A. Ziegler v. City of Reading and Reading Area Water Authority , 2016 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 178 ( 2016 )


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  •              IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Alan Ziegler and Nicolas Bene and                   :
    Lissette Chevalier and Jose Munoz,                  : No. 10 C.D. 2015
    and Efrain Caban, Individually and                  : Argued: February 10, 2016
    on behalf of all similarly situated persons,        :
    :
    Appellants           :
    :
    v.                           :
    :
    City of Reading and Reading                         :
    Area Water Authority                                :
    BEFORE:         HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
    HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge
    HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge
    HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
    HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
    HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    OPINION BY JUDGE WOJCIK                                            FILED: April 20, 2016
    Appellants (Residents)1 ask whether the Court of Common Pleas of
    Berks County (trial court) erred in declaring a residential curbside recycling fee is
    authorized by the City of Reading’s (City) newly enacted ordinances and is not in
    violation of the Municipal Waste Planning, Recycling, and Waste Reduction Act
    (Act 101).2 Residents contend the City’s ordinances, which provide for a curbside
    recycling fee, are preempted by Act 101. They assert the Third Class City Code3
    1
    Residents are Alan Ziegler, Nicholas Bene, Lissette Chevalier, Jose Munoz, and Efrain
    Caban, individually and on behalf of all similarly situated persons.
    2
    Act of July 28, 1988, P.L. 556, as amended, 53 P.S. §§4000.101-4000.1904.
    3
    Formerly the Act of June 23, 1931, P.L. 932, as amended, 53 P.S. §§35101-39701,
    repealed and codified, effective January 25, 2016, 11 Pa. C.S. §§10101-14702.
    does not otherwise authorize the City to impose recycling fees because the City is
    organized and operates under a home rule charter. They claim the trial court erred
    in considering how other municipalities fund their recycling programs, and that the
    City disregarded permissible alternative options to fund its recycling program.
    Upon review, we find it necessary to vacate and remand for further analysis based
    on our recent decision in Waste Management of Pennsylvania, Inc. v. Department
    of Environmental Protection, 
    107 A.3d 273
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015) (en banc), which
    was filed approximately one month after the trial court’s decision here.
    I. Background
    The City is a third class city located in Berks County, operating under
    a home rule charter. The Reading Area Water Authority (RAWA) is a municipal
    authority created under the Municipality Authorities Act.4 The City delegated the
    responsibility for solid waste planning and plan implementation under Section
    303(d) of Act 101, 53 P.S. §4000.303(d), to RAWA. Residents either reside in or
    maintain a place of business in the City and have paid recycling fees to the City or
    RAWA.
    In June 2014, Residents filed a class action complaint against the City
    and RAWA (collectively, City), challenging the City’s assessment and collection
    of a service fee for curbside recycling.             In one count, Residents sought a
    declaratory judgment that the City’s ordinances, which authorized the curbside
    recycling fees, violated Act 101 and the Solid Waste Management Act5 (SWMA).
    4
    53 Pa. C.S. §§5601-5623.
    5
    Act of July 7, 1980, P.L. 380, as amended, 35 P.S. §§6018.101-6018.1003.
    2
    In response, City filed preliminary objections to the complaint, which
    included objections that Residents did not exhaust an exclusive and adequate
    statutory remedy and that class action status was not maintainable. Residents, in
    turn, filed a motion for preliminary injunction to enjoin the City from assessing
    and collecting curbside recycling fees. The parties agreed to defer all motions and
    pleadings until the trial court ruled on the count for declaratory judgment.
    Thereafter, the parties filed a joint stipulation of facts containing 120
    facts, and briefs in support of their positions. In response to the trial court’s
    request for supplemental data, the parties filed a supplemental stipulation of facts
    adding 68 additional facts. The facts, which are not in dispute, can be summarized
    as follows.
    In 1988, the General Assembly passed Act 101. Joint Stipulation,
    9/3/14, at ¶1.       Section 1501 of Act 101, 53 P.S. §4000.1501, mandates
    municipalities with populations over 10,000, which includes the City, to establish
    and implement recycling programs. 
    Id. at ¶3.
    In 1991, while operating under the
    Third Class City Code, the City enacted Ordinance 21-1991 pursuant to Act 101,
    which imposed a curbside recycling fee on persons owning property within its
    borders. 
    Id. at ¶9.
    In 1996, the City adopted a home rule charter pursuant to the
    Home Rule Charter and Optional Plans Law6 (Home Rule Law), and it continued
    collecting the recycling fee. 
    Id. at ¶6.
                   From 1991 through 2012, the City contracted with private haulers to
    collect curbside recycling. Joint Stipulation at ¶12. In 2012, the City began in-
    6
    53 Pa. C.S. §§2901-3171.
    3
    house collection of recyclables and delegated the responsibility to RAWA. 
    Id. at ¶¶40-42.
                  The City assessed a fee for the collection of recyclable materials from
    1991 until November 2013.             Joint Stipulation at ¶24.         In November 2013,
    following this Court’s decision in City of Reading v. Iezzi,7 the City temporarily
    suspended the assessment and collection of curbside recycling fees.                        Joint
    Stipulation at ¶¶24, 100.
    In March 2014, the City revised its ordinance relating to the collection
    of curbside waste, including recycling, by enacting Ordinances 20-2014 and 21-
    2014. Joint Stipulation at ¶¶33, 34; see Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 86a-92a.
    Ordinance 20-2014 replaced the solid waste fee and recycling fee with a single
    “curbside waste collection fee.” Joint Stipulation at ¶33. Ordinance 20-2014’s
    definition of “curbside waste” includes recyclables. 
    Id. at ¶34.
    Ordinance 21-2014
    set the amount of the new “curbside waste collection fee” of $303.10. 
    Id. at ¶¶36,
    37. Imbedded in that fee is a service fee for recycling of $91.83. 
    Id. at ¶37.
    The
    ordinances apply to owners of residential properties with four or fewer units; they
    are not permitted to use a private hauler for curbside recycling. 
    Id. at ¶¶10,
    29. In
    April 2014, the City resumed assessment and collection service fees for curbside
    recycling. 
    Id. at ¶103.
                  To operate its curbside recycling collection program, the City
    budgeted $2,400,000 in 2014, $2,774,905 in 2013, and $2,614,616 in 2012. Joint
    7
    
    78 A.3d 1257
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2013) (Iezzi), vacated on other grounds, In re Iezzi, 
    504 B.R. 777
    (Bankr. E.D. Pa. 2014). In Iezzi, we held that the City’s fee covering all costs of
    recycling was preempted by Act 101. On January 31, 2014, the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
    Eastern District of Pennsylvania issued an order declaring that our decision in Iezzi was void ab
    initio because the appellant declared bankruptcy prior thereto without providing notice to this
    Court. In re Iezzi. Thus, our decision was inadvertently entered during the pendency of the
    automatic stay. 
    Id. 4 Stipulation
    at ¶¶17-19. The City’s budgeted expenditures for its recycling program
    include 1 part-time and 15 full-time employees.             
    Id. at ¶20.
       The City pays
    $1,022,033 a year in salaries, temporary wages, fringe benefits and pensions. 
    Id. The City’s
    funding for the recycling program comes from three main
    financial sources: the fee, which is the subject of this challenge; grants under
    Sections 902 and 904 of Act 101, 53 P.S. §§4000.902, 4000.904; and, the
    marketing and sale of recycled materials. Joint Stipulation at ¶¶36-40, 54-88, 94.
