Knoll v. White

595 A.2d 665, 141 Pa. Commw. 188
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 22, 1991
Docket198 M.D. 1991
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 595 A.2d 665 (Knoll v. White) 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
Knoll v. White, 595 A.2d 665, 141 Pa. Commw. 188 (Pa. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

CRAIG, President Judge.

At present, with no appropriations act in effect to authorize state expenditures for the current fiscal year which began July 1, 1991, are the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare and the State Treasurer lawfully authorized and obligated to continue issuing payments to recipient clients with respect to cash-grant public assistance programs and related benefits:

(1) with respect to programs under which the funding comes chiefly from federal funds under federal law; and

(2) with respect to programs wholly funded by state revenues?

To those questions, this court’s answer must be that, despite the current absence of statutory appropriation authorization, the state officials (1) are lawfully mandated, by the supremacy of federal law over state law in this sphere, to continue the federally funded public assistance payments and (2) in order to do so, are lawfully justified in continuing the state welfare payments operationally integrated with the federal programs, until such time as the state payment process can be made separate.

*190 THE PROCEEDINGS

State Treasurer Catherine Baker Knoll instituted this declaratory judgment action in this court’s original jurisdiction against Secretary John F. White and his Department of Public Welfare to obtain a declaratory judgment with respect to the legality of the actions of the department and the treasurer, who are presently continuing to issue public assistance payments and benefits despite the absence of any current state appropriation authorization. In response to the treasurer’s request for expedited relief under Pa. R.A.P. 1532, this court directed an accelerated pleading schedule and set the matter down for an expedited evidentiary hearing, the record of which is now complete.

The court has allowed intervention by Vernell Smith, a public assistance recipient, and also by welfare rights organizations of Philadelphia, Allegheny and Armstrong County — representing recipients — on behalf of the interests of General Assistance recipients.

The parties have brought the pleadings to closure by filing a petition for review, an answer and new matter to the petition, a reply to new matter, a motion for special relief, a response to that motion, and the petition to intervene.

Pursuant to evidentiary hearing, and the testimony, exhibits and stipulations placed on the record at that hearing, the court makes findings of fact:

FINDINGS

1. Upon and after July 1, 1991, for the time being, there is no appropriations act — neither general, special, deficiency, stopgap, or otherwise — in effect to authorize expenditure of funds by the Commonwealth.

2. The administration of public assistance in Pennsylvania involves bi-monthly payments to recipients, administered in two ten-day cycles of payments in each month, initiated by payment voucher transmittals from the department and *191 carried out by the issuance of payments by the treasurer, along with related benefits.

3. Each day of that cycle involves the issuance of approximately 30,000 payments, totalling in value approximately $4.5 million dollars per day.

4. The involved public assistance programs are as follows:

General Assistance (GA) under state law, 62 P.S. §§ 401 et seq.;
State Blind Pension Trust (SBP) under state law, 62 P.S. §§ 501 et seq.;
Refugee Cash Assistance (RCA) under federal law;
Aid to Families With Dependent Children (AFDC) under federal Social Security Law, 42 U.S.C. §§ 601 et seq.;

5. Related benefits distributed in connection with public assistance payments include:

Food stamp authorizations-to-purchase, issued under federal law programs to recipients who may then obtain food stamps from issuing agents or contractors; and Medical assistance identification cards, issued under federal and state law to permit recipients to obtain medical benefits during the period covered, also a federal program.

6. The department and treasurer issue public assistance payments in four different modes as follows:

Regular mail;
Supplemental mail;
Electronic funds transfer, to contracted agents who provide cash to recipients who come in person, with identification; and
Direct delivery of checks, also to contracted distribution centers who distribute the checks to recipients who appear in person with proper identification.

7. For efficiency, the department and treasurer operationally implement all four payment programs on a unified basis, rather than as four discrete payment channels, by maintaining all recipient information in a single database *192 for computer purposes. With respect to each day in the bimonthly cycle, the department delivers computer tapes to the state treasurer, backed up by hard-copy listings for verification. Although the hard-copy listings identify each recipient with respect to program by a code letter, manual separation or reservation of checks or electronic payments for any specific program is not feasible because treasurer personnel cannot manually thus manipulate the daily volume of 30,000 payments and because the common database does not group the recipients of each program by consecutive groupings in either the electronic computerized listing or the hard-copy listings.

8. On each of the payment cycle days, the overnight computer runs by the department involve batch processing with approximately 70 interrelated, but different, applications programs applied to the common data base. Computer reprogramming to regroup all payment processes separately for each program, for the purpose of distinguishing state-funded programs from those primarily federally funded, would require extensive computer program rewriting, the basic work for which could be accomplished in not less than six weeks, with additional weeks required for testing, debugging and other completion work necessary for accuracy and proper auditing.

9. In addition to the time required to create new programs to process AFDC payments separately from GA and SBP payments, there would have to be new computer programs designed to issue medical assistance cards independently of GA payments if GA payments were stopped for the lack of state funding.

10. No computer program presently exists to calculate GA amounts for the resumption of payments of GA if such assistance is stopped for some period.

11. If operations were revised to continue payments of AFDC and RCA, but not GA, the food stamp entitlement of many GA recipients would increase, requiring additional new computer programming, as to food stamp increases, which does not now exist.

*193 12.

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Bluebook (online)
595 A.2d 665, 141 Pa. Commw. 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knoll-v-white-pacommwct-1991.