ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
July 11,
1991
INDIAN REFINING LIMITED
)
PARTNERSHIP,
)
Petitioner,
)
v.
)
PCB 91—110
)
(Permit Appeal)
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
)
PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
)
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD by
(N. Nardulli):
This matter is before the Board on petitioner Indian Refining
Limited Partnership’s filing of a petition for review challenging
the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency’s
(Agency)
denial of
petitioner’s renewal applications for operating permits.
Section 40(a) (1)
of the Environmental Protection Act
(Ill.
Rev.
Stat.
1989,
ch.
111 1/2,
par.
1040(a)(l))
provides that an
applicant may seek review of the Agency’s permit decision by filing
a petition for hearing with the Board within
35
days.
Section
105.102(a)(2)
of the Board’s
procedural
rules
governing permit
appeals provides that such a petition for hearing shall be filed
with the
Board
“within
35
days
of
the date
of mailing
of the
Agency’s final decision.”
(35 Ill.
Adm. Code 105.102(a) (2).)
Here,
petitioner states that “by letter dated may
16,
1991,
the Agency denied the Renewal Applications
...
.“
35 days from May
16,
1991 is June 20, 1991.1
Petitioner’s petition for hearing was
date-stamped by the Clerk on June 25,
1991.
Because the petition
for hearing is date-stamped after the due date “the time of mailing
shall
be
deemed
the
time
of
filing.”
(35
Ill.
Adm.
Code
101.102(d).)
Hence, the Board must look to petitioner’s proof of
service
to
determine the
date
of
filing.
(35
Ill.
Adm.
Code
101.143(a)(l).)
Petitioner’s certificate of service states only
that the petition was served on the Agency by certified mail on
June 24,
1991,
four days after June 20,
1991.
The only reference
1
Section 101.109 of the Board’s general procedural rules
provides
that
“c)omputation
of
any
period
of
time
prescribed by this Chapter or the Act shall begin with
the first calendar day following the day on which the
act, event, or development occurs and shall run until the
end of the last day, or next business day if the last day
is
a
Saturday,
Sunday
or
national
or
state
legal
holiday.”
(35 Ill. Adm. Code 101.109.)
124—93
2
to filing with the Board is in petitioner’s notice of filing which
states that the petition was filed with the Board on June 24,
1991.
Based upon the above, it appears that the petition for hearing
is untimely filed.
The Board directs the parties to address the
issue of timeliness of the filing of the instant petition by filing
simultaneous responses to this order to be received by the Board
no later than 4:30 p.m. on July 22, 1991.
In particular, the Board
directs the parties’ attention to the Board’s decision in Finks
&
Austman v.
IEPA, PCB 90—243
(February 7,
1991).
Although the Board questions the timeliness of the instant
filing and, hence whether the Board has jurisdiction, because the
Board has a decision deadline in this permit appeal,
this matter
will be set for hearing subject to the outcome of the timeliness
issue.
The Board
notes
that the
time period within
which
the
hearing officer must schedule the hearing has been adjusted to
accommodate the July 22,
1991 filings of the parties pursuant to
the above discussion.
Hearing must be scheduled within 18 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
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
124—94
3
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
120 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 making
a
decision,
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
establish a Scheduling Order pursuant to the requirements of this
Order, and to adhere to that Order until modified.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
I, Dorothy N.
Gunn,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board
hereby cer
fy that the above Order was adopted on the
/(t?7’day of
____________
,
1991 by a vote of
7c)
~
L~
orothy N. GUp~,Clerk”
Illinois P01Q)ition Control
Board
12 4—95