    The City currently collects approximately $2,300,000 in recycling fees and less
    than $100,000 from the marketing and sale of recyclable materials per year. 
    Id. at ¶¶21,
    94.
    The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP),8
    awarded the City grants under Sections 902 and 904 of Act 101. Joint Stipulation
    at ¶¶54, 58, 67, 73-83, 85-87. Section 902 grants can be used for limited purposes
    while Section 904 grants, also known as performance grants, may be used for any
    lawful purpose. 
    Id. at ¶¶46,
    49.
    Municipalities may apply for Section 902 grants periodically, but not
    on an annual basis. Joint Stipulation at ¶47. The City did not seek Section 902
    grants from 2009 to 2011. 
    Id. at ¶65.
    The City most recently received a Section
    902 grant of $250,000 in January 2013. 
    Id. at 67.
    Since Act 101 was passed, the
    City has received less than $2 million in Section 902 grants. 
    Id. at ¶71.
                  Municipalities may apply for Section 904 grants annually. See Joint
    Stipulation at ¶¶73-87. Section 904 performance grants are awarded based on the
    8
    DEP is the Commonwealth agency responsible for administering municipal waste
    planning, recycling and reduction, and awarding grants for the development and implementation
    of municipal recycling programs. Sections 301(1) & 902(a) of Act 101, 53 P.S. §§4000.301(1),
    4000.902(a).
    5
    tonnage of recyclable materials collected in the municipality and actually
    marketed. 
    Id. at ¶¶51.
    The City received Section 904 performance grants in the
    amount of $86,132 in materials collected and marketed in 2010, $96,168 for 2011,
    and $86,760 for 2012. 
    Id. at ¶¶85-87.
    In previous years, the Section 904 grants
    were larger before DEP reduced the recyclable grants by 60% in 2011 in order to
    ensure the sustainability of the Recycling Fund. 
    Id. at ¶84.
    The City does not have
    records indicating it received 904 grants prior to 2000. 
    Id. at ¶72.
                 The City never requested an exemption from Act 101’s mandate to
    establish a recycling program. Joint Stipulation at ¶96. The City never filed an
    application to implement an alternative recycling program. 
    Id. at ¶97.
    At no time
    has the City complained, petitioned or otherwise notified DEP that it should be
    relieved of its Act 101 obligations because its recycling program costs are
    excessive. 
    Id. at 105.
                 Volume-wise, the City averages approximately 12,000 tons of
    residential and commercial recyclable materials that are collected and marketed per
    year. See Joint Stipulation at ¶¶81-83, 85-87.
    In the supplemental stipulation, the parties provided statistics on
    comparable cities’ recycling programs.            The comparable cities included
    Bethlehem, Lancaster, York, Allentown, Wilkes-Barre and Scranton, which are a
    variety of three third class cities, two third class cities with home rule charters, and
    one second class A city with a home rule charter.           Supplemental Stipulation,
    11/6/14, at ¶¶1, 13, 24, 35, 49, 58. Four cities surveyed largely depend on the
    assessment and collection of recycling fees to fund their recycling programs. 
    Id. at ¶¶19,
    20, 30, 42, 53, 54, 64, 65. Although the City of Scranton collects a waste
    disposal collection fee, which excludes recyclables, the revenues generated are
    6
    deposited in the city’s general fund, which in turn funds the city’s recycling
    program. 
    Id. at ¶¶43,
    46, 47. Significantly, the Cities of Lancaster, Scranton and
    York realized no revenue from the marketing and sale of collected recyclables in
    2013. 
    Id. at ¶¶27,
    38, 61.
    On December 5, 2014, the trial court entered an order granting
    declaratory judgment in favor of the City. In the accompanying opinion, the trial
    court explained its decision was not controlled by Iezzi because: (1) Iezzi was
    voided by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court; (2) the parties provided relevant stipulations
    of fact, which were not before the Court in Iezzi; (3) Act 101 does not explicitly
    permit or prohibit recycling fees, and relevant case law interpreting Act 101 only
    prohibits fees that cover all costs associated with the recycling program; and, (4)
    after Iezzi, the General Assembly amended the Third Class City Code to
    specifically allow third class cities to assess and collect rates for the collection,
    removal and disposal of recyclable materials.
    With regard to the central legal issue, whether the City’s new
    “curbside waste collection fee” is inconsistent with, and therefore preempted by,
    Act 101, the trial court’s entire discussion follows:
    This Court finds that the City’s recycling program is not
    solely supported by the recycling fee. In addition,
    without the fee, maintaining the recycling program would
    be impossible. Using the [Pennsylvania Waste Industries
    Association v. Monroe County Municipal Waste
    Management Authority, 
    80 A.3d 546
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2013)
    (en banc)] analysis, because the City uses grants and
    recyclable sales to supplement the recycling fee, and
    because the Act 101 mandated recycling program
    couldn’t survive without the fee, the fee itself supports
    Act 101’s primary purpose of alleviating the growth of
    landfills and the subsidization of the costs with the sale
    7
    of recyclables and state grants, comporting with both the
    spirit and the letter of Act 101.
    Trial Court Opinion, 12/5/14, at 11.
    On December 15, 2014, the trial court amended its order so that it
    could be appealed in the event this Court considered the initial order interlocutory.
    Residents appealed to this Court,9 and they filed a concise statement of errors
    complained of on appeal with the trial court. In response, the trial court issued an
    order adopting its earlier-filed opinion. This appeal followed.10
    II. Issues
    Residents contend the City’s ordinances, which provide for a curbside
    recycling fee, are preempted by Act 101. According to Residents, the City is not
    9
    The City suggests that this Court may lack jurisdiction over this appeal because
    Residents filed their petition for permission to appeal on January 6, 2015, which was 32 days
    after the entry of the trial court’s December 5, 2014 Order. Notwithstanding the untimeliness
    contention, the City asserts the appeal should not be dismissed. Appellees’ Brief at 1.
    However, the trial court amended its order on December 15, 2014, to express the
    statement specified in 42 Pa. C.S. §702(b) that the declaratory judgment order “involves a
    controlling question of law as to which there is substantial ground for difference of opinion and
    that an immediate appeal from the order may materially advance the ultimate termination of the
    matter.” Trial Court’s Amended Order, 12/15/14, at 1. Residents requested permission to appeal
    the amended order.
    This Court determined the amended order constituted a final order and was immediately
    appealable as of right. Commonwealth Court Order, 1/26/15 (Quigley, S.J.) (citing Pa. R.A.P.
    341(b); 42 Pa. C.S. §7532; Nationwide Insurance Co. v. Wickett, 
    763 A.2d 813
    (Pa. 2000)). We
    treated Residents’ petition for permission to appeal as a notice of appeal. 
    Id. As Residents
    filed
    their petition within 30 days of the trial court’s amended order, we conclude the appeal was
    timely filed. See Pa. R.A.P. 1316 (a timely petition for permission to appeal shall be treated as a
    timely notice of appeal); see also Commonwealth v. Shull, 
    811 A.2d 1
    , 3 n.3 (Pa. Super. 2002)
    (holding where a petition to file an interlocutory appeal by permission is incorrectly filed within
    30 days of the order to be reviewed, it must be treated as a timely filed notice of appeal).
    10
    Our review in a declaratory judgment action is limited to determining whether the trial
    court's findings are supported by substantial evidence, whether an error of law was committed or
    whether the trial court abused its discretion. Pennsylvania Independent Waste Haulers
    Association v. Township of Lower Merion, 
    872 A.2d 224
    , 227 n.13 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2005).
