ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
March 19,
1987
A.R.F.
LANDFILL CORPORATION,
)
Petitioner,
V.
)
PCB
87—34
VILLAGE OF ROUND
LAKE
PARK
)
and LAKE COUNTY,
Respondents.
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by
B,.
Forcade):
On March
12,
1987,
the A.R.F.
Landfill Corporation
(“A.R.F.”)
filed
a Siting Application Appeal.
That appeal
asserts that the Village of Round Lake Park failed
to act on
a
request
for site location suitability approval for
a new regional
pollution control facility under Section
39.,2 of the Environ-
mental Protection Act (“Act”).
A.R.F.
asserts that as
a result
of the failure
to
act, this Board must determine that
site
location suitability approval
is “deemed approved”
under
Section
39.2(e)
of the Act.
As
a preliminary matter, the Board
notes one area of un-
certainty.
A.R.F.’s siting application appeal states that the
proposed facility “...would
be partially located
in Round Lake
Park.
That part of the proposed site that would not be located
in Round Lake Park would be located
in unincorporated Lake
County”
(Appeal,
2).
Because a portion of the facility is
located
in unincorporated Lake County,
this Board
is uncertain
whether Lake County is
a necessary party
to this proceeding,
under Section
39(c)
of the Act which controls jurisdiction for
siting applications:
Except
for
those
facilities
owned
or
operated
by sanitary districts organized
under
“An Act
to
create
sanitary
districts
and
to
remove
obstructions
in
the
Des Plaines
and
Illinois
rivers”,
approved
May
29,
1889,
as
now
or
hereafter
amended,
no
permit
for
the develop-
ment
or
construction
of
a
new
regional
pollution
control
facility
may be
granted
by
the Agency unless
the applicant submits proof
to
the
Agency
that
the
location
of
said
facility has been approved by the County Board
of the county if
in
an unincorporated area,
or
the governing body of the municipality when
in
an
incorporated
area
in which
the facility
is
76-383
—2—
to
be
located
in accordance with Section 39.2
of this Act.
The Board has not been briefed on what role,
if any, Lake County
should have in this process.
Consequently, the Board, on its own
motion, will join Lake County as a party respondent for purposes
of determining whether Lake County is a necessary party.
Any
party,
including Lake County, may file motions and briefs
opposing or supporting this joinder not later than April 10,
1987.
This action is an appeal
filed March 12, 1987, pursuant
to
Section 40.1(b)
of the Environmental Protection Act
(“Act”)
(Ill.Rev.Stat. ch.
11.~/2,
par. 1040.1(b).
Petitioner appeals the
asserted default decision of the Village of Round Lake Park
(“Village”).
Record Before the County Board
P.A. 82—682, also known as SB—l72,
as codified
in Section
40.1(a)
of the Act, provides that the hearing before the Board
is
to “be based exclusively on the record before the county board or
governing body of the municipality.”
‘Ihe statute does not
specify who
is to file with the Board such record or who
is
to
certify to the completeness or correctness
of the record.
As the Village alone can verify and certify what exactly
is
the entire record before it,
in the interest of protecting the
rights of all parties
to this action, and in order to satisfy the
intention of SB—172,
the Board believes that the village must be
the party to prepare and file the record on appeal.
The Board
suggests that guidance in so doing can be had by reference to
Section lOS.102(a)(4)
of
the Board’s Procedural Rules and to
Rules 321 through 324 of the Illinois Supreme Court Rules.
In
addition to the actual documents which comprise the record, the
Village Clerk
shall also prepare
a document entitled “Certificate
of Record on Appeal” which shall list the documents comprising
the record.
Seven copies of the certificate, seven copies
of the
transcript of the village hearing and three copies of any other
documents in the record shall
be filed with the Board,
and a copy
of the certificate shall
be served upon the petitioner.
The
Clerk of the Village
is given 21 days from the date of this Order
to “prepare, bind and certify the record on appeal”
(Ill.
Supreme
Court, Rule 324).
Section 40.1(a) provides that
if there is no final action by
the Board within 120 days, petitioner may äeem the site location
approved.
The Board has construed identical “in accordance with the
terms of” language contained in Section 40(b)
of the Act
concerning third—party appeals of the grant of hazardous waste
76-384
—3—
landfill
permits as giving the person who had requested
the
permit:
(a)
the right to
a decision within the applicable
statutory time frame (now 120 days); and
(b)
the
right to waive
(extend)
the decision period (Alliance for
a
Safe Environment, et
al.
v.
