ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
March
19, 1987
HILLVIEW FARMS FERTILIZER,
INC.,
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 86—18
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
)
AGENCY,
Respondent,
and
PEOPLE OF THE STATE
OF ILLINOIS,
)
Intervenors.
MR. JAMES
R.
MORRIN AND MR. LEONARD KURFIRST,
WILDMAN, HAROLD,
ALLEN
& DIXON APPEARED ON BEHALF OF PETITIONERS;
MS HEIDI HANSON
& MR.
STEVE EWART APPEARED ON BEHALF OF
RESPONDENT; AND,
MR. MATTHEW DUNN, ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL, APPEARED ON BEHALF
OF
INTERVENORS.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by J.D.
Dumelle):
This matter comes before the Board upon a January
31, 1986
permit appeal
filed
on behalf of Hiliview Farms Fertilizers,
Inc.
(Hiliview)
seeking reversal of the Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency’s
(Agency) denial
of Hillview’s application
to
renew and modify its existing permit
for the land
injection of
industrial non—hazardous sludge.
Hiliview owns and operates a facility which accepts and
stores non—hazardous industrial process sludge
from certain
specified generators.
Hiliview applies this sludge to
approximately 600
acres* of farmland located
in Richmond,
McHenry
County,
Illinois.
This sludge
is applied 10
to
20 inches below
*
This
figure of 600 acres was supplied by Hillview in
its
petition for
review.
However,
a dispute exists
over
the exact
amount of acres Hillview injects, and this figure
is used for
descriptive purposes only and does not constitute
a
finding by
the Board
on
this point.
76-291
—2—
the surface of the ground by means of injection units.
(Pet.
p.
2).
Procedural History
On September 25,
1985,
Hiliview filed with the Agency an
application consisting of
a renewal and modification of its
existing permit which was due
to expire on February
1,
1986.
The
application requested to operate as in the past, but with an
increase
in capacity from 17
to 22 million gallons per year.
In
connection with this volume increase, Hillview also requested
permission to extend one of its existing feed lot tanks
to add
approximately 2.1 million gallons to its existing storage
capacity.
(Pet.
pp. 3—4).
On December
3,
1985,
the Agency requested additional
information
and Hiliview responded on December
6,
1985.
On
December
11,
1985,
a public
hearing was held
at which numerous
members of the public testified as well as witnesses from
Hiliview.
(Agency Record, Vol.
1).
Hillview submitted
additional
information
in response
to concerns expressed at the
public hearing.
The record closed
on December
20,
1985.
(Pet.
pp.
4—5).
On January 17,
1987,
the Agency denied Hillview’s
application listing eight reasons
for the denial.
This appeal
followed
(Id. p.
5).
Hearings on Hiliview’s permit appeal were
held on August 28,
29; September
8,
9;
and October 27,
28 and 31,
1986.
Briefs were
filed by Hiliview,
the Attorney General
on
behalf of the People of
Illinois and the Agency on December
19,
1986, January 26,
1987 and January 27,
1987,
respectively.
Hillview filed
a reply brief on February 11,
1987.
Motion
to Dismiss
The first matter
to be
addressed by the Board
in this permit
appeal
is the Attorney General’s Motion
to Dismiss this appeal
which was denied with leave
to renew the motion
at hearing
by
Board Order
dated March
14,
1986.
The motion was renewed at
hearing and the parties presented
additional argument
on this
motion at hearing.
(R. pp.
32—53).
Prior
to ruling on this
motion,
the Board believes that
it would be useful
to outline the
procedural
scenario of the instant appeal
as
it relates
to the
dismissal
issue.
On January
17,
1986,
the Agency denied Hillview’s
application
to renew and modify its existing operating
permit.
(first application).
On January 22,
1986,
Hillview reapplied
to
the Agency
for renewal of its existing operating permit but did
not include
in
its reapplication
a request
to modify the existing
permit.
(second application).
In other words,
Hiliview
attempted
to
renew as well
as modify its existing permit
in the
76-292
—3—
first application, and after denial
of the first application,
Hiliview reapplied only
for the renewal of its existing permit.
Then, on January 31,
1986, Hiliview filed an appeal with the
Board concerning the first application.
The Attorney General and the Agency argue that the
procedural scenario of this permit appeal
is identical
to the
scenario
in Caterpillar Tractor Co.
v. Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency,
54 PCB
259, October
19,
1983,
and, since the
permit appeal
in Caterpillar was dismissed this permit appeal
must also be dismissed.
The procedural scenario
in Caterpillar
and the instant appeal
was: the Agency permit decision, the
reapplication and then,
the
filing
of the appeal.
