BEFORE THE ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
     
    ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
    PROTECTION AGENCY,
     
    Complainant,
    )
    )
    )
    ) AC 05-40
     
    v.
     
    )
    )
    )
    (IEPA No. 567-04-AC)
    NORTHERN ILLINOIS SERVICE
    COMPANY,
    )
    )
     
     
    Respondent.
    )
    )
     
     
      
    NOTICE OF FILING
     
    To: Peter DeBruyne
    838 North Main Street
    Rockford, Illinois 61103
     
     
     
    PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that on this date I electronically filed with the Clerk of the
    Pollution Control Board of the State of Illinois the following instrument(s) entitled POST-
    HEARING BRIEF OF COMPLAINANT.
    Respectfully Submitted,
     
     
     
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
    _________________________________
    Michelle M. Ryan
    Special Assistant Attorney General
     
    Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
    1021 North Grand Avenue East
    P.O. Box 19276
    Springfield, Illinois 62794-9276
    (217) 782-5544
     
     
    Dated: May 23, 2006
     
     
    ELECTRONIC FILING, RECEIVED, CLERK'S OFFICE, MAY 23, 2006

     
     
      
    BEFORE THE ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
     
    ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
    PROTECTION AGENCY,
     
    Complainant,
    )
    )
    )
    ) AC 05-40
     
    v.
     
    )
    )
    )
    (IEPA No. 567-04-AC)
    NORTHERN ILLINOIS SERVICE
    COMPANY,
    )
    )
     
     
    Respondent.
    )
    )
     
     
     
    POST-HEARING BRIEF OF COMPLAINANT
     
    On November 18, 2004, the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (“Illinois EPA”)
    issued an administrative citation to Northern Illinois Service Company (“Respondent”). The
    citation alleges violations of Section 21(p)(1) and 21(p)(7) of the Environmental Protection Act
    (“Act”) (415 ILCS 5/21(p)(1) & (7) (2002)), in that Respondent caused or allowed open
    dumping of waste resulting in litter and the deposition of construction or demolition debris.
    The violations occurred at a property located at 4960 Rockton Road, Roscoe, Winnebago
    County. Transcript, p. 10; Exhibit 1.
    Illinois EPA has demonstrated that Respondent caused or allowed open dumping on the
    site. “Open dumping” means “the consolidation of refuse from one or more sources at a disposal
    site that does not fulfill the requirements of a sanitary landfill.” 415 ILCS 5/3.305 (2004).
    “Refuse” means “waste,” (415 ILCS 5/3.385 (2004)), and “waste” includes “any garbage . . . or
    other discarded material” (415 ILCS 5/3.535 (2004)). The inspection report admitted into
    evidence as Exhibit 1 and the testimony at hearing show that materials including dead trees,
    concrete with protruding rebar, and metal conduit were present at the site. Tr. at 12-13; Exh. 1,
    pp. 3, 5-7. These materials constitute “discarded material” within the meaning of the term
    ELECTRONIC FILING, RECEIVED, CLERK'S OFFICE, MAY 23, 2006

    3
    “waste.” Respondent owned the site since early 1996. Tr. at 39. Some of the waste trees had
    been on the site since Respondent acquired the property. Tr. at 40, 48. In addition, Respondent
    added to the pile trees cut from the site, as well as “stragglers” from excavating jobs that he
    performed for others. Tr. at 42, 48. Therefore, Respondent caused or allowed the open dumping
    of waste observed on October 4, 2004.
    Respondent’s causing or allowing the open dumping of these wastes resulted in “litter”
    under Section 21(p)(1) of the Act (415 ILCS 5/21(p)(1) (2004)). The Act does not define
    “litter,” but in similar cases, the Board has looked to the definition of “litter” in the Litter
    Control Act:
    “Litter” means any discarded, used or unconsumed substance or waste. “Litter” may
    include, but is not limited to, any garbage, trash, refuse, debris, rubbish…or anything
    else of an unsightly or unsanitary nature, which has been discarded, abandoned or
    otherwise disposed of improperly.
     
    415 ILCS 105/3(a) (2004); see
    St. Clair County v. Louis I. Mund
    (Aug. 22, 1991), AC 90-64, slip op.
    at 4, 6. Using this definition, the dead trees, concrete with protruding rebar, and metal conduit
    1
     
    constitute “litter” under Section 21(p)(1) of the Act, and therefore Respondent violated that section.
    Respondent’s open dumping of these wastes also resulted in the deposition of
    construction or demolition debris in violation of Section 21(p)(7) of the Act (415 ILCS
    5/21(p)(7) (2004)). “Construction or demolition debris” is defined in part, as follows:
    “General construction or demolition debris” means non-hazardous,
    uncontaminated materials resulting from the construction, remodeling, repair, and
    demolition of utilities, structures, and roads, limited to the following: bricks,
    concrete, and other masonry materials; soil; rock; wood, including non-hazardous
    painted, treated, and coated wood and wood products; wall coverings; plaster;
    drywall; plumbing fixtures; non-asbestos insulation; roofing shingles and other
    roof coverings; reclaimed asphalt pavement; glass; plastics that are not sealed in a
    1
    Respondent’s counsel limited the issue of litter at hearing to the dead trees. Tr. at 15. However, the concrete with
    protruding rebar and metal conduit also meet the definition of “litter,” as it is “debris…or anything else of an
    unsightly nature, which has been discarded…or otherwise disposed of improperly.” The language of the statute
    controls over the opinion of Respondent’s counsel or the characterization of a single field inspector.
    ELECTRONIC FILING, RECEIVED, CLERK'S OFFICE, MAY 23, 2006

    4
    manner that conceals waste; electrical wiring and components containing no
    hazardous substances; and piping or metals incidental to any of those materials.
     