    However, where an appeal presents questions of law, our standard of review is de novo and our
    scope of review is plenary. Pennsylvania Waste Industries Association v. Monroe County
    Municipal Waste Management Authority, 
    80 A.3d 546
    , 551 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2013) (en banc).
    8
    otherwise authorized by statute to assess and collect a recycling fee. Although the
    General Assembly amended the Third Class City Code thereby authorizing third
    class cities to impose recycling fees, the Code does not apply to the City because
    the City is organized and operates under a home rule charter.           In addition,
    Residents claim the trial court erred by considering what other local governments
    do in determining whether the City can implement a curbside service fee to fund its
    recycling program. Finally, Residents maintain the City disregarded permissible
    alternative options to imposing a recycling fee under Act 101.
    III. Discussion
    A. Preemption
    1. Contentions
    First, Residents contend the City’s new ordinances establishing a fee
    to fund its recycling program violates Act 101 and SWMA. In Act 101, the
    General Assembly designated the type of fees that can be collected and which
    entity is legally entitled to collect them. These fees are a $2 per ton recycling fee
    imposed on operators of municipal waste landfills or resource recovery facilities to
    be paid to the DEP and a host municipality benefit fee of $1 per ton to be paid to
    the operator of a municipal waste landfill or resource recovery facility. Sections
    701 & 1301 of Act 101, 53 P.S. §§4000.701, 4000.1301.            A fee imposed on
    property owners for curbside recycling collection is not delineated under Act 101.
    A municipality can only impose a recycling fee if it is authorized. Under Act 101,
    municipalities are to use planning, grants and other incentives, as well as revenue
    realized from the marketing of recyclables, to fund the recycling programs, nothing
    more.
    In addition, Residents claim the City’s ordinances contravene this
    Court’s prior authority, which have consistently held recycling fees are preempted
    9
    because they conflict with Act 101. See Waste 
    Management, 107 A.3d at 286
    ;
    Monroe 
    County, 80 A.3d at 560
    ; 
    Iezzi, 78 A.3d at 1268
    ;11 IESI PA Bethlehem
    Landfill Corp. v. County of Lehigh, 
    887 A.2d 1289
    , 1292 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2005)
    (Lehigh County); Pennsylvania Independent Waste Haulers Association v. County
    of Northumberland, 
    885 A.2d 1106
    , 1111 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2005) (Northumberland
    County), appeal denied, 
    917 A.2d 316
    (Pa. 2006).
    More particularly, in Northumberland County, the Court held Act 101
    provides a comprehensive recycling plan that provides a specified funding source
    and does not provide any authority to raise revenue by other 
    means. 885 A.2d at 1110
    .        Most recently, this Court, in Waste 
    Management, 107 A.3d at 286
    ,
    reaffirmed that “Act 101 does not contemplate local recycling fees to fund
    recycling programs, and it does not authorize such fees.” Significantly, in Iezzi,
    this Court struck down a similar service fee to cover the costs of the City’s
    recycling 
    program. 78 A.3d at 1268
    .
    Contrary to the City’s assertions, there is no statutory or common law
    basis for permitting recycling fees that only partially fund a recycling program. To
    the extent the fee in Iezzi referred to a fee that covered “all costs,” the Court merely
    pointed to language contained in the City’s former ordinance. Although the City’s
    new ordinances changed the terminology, the ordinances contain the same
    language as before – “a service fee to cover all costs associated with the collection
    and removal of all curbside waste.” Section 496-208(2) of Ordinance 20-2014;
    R.R. at 87a. Residents raise the same facial challenge that was raised in Iezzi.
    Therefore, the same result in Iezzi should apply here.
    11
    Notwithstanding the nullification of this decision by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court, In re
    Iezzi, we recently confirmed our preemption reasoning in Waste Management.
    10
    The City responds that its curbside waste fee is not inconsistent with
    the provisions or purposes of Act 101. The General Assembly’s intent in enacting
    Act 101’s preemption provision was to avoid “inconsistency of municipal
    regulations of municipal waste disposal and state regulation.” Monroe 
    County, 80 A.3d at 559
    . Funding of municipal recycling programs is done “through planning,
    grant, and other incentives” because Act 101 contains “no mention of recycling
    revenue from other sources.” 
    Iezzi, 78 A.3d at 1265
    .
    The City concedes “a municipality’s imposition of a service charge
    which covered all costs of its recycling program [is] inconsistent with the
    comprehensive statewide recycling funding provisions in Act 101 and related
    statutes.” Monroe 
    County, 80 A.3d at 559
    (emphasis added). However, the City
    attempts to assert an as-applied defense. Although language of the ordinance
    recommends a fee that covers all costs for curbside waste, in actuality, the
    recycling fee does not cover all costs of the City’s recycling program. The City
    uses the recycling fee to supplement Act 101 grants and revenue from recyclable
    sales. In so doing, the City is acting consistent with the provisions and purposes of
    Act 101 because it encourages waste reduction and marketing of recyclables. See
    
    Iezzi, 78 A.3d at 1268
    .
    The City further maintains that Act 101’s funding mechanisms,
    standing alone, are insufficient to cover operating costs. Indeed, the program costs
    greatly exceed the sum of available funds from the state and revenue realized from
    the marketing of recyclables, creating a gap of over $2 million. Although Act 101
    is silent with regard to the imposition of fees for curbside recycling, a
    comprehensive reading of Act 101 demonstrates that the General Assembly did not
    intend to impede a municipality’s ability to fill this gap through the imposition of a
    11
    reasonable fee to support a mandatory curbside collection program. The General
    Assembly is well aware of the funding gap in Act 101. The General Assembly
    never intended to displace the authority of municipalities to enact the most obvious
    and equitable means of filling that gap.
    Since the enactment of Act 101, the General Assembly amended both
    the Second Class City Code12 and Third Class City Code by specifically
    authorizing the implementation and collection of a recycling collection fee. The
    amendments to the Codes conclusively demonstrate that the General Assembly
    does not view curbside waste fees as inconsistent with the provisions of Act 101.
    Because the City’s curbside waste fee is “otherwise authorized by statute,” Monroe
    
    County, 80 A.3d at 559
    , and is not inconsistent with Act 101’s provisions and
    purposes, it follows that Act 101 does not preempt it.
    In addition, the City urges the Court to reconcile any perceived
    inconsistency based on prior case law by allowing municipalities to charge
    recycling fees provided they do not cover all costs and they utilize grants, offsets
    and other incentives to fund the program. See 
    Iezzi, 78 A.3d at 1257
    . Had the
    General Assembly wished to impose a significant limitation on municipalities’
    ability to offset what is essentially a huge, unfunded mandate, it would have done
    so explicitly in Act 101.          It would be absurd to mandate municipalities to
    implement recycling programs but yet deny them the ability to adequately fund
    them. As the trial court aptly observed, if “the City is not authorized to collect a
    recycling fee” that “would likely result in the elimination of the established
    recycling program.” Trial Court Opinion at 9. Such an interpretation is contrary to
    12
    Act of March 31, 1927, P.L. 98, as amended, 53 P.S. §§22101-28707.
    12
    Act 101’s fundamental purpose of alleviating the rapidly diminishing disposal
    capacity for municipal waste.            See Section 102(a) of Act 101, 53
    P.S. §4000.102(a).
    Finally, the City argues Residents have not shown any violation or
    inconsistency with Act 101 to justify express or conflict preemption. To the
    contrary, the ordinances, which fund the City’s recycling program, further the
    fundamental purpose of Act 101 by encouraging development of waste reduction
    and recycling. The fee in this case is compatible with the goals and funding
    scheme expressed in Act 101 because, unlike in Iezzi, the current service charge
    fills the funding gap, but it does not cover “all costs.”
