Energy Transer v. R. Moss & Spotlight PA

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 20, 2023
Docket1700 & 1722 C.D. 2019
StatusPublished

This text of Energy Transer v. R. Moss & Spotlight PA (Energy Transer v. R. Moss & Spotlight PA) 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
Energy Transer v. R. Moss & Spotlight PA, (Pa. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Energy Transfer, : CASES CONSOLIDATED Petitioner : : v. : No. 1700 C.D. 2019 : Submitted: July 15, 2022 Rebecca Moss and Spotlight PA, : Respondents :

Pennsylvania Public Utility : Commission, : Petitioner : : v. : No. 1722 C.D. 2019 : Rebecca Moss and Spotlight PA, : Respondents :

BEFORE: HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, Senior Judge

OPINION BY SENIOR JUDGE LEAVITT FILED: January 20, 2023

Energy Transfer and the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (Commission) have separately petitioned for this Court’s review of the final determination of the Office of Open Records (OOR) directing the Commission to provide records requested by Rebecca Moss and Spotlight PA (collectively, Requesters)1 under the Right-to-Know Law.2 Requesters sought email communications between certain Commission staff and Energy Transfer. The Commission denied the request for the stated reason, inter alia, that the records were protected from disclosure under the Public Utility Confidential Security Information

1 Our Court consolidated the above-captioned cases in an order dated January 10, 2020. 2 Act of February 17, 2008, P.L. 6, 65 P.S. §§67.101-67.3104. Disclosure Protection Act (CSI Act)3 or were exempt under the Right-to-Know Law as related to a noncriminal investigation. The OOR sustained Requesters’ appeal but permitted the Commission to redact any information that could be used for criminal or terroristic purposes. After review of the OOR’s final determination, we reverse. Background On August 23, 2019, Requesters submitted a Right-to-Know request to the Commission that stated as follows: Please provide all emails, including attachments, sent or received by staff of the Public Utility Commission, including but not limited to Paul Metro, Seth Mendelsohn, Richard Kanaskie, Kasha Schreffler, Cathy Royer, Anthony Bianco, including correspondence with Energy Transfer Partners and Sunoco, including but not limited to Albert Kravatz, between Nov. 1, 2017 and the date this request is processed that relate to pipeline projects, including Mariner East 1, 2, and 2X pipeline project, and specifically mention terms including but not limited to “real time modeling”, and/or “evacuation zone(s)”, and/or “safety risks”, and/or “buffer zone(s)”, and/or “emergency response plan(s)”, and/or “accident”, and/or “accident plan”.

Reproduced Record at 6a (R.R. __) (emphasis added). The Commission denied the request as insufficiently specific. Nevertheless, the Commission did a search of its records and determined that, except for Paul Metro, none of the named Commission staff had engaged in email communication with Albert Kravatz. With respect to the emails sent to or received by Paul Metro, the Commission asserted those emails contained confidential security information or were related to a noncriminal investigation. Therefore, the records were exempt from disclosure under the CSI

3 Act of November 29, 2006, P.L. 1435, 35 P.S. §§2141.1-2141.6. 2 Act or the Right-to-Know Law. Requesters appealed the Commission’s decision to the OOR. Before the OOR, the Commission submitted a position statement reciting the above-stated grounds for its denial of the email communications sought by Requesters. In support, the Commission submitted several affidavits. Richard A. Kanaskie, the Commission’s Director of the Bureau of Investigation and Enforcement (Bureau of Enforcement), attested that the requested records, save two, had been designated confidential security information within the meaning of the CSI Act. Accordingly, their disclosure would be reasonably likely to jeopardize or threaten public safety or preparedness or public protection activity[; . . .] would create a reasonable likelihood of endangering the safety and physical security of a public utility[ because t]hese records include infrastructure records that expose or create vulnerability through disclosure of location, configuration, or security of public utility systems, that is pipeline systems[; and, . . .] would jeopardize or threaten public safety or preparedness or public protection activity, and create a reasonable likelihood of endangering the safety and security of a public utility in consultation with technical Gas Safety staff at the Commission, which agree with my professional assessment.

R.R. 41a. Kanaskie also attested that, on or about April 17, 2017, the Bureau of Enforcement began an investigation into one of Energy Transfer’s pipelines, which investigation was still ongoing, and it has other pending investigations of Energy Transfer’s pipelines. Energy Transfer, which participated in the OOR proceeding, also submitted a position statement. It agreed with the Commission’s position and further argued that the records at issue contained confidential proprietary information and/or trade secrets and, thus, were exempt from disclosure under the Right-to-Know Law.

3 Energy Transfer submitted the sworn declaration of Todd Nardozzi, Senior Manager, attesting that, since April 1, 2017, Energy Transfer has submitted technical reports, locational drawings, and operational reports to the Commission, which contain information on the operation, location, and vulnerabilities of its pipelines. Nardozzi also attested that Energy Transfer has treated this information as confidential security information in accordance with the requirements of the CSI Act. Finally, Nardozzi attested that since April 1, 2017, several of Energy Transfer’s pipelines have been the subject of ongoing, noncriminal investigations by the Commission. In their response, Requesters argued that their Right-to-Know request was sufficiently specific, because it provided both dates and names. They also argued that the records were not exempt because any confidential information could be redacted. Finally, they argued the Commission’s claim that the records were part of a noncriminal investigation was overbroad and, thus, did not authorize an exemption on that basis. In its final determination, the OOR agreed that the request was sufficiently specific because it was limited to a discrete group of documents, identified email senders or recipients, and provided a keyword list to limit the search. The OOR also agreed that the requested records were not exempt as confidential security information. The OOR reasoned that for a record to be exempt as confidential security information, the public utility must comply with the procedures for “protecting confidential security information,” as set forth in Section 3 of the CSI Act, 35 P.S. §2141.3.4 OOR Final Determination at 11; R.R. 90a. Notably, the

4 It states, in pertinent part: (a) General rule.--The public utility is responsible for determining whether a record or portion thereof contains confidential security information. When a public utility 4 Commission’s regulation does not authorize the electronic communication of confidential security information. 52 Pa. Code §102.3(b)(1), (3).5 Because Requesters sought emails and attachments, the requested electronic records were not entitled to protection under the CSI Act. The OOR found that the affidavits of Kanaskie and Rosemary Chiavetta, Secretary of the Commission, attested to ongoing investigations to which the requested records pertained. However, this did not end the inquiry. Section 335(d) of the Public Utility Code states, in pertinent part, as follows: whenever the commission conducts an investigation of an act or practice of a public utility and makes a decision, enters into a settlement with a public utility or takes any other official action,

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Related

Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission v. Gilbert
40 A.3d 755 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2012)
Carey v. Pennsylvania Department of Corrections
61 A.3d 367 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2013)
Bowling v. Office of Open Records
75 A.3d 453 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2013)
Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission v. Seder
139 A.3d 165 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2016)

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Bluebook (online)
Energy Transer v. R. Moss & Spotlight PA, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/energy-transer-v-r-moss-spotlight-pa-pacommwct-2023.