J. Buchanan Associates, LLC v. University Area Joint Authority ( 2020 )


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  •               IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    J. Buchanan Associates, LLC,              :
    Appellant                :
    :   No. 261 C.D. 2019
    v.                           :
    :   Argued: December 10, 2019
    University Area Joint Authority           :
    BEFORE:      HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
    HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge
    OPINION BY
    JUDGE McCULLOUGH                                           FILED: May 13, 2020
    J. Buchanan Associates, LLC (Buchanan) appeals from the February 28,
    2019 order of the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County (trial court), which
    sustained the University Area Joint Authority’s (Authority) preliminary objections and
    dismissed Buchanan’s first amended class action complaint. We affirm.
    Introduction
    The Authority is a joint municipal sewer authority formed under the
    Municipality Authorities Act (MAA), 53 Pa.C.S. §§5601-5623.               When a new
    residential or commercial customer desires (or is required) to connect to a municipal
    authority’s sewer system, the municipal authority is authorized, pursuant to the MAA,
    to charge a “tapping fee” to recoup its capital costs incurred in constructing the
    particular facilities required to provide service to the new customer. The tapping fee
    is a one-time charge for access to the sewer system; it is not to be confused with a user
    fee, which is a separate ongoing charge for actual use of the system.
    Buchanan owns a 20,260-square-foot office building known as the
    Buchanan Center in State College, Pennsylvania. In December 2015, Buchanan
    submitted an application to connect Buchanan Center to the Authority’s sanitary sewer
    system. The Authority charged Buchanan a $32,977 tapping fee, which was the
    equivalent of seven times the tapping fee for a single residential dwelling, measured in
    Equivalent Dwelling Units (EDUs).1 That is, the Authority used a residential unit, i.e.,
    an EDU, as the standard unit for measuring units of discharge, and converted Buchanan
    Center’s estimated sewage flow into EDUs. Buchanan disagreed with the amount of
    the tapping fee, but paid it under protest and connected to the system. Whether
    Buchanan has sufficiently stated a claim for relief against the Authority for violation
    of the MAA’s tapping fee provisions is the subject of this appeal.2
    Statutory Background for Charging Tapping Fees
    Section 5607 of the MAA governs municipal authorities’ “Purposes and
    Powers,” and provides, in pertinent part:
    (d) Powers.--Every authority may exercise all powers
    necessary or convenient for the carrying out of the purposes
    1
    An “equivalent dwelling unit” (EDU) is a unit of measurement for volume of sewage flow,
    and typically one EDU will correspond to one residence. The Ainjar Trust v. Department of
    Environmental Protection, 
    806 A.2d 482
    , 484 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2002).
    2
    In an appeal from an order sustaining preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer, we
    are constrained to examine only those well-pleaded facts in the complaint, since a demurrer admits
    those facts and any inferences reasonably deducible therefrom, for purposes of such a determination.
    Robinson v. Department of Justice, Bureau of Corrections, 
    377 A.2d 1277
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 1977). In
    that examination, we bear in mind that dismissal of a complaint on preliminary objections should
    occur only in cases which are clear and free from doubt. Legman v. School District of the City of
    Scranton, 
    247 A.2d 566
     (Pa. 1968). Any reservation relative to the legal possibility of recovery
    should be resolved by refusing to sustain the demurrer. Allstate Insurance Company v. Fioravanti,
    
    299 A.2d 585
     (Pa. 1973).
    2
    set forth in this section, including, but without limiting the
    generality of the foregoing, the following rights and powers:
    ***
    (9) to fix, alter, charge and collect rates and other
    charges in the area served by its facilities at
    reasonable and uniform rates to be determined
    exclusively by it for the purpose of providing for the
    payment of the expenses of the authority, the
    construction, improvement, repair, maintenance and
    operation of its facilities and properties. . . .
    ***
    (24) To charge enumerated fees to property owners
    who desire to or are required to connect to the
    authority’s sewer or water system.
    ***
    (i) The fees may include any of the following if
    they are separately set forth in a resolution
    adopted by the authority:
    ***
    (C) Tapping fee.
    53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(9), (24).3
    A tapping fee may be comprised of up to four components, only two of
    which are relevant in this appeal: the “Capacity part” and the “Collection part.” 53
    3
    Permissible fees also include: a connection fee and a customer facilities fee. 53 Pa.C.S.
    §5607(d)(24)(i)(A), (B). Only the tapping fee is relevant to this appeal.
    3
    Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(I), (II).4 As applicable here, section 5607(d)(24)(i)(C) of
    the MAA addresses the requirements relating to the computation of the Capacity and
    Collection parts of the tapping fee:
    (C) Tapping fee. A tapping fee shall not exceed an amount
    based upon some or all of the following parts which shall be
    separately set forth in the resolution adopted by the authority
    to establish these fees . . .
    (I) Capacity part. The capacity part shall not
    exceed an amount that is based upon the cost of
    capacity-related facilities, including, but not
    limited to, source of supply, treatment,
    pumping, transmission, trunk, interceptor and
    outfall mains, storage, sludge treatment or
    disposal, interconnection or other general
    system facilities. . . . The cost of capacity-
    related facilities . . . shall be based upon their
    historical cost trended to current cost using
    published cost indexes or upon the historical
    cost plus interest and other financing fees paid
    on debt financing such facilities. . . .
    Outstanding debt related to the facilities shall be
    subtracted from the cost. . . .The capacity part of
    the tapping fee per unit of design capacity of
    said facilities required by the new customer
    shall not exceed the total cost of the facilities as
    described herein divided by the system design
    capacity of all such facilities. . . .
    (II) Distribution or collection part. The
    distribution or collection part may not exceed an
    amount based upon the cost of distribution or
    collection facilities required to provide service,
    such as mains, hydrants and pumping stations. .
    4
    The tapping fee may also be based on a special purpose part and a reimbursement part,
    neither of which are relevant for purposes of this appeal. See 53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(III)-(IV).
    4
    . . The cost of distribution or collections
    facilities . . . shall be based upon historical cost
    trended to current cost using published cost
    indexes or upon the historical cost plus interest
    and other financing fees paid on debt financing
    such facilities. . . . Outstanding debt related to
    the facilities shall be subtracted from the cost. .
    . . The distribution or collection part of the
    tapping fee per unit of design capacity of said
    facilities required by the new customer shall not
    exceed the cost of the facilities divided by the
    design capacity. . . .
    53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(I)-(II).
