ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
December
3,
1987
IN THE MATTER OF:
PUBLIC AIRPORT NOISE REGULATIONS
)
R 77-4
35
ILL. ADM., CODE PART
904
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by J.
Marlin):
The public comment period concerning
these proposed rules
adopted April 10,
1986 had initially been closed by the Board
as
of December
15,
1986.
It was, however, reopened by the Board
for
further argument concerning Bryski,
et al.~ v.
City of Chicago,
et
al.,
148 Ill. App.
3d
556,
499 N.E.
2d 162
(2d Dist.
1986),
a
decision by the Illinois Appellate Court which relates to the
Board’s authority under federal
and
state law to regulate airport
noise.
The last argument concerning this case was ordered
to be
filed
by April
22,
1987,
and the comment period was again closed.
(See RES 87—1,
January 26,
1987,
and Orders
of February 19 and
April
16,
1987.)
On November
2,
1987,
the Suburban O’Hare Commission
(SOC)
filed
a “motion to defer
rulemakingu which essentially requests
that the Board stay these proceeding
until entry of a final
decision
in
a case pending
in the United States Court of appeals
for the Seventh Circuit, Lawrence
~.
Bieneman,
et
al.
v.
City of
chicago, et al,
No. 87—2077.
On November
3,
1987 SOC
supplemented the motion by filing copies of the District Courts
decision
in Bieneman,
as well
as certain appellate briefs filed
in the case.
There has been only one response to this motion,
that filed
by the Air Traffic Association of America
(ATA)
on
November
16,
1987.
ATA alternatively requests that the motion be
dismissed
or denied.
In support of
its motion, SOC recites that the Illinois
Appellate Courts decision in Bryski relied,
in large part,
on the
decision
in Luedtke
v.
County of Milwaukee,
521 F.2d 387 (7th
Cir.
1975), decided by the United States Court of Appeals
for the
Seventh Circuit, which
the Bryski court felt bound to follow.
SOC asserts that the Bieneman case concerns many of the same
issues which were before the courts
in both Bryski and Luedtke.
The United States District Court,
in the Bieneman case,
held
that
it was bound
by the Luedtke decision.
In the Bienemari
appeal,
Plaintiff—Appellant Bieneman has requested that the
Seventh Circuit reverse
the decision
in Luedtke.
SOC argues
that,
should the Bieneinan case result
in
a reversal
or
abandonment of the Luedtke decision, the Bryski decision would
no
84—71
—2—
longer warrant
the consideration
of any additional action by the
Illinois Pollution Control Board.
SOC did not provide an estimated decision date, noting only
that the Bieneman appeal has been fully briefed,
and that it
is
anticipated that
a date
for oral argument will be set shortly.
In response, ATA asserts
that:
“There
is
no
reasonably
predictable
basis
to
surmise
that
the
Bryski
decision
could
be
changed
as
the
Motion
tries
to
suggest.
The
Board’s
deliberations
should
go
forward
in
the
normal
course under
the authority of Bryski, and
of
other
judicial
authorities
on
federal
preemption
of the aviation field.
The SOC Motion refers only
to Luedtke
v.
County
of Milwaukee,
521 F.2d 387
(7th Cir.
1975).
It
ignores
that
the
decision
in
Bryski
is
also
based
on
prior
Illinois decisions
in County
of
Cook
v.
Priester,
22
Ill.App.3d
964
(1st
Dist.
1974)
and
Village
of
Bensenville
v.
City
of
Chicago,
16
Ill.Apo.3d
733
(1st
Dist.).
Whatever might
flow
from some
fut~.ir~ereading
of
Luedtke,
the determination of federal preemption
in
Bryski
has
other
foundation
in
the
law
of
Illinois.
In view of the length of time the proceeding has
been
pending
and
its
posture
in
respect
of
statutory
requirements
governing
agency
rulemaking,
all
considerations
of
sound
and
efficient
agency
administration
require
that
SOC’s
request
for
an
indeterminate delay of
the
Board’s
processes
for
the
most
speculative
of
reasons be denied.
The Board
is persuaded
by ATA’s reasoning.
Even assuming
that the result of the Bieneman case
——
after any appeal
to the
U.S. Supreme Court
——
is
reversal
of the Luedkte decision,
the
Illinois court’s rulings
in Bryski remain binding on
the Board
pursuant
to the principles of stare decisis unless and until they
are modified
in
a subsequent
case.
Thus,
the Board would
be
deferring action for two indeterminate
time periods:
the period
during which the federal courts
take action
in Bieneman, and the
period during which some unknown case raising Luedtke
issues
makes
its way through
the Illinois Appellate and Supreme Court.
To defer
action
in this docket
for what could well
be several
years would
be unfair
to the many participants
in this action,
and
an unsound
use of the Board’s discretion.
In the event
that
84--72
—3—
any legal or other developments occur subseqeunt to
the Board’s
actions
in this docket, any person is free to file
a new petition
for rulemaking before
the Board pursuant
to Section
27 of the
Environmental Protection Act for consideration of such
developments.
The motion to defer
rulemaking
is denied.
The Board will
continue deliberations
in this matter.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
J.
T. Meyer abstained.
I, Dorothy M. Gunn,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certif~that the above Order was adopted on
the
31’-~-(
day of
Jjz_.~~_~’
,
1987, by a vote of
~-Q
Illi
Pollution Control Board
84—73