    415 ILCS 5/3.160(a) (2004). Respondent offered no testimony regarding the concrete and metal
    conduit. According to the Petition for Review and comments made by Respondent’s counsel at
    the pre-trial status call with the Hearing Officer, Respondent is not contesting the 21(p)(7) count.
    Therefore, based on the evidence of concrete with protruding rebar and metal conduit,
    Respondent violated Section 21(p)(7) of the Act.
     
    Some of the waste at the site was present when Respondent bought the property ten years
    ago. Tr. at 40, 48. This Board has long held that present inaction of the part of a current landowner
    to remedy past illegal disposal of waste previously placed on the site constitutes “allowing” open
    dumping, in that the owner allows the illegal situation to continue.
    Illinois EPA v. William Shrum
    ,
    AC 05-18 (March 16, 2006), p. 8 (citations omitted);
    Sangamon County v. Lee Hsueh
    , AC 92-79
    (July 1, 1993), pp. 4-5. Respondent in this case not only allowed the dumping to persist for over ten
    years, but added up to eighty percent of the dead trees.
    See
    Tr. at 48.
    Respondent made a showing at hearing that the wood waste could have been processed into
    a useable mulch product. Tr. at 30-36. However, it was uncontroverted that the wood waste in its
    condition on the date of the inspection was not usable as mulch. Tr. at 23, 31-32 (tub grinding
    necessary prior to use as mulch). In fact, the type of mulch described by the landscaper was
    identified as “double ground mulch,” implying that at least two passes through a grinder were
    required to render trees into usable product. However, the trees at Respondent’s site had been “laid
    there just to rot.” Tr. at 23. There was no evidence of any processing “whatsoever.”
    Id.
    Whether
    Respondent may have intended to use the wood waste as mulch--which evidence was actually never
    introduced at hearing--is irrelevant, as it hadn’t happened for more than ten years while the tree
    waste lay dumped on the site. The fact that Respondent later applied for and received an open
    ELECTRONIC FILING, RECEIVED, CLERK'S OFFICE, MAY 23, 2006

    5
    burning permit certainly implies the lack of intent to use the tree waste, as burning wood
    unquestionably precludes its use as mulch. Nevertheless, a plan for use of material at some future
    date is not dispositive in determining whether a material is waste or litter.
    Illinois EPA v. Yocum, et
    al.
    , (June 6, 2002), p. 8. Indeed, a person can cause or allow a violation of the Act without
    knowledge or intent.
    County of Will v. Utilities Unlimited, Inc.,
    et al. (July 24, 1997), AC 97-41, slip
    op. at 5, citing
    People v. Fiorini
    , 143 Ill.2d 318, 574 N.E.2d 612 (1991).
    The Illinois EPA photographs, inspection report and the testimony show that Respondent
    allowed open dumping of waste in a manner resulting in litter and deposition of construction or
    demolition debris in violation of Sections 21(p)(1) and (p)(7) of the Act. Illinois EPA requests that
    the Board enter a final order finding that Respondent violated these sections and imposing the
    statutory penalty.
     
    Respectfully Submitted,
     
     
    DATED: May 23, 2006
    _________________________________
    Michelle M. Ryan
    Special Assistant Attorney General
     
     
    Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
    1021 North Grand Avenue East
    P.O. Box 19276
    Springfield, Illinois 62794-9276
    (217) 782-5544
    ELECTRONIC FILING, RECEIVED, CLERK'S OFFICE, MAY 23, 2006

     
     
    THIS FILING SUBMITTED ON RECYCLED PAPER
     
     
    PROOF OF SERVICE
     
    I hereby certify that I did on the 23
    rd
    day of May, 2006, send by U.S. Mail with postage thereon
    fully prepaid, by depositing in a United States Post Office Box a true and correct copy of the
    following instrument(s) entitled POST-HEARING BRIEF OF COMPLAINANT
    To: Peter DeBruyne
    838 North Main Street
    Rockford, Illinois 61103
     
     
    and an electronic copy of the same foregoing instrument on the same date via electronic filing
    To: Dorothy Gunn, Clerk
    Pollution Control Board
    James R. Thompson Center
    100 West Randolph Street, Suite 11-500
    Chicago, Illinois 60601
     
     
     
     
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
    _________________________________
    Michelle M. Ryan
    Special Assistant Attorney General
     
     
     
    Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
    1021 North Grand Avenue East
    P.O. Box 19276
    Springfield, Illinois 62794-9276
    (217) 782-5544
     
     
    ELECTRONIC FILING, RECEIVED, CLERK'S OFFICE, MAY 23, 2006

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