    2. Analysis
    “In Act 101, the General Assembly addressed the municipal waste
    industry in order to provide a comprehensive program of ensuring adequate
    planning and implementation of future disposal capacity as well as encouraging
    more recycling efforts.” Waste 
    Management, 107 A.3d at 282
    (quoting Monroe
    
    County, 80 A.3d at 549
    ). The General Assembly declared waste reduction and
    recycling are preferable to processing or disposal of municipal waste. Section
    102(a)(8) of Act 101, 53 P.S. §4000.102(a)(8). Indeed, the promotion of “source
    separation of marketable materials on a Statewide basis so that reusable materials
    may be returned to the economic mainstream in the form of raw materials or
    products rather than be disposed of or processed at the Commonwealth’s
    overburdened municipal waste processing disposal facilities” is in the public
    interest. 53 P.S. §4000.102(a)(14).
    Among the many enumerated purposes, Act 101 is designed to:
    13
    (1) Establish and maintain a cooperative State and local
    program of planning and technical and financial
    assistance for comprehensive municipal waste
    management.
    (2) Encourage the development of waste reduction and
    recycling as a means of managing municipal waste,
    conserving resources and supplying energy through
    planning, grants and other incentives.
    ***
    (4) Provide a flexible and effective means to implement
    and enforce the provisions of this act.
    Section 102(b) of Act 101, 53 P.S. §4000.102(b). The terms and provisions of Act
    101 are to be liberally construed, so as to best achieve and effectuate its goals and
    purposes. Section 104(a) of Act 101, 53 P.S. §4000.104(a); Waste 
    Management, 107 A.3d at 282
    .
    In furtherance of these goals, Section 304(a) of Act 101,
    53 P.S. §4000.304(a), provides each municipality:
    shall have the power and its duty shall be to assure the
    proper and adequate transportation, collection and
    storage of municipal waste which is generated or present
    within its boundaries, to assure adequate capacity for the
    disposal of municipal waste generated within its
    boundaries by means of the procedure set forth in section
    1111, and to adopt and implement programs for the
    collection and recycling of municipal waste or source-
    separated recyclable materials as provided in this act.
    Act 101 permits each municipality to adopt supplemental ordinances “not in
    violation of or inconsistent with, the provisions and purposes of [SWMA], this act
    and the regulations promulgated pursuant thereto.” Section 304(b)(1) of Act 101,
    53 P.S. §4000.304(b)(1).
    This Court described the latter provision as an example of express,
    rather than conflict, preemption. Waste 
    Management, 107 A.3d at 286
    ; Monroe
    
    County, 80 A.3d at 560
    .       In Monroe County, we described three forms of
    14
    preemption: (1) express preemption, based on express statutory declarations; (2)
    field preemption, where the statute is silent on preemption but pervasively
    regulates a field; and, (3) conflict preemption, where a local regulation is
    inconsistent with a state statute.      We opined “Act 101 contains an express
    preemption provision predicated on inconsistency of municipal regulations of
    municipal waste disposal and state regulation.” 
    Id. at 559
    (quoting 
    Iezzi, 78 A.3d at 1264
    ) (emphasis removed).
    In rejecting field preemption, we explained, “there are indications that
    the Legislature intended that other municipal action may be tolerated if not
    inconsistent with the provisions and purposes of Act 101.” 
    Id. at 560.
    “[T]he first
    express purpose of Act 101 is to “[e]stablish and maintain a cooperative State and
    local program of planning and technical and financial assistance for comprehensive
    municipal waste management.”            Section 102(b)(1) of Act 101, 53 P.S.
    §4000.102(b)(1).      This language anticipates some local financial assistance.
    Monroe 
    County, 80 A.3d at 560
    .
    Insofar as Residents assert conflict preemption, we note express and
    conflict preemption are similar in that they both preclude inconsistent legislation.
    California Federal Savings & Loan Association v. Guerra, 
    479 U.S. 272
    , 282
    (1987). The main difference is that, in the context of conflict preemption, a court
    is inferring legislative intent, rather than reading express language in the text of the
    statute. 
    Id. In Northumberland
    County, this Court held Act 101 preempted four
    counties and a municipal authority from imposing an administrative fee on waste
    haulers to help fund recycling programs. There, the administrative fee involved
    was duplicative of a fee already imposed by Section 701(a) of Act 101, 53 P.S.
    15
    
    §4000.701(a). 885 A.2d at 1110
    . Act 101 did not authorize the counties or the
    municipal authority to impose their own administrative fee in addition thereto. 
    Id. at 1111.
    Because Act 101 provided a specified funding source, and it did not
    authorize municipalities to impose its own fee, we determined the fee was
    inconsistent with Act 101. 
    Id. We applied
    the same analysis in Lehigh County to a similar
    administrative fee on waste haulers to fund recycling programs. We likewise held
    the administrative fee was preempted by Act 
    101. 887 A.2d at 1292
    .       Our
    decisions in Lehigh County and Northumberland County “are limited to
    unauthorized recycling fees.” Monroe 
    County, 80 A.3d at 559
    (emphasis added).
    Later in Iezzi, we examined whether the City’s prior ordinance, which
    imposed a “service fee to cover all costs associated with the recycling program”
    was preempted by Act 101 or 
    SWMA. 78 A.3d at 1268
    . We determined neither
    Act 101 nor SMWA expressly granted the power to charge such a fee. We also
    concluded the fee was inconsistent with the purpose of Act 101. 
    Id. We explained
    that, because the fee covered “all costs associated with the recycling program,” it
    did not encourage “waste reduction and marketing of recyclables, nor [did] it use
    planning, grants or other incentives to attain increased efficiency” inconsistent with
    Act 101’s purpose. 
    Id. (emphasis added).
                 Although neither Act 101 nor SWMA expressly authorize
    municipalities to charge such fees, they also do not necessarily preclude them.
    Significantly, “[t]his Court has never held that Act 101 preempts other municipal
    charges that are otherwise authorized by statute ....” Monroe 
    County, 80 A.3d at 559
    (emphasis added).
    16
    Significant to our disposition, the General Assembly authorized the
    imposition of recycling fees in other statutes. The General Assembly amended
    both the Second Class City Code and the Third Class City Code after the
    enactment of Act 101 to provide for the imposition and collection of recycling
    fees. Of import here, in 2014, after Iezzi, the General Assembly added Section
    2409 of the Third Class City Code.13 This section provided third class cities “may
    establish, alter, charge and collect rates and other charges for: (i) the collection,
    removal and disposal of ashes, garbage, solid waste, other refuse materials and
    recyclable materials ....” Formerly 53 P.S. §37409(e), now 11 Pa. C.S. §12409(e)
    (emphasis added). Thus, a recycling fee is otherwise authorized by statute for
    second and third class cities.
    Nevertheless, whether authorized by some other statute or not, a home
    rule municipality’s recycling ordinance may not be inconsistent with the provisions
    and purposes of Act 101. Section 304(b) of Act 101, 53 P.S. §4000.304(b). In
    addressing the question of inconsistency with Act 101, our recent decision in
    Waste Management is instructive.
    In Waste Management, DEP and a county were parties. The legal
    question was whether Act 101 permits a county to rely on a third party’s agreement
    to contribute financial or in-kind support to a county’s recycling program. The
    third party support was a suggestion from a comprehensive sustainability study
    undertaken to address significant shortfalls in recycling funding. DEP approved
    the county’s Act 101 plan revision which included the third party support. A group
    of vendors, who did not offer support in their competing bids, challenged the
    13
    Former Section 2409 was added by the Act of March 19, 2014, P.L. 52, 53 P.S.