The Attorney
General and the Agency cite Caterpillar
for the proposition that
when the
same permit
is the subject of
a pending permit
application and a permit appeal, the appeal must be dismissed as
there
is no
final action by the Agency for the Board
to review
under
Section 40 of the Environmental Protection Act.
Caterpillar, at
260.
They go on
to argue
that application of
this proposition
to the instant case requires the Board to
dismiss this appeal.
Hillview does not dispute that the procedural scenario
in
Caterpillar
is identical
to the instant appeal,
rather, Hillview
argues that the facts of its appeal differ
to such an extent that
it
is distinguishable from Caterpillar.
Hillview argues that the
second
application
is different from the first
application in
that the second application does not request
a modification of
the existing operating permit; the
second application only seeks
renewal.
Hillyiew goes on
to argue that it has
a right
to appeal
the modification issue
to the Board
and
if the Board
were
to
grant the motion
to dismiss it would deprive Hiliview of its
right under Section 40(a)
of the Act
to appeal
the Agency’s
decision.
As
to
the
issue of modification of the existing operating
permit,
the motion
to dismiss
is denied.
As
to the issue of
renewal
of the existing
operating permit, the motion to dismiss
is granted as the Board
finds the second application
to be
identical to
the renewal request
in the
first application and,
therefore, Caterpillar dictates that this portion of the appeal
be dismissed
until
the Agency has rendered
a final decision on
this matter.*
As to the modification issue, Hillview is correct in arguing
that the facts of this appeal
are distinguishable from those
in
Caterpillar.
In Caterpillar,
the Agency issued
a permit
to
*
The Board
notes that the Agency denied Hillview’s renewal
request and Hillview has appealed that decision
to the Board.
That action
is docketed PCB
86—70.
76-293
—4—
Caterpillar with conditions.
Caterpillar requested the Agency to
reconsider
its decision and also stated that
it may file an
appeal of the decision.
The Agency reopened the application, and
Caterpillar
filed
an appeal.
The Agency filed
a motion to
dismiss the appeal and
the Board granted the motion stating that:
“Since
the
same
permit
is
the
subject
of
a
pending
permit
application
and
this appeal,
there was
not
final action by the Agency
for
the
Board
to
review under
Section 40
of
the
Act.
This
appeal
is
dismissed”
Caterpillar,
54 PCB at
260.
The appeal
in Caterpillar focused on the permit conditions
on which
the Agency had decided
to reopen discussion.
The issues
in the permit appeal were the same as those
to be addressed
in
the reapplication.
However,
in the
instant case,
the issues
to
be
addressed in the permit appeal
and the reapplication
are
different in that Hillview wishes
to appeal
the modification
issues which are not part of the reapplication.
The Board cannot
deprive Hillview of its right to appeal these
issues.
The Board
notes that the procedural scenario
in the
instant
appeal
is identical to the scenario
in Caterpillar.
However,
Caterpillar cannot be read so broadly as the Attorney General
and
the Agency would suggest.
Procedural
identity does not trigger
dismissal of the appeal under Caterpillar,
rather,
identity of
the factual
issues underlying
the permit appeal
and
the permit
reapplication triggers dismissal of the appeal
under
Caterpillar.
Thus,
the portion of the appeal which deals with
the renewal
of Hillview’s existing operating permit must be
dismissed as
it presents factual
issues which are identical
to
those which
are the subject of a pending permit application.
As
stated previously,
the Agency has rendered
a decision on the
renewal application which is the subject of
an appeal
in PCB
86—
70.
Review of the Agency’s decision on the renewal application
will
be addressed
in that proceeding.
The only remaining
issue
to be
addressed by the Board
is
Hiliview’s request
to expand
its waste storage area and its
request
to accept additional sludge volume
(i.e.,
the
modification portion of the permit application).
The Agency
denied both requests
in
its January 17 denial letter
the reasons
for which are as
follows:
1.
The
Agency
has
determined
that
the
proposed
waste
storage pit expansion
is
a
new
regional
pollution
control
facility
pursuant
to
the
Environmental
Protection Act
under
Section 3(X).
The
proposed
waste
storage pit
represents
a
physical
expansion
of
the
facility
and
76-294
—5—
as
such
is
expanding
its area currently
permitted
for
storage.
Pursuant
to
Section
39(c)
of
the
Environmental
Protection
Act
“...
no
permit
for
the
development
or
construction
of
a
new
regional
pollution control
facility may
be
granted
by
the
Agency
unless
the
applicant
submits
proof
to
the
Agency
that
the
location
of
said
facility
has
been approved by the County Board of the
County
if
in
an
unincorporated
area...”