    Act 57 of 2003
    In December 2003, the MAA was amended by the Act of December 30,
    2003, P.L. 404, No. 57 (Act 57). Relevant to this appeal, Act 57 made the following
    changes. It established the maximum “design capacity”5 that a municipal authority
    may allot to a new residential customer when calculating that customer’s tapping fee:
    [T]he design capacity required by a new residential customer
    used in calculating sewer or water tapping fees shall not
    exceed an amount established by multiplying . . . 90 gallons
    per capita per day for sewer capacity times the average
    number of persons per household as established by the most
    recent census data provided by the United States Census
    Bureau.
    53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(V)(e).
    5
    “Design capacity” refers to the wastewater requirements of a customer. “System design
    capacity” refers to the maximum wastewater capacity of the municipal authority’s sewer facility. See
    p.6, infra.
    5
    Pursuant to Act 57’s amendments to section 5607(d)(24)(ii), any authority
    charging a tapping fee may only do so pursuant to a resolution adopted at a public
    meeting. Section 5607(d)(24)(ii) of the MAA now reads:
    (ii) Every authority charging a tapping, customer facilities or
    connection fee shall do so only pursuant to a resolution
    adopted at a public meeting of the authority. The authority
    shall have available for public inspection a detailed
    itemization of all calculations, clearly showing the
    maximum fees allowable for each part of the tapping fee
    and the manner in which the fees were determined, which
    shall be made a part of any resolution imposing such fees.
    A tapping, customer facilities or connection fee may be
    revised and imposed upon those who (sic) subsequently
    connect to the system, subject to the provisions and
    limitations of the act.
    53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(ii) (emphasis added).6
    Act 57 also added several definitions for use in section 5607(d)(24) of the
    MAA, including the following definitions for “design capacity” and “system design
    capacity”:
    “Design capacity.” For residential customers, the permitted
    or rated capacity of facilities expressed in million gallons per
    6
    The highlighted portions were added by Act 57. Notably, the basis for the requirement that
    municipalities adopt tapping fees at a public meeting and make available for public inspection a
    detailed itemization of all calculations showing the manner in which the fee is calculated is not new.
    It can be traced back to the Act of December 19, 1990, P.L. 1227, No. 203, as amended (Act 203 of
    1990), which amended the former MAA. See generally West v. Hampton Township Sanitary
    Authority, 
    661 A.2d 459
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 1995). Act 57 added the requirements that (1) the tapping fee
    be adopted by “resolution”; (2) the authority have available for public inspection a detailed
    itemization of all calculations which include “the maximum fees allowable for each part of the tapping
    fee”; and (3) the detailed itemization “be made part of any resolution imposing such fee.” 53 Pa.C.S.
    §5607(d)(24)(ii).
    6
    day. For nonresidential customers, design capacity may also
    be expressed in pounds of BOD5 [five-day biochemical
    oxygen demand] per day, pounds of suspended solids per day
    or any other capacity-defining parameter that is separately
    and specifically set forth in the permit governing the
    operation of the system and based upon its original design as
    modified by those regulatory agencies having jurisdiction
    over these facilities. Additionally, for separate fire service
    customers, the permitted or rated capacity of fire service
    facilities may be expressed in peak flows. The units of
    measurement used to express design capacity shall be the
    same units of measurement used to express the system design
    capacity. Except as otherwise provided for special
    purpose facilities, design capacity may not be expressed
    in terms of equivalent dwelling units.[7]
    ***
    “System design capacity.” The design capacity of the system
    for which the tapping fee is being calculated which
    represents the total design capacity of the treatment facility
    or water sources.
    53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(VII) (emphasis added).
    The Authority’s 2005 Capital Charges Study8
    In 2005, in response to Act 57, the Authority commissioned a Capital
    Charges Study by an engineering firm, Herbert, Rowland & Grubic, Inc. (HRG), to
    determine, inter alia, the Capacity and Collection parts of the maximum allowable
    7
    As discussed infra, Buchanan relies heavily on this sentence to support its position that the
    Authority was precluded from utilizing an EDU-based method of charging its tapping fee.
    8
    The 2005 Capital Charges Study is attached to the Amended Complaint as Exhibit “G.”
    7
    tapping fee that Authority could charge its customers.9 (Amended Complaint, ¶ 30,
    Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 51a-70a.)
    HRG began with the fixed starting point that the Authority’s system
    design capacity (how much wastewater its facilities can handle) was 6,750,000 gallons
    of wastewater per day.            (R.R. at 53a.)        Applying the requirements of section
    5607(d)(24)(i)(C) of the MAA, as set forth above, HRG concluded that the maximum
    tapping fee the Authority could charge a residential customer was $4,636.93 based on:
    (1) the Capacity part - $3,640.96, and (2) the Collection part - $995.98.                             Id.
    Specifically, in determining the Capacity part of the tapping fee, HRG trended the
    capital costs associated with construction of the Authority’s capacity-related facilities
    to 2005 ($170,149,012.51).10 (R.R. at 57a.) HRG reduced that amount by the amount
    of the Authority’s outstanding debt ($65,506,007). Id. That amount ($104,643,005)
    was divided by 6,750,000 gallons per day, i.e., the Authority’s system design capacity.
    Id. That calculation yielded the Authority’s “Cost per Unit of Design Capacity” of
    $15.50 per gallon for the Capacity part of the tapping fee. Id.
    Next, HRG determined Act 57’s maximum allowable design capacity for
    a residential connection by multiplying 90 gallons per day by the average number of
    9
    Buchanan does not argue that HRG’s 2005 Capital Charges Study was not adopted at a
    public meeting or that it otherwise violates the requirements of section 5607(d)(24)(ii) of the MAA,
    as set forth above. 53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(ii). However, as discussed infra, Buchanan argues that
    a rate resolution adopted by the Authority in 2015, which revised its tapping fees, violates this section.
    10
    A municipal authority’s cost per unit of the sewer system’s capacity and collection-related
    facilities are computed by using one of the following approaches: (1) historical costs trended to
    current cost; (2) historic costs plus cost of financing; or (3) replacement cost. 53 Pa.C.S.
    §5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(I) and (II). In this case, the Authority’s engineers used the historical cost trended
    to current costs method to determine the costs of the capacity and collection related facilities. The
    Authority’s methodology for calculating the cost factor is not at issue here.
    8
    persons per household as determined by the 2000 census statistic of 2.61 persons per
    household in Centre County (90 x 2.61 = 234.9).11 Id.
