52 Pa. Commw. 514 | Pa. Commw. Ct. | 1980
Opinion by
This appeal by Strasburg Associates (Strasburg)
On August 15, 1975, the Department of Environmental Resources (DER) awarded a sanitary landfill permit for 22 acres of a 300-aere site owned by Strasburg in Newlin and West Bradford Townships, Chester County, Pennsylvania. Zoning disputes, groundwater problems, and erosion control measures halted construction of the landfill, for reasons material to this litigation, through October of 1978. Financing problems then forced Strasburg to enter investment negotiations with a three-corporation investment group, whereby a joint venture known as Strasburg Landfill Associates (SLA)
In the meantime, Strasburg, SLA, the American Bank, and the Chester County Industrial Development
On October 9, 1978, Newlin Township appealed, contending that DER erred in its September 8th approval of landfill operations by SLA without the reissuance of a permit, and abused its discretion by approving the revisions and failing to condition continued landfilling on the soil and erosion control plan for the secondary access road. DER and Strasburg, the intervenor below, moved to dismiss the appeal for lack of EHB jurisdiction arguing that the September 8th letter did not constitute an appealable action, and that the Township lacked standing to bring the appeal as a party aggrieved by DER action.
Asserting jurisdiction, the EHB found the Township had standing to prosecute the appeal, concluding that it had an interest in protecting surface and groundwaters within its own borders and the municipality could be called upon as a last resort to remedy threats to the public health, welfare, or safety that might be created within its jurisdiction. The order, dated February 16, 1979, dismissed the appeal as it related to DER’s approval of revisions to the permitted plans and failure to require adequate erosion and sedimentation measures, and sustained the appeal by requiring compliance with Regulation Section 75.22 (f)’s “change of ownership” provision and more complete documentation of offsite leachate treatment arrangements before operations could begin.
The basic principles of standing are enumerated by our Supreme Court in Wm. Penn Parking Garage, Inc. v. City of Pittsburgh, 464 Pa. 168, 346 A.2d 269 (1975). To prevail on the standing issue, the “adversely affected” or “aggrieved” party must have an interest in the subject matter or particular question litigated which is substantial, immediate, and direct. The interest is “substantial” when there is “some discernible adverse effect to some interest other than the abstract interest of all citizens in having others comply with the law.” Wm. Penn, supra at 195, 346 A.2d at 282. The requirement that the interest be “direct” goes to causation in that “the person claiming to be aggrieved must show causation of the harm to his interest by the matter of which he complains.” Wm. Penn, supra. The interest must also be “immediate” and not a remote consequence of the judgment, the concern being focused on the nature and proximity of the action and injury challenged to the person challenging it. Wm. Penn, supra at 197, 346 A.2d at 269.
This Court has dutifully obeyed these instructions in a number of cases where there have been interests
In this context, we first examine the Township’s standing to challenge DER’s determination on “transfer of ownership” as approved by the EHB. The Township relies upon the EHB’s finding of financial and operational responsibility:
Although this case presents a close question under the Commonwealth Court decisions, we believe that municipalities should have the right to appeal to this board where they are dissatisfied with a DER action that could prospectively affect their municipal responsibilities to a significant degree, and we will not abandon the board’s practice by denying a right of appeal in this case.
Similarly, the question of who owns the permit and operates the landfill is important to a mu*521 nicipality because of the consequence of poor or inadequate management or of an insufficient financial commitment. In our view, a municipality may be more directly affected by an unlawful grant of a solid waste permit by DER than individual citizens, since it is the municipality rather than individual residents that could be called upon as a last resort to remedy any threat to the public health, welfare or safety that might be created within its jurisdiction.
