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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
No.67 MAP 2016
BRIAN GORSLINE,DAWN GORSLINE,PAUL BATKOWSKI,&MICHELE
BATKOWSKI
Appellants
v.
BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF FAIRFIELD TOWNSHIP
Appellees
INFLECTION ENERGY,LLC,&DONALD H.AND ELEANOR R.SHAHEEN
Intervenors
BRIEF OFAMICICURIAEDELAWARE RIVERKEEPER NETWORK,
CLEAN AIR COUNCIL,&ENVIRONMENTALINTEGRITY PROJECT
IN SUPPORT OF APPELLANTS
Appeal of: Brian Gorsline,Dawn Gorsline,Paul Batkowski &Michele Batkowski
from the Opin.&Order ofthe Commonwealth Court entered Sept. 14,2015 at No.
1735 CD 2014
Jordan B.Yeager
PA ID No.72947
Lauren M.Williams
Curtin & Heefner LLP
2005 S.Easton Rd.,Ste. 100
Doylestown,PA 18901
Tel.:(267)898-0570
Joseph Otis Minott
PA ID No.36463
Exec.Dir.&ChiefCounsel
Aaron Jacobs-Smith
Clean Air Council
135 youth 19th St., ate.300
Philadelphia,PA 19103
Tel.:(215)567-4004
COUNSEL FOR AMICICURIAE
Adam Kron
D.C.ID.No.992135
Senior Attorney
Environmental Integrity
Project
lOt~O Vermont~~~e.I~V6', Ste.
1100
Washington,D.C.20005
Tel:(202)263-4451
1675818.1/48436
Received 8/1/2016 4:08:10 PM Supreme Court Middle District
TABLE OF CONTENTS
TABLE OF CONTENTS...................................:....................................................... i
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES...................................................................................iii
I. STATEMENT OF INTEREST......................................................................... 1
II. INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT............................... 5
III. ARGUMENT...................................................................................................9
A. Allowing Unconventional Gas Developmentin Non-Industrial Zoning
Districts Is an Abuse ofthe Police Power,Violates Basic Constitutional
Protections,and Is Inconsistent with This Court's Prior Precedent......................9
1. Land Use Decision Makers Must Balance Constitutionally-Protected
Rights and Interests......................................................................................... 10
2. This Court and the Commonwealth CourtPreviously Found
Unconventional Gas Development To Be an Industrial Activity That Is
Incompatible with Non-industrial Uses Such that Putting LTNGD in Non-
Industrial Areas Violates Constitutional Rights ............................................. 12
3. l~~unicipal ~ctior~ that ~ll~vi~s Industrial Uses in Non-Industrial T~is~rict~
Despite the Incompatibility MakesZoning Irrational..................................... 15
1675807.18/48436
4. Allowing Unconventional Gas DevelopmentIn Non-Industrial Districts
Unconstitutionally Upsets Residents'Reasonable Expectations.................... 17
B. The Commonwealth Court's Decision Trangresses These Established
Principles,Threatening Citizens' Constitutional Rights..................................... 20
1. The Pennsylvania Constitution,the MPC,and the Zoning Scheme Define
the Outer Bounds ofWhat Can be"Similar and Compatible," which the
Commonwealth Court Contravened ............................................................... 21
2. Unconventional Gas Development Uses Are Private,For-Profit
Enterprises,Are Notfor the Use or Benefit ofthe General Public,and Are
Not Like Public Services Facilities................................................................. 29
3. The Commonwealth Court's Analogy to Ma~kWestIs In Error............. 33
IV. CONCLUSION..............................................................................................40
Certificate ofService
~~
1675807.18/48436
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
Cases:
Appeal ofBaird,
537 A.2d 976(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1988).................................................................38
Baker v. Chartiers Twp.Zoning Hearing Bd.,
677 A.2d 1274(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1996)...............................................................39
Boundary Drive Assocs. v. Shrewsbury Twp.Bd.ofSupervisors,
491 A.2d 86(Pa. 1985).........................................................................................10
Bray v.Zoning Bd.ofAdjustment,
410 A.2d 909(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1980).....................................................37, 38,39
Butler v. Derr Flooring Co.,
285 A.2d 538(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1971).................................................................39
Ed~mont Twp.v. Springton Lake Montessori Sch.,Inc.,
622 A.2d 418(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1993).................................................................38
Elizabethtown/Mt. Joy Associates,L.P. v. Mount Joy Twp.Zoning Hearing Bd.,
934 A.2d 759(Pa.Commw.Ct.2007)...........................................................37,38
Gorsline v.Bd.ofSupervisors ofFairfield Twp.,
123 A.3d 1142(Pa.Commw.Ct.2015)........................................................passim
Gorsl ne,et a1. v.Bd.ofSup'rs ofFairfield Two.,No. 14-000130
(Lycoming Cty. Ct.ofCmmn.Pleas,Aug.29,2014)..........................................36
Hock v.Bd.ofSup'rs ofMountPleasant Twp.,
622 A.2d 431(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1993).................................................................15
In re Realen Valley Forge Greenes Assocs.,
838 A.2d 718(Pa.2003).................................................................................11, 12
Keystone Chem.Co.,Inc. v.Zoning Hearing Bd.ofButler Twp.,
494 A.2d 1158(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1985)...............................................................38
iii
1b7`JS~~.Ig%4g4.ib
Main St.Dev.Gi-p.,Inc. v. Tinicum Twp.Bd.ofSupervisors("Main Street"),
19 A.3d 21(Pa.Commw.Ct.2011)....................................................15, 18,28,39
MarkWest Liberty Midstream &Res.,LLC v. Cecil Twp.Zoning Hearing Bd.
("MarkWest"),102 A.3d 549(Pa.Commw.Ct.2014)................20,29,33,34,35
Pennsylvania Coal Co.v. Mahon,
260 U.S.393(1922)..............................................................................................11
Robinson Township,Delaware Riverkeeper Network,et al. v. Commonwealth
("Robinson II"~,83 A.3d 901 (Pa.2013).......................................................passim
Robinson Twp.v. Com.~"Robinson I"~,
52 A.3d 463(Pa.Commw.Ct.2012).............................................................passim
Shamah v. Hellam Two.Zoning Hearing Bd.,
648 A.2d 1299,(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1994)..............................................................38
Suhy v.Zoning Bd.ofAdjustment ofCity ofPhila.,
169 A.2d 62(Pa. 1961).........................................................................................16
Swade v.Zoning Board ofAdj.ofSpringfield Twp.,
140 A.2d 597(Pa. 1958).....................................................................14, 23,26,28
United Artists Theater Circuit,Inc. v. City ofPhila.,
595 A.2d 6(Pa. 1991)...........................................................................................11
Valley View Civic Assn v.Zoning Bd.ofAdjustment,
462 A.2d 637(Pa. 1983).......................................................................................37
Vill. ofBelle Terre v. Boraas,
416 U.S. 1 (1974)..................................................................................................14
Village ofEuclid,Ohio v. Ambler Realty Co.,
272 U.S.365(1926)..............................................................................................14
~v
1ti7~8u7.1$l4843ti
Constitutional Provisions:
Pa. Const. art. I,§ 1.................................................................................7,9, 14,28
Pa. Const. art. I,§ 27.................................................................................2, 7,9,28
Other:
Robert S.Ryan,Pa.Zoning Law &Practice("Ryan on Zoning").......................27
v
1ti7580718i4843o
I. STATEMENT OFINTEREST
Amici Delaware Riverkeeper Network("DRN")and Clean Air Council(the
"Council")are Pennsylvania-based environmental non-profits with strong ties to
local Pennsylvania communities. These amid have active cases before the
Pennsylvania courts involving the same—or related issues as those in this matter.
Amicus EnvironmentalIntegrity Project("EIP")is a national non-profit with
locations in Pennsylvania that has also worked on zoning issues similar to those in
this matter. Amici have long-standing interests in the health and wellbeing of
Pennsylvania residents,and are committed to preserving and protecting
Pennsylvania's natural resources. Amici have a specific interest in ensuring that
municipal-level land use and zoning ordinances regulate oil and gas development
in a manner that serves all residents in the community,and thatthey are carried out
in a manner that is consistent with existing restrictions that protect agricultural and
open space areas and provide for responsible,orderly development.
DRN is anon-profit organization established in 1988 to protect and restore
the Delaware River,its associated watershed,tributaries,and habitats. DRN also
works in communities outside the Delaware River watershed to support
organization members with shared interests in protecting water quality,quality of
life, public trust resources,and the constitutionally-protected environmental rights
in members'communities.
1675807.18id8~}3b
DRN was an integral party to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's decision in
Robinson Township Delaware Riverkee~er Network,et al. v. Commonwealth,83
A.3d 901(Pa.2013),which recognized the significant rights protected under
Article I,Section 27 ofthe Pennsylvania Constitution and reaffirmed that all
citizens have an inalienable right to a clean and healthy environment.
DRN established a new initiative,For The Generations,to: 1)ensure that the
Pennsylvania Environmental Rights Amendment is further strengthened in the
wake ofthe Robinson Township,Delaware Riverkeeper Network decision;2)
pursue and secure constitutional protection ofenvironmental rights in states across
the nation;3)pursue and secure recognition ofenvironmental rights at the federal
level through constitutional amendment;and 4)ensure governments at the local
level,state level,and federal level honor the rights ofall people to pure water,
clean air and healthy environments in the laws they enact,the decisions they make,
and the actions they pursue.
As a result,DRN works with and supports local groups who are fighting to
protect their communities and their constitutional rights to a clean and healthy
place in which to live, work and recreate. For example,DRN has partnered with
Clean Air Council and members ofthe Mars Parent Group and in Middlesex
Township,Butler County to challenge zoning changes which would allow drilling
in over 90% ofthe Township,including near the Mars Area School District
2
1675807.18/48436
campus. The zoning changes also placed compressor stations in non-industrial
areas near farms and homes.
The Council is atax-exempt non-profit organization was established in 1967
under the laws ofPennsylvania,with a mission to protect everyone's right to
breathe clean air. The Council has members and supporters throughoutthe
Commonwealth. The Council fights to improve air quality across Pennsylvania
through public education,community organizing,and litigation.
The Council is a founding member ofProtect Our Children,a coalition of
parents,concerned citizens,and advocacy organizations,dedicated to protecting
school children from the health risks ofshale gas drilling and infrastructure.
EIP is a national nonprofit organization founded in 2002 with staffin
Washington,D.C.,Austin(Texas),western Pennsylvania,and Philadelphia. EIP is
dedicated to advocating for more effective enforcement ofenvironmental
protections. Since its founding,EIP has worked to help and protect Pennsylvania
communities from the effects ofheavy industry and energy production,including
oil and gas development and production; natural gas processing plants,oil
refineries,and petrochemical facilities; coal-fired power plants; and coal ash
landfills. In response to the recent weakening ofzoning ordinances in
municipalities across Pennsylvania,which would allow increased oil and gas
development and heavy industry in incompatible districts,EIP's attorneys and
1675307.18/48436
Pennsylvania organizer have worked to address this trend through a combination of
legal challenges and community organizing. In 2014,EIP filed a substantive
validity challenge on behalfofsix residents ofRobinson Township,Washington
County,Pennsylvania,with respectto a revised ordinance that allows oil and gas
development in every zoning district, whether industrial, agricultural,or
residential.
:!
1675807.18/48436
II. INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT
Amici urge this Honorable Courtto reverse the decision ofthe
Commonwealth Court. The Commonwealth Court's decision,like Act 13 of2012,
makeszoning irrational by allowing the injection ofindustrial oil and gas land uses
into non-industrial zoning districts. The Court below did so without any
substantial evidence in the record created atthe Fairfield Township Board of
Supervisors' conditional use hearing. The Commonwealth Court's decision below
— finding that industrial shale gas development is similar to and compatible with
uses expressly permitted in a Residential Agricultural District —conflicts with the
prior decisions ofthis Court and the Commonwealth Court in Robinson Townshi
v. Commonwealth.
Allowing unconventional gas development in residential agricultural
districts is inconsistent with the purposes ofsuch districts,existing development
patterns,residents' expectations,and the protection ofour shared natural resources.
As a result,such actions —and ordinance provisions that provide for similar
expansions —are arbitrary and unreasonable,and bear no substantial relation to
protecting the public health,safety and welfare. Shale gas wellsite development
exposes residents,their children,pets,livestock,and property to air pollution and
industrial 1•isks such as blowouts,spills, water or soil contamination,and
explosions. New wellpads allow for industrial uses next door for many years to
5
167807.18/48436
come,in contrast to expectations created by the existing zoning that such areas
would be for homes,farms,or schools.
The courts,when interpreting and applying zoning ordinances, must be
guided by Robinson Township v. Commonwealth and the long line ofzoning cases
thatrecognize constitutional limitations on governmental action. These
constitutional limitations define the outer bounds ofwhat is"similar and
compatible" with another activity in a given zoning district. The Commonwealth
Court's decision transgressed these bounds,as well as the bounds set by the zoning
scheme in Fairfield Township itself.
Indeed,as this Court and the Commonwealth Court understood when
striking down Act 13,what is"similar and compatible" cannot be analyzed or
pronounced in a vacuum. It must be understood and applied within the context of
local citizens' reciprocal rights to the use and enjoyment oftheir property. It must
be understood and applied consistent with residents' rights"to clean air, pure
water,and to the preservation ofthe natural,scenic,historic,and esthetic values of
the environment." It must be understood and applied consistent with residents'
rights to the enjoyment ofthe people's shared natural resources. The
Commonwealth Court's opinion laid aside these essential considerations and was
therefore in error.
The import ofcorrecting these errors cannot be understated. There is a
iei~soi.is~~~a3e
significant problem across the Commonwealth with municipalities enacting the
same types ofordinances at the local level that the Courts in Robinson Township
recognized as being unconstitutional. Despite the Act 13 decisions,many
municipalities have been enacting zoning provisions that are parallel to those that
had been contained in Act 13. There are also circumstances,such as this case,in
which municipalities must determine whether unconventional gas development is
similar to and compatible with uses in certain non-industrial districts. However,
municipalities are acting without considering whether the ordinance or approval in
question protects the health,safety, morals and public welfare ofall local citizens,
resulting in the improper exercise ofa municipality's police power in violation of
Article I, Section 1 ofthe Pennsylvania Constitution. Many ofthese ordinances
inject incompatible industrial uses into non-industrial districts,in violation of
municipalities' own comprehensive plans,and make the zoning schemes irrational,
in violation ofArticle I, Section 1 ofthe Pennsylvania Constitution. By placing
industrial uses next to homes,schools,and farms,they degrade the local
environment and public natural resources and infringe on rights protected by
Article I, Section 27 ofthe Pennsylvania Constitution.
Indeed,one ofthe problems with the Commonwealth Court's reliance on
past conditional use approvals to support a challenged approval is that it works a
defacto amendmentto the zoning ordinance by injecting industrial uses into non-
7
1675807.18/48436
industrial districts without changing the zoning to reflect the different character
and uses. A municipality could,to avoid the level ofpublic notice and opportunity
to be heard that comes with a zoning change,simply not update its ordinances to
address gas development,and instead,act as Fairfield Township has. The result is
the same —citizens'rights are unduly infringed upon in violation ofthe
Pennsylvania Constitution.
Aynici respectfully urge this Honorable Courtto correctthese errors so that
all citizens' constitutional rights are protected,not simply those who have a direct
economic interest in gas development.
