Delaware Riverkeeper Network v. Middlesex Twp. ZHB v. R.E. Gas Development, LLC ( 2017 )


Menu:
  •          IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Delaware Riverkeeper Network,        :
    Clean Air Council, David Denk,       : No. 1229 C.D. 2015
    Jennifer Chomicki and Joann Groman   : Argued: November 14, 2016
    :
    v.                 :
    :
    Middlesex Township Zoning            :
    Hearing Board                        :
    :
    v.                 :
    :
    R.E. Gas Development, LLC and        :
    Middlesex Township                   :
    :
    Appeal of: R.E. Gas Development, LLC :
    Delaware Riverkeeper Network,        :
    Clean Air Counsel, David Denk        : No. 1323 C.D. 2015
    and Jennifer Chomicki                :
    :
    v.                 :
    :
    Middlesex Township Zoning            :
    Hearing Board                        :
    :
    :
    v.                 :
    :
    R.E. Gas Development, LLC and        :
    Middlesex Township and               :
    Robert G. Geyer                      :
    :
    Appeal of: Robert G. Geyer           :
    Delaware Riverkeeper Network,              :
    Clean Air Council, David Denk,             : No. 2609 C.D. 2015
    Jennifer Chomicki, and Joann               :
    Groman,                                    :
    :
    Appellants      :
    :
    v.                     :
    :
    Middlesex Township Zoning                  :
    Hearing Board                              :
    :
    v.                     :
    :
    R.E. Gas Development, LLC,                 :
    Middlesex Township, and Robert G.          :
    Geyer                                      :
    BEFORE:      HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
    HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    BY JUDGE WOJCIK                                              FILED: June 7, 2017
    Objectors1 appeal the order of the Butler County Court of Common
    Pleas (trial court) denying their appeal of the Middlesex Township (Township)
    Zoning Hearing Board’s (Board) decision that denied their substantive challenge to
    the Township’s Ordinance 127 and denied their appeal of the zoning permit that
    1
    The Objectors are the Delaware Riverkeeper Network (DRKN), the Clean Air Council
    (CAC), and David Denk, Jennifer Chomicki, and Joann Groman, landowners in Weatherburn
    Heights Planned Residential Development in Middlesex Township near the well site.
    the Township issued to R.E. Gas Development, LLC (Rex). Rex and Robert G.
    Geyer (Geyer) appeal the stays that the trial court issued during the pendency of
    the appeal of the Board’s decision. We affirm the order that affirmed the Board’s
    decision and dismiss the appeals of the trial court’s stay order.
    The farm property owned by Robert G. Geyer is along the south side
    of the east-west Route 228 corridor in the Township near its boundary with Adams
    Township and is near the Weatherburn Heights (Weatherburn) Planned Residential
    Development (PRD). In November 2012, the Township’s Board of Supervisors
    enacted Ordinance 125 creating the R-AG Residential Agriculture Zoning District,
    a mixed use district, to limit suburban growth and the location of PRD
    developments from a majority of the zoning districts in the Township.2 The Geyer
    2
    Ordinance 125 added Section 175-243 to the Township’s Zoning Ordinance which
    states that the purpose of the R-AG Zoning District “is to provide for agricultural uses, low-
    density residential development and planned higher density development in areas where the
    general character is defined by rural areas which are in close proximity to major roads,
    infrastructure and areas near existing concentrated residential development and to provide for
    compatible public, semipublic and accessory uses as conditional uses or uses by special
    exception.” Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 1760a. Ordinance 125 also added Section 175-
    244(A)(1) to the Zoning Ordinance providing the following permitted principal uses in the R-AG
    Residential Agriculture District: farms; greenhouse or tree nursery; single-family dwellings;
    two-family dwellings; government buildings; municipal firehouses; schools; public utilities,
    except buildings; and municipal recreation. Id. In turn, Section 175-8 defines “public utility” as:
    A. Any person or corporation now or hereafter owning or
    operating in this commonwealth equipment or facilities for:
    (1) Producing, generating, transmitting, distributing or furnishing
    natural or artificial gas, electricity or steam for the production of
    light, heat or power to or for the public for compensation.
    (2) Diverting, developing, pumping, impounding, distributing or
    furnishing water to or for the public for compensation.
    (Footnote continued on next page…)
    2
    farm is located in the R-AG Residential Agriculture District and Rex has leased the
    oil and gas underlying Geyer’s property.
    In August 2014, the Township’s Board of Supervisors enacted
    Ordinance 127 over the objection of the Township’s Planning Commission.
    Ordinance 127 states that the “Township Zoning Ordinance as currently written
    does not expressly provide for the use or regulation of oil and gas operations” and
    the “Township Board of Supervisors desires to expressly provide for the use and
    regulation of oil and gas operations within the Township.” Reproduced Record
    (R.R.) at 34a. Ordinance 127 allows for “oil and gas well site development” as a
    (continued…)
    ***
    (5) Transporting or conveying natural or artificial gas, crude oil,
    gasoline or petroleum products, materials for refrigeration, or
    oxygen or nitrogen or other fluid substance by pipeline or conduit
    for the public for compensation.
    (6) Sewage collection, treatment or disposal for the public for
    compensation.
    (7) Conveying or transmitting messages or communications,
    except as excluded below, by telephone, telegraph or domestic
    public land mobile radio service, including, but not limited to,
    point-to-point microwave radio service for the public for
    compensation.
    Id. at 1594a-1595a. However, Section 175-8 also provides that “[t]he term ‘public utility’ shall
    not include . . . [a]ny producer of natural gas not engaged in distributing such gas directly to the
    public for compensation.” Id. at 1595a. Finally, Section 175-8 defines “public utility building”
    as “[a]ny administrative, maintenance, storage or service building operated by a public utility.”
    Id. In addition, Section 175-8 defines “structure” as “[a]ny man-made object having an
    ascertainable stationary location on or in land or water, whether or not affixed to the land.” Id. at
    1598a.
    3
    permitted principal and accessory use in the AG-A Rural Residential District;3 AG-
    B Agricultural District; I-1 Restricted Industrial District; and the R-AG Residential
    Agriculture District; and as a conditional use in the C-2 Highway Commercial
    District; TC Town Center District; and C-3 Regional Commerce District. The
    ordinance provides natural gas compressor stations as a permitted use in the I-1
    Restricted Industrial District and as a conditional use in the AG-A Residential
    District; AG-B Agricultural District; C-2 Highway Commercial District; TC Town
    Center District; and C-3 Regional Commerce District.                      The ordinance also
    provides natural gas processing plants as a conditional use in the I-1 Restricted
    Industrial and C-3 Regional Commerce Districts. See R.R. at 48a.4
    In September 2014, the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental
    Protection (DEP) issued well permits for drilling on the Geyer farm (Geyer site).
    The Township also granted Rex’s application for a zoning permit for the drilling.
    In October 2014, Objectors filed a substantive validity challenge to
    Ordinance 127 and an appeal of the zoning permit, which the Board consolidated
    3
    Ordinance 127 added the definition of “oil and gas well site development” to Section
    175-8 of the Township’s Zoning Ordinance which is defined as “well location assessment,
    including seismic operations, well site preparation, construction, drilling, water or fluid storage
    operations, hydraulic fracturing and site restoration associated with an oil and gas well of any
    depth. The term includes conventional (vertical) and non-conventional (horizontal) methods of
    drilling.” R.R. at 35a.
    4
    Ordinance 127 also added Section 175-155.2 to the Zoning Ordinance which imposes a
    number of restrictions and requirements with respect to oil and gas well site development
    including: a 10-acre minimum lot size; compliance with state and federal regulations; access
    roads; traffic safety; dust control measures; noise standards; light restrictions; water storage
    requirements; limits to times of operation; signage and site identification; and any other
    restrictions necessary for the grant of a conditional use. See R.R. at 38a-45a.
    4
    for disposition.5         In the substantive validity challenge, Objectors claimed that
    Ordinance 127: (1) violates Article 1, Section 1 of the Pennsylvania Constitution6
    because it was not designed to protect the health, safety, morals, and public welfare
    of its citizens and, therefore, is not a valid exercise of the Township’s police
    power; (2) violates Article 1, Section 1 by injecting incompatible industrial uses
    into a non-industrial zoning district in violation of the Township’s Comprehensive
    Plan thereby making the ordinance irrational; and (3) unreasonably infringes on
    their rights under Article 1, Section 27 of the Pennsylvania Constitution7 to clean
    air, pure water, and a healthy local environment in which to live, work, recreate,
    and raise their children.8
    5
    Rex and MarkWest Liberty Midstream & Resources (MarkWest), a natural gas
    gathering, processing and transportation company, intervened in the proceedings.
    6
    Article 1, Section 1 states, in relevant part, that “[a]ll men . . . have certain inherent and
    indefeasible rights, among which are those of enjoying and defending life and liberty, of
    acquiring, possessing and protecting property . . . and of pursuing their own happiness.” Pa.
    Const. art. I, §1.
    7
    Article 1, Section 27 states:
    The people have a right to clean air, pure water, and to the
    preservation of the natural, scenic, historic and esthetic values of
    the environment. Pennsylvania’s public natural resources are the
    common property of all the people, including generations yet to
    come. As trustee of these resources, the Commonwealth shall
    conserve and maintain them for the benefit of all the people.
    Pa. Const. art. I, §27.
    8
    In their appeal of the zoning permit issuance, Objectors raised similar claims, asserting
    that the Township’s approval of the Geyer site well pad development: (1) violates their rights
    under Article 1, Section 1 by injecting an incompatible industrial use with industrial standards
    into a zoning district where there is no expectation of industrial activity and where it will cause a
    (Footnote continued on next page…)
    5
    The Board held nine public hearings at which the parties presented
    expert and lay testimony and evidence. Development at the Geyer site was stayed
    during the proceedings.
    David Denk, one of the Objectors and a member of DRKN and CAC,
    testified that he lives in Weatherburn with his wife and two children approximately
    1200 feet from the Geyer site. He stated that he did not expect industrial activity
    from a well pad at the Geyer site when he purchased his house and he did not
    check with the Township to see if a well site was a permitted use. He said that he
    had retained the mineral rights in his property, but that he had concerns about the
    health impact of fracking activities if they take place nearby. The Board accepted
    Denk’s testimony as credible.
    Robert Zaccari, a member of DRKN and CAC, testified that in 2011,
    he purchased his house in Weatherburn and understood that the area is zoned for
    residential and agricultural uses. He acknowledged that residential construction in
    Weatherburn has been ongoing since he moved there, but that well pad
    construction is more intense. He stated that he did not know that the Township has
    a noise ordinance and that he refused to lease his subsurface rights to Rex. He said
    that he is concerned that well pad activity will impact the future value of his home,
    but he did not know to what extent. The Board accepted Zaccari’s testimony as
    credible.
    Kathleen Wagner lives on Denny Road in the Township and is
    opposed to the well pad at the Geyer site. However, she stated that she signed a
    (continued…)
    nuisance; (2) violates their rights under Article 1, Section 27 to a healthy community in which to
    live; and (3) breached the Township’s obligations as trustee under Article 1, Section 27.
    6
    gas lease with Rex and was paid by Rex so the Board found the remainder of her
    testimony to be not credible.
    Henrich Hartge testified that he resides in Weatherburn with his wife
    and daughter and that he is most worried about an explosion from fracking
    activities. The Board found that his concern, although not entirely outside the
    realm of possibility, was exaggerated for purposes of the hearing and not credible.
    Crystal Yost testified that she lives with her husband and children
    approximately 1300 feet from an operating Rex fracking facility, the Reno Well.
    The Board found that her testimony was not credible because she substantially
    exaggerated her testimony and was evasive.
    Melissa Brown testified that she lives with her husband and daughter
    on Forsyth Road adjacent to an oil and gas pipeline. She stated that she has
    concerns about the pipeline near the rear of her property contaminating the
    environment, her water well and her trees. However, she signed a subsurface gas
    lease with Rex and the Board found her testimony to be not credible.
    Michael Endler, Rex’s vice president and regional manager, testified
    regarding the construction activities and the timetable for the construction of a well
    pad. However, the Board found that his testimony was not credible because he
    was combative and evasive on cross-examination.
    Jane Hawkins Peterson testified that she lives in the Township with
    her husband and is a part owner of a farm property that is leased to Rex and also to
    MarkWest for a pipeline.        She stated that leasing the land for oil and gas
    financially helps her property remain agricultural, as opposed to being developed
    for residential uses. The Board accepted her testimony as credible.
    7
    Catherine Morely testified that she lives in the Township and her
    father’s farm is the site of an existing Rex well pad, the Ferree well site. She stated
    that she lives 1900 feet from the Reno well site and 1900 feet from the Ferree well
    site. She said that her family’s farming operations continue around the Ferree well
    site and the intrusion of the well pad drilling and construction was minimal. The
    Board accepted her testimony as credible.
    Janice Kennedy testified that she lives adjacent to Weatherburn and
    would be approximately 1,015 feet from the Geyer well pad, the closest residence
    to the pad.       She said that she began living in the area before residential
    construction in Weatherburn and that there has been ongoing construction from
    2010. She stated that she considers the residential development to be a greater
    concern than the Geyer well pad due to increased lighting, ongoing construction,
    and denser population. She acknowledged that she has a subsurface lease with Rex
    and that she has no objection to the construction of the well pad and fracking for
    gas and oil at the Geyer site. The Board accepted her testimony as credible.
    Scott Fodi, the Township’s manager and zoning officer, testified that
    the Township’s Zoning Ordinance was silent as to oil and gas facilities prior to the
    enactment of Ordinance 127 so the Township was at risk for such facilities being
    permitted in every district due to exclusionary zoning. He stated that oil and gas
    leasing reached a peak in intensity in the Township around the time the General
    Assembly enacted the Pennsylvania Oil and Gas Act (Act 13),9 and that 80% of the
    properties in the Township are now leased for oil and gas development. He said
    that after this Court held that the zoning provisions in Act 13 were invalid in
    Robinson Township v. Commonwealth, 
    52 A.3d 463
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2012) (Robinson
    9
    58 Pa. C.S. §§2301-3504.
    8
    I), aff’d in part and rev’d in part, 
    83 A.3d 901
     (Pa. 2013) (Robinson II), the
    Township’s Board of Supervisors directed him to develop an oil and gas
    development zoning ordinance for the Township. He testified that he submitted
    the draft ordinance to the Township’s Planning Commission in June 2014. He
    stated that, in July 2014, the Commission voted to request the Board of Supervisors
    to postpone a vote on the draft ordinance for one month, but that the Board enacted
    Ordinance 127 in August 2014, nonetheless. The Board accepted his testimony as
    credible.
    Thomas Daniels, Objectors’ land use expert, asserted that Ordinance
    127 is not valid because it is not consistent with the Township’s current joint
    Comprehensive Plan with Richland Township. He calculated that Ordinance 127
    opens up 90.2% of the Township to oil and gas development, but he did not
    provide a basis for this calculation.           He opined that oil and gas operations
    constitute a heavy industrial use associated with noise, odor, dust, pollution, fires
    and evacuations, which is inconsistent with the residential and agricultural uses in
    the R-AG Zoning District.10
    Attorney William Sittig, the Township’s and Rex’s land use expert,11
    asserted that oil and gas operations include industrial components, but cannot be
    10
    Objectors also offered Jay Parrish as an expert in geology and geography. However,
    the Board found that “Dr. Parrish’s methodology is not generally accepted in the relevant field”
    and that “he admitted that the opinion he was offering is not supported by any scholarly support
    and is indeed ‘novel.’ [R.R. at 1911a].” R.R. at 1773a. As a result, the Board determined that
    “[Objectors] failed to lay a proper foundation to establish the acceptance of [] Parrish’s methods
    and conclusions,” “decline[d] to accept [] Parrish as an expert,” and “rejected [his testimony] in
    toto.” 
    Id.
    11
    Objectors objected to Sittig’s testimony as an expert in land use law and planning and
    ordinance analysis. The Board noted that Sittig “has a Bachelor’s Degree in mechanical
    engineering as well as a Juris Doctorate,” that “[h]e has extensive experience in land use
    (Footnote continued on next page…)
    9
    characterized as a heavy industrial use. He opined that Daniels only focused on a
    temporary period of industrial development and did not take into account the entire
    lifespan of a well pad during drilling operations and the post-reclamation period.
    He disputed Daniels’ assertion regarding breadth of development, stating that less
    than 30% of the land in the Township can be drilled pursuant to Ordinance 127.
    With respect to the Township’s Comprehensive Plan, Sittig asserted that the issue
    is whether Ordinance 127 is a valid exercise of Township power and not whether it
    fell within the plan’s framework.             The Board accepted Sittig’s testimony as
    credible.
    Daniel Carpenter, Objectors’ public health expert, opined that there is
    a public risk for significant contamination by pollutants within a two-mile radius of
    a well pad based on his examination of studies relevant to fracking. However, the
    Board found that his opinion is based on flawed data and failed to take into account
    contrary studies.
    Julie Panko, Rex’s expert in human health risk assessments,
    conducted a study of the fracking operations at Fort Cherry High School in
    Washington County, from which she determined that the release of chemical
    pollutants into the air during fracking and flaring do not significantly exceed the
    (continued…)
    planning issues as counsel for both municipalities and developers,” and that “[h]is methodology
    is generally accepted in the field.” R.R. at 1773a. The Board stated that “[t]he issue with Mr.
    Sittig is whether he can ‘bring to the table’ specialized knowledge beyond the scope of a
    layperson” and that “[a]s a general rule, expert testimony on questions of law is not permitted.”
    