The Township further claims that the defacto transfer and DER’s unwillingness to elicit all facts as to ownership and operation, such as its owners and-operators, their experience, financial credibility, and operational intentions, has aggrieved the Township above and beyond the premature and wrongful approval of the substantive modifications. •
Upon careful review of these interests and counsel’s supporting arguments, we find no reasonable grounds for standing when interests are not “substantial, direct or immediate.” The interests are without foundation in case law or statutes. They are neither supported by the Pennsylvania Solid Waste Management Act, Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 788, as amended, 35 P.-S. §§6001 et seq., which provides municipalities with responsibility over only its own facilities and not those privately owned or controlled, nor Article I, Section 27 of the Pennsylvania Constitution, which merely espouses the people’s right to clean air, pure water, and the preservation of their environment by the Commonwealth as trustee for these resources. To the contrary, DER is vested with these powers and duties in the public interest. See 71 P.S. §510-1(15), Act of December 3, 1970, P.L. 834, and Ryan Appeal, 30 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 180, 373 A.2d 475 (1977). The record clearly reveals that the transactions and partici
Further, we can find no reasonable grounds for standing where interests or injuries are hypothetical in nature. See Snelling, supra, and The Concerned, Citizens of Greater West Chester, supra. To approve of the Township’s alleged interest only if and when poor management or insufficient financial commitment from ownership results in economic trouble would extend the principles of standing to speculation, far beyond the intent of our Supreme Court in Win. Penn, supra. This we are unwilling to do.
The second issue presents us with a broader standing question — Did the EHB err by allowing the Township to challenge DER’s decision on off-site leachate collection and treatment? The Township asserts a host of claims in an effort to show that its direct, immediate, and substantial interests are threatened by the improper design, construction, and operation of the landfill. Most are directed toward such alleged interests as the protection of surface and groundwater resources for residential, commercial, and industrial uses, avoiding the creation of nuisances, and assuring land use compliance with local land use planning. However, standing must again be denied. We cannot extend standing to a Township with the purported interest of protecting the health, safety and general welfare of its citizens without its having met the requisite
Accordingly, we
Order
And Now, this 2nd day of July, 1980, the order of the Environmental Hearing Board, dated February 16, 1979, is hereby reversed insofar as it requires reissuance of an operating permit for Strasburg Landfill in accordance with 25 Pa. Code §75.22(f), and the submission of more complete documentation of its arrangements for off-site leachate treatment in conformity with 25 Ra. Code §75.25(:o) (7).
Strasburg is a joint venture consisting of two Pennsylvania limited partnerships known as Strasburg Associates I and Strasburg Associates II, both founded in December of 1973 with business conducted solely in that form by Earle Hart, Alex Barry and James Hart, all limited and general partners.
Strasburg Landfill Associates is a joint venture consisting of Pennsylvania’s Newlin Corporation, owned equally by David Ehrlich and Richard Winn, Pennsylvania’s Eco-Waste, Inc., owned by Earle and Marion Hart, and Virginia’s Somerset Strippers of Virginia, Inc., a subsidiary of a company controlled by Robert Buckley.
DER Regulation Section 75.22(f), 25 Pa. Code §75.22 (f), provides :
(f) Reissuanee of permits. Reissuance of permits shall be in accordance with the following:
(1) Permits are not transferable or assignable.
(2) If a change of ownership occurs, the new owner must submit the following:
(i) An application for a revised permit on a form to be provided by the Department.
(ii) A notarized statement attesting to the following items:
(A) Verification of possession of all approved plans, maps, documents, schedules, and commitments approved by the Department.
(B) Statement of agreement and intent to comply with all the requirements, plans, stipulations, and commitments previously approved by the Department.
(iii) A clear and cogent narrative indicating the scheduling and procedure to be utiUzed in the transfer of ownership and subsequent operational Intent.
We see no problem with the EHB’s exercise of jurisdiction over the subject action by DEB, which effectively authorizes re-activation of Strasburg’s permit, and commencement of construction and operation of the landfill.
Although we acknowledge such federal cases as Township of Ridley v. Blanchette, 421 F. Supp. 435 (E.D. Pa. 1976), for the “standing” proposition thait Townships shoulder the responsibility for protecting the health, safety, and general welfare of its citizens, they are distinguishable in that they require the protected interest to be arguably within the zone of interests regulated by federal statutes.