    §37409, and is now codified as 11 Pa. C.S. §12409.
    17
    approval as inconsistent with Act 101. The Environmental Hearing Board (EHB)
    denied a motion for summary judgment by the disappointed vendors, and this
    Court allowed an interlocutory appeal.
    Ultimately, this Court affirmed the denial of summary judgment and
    returned the matter to the EHB for a full hearing. In doing so, we noted DEP’s
    assertion that it approves county-wide Act 101 “plans that provide for the
    maximum feasible development and implementation of recycling programs, as
    well as for the processing and disposal of municipal waste ….”                  Waste
    
    Management, 107 A.3d at 280
    . We also noted one of Act 101’s enumerated
    purposes is to “[e]stablish and maintain a cooperative State and local program of
    planning and technical and financial assistance for comprehensive municipal waste
    management.”      
    Id. at 285
    (quoting Section 102(b)(1) of Act 101, 53 P.S.
    §4000.102(b)(1)) (emphasis added).
    Finally, we held that, before trial, we could not determine as a matter
    of law whether the county’s Act 101 plan “will have a negative impact on
    sustainability and ultimate self-sufficiency of its recycling program.”         Waste
    
    Management, 107 A.3d at 287
    (citing Section 1513 of Act 101, 53 P.S.
    §4000.1513). We also held that it was “too early to determine as a matter of law
    whether the county’s proposed plan will have a deleterious effect on the arguably
    ‘topped-out’ efficiencies of the [c]ounty’s recycling program.”           
    Id. These determinations
    were important to a final conclusion about whether the innovative
    third party support was consistent with Act 101. 
    Id. In this
    case, the respected trial court did not have the benefit of our
    decision in Waste Management at the time it was called upon to decide the case
    based on stipulated facts. It is unfortunate that the current parties did not offer any
    18
    of Berks County’s approved-Act 101 plans, or otherwise seek input from DEP,
    which is a crucial part of a cooperative State and local program. This is especially
    true where DEP must approve any plan that “provides for maximum feasible
    development and implementation of recycling programs.” Section 505(b) of Act
    101, 52 P.S. §4000.505(b); accord Waste 
    Management, 107 A.3d at 278
    . And,
    DEP must assist municipalities in making recycling programs “financially self-
    sufficient.” Section 1513 of Act 101, 53 P.S. §4000.1513. It is just this type of
    input that is essential to determine whether a recycling program has “topped-out”
    on its efficiencies. See Waste 
    Management, 107 A.3d at 287
    .
    As a final point, the trial court here clearly determined that the City’s
    curbside recycling fee made the recycling program sustainable. However, the trial
    court did not address how, if at all, the fee impacted the ultimate financial self-
    sufficiency of the program or whether the program was as efficient as it could be.
    These latter points are obvious purposes of Act 101.14
    In the absence of input from DEP, and in lieu of determinations
    regarding the effect of the City’s curbside recycling fee on the financial self-
    sufficiency and efficiency of the recycling program, we vacate and remand to the
    trial court for further proceedings.
    14
    We have doubts about whether the term “financially self-sufficient” as used in Section
    1513 of Act 101, 53 P.S. §4000.1513 (development of recycling program plan) merely means
    operating without state grants. This is because the term is also used in conjunction with the
    phrase “market development” of recyclables. Therefore, an argument could be made that the
    goal of a financially self-sufficient recycling program is to be attained through market
    development rather than through user fees. Moreover, a user fee that covers all the costs of a
    recycling program undoubtedly makes the program self-sufficient regardless of state grants, but
    the fee is inconsistent with other provisions and purposes of Act 101. Waste Management; Iezzi.
    However, neither the parties nor the trial court addressed this issue, and we will not decide it
    now.
    19
    B. The Third Class City Code
    1. Contentions
    Next, Residents maintain the City is no longer subject to the Third
    Class City Code because it adopted a home rule charter. The adoption of a home
    rule charter acts to remove a municipality from the operation of the code
    provisions enumerating the powers of that particular class of municipality.
    Danzilli v. Lomeo, 
    944 A.2d 813
    , 815 n.6 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2008); Wecht v. Roddey,
    
    815 A.2d 1146
    , 1152 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2002), appeal denied, 
    827 A.2d 432
    (Pa. 2003).
    Once a municipality adopts a home rule charter, “it is no longer a city of the
    second class, a county of the third class, a borough or a township of the first or
    second class, but a ‘home rule municipality’ and its ‘code’ is the [Home Rule
    Law].” 
    Danzilli, 944 A.2d at 815
    n.6. In other words, Residents maintain home
    rule municipalities may not cherry pick legal authority.
    On this basis, Residents assert the City is governed by its charter
    under the Home Rule Law, and the Third Class City Code no longer applies.
    Consequently, the Third Class City Code’s recent amendment to include recyclable
    materials in the definition of waste has no effect on the City’s right to establish a
    service fee for recycling. As a home rule charter municipality, the City may
    operate any powers and perform any function not denied by the Constitution,
    statute or the home rule charter. Residents maintain the imposition of a recycling
    fee is at odds with Act 101 and is otherwise not authorized.
    The City responds, despite the enactment of a home rule charter, the
    City “is a Third Class City.” Joint Stipulation at ¶4; see McSwain v. City of
    Farrell, 
    624 A.2d 256
    , 258 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1993) (“[a]lthough the city has adopted a
    home rule charter, it is still a third class city”). Home rule municipalities have the
    broadest possible authority. Although a home rule municipality is not restrained
    20
    by its former municipal code, it is not prohibited from exercising powers provided
    thereunder.
    The City maintains Residents’ reliance on Danzilli and Wecht is
    misplaced. These cases hold home rule municipalities are not subject to the limits
    contained in their prior municipal codes. However, they do not stand for the
    proposition that a home rule municipality, with its broad powers, cannot avail itself
    of specific powers previously provided by its former municipal code.
    According to the City, a hybrid approach is necessitated. Under this
    approach, while a particular code still applies, a home rule municipality has the
    power to supplement its terms under the home rule powers. In re Condemnation
    by City of Coatesville, 
    898 A.2d 1186
    , 1192 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2006); see 
    McSwain, 624 A.2d at 258
    . Although the Third Class City Code “shall not be construed as a
    limitation on the ability of a city” to adopt a home rule charter, 15 allowing the City
    to exercise the powers granted under a municipal code that indisputably applies to
    it is not a “limitation” on the City’s powers under the Home Rule Law.
    To the extent the City’s powers under the Code are ambiguous, any
    ambiguities regarding home rule authority must be resolved in favor of the
    municipality. Nutter v. Dougherty, 
    938 A.2d 401
    , 414 (Pa. 2007); County of
    Delaware v. Township of Middletown, 
    511 A.2d 811
    , 813 (Pa. 1986). Prohibiting
    the City from exercising authority that it had when it was a non-home rule
    municipality would create an “anomalous [result] that third class cities which have
    not adopted home rule . . . are not prohibited from enacting this type of ordinance,
    but a similar city that has adopted home rule is prohibited.” Hartman v. City of
    15
    Formerly Section 107 of the Third Class City Code, 53 P.S. §35107(b)(2), now
    11 Pa. C.S. §10107.
    21
    Allentown, 
    880 A.2d 737
    , 745 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2005). As discussed above, the Third
    Class City Code permits third class cities to impose recycling fees. Formerly
    53 P.S. §37409(e), now 11 Pa. C.S. §12409(e). As the City remains a city of the
    third class operating under home rule, the City may exercise this statutory authority
    to impose a recycling fee.
