ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
August 14, 1986
DUPAGE PUBLICATIONS COMPANY,
)
)
Petitioner,
)
v.
)
PCB 85—44
85—70
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
)
85—130
PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
Consolidated
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD (by B. Forcade):
This matter comes before the Board on a June 16, 1986,
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (“Agency”) Motion for
Reconsideration of a May 9, 1986, Board Opinion and Order.
Respondent DuPage Publications Company (“DuPage”) filed a
response on August 13, 1986. The Board’s Opinion and Order
strikes contested conditions for five heatset web offset printing
presses and reverses the denial of an operating permit for a
sixth press. Reconsideration is hereby granted and the Board’s
May 9, 1986, Opinion and Order is affirmed.
The Agency’s first argument on reconsideration is that the
Board’s finding that DuPage is not subject to the Board’s New
Source Review (~NSR”) rules is contrary to the plain and
unambiguous language of those rules and is erroneous. The Agency
cites Continental Grain v. Illinois Pollution Control Board, 131
Ill. App. 3d 838, 475 N.E.2d 1362 (1985), and Dean Foods v.
Illinois Pollution Control Board, et al., 142 Ill. App. 3d 322,
492 N.E.2d 1344 (1986). The Board addressed this argument in its
May 9, 1986, Opinion. The Board further maintains that
Continental Grain and Dean Foods do not provide an absolute bar
to Board interpretation of its rules. Only where administrative
rules are unambiguous on their face must they be construed as
written. Such is not the case with the rules at issue. The
courts in Modine Manufacturing Company v. Illinois Pollution
Control Board, 40 Ill. App. 3d 498, 351 N.E.2d 875 (1976) and
Hoffman V. Wilkins, 132 Ill. App. 2d 810, 270 N.E.2d 594 (1971)
have held that an agency ~has the power in any event to construe
its own rules to avoid absurd or unfair results.N In the instant
case, ther’e is ambiguity in the rules in that, by the Agency’s
interpretation, they could apply to facilities in an over broad
or unreasonable fashion, unrelated to ozone control.
The primary purpose of construction of regulations is to
determine the intent of the administrative body as revealed by
the language used. City of East St. Louis v. Union Electric
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Company, 37 Ill.
2c3
537, 542, 229 N.E.2d 522, 524 (1967).
However, when a word or phrase is used in a provision and its
meaning becomes an issue in a legal proceeding, the strict
meaning of the term is not as important as the sense in which it
was used by the lawmaking body, and a regulation must receive a
sensible construction, even though the construction qualifies the
universality of its language. 37 Ill. 2d 537, 542, 229 N.E.2d
522, 525 (1967). The Supreme Court, in the Union Electric case,
interpreted an ordinance of the City of East St. Louis so as to
avoid an absurd and unjust result, not withstanding the strict
literal meaning of the words used in the ordinance. Such an
approach is appropriate in construing the regulation at issue in
the instant proceeding.
The Board rule at issue states that “a major stationary
emission source that is major for organic material shall be
considered major for ozone.” In the opinion supporting the final
adoption of this rule, the Board discussed the appropriate NSR
emissions trigger for the criteria pollutant ozone:
“Finally, in either case if the non—attainment
designated pollutant is ozone, the source’s
potential to emit will be based on organic
material emissions 50 (sic) CFR 5l.l8(j)(l)
(v)(b)) (sic). It should be noted that the
NSR is applied only to project’s potential to
emit the non—attainment designated pollutant.”
R8l—l6, Docket B, In Re:
Major Source
Construction and Modification, Part 203 of
Chapter 2: Air Pollution, 53 P.C.B. 45 at 50
(July 14, 1983).
The federal regulations cited by the Board as the basis for NSR
applicability for the control of ozone provide as follows:
“Any net emissions increase that is considered
significant for volatile organic compounds
shall be considered significant for ozone.”