    Id.
     (citations omitted). Nevertheless, the Board accepted Sittig as an expert explaining that
    “during closing, counsel for [CAC] relied on, in large part, the testimony of Attorney Sitting in
    support of its own case, thereby waiving its objection,” and “reserve[d] to itself . . . any decision
    as to questions of law.” 
    Id.
     at 1774a.
    10
    background concentrations or health-based exposure limits. She opined that the oil
    and gas production authorized by Ordinance 127 does not constitute a risk to
    public health or neighboring residents, contradicting Carpenter’s opinion.
    However, the Board found that her studies did not consider a number of emission
    sources and failed to include a variety of pollutants caused by gas development
    including contaminant volatile organic chemicals.
    Dana Bowen, Objectors’ expert in noise assessment, prepared a study
    in which she concluded that the predicted noise levels would be 65 to 75 dBa at the
    Geyer site and would not reach 60 dBa for a distance of 3,200 feet from the site.
    She opined that sound mitigation techniques such as barriers would not effectively
    mitigate the noise. However, the Board found that she did not undertake any noise
    measurements at the Geyer site, did not accurately locate the position of the
    proposed well pad, and assumed that all equipment would be running
    simultaneously from the same spot and not arrayed across the site.
    Ultimately, the Board rejected the expert testimony of Carpenter,
    Panko, and Bowen, stating that “[i]t is apparent from cross-examination that of
    these three scientific expert witnesses, each failed to take into account underlying
    data that did not support their conclusions, chose to take shortcuts in their research
    by only utilizing favorable data and overlooked or substantially downplayed
    inconvenient data.” R.R. at 1784a-1785a. As a result, the Board found that “Dr.
    Carpenter, Ms. Panko and Ms. Bowen are not credible witnesses.” 
    Id.
     at 1785a.
    In disposing of Objectors’ claims, the Board initially explained that
    the Township’s Board of Supervisors is granted the authority to amend its Zoning
    11
    Ordinance under Section 601 of the Municipalities Planning Code (MPC)12 and
    that Section 603(i) provides that “zoning ordinances shall provide for the
    reasonable development of minerals in each municipality.” 53 P.S. §10603(i). In
    turn, Section 107 of the MPC defines “minerals” as including “crude oil and
    natural gas.” 53 P.S. §10107. The Board also stated that under Sections 603(g)
    and (h) and Section 604(5) of the MPC, “[z]oning ordinances must protect ‘prime
    agricultural land’ and encourage the continuity, development and viability of
    agricultural operations while also accommodating reasonable overall community
    growth. 53 P.S. §§10603(g) and (h), 10604(5).” R.R. at 1789a. The Board
    rejected “Daniels’ view that oil and gas operations should be limited to industrial
    districts” because “it views residential as the preeminent use, to which all other
    uses are subordinate.” Id. Rather, the Board found Sittig’s testimony to be more
    persuasive and credible that “the need to balance interests and uses is a far better
    view of a mixed use zoning district, [which is] one of the aims of the MPC and
    indeed the balance spoken of in Article 1, Section 27 of the Pennsylvania
    Constitution.” Id.
    As the Board explained:
    The Township Supervisors, through the passage of
    Ordinance 127, view oil and gas drilling activities as a
    way to help preserve agricultural activity. Their view is
    supported by the competent expert testimony of [] Sittig
    and the lay testimony of [] Morley and [] Hawkins
    Peterson.     The Supervisors also view unchecked
    suburban growth as being associated with air and water
    pollution, traffic issues, and sewer and water costs.
    12
    Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 805, 53 P.S. §10601. Section 601 states that “[t]he
    governing body of each municipality . . . may enact, amend and repeal zoning ordinances to
    implement comprehensive plans and to accomplish any of the purposes of this act.”
    12
    Where [Objectors] view agriculture and residential to be
    nearly synonymous, with a perspective that favors
    residential, the Supervisors do not, instead viewing
    residential and agricultural as distinct and different uses
    in a mixed use district that must be balanced. The
    [Board] finds the Supervisors’ view, espoused through
    the passage of Ordinance 127, to be credible.
    R.R. at 1789a-1790a.
    The Board found that “[t]he answer to whether the temporary
    industrial use poses a danger to the health, safety and welfare of the residents of
    [the] Township remains unanswered by the woefully inadequate scientific expert
    testimony presented in this case.” R.R. at 1790a. The Board concluded that
    Objectors “failed to prove a health hazard to the community by their use of
    woefully inadequate scientific testimony” and, “[t]o the extent [that they] seek to
    limit oil and gas operations to a traditional industrial zone, the net effect would be
    to engage in the exclusionary zoning of oil and gas.” Id.
    The Board rejected Objectors’ assertion that Ordinance 127 conflicts
    with the Township’s Comprehensive Plan, concluding that “oil and gas operations
    are not specifically mentioned within the Comprehensive Plan” and that it “does
    not refer to the evaluation and development of [an] approval process for the
    production of natural resources.” R.R. at 1791a. To the extent that they are
    inconsistent, the Board asserted that “a comprehensive plan is an abstract
    recommendation as to land utilization” so that “inconsistency with a
    comprehensive plan . . . cannot be a basis for a substantive challenge to a zoning
    ordinance.” Id. (citations omitted). The Board stated that it “does not view
    Robinson, 
    supra,
     as reversing prior case law on this issue” or “to require absolute
    adherence to an adopted comprehensive plan.” 
    Id.
    13
    Regarding Article 1, Sections 1 and 27, the Board explained that
    “[t]he substantive due process inquiry requires a balancing of land owners’ rights
    and the public interest to be protected by the exercise of the police power” and that
    “[t]his balancing of interests is the same inquiry that must be made to determine
    whether an ordinance meets [the] requirements of Trustee [under Section 27].”
    R.R. at 1792a. The Board found that “[t]he totality of oil and gas drilling on a site,
    such as the Geyer [site], is not an industrial use, but it is instead a use traditionally
    exercised in agricultural areas, containing [temporary] components of an industrial
    use” and that “[t]o limit oil and gas drilling activities to a traditionally zoned
    industrial district based on their industrial incidents, is irrational.” 
    Id.
     at 1793a.
    The Board explained that the Township’s Supervisors “balanced the
    community’s costs and benefits of oil and gas production as evidenced by, on one
    hand, Ordinance 127’s exclusion of oil and gas activity from ‘purely’ residential
    zones, such as R-1, R-2 and PRD districts, to on the other hand, viewing oil and
    gas drilling as part and parcel of an agricultural district.” R.R. at 1792a.13 The
    13
    The Board cited the following provisions in Ordinance 127 demonstrating this
    balancing of interests:
    Oil and gas activities are specifically excluded by
    Ordinance 127 from exclusively zoned residential districts, be it R-
    1, R-2 or within any PRD overlay district. The exclusion
    encompasses the three components of oil and gas drilling – well
    pads, processing plants and compressor stations. In addition,
    compressor stations and processing plants are not permitted in the
    R-AG district. The only oil and gas activity permitted in the R-AG
    mixed use district is an oil and gas well pad and its temporary
    industrial components. All of these limitations on oil and gas use
    evidence rational planning and a balancing of interests.
    R.R. at 1793a.
    14
    Board noted the PRD overlay located in the R-AG Residential Agriculture District
    and that “[m]ixed use districts, and even seemingly incompatible mixed use
    districts with crowded residential areas, have been recognized as an acceptable
    planning tool.” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted). The Board stated:
    In mixed use districts of residential and
    agricultural districts, such as the epicenter R-AG district,
    it is rational to preserve agricultural districts to maintain
    a check on the growth of residential districts. Oil and gas
    drilling provides a financial mechanism by which the free
    market can preserve agriculture.            Ordinance 127
    therefore bears a substantial relationship to public health,
    safety and welfare as well as a balancing of interests.
    
