ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
December
17,
1987
WASTE MANAGEMENT OF ILLINOIS
INC.,
a Delaware Corporation,
)
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 87—75
LAKE COUNTY BOARD,
Respondent.
DISSENTING OPINION
(by J.
Theodore Meyer):
I dissent from the majority opinion adopted
in this
matter.
I do not agree with the majority’s
finding that the
procedures used were fundamentally fair.
I agree with the majority insofar
as
its determination that
a county board or governing body of
a municipality may adopt
procedural
rules
to govern
the hearing process under Section
39.2
of the Environmental Protection Act
(Act).
Ill. Rev.
Stat.
1985,
ch.
1111/2, par.
1039.2.
However,
it
is clear that any such rules
must provide fundamental fairness
to all parties.
I believe that
the provisions of the Lake County ordinance which forbid any
amendment of the application while allowing various county
departments and objectors
to file written materials up
to
10 days
prior
to hearing deny the applicant fundamental fairness.
These
provisions put the applicant
at
a disadvantage because the only
opportunity to
respond
to submissions
by the objectors and county
departments is through oral testimony at hearing.
The applicant
cannot introduce any written reports or studies.
I recognize
that the
intent of these provisions
is “to give members of the
public and departments of the County an opportunity to prepare
adequately and fairly for the public hearing”.
Lake County,
Illinois, Ordinance Establishing a Procedure for New Regional
Pollution Control
Facility Site Approval Requests
(Sept.
9,
1986),
Section 11(E).
The provisions of the ordinance,
however,
do not give the same protections to the applicant.
Thus,
these
provisions are fundamentally unfair.
Unlike
the majority,
I do not feel
that the “opportunity” to
withdraw the application and
then refile
is sufficient to cure
the unfairness
to the applicant.
Such
a “solution”
results in a
circular situation:
an applicant files
an application, objectors
and county departments submit written materials
in response, and
the applicant withdraws the application
in order
to add
information
in reply
to the written submissions.
Upon the
84—645
—2—
refiling of
the application, the cycle
is started all over again,
potentially continuing
indefinitely.
This hardly provides
fundamental fairness
to the applicant.
I also note that the length of the record before this Board
is merely one example of the ever—expanding records
in landfill
siting appeals.
As
the majority notes,
the county board hearings
in this case produced more than 7,300 pages of transcript,
131
exhibits, and 77 written comments, plus pleadings and motions.
The hearings before this Board resulted
in an additional
474
pages of transcript plus exhibits.
(Majority opinion at 4.)
There were five briefs filed
in
this appeal, with petitioner’s
opening brief alone being 137 pages.
I recognize that the
Board’s procedural
rules do not set
a limit on the length of
briefs, but
I must point out that the rules of the Supreme Court
of
Illinois allow briefs of only 50 pages
if printed, and 75
pages
if not printed.
S.Ct. Rule 341.
The Federal Rules of
Appellate Procedure also state
that briefs are not to exceed
50
pages.
F.R.App.P.
28(g).
While
I understand the parties’ desire
to fully argue
their positions, perhaps
a bit of common sense
would
result
in a somewhat shorter record
and facilitate this
Board’s review of the case.
Because the procedures utilized under
the county ordinance
in
this case were fundamentally unfair,
I feel that the
proceedings were void ab initio.
Thus,
I believe that the case
should be remanded
to the county for new hearings on the
application.
Board Member
I,
Dorothy M.
Gunn,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify tha~the above Dissenting Opinion was filed
on the ~
~
day of ______________________,
1987.
Illino
Poll
on Control Board
84—646