ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    January
    21,
    1988
    MCLEAN COUNTY DISPOSAL
    COMPANY, INC.,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    )
    PCB 87—133
    COUNTY OF MCLEAN,
    Respondent.
    CONCURRING OPINION
    (by J.
    Marlin):
    I agree that
    in this matter the legally correct decision
    is
    to conclude that site approval
    is granted by operation of
    law.
    However,
    I believe that additional comments are warranted.
    This proceeding highlights
    to an extent greater
    than most
    the frustrating situations which the current
    landfill siting law
    is visiting upon all those
    involved with the process.
    From the
    beginning,
    this law has been subject
    to numerous conflicting
    interpretations.
    The Courts have regularly held that the law is
    to be interpreted quite strictly,
    and the Legislature has amended
    it precisely and narrowly
    in response
    to perceived problems.
    The
    result has been a multi—year co—evolutionary struggle between
    various factions.
    Each faction strives
    to find a new technical
    maneuver or interpretation to get around
    the innovation
    established by the other
    faction
    in
    a prior proceeding.
    The
    process has degenerated
    to the point where procedural
    technicalities and artful
    interpretations are used by both
    landfill opponents and proponents with the result that this Board
    finds
    it increasingly difficult to reach
    the merits.
    The Board consequ2ntly finds itself unable
    to consider the
    merits
    of an increasingly large proportion of
    the landfills which
    reach
    it on appeal.
    The simple fact
    is that procedural and
    fundamental fairness issues need
    to
    be addressed before the
    merits.
    This often results
    in remands or dismissals.
    A
    dismissal or
    remand coming after the applicant and County have
    invested
    thousands of dollars and hundreds of hours
    in the
    process
    is guaranteed to
    increase the frustration level
    of the
    participants.
    In this case,
    the alternative to the majority
    finding was
    a remand
    ——
    which would still not reach the merits.
    Much
    of the problem stems from the holding that the
    landfill
    siting process at the local
    level
    is
    a quasi—judicial function.
    Local officials are legislators with
    little judicial experience
    and frequently
    run afoul
    of judicial fairness considerations,
    especially those prohibiting what
    they view as normal contact
    85—221

    with their constituents.
    The Board
    is prohibited from
    considering the evidence
    de novo and thus
    is unable
    to overlook
    or
    bypass procedural issues
    and go directly to the merits.
    If the Board had accepted the minority position
    in this
    matter regarding the County Board’s right
    to have rules which
    in
    effect “re—start the clock after an application
    is filed”
    a
    number
    of complications would occur.
    The filing triggers
    a
    number of steps
    in the landfill law.
    Using McLean County’s
    process, would open
    a variety of new avenues
    for technical
    appeals of decisions.
    For example,
    in this case the applicant
    did not issue
    notice of
    the “new filing date”
    and submitted only
    a few pages of additional information instead of an entirely new
    and complete application.
    Both of
    these points could have been
    contested in an appeal brought by an opponent who did not like
    a
    county decision favoring the landfill.
    There
    are numerous other
    complications inherent
    in this process which could lead
    to
    further appeals.
    Another potential problem involves how
    a
    determination
    of incompleteness will mesh with the recently
    passed State law providing that
    a landfill at
    a rejected site may
    not have
    a second application submitted for at least two years.
    The County does not need full—blown merit hearings to reach
    jurisdictional and completeness issues.
    The County could easily
    and properly handle an inadequate
    information situation by
    holding
    a hearing on completeness, jurisdiction,
    and fairness and
    then deciding by
    a vote
    of
    the entire County Board whether
    or not
    to reject
    the application.
    There
    is no need
    to go through an
    entire merit hearing process to conclude that
    an application will
    be rejected.
    However,
    the current law does require
    a hearing and
    a vote by the full County Board.
    I do not necessarily agree with everything said on page
    eight of the majority opinion regarding the extent to which
    a
    county can establish rules •governing
    the siting process.
    The
    counties obviously need the ability to control
    a hearing so that
    the process
    is
    fair,
    understandable,
    and orderly.
    However,
    it
    is
    equally obvious that the State will
    be
    ill served by 102
    different complex county ordinances specifying
    in detail what
    each County Board considers to be an adequate application and
    procedure.
    Unfortunately, the landfill siting law gives limited
    guidance
    in this area and authorizes no entity to establish firm
    rules
    up front.
    The rules unfortunately are being established
    over time on appeal.
    Given this situation,
    and the strict
    interpretations
    of reviewing courts, counties would
    be well
    advised
    to keep their
    rules as close as possible to the language
    of the Act.
    I do not agree with the majority statement on page nine
    regarding
    the findings of the County’s technical adviser.
    At
    best,
    the documents provided
    to the Board,
    including
    the
    stipulation are unclear
    as
    to whether
    she believes
    a leachate
    collection system is necessary (Staff Report)
    or should be
    85—222

