ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
February 28,
1991
SEXTON ENVIRONMENTAL SYSTEMS,
INC.
)
Petitioner,
)
PCB 91-4
)
(Permit Appeal)
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY,
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by J. Anderson):
On February 25, 1991, the Agency filed a Motion for Summary
Judgment asserting that there was no genuine issue as to material
fact and that the Agency was entitled to Judgment as a matter of
law.
On February 27, 1991,
Sexton Environmental Systems
(SES)
filed a motion for extension of time until March 26, 1991, to
respond to the summary judgment motion,
stating
that,
“...SES...
believes that information developed at hearing will assist the
Board
in deciding the Motion for Summary Judgment”.
The Motion for extension of time
is granted only insofar as
Sexton may file its response no later than March 7,
1991.
If the
Board were to grant
the extension as requested,
it would be faced
with two unacceptable choices:
if the March 11 hearing is
cancelled in order
to await Sexton’s March
26 response, the Board
would not be able
to schedule and notice another hearing before
the decision deadline, and thus the Board would risk thismatter
going by operation of
law;
if the Board allows a “ministerial”
hearing to beheld and then continued,
the Board would be using
its extremely limited hearing money for no substantive purpose.
Therefore,
the Board intends
to act upon the summary
judgment issue on Friday, March
8,
1991.
If the Agency’s motion
is granted, the March 11 hearing will be cancelled.
The Board
will accept a
“fax” copy of Sexton’s response
to be followed by a
formal filing pursuant to Section 101.103 of the Board’s
procedural rules.
We also note that Sexton
is asserting a non—sequiter
to
state that facts developed at hearing will help the Board
determine whether there is a genuine issue of material fact.
SES
has not disputed in its motion for extension the Agency’s
assertion that there
is no issue
of material fact.
Unless SES’s
response can clearly identify disputed issues of fact from this
record, hearing will be denied.
Due to
a fiscal shortfall, the
Board
is involved in the painful process of deferring some
119—69
—2—
hearings, and prioritizing others,
as funds are presently
insufficient to allow hearings
to be held
in all pending cases.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Bill Forcade dissented.
I, Dorothy M. Gunn,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, h~rebycertify t~t the above Order was adopted on
the
c~c~I-’day
of
~
,
1991, by a vote of
~5~—~/
S
Control Board
119—70