ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    August
    10, 1989
    WASTE MANAGEMENT OF ILLINOIS,
    INC.,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    )
    PCB 89—28
    VILLAGE OF BENSENVILLE,
    Respondent.
    MR. DONALD J. MORAN,
    APPEARED ON BEHALF OF THE PETITIONER; AND
    MR.
    LARRY
    M. CLARK,
    APPEARED ON BEHALF OF THE RESPONDENT.
    DISSENTING OPINION (by
    J. Anderson, 3.
    C. Marlin and
    J.
    T.
    Meyer):
    We dissent from the Board majority’s decision of July
    13,
    1989, which affirmed Bensenville’s denial of local siting
    approval.
    We dissent also from the majority’s Opinion of August
    10, 1989, which affirms Bensenville’s finding that WMI had not
    met
    its burden of proof as
    to Criterion
    #1, regarding need.
    One of the troubling aspects of the majority opinion
    is its
    selective reliance upon the testimony of WMI’s witness,
    Mr.
    Edward Evanhouse,
    in finding that the Village could reasonably
    have found that WMI had failed to meet
    its burden of proof on
    Criterion #1
    (Need).
    The majority first asserts
    as support the fact
    that the
    witness “admits
    that the application does not discuss the service
    area”
    (Opinion, pg.
    11).
    Any lack of specific delineation of the Garden City service
    area in the siting application was certainly cured by Mr.
    Evanhouse’s quoted testimony
    in the hearing which
    is, after all,
    an integral part of the information gathering process.
    The
    majority’s suggestion
    that such
    a lacking supplied a basis
    for
    upholding the Village on Criterion
    #1 disregards
    the fact that a
    hearing was held and
    a reply was given at that hearing to that
    question.
    The law does not require a perfect application;
    the
    law requires
    a hearing at which such questions may be answered.
    That was clearly done with respect
    to the service area.
    102—4 1

    —2—
    The majority then points to Mr. Evanhouse’s uncertainty as
    to the quantity of waste Garden City takes to a landfill owned by
    WMI at Northbrook or
    to the Congress Development Company Hillside
    Landfill.
    The majority chooses to give great weight to what we
    believe is not an important point in demonstrating
    need for
    a
    transfer station.
    The important point
    is that the Hillside
    landfill quota will not allow Garden City to increase its
    reliance on Hillside as other landfills close or
    restrict
    access.
    The majority also ignores Mr Evanhouse’s testimony
    regarding the greater distance
    to the Northbrook landfill and its
    limited remaining life.
    Most important,
    the majority appears
    to blur the distinction
    between landfills and transfer stations
    in determinin~need.
    If
    the yardstick for measuring need is strictly waste volumes
    generated and landfill capacity,
    it would appear
    to be impossible
    to ever demonstrate a “need”
    for a transfer station prior
    to an
    acute crisis.
    A transfer station siting adds not one cubic foot
    of capacity.
    It
    is not
    a disposal site.
    Yet
    a transfer station
    can, by performing compaction and waste minimization as WMI here
    proposes, prolong the life of existing landfills, divert usable
    materials from the wastestream,
    and thus promote the public
    policy expressed by the General Assembly
    in Section
    2 of
    the
    Illinois Solid Waste Management Act
    (Ill.
    Rev. Stat.
    1987,
    ch.
    111
    ~,
    par.
    7052).
    The record demonstrates amply
    that WMI justified the
    proposed transfer station on the basis of the
    “efficiencies”
    associated with waste reduction, waste transport reduction and
    conservation of landfill space
    (R.
    130—131,
    138—142).
    There
    is
    nothing in the record to suggest that the proposed transfer
    station would not improve efficiencies or
    to challenge WMI’s
    assertions
    in this regard.
    What constitutes
    a “transfer station”
    is not defined
    in the
    Act or Board
    regulations.
    At the very least,
    it connotes
    a
    stopping off point where
    the contents of garbage
    trucks are re-
    loaded onto other,
    larger vehicles capable of carrying the
    contents
    to one or more destinations.
    The rationale for
    a
    transfer station
    is inherently
    to achieve efficiencies.
    Salvaging activities
    that allow some of the waste to be diverted
    to a destination for
    reuse,
    and compaction activities that
    further increase the efficiencies of
    the larger vehicles, are
    activities
    that also accommodate waste
    needs.
    The question becomes,
    then,
    did Mr. Evanhouse demonstrate
    need sufficiently for this Board to reverse the Village.
    ~e
    believe he
    did.
    Mr.
    Evanhouses
    testimony that was imprecise or
    lackinc~in
    knowledge under
    cross-examination, was not
    in areas essential to,
    or
    in some instances even relevant to, WMI’s demonstration oE
    102—42

    —3—
    need.
    That WMI used its own knowledge and field experience to
    demonstrate that there are waste disposal problems
    in the area
    now in terms of accessibility and distance is arguably more
    acceptable and more current than an outside analytical “numbers”
    study.
    Given the dynamics of, and the restrictions on,
    the
    movements of the waste streams in the urban setting
    in which WMI
    finds
    itself,
    its explanation as to why it believes
    it
    is
    necessary to pursue its proposed course of action at this time as
    opposed to trying to continue “as
    is” was credible,
    on point, and
    unrebutted.
    We believe that the majority’s rationale for affirming the
    Village has placed almost insurmountable hurdles
    in siting
    transfer stations anywhere in this State; neither th&statute nor
    the evidence as viewed under
    the manifest weight standard
    supports this result.
    For these reasons we respectfully dissent.
    ~
    3.FMarlin17~
    J.~. Meyer
    I,
    Dorothy M.
    Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby certify
    that the ab~pveDissenting Opinion was
    submitted on the
    ~‘/~
    day of
    _____________
    ,
    1989.
    Dorothy
    M. Grin, Clerk
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    102—43

    .
    .

    Back to top