‘Imminent health threats' to rural water customers lead judge to order temporary takeover
This story was produced by the State College regional bureau of Spotlight PA, an independent, nonpartisan newsroom dedicated to investigative and public-service journalism for Pennsylvania. Sign up for Talk of the Town, a weekly newsletter of local stories that dig deep, events, and more from north-central PA, at spotlightpa.org/newsletters/talkofthetown.
BELLEFONTE — A private entity is poised to take temporary control of a troubled rural water company after a judge approved an emergency request by Pennsylvania's consumer advocate.
Pennsylvania American Water Company — one of the state's largest investor-owned utilities — should take over management of privately owned Rock Spring Water Company, Administrative Law Judge John Coogan ordered Thursday.
The appointment, which requires approval from the state Public Utility Commission to take effect, could offer some relief to the company's 1,000 customers who've endured more than a decade of unreliable service in Centre County as regulators decide on a permanent solution.
Nils Hagen-Frederiksen, a spokesperson for the PUC, told Spotlight PA that regulators 'will work to address this matter in a timely fashion.' Next steps include reviewing the judge's emergency order and briefs from those involved in the case, which are due in a week, he said.
The decision came as a surprise to stakeholders and goes against requests from Rock Spring owner J. Roy Campbell, lawyers for the company, and even Pennsylvania American. All asked the judge to let the nearby State College Borough Water Authority assume interim control.
'It's out of left field, but at least somebody will be there to answer the phone,' James Bryant, an attorney for Rock Spring, told Spotlight PA.
Rock Spring has racked up dozens of regulatory violations — including for failing to protect the system's water source, shutting off service without proper notice, and letting a leak go unfixed for six months — and tens of thousands of dollars in unpaid civil penalties as part of a yearslong legal battle with the Department of Environmental Protection over excessive water loss.
A June Spotlight PA investigation found that Rock Spring, state regulators, and elected officials failed those who rely on the system in Ferguson Township. Efforts to find new ownership have gone nowhere, while years of neglect have led to deteriorating infrastructure, low water pressure, regular outages, and sometimes lengthy boil water advisories. The utility commission even erroneously told a customer in 2018 that it doesn't regulate the company. So after years of inaction, residents resigned to living with shoddy service.
Issues with Rock Spring were referred to the Bureau of Investigation and Enforcement, a division within the PUC, on May 23. The unit then launched a review of the company.
The state regulatory process is lengthy, with no guaranteed outcome. As part of the review, a two-day hearing is scheduled for late April. But customers can't wait until the spring, the consumer advocate argued in its emergency request for another provider to take over service.
The State College water authority has talked about acquiring Rock Spring's 20-mile water system — which needs at least $13.5 million in repairs — for years. In December, Campbell signed a letter of intent to sell to the municipal entity for $65,000. The state Office of Consumer Advocate, which urged regulators to provide emergency relief to prevent 'irreparable' injury, identified the municipal authority as the most logical choice for an interim operator, called a receiver.
But uncertainty over regulatory authority and a desire for quick relief for customers prompted the decision to appoint Pennsylvania American as the receiver, Coogan wrote in a 26-page order.
Because the PUC primarily regulates private utility companies, the judge had reservations about whether a municipal authority could take over, especially when the State College authority opposed subjecting itself to the commission's jurisdiction and regulations.
The water authority had instead asked the administrative law judge to recommend it become the receiver, hoping it would make a Centre County judge more comfortable approving a local request to let the municipal entity take over. Rock Spring's lawyers previously tried this approach, but their request was denied, with the judge saying he could not usurp the PUC's powers.
While not necessarily opposed to the idea, the Office of Consumer Advocate and investigators for the PUC had concerns over how long it might take for State College to take the helm.
A Pennsylvania American representative told Spotlight PA that the company is reviewing the judge's decision.
During a recent hearing, David Zambito, an attorney for the company, said Pennsylvania American could handle operations but thinks State College was the best option. Plus, if the receiver isn't the ultimate buyer, the utilities will have to 'unravel' the cost of repairs, he said.
'Somebody has to pay to remediate the Rock Spring system,' Zambito said.
State College water authority officials met with their lawyer to discuss the decision Friday morning, Katie McCaulley, assistant executive director, told Spotlight PA.
'At this time, we are still intent on the long term and continuing the discussions and negotiations of the acquisition of RSWC,' she wrote in an email.
and help us reinvigorate local news in north-central Pennsylvania at spotlightpa.org/donate/statecollege. Spotlight PA is funded by foundations and readers like you who are committed to accountability and public-service journalism that gets results.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Mednicoff said that Saudi Arabia has had an image of being a backwards country for women. 'The image was based in the Kingdom's longstanding connection to a conservative form of Islam that favors fairly strict separation of men and women in the public arena,' he said. However, Mednicoff said, the Kingdom has loosened the grip of this type of Wahhabi Islam on the Kingdom's daily life. 'As a result, women are enjoying more ability to enter the workforce and go out in public more freely,' he said. 'This liberalization of women's access to social spaces includes freedom for women to drive, which was long a source of criticism by outsiders.' Frederiksen said that he has been to Saudi Arabia five times in the past 12 to 13 months and he views it as a 'country that is transforming at the speed of light,' adding that women make up 36% of the workforce. And he added that 45% of small to medium-sized businesses are owned by women. 'It is a country that is dramatically modernizing,' he said. Gaboury said that he has seen how the culture has evolved, remembering his first trip in 2008 when he could feel the oppressiveness of the culture. During his trip last year, he saw men and women together as opposed to being separated previously. He also observed women in high level positions. But Amnesty International also raised concerns stating that Saudi Arabia's new Personal Status Law touted as major reform 'also codifies some of the practices inherent in the male guardianship system, fails to adequately protect women from domestic violence and entrenches a system of gender-based discrimination in marriage, divorce, custody and inheritance.' Gaboury said the university's branch campus will include male and female faculty and that the program will be taught in the same methodology that is on the main campus. He added that Saudi Arabia is looking to 'elevate the role of women. 'It is leading by example,' he said, adding that the university has programs that advance women in law enforcement and is adding training programs for women in the Ministry of Education. He added that the collaboration is going a long way. 'Good economic relations and stability are actually helpful in terms of peace and prosperity,' he said. 'We are not giving dividends. We are trying to contribute to a civil society.'