    Id.
     at 1793a-1794a.
    The Board found that the burden was on Objectors and that they
    “failed to meet their burden that oil and gas drilling pads will injure their
    neighbors.” R.R. at 1794a. The Board stated that the Township’s Supervisors
    “acted in their role as trustee for future generations, as required by Article 1,
    §27 . . . by helping to preserve agricultural resources for future generations.” Id.
    The Board concluded that “the effect of Ordinance 127 constitutes a balancing of
    the benefits of preserving agriculture including utilizing oil and gas use upon
    agricultural areas encompassing no more than 30% of the Township, and, by
    limiting suburban growth.”        Id.   As a result, the Board denied Objectors’
    substantive challenge to Ordinance 127 and their appeal of the zoning permit.
    Objectors appealed the Board’s decision to the trial court and the trial
    court issued a stay14 pursuant to Section 1003-A(d) of the MPC.15 Rex, Geyer, and
    14
    The trial court had previously issued and then vacated a preliminary injunction
    pursuant to Pa. R.C.P. No. 1531.
    15
    the Township intervened in Objectors’ zoning appeal and appealed the trial court’s
    stay order to this Court. The zoning appeal continued and the trial court ultimately
    affirmed the Board’s decision without taking additional evidence and lifted the
    stay. Objectors, the Township, Rex, and Geyer then filed the instant appeals16 of
    the trial court’s affirmance of the Board’s decision.17
    (continued…)
    15
    Added by Act of December 21, 1988, P.L. 1329, 53 P.S. §11003-A(d). Section 1003-
    A(d) states that “[t]he filing of an appeal in court under this section shall not stay the action
    appealed from, but the appellants may petition the court having jurisdiction of the land use
    appeals for a stay.”
    16
    This Court stayed the appeals of the trial court’s stay order and sua sponte consolidated
    the land use appeals with Rex’s and Geyer’s appeals of the trial court’s stay order; the Township
    discontinued its appeal of the trial court’s stay order. We also designated Objectors as appellants
    in the consolidated appeals. The Board did not file an appellate brief, and Geyer joined in Rex’s
    and the Township’s appellate briefs.
    17
    “In an appeal from a trial court’s order affirming a decision of a zoning hearing board,
    where the trial court takes no additional evidence, our review is limited to considering whether
    the zoning hearing board abused its discretion or erred as a matter of law. The zoning hearing
    board abuses its discretion when it issues findings of fact that are not supported by substantial
    record evidence[.]” In re Bartkowski Investment Group, 
    106 A.3d 230
    , 237 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014),
    appeals denied, 
    118 A.3d 1109
     (Pa. 2015) (citation omitted). See also 41 Valley Associates v.
    Board of Supervisors of London Grove Township, 
    882 A.2d 5
    , 13 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2005), appeal
    discontinued, (Pa., No. 60 MAP 2006, filed March 21, 2007) (“On appeal, most of the arguments
    advanced by the parties focus on the trial court’s opinion. However, we review the Board [of
    Supervisor’s] decision to determine whether it committed an error of law and whether its
    necessary findings of fact are supported by substantial evidence. [Since most of the arguments
    advanced by the parties focus on the trial court’s opinion rather than on the Board’s decision,
    which is the subject of our review, our analysis departs from the arguments advanced by the
    parties].”) (emphasis in original).
    16
    I.
    Objectors first claim18 that the trial court erred in failing to correctly
    apply a substantive due process analysis under Article 1, Section 1 because
    Ordinance 127 was not a valid exercise of the Township’s police powers and
    places an incompatible industrial use in the R-AG Residential Agriculture District
    in violation of the MPC. Specifically, Objectors assert that Ordinance 127 has
    substantially similar problems to Act 13’s zoning scheme that was held to be
    invalid by this Court in Robinson I wherein this Court determined that the
    placement of industrial uses in districts set aside for non-industrial uses makes
    zoning schemes irrational and unconstitutional. See Robinson I, 
    52 A.3d at
    484
    n.21, 485 n.23.       They contend that Ordinance 127 is illogical, arbitrary, and
    discriminatory by permitting oil and gas development by right in agricultural and
    residential/agricultural zones and that it unduly disturbs their established
    expectations regarding their property rights, including public health, safety, and
    welfare. Likewise, Objectors submit that the trial court erred in its analysis of their
    MPC claims because Section 603 requires consistency with the Comprehensive
    Plan and protection of natural and historic features and resources, and Section 604
    requires that ordinances be designed to provide adequate land for housing and to
    18
    Objectors initially assert that the trial court erred in holding that they could not
    challenge the validity of Ordinance 127. However, our review of the trial court’s opinion
    demonstrates that this claim of error is based on a misconstruction of the opinion. See Trial
    Court 1/21/16 Opinion at 12. In any event, to the extent that the trial court may have erred in this
    regard, any error was harmless because the trial court considered Objectors’ claims on the merits
    and it did not affect the outcome of their appeal. See, e.g., Pennsy Supply, Inc. v. Zoning
    Hearing Board of Dorrance Township, 
    987 A.2d 1243
    , 1251 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2009), appeal denied,
    