167807.18/48436
III. ARGUMENT
A. Allowing Unconventional Gas Development in Non-Industrial
Zoning Districts Is an Abuse ofthe Police Power,Violates Basic
Constitutional Protections,and Is Inconsistent with This Court's Prior
Precedent
Municipal action that would allow unconventional natural gas development
("UNGD"),an industrial activity,in non-industrial zoning districts is inconsistent
with fundamental principles ofzoning law and runs afoul ofthe rights ofcitizens
under Article I, Sections 1 and 27 ofthe Pennsylvania Constitution.' The due
process protections ofArticle, Section 1 place a restraint on local government
police powers when exercised to affect the property rights ofresidents through
land use and zoning decisions. Chiefamong those restraints is the mandate that
land use and zoning decisions promote the public health,safety and general
It is amici's understanding thatthe original land use appeal made claims relative
to Article I, Sections 1 and 27 ofthe Pennsylvania Constitution. The trial court did
not address those arguments,and the Commonwealth Court dismissed those claims
summarily. Gorsline v.Bd.ofSupervisors ofFairfield Twp.,123 A.3d 1142, 1154
n.ll (Pa.Commw.Ct.2015).
However,as amici wi11 explain,one cannot so easily segregate constitutional
considerations when dealing with zoning ordinances because the standards used to
judge zoning ordinances —whether they unreasonably infringe on property rights
or individual environmental rights —flowfistfrom tl~e Pennsylvania Constitution.
The Municipalities Planning Code("MPC")adds"meat"to these standards,but
the basic standards we use in the substantive due process analysis flow from
judicial decisions interpreting whether a governmental action infringes on
protected constitutional rights. In this case,Fairfield Township's approval must be
judged againstthe township'szoning ordinance standards,the MPC,andthe
Pennsylvania Constitution.
9
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welfare ofallresidents.
1. Land UseDecision Makers MustBalance Constitutionally-
PYotected Rights andInterests
Municipalities must balance property rights with constitutionally-protected
rights to clean air and pure water,and with the rights ofpresent and future
generations to healthy public natural resources. Robinson Twp.,Delaware
Riverkeeper Network v. Com.("Robinson II"),83 Aid 901(Pa.2013). Likewise,
municipalities must balance the property rights ofallthose in a community,as all
community members —notjustthose with gas leases — have a right to the use and
enjoyment oftheir property. Fairfield Township granted conditional use approval
for an unconventional wellsite without due consideration to the impacts on
neighbors and the community at large. The decision unreasonably benefitted some
at the expense ofothers. In short,Fairfield Township gotthe balance wrong.
The constitutionality ofa zoning scheme as a whole rests on whether the
ordinance promotes the public health,safety,and welfare,and the provision or
action in question is substantially related to the purpose the ordinance seeks to
serve. Boundary Drive Assocs.v. Shrewsbury Twp.Bd.ofSupervisors,491 A.2d
86,90(Pa. 1985). As noted by the Commonwealth Courtin Robinson I,for
L,O111I1g `l0 ~[j(: GO11S`l.1lU~lOi1~Ii~ ii "I17iU~i ~ic C~t1iECiECi ~O'vVaiu t~12 iv^riiiTi'ullit`y' aS a `vViiv^~i~~
concerned with the public interest generally,andjustified by a balancing of
10
1675807.18/48436
community costs and benefits." Robinson Twp.v. Com.("Robinson I"),52 A.3d
463,483(Pa.Commw.Ct.2012)(quoting In re Realen Va11ey Fore Greenes
Assocs.,838 A.2d 718,728(Pa.2003)(emphasis added);see also Main St.Dev.
Grp.,Inc., 19 A.3d at 28(finding thatzoning requires a balancing ofthe needs of
varying uses).
As this Court has stated:
As regulations grounded in the delegated police power,
zoning must accomplish `an average reciprocity of
advantage' so-termed by Mr. Justice Holmes in
Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon, 260 U.S. 393, 415
(1922), by which `all property owners in a designated
area are placed under the same restrictions, not only for
the benefit ofthe municipality as a whole but also for the
common benefit ofone another.'
In re Realen Valle~Forge Greenes Assocs.,838 A.2d at 729(parallel citations
omitted)(quoting United Artists Theater Circuit,Inc. v. City ofPhila.,595 A.2d 6,
13(Pa. 1991)); see also Robinson I,52 A.3d at 482.
These same considerations are at play when municipalities make conditional
use or other zoning permitting decisions. A municipality must be mindful ofthe
interests ofall residents,notjustthe applicant and the property owner who might
financially benefit. When the municipality's focus narrows tojustthe interests ofa
1V ~~ 1.~1V 1 V~~~L `~~11t+ l~l~L 1V1V ~il 1 UlllllJl~ 1 V`~Y~11J111~/~ V~ll ~~+ N.ii 'Ut1~+v13J~1ti.~u~iC~:r`~.~ ~r
illegal"spot use." As explained in Robinson I,
11
1675807.18/48436
While in spotzoning the land is classified in a way that is
incompatible with the classification of the surrounding
land, the same unconstitutional infirmity exists here.
What we have under Act 13 is a"spot use" where oil and
gas uses are singled out for different treatment that is
incompatible with other surrounding permitted uses.
What the dissent ignores is that the sanctioning of"bad
planning" renders the affected local zoning ordinances
unconstitutionally irrational.
52 A.3d at485 n.23; see also id. at484 n.21("Whether you classify oil and gas
operations as a `pig in the parlor' or a `rose bush in a wheatfield,' it nonetheless
constitutes an unconstitutional `spot use."');In re Realen Valley Fore Greenes
Associates,838 A.2d 718,729(Pa.2003)("Spotzoning is the antithesis oflawful
zoning in this sense[ofa community-wide focus and balancing ofcosts and
benefits].In spotzoning,the legislative focus narrows to a single property and the
costs and benefits to be balanced are those ofparticular property owners."). Thus
whether enacting an ordinance or approving a use not provided for under an
ordinance,municipalities must keep all rights in mind. When the focus narrows,as
it did in Act 13,courts must invalidate the action in question. The focus na1-rowed
here tojustthe interests ofthe one set ofproperty owners in developing their land,
and thus the same result mustfollow.
2. This Courtand the Commonwealth CourtPreviously Found
~~~econ~Ei~iior~c~l vns~e~E~opm~~~t ~'~ ~'3E aY i:~~lu~t~it~d A~~ir~~:~ ''~~u~
I~Incompatibde wath 1lroaa-indaastrial UsesSucla thatPutting UNGD
in NonIndustrialAreas Violates ConstitutionalRights
12
167807.1x/4x436
The Commonwealth Court's decision below —finding that industrial shale
gas development is similar to and compatible with uses expressly permitted in a
Residential Agricultural District —conflicts with the prior decisions ofthis Court
and the Commonwealth Court in Robinson Township v. Commonwealth.
This Court and the Commonwealth Court both understood that injecting
industrial uses —gas development —into non-industrial districts violated basic
constitutional standards,like thosejust described above. Fairfield Township
contravened these same constitutional protections when it permitted Inflection's
unconventional gas wellsite in aresidential agricultural district.
A majority ofthejustices on this Court understood that UNGD is an
industrial use and is incompatible with non-industrial uses. Threejustices
described Act 13 as"a new regulatory regime permitting industrial uses as cc
mc~tte~ ofrightin every type ofpre-existing zoning district" and found thatthe
statute "is incapable ofconserving or maintaining the constitutionally-protected
aspects ofthe public environment and ofa certain quality oflife." Robinson II,83
A.3d at 979(plurality)(emphasis added). Justice Baer,in his concurrence with the
threejustice plurality opinion striking down Act 13,wrote that Act 13
expands private property rights by mandating that
iil~iViu~u2i 1ii'ut211C1~c"~ii~1~S ~~~'iiii~i, ~'21"L'~1'2j"~y' ~3y322Y~ ~~
residentially o~ ~rg~icultur~lly zoned a~e~s to bring oal
andgas operations onto them land. As Challengers duly
note, these industrial-like operations include blasting of
13
I67~807.18/48436
rock and other material, noise from the running of diesel
engines, sometimes nonstop for days, traffic from
construction vehicles, tankers, and other heavy-duty
machinery, the storage of hazardous materials, constant
bright lighting at night, and the potential for life- and
property-threatening explosions and gas well blowouts.
Id. at 1005(Baer,J., concurring). Justice Baerjoined in the result,adopting the
rationale ofthe Commonwealth Court,finding thatthe legislation failed on
substantive due process grounds under Article I, Section 1 ofthe Pennsylvania
Constitution.Id. at 1001(Baer,J., concurring).
In the Act 13 litigation,the Commonwealth Court likewise found thatthe
zoning provisions ofAct 13 made the local zoning schemes unconstitutionally
irrational by injecting industrial and therefore incompatible uses into non-industrial
districts not slated for such uses; allowing industrial uses in non-industrial districts
makes the very designation ofdistricts —the cornerstone ofzoning —irrational.
Robinson I,52 A.3d at 484-85;see also Swade v.Zoning Board ofAdj.of
Springfield Twp.,140 A.2d 597,598(Pa. 1958)("The very essence ofZoning is
the designation ofcertain areas for different use purposes."); Vill. ofBelle Terre v.
Boraas,416 U.S. 1,9(1974); Village ofEuclid,Ohio v. Ambler Realt~o.,272
U.S.365(1926). Act 13 also applied standards appropriate only in heavy
i31~liStiia~i Zv12~S iii i1luuStilui'~1S~S Y~~~~L~i iii i~Si`ua~iiti2ii c^iri~ c`3~ii~ult'u'rc`i~ ZvnP~ n~vt
to homes and schools,only exacerbating the incompatibility.Robinson I,52 A.3d
14
167807.18/48436
~ ~ ~~
Unconventional natural gas developmentis simply not"compatible" with
residential and agricultural development,and placing such development in non-
industrial areas upsets the fabric ofthe zoning scheme.See Robinson I,52 A.3d at
485 n.23("What we have under Act 13 is a `spot use' where oil and gas uses are
singled outfor different treatmentthat is incompatible with other surrounding
permitted uses.")
3. MunicipalAction thatAllowsIndustrial Uses in Non-
Indust~ialDistricts Despite theIncompatibility MakesZoning
Irrational
When local governments grant conditional use approvals or approve
ordinances that inject industrial uses into non-industrial districts,the same
constitutional infirmities arise as those that caused the downfall ofAct 13.
Allowing industrial development in a residential or agricultural district that is not
compatible with the other uses in the district makes the zoning unconstitutionally
irrational. See Robinson I,52 A.3d at 484-85 affd in dart,rev'd in part by 83 A.3d
901(Pa.2013); Main St.Dev.Grp.,Inc. v.Tinicum Twp.Bd.ofSupervisors, 19
A.3d 21,29(Pa.Commw.Ct.2011)(finding unconstitutional an ordinance
provision that"create[d] agricultural districts out ofdistricts with non-agricultural
statedpurposes...completely changing the expectations created by the Ordinance
in the non-agricultural districts")(emph. added);Hock v.Bd.ofSu~'rs ofMount
15
167807.18/48436
Pleasant Twp.,622 A.2d 431,434(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1993)(similar); com are Suhy
v.Zonin~Bd.ofAdjustment ofCity ofPhila., 169 A.2d 62(Pa. 1961)(finding gas
station owner not entitled to sell cars,trucks,and trailers on property zoned
commercial but bordered on three sides by residential uses due to potential
disruption ofcharacter ofthe area). Indeed,as the Commonwealth Court
succinctly noted in Robinson I,"Ifa municipality cannot constitutionally include
allowing oil and gas operations,it is no more constitutionaljust because the
Commonwealth requires that it be done."52 A.3d at485.
Shale gas wellsite development exposes residents,their children,pets,
livestock,and property to air pollution and industrial risks such as blowouts,spills,
water or soil contamination,and explosions. New wellpads allow for industrial
uses next door for many years to come as companies drill and frack wells,re-frack
old wells,and dri11 existing we11s deeper. Further,proliferation ofgas wellpads
means proliferation ofcompressor stations,pipelines,and processing facilities used
to transport and transform the gas into a marketable product. All these operations
threaten to disrupt open space preservation; degrade air quality; disruptthe
community's character;remove agricultural soils from future use by developing
over them;and contaminate agricultural soils and the water supplies relied on by
rural residents,farmers,and other businesses. In addition, wellsite activity
frequently occurs 24 hours a day,seven days a week during the drilling and
16
1675807.18/48436
fracking phases,exposing neighbors to loud noise,vibrations,and bright lights all
nightin a district where no other such operations are allowed. This can disrupt
sleep,children attempting to do homework,and enjoying a quiet evening at home
after a long day's work.
By allowing industrial shale gas development in non-industrial districts, and
where it may also conflict with the municipality's community development
objectives and/or comprehensive plan,a municipality's actions are arbitrary and
unconstitutional,as they establish an irrational zoning framework. See Robinson I,
52 A.3d at 484-85.
4. Allowing Unconventional GasDevelopmentIn Non-
InclustrialDistricts Unconstitutionally UpsetsResidents'Reasonable
Expectations
Municipalities that allow heavy industrial uses into zoning districts not
designed for any industrial uses at all also do so at the substantial risk ofunduly
upsetting the expectations oflocal citizens who purchased homes there in reliance
on the existing non-industrial districts,i.e.the existing zoning scheme. Allowing
industrial activity in non-industrial areas set aside for farming,schools,open space
preservation,and homes frequently conflicts with the very purposes ofthe districts
and unduly disrupts the expectations ofresidents who looked to the local zoning
scheme and made decisions based ~n it, believing thatthey and their families
would be protected from the dangers ofindustrial development in a residential
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agricultural area.
This concept—that a certain level ofdisruption to expectations can be
unconstitutional—wasaddressed in both Robinson I and Robinson II.Robinson I,
52 A.3d at 484(discussing reliance on zoning scheme and investment decisions);
Robinson II,83 A.3d 901 at974("The displacement ofprior planning,and
derivative expectations,regarding land use,zoning,and enjoyment ofproperty is
unprecedented.");978("The police power,broad as it may be,does not encompass
such authority to so fundamentally disruptthese expectations respecting the
environment.");979-80(plurality).
Likewise,in Main St.Dev. Grp.,Inc. v. Tinicum Twp.Bd.ofSupervisors,
19 A.3d 21,29(Pa.Commw.Ct.2011),the Commonwealth Court determined that
an overlay district designed to protect agricultural soils"effectively created]
agricultural districts out ofdistricts with non-agricultural stated purposes ...
completely changing the expectations created by the Ordinance in the non-
agricultural districts." Main Street, 19 A.3d at 29. The overlay"unreasonably
disturbed]expectations created by the existing zoning ordinance" and as a result,
this Court struck it down as invalid.Id. at 28-29.
In Robinson I,the Commonwealth Court determined that Section 3304 of
Act 13 did not promote the public interest because
[t]he public interest in zoning is in the development and
1675807.18/48436
use of land in a manner consistent with local
demographic and environmental concerns. 58 Pa.C.S. §
3304 requires zoning amendments that must be normally
justified on the basis that they are in accord with the
comprehensive plan, not to promote oil and gas
opeYations that are incompatible with the uses by people
who have made investment decisions regarding
businesses and homes on the assurance that the zoning
district would be developed in accordance with
comprehensive plan and would only allow compatible
uses.
Robinson I,52 A.3d at484(emphasis added).
An industrial unconventional gas wellsite next door to a person's home
abruptly upsets the expectations that accompany buying a home in a quiet,
residential or agricultural area. Instead,residents face industrial operations for
years to come;diminishing the value oftheir property;injecting a source of
industrial air pollution in an area in which there was no expectation ofsuch
activity. The incursion ofindustrial gas development subjects families to round-
the-clock lighting,flaring,truck traffic, dust,and noise,particularly during active
drilling and fracturing. With such activities comes a risk ofindustrial accidents that
will force residents to evacuate due to their proximity to the proposed site.
A municipality cannot,consistent with the Pennsylvania Constitution's
restraints on its authority,allow industrial gas development in non-industrial zones,
whether by way ofan ordinance or other municipal action,like a conditional use
approval.