Akron Land Corp. et al., PCB 80—184,
October
30, 1980).
The Board,
therefore,
construes Section 40.1(b)
in like manner,
with the result that failure of this Board
to act in 120 days
would allow the site location applicant to deem the site location
approved.
Pursuant to Section 105.104
of the Procedural Rules,
it
is each party’s responsibility to pursue its action,
and
to
insist that
a hearing on the petition is timely scheduled
in
order
to allow the Board to review the record
and
to render its
decision within 120 days of the
filing
of the petition.
Transcription Costs
The issue of who has the burden of providing transcription
in Board site location suitability appeals has been addressed
in
Town of Ottawa, et al. v.
IPCB,
et al., 129 Ill. App.
3rd,
472
N.E.2d
150
(Third District,
1984).
In that case,
the court
ordered
the Board
to assume transcription costs
(472 N.E.2d at
155).
The Supreme Court denied leave
to appeal on March
14,
1985.
The cognizance of this ruling, the Board will provide for
stenographic transcription of the Board hearing
in this matter.
Hearing must be scheduled within
14 days of the date of this
Order and completed within 60 days of the date of this Order.
The hearing officer shall
inform the Clerk
of the Board
of the
time and location of the hearing at least
40 days
in advance of
hearing
so that public notice of hearing may be published.
After
hearing, the hearing officer shall submit an exhibit list and all
actual exhibits to the Board within
5 days of the hearing.
Any
briefing schedule shall provide
for
final
filings as
expeditiously as possible and
in no event
later
than
70
days from
the date of this Order.
If
after
appropriate consultation with the parties,
the
parties
fail
to
provide
an
acceptable
hearing
date
or
if
after
an
attempt
the
hearing
officer
is
unable
to
consult
with
the
parties,
the
hearing
officer
shall
unilaterally
set
a
hearing
date
in
conformance
with.the
schedule
above.
This
schedule
will
only
provide
the
Board
a
very
short
time
period
to
deliberate
and
reach
a decision before the due date.
The hearing
officer and
the parties are encouraged
to expedite this proceeding as much as
possible.
Within
10 days of accepting
this case,
the Hearing Officer
shall
enter
a
Hearing
Officer
Scheduling
Order
governing
completion
of
the
record.
That
Order
shall
set
a
date
certain
for each aspect of the case including:
briefing schedule,
hearing date(s), completion of discovery (if necessary)
and pre—
hearing conference
(if necessary).
The Hearing Officer
74.385
—4—
Scheduling Order may be modified
by entry of a complete new
scheduling order conforming with the time requirements below.
The hearing officer may extend this schedule only on
a
waiver of the decision deadline by the petitioner and only for
the equivalent or
fewer number of days that the decision deadline
is waived.
Such waivers must be provided
in writing
to the Clerk
of the Board.
Any waiver must be
an “open waiver”
or
a waiver of
decision until
a date certain.
Because of requirements regarding the publication of notice
of hearing,
no scheduled hearing may be canceled unless the
petitioner provides an open waiver or
a waiver
to a date
at least
75 days beyond the date of the motion
to cancel hearing.
This
should allow ample time for the Board
to
republish notice of
hearing and receive transcripts from the hearing before the due
date.
Any order by the hearing officer granting cancellation of
hearing
shall include
a complete new scheduling order with
a new
hearing date
at least
40 days in
the future and
at least 30 days
prior
to the new due date
and the Clerk of the Board shall be
promptly informed
of the new schedule.
Because this proceeding
is the type
for which the Illinois
Environmental Protection Act sets
a very short statutory deadline
for decisioninaking,
absent a waiver,
the Board will grant
extensions or modifications
only
in
unusual
circumstances.
Any
such motion must set
forth an alternative schedule for notice,
hearing,
and
final submissions,
as well
as the deadline for
decision,
including response time
to such
a motion.
However,
no
such motion shall
negate
the obligation of the hearing officer
to
set a date pursuant
to the fourth paragraph of this Order,
and
to
adhere
to that Order
until modified.
IT IS SO ORDERED
I,
Dorothy
M.
Gunn,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board,
~p~çeby
certify
t
a
the
above
Order
was
adopted
on
the
//‘+‘day
of
________________________,
1987,
by
a
vote
of
_______.
Dorothy
M./Gunn,
Clerk
Illinois
Pollution
Control
Board
76-386