Nathan Benefield, vice president of the conservative Commonwealth Foundation, said this is yet another example of the governor making up rules as he goes along and exacerbating “people’s pain by playing petty politics with pandemic aid funds.”
“While Wolf complains of others ‘not following the rules’ (his rules), the governor is breaking the law,” Benefield wrote in an email. “Wolf admitted that his motivation for doing this is political retribution rather than emergency response when he told voters to vote out their county commissioners.”
In a letter to Wolf, U.S. Rep. Dan Meuser (R), who served as a state cabinet official during the Corbett administration, said that Wolf is violating the expressed will of both the U.S. congress and the state legislature.
“Had the General Assembly intended for additional requirements to be added … directives for DCED would have been included,” Meuser said.
He also pointed to guidance from the U.S. Department of Treasury, which administers the CARES Act, that says states should transfer funds to smaller local governments to “ensure equitable treatment among local governments of all sizes.”
But in a press conference Thursday, Wolf remained steadfast, saying that Lebanon County violated his orders, and now there are consequences.
“Don’t come and say you want something from the state when you haven’t followed the rules,” he said. “There are consequences. These are the consequences. I think I’m being consistent here.”
Duquesne University Professor of Law Bruce Ledewitz, who directs the law school’s project on the state constitution, said he is “not sure” the emergency statute allows the governor to withhold the money from Lebanon County. But, he said, the governor may not need to exercise his emergency powers to withhold money from a county that defied a lawful regulation, such as the governor’s closure orders, which the state supreme court has upheld on several occasions.
“It seems to me a fair reading of the Act itself that it presupposes that a county complies with all lawful regulations,” said Ledewitz.
For his part, Lebanon County Chairman Commissioner Bob Phillips (R) said that the county is working with its federal representatives — Meuser as well as Sens. Bob Casey (D) and Pat Toomey (R) — to try to change the Wolf administration’s mind. He did not rule out legal action if that effort fails, but he said the commissioners are taking things one step at a time.
“We’re going to let that process play out, and we’ll go from there,” he said. “It would be devastating to the businesses and all the municipalities and school districts that have spent money on the COVID mitigation to not have access to this money.”
Lebanon County was the last in the state to move to the green phase of reopening, which the Wolf administration said was due to ongoing community spread of the coronavirus.
“Lebanon County’s partisan, politically driven decision to ignore public health experts and reopen prematurely is having severe consequences for the health and safety of county residents,” Secretary of Health Dr. Rachel Levine said in a press release on June 19.
The governor’s emergency powers have been a frequent source of ire for Republicans and a handful of Democrats, who attempted to terminate the disaster declaration via a resolution that the state supreme court declared a legal nullity. More recently, Republicans have pushed a constitutional amendment that would limit the duration of a declared emergency and allow the legislature to terminate a declaration with a simple majority, but the earliest that could take effect is after the 2021 election.