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B. The Commonwealth Court's Decision Trangresses These
Established Principles,Threatening Citizens' Constitutional Rights
In reaching their respective decisions,the Fairfield Township Board of
Supervisors and the Commonwealth Cou1-t appear to have ignored the basic zoning
standards described above.The Commonwealth Court's reasoning is inconsistent
with these constitutional standards,including those applied in Robinson I and II.
The decision is also flawed because it fails to base its conclusions on the record
presented to the Board. By contrast,the trial court exercised appropriate appellate
review,having carefully reviewed the facts developed below to assess whether
there was substantial evidence to supportthe Board's decision.
The Commonwealth Court,however,appears to have bypassed this crucial
task,and instead, relied on its decision in MarkWest Liberty Midstream &Res.,
LLC v. Cecil Two.Zoning Hearing Bd.("MarkWest"),102 A.3d 549(Pa.
Commw.Ct.2014)reargument denied(Nov. 12,2014),appeal denied, 113 A.3d
281(Pa.2015).However,that case and the present matter differ in material
respects. MarkWestinvolved an industrial district and a compressor station; here,
there is a residential agricultural district and an unconventional gas wellsite. These
problems and their conflict with constitutional standards(and the ordinance itself
w~ii'~~ discussct~ ui~li~i b~ic,w.
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1. ThePennsylvania Constitution,the MPC,and theZoning
Scheme Define the Outer Bounds ofWhatCan be "Similar and
Compatible,"which the Co~zmonwealth GoutContravened
There are two primary sections ofthe Fairfield Township Zoning Ordinance
("Zoning Ordinance")that pertain to the conditional use standards for the approval
in question. The first is Section 14.2, which governs all conditional use approvals.
The second is Section 12.18,regarding"uses not provided for" under the Zoning
Ordinance. Section 12.18 requires conditional use approval for"a use[that]is
neither specifically permitted or denied."
In full, Section 12.18 ofthe Zoning Ordinance states:
Whenever, under this Ordinance, a use is neither
specifically permitted or denied, and an application is
made by an applicant to the Zoning Officer for such a
use, the Zoning Officer shall refer the application to the
Board ofSupervisors to hear and decide such request as a
conditional use. The Board of Supervisors shall have the
authority to permit the use or deny the use in accordance
with the standards governing conditional use applications
set forth in Section 14.2 of this Ordinance. In addition,
the use may only be permitted if:
12.18.1 It is similar to and compatible with the
other uses permitted in the zone where the subject
property is located;
12.18.2 It is not permitted in any other zone under
the terms ofthis Ordinance;and
12.18.3 It in no way is in conflict with the general
purposes ofthis Ordinance.
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The burden of proof shall be upon the applicant to
demonstrate that the proposed use meets the foregoing
criteria and would not be detrimental to the public health,
safety and welfare ofthe neighborhood where it is to be
located.
As discussed at length above,LJNGD is an industrial use and is not similar to
or compatible with residential and agricultural use,as this Court and the
Commonwealth Court recognized in Robinson I & II. See,~,Robinson I,52
A.3d at 484("Ifthe Commonwealth-proffered reasons are sufficient,then the
Legislature could make similar findings requiring coal portals,tipples, washing
plants,limestone and coal strip mines,steel mills,industrial chicken farms,
rendering plants and fireworks plants in residential zones for a variety ofpolice
power reasons advancing those interests in their development.It would allow the
proverbial `pig in the parlor instead ofthe barnyard."')
However,despite all this,the Commonwealth Courtreached the opposite
result. The Commonwealth Court relied heavily on the argumentthat Inflection's
proposed use need not be exactly like the use it was being compared to because the
ordinance requires,in part,thatthe use in question be "simzla~ to and compatible
with the other uses permitted in the zone." Section 12.18.1; Gorsline v. Board of
Sup'rs ofFairfield Tp., 123 A.3d 1142, 1152(Pa.Commw.Ct.2015)("It was not
necessary thatthe proposed use be the `same' as a permitted use but only that it be
`similar."').
22
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The Commonwealth Court's ultimate conclusion does not withstand
scrutiny. Just because gas extraction can be argued to be similar to a public
service facility in the abstract,it does notfollow thatthe result is correct under
constitutional standards and the zoning scheme. Whether something is"similar to
and compatible with" uses in a given district cannot be examined in the abstract,as
the Court did,but rather must be looked at within the confines ofconstitutional
standards designed to protect citizen's rights(e.g. Robinson I and II),the
ordinance,and the zoning scheme as a whole. Robinson I and II, and other case
law that has been discussed,are clear that inserting industrial uses like gas
development into non-industrial areas undermines the rationality of entire zoning
schemes because,among other reasons,"[t]he very essence ofZoning is the
designation ofcertain areas for different use purposes." Swade v.Zoning Bd.Of
Adjustment ofSpringfield Twp.,140 A.2d 597,598(Pa. 1958).
Stated differently,the comparison process is an exercise in"which one of
these things is most like the other,"to put a different spin on the old Sesame Street
song. And,in a way,this is whatzoning is all about —determining which land uses
definitely do not belong with each other,and which ones best belong with one
another(and in what parts ofthe municipality),and doing so to protect public
health,safety,and welfare,environmental rights,and public natural resources.
In this case,the Zoning Ordinance already determined that surface mining
23
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which is mope similar to gas extraction than a sewage pumping station2 — is not
'- Amici disagree with the trial court that gas extraction is not"surface mining"
under the Zoning Ordinance. It is not clear whether this matter is before this Court
because part ofdetermining whether the Township properly granted the
conditional use approval is to consider whether the proposed use(unconventional
gas wellsite)is already allowed in another district.
To the extent this is before this Court,it is clear that"surface mining"
includes the surface activities associated with unconventional natural gas
extraction(as opposed to,e.g., deviated or horizontal wellbores, which can extend
for miles underground).
The Zoning Ordinance defines"surface mining" as,in relevant part:
the extraction ofmineralsfrom the earth . . . or fiom
pits or bands by removing the stYata or mateYial which
overlies o~ is above or between them or otherwise
exposing and retrieving them from the surface, including
but not limited to strip, drift, and auger mining,dredging,
quarrying, leaching and activities related thereto, but not
including those mining operations carried out beneath the
surface by means ofshafts,tunnels,or other underground
mine openings."Surface mining" shall not include(i)the
extraction of minerals (other than anthracite and
bituminous coal) by a landowner for his own non -
commercial use from land owned or leased by him ....
Section 2.2(emphasis added). The ordinance is saying it does not regulate the part
ofextractive activity that happens underground,but merely the surface activities
(e.g. drilling rig and fracking equipment location). Indeed,"minerals" under the
ordinance is defined to include "natural gas." Thus,gas extraction involves
"extraction ofminerals from the earth" by removing rock from the ground to get to
the gas underneath("removing the strata or material which overlies...them").
Similarly,a coal tipple or prep plant would be included in this definition,butthe
underground tunnels(which could extend for miles)would not be. Any
ambiguities are to be interpreted in the landowner's favor, which would mean that
24
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compatible with the uses in the RA District because surface mining is only allowed
in the Industrial District. Even wind energy facilities —anothertype ofenergy
genet~ation —are permitted only in theIndustrial Distf~ict. Further,part ofthe
purpose ofthe Industrial District in Fairfield Township is to"protect commercial
and industrial development against intrusive uses which are incompatible with it."
Notably,mostresidential development is notallowed in theIndustrialDist~~ict,and
single family detached homes are conditional uses(not permitted by-right). While
agricultural development is allowed by-right, according to the purpose statement,it
is intended that such development be located in "floodplain areas and as an
accessory use to a commercial or industrial facility to maintain undeveloped or
buffer areas. A determination shall be made that the proposed agricultural use shall
have minimal impacts upon the existing development within close proximity to the
proposed use." Section 6.1 ofthe Zoning Ordinance.
The Court below appears to have completely skipped over the compatibility
requirement. The question is not what might be similar or compatible in theory.
The question is what is similar and compatible in the confines ofthe zoning
ordinance,the zoning scheme,the uses in question,the limits oflogic,and case
law like Robinson I& II that define the bounds ofcompatibility in an effort to
gas wells are allowed in the Industrial District. In turn,this means that they could
not be allowed to use Section 12.18 ofthe Zoning Ordinance.
25
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protect citizens' constitutional rights. Indeed,this Court's decision in Swade rings
true as to the danger ofthe Commonwealth Court's decision in this matter:
`If the appellant's first contention is the law, then the
whole plan and scheme ofZoning must be case aside
because business and industry could invade crny zone
just so long as it could be shown that the proposed use
would not adversely affect to any reasonable extent the
public health, s~cfety or morals. The statutory law of
zoning would be replaced by the law ofnuisance....
`The general scheme or plan ofzoning has been held to
be constitutional by our highest courts because it has a
definite relation to the public health, safety, morals and
welfare. It is in the interest ofpublic welfare that land in
a community be used and developed in an orderly
manner in accordance with a comprehensive plan.
`By its very nature zoning impinges upon the right of a
land owner to use his land in any way that he desire so
long as he does not unduly interfere with his neighbor's
right to use and enjoy his land. To this extent, zoning
imposes a hardship on every land owner subject to the
provisions of a zoning ordinance. It is a hardship,
however,made necessary by considerations ofthe public
welfare and is imposed by virtue ofthe police power.
. . If we were to hold that the Zoning Ordinance of
Springfield Township was unconstitutional as applied to
the appellant's property,then we would throw every zone
open to prohibited uses if it could be shown that the
prohibited use did not offend against the public health,
safety or morals, and we would in effect put an end to
allzoning.
Swade, 140 A.2d at 598(emphasis added);see also Robinson I,53 A.3d at 485
n.23("What we have under Act 13 is a"spot use" where oil and gas uses are
26
167807.18/48436
singled out for different treatmentthat is incompatible with other surrounding
permitted uses. Whatthe dissent ignores is thatthe sanctioning of`bad planning'
renders the affected local zoning ordinances unconstitutionally irrational.").
Provisions related to"comparable uses" and"uses-not-provided for," like
the one in question,are not designed to allow uses to go anywhere a person wants
to putthem,just like variances are not allowed to disruptthe zoning scheme as a
whole.3 They are not a means to allow industrial uses in districts not set aside for
3 There are two types ofvariances —use variances and other(usually dimensional)
variances. Use variances are usually significantly more difficult to obtain than
dimensional variances because use variances deal with the integrity ofthe zoning
scheme as a whole,and a rezoning or other zoning change may be necessary.
Robert S.Ryan,Pa.Zoning Law &Practice("Ryan on Zoning"),§§ 6.1.10,6.4.1
("[F]ew such variance applications can succeed short ofa showing thatthe
property has no reasonable value as zoned.");see also 53 P.S.§ 10916.1(a)(setting
forth curative amendment and validity challenge procedures for landowners whose
land is restricted).
However,in either situation,one requirement is that,ifgranted,the variance
will not disrupt the zoning scheme as a whole.Robinson I,52 A.3d at 481 n.20;
see also Ryan on Zoning,§§ 6.1.1 and 6.1.3(discussing inter alia that"too
specific" an action may result in the action being invalid as spotzoning);53 P.S.§
10910.2(a)(4)("That the variance,ifauthorized, will not alter the essential
character ofthe neighborhood or district in which the property is located,nor
substantially or permanently impair the appropriate use or development ofadjacent
property,nor be detrimental to the public welfare."). An applicant also mustshow
unique hardships that result due to the application ofthe ordinance to her property.
Variances.like the nonconforming use doctrine,are a sort of"escape valve"
to ensure that the zoning scheme achieves a general reciprocity ofadvantage across
all property owners subject to the zoning scheme,and does not unduly infringe on
constitutional rights. See also Ryan on Zoning,§ 6.1.1; Robinson I,52 A.3d at 481
n.20.
27
167807.18/48436
industrial activity,or as a way around potentially controversial zoning changes or
rezonings.4 These provisions are designed to account for uses that a municipality
did not originally contemplate,and to ensure that there is a process for fitting those
uses in(when they arise)into the spot where they make the most sense under the
zoningscheme as a whole and accounting for the rights ofall property owners
under Article I, Sections 1 and 27 ofthe Pennsylvania Constitution. To take any
other approach"would in effect put an end to all zoning." Swade,140 A.2d at 598.
Consequently,Inflection's unconventional gas wellsite cannot be permitted on the
Shaheen property.
4 This is partly why relying onpast approvals as a basis for allowing new approvals
is problematic. Just because something was approved in the past does not mean it
was legal or constitutional. The Commonwealth Court cites no evidence to
determine whether those past approvals were challenged. The trial court
references these past approvals,and notes thatthey were apparently further from
homes. In either case,simply because a municipality allows an incompatible use
in district illegally and no one challenges it does not mean future approvals must
be approved,which only further exacerbate the initial unconstitutional action.
Indeed,the RA District in Fairfield Township covers the largest land area in the
Township —thus,approving more and more industrial uses in the RA District
makes well over half(ifnot well over 75%)ofthe Township a defacto industrial
area without notice or opportunity to be heard for citizens.(Zoning Map). It also
belies any attempt to balance land uses and citizens' rights. Compare Main Street,
19 A:3~1 ~1;("there must be an appropriate balance in the zoning ordinance
between agricultural uses and development....[A]zoning ordinance that requires
between 95%and 97% ofthe land in the Township to be used for agricultural
purposes simply does not balance the need for development and agricultural
uses.").
28
167580718/48436
2. Unconventional GasDevelopment UsesArePrivate,For-
ProfitEnterprises,Are Notfor the Use orBenefitofthe General
Public, anc~Are NotLikePublicSeYvices Facilities
In addition to the issuesjust discussed,unconventional gas development
cannot be treated like public service facilities in zoning and land use decisions,
especially in residential and agricultural areas. Gas extraction(and transmission)
differs from public service facilities in many material respects. Analogizing gas
extraction to a public service facility like a power line,a sewage pumping station,
or a water treatment plantfundamentally disguises extractive activity as something
it is not. As noted already,under Fairfield Township's ordinance,"surface
mining"(the most analogous activity)is not permitted in the Residential
Agricultural("RA")District at all. Further,such a determination poses substantial
risks for municipalities seeking to cant'outtheir constitutional obligations and
protect the rights ofall citizens in their communities.
The court below,in analogizing a gas wellsite to a public service facility,
cited no facts in the record for its conclusion.' No facts were developed given
Inflection's contradictory statements. This creates the appearance thatthe Court
found as a mattes oflaw that gas development —industrial activity — is compatible
Indeed,the Commonwealth Court oddly took issue with the trial court's thorough
review ofwhether the Board's decision was supported by substantial evidence,
which is a part ofappellate review and which the Courtitselfdid in MarkWest,and
then came to a conclusion that was not supported at all by the record atthe hoard.
29
1675807.18/48436
with a RA District. Not only is this conclusion in direct conflict with Robinson
Twp.(which found the exact opposite)and the industrial nature ofshale gas
development(both discussed above),the legal implications for municipal
ordinances are extremely problematic.
Ifgas developmentis deemed compatible with residential development as a
matter oflaw,it will be precisely contrary to this Court and the Commonwealth
Court's decisions in Robinson I & II. Further,there are ongoing battles in the
lower courts over municipal ordinances that attemptto place gas development in
residential agricultural and agricultural areas. Industry will rely on the
Commonwealth Court's Gorsline decision to defend these ordinances,despite the
contrary authority ofRobinson I and II. Indeed,there are even those who argue
thatthese cases were only about who could zone(the state or local govermnents)
and not about constitutional limitations on zoning no matter who the decision
maker is. Such arguments are contrary to the express language ofboth Robinson I
and Robinson II and the fact thatthejudicial branch makes decisions based on law,
not on policy.
