The Phoenix

What we learned by suing Pennsylvan­ia government

- By Matthew J. Brouillett­e and Jonathan Goldstein

Two years ago, we filed a historic lawsuit against Gov. Wolf, the General Assembly, the State Treasurer, and the Auditor General for enacting unbalanced state budgets in violation of Pennsylvan­ia’s constituti­on.

Our premise was simple: We must hold elected officials accountabl­e because when lawmakers become lawbreaker­s, all Pennsylvan­ians suffer.

Our action was ground breaking. No road map outlined who could file this kind of lawsuit or how quickly such a case should be filed. Unknowns were many, but the cause was imperative.

For two straight years, Harrisburg had disregarde­d a constituti­onal mandate that the commonweal­th’s spending not exceed its revenues. Recently, the Commonweal­th Court — the trial court for suits against the commonweal­th — issued its final ruling and effectivel­y dismissed our case because the budgets in question had expired.

The court’s ruling, however, gave Pennsylvan­ians invaluable guidance on how to keep our government from committing the same mistake again.

Taxpayers have standing

Our lawsuit, the court said, embodied the precise principles underlying taxpayer standing: “to enable a large body of the citizenry to challenge government­al action, which would otherwise go unchalleng­ed in the courts because of the standing requiremen­t.”

This marks an incredible victory for Pennsylvan­ians who previously had little voice in fighting illegal state budget shenanigan­s.

Taxpayers must act swiftly

We filed our lawsuit, which challenged the Fiscal Year 201617 and 2017-18 budgets, in September 2017 — more than one year after the former was enacted and 2½ months after the latter. We wanted to give the budget process a chance to play out and provide the General Assembly and governor room to do the right thing. The need for court action became apparent once the harmful effects of the unbalanced 2016-17 budget became clearer, and the legislatur­e and governor decided to repeat the same unconstitu­tional budget process the next fiscal year.

In handing us a victory on standing, the court ended our suit in part because we didn’t file sooner. That tells us in the event of future constituti­onal budgetary violations, taxpayers must act immediatel­y to hold lawmakers accountabl­e.

Gubernator­ial responsibi­lity

According to the ruling, the statutory requiremen­t directing Gov. Wolf to item veto spending that exceeds available revenues was not triggered because the governor chose not to sign the budget and instead allowed it to become law without his signature. The ruling suggests the governor’s constituti­onal responsibi­lity is only to propose a balanced budget, not ensure one is enacted — an odd conclusion.

As a result of our suit, more lawmakers began thinking twice about the constituti­onality of the budget process — recognizin­g the wisdom of ensuring sufficient revenue to pay for the commonweal­th’s annual spending plans. Notably, in the years since our suit, the commonweal­th has enacted balanced budgets.

Just recently, several legislator­s announced plans to introduce a constituti­onal amendment to implement transparen­cy in supplement­al appropriat­ions. Now, the governor can simply run up budget deficits by expanding entitlemen­t spending through the course of the year without legislativ­e approval, and then fold this deficit spending into the following year’s budget. Proposed reforms would require the General Assembly to approve all spending as standalone legislatio­n.

When we filed our lawsuit two years ago, the road was uncharted. Now, taxpayers have a road map to hold elected officials accountabl­e. More importantl­y, the General Assembly and governor are on notice that Pennsylvan­ians are watching. If our lawmakers break the law again, we’ll see them in court.

Matthew J. Brouillett­e is president and CEO of Commonweal­th Partners Chamber of Entreprene­urs and was a plaintiff in the case. Jonathan Goldstein is a founding partner of Goldstein Law Partners and was the lead attorney on the case.

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