LACKAWANNA CO. (WOLF) — The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has upheld the Lackawanna County Home Rule Charter, resolving a legal battle over the process for filling vacancies on the county Board of Commissioners. This decision allows voters to decide who will permanently fill the seat left vacant by former Commissioner Matt McGloin, who resigned in February.
Chief Justice Debra Todd issued the majority opinion, affirming that the county’s Home Rule Charter section 1-2.206 governs the process for filling vacancies. The Court found no conflict between the local charter and Pennsylvania Rule of Judicial Administration 1908, which outlines procedures for courts to fill vacancies in public offices.
Rule 1908 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Judicial Administration allows courts to accept application from “any interested candidates.” The Lackawanna County Home Rule Charter requires the court to select a temporary replacement for a vacant elected office from a list of three candidates provided by the vacating official’s political party.
The ruling supports a July 18 Commonwealth Court decision that upheld the Home Rule Charter and dismissed arguments by Commissioner Bill Gaughan. Gaughan had contended that Rule 1908 should override the charter’s requirement for the local Democratic Committee to submit three names for consideration. The Supreme Court concluded that the charter determines who may be considered, while Rule 1908 governs how the court selects from that pool.
In response, Commissioner Gaughan stated,
“I respect the decision of the Supreme Court. The Court declared that section 1-2.206 of the Home Rule Charter controls the process for filling the vacancy. Consistent with that provision and the Commonwealth Court’s decision dated July 18, 2025, the special election on November 4 will decide who permanently fills the vacancy. I am very comforted by the knowledge that the voters of Lackawanna County will decide who permanently fills the vacancy.”
Lackawanna County Democratic Chair Chris Patrick also released a statement to FOX56 saying:
Lackawanna County Democratic Chair Chris Patrick criticized Gaughan, saying, “Bill Gaughan’s reckless pursuit of power has finally caught up with him. Every court in Pennsylvania, including the Supreme Court, has made it clear — he was wrong. But instead of accepting responsibility, he doubled down, wasting taxpayer money and embarrassing Lackawanna County in the process.The whole situation reeks of backroom politics — the same tired network of insiders, connected law firms, and courthouse relationships that have dominated this county for decades. It’s the kind of back-scratching and favor-trading that has held Lackawanna County back for far too long. The people deserve transparency, not secret deals behind closed doors.Gaughan’s immaturity, arrogance, and obsession with control have made him unfit to serve as a county commissioner. His tax increases, his botched reassessment, and his blatant attempt to hand-pick McGloin’s replacement in Michael Cappellini prove it’s about power — not people. Voters have the chance to end this cycle of insider politics at the polls and send Bill Gaughan, Cappellini, and the real machine packing once and for all.”
The Supreme Court’s decision affirms that Lackawanna County’s home rule system gives local voters and governing bodies the authority to set their own procedures for county offices. With the ruling, the temporary appointment process under the Home Rule Charter remains intact, and the special election on Nov. 4 will determine who will fill McGloin’s seat for the remainder of the term.