40 CFR 5l.18(j)(l)(v)(b) (emphasis added)
The reference to the CFR is the only authority or source
cited for the Board’s adopted regulatory language. A review of
the record in R8l—16 indicates that the terms “volatile organic
material” and “organic material” were used interchangeably by
some participants and that different definitional terms were
discussed (R8l—l6, R. at 428—39 and 724—25). The Board does not
dispute the Agency’s argument on reconsideration that the Agency
advocated the term “organic material,” rather than “volatile
organic material.” However, there is no indication in the
Board’s supporting opinion that the Agency’s position was
followed. The only citation is the CFR citation which uses the
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term “volatile.” The Board’s opinion specifically states that
“the NSR is applied only to project’s potential to emit the non—
attainment designated pollutant.” In the context of ozone, the
CFR prescribes that the designated pollutant is volatile organic
compounds.
At 40 CFR 5l.l8(j)(l)(x), the definition of “significant” is
as follows:
“(x) ‘Significant’ means, in reference to a
net emissions increase or the potential of a
source to emit any of the following
pollutants, a rate of emissions that would
equal or exceed any of the following rates:
Pollutant and Emissions Rate
Carbon monoxide: 100 tons per year (tpy)
Nitrogen oxides: 40 tpy
Sulfur dioxide: 40 tpy
Particulate matter: 25 tpy
Ozone: 40 tpy of volatile organic compounds
Lead: 0.6 tpy”
While the Board used the term “organic material,” it did not
change the quantity threshold of 40 tons per year. Under the
Agency’s interpretation, a facility would come under NSR if it
was planning a modification that would emit 20 tons of isopropyl
alcohol, a reactive VOM, and 20 tons of ink solvents, while a
second facility that would emit 39 tons of isopropyl alcohol
would not. This would be an unreasonable application where the
facility emitting substantially more VOM would not come under
NSR.
In reviewing the federal regulations relevant to ozone
control, one finds both the terms “organic compounds” and
“volatile organic compounds” used in various locations (40 CFR
51, App. B. 4.0—4.6). No definitions for these terms are found
that specifically apply to NSR. Appendix B of Part 51
—
“Examples of Emission Limitations Attainable With Reasonably
Available Technology” provides a definition of “volatile organic
compounds” which is generally consistent with the Board’s
definition
—
a compound which contains carbon and hydrogen which
has a specified vapor pressure under certain conditions. No
definition of “organic compound” is provided. The ambiguity is
apparent both in the Board rule and opinion and in the federal
regulations.
As noted in the Board’s May 9, 1986, Opinion in the instant
proceeding, the general strategy in the area of ozone has been
“to control volatile organic material (VOM), which is generally
presumed to be photochemically reactive, i.e., an ozone
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precursor. Thus, VOM, rather than non—volatile organic material
is controlled because it is more likely to be emitted to the
atmosphere and, therefore, available for photochemical
reactivity. Certain VOM’s that are of negligible photochemical
reactivity are specifically excluded.” This approach is
consistent with relevant federal regulations. 40 CFR 51 App. B
4.6 Organic Solvents provides that: “organic solvents which have
been shown to be virtually unreactive in the formation of
ozone...also may be considered for exemption.” The Board,
relying on this rationale, has exempted certain solvents from
regulation as VOM’s in the R80—5, RACT II and R82—14, RACT III
proceedings. The important distinction to be made in the instant
controversy is that VOM’s are presumed to be photochemically
reactive. The same presumption does not apply to organic
material. Such an interpretation would clearly be overbroad and
unreasonable where the “common, and sole, focus of these various
programs is the control of ozone precursors emitted to the
atmosphere.” PCB 85—44, 85—70 and 85—130, DuPage Publications
Co. v. Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, Opinion of the
Board at p. 4 (May 9, 1986). In R8l—l6(B), the Agency, by public
comment No. 17, suggested that under “Organic Material”, the
Board may wish to consider exempting from the definition of
organic material the solvents methylene chloride or 1,1,1—
trichloroethane as was done in the recent RACT rulemaking” (R80—
5, RACT II). The Board did not exempt these solvents because it
did not intend that a presumption of photochemical reactivity
apply to organic material as it does with volatile organic
material.