    -J
    included only if new Board
    regulations require
    it
    (Stipulation).
    Fortunately the Illinois Environmental Protection
    Agency will be able
    to consider this matter
    in detail during the
    permitting process.
    I believe that the Board should have made
    a firm holding
    that tape recordings and transcripts
    of tape recordings are not
    to be considered
    an acceptable record for County Board members
    or
    this Board
    to review.
    In the City of Columbia,
    the Board
    allowed
    an appeal
    to proceed where the County Board had reviewed
    a
    written transcript of
    a
    tape recording
    of the hearing.
    The Board
    did caution, however,
    that this process had several undesirable
    features.
    In the instant proceeding,
    the County Board had only a
    pile
    of tapes
    and was not ever provided with
    a written
    transcript.
    It
    is difficult to conclude that anyone could
    adequately review sixteen days of hearings by listening to the
    tapes even
    if
    they had the required amount of time.
    Among other
    things, with
    a tape it
    is extemely difficult
    if not impossible
    for someone to scan
    a record for important points
    or break into
    a
    discussion
    of
    a particular point and then page back to see who
    is
    speaking without
    listening to an entire sequence.
    One cannot be
    sure who
    the speaker
    is
    at any given
    point
    ——
    speakers on
    a tape
    are probably not identified individually every time they open
    their mouths as
    they are
    in a transcript.
    Additionally
    it
    would
    be quite difficult
    to check
    a point after hearing
    it
    once.
    winding tapes and resetting counters
    is much more complicated
    than going back
    to
    a given page.
    It would be extremely difficult
    to make any sense out of
    a pile of tapes covering sixteen
    hearings unless there was an incredibly detailed
    index.
    In
    addition,
    it would be difficult for members
    to share
    a
    tape
    recorder and tapes as they can
    a multi—volume transcript.
    The
    official typed transcript provided
    to this Board
    (but not the
    County Board)
    is about
    a foot thick. Tapes simply cannot
    substitute
    for
    a paper transcript when one is trying to reach
    a
    reasoned decision based on the complex testimony of competing
    witnesses.
    Also,
    it
    is important to note that
    in Ash v. Iroquois County
    Board,
    PCB 87—29,
    (July 16,
    1987),
    the Board quoted the following
    passage which
    is taken from Homefinders,
    Inc.
    v. City of
    Evanston,
    65
    Eli.
    2d 115,
    (1976):
    The
    requirements
    of
    due
    process
    are
    met
    if
    the
    decision—making
    board
    considers
    the
    evidence
    contained
    in
    the
    report
    of
    proceedings
    before
    the
    hearing
    officer
    and
    bases
    its determinations thereon...We are
    in
    accord
    with
    the
    majority
    view
    and
    conclude
    that
    the
    requirements
    of
    procedural
    due
    process would
    be met
    under
    the Evanston Fair
    Housing
    Ordinance
    if
    those
    members
    who
    were
    not personnally present
    at the hearings based
    their
    determination
    of
    penalties
    on
    the
    85—223

    evidence contained
    in the transcript
    of
    such
    proceeding.
    65
    Ill.
    2d
    115
    at
    128—129.
    (emphasis added).
    Ash,
    slip.
    op.
    at
    10
    In other words, when decision—makers do not attend hearings, due
    process requires that they consider the written transcript of
    those hearings before rendering
    a decision.
    Therefore,
    it could
    be argued
    that the decision by the McLean County Board was
    fundamentally unfair,
    since
    the County Board members who did not
    attend the hearings could only contemplate
    a pile of
    tapes
    ——
    not
    transcripts.
    For these reasons,
    I concur.
    I, DorothyM.
    Gunn, Clerk
    of
    the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board,
    hereby certify~~~at
    the abov~e~
    Concurring Opinion was
    submitted on the
    ~
    day of
    ______________,
    1988.
    Dorothy M.
    Q’unn, Clerk
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    onn
    U.
    Marlin
    85—224

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