ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL
    BOARD
    November
    26, 1984
    ~.J~STE
    MAUAGEMENT,
    INC.,
    )
    )
    Petitioner~
    )
    v.
    )
    PCB 84—45
    PCI3 84—61
    t~r~INois
    ENVIRONMENTAL
    )
    PCB 84—68
    PROTECTION
    W3ENCY,
    )
    Consolidated
    Respondent.
    SUPPLEMENTAL
    OPINION, CONCURRING
    IN PART, DISSENTING
    IN PART (by
    l3~
    Forcade):
    I must dissent,
    in part,
    from the
    Board’s
    Supplemental
    Opinion
    and Order,
    which affirms on reconsideration the denial of
    ~~tizen
    intervention.
    I originally explained my position on this
    issue
    in my concurring
    and
    dissenting opinion of October
    1, 1984.
    Rriefly stated, while
    I am concerned about the potential
    impact
    that
    Landfill,
    Inc.
    has
    on
    the
    procedural
    rules
    concerning
    citizen
    intervention,
    I believe it is improper for the
    Board
    to
    invalidate
    these
    rules
    and
    deny
    intervention
    rights
    without
    going
    through
    a
    L)roper
    rulemaking
    procedure
    or
    without
    specific
    direction
    from
    a
    higher
    court.
    Landfill,
    Inc.
    is
    almost
    six
    years
    old.
    If
    our
    ~uies
    are
    invalid
    they
    should
    have
    been
    changed
    long
    before
    this
    issue
    arose.
    As
    Chairman
    Dumelle
    has pointed
    out
    in
    his
    concur-
    ring
    statement,
    there
    are
    compelling
    reasons
    to
    allow
    intervention,
    not
    the
    least
    of
    which
    is
    the
    strong
    tradition
    in
    Illinois
    of
    liberal
    p~blicparticipation rights in the environmental
    area.
    Today,
    we once again deny intervention rights that I believe our
    procedural
    regulations establish.
    I,
    therefore,
    must
    dissent
    from
    paragraph A(3)
    of today’s order.
    While
    I
    am
    in
    agreement
    with
    the
    balance
    of
    the
    Board’ s
    Order
    and
    the
    general
    outcome
    that
    is
    achieved,
    I
    must
    concur
    with
    the
    supplemental
    opinion
    adopted
    by
    the
    majority.
    Speci-
    fically,
    I
    have
    concerns
    regarding
    the
    majority’s
    analysis
    of
    the
    nature
    of
    Board
    review
    in
    a
    permit
    appeal
    and
    the
    application
    of
    the
    standard
    of
    review
    to
    the
    facts
    of
    this
    case.
    I
    also
    wish
    to
    explain
    my reasons for ~1pporting today’s order (except regarding
    denial
    of
    intervention),
    as
    it
    differs
    from
    the
    majority’s
    rationale.
    Illinois
    has
    a
    unique
    administrative
    system
    in
    the
    area
    of
    e~wironmental
    regulation
    and
    control
    because
    of
    the
    division
    of
    functions
    between
    the
    Illinois
    Environmental
    Protection
    Agency
    (“Agency’1)
    and
    the
    Board.
    This
    system
    creates
    especially
    vexing
    problems in the context of Board review of permit decisions.
    Oscar
    Mayer
    and
    the line
    of
    cases
    that
    adopt
    that
    approach
    provide
    some
    guidance
    for
    the
    Board
    on
    the
    proper
    scope
    of
    review
    in
    a
    permit
    appeal,
    bet
    Illinois
    law
    is
    silent
    on
    what
    the
    proper
    standard of review is
    in these cases.
    61-~321

