Op-Ed: PA Supreme Court Has Saved Our State Forests And Parks!
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By John E. Childe, Attorney For PA Environmental Defense Foundation

Much has been written and talked about the impact of the Supreme Court Decision in PEDF v. Governor Wolf, decided a week ago on June 20, 2017, on the development of the meaning of our Environmental Amendment, Article I § 27.

The reason why the PEDF brought the action in the first place was to stop the destruction of our State Forests and Parks from the extraction of natural gas and oil.

In early 2012, when PEDF first brought the action in Commonwealth Court, 660,000 acres of State Forest were open to leasing for oil and gas in the Marcellus Shale region, Northcentral Pennsylvania.

Additionally, these lands were surrounded by private land and State Game lands also subject to gas development.

In 2008, when the first unconventional deep, horizontal wells were drilled, DCNR realized how much they didn’t know about just how destructive the extraction process was and would continue to be.

DCNR issued a decision not to lease until they could deal with the problems they were confronting. DCNR also needed the money from leasing the land to deal with the problems.

But Governor Rendell and then Governor Corbett ignored DCNR’s requests, both to stop the leases and to keep the funds.

In 2012 Governor Corbett started to use the lease funds to replace general funds to pay for DCNR’s operations. That is when PEDF filed the Petition.

The Supreme Court Decision has specifically provided the legal mechanisms both to stop further leasing of our State Forest and Parks, and to insure that the funds are there for DCNR to deal with the impacts from the leases and to meet its other statutory and constitutional obligations regarding the public natural resources.

The Court’s findings that the standards for determining compliance with the trust provisions is the text of Article I § 27, the duty to conserve and maintain the public natural resources; and that duty requires the government to both prevent and remedy degradation, depletion, or diminution of those resources, provides strict protections.

These protections cannot be modified by any legislation because they are constitutionally based.

Conversely, the Court’s determination that the three-pronged test of Payne v. Kassab no longer is the standard opens up new jurisprudence.

The Court’s determination that each and all governmental agencies, both statewide and local, are trustees, and that if DCNR continues to determine that no further leases can be entered into, then the Governor and the Legislature can only change that decision by proving that such leasing meets their duty to conserve and maintain.

The Court’s determination that all royalty moneys are part of the trust established under Article I § 27 means that DCNR has access to those funds now to deal with the gas extraction problems, as well as their other trust duties.

That means that hundreds of millions of dollars are now available to them. It also means that the funds must remain available for DCNR to deal with future problems, to insure that future generations’ rights are retained.

The Supreme Court’s determination that the trustees must meet all legally enforceable fiduciary duties provides ever further protection. Any decision the trustee makes regarding public natural resources must meet the tests of prudence, loyalty, and impartiality, each defined with clear limitations.

The determination that the Commonwealth no longer has any proprietary rights to our public natural resources specifically limits their decisions regarding the natural resources, and provides the people with much greater roles than conceived before the decision.

The immediate impact is to preclude the Government from using a balancing test to allow some degradation if other Government interests are advanced.

 Overall, the Supreme Court has issued an opinion that is and will continue to provide strong protection for our public natural resources.

Findings Of The PA Supreme Court

1. The standard for review of challenges of government actions under Article I § 27 is the text of the amendment itself as well as the underlying principles of Pennsylvania trust law in effect at the time of the enactment.  (This is a really big deal.  Pennsylvania is the first in the nation to have an enforceable trust under the Constitution.)

2. The Payne v. Kassab three-prong test of the Commonwealth Court to determine compliance of government actions with Article I § 27 has been overturned, thus eliminating forty-three years of precedent, and opening the door to significant changes on how environmental laws are enforced and permits are issued.  (This is a really big deal.  It precludes the Legislature from controlling the meaning of the Environmental Amendment.)

3. The second sentence of the Environmental Amendment establishes that the people own the public natural resources, not the Commonwealth. (This is a big deal. It eliminates all previous common law public trust precedent, and precludes “balancing” protecting the resources with other Commonwealth duties.  No more “Thumb on the Scale.”)

4. The third sentence of the Environmental Amendment establishes a public trust.

5. The terms “trust” and “trustee” carry their legal implications, their fiduciary duties. (This is a really big deal. It pins down the Commonwealth greatly by requiring compliance with legal authority of the trustee duties.)

6. All agencies of the Commonwealth, both statewide and local, have a fiduciary duty to act toward the corpus of the trust, the public natural resources, with prudence, loyalty and impartiality. (This eliminates the Commonwealth Court theory that there is only one trustee, the Commonwealth.  All agencies of the Commonwealth must comply with fiduciary duties.)

7. The Commonwealth may not act as proprietor of our resources, only as trustee. (Again, this reverses a century of belief that the Commonwealth owns the property and the people have only equitable interest.)

8. The standard for determining compliance is based on the plain meaning of “conserve and maintain,” which implicates a duty to prevent and remedy the degradation, diminution or depletion of our natural resources.(This is a really big deal. There is no limitation of this duty to be based on “reasonable” degradation, diminution or depletion. This establishes a stringent standard to be met to be in compliance with the terms of the trust.)

9. This duty is an affirmative duty to prohibit the degradation, etc.

10. The trustee must also act affirmatively to pass such laws as will best preserve the subject of the trust, and secure its beneficial use in the future to the people of the state. (This is another big break.  The Legislature and the Department of Environmental Protection are much more limited to providing real protection of our air and water.)

11. Proceeds from the sale of natural gas and oil are part of the corpus of the trust and must remain part of the trust. (This is a big, big deal. All royalties from oil and gas must stay as part of the trust, and be used only to conserve and maintain the natural resources. Hundreds of millions of dollars, if not billions, must be used for conservation and maintenance of our public natural resources.)

12. The Supreme Court wants the Commonwealth Court to determine if lease and bonus payments are also assets of the trust.

13. Sections 1602 and 1603 of the Fiscal Code are unconstitutional.

John E. Childe is an attorney for the PA Environmental Defense Foundation and can be contacted by calling 717-743-9811 or send email to: childeje@aol.com.

(Reprinted from the PA Environmental Defense Foundation website.)

NewsClips:

Advocate Seeks Budget Declared Unconstitutional Based On Environmental Rights Amendment Case 

Court To Decide If Nearly $400M In Oil & Gas Lease Funds Should Be Used For Conservation

Op-Ed: Court Ruling’s Impact On Environment

Related Stories:

PEDF Petitions Court To Declare 2017-18 General Fund Budget Bill Unconstitutional

PEDF Asks Court To Determine If $383 Million Transferred From Oil & Gas Lease Fund Remains In The Public Trust

Op-Ed: Taking The Public Trust Seriously: the PA Supreme Court’s Landmark Decision In PEDF v. Commonwealth

Op-Ed: The Impact Of The PA Supreme Court Environmental Rights Amendment Ruling On The Environment

PA Supreme Court Declares Law Diverting Oil & Gas Lease Funds To General Fund Unconstitutional

[Posted: July 4, 2017]


7/10/2017

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