    HRG then multiplied the Authority’s Cost per Unit of Design Capacity for
    its capacity facilities ($15.50 per gallon per day) by Act 57’s maximum allowable
    design capacity for a residential connection (“No. Units of Design Capacity” also
    expressed in gallons per day)12 to determine the Capacity part of the tapping fee for
    residential customers ($15.50 per gallon per day x 234.9 gallons per day = $3,640.95).
    Id. HRG performed a similar calculation to determine the Collection part of the tapping
    fee, using the cost of the collection facilities. (R.R. at 62a-63a.) The calculation was
    the same as the Capacity part calculation—except instead of beginning the formula
    with the cost of the Authority’s capacity-related facilities, the cost of the Authority’s
    collection-related facilities was used.          Id.   HRG computed the total maximum
    residential tapping fee by adding together the Capacity part and the Collection part, as
    outlined above. (R.R. at 53a.) HRG’s complete calculation of a residential tapping
    fee, which was appended to the 2005 Capital Charges Study as “Exhibit 3,” is set forth
    below:
    11
    As noted, Act 57 sets the maximum design capacity per residential connection. The design
    capacity for a single-family dwelling cannot be more than 90 gallons of wastewater per day times the
    average number of persons per household as established by the most recent census data provided by
    the U.S. Census Bureau. See 53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(V)(e).
    12
    We emphasize this part of the complex calculation for ease of reference because it is
    important to our discussion below.
    9
    (R.R. at 70a.)
    For non-residential customers, HRG assessed the tapping fee based on a
    per/gallon basis, as follows:
    $15.50 Capacity part + $4.24 Collection part = tapping fee of $𝟏𝟗. 𝟕𝟒 per gallon per day
    (R.R. at 53a.)
    The Authority’s 2015 Rate Resolution13
    On June 30, 2015, the Authority adopted a Rate Resolution (2015 Rate
    Resolution), which revised, among other things, its sewer tapping fees. (Amended
    13
    The Authority’s 2015 Rate Resolution is attached to the Amended Complaint as Exhibit
    “F.”
    10
    Complaint, ¶¶ 18-20, R.R. at 37a-47a.) Section 7 (Definitions) defines an EDU as “a
    unit of measurement that estimates an average use of wastewater facilities. Roughly
    the average amount of wastewater generated by a typical family in one day.” (R.R. at
    47a.)
    Section 1.2 provides that “Tapping Fees are based on EDUs according to
    Section 2.” (R.R. at 38a.) In Section 2, the 2015 Rate Resolution includes a section
    entitled, “Assignment of Equivalent Dwelling Units,” listing different types of uses and
    assigning a number of EDUs per unit of measure for each type of improved property.
    (R.R. at 39a-41a.) For example, and pertinent to review of this case, the 2015 Rate
    Resolution provides that a single-family home is assigned a measure of one EDU; an
    apartment building is assigned one EDU per unit; a commercial office building is
    assigned “1 EDU per Business up to 10 employees”; and a “shell Building, per 3000
    sq. ft.” is assigned one EDU. (R.R. at 40a-41a.)
    Buchanan’s Application for Permit to Connect to Sanitary Sewer
    On December 23, 2015, Buchanan submitted an “Application for Permit
    to Connect to [the Authority’s] Sanitary Sewer System.” (Amended Complaint, ¶8,
    R.R. at 33a.) The Authority was informed that there would be 40 employees in a space
    rented to Blue Mountain Quality Resources, and that there was a 9,238-square-foot
    space that had not yet been completed. Based on these assumptions, the Authority
    charged Buchanan a $32,977 tapping fee, computed as follows: $4,711 (which was the
    Capacity part of tapping as set forth in the 2015 Rate Resolution)14 times 7 EDUs. In
    an email, the Authority explained that it charged Buchanan a tapping fee based on 7
    EDUs, as follows:
    14
    See R.R. at 38a.
    11
    Tom,
    Based on the form you submitted, the EDU tapping fee
    assignment would be 7 EDUs.
    The Blue Mountain Quality Resources section is based on the
    number of employees divided by 10, which is 4 EDUs.
    The remainder of the building is calculated as a shell
    building, which is 1 EDU per 3,000 square feet, for 3 EDUs
    (9,238/3,000 = 3).
    (Amended Complaint, ¶13, R.R. at 301a.)
    Buchanan disagreed with the tapping fee, but paid it under protest and
    connected to the system.15 (Amended Complaint, ¶16.)
    Buchanan’s Amended Complaint
    On August 6, 2018, Buchanan filed an amended class action complaint
    against the Authority.16 In Count I, Buchanan seeks a judicial declaration that the
    Authority’s 2015 Rate Resolution and the tapping fees charged are not in accordance
    with the MAA. Buchanan argues that the Authority’s tapping fees “are not proportional
    to . . . the cost of [Buchanan Center’s] ‘design capacity requirements’ for ‘capacity
    part’ and ‘collection part’ facilities in the [Authority’s] system for [Buchanan Center]
    when compared to the overall system capacity.”                       Amended Complaint, ¶131.
    15
    Specifically, Buchanan objected to the Authority’s EDU-method to charge Buchanan
    Center’s tapping fee, arguing instead that its design capacity (i.e., its wastewater needs) should be
    based on its anticipated water usage, as determined by the State College Borough Water Authority.
    (Exhibit “D” to Amended Complaint, R.R. at 49a.)
    16
    This is the operative complaint for purposes of this appeal.
    12
    Buchanan argues that the Authority’s tapping fees “are improperly expressed as EDUs
    and are excessive, in violation of the express provisions of the MAA, as amended by
    Act 57 of 2003, specifically 53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(I)-(II) and (VII).” Id.
    Buchanan argues that the Authority should be calculating tapping fees “on the basis of
    . . . anticipated or actual flow rates . . . as opposed to the arbitrary number of EDUs
    assessed.” Id. ¶134. Buchanan alleges that State College Borough Water Authority
    estimated its water flow demand to be approximately 185 gallons per day. Id. ¶17.
    Buchanan alleges that, applying the methodology used by HRG in the 2005 Capital
    Charges Study, the Authority should have charged Buchanan a tapping fee of
    $3,651.90:
    $19.74 (non-residential tapping fee per gallon) x 185 gallons per day = $3,651.90.
    Id. ¶41.
    Buchanan also seeks a declaration that the Authority’s 2015 Rate
    Resolution is a legal nullity because the Authority failed to include a “detailed
    itemization” showing “the manner in which the fees were determined,” as part of the
    Rate Resolution, in violation of the requirements of section 5607(d)(24)(ii) of the
    MAA, 53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(ii). Id. ¶¶ 117, 115, 134.