Also,ifGorsline stands,those municipalities that have appropriately zoned
UNGD and associated uses in industrial areas away from homes,schools,and
faz7ns and to balance all citizens'rights will risk challenges by industry similar to
what would have arisen under Act 13. This would be despite these municipalities
30
167 807.18/48436
focusing on the facts on the ground in the local community,including the zoning
scheme developed to protect and balance all citizens' rights. Ruling that
unconventional gas developmentis compatible with residential and agricultural
uses presents a threatto zoning ordinances that do not specifically address gas
development,as well as to ordinances that do limit gas developmentto certain
zones. Ifa gas wellsite is compatible with residential and agricultural activity as a
mattes oflaw in all circumstances,then once again,as under Act 13,zoning is
meaningless because any operator can either: 1)seek to insert a use in a non-
industrial district as a"comparable"or"compatible" use;or 2)challenge an
ordinance for being too restrictive because the ordinance allows gas development
only in industrial areas,away from homes,schools,and farms. Ifthe
Commonwealth Court's decision stands,industry is highly likely to challenge
ordinances for not allowing gas wellsites or other industrial gas development
where"public service facilities" are also located.
In addition,there is nothing"public" aboutthe wellsite proposed in Fairfield
Township. It is a private project,carried out by a private entity,for private
enrichment. The court below looked to the Township Zoning Ordinance definition
of"public service facility"to find thatInflection's wellsite constitutes a similar
use. The definition of"public service facility" is as follows:
Public Service Facility: The erection, construction,
J I
167807.18/48436
alteration, operation or maintenance of buildings, power
plants or substations, water treatment plants or pumping
stations; sewage disposal or pumping plants and other
similar public service structures by a utility, whether
publicly or privately owned, or by a municipal or other
governmental agency, including the furnishing of
electrical, gas, communication, water supply and sewage
disposal services
Section 2.2 ofthe Township Z.O.
Butthe Commonwealth Court failed to look to all applicable definitions.
The Township's Ordinance defines the "public"in "public service facility" as
"Something owned,operated,and supported by the community or the peoplefor
the use o~ benefitofthe geneYc~lpublic."ZONING ORDINANCE § 2.2(emphasis
added). There is nothing to indicate that Inflection's wellsite is for the use or
benefit ofthe general public.
It is asserted that the wellsite "will serve the general public by producing
natural gas for its use and consumption." Gorsline, 123 A.3d at 1150. Butthere is
no evidence in the record to support this. The gas produced may very well be sent
out-of-state,or even overseas,especially given the large number ofinterstate
pipeline projects currently proposed,some ofwhich will facilitate shipment of
natural gas overseas.6 Even assuming the gas produced was for the Pennsylvania
6 See Transcontinental GasPipeline Co. Appl.(Pt. 1)for proposed Atlantic Sunrise
Pipeline, at p.10(noting: Cabot Oil &Gas as largest customer,Inflection Energy
32
1675807.l8/48436
public's consumption,ifsuch a statement were sufficient to satisfy the"public
benefit"requirement,a local McDonalds or Wal-Mart would similarly be deemed
a public entity. Such an absurd result must be avoided.
Indeed,even the Pennsylvania Public Utility Code expressly excludes from
the definition of"public utility" the following:"Any producer ofnatural gas not
engaged in distributing such gas directly to the public for compensation."66
Pa.C.S.§ 102(2)(iii)(emph. added).
3. The Commonwealth Court's Analogy to MarkWestIsIn
Er~o~
The decision below relied improperly on an analogy to its decision in
MarkWest Liberty Midstream &Resources,LLC v. Cecil Township Zoning
Hearing Board,102 A.3d 549(Pa.Commw.Ct.2014),petition for allowance of
appeal denied, 113 A.3d 281(Pa.2015). This matter,and the MarkWest decision
are wholly different. First,the ordinances themselves are different. Second,the
activities are different. Here,the activity is unconventional gas wellsite
development. In MarkWest,it was a compressor station that was to be built.
(Intervenor)having bought capacity,and transport ofgas to Dominion
Transmission(which runs CovePoint export facility)),ht~p://elibrary-
backup.ferc.Gov/~dmws/common/Openl~Tat.as~:'fi1eI~=13 20971(downloads
PDF);htt~://pac~ficsummiten~r~y.coin/special-~ro'e~ cts/(describing Cabot's
contractto sell 350,000 NIBTU/day ofgas,for conversion to liquefied natural gas
at Cove Point export facility, and distribution to two Japanese coinpaniesj
~~~~
I67~807.18/48436
Wellsites and compressor stations are different in nature in that a wellsite involves
mineral extraction,whereas the purpose ofa compressor station is to facilitate the
transport and in some cases low-level processing ofthose minerals. As noted,
other extractive and energy generation activities in Fairfield Township(e.g. surface
mining, wind energy)are limited to the Industrial District.
Third,and equally crucial,the districts are different. MarkWestinvolved a
LightIndustrial District whereas Gorsline involves a Residential Agricultural
District. The expectations created by each are markedly different as far as what
intensity and type ofactivity a person could reasonably expectto locate in a district
with a light industrial character versus a residential agricultural character.
The Commonwealth Court's opinion in MarkWest relied heavily on an
analysis ofthe testimony and the ordinance provisions in Cecil Township,all of
which centered around a LightIndustrial District,including considering whether
the proposed use(a compressor station)would be ofthe wine general character of
other uses in that District,and was consistent with the purpose ofthat District also.
In contrast,the Court in Gorsline did nottake this same approach. In
Gorsline,the Courttook almostthe exact opposite approach,brushing over much
ofthe record and failing to carefully examine the language ofthe Fairfield
Township ordinance,which the trial court had done. Oddly,the Court chastised
the trial courtjudge for taking the same approach the Court itselftook in
34
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MarkWest,that is,reviewing the ordinance language in some cases word-by-word
and closely reviewing the evidence at the local zoning body. For instance,the
Commonwealth Courtfound that the proposed unconventional wellsite satisfies the
requirement to not conflict with the general purpose,but does not actually examine
the Zoning Ordinance purposes,enumerated in Section 1.4 ofthe Ordinance.
Gorsline v. Board ofSu~'rs ofFairfield Tp., 123 A.3d 1142, 1152-53(Pa.
Commw.Ct.2015). Instead,the Commonwealth Court pivots,noting that the
Ordinance directly authorizes mineral extraction,quotes the definition of"rural
resource area."Id. However,there is no evidence in the record that Inflection's
wellsite is in a"rural resource area."~
In contrast,the trial court reviewed both the purpose statement ofthe RA
District, and the uses allowed:
According to the clear language of Article 3 of the
ordinance, the RA district is generally intended for
application to rural development areas. The purpose of
the regulations for this district is to foster a quiet,
medium density residential environment while
encouraging the continuation of agricultural activities
and the preservation of prime farmland. Industrial uses
are discouraged in this district. Compatible public and
semipublic uses such as schools, churches and
recreational facilities are provided for. As well, a higher
Among other things,this is an area that must be designated as such in a
"municipal or multimunicipal plan." Section 2.2 ofthe Zoning Ordinance. The
comprehensive plan was not introduced as part ofthe record at the hearings below.
35
167~80718/48436
density residential development may be permitted under
certain circumstances. Ordinance,§ 3.1.
As set forth in Article 4 ofthe ordinance,the purpose of
the RA district is to encourage the continued use ofareas
of the Township for rural living including open space,
agricultural and residential uses. Such uses typically do
not require public utilities or community services. Uses
which specify the provision of community or public
utilities may be feasible in certain locations in the
Township provided that the developer is able to furnish
the necessary utility infrastructure. Ordinance,§ 4.1.
Gorsline,et al. v.Bd.ofSup'rs ofFairfield Twp.,No. 14-000130,at pp.13-14
(Lycoming Cty. Ct.ofCmmn.Pleas,Aug.29,2014)(emph.added).$ It also
focused on the language ofthe Ordinance that requires there be"in no way"a
conflict between the allowance ofa use and the general purposes ofthe Ordinance.
Id. at p.17.
The trial court also reviewed the body oftestimony from the hearings,
including Inflection's largely conclusory and/or conflicting statements that
Inflection offered to supportthe nature ofits proposed activity. This is a necessary
discussion not simply to determine whether the Township's decision was
8 It also appears thatthe Ordinance only contemplated "public service facilities" in
the RA District to the extentthat new,larger residential development was entering
the area(as opposed to places that rely on private water and sewer).
1675807.18/48436
supported by substantial evidence.9 An applicant for a special exception or
conditional use permit also bears the initial burden to"show[]compliance with all
the objective requirements ofthe zoning ordinance."Elizabethtown/Mt. Joy
Associates,L.P. v. Mount Joy Twp.Zoning Hearing Bd•,934 A.2d 759,764(Pa.
Commw.Ct.2007). "The standard to be observed by the[Board]is whether the
plan as submitted complies with specific ordinance requirements at tl~e time the
plan comes before it." Id. at 765. Among these requirements,the applicant must
show that it meets"[t]he kind ofuse ... i.e.,the threshold definition ofwhatis
authorized as a special exception" or conditional use.10 Bray v.Zoning Bd.of
Adjustment,410 A.2d 909,911 (Pa.Commw.Ct. 1980)(emphasis added). The
9In other words,it is difficult to determine whether substantial evidence exists by
simply zeroing in on one ortwo statements by an applicant,as the rest ofwhat an
applicant(or protestants)has said may actually show thatthose two statements are
wrong. Indeed,this Court has stated,"By `substantial evidence' we mean such
relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a
conclusion." Valley View Civic Assn v.Zoning Bd.ofAdjustment,462 A.2d 637,
640(Pa. 1983). It is difficult to see how a reasonable mind could accept as
adequate internally-inconsistenttestimony by an applicant, much less mere
statements thatthe applicant"believes"its use to be compatible with the ordinance,
as the trial court noted here. In an effort to reach the conclusion that it did,the
Commonwealth Court conflated normal appellate review with credibility
determinations.
to A conditional use and special exception differ only in that the governing body
decides conditional use applications and azoning hearing board decides special
exception applications. The standards for such decisions,including burdens of
proof,are the same.
J7
1675807.18/48436
applicant must show"not only thatthe proposed use was ofa type permitted by
special exception but also thatthe proposed use complied with the otheY
applicable requirements ofthe ordinance which expressly govern such a grant."
Shamah v.Hellam Twp.Zoning Hearing Bd.,648 A.2d 1299, 1303(Pa.Commw.
Ct. 1994)(emphasis added). Importantly,"[o]ur cases have repeatedly made clear
thatthe applicant has both the persuasion burden and the initial evidence
presentation duty to show that the proposal complies with the `terms ofthe
ordinance' which expressly govern such a grant." Bray,410 A.2d at 910(emphasis
added). Where an applicant does not demonstrate with evidence(rather than
promises or beliefs)that it meets the requirements ofthe ordinance,the application
should be denied. See Elizabethtown/Mt. Joy Associates,L.P.,934 A.2d 759;
Keystone Chem.Co.,Inc. v.Zoning Hearing Bd.ofButler Twp.,494 A.2d 1158
(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1985),Appeal ofBaird,537 A.2d 976(Pa. Cornrow. Ct. 1988).
"Evidence is not a `promise'that the applicant will comply because that is a legal
conclusion the Board makes once it hears whatthe applicant intends to do and then
determines whether it matches the requirements set forth in the ordinance."
Edgmont Twp.v. Springyton Lake Montessori Sch.,Inc.,622 A.2d 418,419(Pa.
Commw.Ct. 1993). Furthermore,"[a]self-serving declaration ofa future intent to
comply[with a zoning ordinance]is not sufficient to establish compliance with the
criteria contained in the ordinance."Id. at 420.
38
167~2iU7.I /4x436
Ifappellate review is to be meaningful,an inquiry into the record by the
reviewing court — as the trial court did — is necessary to determine whether
substantial evidence actually exists to supportthe factual conclusions ofa zoning
hearing board or governing body. This includes whether the applicant met its
initial burden for demonstrating its activity falls within the definition ofsomething
allowed by conditional use,and meets the criteria set forth in the ordinance." The
Courts ofthis Commonwealth have never shied away from their responsibility to
tell a municipality that it got it wrong in its decision. See,~,Main Street, 19
A.3d 21;Baker v. Chartiers Twp.Zoning Hearing Bd•,677 A.2d 1274(Pa.
Commw.Ct. 1996)(both ordinance challenges). The Court's solution to
compatibility was to focus on the conditions the Board imposed on the operation,
which while relevant to whether a conditional use should issue(rather than be
denied),avoids the actual question ofwhether an industrial use should be going
1'To the extent an applicant meets its burden,the burden then shifts to objectors
"to raise specific issues concerning health,safety and general welfare." Butler v.
Derr Flooring Co.,285 A.2d 538,542(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1971). In situations like
Fairfield Township,the ordinance in Section 12.18 appears to place the burden on
the applicantto prove thatthe proposed use not provided for"would not be
detrimental to the public health,safety and welfare ofthe neighborhood where it is
to be located." Thus,after objectors raise specific issues,"then the burden would
rnntini~P to hP Sz~ith the ar»,~lirant" ~x~hn "~x~n~ilr~ 1JP t'P(~1711Y'PC~ t(1 C`(lYY1P f(11'W?YC~ t(1
meetthe objections so as to show thatthe intended use would not violate the
health,safety and general welfare ofthe community with relation to such
objections." Butler,285 A.2d at 542;see also Bray,410 A.2d at 912.
39
167807.18/48436
into a residential district in the first place. This again creates the same problems
that Act 13 created —putting industrial uses in non-industrial areas so that there's a
pig in the parlor that everyone has to be concerned about managing,when the idea
was that no one would have to think aboutthe management because ofthe nature
ofthe zoning district. See Robinson I,52 A.3d at484 n.22.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons,Amici respectfully requestthatthe Court reverse
the decision ofthe Commonwealth Court.
40
I67i807.13/48436
Respectfully submitted,
Date: August 1,2016
/s/ Jordan B.Yeager
Jordan B.Yeager
PA ID No.72947
Lauren M.Williams
PA ID No.311369
Curtin & Heefner LLP
2005 S.Easton Rd.,Ste.
Doylestown,PA 18901
Tel.:(267)898-0570
Fax:(215)340-3929
jby@curtinheefner.com
lmw@curtinheefner.com
Joseph Otis Minott
PA ID No.36463
Exec.Dir.&Chief
Counsel
Aaron Jacobs-Smith
100 PA ID No.319760
Clean Air Council
135 S. 19th St., Ste.300
Philadelphia,PA 19103
Tel.:(215)567-4004
Fax:(215)567-5791
joe_minott@cleanair.org
ajs@cleanair.org
Counselfog Amicus Cuf~iae Counselfog Amicus
Delaware Riverkeepe~ Curiae Clean Air
Network Council
41
Adam Kron
D.C.ID No.992135
Senior Attorney
EnvironmentalIntegrity Project
1000 Vermont Ave.NW,Ste.
1100
Washington,D.C. 20005
Tel:(202)263-4451
Fax:(202)296-8822
akron@environmental
integrity.org
Counselfog^Amicus Curiae
EnvironmentalIntegf~ity
PNoject
167~807.I8/48436
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
The undersigned hereby certifies that a true and correct copy ofthe
foregoing was served on this date to the following:
Via Electronic Service
Susan J. Smith,Esq.
The Law Office ofSusan J. Smith
2807 Market Street
Camp Hill,PA 17011
Timothy A.Schoonover,Esq.
Blaine A.Lucas,Esq.
Krista-Ann M.Staley,Esq.
Babst,Calland,Clements & Zomnir,P.C.
Two Gateway Center,6th Floor
Pittsburgh,PA 15222
George Jugovic,Jr., ChiefCounsel
Citizens for Pennsylvania's Future
200 First Avenue,Suite 200
Pittsburgh,PA 15222
James Michael Wiley,Esq.
McCormick Law Firm
835 W.4t'' Street,PO Box 577
Williamsport,PA 17701
Michael Helbing,StaffAttorney
Citizens for Pennsylvania's Future
West Market Street,Suite 901
Wilkes-Barre,PA 18701
Via Fist Class Mail
Joshua Joseph Cochran,Esq.