    2. Analysis
    Under the Home Rule Law, a municipality that has “adopted a home
    rule charter may exercise any powers and perform any function not denied by the
    Constitution of Pennsylvania, by statute or by its home rule charter.”16
    53 Pa. C.S. §2961.         A home rule charter municipality shall not exercise any
    “powers contrary to, or in limitation or enlargement of, powers granted by statutes
    which        are      applicable   in   every     part     of    this     Commonwealth.”
    53 Pa. C.S. §2962(c)(2). Statutes that are “uniform and applicable in every part of
    this Commonwealth” remain in effect and cannot be changed or modified by
    charter. 53 Pa. C.S. §2962(e).
    “The essential principle underlying home rule is the transfer of
    authority to control certain municipal affairs from the state to the local level.”
    
    Hartman, 880 A.2d at 742
    . “This transference results in home rule municipalities
    having broader powers of self-government than non-home rule municipalities.” 
    Id. The grant
    of municipal power to a municipality governed by a home
    rule charter is “liberally construed in favor of the municipality.”              53 Pa. C.S.
    16
    The City’s Home Rule Charter echoes this grant of power providing: “The City shall
    have the power to exercise any power or to perform any function not denied by the Constitution
    of the United States, by the Constitution of Pennsylvania, by act of the General Assembly of
    Pennsylvania, or by this Charter.” Section 102 of the City’s Home Rule Charter.
    22
    §2961; accord 
    Hartman, 880 A.2d at 742
    . Indeed, a presumption exists that the
    exercise of power by a municipality is valid if no restriction is found in the
    Constitution, the charter itself, or the acts of the General Assembly.                    In re:
    Pittsburgh Citizen Police Review Board, 
    36 A.3d 631
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2011), appeal
    denied, 
    44 A.3d 1163
    (Pa. 2012); 
    Wecht, 815 A.2d at 1151
    . Thus, we look for
    direct conflict between the home rule enactment and the Constitution, the home
    rule charter, or the statute. 
    Wecht, 815 A.2d at 1151
    .
    Residents rely on Wecht and Danzilli in support of their position that
    the Third Class City Code no longer applies. In Wecht, we held the Second Class
    County Code17 did not supersede the Allegheny County Home Rule Administrative
    
    Code. 815 A.2d at 1152
    . We explained the Second Class County Code is not an
    act of the General Assembly ‘applicable in every part of this Commonwealth’” so
    as to come within the enabling law limitation. 
    Id. (citing Section
    3107-C(j) of the
    Second Class County Code18). In other words, Allegheny County was not limited
    or restrained by its former code. See 
    id. “In general,
    the adoption of a home rule
    charter acts to remove a municipality from the operation of the code provisions
    enumerating the powers of that particular class of municipality.” 
    Id. “[I]n the
    absence of explicit constraint or collateral effect on another municipality, there
    will be no conflict between the home rule municipality's actions and the former
    code provisions, since the latter no longer apply.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    19
    17
    Act of July 28, 1953, P.L. 723, as amended, 16 P.S. §§3101-6302.
    18
    Added by the Act of May 20, 1997, P.L. 149, as amended, 16 P.S. §6107-C(j).
    19
    Although this Court in Iezzi relied on Wecht in determining the Third Class City Code
    did not apply to the City because it adopted a home rule charter, such determination was not
    significant to our ruling. This is because we concluded the Third Class City Code, as it existed
    prior to the 2014 amendment, did not authorize recycling fees, and the fees, which covered all
    costs of recycling, were inconsistent with the provisions and purposes of Act 101. 
    Iezzi, 78 A.2d at 1267
    .
    23
    Similarly, in Danzilli, we held, once a borough adopts a home rule
    charter, it is a home rule municipality governed by the Home Rule Law, and it is
    no longer a borough governed by the Borough Code.20 In absence of direct conflict
    with a statute applicable throughout the Commonwealth, a home rule charter
    provision is presumed valid and, therefore, prevails over a Borough Code
    provision. 
    Id. For its
    part, the City relies on McSwain and Coatesville. In McSwain,
    a third-class city operating under a home rule charter filed an action in assumpsit
    against a property owner in order to recover for delinquent sewer and garbage
    removal fees. The issue was whether the city may properly bring an in personam
    action in assumpsit to recover the fees as this was not permitted by the Third Class
    City Code. We opined, “[a]lthough the city has adopted a home rule charter, it is
    still a third class city.” 
    McSwain, 624 A.2d at 258
    . Although we determined the
    city did not have the power under the Third Class City Code to bring actions in
    assumpsit, it had the right to proceed in assumpsit under the broad powers granted
    to it as a home rule municipality. 
    Id. In essence,
    an action in assumpsit was not
    denied by the Constitution of Pennsylvania, by a statute applicable in every part of
    the Commonwealth or by the charter. 
    Id. In Coatesville,
    an estate challenged a city’s ability to condemn
    property under the Third Class City Code because the city was a home rule
    municipality, and it did not have the power to condemn the property for a
    recreational facility because it was a proprietary business, not a public purpose.
    The trial court determined, even though the city was a home rule municipality, it
    20
    8 Pa. C.S. §§101-3501.
    24
    still had the power to condemn property for a public golf course and other
    attendant recreational purposes.
    On appeal, we considered the relationship between various municipal
    and county codes to home rule municipalities and examined whether the Third
    Class City Code’s authorization to take property remained in effect.              We
    recognized three different approaches to determining whether a city or county code
    applies to a home rule charter municipality applied by the courts. 
    Coatesville, 898 A.2d at 1192
    . Specifically,
    [I]n some cases we have held that a home rule
    municipality is free to adopt measures in contravention of
    the particular code that used to apply prior to its adoption
    of a home rule charter. ... In other cases, though, we
    have held that an individual county or city code is
    applicable to every part of the Commonwealth, and the
    home rule municipality is not allowed to change those
    procedures. ... Yet, in other cases, we have adopted what
    can best be described as a hybrid approach, holding that
    while a particular code still applies, a home rule
    municipality has the power to supplement its terms under
    its home rule powers.
    
    Id. (citations omitted).
                 Ultimately, we did not resolve the inconsistency because we decided,
    regardless of the approach, the city still had the power to take the property. “If the
    Third Class City Code still applies, then there is no dispute that the [c]ity has the
    power to take the [p]roperty; if it does not apply, then the [c]ity has the power to
    take under the broad and expansive powers given to it under home rule because
    there is no uniform law applicable to all parts of the Commonwealth that would
    preclude the taking.” 
    Id. On this
    basis, we affirmed. 
    Id. at 1193.
                 In essence, although home rule cities may not be limited or restrained
    by their former municipal codes, there is no law preventing a home rule charter
    25
    from exercising powers bestowed by its former code. See 
    Hartman, 880 A.2d at 745
    . Given that a home rule municipality is to have broader authority than a non-
    home rule municipality, and in light of the policy and purpose underlying home
    rule authority, we see no reason why the City may not exercise the powers granted
    under its former municipal code, particularly when such provisions are necessary
    to comply with Act 101’s mandates. Any other result would unnecessarily restrict
    municipal autonomy.