    4 A.3d 1056
     (Pa. 2010) (“We hold, however, that the trial court’s reference to [Butler v. Derr
    Flooring, 
    285 A.2d 538
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 1971),] in its original opinion was harmless error since the
    trial court affirmed the ZHB’s decision that applied the appropriate burden of proof, and the error
    had no effect on the outcome of this case.”).
    17
    promote proper emergency response and to prevent the loss of health, life or
    property from fire, flood, panic or other dangers.19
    However, Objectors’ claims in this regard are based on the faulty
    premise that Ordinance 127 introduced a new and incompatible industrial use into
    the R-AG Residential Agriculture Zoning District. As this Court has explained:
    In MarkWest Liberty Midstream & Resources,
    LLC v. Cecil Township Zoning Hearing Board, 
    102 A.3d 549
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014), [appeal denied, 
    113 A.3d 281
    (Pa. 2015)], the zoning board denied MarkWest’s
    application for a special exception to operate a natural
    gas compressor station in the township’s light industrial
    zoning district. Its proposed facility involved up to eight
    engines, surrounding sound structures, dehydration
    facilities, tanks, a vapor recovery unit, a flare and
    associated piping. The closest residence was 1,000 feet
    19
    As the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has explained:
    When presented with a challenge to a zoning ordinance, the
    reviewing court presumes the ordinance is valid. The burden of
    proving otherwise is on the challenging party.
    A zoning ordinance is a valid exercise of the police power
    when it promotes public health, safety or welfare and its
    regulations are substantially related to the purpose the ordinance
    purports to serve. In applying that formulation, Pennsylvania
    courts use a substantive due process analysis which requires a
    reviewing court to balance the public interest served by the zoning
    ordinance against the confiscatory or exclusionary impact of
    regulation on individual rights. The party challenging the
    constitutionality of certain zoning provisions must establish that
    they are arbitrary, unreasonable and unrelated to the public health,
    safety, morals and general welfare. Where their validity is
    debatable, the legislature’s judgment must control.
    Boundary Drive Associates v. Shrewsbury Township Board of Supervisors, 
    491 A.2d 86
    , 90 (Pa.
    1985) (citations omitted).
    18
    from the proposed facility. The zoning board denied the
    application for the stated reason that MarkWest failed to
    establish that its facility would be similar to other uses
    permitted in the zoning district or that its impact would
    be equal to or less than that of other permitted uses. The
    trial court affirmed the board.
    On appeal to this Court, MarkWest argued that its
    compressor station had the same general character as an
    “essential service,” which was a use permitted in the light
    industrial district.     The zoning ordinance defined
    “essential service” as follows:
    The erection, construction, alteration, or
    maintenance,      of     gas,  electrical,   and
    communication facilities; steam, fuel, or water
    transmission or distribution systems; and
    collection, supply, or disposal systems. Such
    systems may include poles, wires, mains, drains,
    sewers, pipes, sewage treatment plants, conduits,
    cables, fire alarm and police call boxes, traffic
    signals, hydrants, and similar accessories. This
    definition is not intended to include private
    commercial enterprises such as cellular
    communications facilities, but only those public
    facilities necessary for the health, safety, and
    general welfare of the community.[20]
    20
    Similarly, Section 175.8 of the Township’s Zoning Ordinance defines “essential
    services” as:
    The provision of distribution systems by public utilities, municipal
    or other government units regulated by the Public Utility
    Commission (PUC) or other governmental agencies of
    underground or overhead gas, electrical, steam or water pipes,
    sewers, conduit, fire alarm boxes, traffic signals, hydrants and
    other similar equipment and accessories in connection therewith,
    reasonably necessary for the furnishing of adequate services by
    such public utilities or municipal or governmental units or for the
    public health and safety or general welfare.
    R.R. at 1582a.
    19
    MarkWest, 
    102 A.3d at 556
     (emphasis added). The
    zoning board concluded that the MarkWest compressor
    was different from an “essential service” because it
    would not transmit natural gas to an “end user.” 
    Id. at 557
    . This Court rejected that conclusion because the
    zoning ordinance did not contain such a requirement.
    Rather, an “essential service” was defined as “public
    facilities necessary for the health, safety, and general
    welfare of the community.” 
    Id. at 557
    . Further, the
    zoning ordinance defined a “public service facility” as
    [b]uildings, power plants or substations, water
    treatment plants or pumping stations, sewage
    disposal or pumping plants, and other similar
    public service structures used by a public utility
    . . ., whether publicly or privately owned, or by a
    municipal or other government agency, including
    the furnishing of . . . gas . . . services.
    