    In Count II, Buchanan seeks for itself, and on behalf of all class members,
    a refund of the difference between the alleged legally defective tapping fees imposed
    and the tapping fees that should have been imposed in conformity with the law.
    (Amended Complaint, ¶142.)
    The Authority filed a preliminary objection to the Amended Complaint in
    the nature of a demurrer. The Authority argued that municipal authorities are, and have
    long been, authorized to “fix, alter, charge and collect rates and other charges” at “rates
    to be determined exclusively by it.” (R.R. at 420a.) Citing Patton-Ferguson Joint
    13
    Authority v. Hawbaker, 
    322 A.2d 783
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 1974) (upholding joint authority’s
    rate schedule based on EDUs); Curson v. West Conshohocken Municipal Authority,
    
    611 A.2d 775
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 1992) (upholding decision of municipal authority to treat
    each separate unit in apartment building as separate EDU for purposes of charging
    building’s owner a sewer tapping fee); and Smith v. Athens Township Authority, 
    685 A.2d 651
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 1996) (upholding municipal sewer authority’s charge of
    tapping fee for multi-unit trailer park on flat $600 per residence basis), the Authority
    asserted that our Court has, time and again, authorized municipal authorities to charge
    tapping fees on an EDU basis.
    The Authority further argued that Act 57 did not alter the longstanding
    recognition that municipal authorities may charge fees and rates on an EDU basis. It
    relied on several cases, including Chicora Commons Limited Partnership, LLP v.
    Chicora Borough Sewer Authority, 
    922 A.2d 986
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2007) (upholding sewer
    authority’s EDU classification system for rate structure), and Peifer v. North Codorus
    Township Sewer Authority (Pa. Cmwlth., Nos. 1407 C.D. 2009, 1408 C.D. 2009, filed
    May 21, 2010) (unreported) (upholding municipal authority’s decision to charge
    mobile home park tapping fee on EDU basis instead of making an individual
    assessment of expected use), which were decided after the enactment of Act 57 and did
    not recognize any change in the law.
    Next, the Authority argued that the MAA, as amended by Act 57, plainly
    does not change the way that tapping fees may be charged because it says nothing about
    any change to section 5607(d)(9) or municipal authorities’ ability to charge tapping
    fees on an EDU basis. (R.R. at 423a.)
    Regarding Buchanan’s procedural challenge to the enactment of the 2015
    Rate Resolution, the Authority argued that Buchanan’s challenge was untimely because
    14
    Buchanan failed to contest the 2015 Rate Resolution within 30 days of its effective date
    in accordance with section 5571.1(b) of the Judicial Code, 42 Pa.C.S. §5571.1(b).17
    (R.R. at 424a-26a.)
    On November 16, 2018, the trial court issued an opinion and order,
    sustaining in part, and denying in part, the Authority’s demurrer. With respect to
    Buchanan’s challenge to the Authority’s method of charging tapping fees on an EDU
    basis, the trial court essentially adopted the Authority’s position that Act 57 did not
    change the original intent of the MAA, which was to permit municipal authorities to
    charge fees and user rates on an EDU basis, as evidenced by this Court’s 2007 decision
    in Chicora. (Trial ct. op., November 16, 2018, at 5.) The trial court further held that
    charging a tapping fee on an EDU basis is permissible if the EDU is applied in
    compliance with the “reasonable and uniform” requirements of section 5607(d)(9) of
    the MAA, 53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(9). Id. The trial court concluded that Buchanan failed
    to allege facts sufficient to support its claim that the Authority’s assignment of seven
    17
    Section 5571.1 of the Judicial Code provides, in pertinent part:
    (a) Applicability, court of common pleas.—
    (1) This section shall apply to any appeal
    raising questions relating to an alleged
    defect in the process of or procedure for
    enactment or adoption of any ordinance,
    resolution, map or similar action of a
    political subdivision.
    ***
    (b) Appeals of defects in statutory procedure.—
    (1) Any appeal raising questions relating to an
    alleged defect in statutory procedure shall
    be brought within 30 days of the intended
    effective date of the ordinance.
    42 Pa.C.S. §5571.1.
    15
    EDUs to Buchanan Center was arbitrary. Id. at 6. Lastly, the trial court addressed
    Buchanan’s procedural challenge to the 2015 Rate Resolution and the Authority’s
    argument that the challenge was time-barred under section 5571.1 of the Judicial Code,
    42 Pa.C.S. §5571.1. The trial court found that
    [t]he Rate Resolution permits tapping fees and lists the costs
    of the various components of the tapping fee by listing the
    cost per EDU. There are no allegations the [2005 Capital
    Charges] Study was not available for the public to inspect, or
    the resolution was passed without proper notice. Plaintiff
    challenges the failure to incorporate and attach the [2005
    Capital Charges] Study into the rate resolution, despite the
    comprehensive breakdown of the individual portions of the
    tapping fee. The Rate Resolution strictly complies with the
    statutory requirements, is a valid ordinance, and is not void.
    (Trial ct. op., November 16, 2018, at 7-8.)18
    18
    The trial court agreed with the Authority that the time limitation in section 5571.1 of the
    Judicial Code, 42 Pa.C.S. §5571.1, was applicable to these circumstances. The trial court applied the
    burden of proof provisions of section 5571.1(e)(2) of the Judicial Code, 42 Pa.C.S. § 5571.1(e)(2)
    (which only apply when there is an exemption under section 5571.1(c) from the 30-day time
    limitation), and concluded that the 2015 Rate Resolution strictly complied with the requirements of
    section 5607(d)(24)(ii) of the MAA, 53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(ii). This was in error because section
    5571.1 of the Judicial Code, 42 Pa.C.S. §5571.1, applies to political subdivisions. This section
    specifically states: “This section shall apply to any appeal raising questions relating to an alleged
    defect in the process of or procedure for enactment or adoption of any ordinance, resolution, map or
    similar action of a political subdivision.” The Authority is not a political subdivision. Section 1991
    of the Statutory Construction Act of 1972 defines “political subdivision” as “[a]ny county, city,
    borough, incorporated town, township, school district, vocational school district and county
    institution district.” 1 Pa.C.S. §1991. See also Greer v. Metropolitan Hospital, 
    341 A.2d 520
    , 527
    (Pa. Super. 1975) (“[A] municipal authority is an entity distinct from both the Commonwealth and a
    political subdivision.”).
