ILLINOiS POLLUTION CON~LRC’LBOAJtD
August
15,
1985
M.L.G.
INVESTMENTS,
INC., and
UiiITEIJ
BA1~KOF
ILLINGIES,
Petitioners,
v.
)
PCB 85—6U
ILLiNOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
PROThCTCCN
AGENCY,
Respondent.
DISSENTING
OPINION
(by 3. Theodore Meyer):
I dissent from the majority opinion adopted
in this matter
by
my fellow Board Members.
A brief
history
of
the law
concerning local approval
of landfill
siting decisions
is
in
oroer.
Prior
to the enactment of Sec~ion39(c)
of
the Illinois
Environmental Protection Act,
(Ill.
Rev.
Stat.
1985,
ch.
1111/2,
par.
1039(c)),
the landfill
siting approval process
in Illinois
was
in a complete state of disarray.
In
1976,
the Illinois
Supreme Court decided that by enacting the Environmental
Protection Act
(“Act”),
the state had pre—empted
local government
trom
using
its
zoning authority to prevent the siting
of
landfills within
its boundaries.
Carison
v. Village of horth,
62
Ill.2d 406, 343 N.E.2d
493
(1976).
Local government was
up
in
arms over
its ouster from
the siting process.
In
a subsequent
decision the
court found that home rule
units did retain power
to
regulate the siting of landfills.
County
of Cook
v.
John Sexton
Contractors Co.,
75
111.2nd 494, 389 N.E.2d
553
(1979).
This
created
a schism:
while home rule units could continue
to
prohibit landfills within their boundaries,
non—home rule
units
were required
to accept
the siting decisions of the Illinois
Environmental Protection Agency (“Agency”) without opportunity
for any local
input.
In
response, the Illinois General Assembly enacted Section
39(c)
of
the Act
in order
to give all localities some input
into
siting decisions.
Essentially,
Section
39(c) granted
a portion
of
the state’s power over siting decisions
to local units
of
government
by permitting them to
review
the site suitability
of
a
“new
regional pollution control facility” based
on six criteria
delineated
in Section 39.2.
These
six criteria were
to apply
state—wide
and were
to be
the sole criteria used
by local
g’vernment
in judging
the merits
of
a location.
In today’s
decision,
the Board majority has erroneously
found
that
a change
in
the final
contours of
a sanitary landfill constitutes
a
“new”
regional pollution control facility necessitating
a local siting
he~iring
under
Section 39.2.
65-271
—2—
The majority arrives
at this determination by deferring
to
the Antioch decision and by citing
the need for administrative
$bability and convenience.
Additionally,
the majority reasons
that
its holding
is
“highly compatable
sic
with Section 39.2
criteria”.
Op.
at
8.
The majority then reviews the six criteria
and infers that the legislature must have intended to include
vertical
expansion in the siting process because “n)ot
only can
these factors
be impacted by vertical expansion,
but such
expansion could potentially have much greater
impact than areal
expansion;
an increase of volume by vertical expansion could well
have more
effect than areal expansion by one acre”.
Ia.
As
a member
of the General Assembly and Chairman of the
House
Energy and Environmental Committee during enactment of this
legislation,
I must refute this contention.
The majority’s
reference
to “expansion by one acre”
is taken from a remark made
by me
as sponsor
of the motion
to adopt
the governor’s amendatory
veto.
The
majority mistakenly relies upon this remark
to
demonstrate
that the legislature
intended Section
39(c)
to apply
to vertical expansions, when
in fact
it was my and the
legislature’s intent
and understanding that the area of expansion
beyond
the boundary refers only to surface area and not volume.
Thus,
only those expansions that would alter
the physical
boundaries
as determined
by the parcel’s legal description
were
intended to be encompassed.
I believe this legislative
intent
is
clearly conveyed by the
use of the words
“area” and “boundary”.
To assert that changes
in volume were
to
be encompassed by these
two terms
is
to defy common English usage.
Moreover,
the majority has
ignored the fundamental
distinction between what concerns were
to be addressed by
localities and what was
intended to be
reserved to the State.
Strong policy reasons require that approval
or disapproval of
vertical expansions
be the exclusive province of
the Agency.
This
Board has consistently held
that local authorities do not
have the power
to consider technical aspects
of landfill
design.
See haste Management
v.
County Board
of hill Counti,
52
PCE
23
(Aprfl
7,
1983); Browning Ferris Industries
v.
Lake County
Board
of Supervisors,
50 PBC
61
(December
2, 1982) Waste
Management of
Illinois
v. Tazewell County,
47 PCB 485
(August
5,
1982).
Technical matters of design are beyond
local government’s
expertise and require sole state jurisdiction
to assure adequate
and
consistent state—wide standards.
Questions of engineering
design such as
the height, depth,
and volume of
a landfill
clearly constitute such technical aspects dedicated solely
to
Agency expertise.
Although the majority assures
us that its
~:Lndingdoes not require that the Section 39.2 procedures be
utilized
for
“every proposal
to alter
the contours of
a
landfill”,
no adequate definition
is given
for what changes
in
shape
will trigger
the approval process.
Op.
at
8.
There
are
multitude of situations
in which additional or different space
may
be occupied above or below
the ground surface and thus,
qualify as “vertical
expansion”:
berms,
trenches,
elevation
countours,
buildings and equipment.
To allow counties and
65-272
—3—
municipalities the power
to co—regulate
in this area
“is
to
assure chaos”.
Browning Ferris Industries,
supra at
70.
I also question the majority’s wisdom
in following
the
Antioch decision despite
their conclusion that we are not bound
by
it;
nevertheless,
the majority has determined
that Antioch ann
Agency acquiescence in Antioch’s outcome dictate
that this “area
of law
is now settled”.
Op.
at
8.
I disagree.
First,
I believe the Board should
not surrender
jurisdiction over
an important environmental matter such as this
to
a court
of co—equal jurisdiction when
we
are under
no
obligation
to do
so.
Second,
I question the wisdom of abiding
by
an
unreported decision which was
issued without opinion and find
it somewhat startling that
a one—page order could settle an
entire area of
law.
Finally,
the majority
itself
has provided
persuasive argument for rejecting Antioch
in this quote
from the
Illinois Supreme Court:
“fWhere
it
is clear that
the court has
made
a
mistake,
it will not decline
to correct it,
although
it
may have been reasserted
and
acquiesced
in for
a long number
of years
.
.“
Op.
at
6
(quoting Marathon Petroleum
v.
Briceland,
75
Iii.
App. 3d
189, 394 N.E.2d
44
(1979)
(quoting
Neff
v,
George,
364
Iii.
306,
4 N,E.2d 388
(1936)).
Finally, without reiterating
the arguments made before
the
Antioch court,
I wish to endorse the position as
then articulated
by the Agency
and the Attorney General
as fully supported by
sound logic
and case law.
See Pet.
Brief at
3.
Thus,
for
the foregoing reasons,
I dissent.
Theodore Meyer
~ard
Member
I, Dorothy
M.
Gunn, Clerk
of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board,
her~.eby certify that the above Dissenting Opinion was filed
on
the/7’-’~- day of
~
,
1985.
Dorothy M.~Gunn,
Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board
65-273