    Id. at 558-59
     (emphasis in original). We concluded that
    MarkWest’s compressor had the “same general
    character” as an “essential service.” It was not necessary
    that the proposed use be the “same” as a permitted use
    but only that it be “similar.”
    Gorsline v. Board of Supervisors of Fairfield Township, 
    123 A.3d 1142
    , 1151-52
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015), appeal granted, 
    139 A.3d 178
     (Pa. 2016).
    In Gorsline, Inflection Energy, LLC (Inflection) leased land from
    Donald and Eleanor Shaheen in Fairfield Township’s RA-Residential Agriculture
    District and filed an application for a conditional use permit to construct and
    operate a natural gas well on the land. Because the Township’s Zoning Ordinance
    did not specifically authorize natural gas wells, Inflection sought the permit under
    a “savings clause” that authorizes the Township’s Board of Supervisors to grant a
    conditional use that is not specifically authorized so long as it is consistent with the
    uses permitted in the zoning district and with the public health and safety. The
    Board had previously granted conditional use approval for four other natural gas
    20
    wells in the RA District. The Board conducted a number of hearings at which a
    number of neighboring landowners (Neighboring Landowners), including
    Gorsline, appeared in opposition to the permit, but did not present any evidence.
    The Board determined that Inflection met its burden of proving that it met the
    requirements for a conditional use thereby creating a presumption that the
    proposed use was consistent with the general welfare and safety of the public. The
    Board held that the burden shifted to Neighboring Landowners, who failed to
    present any evidence to substantiate their concerns about their property values,
    drinking water quality, and increased truck traffic and noise. As a result, the Board
    granted the permit.
    On appeal, the common pleas court did not receive additional
    evidence and held that Inflection did not meet its burden of satisfying the
    conditional use requirements and reversed the Board’s grant of the permit. The
    court found that Inflection’s application was too imprecise to determine whether
    the proposed well was a use similar to those expressly permitted in the RA District.
    The court noted that the RA District was intended for residential and farming uses,
    which are quiet uses and that the proposed well was not a compatible use citing the
    number of truck deliveries during the construction phase, the drilling rigs, and the
    installation of a water pipeline. The court found the expert testimony regarding
    noise inconsistent, and held that Inflection did not prove that the proposed use
    would not be detrimental to the public health, safety, and welfare of the
    neighborhood. Accordingly, the court granted Neighboring Landowners’ appeal,
    nullifying the Board’s decision granting the conditional use permit.
    On appeal to this Court, we initially noted that “[t]he gravamen of
    Inflection’s appeal is that its proposed use is similar to and compatible with uses
    21
    allowed in the RA District either as a matter of right or as a conditional use,” and
    that the permitted and conditional uses in the RA District under the zoning
    ordinance ranged “from essential services and hunting camps to parking garages,
    offices, funeral homes and public service facilities.” Gorsline, 123 A.3d at 1150.
    We stated that “Inflection claims that its proposed well is similar to a ‘public
    service facility’” and “that its well will service the general public by producing
    natural gas for its use and consumption.” Id. We also noted that “the Board has
    already permitted four other gas well pads within the RA District, which shows
    that Inflection’s proposed use is compatible with other uses in the RA District.”
    Id.
    In initially holding that Inflection’s proposed natural gas well use was
    similar to and compatible with other uses permitted in the RA District, we
    explained:
    MarkWest is directly on point. The Township’s
    Zoning Ordinance defines a “public service facility” as
    follows:
    The erection, construction, alteration, operation or
    maintenance of buildings, power plants or
    substations, water treatment plants or pumping
    station; 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.
    Zoning Ordinance, §2.2. Further, Section 4.2 of the
    Zoning Ordinance defines “essential services” as follows:
    Public utility facilities that do not require
    enclosure in a building, including gas, electrical,
    steam, telephone, or water distribution systems;
    22
    and including related equipment such as poles,
    towers, wires, mains, sewers, pipes, conduits,
    cables, fire alarm boxes, police call boxes, traffic
    signals, hydrants and other similar equipment.
    Zoning Ordinance, §2.2.
    Precisely as in MarkWest, Inflection’s proposed
    use satisfies the requirement set forth in 12.18.1 of the
    Zoning Ordinance that it “is similar to and compatible
    with other uses permitted in the zone where the subject
    property is located.” Zoning Ordinance, §12.18.1. The
    evidence about Inflection’s well was in no way rebutted,
    and the Board has already authorized Inflection’s other
    wells in the RA District.
    Proving that its proposed use is similar to and
    compatible with uses expressly permitted in the RA
    District is not dispositive. Inflection also had the burden
    to show that its proposed use does not “conflict with the
    general purposes of this [Zoning] Ordinance.” Zoning
    Ordinance, §12.18.3.          Again, its evidence was
    uncontradicted. Inflection argues that its well will not
    conflict with the general purpose of the Zoning
    Ordinance, which expressly authorizes the extraction of
    minerals. Zoning Ordinance, §§12.18.1, 12.18.3.
    In holding otherwise, the trial court conflated the
    general purpose of the Zoning Ordinance with the
    requirement that the proposed use be similar to and
    compatible with other uses allowed in the RA District.
    The trial court also erred in focusing on the truck
    deliveries during the construction phase of the project
    because “[z]oning regulates the use of land and not the
    particulars of development and construction.” In re
    Thompson, 
    896 A.2d 659
    , 671 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2006).
    We hold that Inflection’s proposed use met the
    threshold requirements set forth in Sections 12.18.1 and
    12.18.3 of the Zoning Ordinance. It is similar to and
    compatible with the uses permitted in the RA District and
    does not conflict with the general purpose of the Zoning
    Ordinance.
    23
    123 A.3d at 1152-53 (footnote and citations to the record omitted and emphasis in
    original).
    With respect to Inflection’s assertion that it had demonstrated that the
    proposed use would not be detrimental to the public health, safety, and welfare, we
    stated:
    Inflection argues that the trial court erred in concluding
    that it did not prove that its natural gas well would “not
    be detrimental to the public health, safety and welfare of
    the neighborhood where it is to be located.” Zoning
    Ordinance, §12.18. Inflection presented expert testimony
    on that issue, which the Board accepted. Neighboring
    Landowners presented no evidence to the contrary.
    ***
    Nevertheless, the Board responded to the concerns
    of Neighboring Landowners by imposing numerous
    conditions related to roadway maintenance, traffic and
    parking. It also required Inflection to provide emergency
    contact information upon request, visually screen the
    well from the neighborhood and comply with all federal
    state and local permits and approvals.
    Id. at 1153-54.
    Based on the foregoing, we concluded:
    The trial court erred in holding that Inflection’s
    proposed use was not similar to a public service facility,
    which is expressly permitted in the RA District and
    compatible with other uses permitted in the RA District.
    The trial court also erred in holding that Inflection’s
    proposed use conflicted with the general purpose of the
    Zoning Ordinance, which specifically authorizes
    extraction of minerals. Finally, there was no probative
    evidence offered to show that Inflection’s proposed well
    will present a detriment to the health and safety of the
    neighborhood. Inflection satisfied the requirements of
    Section 12.18 of the Zoning Ordinance.
    24
    Id. at 1154 (emphasis in original).              The foregoing holdings in Gorsline and
    Markwest are instructive.21
    As noted above, when Ordinance 125 was enacted by the Township in
    2012, establishing the R-AG Residential Agriculture District, a permitted use from
    the inception of the district is the “public utilities, except buildings” use. Zoning
    Ordinance §175-244(A)(1)(h); R.R. at 1760a. Section 175.8(A)(1) and (5) of the
    Zoning Ordinance defines the “public utility” use, in relevant part, as “[a]ny person
    or corporation now or hereafter owning or operating in this commonwealth
    equipment or facilities for . . . [p]roducing, generating, transmitting, distributing or
    furnishing natural or artificial gas . . . for the production of light, heat or power to
    or for the public for compensation . . . [and t]ransporting or conveying natural or
    artificial gas, crude oil, gasoline or petroleum products . . . by pipeline or conduit
    for the public for compensation.” R.R. at 1594a. Like the “public service utility”
    use permitted as a conditional use in the RA District in Gorsline, by adding the “oil
    and gas well site development” use to the R-AG Residential Agriculture District
    through Ordinance 127, the Township’s Board of Supervisors merely added a use
    to the district that was similar to and compatible with an existing permitted “public
    utilities, except buildings” use.22 Likewise, as in Gorsline, at the time of Ordinance
    21
    It is well settled that this Court may affirm on any basis appearing in the record. Kohl
    v. New Sewickley Township Zoning Hearing Board, 
    108 A.3d 961
    , 973 n.12 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015)
    (citation omitted).
    22
    The General Assembly has also recognized the compatibility between agricultural and
    oil and gas development uses in other contexts. See Section 14.1(c)(6)(i) of the Agricultural
    Area Security Law, Act of June 30, 1981, P.L. 128, added by Act of December 14, 1988, P.L.
    1202, as amended, 3 P.S. §914.1(c)(6)(i) (“An agricultural conservation easement [purchased by
    the State Agricultural Land Preservation Board] shall not prevent . . . [t]he granting of leases . . .
    or the issuing of permits . . . for the exploration, development, storage or removal of . . . oil and
    gas by the owner of the subject land or the owner of the underlying . . . oil and gas or the owner
    (Footnote continued on next page…)
    25
    127’s enactment, there were already three well pads in the Township’s prior
    agricultural zoning district.        See R.R. at 2194a, 2213a-2214a, 2573a-2575a.23
    Further, Objectors’ reliance on the construction activity related to the “oil and gas
    well site development” use is misplaced “because ‘[z]oning regulates the use of
    land and not the particulars of development and construction.’” Gorsline, 123
    A.3d at 1153 (citation omitted and emphasis in original).
    (continued…)
    of the rights to develop the underlying . . . oil and gas, or the development of appurtenant
    facilities related to . . . oil or gas development or activities incident to the removal or
    development of such minerals.”); Section 6(c.1)(1) of the Pennsylvania Farmland and Forest
    Land Assessment Act of 1974, Act of December 19, 1974, P.L. 973, as amended, 72 P.S.
    §5490.6(c.1)(1) (“Land subject to preferential assessment may be leased or otherwise devoted to
    the exploration for and removal of gas and oil, including the extraction of coal bed methane, and
    the development of appurtenant facilities, including new roads and bridges, pipelines and other
    buildings or structures, related to exploration for and removal of gas and oil and the extraction of
    coal bed methane.”).
    23
    Objectors’ reference to “spot use” in Robinson I, 
    52 A.3d at
    484 n.21, 485 n.23, was in
    the context of the statewide mandate of the invalid provisions of Act 13. In contrast, the “oil and
    gas well site development” use in Ordinance 127 is permitted in mixed-use districts in the
    Township. As noted above, the Board found that natural gas compressor stations are permitted
    uses in non-residential I-1, AG-A, AG-B, and C-3 Zoning Districts, but are not permitted in the
    R-AG Agriculture Residential District because it is within the Township’s PRD district. R.R. at
    1780a, 1793a. The Board properly concluded that “[t]he only oil and gas activity permitted in
    the R-AG mixed use district is an oil and gas well pad and its temporary industrial components.
    All of these limitations on oil and gas use evidence rational planning and a balancing of
    interests.” 
    Id.
     at 1793a. This is not an impermissible “spot use.” See Plaxton v. Lycoming
    County Zoning Hearing Board, 
    986 A.2d 199
    , 211 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2009), appeal denied, 
    8 A.3d 900
     (Pa. 2010) (“Here, Objectors’ spot zoning and/or special legislation claims are unavailing.
    To that end, we observe that the property upon which [the lessee] proposes to construct its wind
    energy facility was not rezoned in a manner so as to subject it to unjustifiably different treatment
    from similar surrounding land. Indeed, the ordinance amendments did not rezone the property at
    issue at all; rather, the effect of the amendments is simply to permit, by right, wind energy
    facilities in all of the County’s Agricultural, Countryside and RP zoning districts. Therefore,
    Objectors' spot zoning claim fails here.”).
    26
    Additionally, there is substantial evidence supporting the Board’s
    determination that the “oil and gas well site development” use is compatible with
    the other permitted agricultural and residential uses and that it will limit sprawl and
    protect agricultural land. R.R. at 2188a, 2193a, 2194a, 2207a- 2208a, 2214a,
    2231a. See also 
    id.
     at 693a-694a, 703a-705a, 2574a-2576a, 2581a-2582a.24 This is
    consistent with the stated general purposes of Ordinance 127 and the R-AG
    Residential Agriculture District created by Ordinance 125. 
    Id.
     at 34a, 1760a. As
    the Board explained, the Township’s Supervisors “balanced the community’s costs
    24
    To the extent that Objectors’ claims could be construed as asserting that oil and gas
    drilling is an “abnormally dangerous” or “ultra-hazardous” activity, thereby implicating strict tort
    liability, this assertion has been specifically rejected. For example, as a federal court has
    explained:
    [T]he evidence in the record developed by the parties contains
    numerous citations to governmental reports, data analysis, and
    expert commentary attesting to the Defendants’ position that the
    risks from a properly drilled, cased and hydraulically fractured gas
    well are minimal. This evidence includes a report from the
    Pennsylvania General Assembly that referred to a study examining
    more than 200 water samples taken before and after drilling and
    hydraulic fracturing that revealed no major influences from gas
    well drilling or fracking. The evidence also indicates that
    Pennsylvania’s [DEP] concluded that problems associated with
    natural gas drilling, to the extent they exist, ‘can be mitigated by
    proper construction of gas wells.’ Other evidence from within
    Pennsylvania and other states in which natural gas drilling occurs
    further supports the view that hydraulically fractured wells create,
    at most, relatively low risk to water supplies, and the Director of
    the DEP’s Office of Oil and Gas Management attested that
    following a ‘million experiments’ from across the country, he had
    not found any instances of fracking interfering with groundwater
    resources.
    Ely v. Cabot Oil and Gas Corporation, 
    38 F.Supp. 3d 518
    , 529 (M.D. Pa. 2014) (citations
    omitted).
    27
    and benefits of oil and gas production as evidenced by, on one hand, Ordinance
    127’s exclusion of oil and gas activity from ‘purely’ residential zones, such as R-1,
    R-2 and PRD districts, to on the other hand, viewing oil and gas drilling as part and
    parcel of an agricultural district.” R.R. at 1792a
    Moreover, Objectors failed to sustain their burden of demonstrating
    by credible testimony that the presumptively valid Ordinance 127 is “arbitrary,
    unreasonable and unrelated to the public health, safety, morals and general
    welfare.” Boundary Drive Associates, 491 A.2d at 90. As noted above, the Board
    found that “[t]he answer to whether the temporary industrial use poses a danger to
    the health, safety and welfare of the residents of [the] Township remains
    unanswered by the woefully inadequate scientific expert testimony presented in
    this case,” and concluded that Objectors “failed to prove a health hazard to the
    community by their use of woefully inadequate scientific testimony.” R.R. at
    1790a. See, e.g., Christman v. Zoning Hearing Board of the Township of Windsor,
    