    That being said, the trial court’s error is not a reversible one. In fact, because the trial court
    analyzed substantively whether the 2015 Rate Resolution violates section 5607(d)(24)(ii) of the
    MAA, 53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(ii), and concluded that it did not, we are able to review Buchanan’s
    second argument, discussed infra, that the trial court erred in finding the 2015 Rate Resolution to be
    valid and enforceable.
    16
    Although the trial court concluded that Buchanan’s challenge to the
    adoption of the 2015 Rate Resolution was legally insufficient, it allowed Buchanan to
    file a second amended complaint to challenge to the Authority’s application of the Rate
    Resolution. Id. at 8. However, Buchanan opted not to file a second amended
    complaint, and instead praeciped the trial court to dismiss the amended complaint with
    prejudice; thus, converting the November 16, 2018 order into a final appealable order.
    The trial court issued a certificate dismissing the amended complaint with prejudice on
    February 28, 2019.
    On appeal, Buchanan argues that the trial court erred by: (1) holding that
    the Authority may charge its sewer tapping fee on the basis of assigning EDUs; (2)
    finding the Authority’s 2015 Rate Resolution to be valid and enforceable; (3) relying
    upon “user rate” cases, and the general provisions of section 5607(d)(9) of the MAA,
    53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(9), instead of the more recently enacted provisions of section
    5607(d)(24), 53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24), which deal specifically with tapping fees; and
    (4) finding the Authority’s EDU-based sewer tapping fee to be valid, when no express
    language under section 5607 of the MAA, 53 Pa.C.S. §5607, authorizes EDU-based
    charges of any type.19
    (1)    Whether the trial court erred finding the Authority may Charge its
    Sewer Tapping Fee on the Basis of Assigning EDUs?
    In its first issue, Buchanan argues that the trial court erred as a matter of
    law and abused its discretion by holding that the Authority may charge tapping fees on
    the basis of assigning EDUs and by sustaining the Authority’s demurrer on this issue.
    19
    Both issues 3 and 4 are subsumed in our discussion of issue 1 and will not be addressed
    separately.
    17
    Buchanan contends that under the MAA, a new customer’s tapping fee must be limited
    to the customer’s proportionate gallons per day requirements (i.e., its “Design
    Capacity”).    (Buchanan’s Br. at 33.)         In support, Buchanan relies on section
    5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(I) of the MAA, which provides in pertinent part: “[t]he capacity part
    of the tapping fee per unit of design capacity of said facilities required by the new
    customer shall not exceed the total cost of the facilities as described herein divided by
    the system design capacity of all such facilities.” 53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(I).
    Buchanan argues that this statutory language clearly limits the Capacity part of the
    tapping fee to a user’s proportionate requirements for design capacity in such facilities
    when compared to the overall system design capacity of such facilities. Buchanan also
    relies on section 5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(II), which provides, “[t]he collection part of the
    tapping fee per unit of design capacity of said facilities required by the new customer
    shall not exceed the cost of the facilities divided by the design capacity.” 53 Pa.C.S.
    §5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(II). Buchanan argues that this statutory language likewise “reflects
    a pro rata limitation that requires a user to pay for collection facilities only to the extent
    of his or her esoteric ‘design capacity’ requirements in such facilities, dividing the cost
    by the ‘design capacity’ of those overall facilities.” (Buchanan’s Br. at 45.)
    Buchanan argues that the legislature “explicitly required an apples-to-
    apples comparison between a user’s requirements for ‘design capacity’ and the overall
    ‘system design capacity’ by providing [in section 5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(VII)] that ‘[t]he
    units of measurement used to express design capacity shall be the same units of
    measurement used to express the system design capacity’” and specifically stating that
    “design capacity may not be expressed in terms of equivalent dwelling units.”
    (Buchanan’s Br. at 46) (citing 53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(VII).)                Buchanan
    contends that, despite this express language, the Authority charged its tapping fee on
    18
    an arbitrarily assigned EDU basis which has nothing to do with Buchanan’s actual
    wastewater requirements. Id. at 47.
    In considering a question of statutory construction, we are guided by the
    Statutory Construction Act. The object of statutory construction is to ascertain and
    effectuate legislative intent. Section 1921(a) of the Statutory Construction Act, 1
    Pa.C.S. §1921(a); Whitmoyer v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Mountain
    Country Meats), 
    186 A.3d 947
    , 954 (Pa. 2018). In pursuing that end, we are mindful
    that a statute’s plain language generally provides the best indication of legislative
    intent. Whitmoyer, 186 A.3d at 954; Commonwealth v. McClintic, 
    909 A.2d 1241
    ,
    1243 (Pa. 2006). Thus, statutory construction begins with examination of the text itself.
    Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority v. Holmes, 
    835 A.2d 851
    , 856
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2003), appeal denied, 
    848 A.2d 930
     (Pa. 2004).
    “[W]e are instructed to give the statute its obvious meaning whenever the
    language is clear and unambiguous.” Whitmoyer, 186 A.3d at 954 (citing 1 Pa.C.S.
    §1921(b)). “To that end, we will construe words and phrases according to their
    common and approved usage.” Id. (citing section 1903 of the Statutory Construction
    Act, 1 Pa.C.S. §1903(a)). “Further, every statute shall be construed, if possible, to give
    effect to all its provisions so that no provision is ‘mere surplusage.’” Id. (citing 1
    Pa.C.S. §1921(a)); Malt Beverages Distributors Association v. Pennsylvania Liquor
    Control Board, 
    918 A.2d 171
    , 175-76 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2007), aff’d, 
    974 A.2d 1144
     (Pa.
    2009). Moreover, we are to assume the General Assembly did not intend a result that
    is “absurd, impossible of execution or unreasonable.” Section 1922(1) of the Statutory
    Construction Act, 1 Pa.C.S. §1922(1).
    When there are conflicts between statutory provisions, we are mindful of
    the maxim that the particular controls the general:
    19
    Whenever a general provision in a statute shall be in conflict
    with a special provision in the same or another statute, the
    two shall be construed, if possible, so that effect may be
    given to both. If the conflict between the two provisions is
    irreconcilable, the special provisions shall prevail and shall
    be construed as an exception to the general provision.
    1 Pa.C.S. §1933. Further, whenever clauses within the same statute are irreconcilable,
    the clause last in order of date or position shall prevail. 1 Pa.C.S. §§1934, 1935.