Schemery Zicolello,P.C.
333 Market Street
Williamsport,PA 17701-6329
Date: 8/1/2016
/s/Jo~~dan B. Yea~e~
Jordan B.Yeager,Esquire
Pa.I.D.No.72947
Curtin & Heefner LLP
2005 S.Easton Road,Suite 100
Doylestown,PA 18901
(267)898-0570
JBY@curtinheefner.com
167862.1/48436
Counselfog Amicus Curiae Delaware
Rivef~keepe~ Network
167~862.I/48436

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Supreme Court hears arguments on zoning for gas development

  • 1. IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA No.67 MAP 2016 BRIAN GORSLINE,DAWN GORSLINE,PAUL BATKOWSKI,&MICHELE BATKOWSKI Appellants v. BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF FAIRFIELD TOWNSHIP Appellees INFLECTION ENERGY,LLC,&DONALD H.AND ELEANOR R.SHAHEEN Intervenors BRIEF OFAMICICURIAEDELAWARE RIVERKEEPER NETWORK, CLEAN AIR COUNCIL,&ENVIRONMENTALINTEGRITY PROJECT IN SUPPORT OF APPELLANTS Appeal of: Brian Gorsline,Dawn Gorsline,Paul Batkowski &Michele Batkowski from the Opin.&Order ofthe Commonwealth Court entered Sept. 14,2015 at No. 1735 CD 2014 Jordan B.Yeager PA ID No.72947 Lauren M.Williams Curtin & Heefner LLP 2005 S.Easton Rd.,Ste. 100 Doylestown,PA 18901 Tel.:(267)898-0570 Joseph Otis Minott PA ID No.36463 Exec.Dir.&ChiefCounsel Aaron Jacobs-Smith Clean Air Council 135 youth 19th St., ate.300 Philadelphia,PA 19103 Tel.:(215)567-4004 COUNSEL FOR AMICICURIAE Adam Kron D.C.ID.No.992135 Senior Attorney Environmental Integrity Project lOt~O Vermont~~~e.I~V6', Ste. 1100 Washington,D.C.20005 Tel:(202)263-4451 1675818.1/48436 Received 8/1/2016 4:08:10 PM Supreme Court Middle District
  • 2. TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF CONTENTS...................................:....................................................... i TABLE OF AUTHORITIES...................................................................................iii I. STATEMENT OF INTEREST......................................................................... 1 II. INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT............................... 5 III. ARGUMENT...................................................................................................9 A. Allowing Unconventional Gas Developmentin Non-Industrial Zoning Districts Is an Abuse ofthe Police Power,Violates Basic Constitutional Protections,and Is Inconsistent with This Court's Prior Precedent......................9 1. Land Use Decision Makers Must Balance Constitutionally-Protected Rights and Interests......................................................................................... 10 2. This Court and the Commonwealth CourtPreviously Found Unconventional Gas Development To Be an Industrial Activity That Is Incompatible with Non-industrial Uses Such that Putting LTNGD in Non- Industrial Areas Violates Constitutional Rights ............................................. 12 3. l~~unicipal ~ctior~ that ~ll~vi~s Industrial Uses in Non-Industrial T~is~rict~ Despite the Incompatibility MakesZoning Irrational..................................... 15 1675807.18/48436
  • 3. 4. Allowing Unconventional Gas DevelopmentIn Non-Industrial Districts Unconstitutionally Upsets Residents'Reasonable Expectations.................... 17 B. The Commonwealth Court's Decision Trangresses These Established Principles,Threatening Citizens' Constitutional Rights..................................... 20 1. The Pennsylvania Constitution,the MPC,and the Zoning Scheme Define the Outer Bounds ofWhat Can be"Similar and Compatible," which the Commonwealth Court Contravened ............................................................... 21 2. Unconventional Gas Development Uses Are Private,For-Profit Enterprises,Are Notfor the Use or Benefit ofthe General Public,and Are Not Like Public Services Facilities................................................................. 29 3. The Commonwealth Court's Analogy to Ma~kWestIs In Error............. 33 IV. CONCLUSION..............................................................................................40 Certificate ofService ~~ 1675807.18/48436
  • 4. TABLE OF AUTHORITIES Cases: Appeal ofBaird, 537 A.2d 976(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1988).................................................................38 Baker v. Chartiers Twp.Zoning Hearing Bd., 677 A.2d 1274(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1996)...............................................................39 Boundary Drive Assocs. v. Shrewsbury Twp.Bd.ofSupervisors, 491 A.2d 86(Pa. 1985).........................................................................................10 Bray v.Zoning Bd.ofAdjustment, 410 A.2d 909(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1980).....................................................37, 38,39 Butler v. Derr Flooring Co., 285 A.2d 538(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1971).................................................................39 Ed~mont Twp.v. Springton Lake Montessori Sch.,Inc., 622 A.2d 418(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1993).................................................................38 Elizabethtown/Mt. Joy Associates,L.P. v. Mount Joy Twp.Zoning Hearing Bd., 934 A.2d 759(Pa.Commw.Ct.2007)...........................................................37,38 Gorsline v.Bd.ofSupervisors ofFairfield Twp., 123 A.3d 1142(Pa.Commw.Ct.2015)........................................................passim Gorsl ne,et a1. v.Bd.ofSup'rs ofFairfield Two.,No. 14-000130 (Lycoming Cty. Ct.ofCmmn.Pleas,Aug.29,2014)..........................................36 Hock v.Bd.ofSup'rs ofMountPleasant Twp., 622 A.2d 431(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1993).................................................................15 In re Realen Valley Forge Greenes Assocs., 838 A.2d 718(Pa.2003).................................................................................11, 12 Keystone Chem.Co.,Inc. v.Zoning Hearing Bd.ofButler Twp., 494 A.2d 1158(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1985)...............................................................38 iii 1b7`JS~~.Ig%4g4.ib
  • 5. Main St.Dev.Gi-p.,Inc. v. Tinicum Twp.Bd.ofSupervisors("Main Street"), 19 A.3d 21(Pa.Commw.Ct.2011)....................................................15, 18,28,39 MarkWest Liberty Midstream &Res.,LLC v. Cecil Twp.Zoning Hearing Bd. ("MarkWest"),102 A.3d 549(Pa.Commw.Ct.2014)................20,29,33,34,35 Pennsylvania Coal Co.v. Mahon, 260 U.S.393(1922)..............................................................................................11 Robinson Township,Delaware Riverkeeper Network,et al. v. Commonwealth ("Robinson II"~,83 A.3d 901 (Pa.2013).......................................................passim Robinson Twp.v. Com.~"Robinson I"~, 52 A.3d 463(Pa.Commw.Ct.2012).............................................................passim Shamah v. Hellam Two.Zoning Hearing Bd., 648 A.2d 1299,(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1994)..............................................................38 Suhy v.Zoning Bd.ofAdjustment ofCity ofPhila., 169 A.2d 62(Pa. 1961).........................................................................................16 Swade v.Zoning Board ofAdj.ofSpringfield Twp., 140 A.2d 597(Pa. 1958).....................................................................14, 23,26,28 United Artists Theater Circuit,Inc. v. City ofPhila., 595 A.2d 6(Pa. 1991)...........................................................................................11 Valley View Civic Assn v.Zoning Bd.ofAdjustment, 462 A.2d 637(Pa. 1983).......................................................................................37 Vill. ofBelle Terre v. Boraas, 416 U.S. 1 (1974)..................................................................................................14 Village ofEuclid,Ohio v. Ambler Realty Co., 272 U.S.365(1926)..............................................................................................14 ~v 1ti7~8u7.1$l4843ti
  • 6. Constitutional Provisions: Pa. Const. art. I,§ 1.................................................................................7,9, 14,28 Pa. Const. art. I,§ 27.................................................................................2, 7,9,28 Other: Robert S.Ryan,Pa.Zoning Law &Practice("Ryan on Zoning").......................27 v 1ti7580718i4843o
  • 7. I. STATEMENT OFINTEREST Amici Delaware Riverkeeper Network("DRN")and Clean Air Council(the "Council")are Pennsylvania-based environmental non-profits with strong ties to local Pennsylvania communities. These amid have active cases before the Pennsylvania courts involving the same—or related issues as those in this matter. Amicus EnvironmentalIntegrity Project("EIP")is a national non-profit with locations in Pennsylvania that has also worked on zoning issues similar to those in this matter. Amici have long-standing interests in the health and wellbeing of Pennsylvania residents,and are committed to preserving and protecting Pennsylvania's natural resources. Amici have a specific interest in ensuring that municipal-level land use and zoning ordinances regulate oil and gas development in a manner that serves all residents in the community,and thatthey are carried out in a manner that is consistent with existing restrictions that protect agricultural and open space areas and provide for responsible,orderly development. DRN is anon-profit organization established in 1988 to protect and restore the Delaware River,its associated watershed,tributaries,and habitats. DRN also works in communities outside the Delaware River watershed to support organization members with shared interests in protecting water quality,quality of life, public trust resources,and the constitutionally-protected environmental rights in members'communities. 1675807.18id8~}3b
  • 8. DRN was an integral party to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's decision in Robinson Township Delaware Riverkee~er Network,et al. v. Commonwealth,83 A.3d 901(Pa.2013),which recognized the significant rights protected under Article I,Section 27 ofthe Pennsylvania Constitution and reaffirmed that all citizens have an inalienable right to a clean and healthy environment. DRN established a new initiative,For The Generations,to: 1)ensure that the Pennsylvania Environmental Rights Amendment is further strengthened in the wake ofthe Robinson Township,Delaware Riverkeeper Network decision;2) pursue and secure constitutional protection ofenvironmental rights in states across the nation;3)pursue and secure recognition ofenvironmental rights at the federal level through constitutional amendment;and 4)ensure governments at the local level,state level,and federal level honor the rights ofall people to pure water, clean air and healthy environments in the laws they enact,the decisions they make, and the actions they pursue. As a result,DRN works with and supports local groups who are fighting to protect their communities and their constitutional rights to a clean and healthy place in which to live, work and recreate. For example,DRN has partnered with Clean Air Council and members ofthe Mars Parent Group and in Middlesex Township,Butler County to challenge zoning changes which would allow drilling in over 90% ofthe Township,including near the Mars Area School District 2 1675807.18/48436
  • 9. campus. The zoning changes also placed compressor stations in non-industrial areas near farms and homes. The Council is atax-exempt non-profit organization was established in 1967 under the laws ofPennsylvania,with a mission to protect everyone's right to breathe clean air. The Council has members and supporters throughoutthe Commonwealth. The Council fights to improve air quality across Pennsylvania through public education,community organizing,and litigation. The Council is a founding member ofProtect Our Children,a coalition of parents,concerned citizens,and advocacy organizations,dedicated to protecting school children from the health risks ofshale gas drilling and infrastructure. EIP is a national nonprofit organization founded in 2002 with staffin Washington,D.C.,Austin(Texas),western Pennsylvania,and Philadelphia. EIP is dedicated to advocating for more effective enforcement ofenvironmental protections. Since its founding,EIP has worked to help and protect Pennsylvania communities from the effects ofheavy industry and energy production,including oil and gas development and production; natural gas processing plants,oil refineries,and petrochemical facilities; coal-fired power plants; and coal ash landfills. In response to the recent weakening ofzoning ordinances in municipalities across Pennsylvania,which would allow increased oil and gas development and heavy industry in incompatible districts,EIP's attorneys and 1675307.18/48436
  • 10. Pennsylvania organizer have worked to address this trend through a combination of legal challenges and community organizing. In 2014,EIP filed a substantive validity challenge on behalfofsix residents ofRobinson Township,Washington County,Pennsylvania,with respectto a revised ordinance that allows oil and gas development in every zoning district, whether industrial, agricultural,or residential. :! 1675807.18/48436
  • 11. II. INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT Amici urge this Honorable Courtto reverse the decision ofthe Commonwealth Court. The Commonwealth Court's decision,like Act 13 of2012, makeszoning irrational by allowing the injection ofindustrial oil and gas land uses into non-industrial zoning districts. The Court below did so without any substantial evidence in the record created atthe Fairfield Township Board of Supervisors' conditional use hearing. The Commonwealth Court's decision below — finding that industrial shale gas development is similar to and compatible with uses expressly permitted in a Residential Agricultural District —conflicts with the prior decisions ofthis Court and the Commonwealth Court in Robinson Townshi v. Commonwealth. Allowing unconventional gas development in residential agricultural districts is inconsistent with the purposes ofsuch districts,existing development patterns,residents' expectations,and the protection ofour shared natural resources. As a result,such actions —and ordinance provisions that provide for similar expansions —are arbitrary and unreasonable,and bear no substantial relation to protecting the public health,safety and welfare. Shale gas wellsite development exposes residents,their children,pets,livestock,and property to air pollution and industrial 1•isks such as blowouts,spills, water or soil contamination,and explosions. New wellpads allow for industrial uses next door for many years to 5 167807.18/48436
  • 12. come,in contrast to expectations created by the existing zoning that such areas would be for homes,farms,or schools. The courts,when interpreting and applying zoning ordinances, must be guided by Robinson Township v. Commonwealth and the long line ofzoning cases thatrecognize constitutional limitations on governmental action. These constitutional limitations define the outer bounds ofwhat is"similar and compatible" with another activity in a given zoning district. The Commonwealth Court's decision transgressed these bounds,as well as the bounds set by the zoning scheme in Fairfield Township itself. Indeed,as this Court and the Commonwealth Court understood when striking down Act 13,what is"similar and compatible" cannot be analyzed or pronounced in a vacuum. It must be understood and applied within the context of local citizens' reciprocal rights to the use and enjoyment oftheir property. It must be understood and applied consistent with residents' rights"to clean air, pure water,and to the preservation ofthe natural,scenic,historic,and esthetic values of the environment." It must be understood and applied consistent with residents' rights to the enjoyment ofthe people's shared natural resources. The Commonwealth Court's opinion laid aside these essential considerations and was therefore in error. The import ofcorrecting these errors cannot be understated. There is a iei~soi.is~~~a3e
  • 13. significant problem across the Commonwealth with municipalities enacting the same types ofordinances at the local level that the Courts in Robinson Township recognized as being unconstitutional. Despite the Act 13 decisions,many municipalities have been enacting zoning provisions that are parallel to those that had been contained in Act 13. There are also circumstances,such as this case,in which municipalities must determine whether unconventional gas development is similar to and compatible with uses in certain non-industrial districts. However, municipalities are acting without considering whether the ordinance or approval in question protects the health,safety, morals and public welfare ofall local citizens, resulting in the improper exercise ofa municipality's police power in violation of Article I, Section 1 ofthe Pennsylvania Constitution. Many ofthese ordinances inject incompatible industrial uses into non-industrial districts,in violation of municipalities' own comprehensive plans,and make the zoning schemes irrational, in violation ofArticle I, Section 1 ofthe Pennsylvania Constitution. By placing industrial uses next to homes,schools,and farms,they degrade the local environment and public natural resources and infringe on rights protected by Article I, Section 27 ofthe Pennsylvania Constitution. Indeed,one ofthe problems with the Commonwealth Court's reliance on past conditional use approvals to support a challenged approval is that it works a defacto amendmentto the zoning ordinance by injecting industrial uses into non- 7 1675807.18/48436