    854 A.2d 629
    , 635 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004) (“It was Landowners’ burden to establish
    the zoning map amendment was arbitrary and unreasonable.                 As discussed
    hereafter, the ZHB was unpersuaded by Landowners’ vague proof on the issue, and
    it found Landowners offered no credible evidence that the Ordinance was arbitrary
    and unreasonable. As the ZHB concluded Landowners failed to meet their burden
    based on credibility findings, no error is evident.”) (citations omitted).
    Finally, Section 603(g)(1), (h) and (i) of the MPC states that
    “ordinances shall protect prime agricultural land,” “shall encourage the continuity,
    development and viability of agricultural operations,” and “shall provide for the
    reasonable development of minerals.” 53 P.S. §§10603(g)(1), (h), (i). In turn,
    Section 107 of the MPC defines “minerals” as including “crude oil and natural
    28
    gas.”   53 P.S. §10107.      Likewise, Section 604(3) and (5) states that “[t]he
    provisions of zoning ordinances shall be designed . . . to preserve prime agriculture
    and farmland” while “accommodat[ing] reasonable overall community growth.”
    53 P.S. §10604(3), (5). The substantial evidence demonstrates that Ordinance 127
    accomplishes the foregoing while limiting oil and gas development to certain
    zoning districts in the Township. The fact that such a use may conflict with the
    Township’s Comprehensive Plan is not a basis upon which the Board may
    invalidate Ordinance 127. See Section 303(c) of the MPC, 53 P.S. §10303(c)
    (“[N]o action by the governing body of a municipality shall be invalid nor shall the
    same be subject to challenge or appeal on the basis that such action is inconsistent
    with, or fails to comply with, the provision of a comprehensive plan.”). Based on
    the foregoing, the Board did not err in rejecting Objectors’ substantive challenge to
    Ordinance 127 as violative of Article 1, Section 1 of the Pennsylvania Constitution
    and the trial court did not err in affirming this determination.
    II.
    Objectors next claim that the trial court also failed to apply the
    relevant constitutional analysis for their Article 1, Section 27 claims. They argue
    that the Township failed to assess whether the ordinance would cause unreasonable
    “actual or likely degradation” of air or water quality. See Robinson II, 83 A.3d at
    951-55. They contend that the Township also violated its fiduciary duty as trustee
    under Section 27 by issuing the permit without first considering the environmental
    effect of the action on the constitutionally protected features; failing to exercise
    prudence respecting the environment; treating all beneficiaries of the trust equally;
    29
    and protecting the natural environment over development and disturbance.
    Robinson II, 83 A.3d at 952, 957-58, 959, 973 n.55.
    Objectors argue that Ordinance 127 suffers from the same infirmity of
    Act 13 that was stricken in Robinson II, i.e., that it permits “industrial” oil and gas
    development in non-industrial zoning districts.       However, the Supreme Court
    invalidated the municipal zoning provisions of Act 13 because the General
    Assembly usurped the municipalities’ right to restrict oil and gas development
    from any zoning district, not because it permitted oil and gas development in non-
    industrial zoning districts.   Robinson II, 83 A.3d at 980.         Nevertheless, the
    Supreme Court recognized that Article 1, Section 27 “do[es] not require a freeze of
    the existing public natural resource stock; rather, . . . the duties to conserve and
    maintain are tempered by legitimate development tending to improve the lot of
    Pennsylvania’s citizenry, with the evident goal of promoting sustainable
    development.” Id. at 958.
    Moreover, this Court has held that “the [Robinson II] plurality’s
    construction of Article 1, Section 27 [is] persuasive only to the extent it is
    consistent with binding precedent from this Court and the Supreme Court on the
    same    subject.”      Pennsylvania     Environmental     Defense     Foundation     v.
    Commonwealth, 
    108 A.3d 140
    , 156 n.37 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015) (citations omitted).
    This Court stated that “[i]n the absence of a majority opinion from the Supreme
    Court or a decision from this Court overruling Payne [v. Kassab, 
    312 A.2d 86
     (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 1973)], that opinion is still binding on this Court.” Id. at 158.
    In Payne, this Court established a test to determine whether
    governmental action implicates the provisions of Article 1, Section 27:
    Judicial review of the endless decisions that will result
    from such a balancing of environmental and social
    30
    concerns must be realistic and not merely legalistic. The
    court’s role must be to test the decision under review by a
    threefold standard: (1) Was there compliance with all
    applicable statutes and regulations relevant to the
    protection of the Commonwealth’s public natural
    resources? (2) Does the record demonstrate a reasonable
    effort to reduce the environmental incursion to a
    minimum? (3) Does the environmental harm which will
    result from the challenged decision or action so clearly
    outweigh the benefits to be derived therefrom that to
    proceed further would be an abuse of discretion?
    312 A.2d at 94.
    We have explained that Article 1, Section 27 “places policymakers in
    the ‘constant and difficult’ position of ‘weighing conflicting environmental and
    social concerns’ and ‘in arriving at a course of action that will be expedient as well
    as reflective of the high priority which constitutionally has been placed on the
    conservation of our natural, scenic, esthetic and historical resources.’ To this end,
    we recently described [Article 1, Section 27] as ‘a thumb on the scale, giving
    greater weight to the environmental concerns in the decision-making process’
    when ‘environmental concerns of development are juxtaposed with economic
    benefits of development.’” Funk v. Wolf, 
    144 A.3d 228
    , 234 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2016)
    (citations omitted).
    Ordinance 127 meets the Payne three-factor test. With respect to the
    first prong of the Payne test, under Section 175-155.2, any person or entity
    intending to engage in “oil and gas well site development” must comply with a
    number of requirements including: (1) provide an application including a copy of
    the Erosion and Sediment Control Plan (ESCGP-2) and Post-Construction
    Stormwater Management Plan prepared by a registered and licensed professional
    who has been trained by DEP’s Office of Oil and Gas Management on erosion and
    sediment control and post construction stormwater management for oil and gas
    31
    activities; (2) if weight-restricted Township roads will be used, demonstrate
    compliance       with    any    applicable    Township      ordinances,     Department   of
    Transportation regulations, and Township road bonding requirements, provide
    proof of bonding, and enter into a road maintenance agreement with the Township;
    (3) provide a copy of Highway Occupancy Permits and a driveway permit if
    entrance to the site is a Township road; (4) provide a copy of the Preparedness,
    Prevention, and Contingency Plan; (5) provide reimbursement for all fees
    permitted under Section 617.3(e) of the MPC;25 (6) provide a copy of any
    applicable DEP permits relating to water storage and the impoundment must be
    reclaimed in accordance with DEP rules and regulations; and (7) comply with all
    DEP signage requirements. See R.R. at 38a-42a.
    Regarding the second prong of the Payne test, as the Board noted:
    Oil and gas activities are specifically excluded by
    Ordinance 127 from exclusively zoned residential
    districts, be it R-1, R-2 or within any PRD overlay
    district.    The exclusion encompasses the three
    components of oil and gas drilling – well pads,
    processing plants and compressor stations. In addition,
    compressor stations and processing plants are not
    permitted in the R-AG district. The only oil and gas
    activity permitted in the R-AG mixed use district is an oil
    and gas well pad and its temporary industrial
    components. All of these limitations on oil and gas use
    evidence rational planning and a balancing of interests.
    R.R. at 1793a. See also National Solid Wastes Management Association v. Casey,
    