The Agency’s second argument is that in amending the Part
203 rules by construction, the Board has erroneously allowed
DuPage to circumvent the Board’s rulemaking procedures and
created inconsistency in its approach to ozone control. The
Agency contends that by modifying the NSR rules, by construction
in the absence of a formal rulemaking, the Board has created an
administrative and regulatory morass. The Board disagrees. The
implication of the Agency’s argument is that the Board cannot
reasonably construe its own rules in the context of an
adjudicatory case. This position is clearly untenable under the
Environmental Protection Act (“Act”) which provides that the
Board shall promulgate regulations and interpret them in the
context of permit appeal, variance and enforcement cases while
the Agency monitors, investigates, issues permits and brings
enforcement actions. Landfill, Inc. v. Pollution Control Board
et al., 387 N.E.2d 258, 262—263 (1978). It is through
interpretation in an adjudicatory setting that some degree of
consistency can be achieved. As the Agency points out, it may
not be feasible to achieve total consistency in terminology
between RACT and NSR. The RACT and NSR programs apply to
different classes of facilities (existing versus new or modified)
and the degree of control prescribed is different (Lowest
Achievable Emission Rate
—
LAER versus Reasonably Available
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Control Technology
—
RACT). However, the basic purpose and focus
of these two programs should not be incompatible or different in
kind. The purpose is the same; the control of ozone through the
control of ozone precursors. While LAER is certainly intended to
be more stringent than RACT, it should be related to the control
of photochemically reactive volatile emissions.
The Agency, in its motion for reconsideration, contends that
the Board erred in relying on the fact that the printing ink oils
do not fall within the Board’s definitions of “volatile organic
materials” and “photochemically reactive material.” The Agency
states that:
“The formal record before the Board in this
case and facts of which the Board should take
official notice, overwhelmingly demonstrate
that the organic emissions from DuPage’s
offset presses do fall within the scope of
Part 203 regardless of the fact that they are
neither “volatile organic materials” nor
“photochemically reactive” as those terms are
defined” (emphasis added).
(Respondents’
Motion for Reconsideration, p. 11)
This argument appears to be based on the conclusion that the ink
solvents in question are ozone precursors and should, therefore,
be regulated. This conclusion is not supported by the Agency’s
record of decision regarding the DuPage permits, the stipulation
of facts and exhibits. The Agency urges the Board to rely on the
Carter Report and a United States Environmental Protection Agency
Administrative Order, which the Agency admits, came to its
attention subsequent to the permit decision. Under Illinois
Environmental Protection Agency v. Pollution Control Board and
Album, 455 N.E.2d 188 (1983), the pertinent case on the scope of
an air permit appeal, the “decision of the Pollution Control
Board must be based exclusively on the record before the Agency
including the record of the hearing, if any.” Id. at 194.
Consequently, the “factual” support for the Agency’s conclusion
cannot be considered by this Board in this proceeding.
The Agency further argues that the terms “photochemically
reactive materials” and “volatile organic material” are
“regulatory definitions” and are “adopted solely for purposes of
implementing a particular rule or rules” (Respondents’ Motion for
Reconsideration, p. 12). The Agency argues that, therefore,
these terms have no meaning beyond the original rulemaking
context. Because the terms “volatile organic material” and
“photochemically reactive material” were not adopted in the NSR
regulatory proceeding, they are irrelevant to this proceeding.
The implication of this argument is that the interpretation of
regulatory language is solely limited to the meaning and context
of its original adoption. This approach is too formalistic and
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unworkable especially in light of the almost continuous process
of amendment that occurs in the Board’s air regulations. Of
course, all definitions in the Board’s regulations are
“regulatory,” and their primary interpretation should be based on
their supporting opinions. However, this approach to regulatory
construction ignores the complex interrelationship of the rules
as they are amended in various regulatory proceedings. As an
example, the Agency in this proceeding argues that the Board
should utilize the “regulatory definition” of “organic material”
in the context of NSR. However, the term “organic material” was
adopted not in the R8l—l6(B) NSR rulemaking, but in the R80—5,
RACT II rulemaking. If one were to follow the Agency’s
reasoning, “organic material” would have no applicability outside
the rules adopted in RACT II. Clearly, the NSR rules were
drafted to overlay the existing regulatory scheme and to be
consistent with it.
