Borough of Wilkinsburg v. Department of Community & Economic Development

728 A.2d 389
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 16, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 728 A.2d 389 (Borough of Wilkinsburg v. Department of Community & Economic Development) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Borough of Wilkinsburg v. Department of Community & Economic Development, 728 A.2d 389 (Pa. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

PELLEGRINI, Judge.

The Borough of Wilkinsburg (Borough) petitions for review of an order issued by the Department of Community and Economic Development (Department) and Samuel A. McCullough, Secretary of the Department (collectively, Secretary) terminating its status as a municipality in financial distress.

In 1985, the Borough suffered a financial crisis that culminated in late 1987 with a significant deficit. Due to its lack of funds, the Borough defaulted on payments of principal or interest on some of its bonds or notes or on payment of rental due any authority; missed a payroll for 30 days; accumulated and operated for each of two successive years with a deficit equal to 5% or more of its revenues; and experienced a decrease in a quantified level of municipal service for the preceding fiscal year that resulted from the Borough reaching its legal limit in levying real estate taxes for general purposes. 1 As a result, on January 19, 1988, the Secretary issued an order designating the Borough as a distressed municipality pursuant to the Municipalities Financial Recovery Act (commonly referred to as Act 47) 2 so that the Borough could receive funds from the Secretary in order to continue operating and providing for the health, safety and welfare of its residents. In addition to receiving several loans, 3 pursuant to Section 221(a) of Act 47, 53 P.S. § 11701.221(a), the Secretary appointed Act 47 Coordinator, Michael Foreman, to prepare a recovery plan for the Borough so that it could eventually meet its budget without assistance and regain its non-distressed financial status.

In order to provide the Borough with enough revenue to change its status, from January 1988 through December 1994, the Borough levied an earned income tax of 1.25% on its residents of which it received 0.75% of the tax, and a non-resident earned income tax of 1.2% with the Borough receiving 0.20%, 4 In an effort to wean the Borough from the dependency of the earned income *391 taxes it was collecting, in 1995, and at the Secretary's request, the Borough’s non-resident earned income tax was eliminated and its resident earned income tax reduced to 1.0% with the borough getting 0.50%. As a result, the Borough would operate without the higher earned income tax for a period of time before the removal of its distress designation, and as of July 1, 1997, the Borough did begin to operate without the benefit of the higher than statutorily permitted earned income tax.

During the first quarter of 1998, the Borough Council realized that its expenditures would exceed its revenues if its current spending patterns continued. In an effort to prevent that eventuality, the Borough reduced its expenses and eliminated equipment and vehicle repairs. Although the Borough alleged that it was still struggling to meet its budget, the Borough’s Act 47 Coordinator believed that the conditions that had originally led to the financial distress status were no longer present and requested a public hearing on the proposed removal of the Borough from that designation. 5 A hearing was held on August 18, 1998, at which time the Act 47 Coordinator testified regarding the Borough’s current ability to meets its budget requirements. He recommended that the distress status be rescinded because the Borough’s accrued deficits had been eliminated, obligations issued to finance all or part of its deficit had been retired, it had operated for the past three years with balanced budgets, and it had eliminated its dependency on the additional revenue generated from the higher rates on the earned income tax.

The Borough’s finance director, Eileen Navish, also testified regarding the Borough’s budget problems, but in direct contrast to the Act 47 Coordinator’s contentions that the budget problems had been resolved. She testified that the deficits of the Borough had not been eliminated and pointed out that due to the result of the change in the earned income tax, money had to be taken from the Borough’s general fund/savings account to cover costs of capital improvements. Additionally, based on projections she made, she stated the Borough would have a deficit of $227,000 in 1998 and would grow to a deficit of $1.1 million by the year 2001. She ultimately concluded that the Borough’s revenues were relatively flat and its costs continued to increase. Based on these projections, Pamela Macklin, chairperson of the Finance Committee, requested the Secretary to consider an additional two-year extension of the distressed status based on the Borough’s projections.

Because the Borough had not yet received a decision from the Secretary, in October of 1998, it authorized its Solicitor to file a petition with the trial court requesting that it be permitted to establish an earned income tax rate of 1.4% on it residents and a rate of 1.3% on its non-residents in an effort to eliminate the projected budget deficit for 1999. A hearing was scheduled for November 18, 1998, but prior to that hearing, however, the Borough received an order from the Secretary dated November 10, 1998, that its financially distressed designation was rescinded. The Secretary primarily relied on the fact that the Borough had an approximate $1 million year-end fund balance from 1997 and had recently received $995,000.00 from the sale of its real estate tax liens to GLS, Inc.

The Borough withdrew its petition from the trial court because the court no longer had authority to grant its request due to the removal of its financially distressed status. It then filed a motion for stay and injunctive relief with this Court requesting that we vacate the Secretary’s November 10, 1998 order and reinstate its status as a financially distressed community. A hearing was held on the motion on December 1, 1998, and was denied. However, the Borough’s request for *392 an expedited argument was granted and arguments were held on February 8, 1999. 6

The Borough first contends that the Secretary violated Section 203 of Act 47, 53 P.S. § 11701.203, by failing to notify it of his November 10, 1998 decision to rescind its financially distressed designation within 30 days of the public hearing when it provided notification of that rescission approximately 83 days after the hearing took place. However, contrary to the Borough’s assertion, Section 203 of Act 47 only provides the procedure that the Secretary is to follow when first determining if a municipality is financially distressed, and the 30-day notice refers to that determination. Specifically, Section 203(f) provides:

Within 30 days after the hearing, the secretary shall issue an administrative determination of whether the municipality is financially distressed and reasons for the determination.

Regarding terminations of such status, Section 253 of Act 47, 53 P.S. § 11701.253(a), provides the procedures that the Secretary must follow in order to terminate a municipality’s financial distress status. That section provides:

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