  • 14. industrial districts without changing the zoning to reflect the different character and uses. A municipality could,to avoid the level ofpublic notice and opportunity to be heard that comes with a zoning change,simply not update its ordinances to address gas development,and instead,act as Fairfield Township has. The result is the same —citizens'rights are unduly infringed upon in violation ofthe Pennsylvania Constitution. Aynici respectfully urge this Honorable Courtto correctthese errors so that all citizens' constitutional rights are protected,not simply those who have a direct economic interest in gas development. 167807.18/48436
  • 15. III. ARGUMENT A. Allowing Unconventional Gas Development in Non-Industrial Zoning Districts Is an Abuse ofthe Police Power,Violates Basic Constitutional Protections,and Is Inconsistent with This Court's Prior Precedent Municipal action that would allow unconventional natural gas development ("UNGD"),an industrial activity,in non-industrial zoning districts is inconsistent with fundamental principles ofzoning law and runs afoul ofthe rights ofcitizens under Article I, Sections 1 and 27 ofthe Pennsylvania Constitution.' The due process protections ofArticle, Section 1 place a restraint on local government police powers when exercised to affect the property rights ofresidents through land use and zoning decisions. Chiefamong those restraints is the mandate that land use and zoning decisions promote the public health,safety and general It is amici's understanding thatthe original land use appeal made claims relative to Article I, Sections 1 and 27 ofthe Pennsylvania Constitution. The trial court did not address those arguments,and the Commonwealth Court dismissed those claims summarily. Gorsline v.Bd.ofSupervisors ofFairfield Twp.,123 A.3d 1142, 1154 n.ll (Pa.Commw.Ct.2015). However,as amici wi11 explain,one cannot so easily segregate constitutional considerations when dealing with zoning ordinances because the standards used to judge zoning ordinances —whether they unreasonably infringe on property rights or individual environmental rights —flowfistfrom tl~e Pennsylvania Constitution. The Municipalities Planning Code("MPC")adds"meat"to these standards,but the basic standards we use in the substantive due process analysis flow from judicial decisions interpreting whether a governmental action infringes on protected constitutional rights. In this case,Fairfield Township's approval must be judged againstthe township'szoning ordinance standards,the MPC,andthe Pennsylvania Constitution. 9 I67~307.18/48436
  • 16. welfare ofallresidents. 1. Land UseDecision Makers MustBalance Constitutionally- PYotected Rights andInterests Municipalities must balance property rights with constitutionally-protected rights to clean air and pure water,and with the rights ofpresent and future generations to healthy public natural resources. Robinson Twp.,Delaware Riverkeeper Network v. Com.("Robinson II"),83 Aid 901(Pa.2013). Likewise, municipalities must balance the property rights ofallthose in a community,as all community members —notjustthose with gas leases — have a right to the use and enjoyment oftheir property. Fairfield Township granted conditional use approval for an unconventional wellsite without due consideration to the impacts on neighbors and the community at large. The decision unreasonably benefitted some at the expense ofothers. In short,Fairfield Township gotthe balance wrong. The constitutionality ofa zoning scheme as a whole rests on whether the ordinance promotes the public health,safety,and welfare,and the provision or action in question is substantially related to the purpose the ordinance seeks to serve. Boundary Drive Assocs.v. Shrewsbury Twp.Bd.ofSupervisors,491 A.2d 86,90(Pa. 1985). As noted by the Commonwealth Courtin Robinson I,for L,O111I1g `l0 ~[j(: GO11S`l.1lU~lOi1~Ii~ ii "I17iU~i ~ic C~t1iECiECi ~O'vVaiu t~12 iv^riiiTi'ullit`y' aS a `vViiv^~i~~ concerned with the public interest generally,andjustified by a balancing of 10 1675807.18/48436
  • 17. community costs and benefits." Robinson Twp.v. Com.("Robinson I"),52 A.3d 463,483(Pa.Commw.Ct.2012)(quoting In re Realen Va11ey Fore Greenes Assocs.,838 A.2d 718,728(Pa.2003)(emphasis added);see also Main St.Dev. Grp.,Inc., 19 A.3d at 28(finding thatzoning requires a balancing ofthe needs of varying uses). As this Court has stated: As regulations grounded in the delegated police power, zoning must accomplish `an average reciprocity of advantage' so-termed by Mr. Justice Holmes in Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon, 260 U.S. 393, 415 (1922), by which `all property owners in a designated area are placed under the same restrictions, not only for the benefit ofthe municipality as a whole but also for the common benefit ofone another.' In re Realen Valle~Forge Greenes Assocs.,838 A.2d at 729(parallel citations omitted)(quoting United Artists Theater Circuit,Inc. v. City ofPhila.,595 A.2d 6, 13(Pa. 1991)); see also Robinson I,52 A.3d at 482. These same considerations are at play when municipalities make conditional use or other zoning permitting decisions. A municipality must be mindful ofthe interests ofall residents,notjustthe applicant and the property owner who might financially benefit. When the municipality's focus narrows tojustthe interests ofa 1V ~~ 1.~1V 1 V~~~L `~~11t+ l~l~L 1V1V ~il 1 UlllllJl~ 1 V`~Y~11J111~/~ V~ll ~~+ N.ii 'Ut1~+v13J~1ti.~u~iC~:r`~.~ ~r illegal"spot use." As explained in Robinson I, 11 1675807.18/48436
  • 18. While in spotzoning the land is classified in a way that is incompatible with the classification of the surrounding land, the same unconstitutional infirmity exists here. What we have under Act 13 is a"spot use" where oil and gas uses are singled out for different treatment that is incompatible with other surrounding permitted uses. What the dissent ignores is that the sanctioning of"bad planning" renders the affected local zoning ordinances unconstitutionally irrational. 52 A.3d at485 n.23; see also id. at484 n.21("Whether you classify oil and gas operations as a `pig in the parlor' or a `rose bush in a wheatfield,' it nonetheless constitutes an unconstitutional `spot use."');In re Realen Valley Fore Greenes Associates,838 A.2d 718,729(Pa.2003)("Spotzoning is the antithesis oflawful zoning in this sense[ofa community-wide focus and balancing ofcosts and benefits].In spotzoning,the legislative focus narrows to a single property and the costs and benefits to be balanced are those ofparticular property owners."). Thus whether enacting an ordinance or approving a use not provided for under an ordinance,municipalities must keep all rights in mind. When the focus narrows,as it did in Act 13,courts must invalidate the action in question. The focus na1-rowed here tojustthe interests ofthe one set ofproperty owners in developing their land, and thus the same result mustfollow. 2. This Courtand the Commonwealth CourtPreviously Found ~~~econ~Ei~iior~c~l vns~e~E~opm~~~t ~'~ ~'3E aY i:~~lu~t~it~d A~~ir~~:~ ''~~u~ I~Incompatibde wath 1lroaa-indaastrial UsesSucla thatPutting UNGD in NonIndustrialAreas Violates ConstitutionalRights 12 167807.1x/4x436
  • 19. The Commonwealth Court's decision below —finding that industrial shale gas development is similar to and compatible with uses expressly permitted in a Residential Agricultural District —conflicts with the prior decisions ofthis Court and the Commonwealth Court in Robinson Township v. Commonwealth. This Court and the Commonwealth Court both understood that injecting industrial uses —gas development —into non-industrial districts violated basic constitutional standards,like thosejust described above. Fairfield Township contravened these same constitutional protections when it permitted Inflection's unconventional gas wellsite in aresidential agricultural district. A majority ofthejustices on this Court understood that UNGD is an industrial use and is incompatible with non-industrial uses. Threejustices described Act 13 as"a new regulatory regime permitting industrial uses as cc mc~tte~ ofrightin every type ofpre-existing zoning district" and found thatthe statute "is incapable ofconserving or maintaining the constitutionally-protected aspects ofthe public environment and ofa certain quality oflife." Robinson II,83 A.3d at 979(plurality)(emphasis added). Justice Baer,in his concurrence with the threejustice plurality opinion striking down Act 13,wrote that Act 13 expands private property rights by mandating that iil~iViu~u2i 1ii'ut211C1~c"~ii~1~S ~~~'iiii~i, ~'21"L'~1'2j"~y' ~3y322Y~ ~~ residentially o~ ~rg~icultur~lly zoned a~e~s to bring oal andgas operations onto them land. As Challengers duly note, these industrial-like operations include blasting of 13 I67~807.18/48436
  • 20. rock and other material, noise from the running of diesel engines, sometimes nonstop for days, traffic from construction vehicles, tankers, and other heavy-duty machinery, the storage of hazardous materials, constant bright lighting at night, and the potential for life- and property-threatening explosions and gas well blowouts. Id. at 1005(Baer,J., concurring). Justice Baerjoined in the result,adopting the rationale ofthe Commonwealth Court,finding thatthe legislation failed on substantive due process grounds under Article I, Section 1 ofthe Pennsylvania Constitution.Id. at 1001(Baer,J., concurring). In the Act 13 litigation,the Commonwealth Court likewise found thatthe zoning provisions ofAct 13 made the local zoning schemes unconstitutionally irrational by injecting industrial and therefore incompatible uses into non-industrial districts not slated for such uses; allowing industrial uses in non-industrial districts makes the very designation ofdistricts —the cornerstone ofzoning —irrational. Robinson I,52 A.3d at 484-85;see also Swade v.Zoning Board ofAdj.of Springfield Twp.,140 A.2d 597,598(Pa. 1958)("The very essence ofZoning is the designation ofcertain areas for different use purposes."); Vill. ofBelle Terre v. Boraas,416 U.S. 1,9(1974); Village ofEuclid,Ohio v. Ambler Realt~o.,272 U.S.365(1926). Act 13 also applied standards appropriate only in heavy i31~liStiia~i Zv12~S iii i1luuStilui'~1S~S Y~~~~L~i iii i~Si`ua~iiti2ii c^iri~ c`3~ii~ult'u'rc`i~ ZvnP~ n~vt to homes and schools,only exacerbating the incompatibility.Robinson I,52 A.3d 14 167807.18/48436
  • 21. ~ ~ ~~ Unconventional natural gas developmentis simply not"compatible" with residential and agricultural development,and placing such development in non- industrial areas upsets the fabric ofthe zoning scheme.See Robinson I,52 A.3d at 485 n.23("What we have under Act 13 is a `spot use' where oil and gas uses are singled outfor different treatmentthat is incompatible with other surrounding permitted uses.") 3. MunicipalAction thatAllowsIndustrial Uses in Non- Indust~ialDistricts Despite theIncompatibility MakesZoning Irrational When local governments grant conditional use approvals or approve ordinances that inject industrial uses into non-industrial districts,the same constitutional infirmities arise as those that caused the downfall ofAct 13. Allowing industrial development in a residential or agricultural district that is not compatible with the other uses in the district makes the zoning unconstitutionally irrational. See Robinson I,52 A.3d at 484-85 affd in dart,rev'd in part by 83 A.3d 901(Pa.2013); Main St.Dev.Grp.,Inc. v.Tinicum Twp.Bd.ofSupervisors, 19 A.3d 21,29(Pa.Commw.Ct.2011)(finding unconstitutional an ordinance provision that"create[d] agricultural districts out ofdistricts with non-agricultural statedpurposes...completely changing the expectations created by the Ordinance in the non-agricultural districts")(emph. added);Hock v.Bd.ofSu~'rs ofMount 15 167807.18/48436
  • 22. Pleasant Twp.,622 A.2d 431,434(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1993)(similar); com are Suhy v.Zonin~Bd.ofAdjustment ofCity ofPhila., 169 A.2d 62(Pa. 1961)(finding gas station owner not entitled to sell cars,trucks,and trailers on property zoned commercial but bordered on three sides by residential uses due to potential disruption ofcharacter ofthe area). Indeed,as the Commonwealth Court succinctly noted in Robinson I,"Ifa municipality cannot constitutionally include allowing oil and gas operations,it is no more constitutionaljust because the Commonwealth requires that it be done."52 A.3d at485. Shale gas wellsite development exposes residents,their children,pets, livestock,and property to air pollution and industrial risks such as blowouts,spills, water or soil contamination,and explosions. New wellpads allow for industrial uses next door for many years to come as companies drill and frack wells,re-frack old wells,and dri11 existing we11s deeper. Further,proliferation ofgas wellpads means proliferation ofcompressor stations,pipelines,and processing facilities used to transport and transform the gas into a marketable product. All these operations threaten to disrupt open space preservation; degrade air quality; disruptthe community's character;remove agricultural soils from future use by developing over them;and contaminate agricultural soils and the water supplies relied on by rural residents,farmers,and other businesses. In addition, wellsite activity frequently occurs 24 hours a day,seven days a week during the drilling and 16 1675807.18/48436
  • 23. fracking phases,exposing neighbors to loud noise,vibrations,and bright lights all nightin a district where no other such operations are allowed. This can disrupt sleep,children attempting to do homework,and enjoying a quiet evening at home after a long day's work. By allowing industrial shale gas development in non-industrial districts, and where it may also conflict with the municipality's community development objectives and/or comprehensive plan,a municipality's actions are arbitrary and unconstitutional,as they establish an irrational zoning framework. See Robinson I, 52 A.3d at 484-85. 4. Allowing Unconventional GasDevelopmentIn Non- InclustrialDistricts Unconstitutionally UpsetsResidents'Reasonable Expectations Municipalities that allow heavy industrial uses into zoning districts not designed for any industrial uses at all also do so at the substantial risk ofunduly upsetting the expectations oflocal citizens who purchased homes there in reliance on the existing non-industrial districts,i.e.the existing zoning scheme. Allowing industrial activity in non-industrial areas set aside for farming,schools,open space preservation,and homes frequently conflicts with the very purposes ofthe districts and unduly disrupts the expectations ofresidents who looked to the local zoning scheme and made decisions based ~n it, believing thatthey and their families would be protected from the dangers ofindustrial development in a residential 17 167807.18/48436
  • 24. agricultural area. This concept—that a certain level ofdisruption to expectations can be unconstitutional—wasaddressed in both Robinson I and Robinson II.Robinson I, 52 A.3d at 484(discussing reliance on zoning scheme and investment decisions); Robinson II,83 A.3d 901 at974("The displacement ofprior planning,and derivative expectations,regarding land use,zoning,and enjoyment ofproperty is unprecedented.");978("The police power,broad as it may be,does not encompass such authority to so fundamentally disruptthese expectations respecting the environment.");979-80(plurality). Likewise,in Main St.Dev. Grp.,Inc. v. Tinicum Twp.Bd.ofSupervisors, 19 A.3d 21,29(Pa.Commw.Ct.2011),the Commonwealth Court determined that an overlay district designed to protect agricultural soils"effectively created] agricultural districts out ofdistricts with non-agricultural stated purposes ... completely changing the expectations created by the Ordinance in the non- agricultural districts." Main Street, 19 A.3d at 29. The overlay"unreasonably disturbed]expectations created by the existing zoning ordinance" and as a result, this Court struck it down as invalid.Id. at 28-29. In Robinson I,the Commonwealth Court determined that Section 3304 of Act 13 did not promote the public interest because [t]he public interest in zoning is in the development and 1675807.18/48436
  • 25. use of land in a manner consistent with local demographic and environmental concerns. 58 Pa.C.S. § 3304 requires zoning amendments that must be normally justified on the basis that they are in accord with the comprehensive plan, not to promote oil and gas opeYations that are incompatible with the uses by people who have made investment decisions regarding businesses and homes on the assurance that the zoning district would be developed in accordance with comprehensive plan and would only allow compatible uses. Robinson I,52 A.3d at484(emphasis added). An industrial unconventional gas wellsite next door to a person's home abruptly upsets the expectations that accompany buying a home in a quiet, residential or agricultural area. Instead,residents face industrial operations for years to come;diminishing the value oftheir property;injecting a source of industrial air pollution in an area in which there was no expectation ofsuch activity. The incursion ofindustrial gas development subjects families to round- the-clock lighting,flaring,truck traffic, dust,and noise,particularly during active drilling and fracturing. With such activities comes a risk ofindustrial accidents that will force residents to evacuate due to their proximity to the proposed site. A municipality cannot,consistent with the Pennsylvania Constitution's restraints on its authority,allow industrial gas development in non-industrial zones, whether by way ofan ordinance or other municipal action,like a conditional use approval. 19 1671807.18/48436
