ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    October
    7,
    1993
    LEONARD
    CARMI
    CHAEL,
    )
    )
    Petitioner,
    )
    v.
    )
    PCB 93—114
    )
    (Landfill Siting Review)
    BROWNING-FERRIS
    INDUSTRIES
    )
    OF ILLINOIS, INC.
    AND
    OGLE
    )
    COUNTY BOARD, FOR
    AND
    ON
    )
    BEHALF
    OF
    THE
    COUNTY
    OF
    OGLE,
    )
    STATE
    OF
    ILLINOIS,
    )
    )
    Respondents.
    KIM D. KRAHENBUHL APPEARED ON
    BEHALF
    OF PETITIONER, LEONARD
    CARMICHAEL;
    FRED C. PRILLANAN APPEARED
    ON
    BEHALF
    OF
    RESPONDENT,
    BROWNING-
    FERRIS
    INDUSTRIES
    OF
    ILLINOIS,
    INC.;
    and
    GLENN
    C.
    SECHEN
    APPEARED
    ON
    BEHALF
    OF
    RESPONDENT
    OGLE
    COUNTY
    BOARD.
    OPINION
    AND ORDER
    OF
    THE
    BOARD
    (by
    C.
    A.
    Manning):
    This matter is before the Board on a petition for review
    filed on June 16, 1993,
    by Leonard Carmichael, pursuant to
    Section 40.1(b)
    of the landfill siting section of the
    Environmental Protection Act (Act).
    (415 ILCS 5/40.1(b)
    (1992).)
    The petition for review seeks the Board’s review of the County of
    Ogle’s (County) May 10,
    1993 siting approval of the expansion of
    Browning—Ferris
    Industries’
    (BFI)
    regional
    pollution
    control
    facility pursuant to Section 39.2 of the Act.
    (415
    ILCS
    5/39.2
    (1992).)
    A hearing was held before Hearing Officer Todd S.
    Parkhurst on August 23,
    1993 in Oregon,
    Illinois.
    The hearing
    was attended by members of the public.
    The Hearing Officer briefing schedule ordered petitioner’s
    brief to be filed with the Board on September 2,
    1993, and
    answer briefs be filed by September 16,
    1993.
    In addition, the
    petitioner was allowed to file a reply brief on September 23,
    1993.
    The petitioner filed a reply brief on September 22,
    1993,
    raising a new argument that was not raised in its brief or the
    answer briefs.
    On October 1,
    1993,
    BFI filed a motion to strike
    portions of the reply brief that concerned this new argument,
    or
    alternatively leave to file a supplemental brief instanter to
    address this argument.
    This matter is to be decided by the Board
    before October
    7,
    1993 pursuant to Section 40.1 of the Act.
    (415

    2
    ILCS 5/40.1
    (1993).)
    As
    a result, pursuant to 35
    Ill. Adm. Code
    101.241(b)
    the Board will grant the motion to strike within the
    seven
    (7) day response time.
    We find that undue delay and
    material prejudice to the Board’s decision-making process would
    result
    if we withhold ruling on the motion.
    The Board grants the
    motion to strike those portions of the reply brief which raise
    new arguments concerning the Forcible Entry and Detainer Act.
    The Board’s responsibility in this matter arises from
    Section 40.1 of the Act.
    The Board is charged, by the Act, with
    a broad range of adjudicatory duties.
    Among these is
    adjudication of contested decisions made pursuant to the local
    siting approval provision for new regional pollution control
    facilities,
    set forth
    in Section 39.2 of the Act.
    FACTS
    On November 13,
    1992, BFI filed with the County an
    application for site location approval for an expansion of a pre-
    existing regional pollution control facility located in Ogle
    County.
    (County Hearing Record at 3220.)1
    The BFI facility has
    a service area which would encompass all of Ogle County.
    (C. Rec
    at 3223.)
    Public hearings were held before the County on February 17,
    18,
    19, and 25,
    1992.
    On May 10,
    1993,
    the County Board granted
    the approval of the landfill siting request at a special meeting
    and on May 20,
    1993, the County entered its written decision
    approving the landfill expansion.
    The County found that it had
    jurisdiction over the application and that BFI established
    compliance with the applicable criteria.
    (C. Rec.
    at 3223.)
    At the County hearing, BFI introduced registered mail “green
    cards” which were postmarked October 27,
    1992,
    for Mr. Pfab,
    an
    adjacent landowner to the landfill,
    and Senator Harlan Rigney
    whose legislative district at that time encompassed the landfill.
    (BFI’s Exhibit
    1 at 5,11.)
    Those same registered mail “green
    cards” are signed as received by Mr. Pfab on November 3,
    1992,
    and as agent by Rebecca Hansen for Senator Rigney on November 2,
    1992.
    (BFI’s Exhibit
    1 at 5,11.)
    BFI’s request for approval was
    received by the County on November 13,
    1992.
    On May 10,
    1993, the County held a meeting to vote on the
    BFI application for the expansion of the landfill.
    Pursuant to
    their obligation to make findings on each of the nine
    (9)
    separate criteria required by Section 39.2(a)
    of the Act the
    1
    The County Hearing Record will be referenced as “C. Rec.”