Therefore,
you must obtain the
McHenry
County
Board
approval
prior
to
the Agency approving the construction of
the new storage pit.
2.
The
Agency
has
noted
in
numerous
site
visits
during
the
periods
when
you
cannot apply on the farm fields that the
storage
tanks
have
become
nearly
completely full of sludge.
As such, the
Agency
cannot
approve
additional
large
quantities
of
sludge
such
as
Griffith
Laboratories (Chicago).
At
hearing, Hillview made the following stipulation~
“Hiliview hereby
stipulates
for
purposes
of
this
appeal
only,
and
for
no other
purpose,
that
the
Agency’s
refusal
in
its
permit
denial
letter
of January
17,
1986
to approve
the
receipt
by Hillview
of additional
large
quantities
of
sludge
was
not
arbitrary
and
capricious
and
was
justified
by
the
record
before
the
Agency at
the
time
of
the denial
——
I guess the denial letter.”
(R.
at 1494).
This stipulation resolves the issue set
forth
in paragraph
2
of the denial letter
in
that it states that the Agency’s refusal
to approve the receipt of additional
large quantities of sludge
was justified
by the record.
However,
such
a stipulation does
not resolve the issue presented
in paragraph
1 of the denial
letter
and cannot, by itself, support affirmance of the Agency’s
January 17 decision.
Therefore,
the Board will address the issue
presented in paragraph
1 of the denial letter.
The issue presented
in the paragraph
1 is whether Hillview’s
proposed waste storage pit expansion is a new regional pollution
control
facility, as that term
is defined
in the Act, thereby
requiring
local siting approval
under Section 39.2
of the Act
before
the Agency can
issue
a permit for development of
the new
storage
pit.
The Attorney General and
the Agency argue
that the
76-295
—6—
proposed expansion would
be
an “area of expansion beyond the
boundary of a currently permitted regional pollution control
facility,”
and,
therefore, falls within the definition of a new
regional pollution control
facility pursuant to Section 3(x)2
of
the Act, thereby triggering
local
review under Section 39.2 of
the Act.
Hillview, on the other
hand, argues that the Agency had
previously determined that the construction of the
additional
tankage would not cause
it
to fall within the siting
requirements
for
new regional pollution control facilities and,
notwithstanding
this determination, that the Second District
Appellate Court
in M.I.G.
Investments,
Inc. et al.
v.
Illinois
Environmental Protection Agency, et al.
___
Ill. App.
3d
___,
No.
2—84—734,
October
15,
1986,
rendered the question moot.
Hillview
argues that in M.I.G.
Investments
the applicant sought
to
increase the volume of wastes to be deposited on its lands within
the geographical boundaries of its approved
site, and
the Court
held that such an increase did not trigger local
siting approval
under Section 39.2 of the Act.
Hillview argues that it seeks
to
increase the volume of waste
to be
stored on its lands within the
geographical boundaries of its own site, and therefore
the
holding
in M.I.G.
Investments controls.
A “regional pollution control facility”
is defined
in
Section 3(x)
of the Act as:
any
waste
storage
site,
sanitary
landfill,
waste
disposal
site,
waste
transfer
station
or
waste
incinerator
that accepts waste
from
or
serves
an
area
that
exceeds
or
extends
over
the
boundaries
of
any
local
general
purpose unit of government
...“
A “new regional
pollution control
facility”
is defined
in the
same Section
as:
1.
a
regional
pollution
control
facility
initially
permitted
for
development
or
construction after July 1,
1981; or
2.
the
area
of
expansion
beyond
the
boundary
of
a
currently
permitted
regional pollution control facility; or
3.
a
permitted
regional
pollution
control
facility
requesting
approval
to
store,
dispose
of,
transfer
or
incinerate,
for
the first
time,
any special
or hazardous
waste.
76-296
—7—
The focus of the current controversy is whether Hillview’s
proposed waste storage expansion falls with the definition of new
regional
pollution
facility
in Section 3(x)2
of the Act.
M.I.G.
Investments
is the most recent case interpreting
Section 3(x)2
of the Act.
In M.I.G.
Investments, the applicant
submitted
an application
to the Agency
for
a supplemental permit
to increase
the maximum elevation of its landfill.
The Agency
denied the application and the applicant appealed the decision
to
the Board.
The only issue on appeal was whether the proposed
vertical
extension
of
an
existing
landfill
required
local
siting
approval.
The
Board
held
that
the
“area
of
expansion
beyond
the
boundary”
of
an
existing
facility
included
vertical
extensions
of
existing
landfills.
Therefore,
the applicant had
to go through
the local
siting
requirement
pursuant
to
39.2
of
the
Act.