    Applying these canons, we conclude that the Authority charged Buchanan
    a tapping fee in a manner consistent with section 5607(d)(24) of the MAA, 53 Pa.C.S.
    §5607(d)(24). For one, section 5607(d)(24) of the MAA, as amended by Act 57, does
    not address how municipal authorities must, at the end of the day, charge an owner of
    a nonresidential property a tapping fee after calculating the Capacity and Collection
    parts.20 It also does not, contrary to Buchanan’s contention, require the authority to
    make individualized assessments of the expected use of each customer. Instead, the
    tapping fee provisions of the MAA at 53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(i)(C) establish the
    guidelines and parameters a municipal authority must follow when calculating and
    recovering the value of its capital costs of providing the parts of the system required
    by the new user. The tapping fee provisions of the MAA ensure a new customer does
    not pay more per unit than what it cost the municipal authority per unit to provide its
    capacity and collection related services. In other words, the Capacity and Collection
    parts of the new customer’s tapping fee per unit cannot be more than what it has cost
    the authority per unit to provide these services required by the new customer. 53
    Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(I) (“The capacity part of the tapping fee per unit of design
    20
    The original Municipal Authorities Act of 1945 (MAA of 1945), Act of May 5, 1945, P.L.
    382, formerly 53 P.S. §§301-322, repealed by the Act of June 19, 2001, P.L. 287, contained a
    provision for tapping fees. Act 203 of 1990 amended the MAA of 1945, to limit tapping and related
    fees such that a new customer would only pay for its fair share of the capital costs for including the
    new customer in the existing sewer system.
    20
    capacity of said facilities required by the new customer shall not exceed the total cost
    of the facilities as described herein divided by the system design capacity of all such
    facilities.”) (emphasis added). 53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(II) (“The distribution or
    collection part of the tapping fee per unit of design capacity of said facilities required
    by the new customer shall not exceed the cost of the facilities divided by the design
    capacity.”) (emphasis added). The language of the MAA is crystal clear. We do not
    agree with Buchanan that these provisions reflect a mandatory pro rata limitation that
    requires a user to pay for collection facilities only to the extent of its esoteric design
    capacity requirements in such facilities. (Buchanan’s Br. at 45.) That is not the import
    of this particular language, which is clearly to place a cap on the amount of the tapping
    fee an authority may collect from a new customer.
    This is not to say that a new customer’s design capacity is irrelevant. To
    calculate the Capacity and Collection parts of a tapping fee, it is necessary to identify
    the requirements of the new customer (its design capacity). See West, 
    661 A.2d at 464
    .
    But, the MAA does not require a tapping fee to be based on the exact number of units
    required by a new commercial customer, as suggested by Buchanan. According to
    Buchanan, the following language from the definition of “Design Capacity” evidences
    the legislature’s intent that a tapping fee for a commercial user must be calculated,
    based on the customer’s actual wastewater needs, as expressed on a per-gallon basis:
    The units of measurement to express design capacity shall
    be the same units of measurement used to express the
    system design capacity.” This provision further states that
    “design capacity may not be expressed in terms of
    equivalent dwelling units.
    53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(VII) (emphasis added).
    21
    We do not agree with Buchanan that this language prohibits a municipal
    authority from charging a commercial customer’s tapping fee on an EDU basis.21 The
    MAA, as amended by Act 57, contains no such broad prohibitory language, and it is
    not for this Court to add, by interpretation, a requirement that the legislature did not
    see fit to include. Commonwealth v. Rieck, Investment Corporation, 
    213 A.2d 277
    ,
    282 (Pa. 1965). At first glance, the prohibition in section 5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(VII) of the
    MAA, 53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(VII), against expressing design capacity in terms
    of EDUs, when read in isolation, could appear to prohibit charging tapping fees on an
    EDU basis. However, the provision must be read in context and together with the
    remaining language and construed with reference to the statute as a whole. See
    Commonwealth v. Office of Open Records, 
    103 A.3d 1276
    , 1285 (Pa. 2014). We
    conclude that, when read in context of the section in which it appears, the phrase “may
    not be expressed” in section 5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(VII) of the MAA, 53 Pa.C.S.
    §5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(VII), was intended to mean that design capacity may not be
    expressed in terms of EDUs when determining the Capacity and Collection parts
    of the tapping fee.
    When determining the Capacity part of the tapping fee, a municipal
    authority’s cost per unit is multiplied by the new customer’s “required number of units
    of design capacity.” (See Exhibit 3 to 2005 Capital Charges Study; R.R. at 70a.)
    Design capacity must obviously be expressed in some type of measurement or “unit.”
    The disputed language simply requires that the number of units of design capacity in
    the calculation of the Capacity part (and Collection part) not be expressed in EDUs.
    21
    See Warwick Township Water & Sewer Authority v. Warwick Realty Co., L.P., 
    176 A.3d 387
    , 389 n.2 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2017) (“Pursuant to the Municipality Authorities Act, 53 Pa.C.S. §5601–
    5623, a municipal authority has the right to assess additional EDUs as water and sewer usage
    increases. See 53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(i)(C)(I).”).
    22
    This is because an artificially reduced tapping fee would result if the authority’s costs
    per unit are multiplied by EDUs. And, if EDUs were used as the multiplier in the
    tapping fee equation, there would be no way to ensure that the new customer is not
    being charged more per unit than the authority’s cost per unit of providing the required
    service.
    We agree with Buchanan that the purpose of this language is to ensure
    apples are compared to apples. However, the problem with Buchanan’s argument is
    that the Authority did not “express” Buchanan’s design capacity in terms of EDUs
    when calculating the Capacity part and Collection parts of the tapping fee. If it
    had, the calculation for the Capacity part of the tapping fee would have been, as
    follows:
    $15.50 (Authority’s cost per gallon to provide capacity-related facilities) x 7 EDUs (No. of
    Units of Design Capacity) = $ 108.5
    And, its calculation for the Collection part of the tapping fee would have
    been, as follows:
    $4.24 (Authority’s cost per gallon to provide collection-related facilities) x 7 EDUs (No. of
    Units of Design Capacity) = $63.60
    By way of further example, in the 2005 Capital Charges Study, the
    Authority’s cost per unit for capacity-related facilities was $15.50 per gallon per day.
    The Authority’s cost per unit for Collection-related facilities was $4.94 per gallon per
    day. If these Costs per Unit ($15.50) and ($4.94) were multiplied by the number of
    EDUs (for example 1 EDU = a single-family home) instead of the maximum allowable
    design capacity of 90 gallons per day for a residence—the entire tapping fee for a
    single-family home would only be $15.50 + $4.94 = $19.74. The prohibition against
    23
    expressing design capacity in terms of EDUs when calculating the Capacity part and
    the Collection part of the tapping fee avoids this absurd result.