    3
    County Board discussed and voted
    on each criterion.2
    (415 ILCS
    5/39.2(a)
    (1993).)
    The County Board vote on the need criterion
    initially resulted
    in
    a tie.
    A motion for reconsideration was
    made and conversations between the board members and the County’s
    lawyers and consultants took place.
    (C.
    Rec. at 3219 at 134).
    After these conversations, another vote was taken finding by a
    vote of
    14 to 10 that the expansion was needed.
    The County
    approved the landfill siting by a vote 15 to
    9.
    (C. Rec. 3219 at
    138.)
    Issues on appeal before the Board are Carmichael’s
    allegations that the County did not have jurisdiction to proceed
    on BFI’s application, and that the conversations between the
    initial vote and the reconsideration vote were fundamentally
    unfair.
    (Petitioners Post Hearing Brief at 1.)
    In addition,
    Carmichael’s petition alludes to BFI’s failure to demonstrate
    compliance with the criteria set forth in Section 39.2 of the
    Act.
    However, Carmichael has not addressed these claims and did
    not raise these issues in his post-hearing brief.
    ANALYSIS
    The notice requirements of Section 39.2(b)
    are
    jurisdictional prerequisites to the local decision-makers power
    to hear a siting proposal.
    The issue of jurisdiction may be
    interposed at any time in the course of the proceedings.
    (Concerned Citizens.
    Inc.
    v. M.I.G.
    Investments, Inc.
    (2nd Dist.
    1986),
    144 Ill.App.3d.
    334,
    98 Ill.Dec.
    253,
    494 N.E.2d 180.)
    The fact that Carmichael raised the issue at the Board hearing
    held on August 26;
    1993, does not preclude a determination by the
    Board on this issue.
    Due to the jurisdictional nature of the
    notice requirements of Section 39.2 of the Act, whether or not
    actual prejudice was shown to have resulted from failure to meet
    the notice requirements, the county lacks jurisdiction to act on
    the siting request if the notice requirements are not met.
    (Id.
    at 807).
    The appellate court has stated that it is appropriate
    for any person to raise the issue of jurisdiction.
    (Concerned
    Citizens~Inc.
    v. M.I.G.
    Investments,
    Inc.
    (2nd Dist.
    1986),
    144
    Ill.App.3d.
    334,
    98 Ill.Dec.
    253, 494 N.E.2d 180.)
    The notice
    requirements of Section 39.2 are to be strictly construed as to
    timing,
    and even a one—day deviation in the notice requirement
    renders the county without jurisdiction.
    (Browning—Ferris
    Industries of Illinois,
    Inc.
    v.
    IPCB (5th Dist.
    1987),
    162
    2
    Section
    39.2(a)
    of
    the Act requires
    the
    unit
    of
    local
    government that
    is making
    the determination
    on the request for
    landfill
    siting
    to
    decide
    if
    the
    applicant
    has
    demonstrated
    compliance with certain criteria.
    One such criterion is that the
    landfill facility to accommodate the waste needs of the area it is
    intended to serve,
    referred to as the “need” criterion.

