ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    December 16,
    1993
    LEONARD CARMICHAEL,
    )
    Petitioner,
    )
    v.
    )
    PCB 93—114
    )
    (Landfill Siting Review)
    BROWNING-FERRIS INDUSTRIES
    )
    OF ILLINOIS,
    INC.
    AND
    OGLE
    )
    COUNTY
    BOARD,
    FOR
    AND
    ON
    )
    BEHALF
    OF
    THE
    COUNTY
    OF
    OGLE,
    )
    STATE
    OF ILLINOIS,
    )
    )
    Respondents.
    ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (by C.
    A. Manning):
    This
    matter
    is
    before
    the
    Board
    on
    a
    Joint
    Motion
    to
    Reconsider the Board’s
    order
    of October
    7,
    1993.1
    The
    instant
    Motion was filed by Browning-Ferris Industries (BFI) and the County
    of Ogle (County) on November 10, 1993 pursuant to 35 Iii. Adin. Code
    SS 101.246 and 101.300.
    The matter was originally before the Board
    on
    a
    petition
    for
    review
    filed
    on
    June
    16,
    1993,
    by
    Leonard
    Carmichael,
    pursuant
    to Section
    40.1(b)
    of
    the landfill
    siting
    section
    of
    the
    Environmental Protection
    Act
    (Act).
    (415
    ILCS
    5/40.1(b)
    (1992).)
    The petition for review
    sought the Board’s
    review
    of
    the
    County’s
    May
    10,
    1993
    siting
    approval
    of
    the
    expansion
    of
    BFI’s
    regional
    pollution
    control
    facility.
    The
    Board’s order
    of October
    7,
    1993,
    vacated the County’s decision
    granting siting approval due to the County’s lack of jurisdiction
    to hear the matter.
    On November 23,
    1993, Leonard Carmichael filed a response to
    the motion
    for reconsideration pursuant to 35
    Iii.
    Adm Code
    SS
    101.246 and 101.300.
    BFI and the County jointly filed a reply to
    Leonard Carmichael’s response.
    While the Board’s procedural rules
    at 35 Ill. Adm Code
    SS
    101.246 and 101.300 concerning the motion
    for reconsideration do not provide for BFI’s and the County’s joint
    reply
    to Leonard Carmichael’s
    response,
    the reply was received
    within the proper tixneframe for our decision—making,
    and therefore
    it will be allowed and has been considered.
    In ruling upon a motion for reconsideration the Board is to
    consider, but is not limited to, error in the previous decision and
    facts in the record which may have been overlooked.
    (35 Ill. Adm.
    Code S101.246(d).)
    In Citizens Against Regional Landfill
    v. The
    The Motion
    for Reconsideration
    will
    be
    referenced
    as
    “Mot.”

    2
    County Board of Whiteside County (March 11,
    1993), PCB 93-156, we
    stated that “t)he
    intended purpose of a motion for reconsideration
    is to bring to the court’s attention newly discovered evidence
    which was not available at the time of the hearing, changes in the
    law or errors in the court’s previous application of the existing
    law. (Korogluvan v. Chicago Title & Trust Co.
    (1st Dist. 1992), 213
    Ill. App.3d 622,
    572 N.E.2d 1154, 1158).”
    While Respondents filed
    a
    49 page motion for reconsideration,
    such motion
    presents the
    Board with no new evidence, no argued change in law, and no reason
    to conclude that the Board’s decision made on October 7,
    1993, was
    in error.
    Nonetheless,
    the Board will briefly
    address certain
    arguments made by Respondents in their motion.
    Respondents
    argue
    that
    the
    Board
    denied
    them
    fundamental
    fairness by
    not
    giving
    them
    an
    opportunity
    to
    respond to the
    jurisdictional question and then applying retroactively “a new rule
    of law.”
    (Not.
    at 5.)
    As the Board noted in its October 7,
    1993
    order
    (Order),
    an objection to jurisdiction may be raised at any
    time,
    even by
    a
    court on its own motion.
    (See Concerned Boone
    Citizens
    v.
    M.I.G.
    Investment,
    Inc.
    (2nd
    Dist.
    1986),
    144
    Ill.
    App.3d.
    334,
    98 Ill.Dec.
    253, 494 N.E.2d 180.)
    The Respondents had
    an opportunity at the hearing and in the post-hearing briefs filed
    in this matter, and in the instant motion, to present evidence and
    arguments
    on
    the
    jurisdictional
    issue.
    No
    new
    arguments
    or
    evidence have been presented which persuade the Board that
    its
    original decision was in error.
    In addition, the Board notes that
    its decision in this matter was not an announcement of a “new rule
    of law” as argued by Respondents but rather, as stated in the Board
    Order,
    the decision is
    based upon
    a
    clear reading of the 14—day
    limitation provision in Section 39.2(b)
    of the Act.
    Respondents also state that the burden of proving that the
    notice
    was
    insufficient
    is
    on petitioner
    and
    that the
    proper
    standard of review is whether the County of Ogle’s determination on
    the jurisdictional question is against the manifest weight of the
    evidence.
    (Mot. at 9.)
    Respondents clearly confuse the issue of
    jurisdiction,
    which vests the County with the power to hear the
    siting
    approval,
    with
    the
    County’s
    decision-making
    process
    concerning the nine criteria that must be met pursuant to 39.2(a)
    of the Act in order for the County grant such siting approval.
    It
    is
    inappropriate to
    apply
    the
    manifest weight
    standard to
    the
    question of jurisdiction especially where the issue of jurisdiction
    had not been previously presented by petitioner before the County
    Board,
    but has been squarely raised for the first time before the
    Board.
    Respondents also argue that the decision
    is contrary to the
    plain meaning of the statutory language, previous Board precedent,
    and
    precedent of
    various
    other
    jurisdictions which Respondents
    generally refer to as “common jurisprudence of the United States.”
    (Mot. at 19.)
    To the contrary, the Board’s decision appropriately
    applies and considers the statute,
    and Board and court precedent.

    3
    Accordingly, for the reasons stated above and in the Board’s
    October
    7,
    1993
    order,
    the
    Board
    denies
    the
    motion
    for
    reconsideration and affirms its previous decision.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    I, Dorothy N.
    Gunn,
    Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby certify that the above order was adopted on the
    /(~-
    day of
    ________________,
    1993,
    by a vote of
    7~
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    I
    7
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    Dorothy M/7Gunn, Clerk
    Illinois ?óllution Control Board

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