65
PCB
261, August
15,
1985.
The Court reversed the Board’s decision
and held
that the definition of
a new regional pollution control
facility set forth
in Section 3(x)2
of the Act does not include
vertical extension to existing landfills.
M.I.G.
Investments.,
slip op. at 12.
For
the following reasons,
the Board finds that Hillview’s
proposed waste storage pit expansion does not constitute
a new
regional pollution control facility,
and, therefore,
does not
require
local siting approval prior
to the Agency issuing
a
permit for development of the waste storage pit expansion.
The Court
in M.I.G.
Investments was dealing with the
vertical expansion of an existing landfill.
The Court pointed
out that increasing
the vertical capacity of
a landfill does not
involve use of any new land and does not alter
the geographical
relationship of the
fill to its neighbors,
that Section 3(x)2 of
the Act applies only to lateral growth which involves
a new area
outside the landfill’s existing boundaries and that the
legislature intended
to limit local
review primarily to
the
propriety of the location of the landfill,
not its capacity.
M.I.G.
Investments, slip op.
at
9.
While
the facts
in Hillview are not identical
to
those
in
M.I.G.
Investments, the rationale the Court applied
to determine
whether
local siting review is triggered
is very useful.
The
Court determined that local
review is triggered when a facility
seeks to
expand laterally into new area outside its existing
boundaries
in such a way that the geographical relationship of
the facility to
its neighbors is altered.
Such
a “new”
location
was
intended
to be submitted
to local
review.
Id.
Hillview seeks
to expand laterally into
a new area within
its existing boundaries.
Hillview does not seek
to expand beyond
its existing
boundaries.
In addition, even
though expansion of
the
storage pits does involve “new”
land,
such a “new” location
as this expansion will necessarily occupy does not alter
to any
76.297
—8—
appreciable degree
the geographical relationship of the storage
pits to the neighbors of Hillview’s existing facility.
Furthermore, the
type of intra—facility modification which
Hillview seeks
is not the type of modification the legislature
intended
to be submitted
to local review.
The Board
notes that
such
an intra—facility expansion as requested here does not
pertain to location,
rather, the expansion pertains to capacity
and, according to M.I.G.
Investments, should not trigger local
review.
However,
in holding that Hiliview’s intra—facility
modification does not trigger local review under Section 39.2 of
the Act, the Board does not intend
to exempt all intra—facility
modifications
from local review.
The Board
notes that such an intra—facility expansion cannot
proceed without the necessary permits being issued by the
Agency.
The
local community can,
as was the case
in Hiliview,
participate at the Agency level
and voice their concerns about
such an expansion.
Such concern about
the operation of
an
existing facility is more appropriately the concern at the Agency
level
than at the local
county board
level.
Any problems with
the facility’s operation can be handled more effectively at the
Agency level through permit terms and conditions.
The Court
stated
in M.I.G.
Investments that the legislature
intended to
give local governments a
voice
in
landfill
decisions
which
affect
them.
However,
the
Court
concluded
that
such
control
is
not
unlimited
and
it
could
find
nothing
in
the
Act
or
legislative
intent
to
persuade
it
that
local
control
should
be
extended
beyond
matters
concerning
location.
Id.
Since
the
Board
has
determined
that
Hillview’s
proposed
waste
storage
expansion
does
not
constitute
a
new
regional
pollution
control
facility,
the
Board
reverses
the
Agency’s
decision
requiring
submission
of
local
siting
approval
prior
to
the
Agency
approving
the
construction of the new storage pit and
orders
the
Agency
to
issue
a
permit
for
construction
of
the
new
storage
pit.
However,
this
decision
does
not
obviate
the
need
to
obtain
an
operating
permit
from
the
Agency
before
Hillview
can
begin
operating
the
new
storage
pit.
This
Opinion
constitutes
the
Board’s
findings
of
fact
and
conclusions
of
law
in
this
matter.
ORDER
The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency’s January 17,
1986 denial of
a development permit
to Hillview Farms
Fertilizers,
Inc.
to construct
a waste storage pit expansion is
hereby reversed and the Agency is ordered
to issue such
a permit
to Hillview Farms consistent with the views expressed
in
this
Opinion.
76-298
—9—
Hillview Farm’s appeal
of the Agency’s January 17,
1986
denial of a renewal of an operating permit
for Hillview Farm’s
facility
is hereby dismissed.
IT
IS SO ORDERED.
I, Dorothy
M.
Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify that the above Opinion and Order was
adopted
on
the
______________
day
of
~
,
1987 by a vote
of
C-
o
.
Dorothy M( Gunn,
Clerk
Illinois
Pollution
Control
Board
76.299