    4
    Ill.App.3d 801,
    516 N.E.2d 804.)~
    Section 39.2(b) provides,
    in relevant part, as follows:
    b.
    No later than 14 days prior to a request for
    location approval the applicant shall cause written
    notice of such request to be served either in person
    or by registered mail,
    return receipt requested,
    on
    the owners of all property within the subject area
    not
    solely
    owned
    by
    the
    applicant,
    and
    on
    the
    owners
    of all property within 250 feet in each direction of
    the lot line of the subject property, said owners
    being such persons or entities which appear from the
    authentic tax records of the County in which such
    facility is to be located.
    Such written notice shall also be served upon
    members of the General Assembly from the legislative
    district in which the proposed facility is located.
    (Emphasis added.)
    A plain reading of the Act places a burden on the applicant
    to serve written notice (either in person or by registered mail)
    no later than 14 days prior to a request for location approval.
    It is undisputed that BFI filed a request for landfill expansion
    with the County on November 13,
    1992, and that written notice was
    received by Mr. Pfab on November
    3,
    1992 and by Senator Rigney’s
    office on November 2,
    1992,
    11 and 12 days prior to that request.
    “Service” clearly means receipt unless otherwise stated.4
    Considering
    the
    language
    of
    Section
    39.2(b), notice was perfected
    when Mr. Pfab and Senator Rigney
    (by agent Rebecca Hansen)
    signed
    See also Kane County Defenders.
    Inc. v. Pollution Control
    Board,
    (2nd Dist.
    1985)
    139 Ill.App.3d 588,
    487 N.E.2d 743, where
    failure to publish the appropriate newspaper notice 14 days prior
    to the request for site approval resulted in the court’s vacating
    the
    county
    board’s decision
    and
    the PCB’s
    affirmation
    of
    that
    decision.
    The
    court
    applied
    the
    reasoning
    of
    Illinois
    Power
    Company v. Pollution Control Board,
    (4th Dist.
    1985)
    137 I11.App.3d
    449,
    484 N.E.2d 898, which found that the PCB’s failure to publish
    notice
    as required by
    Section
    40(a)
    of
    the Act divested
    it
    of
    jurisdiction.
    “Service” is defined by Black’s Law Dictionary to be the
    “exhibition or delivery of a writ, summons and complaint, criminal
    summons, notice,
    order,
    etc., by an authorized person, to a person
    who is thereby officially notified of some action or proceeding in
    which he
    is
    concerned,
    and
    is thereby advised or warned
    of some
    action or step...” Black’s Law Dictionary 1227
    (5th Ed.
    1971).

    5
    the “green cards”
    as received.
    The Board has held that the date
    of mailing
    is not the date of service.
    (Wabash and Lawrence
    County Taxpayers and Water Drinkers Assoc.
    v.
    County of Wabash,
    (December 3,
    1987), PCB 87—122.)
    Taking Section 39.2(b)
    alone,
    service as defined in the Illinois landfill siting sections of
    the Act was not perfected.
    While the Board’s procedural rules do not apply to the
    County’s proceedings,
    the Board has in the past looked to its
    own
    procedural rules as persuasive authority in some landfill siting
    cases.
    The Board’s general procedural rules at 35
    Ill.
    Adin.
    Code
    101.144(c)
    create a rebuttable presumption that service is
    complete four days after mailing by First Class mail,
    and 35 Ill.
    Adm. Code 101.144(b)
    states that service is complete for
    registered
    or
    messenger
    mail
    on
    the
    date
    specified
    on
    the
    registered mail receipt or messenger mail receipt.
    Even looking
    to the Board’s procedural rules and prior cases,5 the prior
    notice requirement of Section 39.2(b) of the Act was not met.
    In City of Columbia
    v. County of St.
    Clair,
    April
    3,
    1986,
    PCB 85—223(Consolidated),
    a case very similar to the instant
    case,
    the applicant filed a request for siting approval
    13 days
    after newspaper publication of the intent to file, rather than
    the 14 days required by statute, and initiated service of notice
    to adjacent landowners 15 days prior to filing the request for
    siting approval with the county.
    The Board held that the
    initiation of service by registered mail 15 days in advance of
    the filing date of the request with the county did not meet
    statutory requirements, was unreasonable and
    therefore, created
    defective notice in violation of Section 39.2(b)
    of the Act.
    The
    action was dismissed by the Board as the County of St. Clair
    lacked jurisdiction to hear the request for the siting approval.
    (I~.
    at 19.)
    In another case, Waste Management of Illinois
    v. Village of
    Bensenville,
    (August
    10,
    1989), PCB 89_28,6 the applicant filed
    the request for siting approval on July 22,
    1988,
    thereby making
    City of Columbia,
    et.
    al.
    v. County of St. Clair
    ,
    (April
    3, 1986), PCB 89-223 (Consolidated), Browning—Ferris Industries of
    Illinois,
    Inc. V.
    Illinois Pollution Control Board,
    162 Ill. App.
    3d.
    801 (1987),
    Waste Management of Illinois, Inc.,
    v. Village of
    Bensenville, (August 10, 1989), PCB 89—28,
    DiMaggio v. Solid Waste
    Agency of Northern Cook County,
    (January 11,
    1990), PCB 89-138.
    6
    Waste Management of Illinois
    v. Village of Bensenville
    was appealed on other grounds where the Appellate Court reversed
    the Board and then the Supreme Court affirmed the Board.
    (201 Ill.
    App.
    3d 614,
    558 N.E.2d 1295,
    146 Ill. Dec.
    961,
    (1st Dist.
    1990)
    Board reversed,
    145
    Ill.
    2d.
    345,
    585 N.E.2d
    606,
    165 Ill.
    Dec.
    875,
    (Sup.
    Ct.
    1991)
    Board affirmed.)