    600 A.2d 260
    , 265 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1991), aff’d per curiam, 
    619 A.2d 1063
     (Pa.
    1993) (“The balancing of environmental and societal concerns, which the
    Commonwealth argues is mandated by Article I, Section 27, was achieved through
    25
    Added by the Act of December 21, 1988, P.L. 1329, 53 P.S. §10617.3(e).
    32
    the legislative process which enacted Acts 97[26] and 101[27] and which promulgated
    the applicable regulations. Article I, Section 27 does not give the Governor the
    authority to disturb that legislative scheme. Neither does it give him the authority
    to alter [DEP]’s responsibilities pursuant to that scheme.”).
    Finally, with respect to the third prong of the Payne test, the Board
    explained that the Township’s Supervisors “acted in their role as trustee for future
    generations, as required by Article 1, §27 . . . by helping to preserve agricultural
    resources for future generations;” “the effect of Ordinance 127 constitutes a
    balancing of the benefits of preserving agriculture including utilizing oil and gas
    use upon agricultural areas encompassing no more than 30% of the Township, and,
    by limiting suburban growth;” and Objectors “failed to meet their burden that oil
    and gas drilling pads will injure their neighbors.” R.R. at 1794a. See also Feudale
    v. Aqua Pennsylvania, Inc., 
    122 A.3d 462
    , 468 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015), aff’d per
    curiam, 
    135 A.3d 580
     (Pa. 2016) (“[Article 1, Section 27] requires [the
    Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR)] to first take into
    consideration the environmental impact of proposed actions. [The objector] has
    failed to specifically allege that DCNR did not comply with all applicable statutes
    and regulations, or that DCNR failed to keep the environmental impact to a
    minimum.      Except for his oft-stated opinion about the aesthetic value of the
    Roaring Creek Tract, [the objector] has not alleged any facts suggesting that the
    ‘environmental harm which will result from the [timbering] so clearly outweighs
    26
    Solid Waste Management Act, Act of July 7, 1980, P.L. 380, as amended, 35 P.S.
    §§6018.1-6018.1003.
    27
    Municipal Waste Planning, Recycling and Waste Reduction Act, Act of July 28, 1988,
    P.L. 556, as amended, 53 P.S. §§4000.101-4000.1904.
    33
    the benefits to be derived therefrom that to proceed further would be an abuse of
    discretion.’ Merely alleging that DCNR’s proposed action will do harm to the
    Roaring Creek Tract is insufficient to establish a claim under [Article 1, Section
    27].”). Based on the foregoing, the Board did not err in rejecting Objectors’
    substantive challenge to Ordinance 127 as violative of Article 1, Section 27 of the
    Pennsylvania Constitution and the trial court did not err in affirming this
    determination.28
    III.
    Objectors next argue that the Board erred in its exclusion of evidence
    and rejection of admitted evidence, and that its decision is not supported by
    substantial evidence.29 Specifically, Objectors assert that the Board abused its
    28
    Objectors also contend that the Township’s issuance of the permit violates the MPC
    and Article 1, Sections 1 and 27 of the Constitution and the permit should be invalidated on these
    bases. However, as outlined above, Objectors’ claims in this regard are without merit so any
    additional contentions based on these claims are likewise without merit.
    29
    As a corollary to this claim, Objectors assert that the record demonstrates the Board’s
    clear bias in these proceedings in violation of due process. However, as this Court has
    previously noted:
    Importantly, “[w]hile an appearance of non-objectivity is
    sufficient to trigger judicial scrutiny, the significant remedy of
    invalidation often depends on something more tangible.” “Before
    it can be said that a judge [or ZHB member] should have recused
    himself the record must demonstrate bias, prejudice, capricious
    disbelief or prejudgment . . . . If a judge [or ZHB member] thinks
    he is capable of hearing a case fairly his decision not to withdraw
    will ordinarily be upheld on appeal.”
    Christman, 
    854 A.2d at 633
     (citations omitted). Prior to hearing the instant matter, all members
    of the Board acknowledged that they had granted subsurface leases to an oil and gas company
    prior to the filing of the instant matter; they had been on the Board for a decade or more; that
    they did not advocate any position with respect to Ordinance 127; that none of their immediate
    (Footnote continued on next page…)
    34
    (continued…)
    family members work for Rex, the Township, DRKN, or CAC; and that they could listen to the
    evidence and decide the matter in an unbiased manner applying the law as instructed by the
    Board’s solicitor. R.R. at 1845a-1846a.
    In Reilly v. Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority, 
    489 A.2d 1291
    , 1299
    (Pa. 1985), our Supreme Court set forth the following procedure to address the issue of judicial
    impartiality:
    The proper practice on a plea of prejudice is to address an
    application by petition to the judge before whom the proceedings
    are being tried. He may determine the question in the first
    instance, and ordinarily his disposition of it will not be disturbed
    unless there is an abuse of discretion.
    Due consideration should be given by him to the fact that the
    administration of justice should be beyond the appearance of
    unfairness…. If the judge feels that he can hear and dispose of the
    case fairly and without prejudice, his decision will be final unless
    there is an abuse of discretion. This must be so for the security of
    the bench and the successful administration of justice . . . .
    [(Citations omitted and emphasis added)].
    The Court concluded that “[o]nce the trial is completed with the entry of a verdict, a party is
    deemed to have waived his right to have a judge disqualified, and if he has waived that issue, he
    cannot be heard to complain following an unfavorable result. In order to preserve an issue for
    appeal, [a party] ha[s] to make a timely, specific objection at trial and raise the issue on post-trial
    motions . . . .” 
    Id.
     at 489 A.2d at 1300 (citations omitted and emphasis added).
    Thus, the issue of the improper conduct of a zoning hearing board must be first raised
    before the board, otherwise any allegation in this regard will be deemed to have been waived. Id.
    See also In re Appeal of Kreider, 
    808 A.2d 340
    , 342 n.2 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2002) (“[W]hen the
    parties do not request that [the] common pleas [court] hear additional evidence, any issues or
    arguments not raised before the ZHB cannot be raised for the first time to common pleas and are
    waived. Society Created to Reduce Urban Blight v. Philadelphia Zoning Bd. Of Adjustment, 
    804 A.2d 116
    , 119 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2002) . . . .”). Herein, Objectors have failed to direct this Court to
    where the issue of the improper conduct of the Board was raised by them in the proceedings
    before the Board. See, e.g., Pa. R.A.P. 2117(c), 2119(e). As a result, in the absence of any
    indication that the issue of the Board’s improper conduct was properly raised before the Board,
    any allegation of error in this regard has been waived for purposes of appeal. Reilly; Kreider.
    35
    discretion in excluding from admission peer reviewed studies, federal or state
    publications, scientific review, and a Rex publication. Objectors also contend that
    the Board erred in accepting as credible Sittig’s testimony, as Rex’s expert on legal
    interpretation, while capriciously disregarding the testimony and reports of their
    expert witnesses, Carpenter, Parrish, Daniels, and Bowen, and the testimony and
    exhibits of two of their lay witnesses. Finally, Objectors claim that the Board
    abdicated its fact-finding role under Section 908(9) of the MPC.30
    The Board properly noted that Section 908(6) of the MPC states that
    “[f]ormal rules of evidence shall not apply, but irrelevant, immaterial or unduly
    repetitive evidence may be excluded,” and that evidence is limited by Section
    908(5) which provides the parties have the right to cross-examine adverse
    witnesses on all relevant issues. 53 P.S. §10908(5), (6). Thus, although this Court
    has held that the Board is not bound by the rule precluding the admission of
    hearsay evidence, Town & Country Management Corp. v. Zoning Hearing Board
    of the Borough of Emmaus, 
    671 A.2d 790
    , 792 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1996), hearsay
    evidence must be sufficiently corroborated to be considered competent evidence.
    Lake Adventure Community Association, Inc. v. Dingman Township Zoning
    Hearing Board, 
    79 A.3d 708
    , 714 n.4 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2013), appeal denied, 
    84 A.3d 1065
     (Pa. 2014). “Significantly, the legislature in the use of the word ‘shall’ in
    both the introductory paragraph and subparagraph (5) of Section 908 of the MPC
    made it mandatory that in all hearings before [the Board] the parties are entitled, as
    a matter of due process to, inter alia, ‘cross-examine adverse witnesses.’” In re
    30
    53 P.S. §10908(9). Section 908(9) of the MPC states, in relevant part, that “[t]he board
    . . . shall render a written decision . . . . Where the application is contested or denied, each
    decision shall be accompanied by findings of fact and conclusions based thereon together with
    the reasons therefor.”
    36
    Appeal of Little Britain Township, 
    651 A.2d 606
    , 615 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1994), appeal
    denied, 
    663 A.2d 696
     (Pa. 1995).
    With respect to the exhibits that the Objectors identify in their
    appellate brief, Exhibits A28, A69, and A94-A106, there is no indication that the
    documents or portions thereof sought to be admitted were sufficiently corroborated
    to constitute competent evidence. R.R. at 2175a, 2425a-2427a, 2625a-2629a. As a
    result, the Board did not err in sustaining the objections to these documents and
    excluding them from the record. See In re Appeal of Little Britain Township, 
    651 A.2d at 615
     (“It admits of no argument that the trial court, in allowing the ZHB to
    receive into evidence in the remand hearing the written [federal Center for Disease
    Control] report and the written DE[P] orders, denied [the landowner] its
    fundamental right to test the validity of said evidence through cross-
    examination.”). See also 37 Standard Pennsylvania Practice 2d §166:413 (2017)
    (“Where a report is properly objected to as hearsay and there is no corroborating
    evidence in support of the report, however, the report will not stand as support for
    a decision.”) (citing In re Appeal of Little Britain Township).
    Regarding the Board’s credibility determinations, it is well settled that
    the Board, as fact-finder, is the sole judge of the credibility and the weight of the
    evidence presented.    Nettleton v. Zoning Board of Adjustment of the City of
    Pittsburgh, 
    828 A.2d 1033
    , 1041 n.10 (Pa. 2003); Taliaferro v. Darby Township
    Zoning Hearing Board, 
    873 A.2d 807
    , 811 (Pa. Cmwlth.), appeal denied, 
    887 A.2d 1243
     (Pa. 2005). As a result, the Board is free to reject even uncontradicted
    evidence that it finds lacking in credibility, including the testimony of an expert
    witness. Nettleton; Taliaferro. This Court’s review of a Board’s factual findings is
    limited to determining whether the findings of fact are supported by substantial
    37
    evidence. Nettleton; Taliaferro. This Court may not substitute its interpretation of
    the evidence for that of the Board. Taliaferro.
    The Board did not err in finding Sittig’s testimony to be more credible
    than Daniels’ because such a determination is clearly within its province as fact-
    finder. The Board also did not err in admitting Sittig’s testimony. The testimony
    of Daniels, Objectors’ witness, consisted primarily of legal opinions with respect to
    the ordinance and his testimony was admitted over the Township’s objection. R.R.
    at 1854a-1868a.           By calling a witness to provide such legal opinions and
    conclusions, Objectors have waived any claim of error in this regard. See, e.g.,
    Tillery v. Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, 
    156 A.3d 1233
    , 1243 (Pa. Super.
    2017), (“Importantly, if a party presents evidence about a certain issue, then they
    open the door to rebuttal evidence that may not otherwise have been admissible.
    See Duchess v. Langston Corp., 
    709 A.2d 410
    , 412 (Pa. Super. 1998), [aff’d, 
    769 A.2d 1131
     (Pa. 2001)].”). Moreover, the Board specifically “reserve[d] to itself . .
    . any decision as to the questions of law” in this case. R.R. at 1774a. As a result,
    any purported error in this regard is harmless. Pennsy Supply, Inc., 
    987 A.2d at 1251
    .
    Additionally, the Board did not capriciously disregard the testimony
    of Carpenter, Bowen, Parrish, or Daniels or the evidence in the 41 exhibits
    introduced by them without objection.31                     In Kiskadden v. Pennsylvania
    31
    As this Court explained:
    “Review for capricious disregard of material, competent
    evidence is an appropriate component of appellate consideration in
    every case in which such question is properly brought before the
    court.” Capricious disregard occurs only when the fact-finder
    deliberately ignores relevant, competent evidence.         Where
    (Footnote continued on next page…)
    38
    Department of Environmental Protection, 
    149 A.3d 380
    , 401 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2016),
    this Court explained that it is a rare instance where we will disturb an adjudication
    based on capricious disregard.          “The express consideration and rejection of
    evidence is, by definition, not capricious disregard.” Taliaferro, 873 A.2d at 815
    (citation omitted). The objections to the reports of these witnesses were sustained
    because they were repetitive and cumulative. See Curtis Investment Company v.
    (continued…)
    substantial evidence supports the findings, and those findings in
    turn support the conclusions, it should remain a rare instance
    where an appellate court disturbs an adjudication based on
    capricious disregard.
    We may conclude that a fact-finder has capriciously
    disregarded competent evidence “when the unsuccessful party
    below has presented ‘overwhelming evidence’ upon which the
    adjudicator could have reached a contrary conclusion, and the
    adjudicator has not satisfactorily addressed that evidence by
    resolving conflicts in the evidence or making credibility
    determinations that are essential with regard to the evidence.” “In
    other words, where there is strong ‘critical’ evidence that
    contradicts evidence supporting a contrary determination, the
    adjudicator must provide an explanation as to how it made its
    determination.”
    However, the fact-finder “is not required to address each
    and every allegation of a party in its findings, nor is it required to
    explain why certain testimony has been rejected.” The pertinent
    inquiry is whether the Board’s findings are supported by
    substantial evidence. “The findings need only be sufficient to
    enable the Court to determine the questions and ensure the
    conclusions follow from the facts.”
    Kiskadden v. Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, 
    149 A.3d 380
    , 401 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 2016), appeal denied, ___ A.3d ___ (Pa. No. 480 WAL 2016, filed May 2, 2017)
    (citations omitted).
    39
    Zoning Hearing Board of the Borough of West Mifflin, 
    592 A.2d 813
    , 814 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 1991) (“The refusal to admit cumulative evidence is not error. Smith v.
    Commonwealth, [
    470 A.2d 1125
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 1984)].”). With respect to their
    testimony, the Board outlined the objective bases to reject the testimony of these
    witnesses as not credible. See R.R. at 1773a, 1781a-1782a, 1783a-1785a. As a
    result, these credibility determinations will not be disturbed on appeal.
    Lastly, the Board did not abdicate its fact-finding role as required by
    Section 908(9) of the MPC. The Board’s “opinion is sufficient if it provides an
    adequate explanation of its resolution of the factual questions involved, and sets
    forth its reasoning in such a way as to show its decision was reasoned and is not
    arbitrary.” Taliaferro, 873 A.2d at 816. Where the Board’s decision “is clear and
    substantially reflects application of the law governing” the issues to be considered,
    “the decision is sufficient to enable effective review.” Id. As outlined above, the
    Board made specific findings relative to Objectors’ claims regarding the validity of
    Ordinance 127 and the issuance of the zoning permit. See id. (“Here, the Board
    made specific findings and conclusions concerning the criteria required to grant the
    requested variance.     In addition, the Board included a discussion in which it
    explained its rationale for resolving evidentiary conflicts and credibility issues . . . .
    As a result, we reject Objectors’ argument that the Board’s findings and
    conclusions are inadequate.”).
    IV.
    Finally, Rex and Geyer claim that the trial court erred in granting a
    stay under Section 1003-A(d) of the MPC. However, “[t]he general rule with
    respect to the issue of mootness is that an actual case or controversy must exist at
    40
    all stages of appellate review.” Pagnotta v. Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic
    Association, Inc., 
    681 A.2d 235
    , 237 (Pa Cmwlth. 1996), appeal denied, 
    693 A.2d 968
     (Pa. 1997). “[W]here ‘[i]ntervening changes in the factual matrix of a pending
    case’ occur which eliminate an actual controversy and make it impossible for the
    court to grant the requested relief, the case will be dismissed as moot.”                        
    Id.
    (citation omitted). It is undisputed that the trial court has vacated the stay and that
    any activity prohibited thereunder has commenced. As a result, the appeals of the
    trial court’s order granting the stay are moot.32
    Accordingly, the trial court’s order affirming the Board’s decision is
    affirmed; Rex’s and Geyer’s appeals of the trial court’s vacated order granting a
    stay under Section 1003-A of the MPC are dismissed as moot.
    MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    Judge McCullough concurs in the result only.
    32
    As this Court has explained, “[a]lthough the parties have not argued mootness, we may
    raise it sua sponte.” Utility Workers Union of America, Local 69 v. Public Utility Commission,
    