  • 26. B. The Commonwealth Court's Decision Trangresses These Established Principles,Threatening Citizens' Constitutional Rights In reaching their respective decisions,the Fairfield Township Board of Supervisors and the Commonwealth Cou1-t appear to have ignored the basic zoning standards described above.The Commonwealth Court's reasoning is inconsistent with these constitutional standards,including those applied in Robinson I and II. The decision is also flawed because it fails to base its conclusions on the record presented to the Board. By contrast,the trial court exercised appropriate appellate review,having carefully reviewed the facts developed below to assess whether there was substantial evidence to supportthe Board's decision. The Commonwealth Court,however,appears to have bypassed this crucial task,and instead, relied on its decision in MarkWest Liberty Midstream &Res., LLC v. Cecil Two.Zoning Hearing Bd.("MarkWest"),102 A.3d 549(Pa. Commw.Ct.2014)reargument denied(Nov. 12,2014),appeal denied, 113 A.3d 281(Pa.2015).However,that case and the present matter differ in material respects. MarkWestinvolved an industrial district and a compressor station; here, there is a residential agricultural district and an unconventional gas wellsite. These problems and their conflict with constitutional standards(and the ordinance itself w~ii'~~ discussct~ ui~li~i b~ic,w. 20 167807.18/48436
  • 27. 1. ThePennsylvania Constitution,the MPC,and theZoning Scheme Define the Outer Bounds ofWhatCan be "Similar and Compatible,"which the Co~zmonwealth GoutContravened There are two primary sections ofthe Fairfield Township Zoning Ordinance ("Zoning Ordinance")that pertain to the conditional use standards for the approval in question. The first is Section 14.2, which governs all conditional use approvals. The second is Section 12.18,regarding"uses not provided for" under the Zoning Ordinance. Section 12.18 requires conditional use approval for"a use[that]is neither specifically permitted or denied." In full, Section 12.18 ofthe Zoning Ordinance states: Whenever, under this Ordinance, a use is neither specifically permitted or denied, and an application is made by an applicant to the Zoning Officer for such a use, the Zoning Officer shall refer the application to the Board ofSupervisors to hear and decide such request as a conditional use. The Board of Supervisors shall have the authority to permit the use or deny the use in accordance with the standards governing conditional use applications set forth in Section 14.2 of this Ordinance. In addition, the use may only be permitted if: 12.18.1 It is similar to and compatible with the other uses permitted in the zone where the subject property is located; 12.18.2 It is not permitted in any other zone under the terms ofthis Ordinance;and 12.18.3 It in no way is in conflict with the general purposes ofthis Ordinance. 21 167807.18/48436
  • 28. The burden of proof shall be upon the applicant to demonstrate that the proposed use meets the foregoing criteria and would not be detrimental to the public health, safety and welfare ofthe neighborhood where it is to be located. As discussed at length above,LJNGD is an industrial use and is not similar to or compatible with residential and agricultural use,as this Court and the Commonwealth Court recognized in Robinson I & II. See,~,Robinson I,52 A.3d at 484("Ifthe Commonwealth-proffered reasons are sufficient,then the Legislature could make similar findings requiring coal portals,tipples, washing plants,limestone and coal strip mines,steel mills,industrial chicken farms, rendering plants and fireworks plants in residential zones for a variety ofpolice power reasons advancing those interests in their development.It would allow the proverbial `pig in the parlor instead ofthe barnyard."') However,despite all this,the Commonwealth Courtreached the opposite result. The Commonwealth Court relied heavily on the argumentthat Inflection's proposed use need not be exactly like the use it was being compared to because the ordinance requires,in part,thatthe use in question be "simzla~ to and compatible with the other uses permitted in the zone." Section 12.18.1; Gorsline v. Board of Sup'rs ofFairfield Tp., 123 A.3d 1142, 1152(Pa.Commw.Ct.2015)("It was not necessary thatthe proposed use be the `same' as a permitted use but only that it be `similar."'). 22 1675307.18/48436
  • 29. The Commonwealth Court's ultimate conclusion does not withstand scrutiny. Just because gas extraction can be argued to be similar to a public service facility in the abstract,it does notfollow thatthe result is correct under constitutional standards and the zoning scheme. Whether something is"similar to and compatible with" uses in a given district cannot be examined in the abstract,as the Court did,but rather must be looked at within the confines ofconstitutional standards designed to protect citizen's rights(e.g. Robinson I and II),the ordinance,and the zoning scheme as a whole. Robinson I and II, and other case law that has been discussed,are clear that inserting industrial uses like gas development into non-industrial areas undermines the rationality of entire zoning schemes because,among other reasons,"[t]he very essence ofZoning is the designation ofcertain areas for different use purposes." Swade v.Zoning Bd.Of Adjustment ofSpringfield Twp.,140 A.2d 597,598(Pa. 1958). Stated differently,the comparison process is an exercise in"which one of these things is most like the other,"to put a different spin on the old Sesame Street song. And,in a way,this is whatzoning is all about —determining which land uses definitely do not belong with each other,and which ones best belong with one another(and in what parts ofthe municipality),and doing so to protect public health,safety,and welfare,environmental rights,and public natural resources. In this case,the Zoning Ordinance already determined that surface mining 23 167307.18/48436
  • 30. which is mope similar to gas extraction than a sewage pumping station2 — is not '- Amici disagree with the trial court that gas extraction is not"surface mining" under the Zoning Ordinance. It is not clear whether this matter is before this Court because part ofdetermining whether the Township properly granted the conditional use approval is to consider whether the proposed use(unconventional gas wellsite)is already allowed in another district. To the extent this is before this Court,it is clear that"surface mining" includes the surface activities associated with unconventional natural gas extraction(as opposed to,e.g., deviated or horizontal wellbores, which can extend for miles underground). The Zoning Ordinance defines"surface mining" as,in relevant part: the extraction ofmineralsfrom the earth . . . or fiom pits or bands by removing the stYata or mateYial which overlies o~ is above or between them or otherwise exposing and retrieving them from the surface, including but not limited to strip, drift, and auger mining,dredging, quarrying, leaching and activities related thereto, but not including those mining operations carried out beneath the surface by means ofshafts,tunnels,or other underground mine openings."Surface mining" shall not include(i)the extraction of minerals (other than anthracite and bituminous coal) by a landowner for his own non - commercial use from land owned or leased by him .... Section 2.2(emphasis added). The ordinance is saying it does not regulate the part ofextractive activity that happens underground,but merely the surface activities (e.g. drilling rig and fracking equipment location). Indeed,"minerals" under the ordinance is defined to include "natural gas." Thus,gas extraction involves "extraction ofminerals from the earth" by removing rock from the ground to get to the gas underneath("removing the strata or material which overlies...them"). Similarly,a coal tipple or prep plant would be included in this definition,butthe underground tunnels(which could extend for miles)would not be. Any ambiguities are to be interpreted in the landowner's favor, which would mean that 24 167807.18/48436
  • 31. compatible with the uses in the RA District because surface mining is only allowed in the Industrial District. Even wind energy facilities —anothertype ofenergy genet~ation —are permitted only in theIndustrial Distf~ict. Further,part ofthe purpose ofthe Industrial District in Fairfield Township is to"protect commercial and industrial development against intrusive uses which are incompatible with it." Notably,mostresidential development is notallowed in theIndustrialDist~~ict,and single family detached homes are conditional uses(not permitted by-right). While agricultural development is allowed by-right, according to the purpose statement,it is intended that such development be located in "floodplain areas and as an accessory use to a commercial or industrial facility to maintain undeveloped or buffer areas. A determination shall be made that the proposed agricultural use shall have minimal impacts upon the existing development within close proximity to the proposed use." Section 6.1 ofthe Zoning Ordinance. The Court below appears to have completely skipped over the compatibility requirement. The question is not what might be similar or compatible in theory. The question is what is similar and compatible in the confines ofthe zoning ordinance,the zoning scheme,the uses in question,the limits oflogic,and case law like Robinson I& II that define the bounds ofcompatibility in an effort to gas wells are allowed in the Industrial District. In turn,this means that they could not be allowed to use Section 12.18 ofthe Zoning Ordinance. 25 1671807.18/48436
  • 32. protect citizens' constitutional rights. Indeed,this Court's decision in Swade rings true as to the danger ofthe Commonwealth Court's decision in this matter: `If the appellant's first contention is the law, then the whole plan and scheme ofZoning must be case aside because business and industry could invade crny zone just so long as it could be shown that the proposed use would not adversely affect to any reasonable extent the public health, s~cfety or morals. The statutory law of zoning would be replaced by the law ofnuisance.... `The general scheme or plan ofzoning has been held to be constitutional by our highest courts because it has a definite relation to the public health, safety, morals and welfare. It is in the interest ofpublic welfare that land in a community be used and developed in an orderly manner in accordance with a comprehensive plan. `By its very nature zoning impinges upon the right of a land owner to use his land in any way that he desire so long as he does not unduly interfere with his neighbor's right to use and enjoy his land. To this extent, zoning imposes a hardship on every land owner subject to the provisions of a zoning ordinance. It is a hardship, however,made necessary by considerations ofthe public welfare and is imposed by virtue ofthe police power. . . If we were to hold that the Zoning Ordinance of Springfield Township was unconstitutional as applied to the appellant's property,then we would throw every zone open to prohibited uses if it could be shown that the prohibited use did not offend against the public health, safety or morals, and we would in effect put an end to allzoning. Swade, 140 A.2d at 598(emphasis added);see also Robinson I,53 A.3d at 485 n.23("What we have under Act 13 is a"spot use" where oil and gas uses are 26 167807.18/48436
  • 33. singled out for different treatmentthat is incompatible with other surrounding permitted uses. Whatthe dissent ignores is thatthe sanctioning of`bad planning' renders the affected local zoning ordinances unconstitutionally irrational."). Provisions related to"comparable uses" and"uses-not-provided for," like the one in question,are not designed to allow uses to go anywhere a person wants to putthem,just like variances are not allowed to disruptthe zoning scheme as a whole.3 They are not a means to allow industrial uses in districts not set aside for 3 There are two types ofvariances —use variances and other(usually dimensional) variances. Use variances are usually significantly more difficult to obtain than dimensional variances because use variances deal with the integrity ofthe zoning scheme as a whole,and a rezoning or other zoning change may be necessary. Robert S.Ryan,Pa.Zoning Law &Practice("Ryan on Zoning"),§§ 6.1.10,6.4.1 ("[F]ew such variance applications can succeed short ofa showing thatthe property has no reasonable value as zoned.");see also 53 P.S.§ 10916.1(a)(setting forth curative amendment and validity challenge procedures for landowners whose land is restricted). However,in either situation,one requirement is that,ifgranted,the variance will not disrupt the zoning scheme as a whole.Robinson I,52 A.3d at 481 n.20; see also Ryan on Zoning,§§ 6.1.1 and 6.1.3(discussing inter alia that"too specific" an action may result in the action being invalid as spotzoning);53 P.S.§ 10910.2(a)(4)("That the variance,ifauthorized, will not alter the essential character ofthe neighborhood or district in which the property is located,nor substantially or permanently impair the appropriate use or development ofadjacent property,nor be detrimental to the public welfare."). An applicant also mustshow unique hardships that result due to the application ofthe ordinance to her property. Variances.like the nonconforming use doctrine,are a sort of"escape valve" to ensure that the zoning scheme achieves a general reciprocity ofadvantage across all property owners subject to the zoning scheme,and does not unduly infringe on constitutional rights. See also Ryan on Zoning,§ 6.1.1; Robinson I,52 A.3d at 481 n.20. 27 167807.18/48436
  • 34. industrial activity,or as a way around potentially controversial zoning changes or rezonings.4 These provisions are designed to account for uses that a municipality did not originally contemplate,and to ensure that there is a process for fitting those uses in(when they arise)into the spot where they make the most sense under the zoningscheme as a whole and accounting for the rights ofall property owners under Article I, Sections 1 and 27 ofthe Pennsylvania Constitution. To take any other approach"would in effect put an end to all zoning." Swade,140 A.2d at 598. Consequently,Inflection's unconventional gas wellsite cannot be permitted on the Shaheen property. 4 This is partly why relying onpast approvals as a basis for allowing new approvals is problematic. Just because something was approved in the past does not mean it was legal or constitutional. The Commonwealth Court cites no evidence to determine whether those past approvals were challenged. The trial court references these past approvals,and notes thatthey were apparently further from homes. In either case,simply because a municipality allows an incompatible use in district illegally and no one challenges it does not mean future approvals must be approved,which only further exacerbate the initial unconstitutional action. Indeed,the RA District in Fairfield Township covers the largest land area in the Township —thus,approving more and more industrial uses in the RA District makes well over half(ifnot well over 75%)ofthe Township a defacto industrial area without notice or opportunity to be heard for citizens.(Zoning Map). It also belies any attempt to balance land uses and citizens' rights. Compare Main Street, 19 A:3~1 ~1;("there must be an appropriate balance in the zoning ordinance between agricultural uses and development....[A]zoning ordinance that requires between 95%and 97% ofthe land in the Township to be used for agricultural purposes simply does not balance the need for development and agricultural uses."). 28 167580718/48436
  • 35. 2. Unconventional GasDevelopment UsesArePrivate,For- ProfitEnterprises,Are Notfor the Use orBenefitofthe General Public, anc~Are NotLikePublicSeYvices Facilities In addition to the issuesjust discussed,unconventional gas development cannot be treated like public service facilities in zoning and land use decisions, especially in residential and agricultural areas. Gas extraction(and transmission) differs from public service facilities in many material respects. Analogizing gas extraction to a public service facility like a power line,a sewage pumping station, or a water treatment plantfundamentally disguises extractive activity as something it is not. As noted already,under Fairfield Township's ordinance,"surface mining"(the most analogous activity)is not permitted in the Residential Agricultural("RA")District at all. Further,such a determination poses substantial risks for municipalities seeking to cant'outtheir constitutional obligations and protect the rights ofall citizens in their communities. The court below,in analogizing a gas wellsite to a public service facility, cited no facts in the record for its conclusion.' No facts were developed given Inflection's contradictory statements. This creates the appearance thatthe Court found as a mattes oflaw that gas development —industrial activity — is compatible Indeed,the Commonwealth Court oddly took issue with the trial court's thorough review ofwhether the Board's decision was supported by substantial evidence, which is a part ofappellate review and which the Courtitselfdid in MarkWest,and then came to a conclusion that was not supported at all by the record atthe hoard. 29 1675807.18/48436