    Alternatively, Buchanan argues that charging it a tapping fee based on
    “equivalent” units of residential discharge resulted in an arbitrary assessment that has
    no relation to its actual wastewater needs – which is contrary to the intent of the MAA.
    Buchanan argues that seven EDUs is an arbitrary number because Buchanan Center is
    projected by the State College Borough Water Authority to use just 185 gallons of
    water. (Exhibit “D” to Amended Complaint; R.R. at 49a.) Buchanan argues that,
    despite this projection, the Authority charged it seven times the residential tapping fee,
    despite the fact that its actual requirements for design capacity in the Authority’s sewer
    system is less than that of a single residential property. (Buchanan’s Reply Br. at 23.)
    Again, we must disagree.
    An EDU assessment structure, while not based on actual wastewater flow
    rates, is not necessarily arbitrary. Here, the Authority’s computation of EDUs was
    based upon the use of the single-family residence as the basic minimum unit of
    discharge. The EDU method of charging tapping fees employed by the Authority
    anticipates each commercial properties wastewater needs based on the type of building
    and the character of its use. After computing the component parts of the residential
    tapping fee in accordance with the MAA, the Authority assessed Buchanan Center at
    seven EDUs. In so doing, the Authority determined that a commercial office space
    with 40 employees (using multiple restroom facilities) and a not-yet-developed 3,000-
    square-foot space, was the equivalent of seven single-family households consisting of
    2.61 occupants each. (R.R. at 301a.) This determination was based on the Authority’s
    2015 Rate Resolution which, for a Commercial Office Building, assigned 1 EDU “per
    business up to ten employees, and 1 EDU per every 3,000 square feet of a ‘Shell
    24
    Building,’ a portion of a building that is not yet built out or occupied.” (R.R. at 40a-
    41a.)
    As the trial court observed, the MAA provides municipal authorities with
    significant discretion to impose fees and charges, including tapping fees, for the
    construction and maintenance of its facilities. See Curson, 
    611 A.2d at 777
     (rejecting
    landowner’s challenge to EDU-based connection fee on grounds that fee was not
    reasonable because it was not related to actual cost of connection); see also Life
    Services, Inc. v. Chalfont–New Britain Township Joint Sewage Authority, 
    528 A.2d 1038
    , 1041 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1987) (holding that a one-time contribution fee was
    reasonably related to the value of service rendered and that municipal authority’s
    assumed use of 100 gallons per day per person was not arbitrary, and further observing
    that an authority is not required to establish its connection fee solely upon services
    actually consumed in order to be deemed reasonable). As the challenging party, the
    burden is on the challenger to show that the municipal authority abused its discretion
    or that the rate system or charge established is arbitrary or unreasonable. Curson, 
    611 A.2d 777
    .
    In Smith, one issue before this Court was whether a municipal authority’s
    charge of $600 tapping fee for each separate residence in a trailer park was reasonable.
    The owners of the trailer park argued that the authority should have only charged it one
    tapping fee of $1,600 for a commercial property, and that their tapping fee was not
    reasonable. 
    685 A.2d at 654, 657
    . In rejecting the owners’ argument, we explained:
    [E]ven though the tap-in fee is not based on the actual cost of
    connection, this does not mean that the fee is arbitrary. There
    is nothing in the [former] Act which prevents the Authority
    from imposing a tap-in fee as a means of financing
    construction of the entire sewer system. Curson . . . . This
    25
    court has held that such a fee is an appropriate method for
    securing financing for the project. 
    Id.
    Id. at 657-58.
    Moreover, the units of capacity required by a new customer must take into
    account the potential use or, as stated in Life Services, “the value of the service rendered
    either as actually consumed or as readily available for use.” 
    528 A.2d at 1041
    (emphasis in original).
    Here, the Amended Complaint alleges that Buchanan’s tapping fee was
    unreasonable because the Authority did not base it on its actual water flow needs.
    Buchanan alleged that its water flow rate for 2016-2017 was 191.78 gallons of water
    per day, and applying that figure, it should have been charged a tapping fee based on 1
    EDU. See Amended Complaint, ¶¶41-43. However, Buchanan fails to allege any facts
    from which one can conclude that water flow demand is necessarily equal to the
    amount of sewage generated. As the Authority points out, “by using this estimate of
    future water usage, Buchanan’s tapping fee for an (sic) 20,000 square foot building
    designed for approximately 40 employees would result in a tapping fee that is less than
    that for a single-family home.” (Authority’s Br. at 21-22.) Thus, the fact that the
    Authority did not charge Buchanan’s tapping fee based on its actual water flow needs
    does not establish that the fee was unreasonable. Because the facts as alleged by
    Buchanan in its Amended Complaint do not establish that the Authority’s tapping fee
    based on seven EDUs was unreasonable, we find the trial court did not err in dismissing
    Count 1 for failure to state a claim against the Authority.
    (2)    Whether the trial court erred finding the Authority’s 2015 Rate
    Resolution to be valid and enforceable?
    26
    Buchanan also seeks a declaration in Count I that the Authority’s 2015
    Rate Resolution was void ab initio because the Authority purportedly did not comply
    with section 5607(d)(24)(ii) of the MAA, which requires as follows:
    (ii) Every authority charging a tapping, customer facilities or
    connection fee shall do so only pursuant to a resolution
    adopted at a public meeting of the authority. The authority
    shall have available for public inspection a detailed
    itemization of all calculations, clearly showing the maximum
    fees allowable for each part of the tapping fee and the manner
    in which the fees were determined, which shall be made a
    part of any resolution imposing such fees. A tapping,
    customer facilities or connection fee may be revised and
    imposed upon those who subsequently connect to the system,
    subject to the provisions and limitations of the act.
    53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(ii).
    Buchanan argues that because the Authority failed to make the 2005
    Capital Charges Study a part of the Resolution, the Authority’s 2015 Rate Resolution
    is not in conformity with the provisions of the MAA, and, therefore, it is a nullity.
    Before a municipal authority can charge a tapping fee, section
    5607(d)(24)(ii) of the MAA, 53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(ii), requires it to adopt a
    resolution at a public meeting and to have available for public inspection a detailed
    itemization of all calculations, clearly showing the maximum fees allowable for each
    part of the tapping fee and the manner in which the fees were determined. Id. The
    purpose of the provision is to make sure the public has a basis upon which to evaluate
    the accuracy of a municipal authority’s tapping fee.