    Notwithstanding, we must determine whether there is a direct conflict
    between the City’s ordinances, which authorize fees for curbside recycling, and
    Act 101, a statute applicable throughout the Commonwealth. As discussed above,
    Act 101 is silent with regard to curbside recycling fees. Although we have struck
    down various fees, we ultimately held “Act 101 does not preempt other local fees
    which are otherwise permitted by statute and which are not inconsistent with Act
    101's provisions and purposes.”     Monroe 
    County, 80 A.3d at 561
    (emphasis
    added). The General Assembly authorized second and third class cities to impose
    recycling fees in its amendments to the Second and Third Class City Codes. In
    light of this legislative authority, we conclude the recycling fees are “otherwise
    permitted by statute.”
    Nevertheless, whether authorized by statute or not, a City ordinance
    must not be inconsistent with the provisions and purposes of Act 101; otherwise, it
    is preempted. As discussed above, a remand is necessary to determine whether the
    City’s recycling fees are inconsistent with Act 101’s provisions and purposes.
    C. Other Municipalities’ Recycling Programs
    1. Contentions
    Next, Residents argue the trial court erred by relying on fees imposed
    by other local governments to uphold the City’s fee.          Residents assert the
    26
    implementation of recycling fees by other local governments has no bearing on the
    legality of the City’s ordinances. The other local governments may come under
    different codes and charters. Moreover, it is unclear whether the fees imposed by
    other local governments would survive if challenged. They claim it should not be
    their burden to identify municipalities that do not charge a service fee to fund the
    operation of their recycling programs. Notwithstanding, Residents point out that
    the City of Scranton does not charge a service fee to fund its recycling program;
    but rather, it funds the program through its General Fund and DEP performance
    grants.
    In addition, Residents assert, if the City cannot fund its recycling
    program without the imposition of a service fee, the City may opt out of the
    recycling program. Finally, they claim the inability of some local governments to
    implement their recycling program without charging a recycling fee is an issue for
    the General Assembly, not this Court. Until such time as the General Assembly
    amends Act 101, the City has no right to impose a recycling fee on its property or
    business owners.
    The City responds that the trial court properly examined information
    from other municipalities as confirming the City’s experience. None of the six
    cities examined accomplished a “self-sustained” recycling program.              The
    experience of the other cities shows there is nothing unusual or inefficient about
    the City’s case. Significantly, it illustrates how mandated municipalities would
    struggle to sustain their recycling programs without a user fee. As the trial court
    found, “it is clear that funds, grants and marketing of recyclables alone, as
    suggested by [Residents] as the sole means permitted by Act 101 of paying for
    recycling, is infeasible.” Trial Court Opinion at 9. As for Residents’ claim that
    27
    Scranton does not charge a service fee to fund its recycling program, the City
    explains Scranton assesses an annual waste disposal fee to cover the cost of its
    waste disposal services (including curbside recycling). The receipts from this fee
    are deposited in Scranton’s General Fund, which is then used to pay all the costs of
    Scranton’s curbside recycling collection. To argue that Scranton does not collect a
    fee to support its curbside recycling program is sophistry.
    Further, the City argues, if Residents’ “other alternatives,” discussed
    below, were anything other than ephemeral, then at least one of these
    municipalities would have opted to take them, rather than enact a fee on its
    residents. None of the six cities listed have been able to accomplish a self-
    sustaining recycling program without the imposition of fees.
    2. Analysis
    Here, at the trial court’s request, the parties submitted supplemental
    stipulations regarding Act 101 funding and how other similarly-situated
    municipalities fund their recycling programs. Contrary to Residents’ assertions,
    the trial court did not rely on the fees imposed by other local governments to
    uphold the City’s fee. Rather, the trial court determined the City’s ordinances are
    not inconsistent with Act 101 and are authorized by the Third Class City Code.
    The trial court merely considered the collective experience of other municipalities
    in determining the availability of state funding and their ability to self-sustain
    recycling programs without imposing a curbside fee. In other cases before this
    Court, we did not have as much information regarding the availability of state
    28
    funding. See, e.g., Waste Management; Iezzi. Therefore, the trial court did not
    abuse its discretion with regard to this information.21
    D. Alternative Options
    1. Contentions
    Finally, Residents maintain the City disregarded alternative options to
    fund the recycling program. When the General Assembly enacted Act 101, it
    devised a clear pathway for municipalities to fund their recycling programs, which
    did not include imposing a recycling fee under Act 101. Act 101 provides grant
    funding to pay for the costs of the recycling program.                        It also enabled
    municipalities to operate their own resource recovery facilities or non-curbside
    recycling program. See 53 P.S. §§4000.1301, 4000.1501(h). They claim Act 101
    allows a municipality to discontinue its program if the costs to operate the program
    are excessive. 53 P.S. §4000.1712.
    Residents assert, although the City applied for some grants through
    Act 101, it did not exhaust all available opportunities to obtain grants.                    For
    instance, the City did not seek Section 902 grants from 2009 through 2011. It did
    not avail itself of the other funding alternatives, such as a resource recovery facility
    or non-curbside recycling. Instead, it chose to implement proscribed service fees,
    which constitute $2.3 million of its $2.4 million budget to operate the program.
    The City defends that Residents’ alternatives are more theoretical than
    real. According to the City, Residents offer nothing but speculation and conjecture
    regarding the existence of these “alternatives” and invites the City to negate them.
    21
    We see no merit in the City’s argument that the City of Scranton collects a user fee for
    collection of recyclables. See Supplemental Stipulation ¶43, R.R. at 351a. To the extent the trial
    court determined otherwise, its determination is not supported by substantial evidence.
    29
    With regard to Residents’ claim the City did not seek Section 902
    grants from 2009 through 2011, Section 902 grants may only be used to identify
    markets, develop a public education campaign, or purchase collection, processing
    and storage equipment. 25 Pa. Code §272.331. Municipalities are specifically
    prohibited from using Section 902 grants to cover maintenance costs or direct
    salaries. 25 Pa. Code §272.332. Further, municipalities cannot apply for Section
    902 grants on an annual basis, and the grants themselves are limited to a maximum
    of $250,000.   44 Pa. Bulletin 2708 (May 3, 2014); Joint Stipulation at ¶47.
    Because the City applied for Section 902 grant funds in 2008, the earliest it could
    have sought additional funds was 2010, and then not again until 2012, which it did.
    Joint Stipulation at ¶¶65, 66. Residents do not suggest how an extra $250,000 of
    limited use grant funds would help defray an annual structural operating deficit of
    over $2 million.
    With regard to Section 904 grants, the City explains they are
    performance grants awarded based on the total weight of recyclable materials that
    are collected within the municipality and which are actually marketed. 53 P.S.
    §4000.904(b); Joint Stipulation at ¶¶51, 52. From 2000 to 2011, the average
    annual amount of performance grant awarded under Section 904 was $157,321,
    and the most the City received in a single year during that period was $203,502 in
    2010. Joint Stipulation at ¶¶73-88. Since 2011, DEP reduced all award amounts to
    60% of the original amount; as a result, the City received grant awards of $86,132
    for 2010, $96,168 for 2011, and $86,760 for 2013. 
    Id. at ¶¶84-87.
                The City also rejects Residents’ claim that the City could have, but
    did not, apply for permission to operate an alternative program to curbside
    recycling under Section 1501(h) of Act 101, 53 P.S. §4000.1501(h). Section
    30
    1501(h) is not an open invitation to municipalities to explore a variety of potential
    alternatives to the standard “source-separation and collection program for
    recyclable materials.” 53 P.S. §4000.1501(a). Residents did not show whether this
    alternative is available to the City and if so, whether the City could establish and
    sustain the program without charging the contested fee.
