The plurality opinion in Robinson Township, written by Chief Justice Ron Castille, together with the concurrence of Justice Max Baer, struck down Act 13, in which the Pennsylvania Legislature had overridden local zoning to permit fracking of natural gas throughout the Commonwealth. In so doing the Supreme Court had brought back to life Article I, Section 27 of the Pennsylvania Constitution, Pennsylvania’s powerful Environmental Bill of Rights (the “ERA”), which had been approved by referendum in 1971, four to one.
Notwithstanding the power of the ERA, which affirms the right of all, including future generations, to a livable environment and the duty of all officials, elected and appointed, to act as trustees for the environment -- the ERA remains little known among officials at all levels of government and less so by the public in general.
This program is focused on the implementation of the ERA at various levels of government at a time of climate crisis. There is an urgent need to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions and to provide for adaptation to a hotter climate and unprecedented flooding, especially for underserved communities.Introduction
- The climate crisis; report from Sharm El-Sheikh and Bonn, the United Nations Climate Change Conferences 2022 and 2023
- The public trust in the era: what does it mean?
- Sustainability and legal ethics
- Getting our heads around the climate crisis: thinking the unthinkable
- The urgency of implementation: what we can do?
- Public trustees’ duty under the ERA to protect the environment for present and future generations
- A brief history of the ERA from ratification to Payne v Kassab to Robinson Township to the Pennsylvania Environmental Defense Fund cases to Township of Marple Township v PUC and other important cases.
- Municipalities planning code and local land-use regulation following Marple Township v PUC: what is a “constitutionally sound environmental impact review”?
- Amendments to local land-use legislation: model provisions
- Role of municipal officers under the era: proprietary, executive, legislative and administrative
- Regional greenhouse gas initiative explained
- Status of current litigation
- Cap and trade economy wide
- Best practices
- Environmental justice for underserved communities
- Legislation for community engagement in federal projects
All attendees will receive the course book as a digital download. A printed copy of the course book is available, at a discount to attendees, for $40. If you wish to purchase the printed version of the course book, please call PBI Customer Service at 800-932-4637.
Original source can be found here.