ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
February 6, 1986
OLIN CORPORATION,
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 84—77
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
)
PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD (by B. Forcade):
On December 5, 1985, the Illinois Environmental Protection
Agency (“Agency”) and Olin Corporation (“Olin”) filed a
“Stipulation of Fact and Recommended Settlement”. That document
recites certain factual and procedural matters and prays “that
this Board adopt and accept the foregoing Stipulation and
Settlement as written and order the Agency to act in accordance
with the settlement terms contained herein.” The Board hereby
rejects the settlement.
The Board has previously rejected settlement agreements in
permit appeals. The rationale and history was recently
articulated in Electric Energy v. IEPA, PCB 85—14 (June 13,
1985):
The Board has had difficulty in dealing with
settlements in permit appeal cases which
involve Agency issuance of negotiated permits
containing conditions for which no record
exists “setting out sufficient technical facts
and legal assertions to allow the Board to
exercise its independent judgment and to make
proper findings of fact and conclusions of
law.” Caterpillar Tractor Co. v. IEPA, PCB 79—
180, Interim Order, June 2, 1983, p. 1—2. The
Board has not issued Orders incorporating the
terms of such stipulations as the Board does in
enforcement cases. The Board has issued Orders
dismissing the appeal and allowing ratification
of a “voidable permit”; e.g., Caterpillar,
supra, Final Order, June 14, 1982; an Order
simply dismissing~the appeal, Village of Sauget
v. IEPA, PCB 79—87, July 19, 1984; and an Order
remanding the permit to the Agency, Caterpillar
Tractor Co. v. IEPA, PCB 83—58, March 7, 1985.
—2—
Additionally, the Board has legal concerns with disposing of
permit appeals by settlement. In many cases, including the
instant case, the parties request that the Board “order” the
Agency to issue a new permit containing agreed conditions and
terms. In addition to the problems associated with having an
inadequate factual basis for “issuing” a permit, this approach
seems to violate the principles of Landfill, Inc. v. PCB et al.,
387 N.E.2d 258, 262 (Ill. S. Ct. 1978).
The Issue for Board resolution in a permit appeal is a
matter of well—settled state law. In IEPA v. PCB and Album,
Inc., 455 N.E.2d 188 (1st Dist., 1983), the court stated:
“
The sole question before the Board in a
review of the Agency’s denial of a permit is
whether the petitioner can prove that its
permit application as submitted to the Agency
establishes that the facility will not cause a
violation of the Act. (Ill.Rev.Stat. 1979, ch
111—1/2, par. 1040.) If the Agency has granted
the permit with conditions to which the
petitioner objects, the petitioner must prove
that the conditions are not necessary to
accomplish the purposes of the Act and
therefore were imposed unreasonably. The Board
may not be persuaded by new material not before
the Agency that the permit should be granted.
(Soil Enrichment Materials Corp. v.
Environmental Protection Agency (1972), 5
I11.P.C.B.Op. 715.)
When reviewing the
Agency’s denial of a permit or imposition of
any conditions, “the decision of the Board
shall be based exclusively on the record before
the Agency including the record of the hearing,
if any
~
Ill.Rev.Stat. 1979, ch. 111—1/2,
par. 1040; Peabody Coal Co. v. Environmental
Protection Agency (1979), 35 Ill.P.C.B.Op.
380.” Id. at 194.
The parties, by their proposed settlement, request that the
Board resolve the conflict by inappropriately applying the law.
As previously noted, parties are at liberty to settle conflicts
by the petitioner voluntarily dismissing the permit appeal and
the Agency issuing the agreed permit.
The Board notes that the hearing record indicates the
parties’ intention to proceed in the following manner:
So, we ask that the Board take that
——
make
note of that, and the way that the Agency and
Olin intend to proceed, as I previously stated,
is that the Agency will issue a permit to Olin,
effective upon dismissal of the appeal, and
that if the conditions of that permit are
—3—
acceptable to Olin in all respects, they will
then so notify the hearing officer and the
Board, and ask that the appeal be dismissed.
(R. 18—19)
As no motion to dismiss has been filed, the Board must order
this matter expeditiously to hearing on the merits. Hearing must
be scheduled within 14 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, written
schedule for submission of briefs if any 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.
The hearing officer may extend this schedule only on a
waiver of the decision deadline by the petitioner and only for
the 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
75 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 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 decisionmaking, absent a waiver, the Board will grant
extensions or modifications only in unusual circumstances. Any
such motion must set forth an a1te~nativeschedule for notice,
hearing, and final submissions, as well as the deadline for
decision, including response time to such a motion. However, no
—4—
such motion shall negate the obligation of the hearing officer to
set a date pursuant to this Order.
IT IS SO ORDERED
Board Member J. Anderson concurred.
I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board hereby certify that the above Order was adopted on
the
______
day of _______________________, 1986, by a vote
of -7-0
.
//LJ
~
Dorothy M. G nn, Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board