    The City likewise rejects Residents’ claim the City could have opened
    its own resource recovery facility to take advantage of the fee permitted under
    Section 1301 paid by operators of such facilities. According to the City, resource
    recovery facilities have nothing to do with recycling. In fact, Act 101 specifically
    excludes recycling.    Section 103 of Act 101, 53 P.S. §4000.103.           Therefore,
    “Residents’ assertion that ‘[t]he City could have opened [its] own resource
    recovery facility in order to generate revenues to fund the recycling program’ or
    sold ‘recyclable materials deposited at the facility’ is a fallacy. Appellees’ Brief at
    38 (citing Appellants’ Brief at 34).
    Finally, City maintains Section 1712 of Act 101 does not provide a
    “right” to discontinue the program when the costs of the program become
    excessive, but merely provides “an affirmative defense.” This affirmative defense
    does not exempt municipalities from compliance with Section 1501’s mandatory
    recycling provisions, nor does it give them a “right” to opt out. To the contrary,
    Section 1712(a) only provides an affirmative defense to certain types of
    enforcement actions brought by DEP.
    Notwithstanding, Residents presented no evidence to the trial court
    that any of these “alternatives” remotely approach the generation of funds
    necessary to displace the City’s curbside recycling fee.
    31
    2. Analysis
    The City is eligible for two types of Act 101 grants under Sections
    902 and 904.       Section 902 grants are awarded “for development and
    implementation of municipal recycling programs” and “may be used to identify
    markets, develop a public education campaign, purchase collection and storage
    equipment and do other things necessary to establish a municipal recycling
    program.” 53 P.S. §4000.902(a). However, Section 902 grants are not available
    on an annual basis. See 44 Pa. Bulletin 2708 (May 3, 2014). Consequently, a
    municipality may not apply for Section 902 grants in consecutive years. 
    Id. Section 904
    grants are performance grants “based on the type and
    weight of source-separated recyclable materials ... that were recycled in the
    previous calendar year, and the population of the municipality.” 53 P.S.
    §4000.904(b).    A municipality may apply for Section 904 grants annually.
    53 P.S. §4000.904(a).
    Section 902 and 904 grants are funded by the Act 101’s recycling
    fund. Section 706 of Act 101, 53 P.S. §4000.706; Waste 
    Management, 107 A.3d at 283
    . The recycling fund itself is funded by a $2 per ton fee on disposal facilities.
    Section 706 of Act 101, 53 P.S. §4000.706; Waste 
    Management, 107 A.3d at 283
    .
    The General Assembly did not intend the Recycling Fund to be the long-term
    mechanism for supporting Act 101's programs. Waste 
    Management, 107 A.3d at 284
    . In fact, Act 101 provides a sunset provision for the $2 fee, directing its
    termination after January 1, 2020.        Section 701(d) of Act 101, 53 P.S.
    §4000.701(d); Waste 
    Management, 107 A.3d at 284
    . The end goal is to make
    recycling programs “financially self-sufficient.” See Section 1513 of Act 101, 53
    P.S. §4000.1513.    “However, it is contemplated that self-sufficiency may be
    beyond the capabilities of municipalities and the Department, ultimately requiring
    32
    further legislative action.   Waste 
    Management, 107 A.3d at 284
    ; see 53 P.S.
    §4000.1513(4)).
    Here, the City previously applied for Section 902 grants and it
    received awards in 2005 ($438,750), 2008 ($250,852), and 2012 ($242,039). Joint
    Stipulation at ¶¶54, 59, 61. The City was not eligible to apply for a Section 902
    grant until 2014. With regard to Section 904 grants, on average, the City receives
    less than $100,000 in Section 904 grants. Joint Stipulation at ¶¶85-87.
    Upon review, there is no support for Residents’ bald assertions that
    the City did not fully avail itself of this grant money. Even if the City may have
    qualified for more grant money, it is clear that grant money alone cannot fund the
    gap. As demonstrated by DEP’s reduction of award amounts, the recycling fund
    coffers are limited.
    As for the other alternatives advanced by Residents, Section 1501(h)
    of Act 101, 53 P.S. §4000.1501(h), provides a single alternative to the standard
    “source-separation and collection program for recyclable materials.” 53 P.S.
    §4000.1501(a). A mandated municipality can comply with its source separation
    and collection obligations through the use of a recycling facility, so long as:
    (1) Materials separated, collected, recovered or created
    by the recycling facility can be marketed as readily as
    materials collected through a curbside recycling program.
    (2) The mechanical separation technology used in the
    recycling facility has been demonstrated to be effective
    for the life of operations at the facility.
    53 P.S. §4000.1501(h).        Residents did not show whether this alternative is
    available to the City, and more importantly, whether this alternative could be
    sustained without charging a fee.
    33
    As for Residents’ claim that the City could have opened its own
    resource recovery facility to fund the recycling program, a resource facility
    excludes recycling. Specifically, Section 103 of Act 101 defines a “resource
    recovery facility” as:
    A processing facility that provides for the extraction and
    utilization of materials or energy from municipal waste
    that is generated offsite, including, but not limited to, a
    facility that mechanically extracts materials from
    municipal waste, a combustion facility that converts the
    organic fraction of municipal waste to usable energy, and
    any chemical and biological process that converts
    municipal waste into a fuel product. The term also
    includes any facility for the combustion of municipal
    waste that is generated offsite, whether or not the facility
    is operated to recover energy. The term does not include:
    ***
    (3) Any separation and collection center, drop-off point
    or collection center for recycling, or any source
    separation or collection center for composting leaf waste.
    53 P.S. §4000.103 (emphasis added).
    Finally, contrary to Residents’ assertions that the City has a “right” to
    discontinue the program when the program costs are excessive, Section 1712 of
    Act 101 provides “an affirmative defense.” Specifically, this section provides:
    It shall be an affirmative defense to any action by the
    department ... against any municipality alleged to be in
    violation of section 1501 that such municipality's failure
    to comply is caused by excessive costs of the program
    required by section 1501. Program costs are excessive
    when reasonable and necessary costs of operating the
    program exceed income from the sale or use of collected
    material, grant money received from the department
    pursuant to section 902 and avoided costs of municipal
    waste processing or disposal.
    34
    53 P.S. §4000.1712(a) (emphasis added). This section is merely a defense against
    certain types of enforcement actions, not a right to opt out of its mandated
    responsibilities under Section 1501(a). See 
    id. Notwithstanding, the
    City here did not offer evidence of a
    sustainability study that presented alternate methods to make up funding deficits.
    See Waste 
    Management, 107 A.3d at 275
    . There is no stipulated fact that the City
    sought private third party support for its recycling program.
    IV. Conclusion
    Accordingly, we vacate and remand for more analysis of the
    preemption issue, consistent with our recent decision in Waste Management. In
    particular, further inquiry is necessary as to whether the curbside recycling fee will
    have a negative impact on the recycling program’s financial self-sufficiency, as
    that term is used in Act 101, or a deleterious effect on the efficiencies of the City’s
    recycling program.
    MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    35
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Alan Ziegler and Nicolas Bene and              :
    Lissette Chevalier and Jose Munoz,             : No. 10 C.D. 2015
    and Efrain Caban, Individually and             :
    on behalf of all similarly situated persons,   :
    :
    Appellants           :
    :
    v.                         :
    :
    City of Reading and Reading                    :
    Area Water Authority                           :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 20th day of April, 2016, we VACATE the order of
    the Court of Common Pleas of Berks County, dated December 15, 2014, and we
    REMAND for further proceedings consistent with the foregoing opinion.
    Jurisdiction is relinquished.
    __________________________________
    MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge