ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
October 10, 1985
ELLINOIS POWER COMPANY
(¼ood River Power Plant)
)
500 South 27th Street
Decatur, Illinois 62525
)
Petitioner,
)
v.
)
PCB
~5—E~4
)
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
)
PROTECT:EON AGENCY,
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD (by LID. Dumelle):
This matter comes before the Board upon an October 3, 1985,
motion for reconsideration filed on behalf of the Illinois Power
Company (IPC) to which the Illinois Environmental Protection
Agency (Agency) responded on October
9,
1985. IPC filed a motion
for leave to reply and a reply on October 10, 1985. The motion
for leave is hereby granted. IPC requests that the Board
reconsider its September 20, 1985 Order denying IPC’s September
6, 1985, motion for summary judgment. In that Order the Board
based its decision on the hearing requirement for permit appeal;
pursuant to Section 40(a)(1) of the Environmental Protection Ac;~.
(Act). IPC characterizes that basis as a “non sequitur”.
However, though the motion was not particularly clear regardintj
the relief requested, the Board construed that motion as
requesting the Board to order the Agency to issue the permit
without the contested conditions. If so, holding a hearing woH
become a useless act, contrary to the legislative intent
expressed in mandating
such
a hearing.
The motion for reconsideration does not clarify the re1i~f
requested. The Board could construe the motion as requesting th~
Board to simply remand the proceeding to the Agency to issue th~
permit in whatever form it deems appropriate using proper
procedures. However, that course of action appears to be
precluded because the Agency then would have been given “the
identical options to consider as permit conditions which
petitioner originally contested as objectionable,” and,
therefore, the Board would have failed to adjudicate the
controversy. Illinois Power Co. v. IPCB, 426 N.E.2d 1258, 1261
(1981).
At the heart of IPC’s request for summary judgment is its
concern that the Agency, through its alleged disregard of state
and federal law, has deprived IPC of the ability to adequately
66-27
—2—
prepare for hearing by reason of the Agency’s failure to respond
to IPC’s written comments during the permit review proceeding
before the Agency or otherwise to explain its rationale for the
contested conditions when the permit was issued. IPC further
argues that unless the Board decides those issues now, the Board
will be contributing to the due process violations. However, IPC
should be able to determine the Agency’s position on the
substance of the contested conditions through the discovery and
prehearing process, thereby avoiding any prejudice at hearing.
In its reply IPC indicates that this procedure may somehow shift
the burden of proof to it. The Board does not understand this
argument. The burden of proof cannot be altered by the discovery
process. Thus, the Board does not believe that the issues raised
by IPC need be decided at this time and since those issues
present questions of both law and fact, they are best decided
after hearing.
The Board notes that a decision is due in this matter on
October 16, 1985, and that hearing has not been scheduled due to
an administrative oversight. Obviously, hearing cannot be
properly held in a timely manner, and as of that date IPC will be
entitled to an appellate court order pursuant to Sections
40(a)(3) and 41(d) of the Act. The Board regrets that this has
occurred. However, the Board will make every effort to reach a
final determination in this matter as expeditiously as possible.
The Board hereby affirms its September 20, 1985 Order.
IT
IS SO ORDERED.
I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certifi th the above Order was adopted on
the /,~Z~dayof ~
,
1985 by a vote of 7°
orothy M. Gunn, Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board
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