    2
    Under
    Oscar
    ~
    the
    Board
    reviews
    the
    “record
    before
    the
    ;gency at the time
    the
    decision was made.”
    Frequently that
    record
    consists
    of
    substantial
    quantities
    of
    technical
    reports,
    correspondence
    and
    analytical
    data.
    One
    purpose
    of
    the
    Board’s
    hearing
    is to allow the parties the opportunity to emphasize
    those portions of the record most favorable to their position
    in
    an
    organized
    manner.
    Although
    the
    scope
    of
    review
    is
    easily
    articulated,
    it
    leads
    the
    Board into substantial
    difficulty in
    determining
    what
    statements
    by
    witnesses
    at
    hearing
    were
    “before
    the
    Agency,”
    and
    which
    were
    not.
    These
    problems
    are
    not
    unique
    to
    Illinois
    law.
    Professor
    Davis
    has
    criticized
    the
    “informal
    record
    before
    the
    decisionmaker”
    concept
    as
    unmanageable
    and
    unrealistic,
    Administrative
    Law
    of
    the
    Seventies,
    §29.01—8
    kenneth
    Culp
    Davis
    (1976).
    The
    voluminous
    record
    developed
    in
    the
    present
    case
    and
    the
    numerous
    evidentiary
    disputes
    that
    arose
    illustrate
    problems
    inherent
    in
    this
    approach.
    While
    I
    support
    the
    majority’s
    conclusion
    that
    the
    appropriate
    standard
    of
    review
    for
    Agency
    factual
    determinations
    is
    substantial
    evidence,
    I
    would
    follow
    the
    Illinois
    Supreme
    Court’s
    articulation
    of
    that
    standard
    in Menning v. Department of Registration and
    Education,
    14
    Ill.
    2d
    553,
    153
    N.E.
    2d
    52
    (1958).
    There,
    the
    court deemed the findings of
    an administrative agency prima facie
    true
    and
    correct.
    The court stated that reviewing courts were
    not authorized to reweigh evidence
    or to make independent deter-
    minations of facts. However,
    agency decisions must be
    supported
    by
    competent
    and
    substantial
    evidence.
    The
    majority
    has
    neglected
    to
    deem
    the
    Agency’s
    findings
    of
    fact
    prima
    fade
    true
    and
    correct.
    I
    believe
    that
    Menning,
    Landfil1~
    Inc.,
    and
    §39
    of
    the
    Act,
    provide
    a
    sound
    basis
    for
    this
    deference
    to
    Agency
    fact
    finding
    in
    the
    permit
    area.
    Likewise,
    I
    agree
    with
    the
    majority
    that
    the
    Board
    need
    not
    defer
    to
    the
    Agency’s
    conclusions
    of
    law.
    Interpretations
    of
    the
    Act
    and
    Board
    regulations
    are
    a
    proper
    function
    of
    the
    Board.
    When
    these
    theories
    are
    applied
    to
    the
    factual
    evidence
    regarding
    the
    Trench
    II
    permit
    denial,
    I
    reach
    the
    same
    conclusion
    as
    the
    majority.
    At
    pages
    29—31
    of
    the
    October
    1,
    1984
    majority
    opinion,
    the
    evidence
    on
    implementation
    of
    the
    groundwater
    assessment
    plan
    and
    groundwater
    monitoring
    is
    reviewed.
    I
    support
    the
    majority
    opinion
    that
    the
    unanimous
    evidence
    shows
    the
    assessment
    plan
    was
    being
    implemented
    and
    that
    none
    of
    the
    assessment
    plan
    reports
    or
    groundwater
    quality
    monitoring
    analyses
    were
    overdue
    at
    the
    time
    the
    Agency
    permit
    decision
    was
    made.
    The
    difficult
    aspect
    of
    the
    decision
    is
    that
    portion
    of
    the
    permit denial
    based on the “presence,
    or potential presence of
    hazardous
    waste
    constituents,
    in
    the
    groundwater.”
    This
    relied
    primarily
    on
    the
    results
    of
    groundwater
    quality
    monitoring
    at
    the
    facility.
    On
    this
    issue,
    I
    depart
    from
    the
    majority
    reasoning
    as
    61-322

    expressed
    at
    pages 27—29
    of the October
    1,,
    Opinion
    and
    pages
    :~2-l3 of
    the November 26,
    Opinion.
    There,
    I believe the majority
    does
    a
    de
    novo
    review
    of
    the
    groundwater quality evidence and
    draws
    a conclusion contrary to the Agency;
    the majority finds the
    testing
    results
    invalid.
    I
    believe
    the
    Agency’s
    factual
    determinations
    should
    be
    ~jiven
    deference,
    and
    any logical
    inferences thereof.
    I believe
    there
    was
    substantial
    evidence that the groundwater quality
    monitoring data was correct.
    The
    logical
    implication
    that
    may
    be
    drawn
    from
    this
    data
    is that ten older hazardous waste cells,
    without
    synthetic
    liners
    and
    with unknown clay compaction or
    a~~resenceof fractures, may after nearly
    a decade lead to the
    intermittent
    presence of trace or part per billion concentrations
    ot~contaminants in the groundwater.
    Unfortunately, the laws of physics dictate that
    all hazardous
    waste
    cells
    will ultimately leak.
    Absent special circumstances,
    ~ch
    as
    a major source aquifer
    or undermining, governmental decision-
    making
    must
    be
    based
    on
    determinations
    of
    when
    and
    how
    much
    leakage
    will
    occur
    and
    whether
    that
    amount
    is
    manageable,
    not
    an
    whether
    leakage
    will
    occur
    at
    all.
    I
    am
    unwilling
    to
    conclude
    that
    trace
    concentration
    leakage
    from
    adjacent
    cells,
    with
    unknown
    engineering,
    constitutes
    substantial
    evidence
    that
    Trench
    II, with “state-of—the--art” engineering, will leak unreasonably
    soon
    or excessively when the permeability tests
    are
    to the contrary.
    I
    would
    note
    that
    landfill
    permitting
    decisions
    are,
    by
    necessity,
    predictive
    of
    future
    events.
    If
    those
    predictions
    prove
    incorrect
    and
    leakage
    does
    occur,
    enforcement
    actions
    can
    be
    filed
    with
    this
    Board
    against
    any
    landfill
    se~king
    remedial
    action
    to
    contain
    contamination
    and
    prevent
    harm~
    I,
    Dorothy
    M.
    Gunn,
    Clerk
    of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board,
    hereby
    certify
    that
    the
    above
    Supplemental
    Opinion,
    Concur-
    ring
    in
    Part
    and
    Dissenting
    in
    Part
    was
    submitted
    on
    the
    ~L’/
    day
    of
    c
    ~
    ,
    1984.
    ~
    i/i.
    ‘~
    ~
    Dorothy M. ~(inn,Clerk
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    Board
    Member
    RI
    ..~

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