    In Hidden Creek, L.P. v. Lower Salford Township Authority, 
    129 A.3d 602
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015), this Court addressed section 5607(d)(24)(ii) of the MAA, 53
    Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(ii), in the context of determining whether the developer’s
    27
    challenge to the amount of the tapping fee was barred by the two-year statute of
    limitations, which ran from the time the fee was paid. There, the developer raised the
    discovery rule and argued that it had no reason to know that the tapping fees were
    calculated erroneously because Lower Salford Township Authority’s (LSTA) rate
    resolutions did not provide enough detail that would enable it to identify the errors in
    LSTA’s tapping fee calculations. LSTA’s 1998 rate resolution provided:
    WHEREAS, [Engineer] has performed a study to determine
    the appropriate amount that the [LTSA] may charge as a
    tapping fee; and
    WHEREAS, the results of the Engineer's study indicated that
    the Authority could charge a tapping fee in excess of Seven
    Thousand Dollars ($7,000.00); and
    WHEREAS, the [LTSA] is desirous of increasing its tapping
    fee but does not desire to charge the maximum fee
    permissible; and
    WHEREAS, the [LTSA], upon the proper motion and
    second, adopted an increase in tapping fees at its December
    11, 1997 meeting.
    NOW, THEREFORE, be it resolved and it is hereby resolved
    as follows:
    1. [LTSA] hereby adopts Engineer's Act 203 study dated
    November, 1997 as a basis for calculating its tapping fees.
    2. [LTSA] hereby establishes its tapping fee at Six Thousand
    Eight Hundred and Seventy-five Dollars ($6,875.00),
    effective December 11, 1997.
    3. All other resolutions inconsistent herewith are deemed
    rescinded.
    28
    LSTA’s 1999 rate resolution provided:
    WHEREAS, [Engineer] has performed a study to determine
    the appropriate amount that the [LTSA] may charge as a
    tapping fee; and
    WHEREAS, the results of the Engineer's study indicated that
    the Authority could charge a tapping fee in excess of Seven
    Thousand Dollars ($7,000.00); and
    WHEREAS, the [LTSA] is desirous of increasing its tapping
    fee but does not desire to charge the maximum fee
    permissible; and
    WHEREAS, the [LTSA], upon the proper motion and
    second, adopted an increase in tapping fees at its December
    21, 1999 meeting.
    NOW, THEREFORE, be it resolved and it is hereby resolves
    as follows:
    1. [LTSA] hereby adopts Engineer's Act 203 study dated
    December, 1999 as a basis for calculating its tapping fees.
    2. [LTSA] hereby establishes its tapping fee at Seven
    Thousand Dollars ($7,000.00), effective January 1, 2000.
    3. All other resolutions inconsistent herewith are deemed
    rescinded.
    Hidden Creek, 129 A.3d at 608-09.
    In Hidden Creek, we concluded that the rate resolutions did not provide
    any basis for the public to evaluate the accuracy of LSTA’s tapping fees because the
    components providing the basis for the tapping fee were not separately set forth in the
    rate resolutions or the engineering studies attached to the rate resolutions. Id. at 609.
    29
    The facts in Hidden Creek are distinguishable. There, the resolutions merely made
    reference to engineering studies which were not attached to the resolutions, and
    referenced the tapping fee without identifying the component parts thereof. Here,
    unlike in Hidden Creek, the 2015 Rate Resolution, inter alia, set forth the Capacity
    component as $4,711 per EDU and explained that “Tapping fees are based on EDUs
    according to Section 2.” (R.R. at 38a.) Section 2.4, in turn, titled “Assignment of
    Equivalent Dwelling Units,” states that “[a]n Equivalent Dwelling Unit EDU shall
    apply to each classification of connection as follows” and lists the following
    classifications: (a) Residential; (b) Commercial; (c) Industrial and Commercial; (d)
    Public; and (e) Miscellaneous. (R.R. at 39a-41a.)
    Further, Buchanan has not alleged any facts to support a claim that the
    Authority either failed to adopt the 2015 Rate Resolution at a public meeting or that it
    failed to make available for public inspection a detailed itemization of all calculations,
    clearly showing the maximum fees allowable for each part of the tapping fee and the
    manner in which the fees were determined (i.e., the 2005 Capital Charges Study). By
    all accounts, the original 2005 Capital Charges Study was duly adopted pursuant to Act
    57, and sets forth the separate capacity and collection components of the tapping fees
    in total compliance with the MAA. The 2005 Capital Charges Study referenced the
    calculations required by the MAA for establishing the different components for tapping
    fees, represented that such calculations were performed, and attached copies of the
    calculations. Further, it is clear from the 2015 Rate Resolution that it is a “revised”
    rate resolution, i.e., it revised something that was done previously. According to the
    Amended Complaint, this was the 2005 Capital Charges Study. Thus, by implication,
    the 2015 Rate Resolution included the 2005 Capital Charges Study which it amended,
    and which Buchanan does not allege was either not duly adopted or not available for
    30
    public inspection. Finally, a review of the revised 2015 Rate Resolution establishes
    that it set forth the Capacity and multiple Collection components of the tapping fee,
    and clearly explained that tapping fees are based on EDUs as set forth in a schedule
    containing over 20 categories of commercial properties, like restaurants, automobile
    dealers, beauty and barber shops, bed and breakfasts, bowling alleys, car washes,
    laundromats, retail food stores, retirement homes, hotels, and office buildings. (R.R.
    at 38a-41a.)
    The purpose of section 5607(d)(24)(ii), 53 Pa.C.S. §5607(d)(24)(ii), is to
    ensure that the public has a basis to evaluate the accuracy of the tapping fees and that
    was accomplished here. Unlike in Hidden Creek, the 2015 Rate Resolution, together
    with the information available for inspection at the Authority, provided the public with
    a sufficient basis to evaluate the accuracy of the Authority’s tapping fees.
    For all of the foregoing reasons, the trial court’s order is affirmed.
    ________________________________
    PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
    Judge Cohn Jubelirer did not participate in this decision.
    31
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    J. Buchanan Associates, LLC,          :
    Appellant            :
    :    No. 261 C.D. 2019
    v.                        :
    :
    University Area Joint Authority       :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 13th day of May, 2020, the February 28, 2019 order of
    the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County is hereby affirmed.
    ________________________________
    PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge