ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
December
1,
1994
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,
)
)
Complainant,
)
V.
)
PCB 94—275
(Enforcement)
BOYD
I
INC.,
)
an Illinois Corporation,
)
Respondent.
BOYD BROTHERS,
INC.,
)
an Illinois Corporation,
Complainant,
V.
)
PCB 94—311
(Enforcement)
ABANDONED MINED LANDS RECLAMATION
)
COUNCIL, an Illinois state entity,
)
)
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by C.
A. Manning):
This matter is before the Board on a motion filed by Boyd
Brothers,
Inc.
(Boyd Bros.), an Illinois Corporation, on October
31,
1994,
to consolidate the above named matters.
Neither the
People of the State of Illinois
(State) nor the Abandoned Mined
Lands Reclamation Council
(AMLRC)
filed responses to the motion.
On September 28,
1994 the State filed an enforcement action
against Boyd Bros. pursuant to Section 31(a)
of the Environmental
Protection Act
(Act) which was docketed by the Clerk of the Board
as PCB 94—275.
(415 ILCS 5/31(a)
(1992).)
The complaint alleges
that Boyd Bros. violated Section 12(a)
of the Act and 35 Ill.
Adin. Code 406.106 by causing or allowing the discharge of pH,
acidity, iron and manganese at levels that violated the Board’s
effluent standards.1
(415 ILCS 5/12(a)
(1992).)
The State is
also alleging that Boyd Bros., by causing or allowing the
discharge of mine effluent containing floating debris, colored
scum, and color of unnatural origin, violated Section 12(a)
of
1 Part 406 of the Illinois Administrative Code was
promulgated to regulate mine waste effluent and water quality
standards.
In particular Section 406.106 states the effluent
limitations for various chemical constituents.
2
the Act and 35 111.
Adm. Code 406.l07.2
The State
is basing
these violations on the July 31,
1994 observations of an Illinois
Environmental Protection Agency (Agency)
inspector at the Peabody
Utility Mine near Marion, Illinois.
On October 31,
1994,
Boyd Bros. filed both a motion to
consolidate and a citizens’ enforcement action against ANLRC
pursuant to Section 31(b)
of the Act.
Boyd Bros.
is alleging
that ANLRC violated Section 12(a) of the Act and 35 Iii.
Adm.
Code 406.106 by causing or allowing the discharge of pH, acidity,
iron and manganese at levels that violated the Board’s effluent
standards and Section 12(a)
of the Act and 35 Ill. Adm. Code
406.107 by causing or allowing the discharge of mine effluent
containing floating debris, colored scum, and color of unnatural
origin.
Boyd Bros.
alleges that these violation occurred on July
31,
1994 at the Peabody Utility Mine near Marion,
Illinois.
DUPLICITOUS/FRIVOLOUS DETERMINATION
Section 103.124(a)
of the Board’s procedural rules, which
implements Section 31(b)
of the Environmental Protection Act
(415
ILCS 5/31(b)), provides:
If a complaint~is filed by a person other than the
Agency, the Clerk shall also send a copy to the Agency; the
Chairman shall place the matter on the Board agenda for
Board determination whether the complaint is duplicitous or
frivolous.
If the Board rules that the complaint is
duplicitous or frivolous,
it shall enter an order setting
forth its reasons for so ruling and shall notify the parties
of its decision.
If the Board rules that the complaint is
not duplicitous or frivolous, this does not preclude the
filing of motions regarding the insufficiency of the
pleadings.
35
Ill. Adm. Code 103.124.
An action before the Board is duplicitous if the matter is
identical or substantially similar to one brought in another
forum.
(Brandle v. Ropp, PCB 85—68,
64 PCB 263
(1985).)
An
action before the Board is frivolous if it fails to state a cause
of action upon which relief can be granted by the Board.
(Citizens for a Better Environment v. Reynolds Metals Co., PCB
73—173,
8 PCB 46973).)
AMLRC has made no filing addressing the
2
Section 406.107 states:
In addition to the other requirements of this Chapter,
no mine discharge effluent shall contain settleable
solids, floating debris, visible oil, grease, scum or
sludge solids.
Color,
odor and turbidity shall be
reduced to below obvious levels.
3
duplicitous/frivolous issues.
Accordingly, there is no evidence
before the Board to indicate this matter is identical or
substantially similar to any matter brought in another forum, nor
is there any evidence that the Board cannot grant the relief
requested.
Although Boyd Bros.’ complaint involves the same
violation as alleged in the People’s complaint, the complaint is
not “duplicitous” since the parties are not identical in the two
actions.
At this time,
therefore, the Board finds that, pursuant
to Section 103.124(á), the complaint is neither duplicitous nor
frivolous.
Accordingly, this matter shall proceed to hearing.
The hearing must be scheduled and completed in a timely
manner, consistent with Board practices.
The Board will assign a
hearing officer to conduct hearings consistent with this order
and the Clerk of the Board shall promptly issue appropriate
directions to the assigned hearing officer consistent with this
order.
The assigned 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,
a statement regarding credibility of witnesses and
all actual exhibits to the Board within five days of the hearing.
The hearing officer and the parties are encouraged to expedite
this proceeding as much as possible.
MOTION TO CONSOLIDATE
The motion to consolidate states that the enforcement
complaint against AMLRC and itself in PCB 94-275 is the result of
the same discharge causing the same alleged violations of the Act
and Board regulations.
Accordingly, Boyd Bros. argues that both
proceedings arise from the same alleged incident at the same site
and concern identical factual circumstances and violations.
Boyd
Bros.
requests the Board to consolidate these matters for
efficiency of the proceedings.
The Board has received
no
response to the motion to consolidate these matters from either
the State or ANLRC.
Section 103.141 of the Board’s procedural rules provides
that the Board may consolidate enforcement proceedings in the
interests of “convenient, expeditious, and complete determination
of claims.”
The Board finds that this case,
which is in the
nature of a cross—complaint,
and PCB 94—275 would be more
conveniently, expeditiously, and completely resolved if the two
cases are consolidated.
The Board grants the motion to
consolidate these matters.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
4
I, Dorothy M. Gunn,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Boarçl, hereby certify that the above order was adopted on the
/4~
day
of
2~e~/
,
1994,
by a vote of
7-~~)
/‘~~ ~
Dorothy N. ,,~unn,Clerk
Illinois P~LlutionControl Board