  • 36. with a RA District. Not only is this conclusion in direct conflict with Robinson Twp.(which found the exact opposite)and the industrial nature ofshale gas development(both discussed above),the legal implications for municipal ordinances are extremely problematic. Ifgas developmentis deemed compatible with residential development as a matter oflaw,it will be precisely contrary to this Court and the Commonwealth Court's decisions in Robinson I & II. Further,there are ongoing battles in the lower courts over municipal ordinances that attemptto place gas development in residential agricultural and agricultural areas. Industry will rely on the Commonwealth Court's Gorsline decision to defend these ordinances,despite the contrary authority ofRobinson I and II. Indeed,there are even those who argue thatthese cases were only about who could zone(the state or local govermnents) and not about constitutional limitations on zoning no matter who the decision maker is. Such arguments are contrary to the express language ofboth Robinson I and Robinson II and the fact thatthejudicial branch makes decisions based on law, not on policy. Also,ifGorsline stands,those municipalities that have appropriately zoned UNGD and associated uses in industrial areas away from homes,schools,and faz7ns and to balance all citizens'rights will risk challenges by industry similar to what would have arisen under Act 13. This would be despite these municipalities 30 167 807.18/48436
  • 37. focusing on the facts on the ground in the local community,including the zoning scheme developed to protect and balance all citizens' rights. Ruling that unconventional gas developmentis compatible with residential and agricultural uses presents a threatto zoning ordinances that do not specifically address gas development,as well as to ordinances that do limit gas developmentto certain zones. Ifa gas wellsite is compatible with residential and agricultural activity as a mattes oflaw in all circumstances,then once again,as under Act 13,zoning is meaningless because any operator can either: 1)seek to insert a use in a non- industrial district as a"comparable"or"compatible" use;or 2)challenge an ordinance for being too restrictive because the ordinance allows gas development only in industrial areas,away from homes,schools,and farms. Ifthe Commonwealth Court's decision stands,industry is highly likely to challenge ordinances for not allowing gas wellsites or other industrial gas development where"public service facilities" are also located. In addition,there is nothing"public" aboutthe wellsite proposed in Fairfield Township. It is a private project,carried out by a private entity,for private enrichment. The court below looked to the Township Zoning Ordinance definition of"public service facility"to find thatInflection's wellsite constitutes a similar use. The definition of"public service facility" is as follows: Public Service Facility: The erection, construction, J I 167807.18/48436
  • 38. alteration, operation or maintenance of buildings, power plants or substations, water treatment plants or pumping stations; sewage disposal or pumping plants and other similar public service structures by a utility, whether publicly or privately owned, or by a municipal or other governmental agency, including the furnishing of electrical, gas, communication, water supply and sewage disposal services Section 2.2 ofthe Township Z.O. Butthe Commonwealth Court failed to look to all applicable definitions. The Township's Ordinance defines the "public"in "public service facility" as "Something owned,operated,and supported by the community or the peoplefor the use o~ benefitofthe geneYc~lpublic."ZONING ORDINANCE § 2.2(emphasis added). There is nothing to indicate that Inflection's wellsite is for the use or benefit ofthe general public. It is asserted that the wellsite "will serve the general public by producing natural gas for its use and consumption." Gorsline, 123 A.3d at 1150. Butthere is no evidence in the record to support this. The gas produced may very well be sent out-of-state,or even overseas,especially given the large number ofinterstate pipeline projects currently proposed,some ofwhich will facilitate shipment of natural gas overseas.6 Even assuming the gas produced was for the Pennsylvania 6 See Transcontinental GasPipeline Co. Appl.(Pt. 1)for proposed Atlantic Sunrise Pipeline, at p.10(noting: Cabot Oil &Gas as largest customer,Inflection Energy 32 1675807.l8/48436
  • 39. public's consumption,ifsuch a statement were sufficient to satisfy the"public benefit"requirement,a local McDonalds or Wal-Mart would similarly be deemed a public entity. Such an absurd result must be avoided. Indeed,even the Pennsylvania Public Utility Code expressly excludes from the definition of"public utility" the following:"Any producer ofnatural gas not engaged in distributing such gas directly to the public for compensation."66 Pa.C.S.§ 102(2)(iii)(emph. added). 3. The Commonwealth Court's Analogy to MarkWestIsIn Er~o~ The decision below relied improperly on an analogy to its decision in MarkWest Liberty Midstream &Resources,LLC v. Cecil Township Zoning Hearing Board,102 A.3d 549(Pa.Commw.Ct.2014),petition for allowance of appeal denied, 113 A.3d 281(Pa.2015). This matter,and the MarkWest decision are wholly different. First,the ordinances themselves are different. Second,the activities are different. Here,the activity is unconventional gas wellsite development. In MarkWest,it was a compressor station that was to be built. (Intervenor)having bought capacity,and transport ofgas to Dominion Transmission(which runs CovePoint export facility)),ht~p://elibrary- backup.ferc.Gov/~dmws/common/Openl~Tat.as~:'fi1eI~=13 20971(downloads PDF);htt~://pac~ficsummiten~r~y.coin/special-~ro'e~ cts/(describing Cabot's contractto sell 350,000 NIBTU/day ofgas,for conversion to liquefied natural gas at Cove Point export facility, and distribution to two Japanese coinpaniesj ~~~~ I67~807.18/48436
  • 40. Wellsites and compressor stations are different in nature in that a wellsite involves mineral extraction,whereas the purpose ofa compressor station is to facilitate the transport and in some cases low-level processing ofthose minerals. As noted, other extractive and energy generation activities in Fairfield Township(e.g. surface mining, wind energy)are limited to the Industrial District. Third,and equally crucial,the districts are different. MarkWestinvolved a LightIndustrial District whereas Gorsline involves a Residential Agricultural District. The expectations created by each are markedly different as far as what intensity and type ofactivity a person could reasonably expectto locate in a district with a light industrial character versus a residential agricultural character. The Commonwealth Court's opinion in MarkWest relied heavily on an analysis ofthe testimony and the ordinance provisions in Cecil Township,all of which centered around a LightIndustrial District,including considering whether the proposed use(a compressor station)would be ofthe wine general character of other uses in that District,and was consistent with the purpose ofthat District also. In contrast,the Court in Gorsline did nottake this same approach. In Gorsline,the Courttook almostthe exact opposite approach,brushing over much ofthe record and failing to carefully examine the language ofthe Fairfield Township ordinance,which the trial court had done. Oddly,the Court chastised the trial courtjudge for taking the same approach the Court itselftook in 34 167j807.18/48436
  • 41. MarkWest,that is,reviewing the ordinance language in some cases word-by-word and closely reviewing the evidence at the local zoning body. For instance,the Commonwealth Courtfound that the proposed unconventional wellsite satisfies the requirement to not conflict with the general purpose,but does not actually examine the Zoning Ordinance purposes,enumerated in Section 1.4 ofthe Ordinance. Gorsline v. Board ofSu~'rs ofFairfield Tp., 123 A.3d 1142, 1152-53(Pa. Commw.Ct.2015). Instead,the Commonwealth Court pivots,noting that the Ordinance directly authorizes mineral extraction,quotes the definition of"rural resource area."Id. However,there is no evidence in the record that Inflection's wellsite is in a"rural resource area."~ In contrast,the trial court reviewed both the purpose statement ofthe RA District, and the uses allowed: According to the clear language of Article 3 of the ordinance, the RA district is generally intended for application to rural development areas. The purpose of the regulations for this district is to foster a quiet, medium density residential environment while encouraging the continuation of agricultural activities and the preservation of prime farmland. Industrial uses are discouraged in this district. Compatible public and semipublic uses such as schools, churches and recreational facilities are provided for. As well, a higher Among other things,this is an area that must be designated as such in a "municipal or multimunicipal plan." Section 2.2 ofthe Zoning Ordinance. The comprehensive plan was not introduced as part ofthe record at the hearings below. 35 167~80718/48436
  • 42. density residential development may be permitted under certain circumstances. Ordinance,§ 3.1. As set forth in Article 4 ofthe ordinance,the purpose of the RA district is to encourage the continued use ofareas of the Township for rural living including open space, agricultural and residential uses. Such uses typically do not require public utilities or community services. Uses which specify the provision of community or public utilities may be feasible in certain locations in the Township provided that the developer is able to furnish the necessary utility infrastructure. Ordinance,§ 4.1. Gorsline,et al. v.Bd.ofSup'rs ofFairfield Twp.,No. 14-000130,at pp.13-14 (Lycoming Cty. Ct.ofCmmn.Pleas,Aug.29,2014)(emph.added).$ It also focused on the language ofthe Ordinance that requires there be"in no way"a conflict between the allowance ofa use and the general purposes ofthe Ordinance. Id. at p.17. The trial court also reviewed the body oftestimony from the hearings, including Inflection's largely conclusory and/or conflicting statements that Inflection offered to supportthe nature ofits proposed activity. This is a necessary discussion not simply to determine whether the Township's decision was 8 It also appears thatthe Ordinance only contemplated "public service facilities" in the RA District to the extentthat new,larger residential development was entering the area(as opposed to places that rely on private water and sewer). 1675807.18/48436
  • 43. supported by substantial evidence.9 An applicant for a special exception or conditional use permit also bears the initial burden to"show[]compliance with all the objective requirements ofthe zoning ordinance."Elizabethtown/Mt. Joy Associates,L.P. v. Mount Joy Twp.Zoning Hearing Bd•,934 A.2d 759,764(Pa. Commw.Ct.2007). "The standard to be observed by the[Board]is whether the plan as submitted complies with specific ordinance requirements at tl~e time the plan comes before it." Id. at 765. Among these requirements,the applicant must show that it meets"[t]he kind ofuse ... i.e.,the threshold definition ofwhatis authorized as a special exception" or conditional use.10 Bray v.Zoning Bd.of Adjustment,410 A.2d 909,911 (Pa.Commw.Ct. 1980)(emphasis added). The 9In other words,it is difficult to determine whether substantial evidence exists by simply zeroing in on one ortwo statements by an applicant,as the rest ofwhat an applicant(or protestants)has said may actually show thatthose two statements are wrong. Indeed,this Court has stated,"By `substantial evidence' we mean such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion." Valley View Civic Assn v.Zoning Bd.ofAdjustment,462 A.2d 637, 640(Pa. 1983). It is difficult to see how a reasonable mind could accept as adequate internally-inconsistenttestimony by an applicant, much less mere statements thatthe applicant"believes"its use to be compatible with the ordinance, as the trial court noted here. In an effort to reach the conclusion that it did,the Commonwealth Court conflated normal appellate review with credibility determinations. to A conditional use and special exception differ only in that the governing body decides conditional use applications and azoning hearing board decides special exception applications. The standards for such decisions,including burdens of proof,are the same. J7 1675807.18/48436
  • 44. applicant must show"not only thatthe proposed use was ofa type permitted by special exception but also thatthe proposed use complied with the otheY applicable requirements ofthe ordinance which expressly govern such a grant." Shamah v.Hellam Twp.Zoning Hearing Bd.,648 A.2d 1299, 1303(Pa.Commw. Ct. 1994)(emphasis added). Importantly,"[o]ur cases have repeatedly made clear thatthe applicant has both the persuasion burden and the initial evidence presentation duty to show that the proposal complies with the `terms ofthe ordinance' which expressly govern such a grant." Bray,410 A.2d at 910(emphasis added). Where an applicant does not demonstrate with evidence(rather than promises or beliefs)that it meets the requirements ofthe ordinance,the application should be denied. See Elizabethtown/Mt. Joy Associates,L.P.,934 A.2d 759; Keystone Chem.Co.,Inc. v.Zoning Hearing Bd.ofButler Twp.,494 A.2d 1158 (Pa.Commw.Ct. 1985),Appeal ofBaird,537 A.2d 976(Pa. Cornrow. Ct. 1988). "Evidence is not a `promise'that the applicant will comply because that is a legal conclusion the Board makes once it hears whatthe applicant intends to do and then determines whether it matches the requirements set forth in the ordinance." Edgmont Twp.v. Springyton Lake Montessori Sch.,Inc.,622 A.2d 418,419(Pa. Commw.Ct. 1993). Furthermore,"[a]self-serving declaration ofa future intent to comply[with a zoning ordinance]is not sufficient to establish compliance with the criteria contained in the ordinance."Id. at 420. 38 167~2iU7.I /4x436
  • 45. Ifappellate review is to be meaningful,an inquiry into the record by the reviewing court — as the trial court did — is necessary to determine whether substantial evidence actually exists to supportthe factual conclusions ofa zoning hearing board or governing body. This includes whether the applicant met its initial burden for demonstrating its activity falls within the definition ofsomething allowed by conditional use,and meets the criteria set forth in the ordinance." The Courts ofthis Commonwealth have never shied away from their responsibility to tell a municipality that it got it wrong in its decision. See,~,Main Street, 19 A.3d 21;Baker v. Chartiers Twp.Zoning Hearing Bd•,677 A.2d 1274(Pa. Commw.Ct. 1996)(both ordinance challenges). The Court's solution to compatibility was to focus on the conditions the Board imposed on the operation, which while relevant to whether a conditional use should issue(rather than be denied),avoids the actual question ofwhether an industrial use should be going 1'To the extent an applicant meets its burden,the burden then shifts to objectors "to raise specific issues concerning health,safety and general welfare." Butler v. Derr Flooring Co.,285 A.2d 538,542(Pa.Commw.Ct. 1971). In situations like Fairfield Township,the ordinance in Section 12.18 appears to place the burden on the applicantto prove thatthe proposed use not provided for"would not be detrimental to the public health,safety and welfare ofthe neighborhood where it is to be located." Thus,after objectors raise specific issues,"then the burden would rnntini~P to hP Sz~ith the ar»,~lirant" ~x~hn "~x~n~ilr~ 1JP t'P(~1711Y'PC~ t(1 C`(lYY1P f(11'W?YC~ t(1 meetthe objections so as to show thatthe intended use would not violate the health,safety and general welfare ofthe community with relation to such objections." Butler,285 A.2d at 542;see also Bray,410 A.2d at 912. 39 167807.18/48436
  • 46. into a residential district in the first place. This again creates the same problems that Act 13 created —putting industrial uses in non-industrial areas so that there's a pig in the parlor that everyone has to be concerned about managing,when the idea was that no one would have to think aboutthe management because ofthe nature ofthe zoning district. See Robinson I,52 A.3d at484 n.22. IV. CONCLUSION For the foregoing reasons,Amici respectfully requestthatthe Court reverse the decision ofthe Commonwealth Court. 40 I67i807.13/48436
  • 47. Respectfully submitted, Date: August 1,2016 /s/ Jordan B.Yeager Jordan B.Yeager PA ID No.72947 Lauren M.Williams PA ID No.311369 Curtin & Heefner LLP 2005 S.Easton Rd.,Ste. Doylestown,PA 18901 Tel.:(267)898-0570 Fax:(215)340-3929 jby@curtinheefner.com lmw@curtinheefner.com Joseph Otis Minott PA ID No.36463 Exec.Dir.&Chief Counsel Aaron Jacobs-Smith 100 PA ID No.319760 Clean Air Council 135 S. 19th St., Ste.300 Philadelphia,PA 19103 Tel.:(215)567-4004 Fax:(215)567-5791 joe_minott@cleanair.org ajs@cleanair.org Counselfog Amicus Cuf~iae Counselfog Amicus Delaware Riverkeepe~ Curiae Clean Air Network Council 41 Adam Kron D.C.ID No.992135 Senior Attorney EnvironmentalIntegrity Project 1000 Vermont Ave.NW,Ste. 1100 Washington,D.C. 20005 Tel:(202)263-4451 Fax:(202)296-8822 akron@environmental integrity.org Counselfog^Amicus Curiae EnvironmentalIntegf~ity PNoject 167~807.I8/48436
  • 48. CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE The undersigned hereby certifies that a true and correct copy ofthe foregoing was served on this date to the following: Via Electronic Service Susan J. Smith,Esq. The Law Office ofSusan J. Smith 2807 Market Street Camp Hill,PA 17011 Timothy A.Schoonover,Esq. Blaine A.Lucas,Esq. Krista-Ann M.Staley,Esq. Babst,Calland,Clements & Zomnir,P.C. Two Gateway Center,6th Floor Pittsburgh,PA 15222 George Jugovic,Jr., ChiefCounsel Citizens for Pennsylvania's Future 200 First Avenue,Suite 200 Pittsburgh,PA 15222 James Michael Wiley,Esq. McCormick Law Firm 835 W.4t'' Street,PO Box 577 Williamsport,PA 17701 Michael Helbing,StaffAttorney Citizens for Pennsylvania's Future West Market Street,Suite 901 Wilkes-Barre,PA 18701 Via Fist Class Mail Joshua Joseph Cochran,Esq. Schemery Zicolello,P.C. 333 Market Street Williamsport,PA 17701-6329 Date: 8/1/2016 /s/Jo~~dan B. Yea~e~ Jordan B.Yeager,Esquire Pa.I.D.No.72947 Curtin & Heefner LLP 2005 S.Easton Road,Suite 100 Doylestown,PA 18901 (267)898-0570 JBY@curtinheefner.com 167862.1/48436
  • 49. Counselfog Amicus Curiae Delaware Rivef~keepe~ Network 167~862.I/48436