The Board’s air regulations are intended to be a cohesive
set of regulations that are internally consistent. While
sections of the regulations are adopted in different proceedings,
they often must be interpreted as a whole rather than in a
segmented fashion. This is especially true in the “definitions”
section of the regulations where the meaning of the terms used
throughout a Part are established. Each new amendment is not
isolated from the regulations it amends but should be interpreted
in light of what already exists. Inevitably, ambiguity does
exist in the Board’s regulations but through reasoned
interpretation in an adjudicatory context, some ambiguity can be
eliminated. As the Board stated in its May 9, 1986, Opinion in
this matter, the Board has attempted to provide some consistency
between the RACT regulation and the NSR regulations. “While
these programs do entail different regulatory approaches, they
both utilize the same definitional terms and address the same
problem
—
achieving the NAAQS for ozone, in non—attainment areas”
DuPage Publications v. Illinois Environmental Protection Agency,
PCB 85—44, 85—70 and 85—130, Opinion at page 6 (May 9, 1986).
The Agency makes a number of comments regarding the
propriety and relevance of considering the pending regulatory
proceedings in R82—l4, RACT—Ill, and R85—20, New Source Review in
the context of this proceeding. The Agency argues that it was
inappropriate for the Board to decide, in the instant proceeding,
an issue which is still unresolved in the RACT—Ill proceeding,
i.e., the photochemical reactivity of heatset web offset ink
oils. However, at the same time, the Agency urges the Board to
take official notice of a specific technical report from the
record in that proceeding. The Agency also states that the
Board’s error in this case will be compounded if the Board
concludes in the RACT—Ill rulemaking that heatset web offset ink
oils do not lead to the formation of ozone. The Agency
apparently wants to “have its cake and eat it too” by relying on
selected pieces of the RACT III record, so long as the Board
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comes to the “correct” conclusion. This inconsistent argument
suggests that the Agency may not be as concerned with procedural
improprieties as with the substance of the Board’s decision.
The Agency argues that their proposed amendments in R85—20
which would change the applicability of Part 203 to “volatile
organic emissions” rather than “organic emissions” is not a tacit
acknowledgment that sources like DuPage should not be subject to
NSR because “neither the Agency nor the USEPA have ever concluded
that emissions from heatset web offset printing ink oils do not
lead to the formation of ozone.” Once again, the Agency fails to
recognize that it is the appropriate role of the Board and not
the Agency to promulgate and interpret regulatory language.
The Agency argues that the Board inappropriately took
administrative notice of an exhibit presented in the R85—20
regulatory proceeding, while refusing to take administrative
notice of the Carter Report. The Agency asserts that the Board
has been inconsistent in its application of official notice and
unequally treats litigants. The “exhibit” which the Board took
official notice of in R85—20 is an Agency regulatory proposal;
hardly a document likely to be subject of much factual dispute.
The Board believes that it is justified in distinguishing between
refusing to take official notice of a technical report on an
issue of disputed fact which is an exhibit in a pending
regulatory proceeding and taking official notice of a proposal
for regulatory language made by the Agency. The Board cannot
take official notice of the facts contained in a technical report
which are not part of the permit record. However, it is
undisputed that the Agency has filed a regulatory proposal with
the Board in R85—20. The only use the Board has made of this
“fact” is recognization that the Agency has proposed to change
“organic material” to “volatile organic material” in the
pertinent regulation at issue in this proceeding
It would be inappropriate for the Board to take official
notice of a technical document not before the Agency at the time
the permit decision was rendered. A permit appeal must be based
on the Agency record. However, the legal validity of an
underlying rule upon which the permit appeal is based can be
challenged in the context of the permit appeal. Consequently, it
is appropriate to go beyond the Agency factual record to construe
the legal import of a regulation. That is a question of law,
rather than a question of fact.
Based on the record before the Agency and a review of the
regulatory record of the underlying rules at issue in this
proceeding, the Board affirms its decision of May 9, 1986.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
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Chairman J.D. Dummelle and Board Member R. Flemal dissented.
I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certi~,ythat the above Order was adopted on
the /~/~2day of
____________,
1986, by a vote of
~
~
~2.
~
Dorothy M. G~f~n,Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board
72-29