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State Supreme Court Affirms Farm Bureau Position On ACRE Law
The Pennsylvania Farm Bureau praised a state Supreme Court ruling that enables the state Attorney General to challenge local ordinances which illegally restrict agriculture, regardless of when they were adopted.
 
“This is a long-awaited victory in our on-going efforts to preserve the future of agriculture in Pennsylvania through Act 38, also known as the ACRE law. It sends a clear message that the Attorney General has the authority to invalidate ordinances that some municipalities may try to prevent the court from reviewing through a technicality,” said PFB Governmental Affairs Counsel John Bell.
 
Farm Bureau asserted that Act 38 was clearly intended to address illegal ordinances that were in place prior to the legislation becoming law. Commonwealth Court disagreed and dismissed a lawsuit by the Attorney General against Locust Township, Columbia County in 2007, ruling that ordinances adopted before the ACRE law took effect could not be challenged until municipalities attempted to enforce them.
 
In overturning Commonwealth Court’s ruling, the Supreme Court noted that such a narrow interpretation of ACRE undermines the Act’s purpose. The state’s highest court specifically noted that if the Attorney General is prevented from challenging an illegal ordinance, farmers in townships with illegal ordinances on the books would still face a serious and unsatisfactory decision. Those farmers would either have to bear the costs of complying with the illegal ordinance or ignore the illegal ordinance and risk it being enforced against them in the future.
 
“The Supreme Court ruling eliminates any distinction between illegal local ordinances enacted before or after ACRE. The decision is welcome news for Pennsylvania farm families, who strive to meet the challenges of an ever changing industry while producing safe food and generating dollars into our state’s economy,” added Bell.

5/8/2009

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