    859 A.2d 847
    , 849 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004) (citation omitted). Moreover, we reject Rex’s and
    Geyer’s assertion that the appeals are not moot because review of such a stay order under Section
    1003-A will evade review. The issues raised herein would have been reviewed by this Court but
    for the joint application to remand the record to the trial court for consideration of that record in
    the land use appeal thereby precluding our review before the claims became moot.
    41
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Delaware Riverkeeper Network,        :
    Clean Air Council, David Denk,       : No. 1229 C.D. 2015
    Jennifer Chomicki and Joann Groman   :
    :
    v.                 :
    :
    Middlesex Township Zoning            :
    Hearing Board                        :
    :
    v.                 :
    :
    R.E. Gas Development, LLC and        :
    Middlesex Township                   :
    :
    Appeal of: R.E. Gas Development, LLC :
    Delaware Riverkeeper Network,        :
    Clean Air Counsel, David Denk        : No. 1323 C.D. 2015
    and Jennifer Chomicki                :
    :
    v.                 :
    :
    Middlesex Township Zoning            :
    Hearing Board                        :
    :
    :
    v.                 :
    :
    R.E. Gas Development, LLC and        :
    Middlesex Township and               :
    Robert G. Geyer                      :
    :
    Appeal of: Robert G. Geyer           :
    Delaware Riverkeeper Network,         :
    Clean Air Council, David Denk,        : No. 2609 C.D. 2015
    Jennifer Chomicki, and Joann          :
    Groman,                               :
    :
    Appellants     :
    :
    v.                   :
    :
    Middlesex Township Zoning             :
    Hearing Board                         :
    :
    v.                   :
    :
    R.E. Gas Development, LLC,            :
    Middlesex Township, and Robert G.     :
    Geyer                                 :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 7th day of June, 2017, the order of the Butler County
    Court of Common Pleas dated November 19, 2015, at No. 15-10429, docketed at
    No. 2609 C.D. 2015, is AFFIRMED. The above-captioned appeals docketed at
    Nos. 1229 C.D. 2015 and 1323 C.D. 2015 are DISMISSED as moot.
    __________________________________
    MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Delaware Riverkeeper Network v. Middlesex Twp. ZHB v. R.E. Gas Development, LLC - 1229, 1323 and 2609 C.D. 2015

Judges: Wojcik, J.

Filed Date: 6/7/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/7/2017

Authorities (20)

Pagnotta v. Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Ass'n , 1996 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 319 ( 1996 )

Lake Adventure Community Ass'n v. Dingman Township Zoning ... , 2013 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 247 ( 2013 )

In re Appeal of Little Britain Township from the Decision ... , 1994 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 657 ( 1994 )

Town & Country Management Corp. v. Zoning Hearing Board , 1996 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 52 ( 1996 )

Plaxton v. Lycoming County Zoning Hearing Board , 2009 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1621 ( 2009 )

In Re Appeal of Kreider , 808 A.2d 340 ( 2002 )

Robinson Township v. Commonwealth , 2012 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 222 ( 2012 )

Markwest Liberty Midstream & Resources, LLC v. Cecil ... , 2014 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 470 ( 2014 )

In re the Bartkowski Investment Group, Inc. , 2014 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 559 ( 2014 )

Utility Workers Union, Local 69 v. Public Utility Commission , 859 A.2d 847 ( 2004 )

Curtis Investment Co. v. Zoning Hearing Board , 140 Pa. Commw. 302 ( 1991 )

Christman v. Zoning Hearing Board of the Township of Windsor , 2004 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 535 ( 2004 )

National Solid Wastes Management Ass'n v. Casey , 143 Pa. Commw. 577 ( 1991 )

In Re Appeal of Thompson , 2006 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 147 ( 2006 )

Society Created to Reduce Urban Blight v. Zoning Board of ... , 2002 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 582 ( 2002 )

Kohl v. New Sewickley Township Zoning Hearing Board , 2015 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 40 ( 2015 )

Feudale v. Aqua Pennsylvania, Inc. , 2015 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 331 ( 2015 )

Pennsy Supply, Inc. v. Zoning Hearing Board of Dorrance ... , 2009 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1694 ( 2009 )

41 Valley Associates v. Board of Supervisors of London ... , 2005 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 441 ( 2005 )

Duchess v. Langston Corporation , 1998 Pa. Super. LEXIS 178 ( 1998 )

View All Authorities »