Rostosky Appeal

67 Pa. D. & C.2d 674
CourtPennsylvania Environmental Hearing Board
DecidedJune 26, 1974
DocketDocket No. 73-178-C
StatusPublished

This text of 67 Pa. D. & C.2d 674 (Rostosky Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Environmental Hearing Board primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rostosky Appeal, 67 Pa. D. & C.2d 674 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1974).

Opinion

COHEN, Member,

This is an appeal by Joseph Rostosky, d/b/a Joseph Rostosky Coal Company, from the action of the Department of Environmental Resources in denying his application to strip a tract of land approximately 16-1/3 acres in Somerset Township, Washington County, situated along the north side of Interstate Route 70 and the [675]*675west side of Township Route 818 to a point one-half mile north of the junction of the two highways. The issue in this case is whether the Department of Environmental Resources rightfully refused to grant appellant’s application for a mine drainage permit.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Appellant in this case is Joseph Rostosky, an individual, d/b/a Joseph Rostosky Coal Company. Appellant’s address is R. D. 3, Box 112, Monongahela, Pa.

2. Appellee in this case is the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Resources.

3. Intervenors in this ease are the Borough of Bentley ville, Washington County, and the Bentley ville Water Authority.

4. On or about September 20, 1971, appellant, Joseph Rostosky, made application to the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Resources (hereinafter “the department”) for a permit to discharge industrial wastes and mine drainage pursuant to the provisions of The Clean Streams Law, Act of June 22, 1937, P. L. 1987, as amended, 35 PS §691.1, et seq.

5. In his application, appellant proposed to strip mine approximately 16-1/3 acres of the Waynesburg seam of coal in Somerset Township, Washington County, located along the north side of Interstate Highway 70 and along the west side of Township Route 818 to a point one-half mile north of the junction of these two highways. The application proposed that, after treatment, sthe discharge from the operation would drain into the north branch of Pigeon Creek, tributary to Pigeon Creek which flows into the Monongahela River. Although application states appellant will strip mine approximately 16-1/3 acres, he testified [676]*676that he proposed to strip mine approximately 24 acres of coal.

6. The proposed stripping operation of appellant is approximately 300 feet from the Bentleyville Reservoir, formerly a source of water supply to the Borough of Bentleyville, but no longer so.

7. The erosion and sedimentation plans, prepared on behalf of appellant in connection with his application for a mine drainage permit by Dr. Marlin L. Sheridan, a registered professional engineer in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and an expert in the field of sedimentation and erosion control, meet the requirements of departmental regulations for sedimentation and erosion control plans.

8. The North Branch of Pigeon Creek and the Bentleyville Reservoir are non-acid waters of the Commonwealth and sustain aquatic life.

9. The Pennsylvania Fish Commission stocks the Bentleyville Reservoir with fish.

10. The Pennsylvania Fish Commission does not stock the North Branch of Pigeon Creek, but has made a survey in order to determine whether this body of water should be stocked with fish.

11. The proposed strip mining activity of appellant does not threaten any source of public water supply for the Borough of Bentleyville.

12. The Bentleyville Water Authority does not now and, in all probability, will never in the foreseeable future utilize the Bentleyville Reservoir as a source of public water supply for the residents of the Borough of Bentleyville.

13. The Bentleyville Reservoir is currently being used for recreational fishing by residents of the borough and others in the vicinity.

[677]*67714. Aside from fishing, there is no other generally permitted recreational use of the Bentleyville Reservoir.

15. The plan of drainage set forth in appellant’s application for a mine drainage permit was designed to treat acid mine drainage resulting from the proposed strip mining operation while said operation was in progress.

16. Nothing in appellant’s application for a mine drainage permit specifically addressed itself to the problem of the possibility of contamination of ground waters by acid-bearing materials.

17. The overburden on the tract of land covered by appellant’s application contains pyritic material which, when coming into contact with oxygen and water, will cause acid.

18. The disturbing of the overburden as a consequence of strip mining exposes more pyritic material to oxidation than would be the case were the earth undisturbed.

19. The contour method of backfilling, by which appellant proposes to fill the land once the coal is extracted, will result in exposing approximately 24 acres of overburden containing pyritic material to the process of oxidation and may result in substantial amounts of acid water reaching the North Branch of Pigeon Creek and the Bentleyville Reservoir through the contamination of ground waters.

20. The “dip” of the seam of coal (and of other strata) on appellant’s tract of land is such that there is a distinct possibility that contamination of ground waters would reach either the North Branch of Pigeon Creek or the Bentleyville Reservoir in such quantities as to raise substantially the acidity of these waters [678]*678and kill substantial amounts of fish and other aquatic life.

21. The department, at the time of its denial of appellant’s application, had no facts before it upon which to determine whether the proposed strip mining pursuant to the application would cause pollution of the waters of the Commonwealth.

22. The basis upon which the department denied appellant’s application for a mine drainage permit was solely that the Borough of Bentleyville and the Bentleyville Water Authority protested to the department the issuance of the permit to the appellant.

23. Initial review of the permit application by the department indicated probable approval of the application.

24. At the time of the initial hearing in this matter on January 11, 1974, the department had no information in its possession which would bear upon the issue of the contamination by acid of ground waters by the proposed stripping operation of appellant.

25. All the evidence relating to contamination by acid of ground waters due to appellant’s proposed operation was adduced by the department and the intervenors subsequent to the first hearing in this matter.

26. At no time prior to the second hearing in this matter on February 20, 1974, was appellant informed, either by the department or by the intervenors, that the main concern in the case was the possibility. of ground water pollution reaching the North Branch of Pigeon Creek or the Bentleyville Reservoir.

DISCUSSION

While it is clear that the department could have denied appellant’s permit on the basis of the evidence [679]*679presented at the hearings in this case, the board is concerned that the department acted in this matter in such a manner as to be repugnant and offensive to basic elements of good faith and fairness that is the hallmark of the American constitutional system.

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Bluebook (online)
67 Pa. D. & C.2d 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rostosky-appeal-paenvhrbd-1974.