concurring.
I join in the Majority’s decision to affirm the Commonwealth Court’s decision with respect to the present application for intervention. I write separately only to note my disagreement with the Majority’s inclusion in its analysis of this Court’s prior decision in Fumo v. City of Philadelphia, 601 Pa. 322, 972 A.2d 487 (2009). In particular, I disagree with the Majority’s assertion that Fumo represents “the clearest articulation of the distinction between a matter implicating a legislator’s direct and substantial interest in the voting process or power to act and one that does not.” op. at 142-43. Fumo has precedential value1 only in the rare instance in which there has been an alleged executive usurpation of a right or power the General Assembly has, by legislative act, granted solely to itself. Fumo, 972 A.2d at 502. No such unusual circumstance exists in this case.
In my view, the Commonwealth Court’s description in Wilt v. Beal, 26 Pa.Cmwlth. 298, 363 A.2d 876 (1976), of the limits of legislative standing to intervene in re*147sponse to executive action constitutes the “clearest articulation” of the issue. “[Legislators, as legislators, are granted standing to challenge executive actions when specific powers unique to their functions under the Constitution are diminished or interfered with. Once, however, votes which they are entitled to make have been cast and duly counted, their interest as legislators ceases.” Id. at 881. In the present case, the General Assembly passed the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Act, 43 P.S. §§ 211.1-211.13, and the Public Employe Relations Act, 43 P.S. §§ 1101.101-1101.2301. At the time of passage, the interests of the members of General Assembly (including those of the proposed inter-venors here), as legislators, ceased. For this reason, the Commonwealth Court did not err in denying Appellants’ Application to Intervene.
. Fumo represents an atypical instance in which this Court acted in contravention of our general proscription against issuing academic or advisory opinions. See, e.g., Philadelphia Entm’t & Dev. Partners, L.P. v. City of Philadelphia, 594 Pa. 468, 937 A.2d 385, 392 (2007). In Fumo, state legislators sought to intervene to vindicate their alleged exclusive power under the 1978 Dam Safety Act, 32 P.S. § 693.1-693.27, to grant a license for the use of submerged lands under the Delaware River to construct a casino. Fumo, 972 A.2d at 496. In a companion case decided almost a year prior to. Fumo, however, this Court had already determined that the Dam Safety Act did not grant the General Assembly any such exclusive authority, and that instead, the City of Philadelphia had properly issued a license for the construction of the casino pursuant to legislative authority contained in prior (1907) legislation (53 P.S. § 14199, also known as "Act 321”). HSP Gaming, L.P. v. City of Philadelphia, 598 Pa. 118, 954 A.2d 1156, 1182 (2008). Accordingly, at the time we decided Fumo, this Court had already ruled that the state legislators had no exclusive licensing rights, which were the sole basis for their claimed right to intervene.