Citizens Coal Council v. Department of Environmental Protection

110 A.3d 1051, 2014 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 599
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 23, 2014
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 110 A.3d 1051 (Citizens Coal Council v. Department of Environmental Protection) 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
Citizens Coal Council v. Department of Environmental Protection, 110 A.3d 1051, 2014 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 599 (Pa. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge COHN JUBELIRER.

Citizens Coal Council (Citizens) petitions for review of the Order of the Environmental Hearing Board (Board) that granted the Stipulation for Settlement and Joint Motions to Withdraw Appeal (Joint Motions) filed by Consol Pennsylvania Coal Company, LLC (Consol)1 and the Department of Environmental Protection (Department). The Board agreed with Consol and the Department that it did not presently have jurisdiction to consider Consol’s appeal from two letters, dated December 27, 2012 (Letters), issued by the Department because the Letters were not final actions or adjudications. In granting the Joint Motions, the Board relied on its decision in Chesapeake Appalachia, L.L.C. v. Department of Environmental Protection (Chesapeake I), EHB Docket No. 2012-016-L, issued after Consol filed its appeals, in which it held that a Department letter modifying a proposed corrective action plan was not an action or adjudication subject to immediate appeal. Chesapeake I was affirmed by this Court in Chesapeake Appalachia, L.L.C. v. Department of Environmental Protection, 89 A.3d 724 (Pa.Cmwlth.2014) (Chesapeake II). On appeal, Citizens argues that: (1) Chesapeake I and Chesapeake II are distinguishable from this case because the Letters here immediately altered the status quo of Consol’s obligations under two consent agreements it had with the Department and, therefore, were reviewable final actions; and (2) pursuant to federal and state law, the Letters were actions imme[1053]*1053diately renewable by the Board. For the following reasons, we affirm.

I. Factual Background

Consol operates an underground coal mine, the Bailey Mine, in Greene County, Pennsylvania. (Board Decision at 1.) On September 19, 2007, Consol and the Department entered into a Global Streams Consent Order and Agreement (Consent Order), requiring Consol to restore “Unnamed Tributary (‘UNT’) 32596,” which the Department asserted was adversely affected by the mining operations at Bailey Mine (UNT 32596 Consent Order). (Stipulation for Settlement and Joint Motion for EHB Docket #2013-018-R (UNT 32596 Stipulation and Motion) at 1, R.R. at 266a.) The UNT 32596 Consent Order required Consol to undertake restoration activities on UNT 32596 “and to submit a Final Report documenting” those restoration activities. (UNT 32596 Stipulation and Motion at 1, R.R. at 266a.) The UNT 32596 Consent Order authorized the Department to, “in addition to the remedies prescribed herein, pursue any remedy available for a violation of an order of the Department,” and “to require additional measures to achieve compliance -with applicable law.” (UNT 32596 Consent Order ¶¶ 5a, 6, R.R. at 301a.)

On June 11, 2008 Consol and the Department entered into another Consent Order requiring Consol to restore seven streams (Polly Hollow Streams) the Department asserted were also adversely affected by the Bailey Mine (Polly Hollow Consent Order).2 (Board Decision at 1; Stipulation for Settlement and Joint Motion to Withdraw Appeal for EHB Docket # 2013-011-R (Polly Hollow Stipulation and Motion) at 1, R.R. at 255a.) The terms of the Polly Hollow Consent Order required Consol “to perform certain stream restoration activities and submit Annual Reports” reflecting the status of the restoration to the Department. (Board Decision at 1-2.) The Polly Hollow Consent Order further indicated that the Department could require Consol to engage in “certain compensatory measures if either Consol or the Department determine[d] that Consol [had] exhausted all technically feasible measures to restore the streams and the affected streams [could not] be restored.” (Polly Hollow Stipulation and Motion at 2, R.R. at 256a.)

In Paragraphs 17 and 22 of the UNT 32596 Consent Order and Polly Hollow Consent Order, respectively, Consol and the Department agreed that:

Any decision which the Department makes under the provisions of this Consent Order and Agreement is intended to be neither a final action under 25 Pa.Code § 1021.2,[3] nor an adjudication under 2 Pa.C.S. § 101.[4] Any objection, which Consol may have to the decision, will be preserved until the Department enforces this Consent Order and Agreement.

[1054]*1054(UNT 32596 Consent Order ¶ 17, R.R. at 304a; Polly Hollow Consent Order ¶22, R.R. at 118a.)

Consol filed its 2012 annual report under the Polly Hollow Consent Order and a report under the UNT 32596 Consent Order (Reports) with the Department. On December 27, 2012, the Department sent the Letters to Consol, indicating that it had reviewed these Reports. Based upon that review, the Department concluded the following as to the Polly Hollow streams:

(1) Consol has performed various remediation efforts over the past 48 months on the affected streams. (2) The Department is unaware of any additional efforts that Consol could be required to take to remediate the affected streams. (3) The Department now requires Con-sol to perform compensatory mitigation or enhancement measures pursuant to Paragraph 7 [of the Polly Hollow Consent Order].

(Letter from the Department to Consol Regarding Polly Hollow (December 27, 2012) (Polly Hollow Letter), R.R. at 5a.) With regard to UNT 32596, the Department concluded that “[w]e feel any additional remediation activities on U[N]T [3]2596 would be futile; therefore, we are requiring Consol to provide appropriate mitigation and/or compensation for the loss of Commonwealth resources.” (Letter from the Department to Consol Regarding UNT 32596 (December 27, 2012) (UNT 32596 Letter), R.R. at 15a.)

II. Proceedings before the Board

Consol appealed the Letters to the Board, arguing it had complied with the terms of the Polly Hollow Consent Order and the UNT 32596 Consent Order and challenged the Department’s conclusion that no further restoration work could be accomplished. On July 1, 2013, Citizens, a Pennsylvania non-profit corporation,5 petitioned to intervene in Consol’s appeals. (Board Decision at 2.) Citizens sought to intervene “to ensure that [the] Board affirm[ed] the determinations and conclusions stated in [the Department’s] December 27, 2012, [L]etter[s] to Consol.” (Citizens’s Petition to Intervene (Polly Hollow) ¶ 21, R.R. at 48a; Citizens’s Petition to Intervene (UNT 32596) ¶ 28, R.R. at 61a.) Consol objected to Citizens’s intervention.6 The Board granted Citizens’s petitions on July 16, 2013.

Thereafter, on August 15, 2013, the Board issued Chesapeake I, in which it [1055]*1055addressed the appealability of Department letters issued pursuant to a consent order. Based on language contained in the consent order in that case, the Board concluded that the Department’s letters issued pursuant to the consent order in Chesapeake I were not final actions or adjudications, were not immediately appealable, and any challenges to those letters were “preserved until such time as the Department enforce[d] the [cjonsent [o]rder.” (Board Decision at 4-5.) Thus, the Board in Chesapeake I found that it lacked jurisdiction to consider the appeal which it dismissed. (Board Decision at 5.)

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110 A.3d 1051, 2014 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-coal-council-v-department-of-environmental-protection-pacommwct-2014.