    6
    the 14—day notice deadline July
    8,
    1988.
    On July
    1,
    1988,
    the
    applicant initiated notice by registered mail service.
    On July
    6,
    1988,
    the applicant left a notice under the door of the
    adjacent landowner.
    When the notice was left on July
    6,
    1988,
    the individual attempting to serve the adjacent landowner noticed
    a sign saying that the he was on vacation and would return on
    July 11,
    1988.
    The registered mail receipt was signed on July
    11,
    1988.
    The Board held that mailing by registered mail 21 days
    prior to the date of filing of the request was sufficient to
    expect receipt of notice and thus notice was not defective.
    The
    Board in its reasoning stated that it was not going to allow the
    process to be frustrated by individuals who refuse service or are
    absent, and therefore will look to the reasonableness of the
    service process.
    Thus,
    in the special circumstances of that
    case, the Board held that the notice requirements of Section
    39.2(b)
    of the Act were fulfilled.
    Here,
    BFI’s request for approval was received by the County
    November
    13, 1992.
    Therefore the 14—day deadline for notice
    pursuant to Section 39.2(b)
    of the Act was October 30,
    1992.
    BFI
    initiated notice by registered mail on October 27,
    1992,
    17 days
    prior to the filing of the siting request.
    Mr. Pfab and Senator
    Rigney signed the “green cards” as received on November 2,
    1992
    and November
    3,
    1992,
    11 and 10 days prior to the filing of the
    request for siting approval.
    We find that notice was not
    properly given pursuant to Section 39.2(b)
    of the Act.
    In
    addition,
    it is unreasonable to expect that service has been
    perfected when notices were mailed 17 days prior to filing the
    request for siting approval.
    Therefore,
    the notice requirement
    pursuant to Section 39.2(b)
    of the Act was not fulfilled and the
    County lacked jurisdiction to hear the request for siting
    approval for the expansion of the landfill.
    The courts and the Board have held that lack of jurisdiction
    at the local level is dispositive of the case which makes it
    unnecessary to review any additional requirements.
    (Kane County
    Defenders,
    Inc.
    V.
    Pollution Control Board,
    (2nd Dist.
    1985)
    139
    Ill.
    App.
    3d 588,
    487 N.E. 2d 743, Concerned Citizens of
    Williamson v.
    Bill Kilber Development Corp.,
    (May 20,
    1993), PCB
    92-204, LeRoy Brown and Sons,
    Inc.
    v.
    County Board of NcDonough
    County,
    (February 4,
    1993), PCB 92-132.)
    Therefore, we will not
    address the issues of fundamental fairness raised by Carmichael.
    Further,
    we make no findings regarding the criteria claims which
    were mentioned Carmichael’s petition but not addressed at hearing
    or in the briefs.
    This opinion constitutes the Board’s finding of fact and
    conclusions of law.
    ORDER
    For all the foregoing reasons, the County of Ogle’s May 10,
    1993,
    decision granting siting approval to Browning Ferris

    7
    Industries of Illinois
    is vacated,
    on the grounds that the County
    lacked jurisdiction to hear the application due to BFI’s failure
    to provide notice as required by Section 39.2(b)
    of the Act.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    Section 41 of the Environmental Protection Act
    (Ill. Rev.
    Stat.
    1991,
    ch.
    111 1/2, par.
    1041) provides for the appeal of
    final Board orders within 35 days.
    The Rules of the Supreme
    Court of Illinois establish filing requirements.
    I, Dorothy M.
    Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby certify that the a~ov~opinionand order was
    adopted on the_7~day of
    _________________,
    1993,
    by a vote
    of
    ~7-O
    .
    Dorothy M./punn, Clerk
    Illinois ~llution
    Control Board

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