Stoystown Borough Water Authority v. Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection

729 A.2d 170
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 14, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 729 A.2d 170 (Stoystown Borough Water Authority v. Pennsylvania 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
Stoystown Borough Water Authority v. Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, 729 A.2d 170 (Pa. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

DOYLE, Judge.

Before this Court is an appeal by the Stoystown Borough Water Authority (Authority) from an order of the Environmental Hearing Board (Board) granting a motion for summary judgment filed by the Department of Environmental Protection (Department).

The essential facts in this case are not in dispute. The Department issued a deep mine coal mining activity permit to the Solar Fuel Company, Inc. (Solar Fuel) in 1990, and in 1997 issued a renewal of that *172 permit. The 1997 renewal permit contained revisions which updated the underground permit boundary of the coal mining activity, added one additional groundwater monitoring well and added one hydrologic monitoring point. The renewal permit also carried with it a special condition which established a no-mining zone consisting of an 1800-foot radius above the Authority’s deep well water supply. The Authority operates three wells adjacent to Solar Fuel’s two coal mines located in this area. One of them is designated as a “deep well” and is approximately 302 feet deep. The other two wells are designated as “shallow wells” and reach a depth of approximately 260 feet. These wells supply the water for approximately 450 residential and 12 business customers within Stoystown Borough.

The Authority appealed the Department’s 1997 renewal of the permit to the Environmental Hearing Board on August 20, 1997. The Authority argued that the renewal permit failed to give assurance that the Authority’s water supply, and the aquifer from which it draws its water, would not be polluted, degraded or diminished. Additionally, the Authority asserted that the bond required by the Department was inadequate to replace the water supply in the event it did become polluted, degraded or diminished.

The Board granted the Department’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed the Authority’s appeal. The Department, in support of its motion for summary judgment, argued that the Authority’s appeal was limited by the doctrine of administrative finality, and the only issue the Authority could raise before the Board was whether the 1997 renewal permit complied with the amendments to the Bituminous Mine Subsidence and Land Conservation Act (Act). 1 It is from this final order granting summary judgement that the Authority appeals.

On appeal, 2 the Authority contends that the Board committed an error of law and abused its discretion when it granted the Department’s motion for summary judgment because: (1) the 1997 permit application failed to comply with the 1994 amendments to the Act; and (2) there were genuine issues of material fact which were in dispute. The Authority argues that the 1997 permit application did not provide adequate information concerning the replacement of the Authority’s water supply if mining activity diminished or degraded it, which it was required to do under the 1994 amendments to the Act, and that the Board committed an error of law when it decided this issue at the summary judgment level.

In 1994, the General Assembly adopted amendments to the Act by passing the Act of June 22, 1994, P.L. 357 (Act 54), of which Section 5(j) provides:

The department shall require an operator to describe how water supplies will be replaced. Nothing contained herein shall be construed as authorizing the department to require a mine operator to provide a replacement water supply prior to mining as a condition of securing a permit to conduct underground coal mining.

52 P.S. § 1406.5b(j) (emphasis added). The Authority asserts that the Solar Fuel permit application failed to describe how the Authority’s water supply would be replaced should it be contaminated as a result of its mining operations. In its permit renewal application Solar Fuel stated:

In the event of a water interruption, diminution, or contamination, the operator will abide by the requirements of Act *173 54 as stated below. If any water losses or contamination occur within the 35° angle of assumption from any mining that has been conducted since August 21, 1994 the operator will provide one of the following within 24 hours;
—a temporary water supply to the complainant; or
—information documenting that the operator was denied access to the water supply to conduct a pre-mining or post mining survey after following the notification requirements specified in Section 5.9(c); or
—information documenting that the supply is still adequate in quantity and quality to serve the premining [sic] uses of the supply or any reasonably foreseeable uses of the supply.

(Solar Fuel permit application, Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 97a.)

The Board, in its July 13, 1998 decision granting the Department’s motion for summary judgment, addressed the Authority’s argument thus:

we agree with the Department’s contention that Solar Fuel adequately described how it intends to comply with the Act 54 requirements when it identified no mining zones and the structures and water supplies to be protected, and because it will provide for temporary water to be supplied in the event that water is adversely affected by its mining operations.

(Board’s 7/13/98 Opinion at 6; R.R. at 223a.)

The question of how to interpret Act 54 is an issue of first impression for this Court. Section 2 of Act 54, which defines the legislative purpose behind Act 54, provides as follows:

This act shall be deemed to be an exercise of the police powers of the Commonwealth for the protection of the health, safety and general welfare of the people of the Commonwealth, by providing for the conservation of surface land areas which may be affected in the mining of bituminous coal by methods other than ‘open pit’ or ‘strip’ mining, to aid in the protection of the safety of the public, to enhance the value of such lands for taxation, to aid in the preservation of surface water drainage and public and private water supplies, to provide for the restoration or replacement of water supplies affected by underground mining, to provide for the restoration or replacement of or compensation for surface structures damaged by underground mining and generally to improve the use and enjoyment of such lands and to maintain primary jurisdiction over surface coal mining in Pennsylvania.

52 P.S. § 1406.2 (emphasis added). The General Assembly, in its Legislative findings and declaration of policy further stated:

It is hereby determined by the General Assembly of Pennsylvania and declared as a matter of legislative findings that:
(1) Present mine subsidence legislation and coal mining laws have failed to protect the public interest in Pennsylvania in preserving our land.
(3) Damage from mine subsidence has caused a very clear and present danger to the health, safety and welfare of the people of Pennsylvania.
The Pennsylvania General Assembly therefore declares it to be the policy of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania that:

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Bluebook (online)
729 A.2d 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoystown-borough-water-authority-v-pennsylvania-department-of-pacommwct-1999.