ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL
BO.kR!)
August
15, 1985
VILLAGE
OF GILBERTS,
)
)
Petitioner,
)
)
v.
)
PCB 85-96
)
FIOLIDAY PARK CORPORATION and
)
LLINOIS
ENVIRONMENTAL
)
NOTECT ION
AGENCY,
)
Respondents.
)
ORDER
OF THE BOARD (by J. Anderson):
This petition, filed by the Village
of
Cilberts JuLy
2,
L985, requests that the Board “review and rescind... a
deClS-tC)n
of the IEPA amending the Water Quality Management Plan and
granting Holiday Park Corp. a point source discharge to Tyler
Creek.” (Pet. p. 8). Motions to dismiss for lack of subject
matter jurisdiction were filed by Holiday on
July 16,
and by the
Agency on
July 17, 1985. Verified responses concerning issuance
of an NPDES permit were filed by the Village and the Agency on
August 9; the Agency also presented new arguments for
dismissal.
On August 12, Holiday moved for leave to file an
unverified pleading, including a second motion to dismiss.
Fhe
motion for leave was mooted by the August 14 filing of a verified
pleading. A response
in opposition to dismissal was filed by the
Village August
13”. The Village filed a response thereto on
August 15.
Holiday Park sought an NPDES permit for a point source
discharge from a proposed sewage treatment plant to treat
wastewater from a mobil home park proposed to be constructed in
the Village. Issuance of this permit apparently would have been
inconsistent with the Illinois Water Quality Management Plan
(IWQMP, also known as the Section 208 plan) (Pet. p. L-2).
On June 1, 1984, Holiday filed a Petition For Conflict
Resolution with the Agency pursuant to 35 Ill. Administrative
Code, Subtitle C, Chapter II, Section 351.101 et seq. (Agency
File #7240). (These are rules adopted by the Agency pursuant to
the Illinois Administrative Procedures Act, but not the
Environmental Protection Act; they are not Board Regulations.)
Holiday’s Petition For Conflict Resolution requested an amendment
to the Illinois Water Quality Management Plan to reflect
the
addition of a new point source.
65-283
-2-
During the month of August, 1983 and prior to filing its
Petition For Conflict Resolution with the Agency, Holiday Park
filed its requested amendment of the IWQMP with the Northeastern
Illinois Planning Commission (NIPC). On September 18, 1984 and
on October 3, 1984, the Agency conducted a hearing on Holiday’s
Petition For Conflict Resolution pursuant to 35 Ill. Adm. Code,
Section 351.101 et seq.. (Holiday motion, p. 1-2). A draft
NPDES permit was also apparently a subject of discussion. The
Village asserts that NIPC, Kane-DuPage Counties Solid and Water
Conservation District, Kane County, and the Kane County Forest
Preserve District all appeared at the hearing and objected to an
NPDES permit and amendment of the IWQMP. (Pet. p. 5).
On May 28~ 1985, the Agency rendered its Final Decision,
which provides in pertinent part:
“It is the Decision of the Agency that the Areawide Water
Quality Management Plan for Northeastern Illinois be amended to
allow the inclusion of a point source discharge to be located
North of Illinois Route 72 at a retention lake which would be
tributary to Tyler Creek, Village of Gilberts, Kane County,
Illinois, to allow the construction of the sewage treatment
plant proposed by Petitioner Holiday Park, and to identify
Petitioner Holiday Part as the Designated Management Agency for
its facility, subject to the following conditions...” (Holiday
Motion, p. 2).
An NPDES permit was issued to Holiday on July 22, 1985
--
20
days after the filing of this action. The Agency and Holiday
assert that the Board lacks jurisdiction to review IWQMP
decisions under Section 40 of the Act, and no other provision of
the Act confers jurisdiction. The Agency states that the
procedure for review of its decision is provided for in its
rules, specifically, that any party may request that the
Regional Administrator, United States Environmental Protection
Agency, Region V, review the decision of the Agency pursuant to
40 C.F.R 35 1517(c).” (35 Iii. Adm. Code
351.403).
The Board agrees with the Agency that the Board lacks
jurisdiction under the Act, although other avenues of review may
be available pursuant to state law. This position is consistent
with the holding in National Marine Service v. IEPA, 120 Ill.
App. 3d 198, 458 N.E.2d 551 (4th Dist. 1983), finding that appeal
lies to the circuit court, and not the Board, from an Agency
decision not to issue a state certification for a dredge and fill
permit pursuant to Section 404 of the Federal Clean Water Act
(FCWA), 33 USC 1251 et seq. Citing Peabody Coal Co. v. PCB, 49
Ill. App. 3d 252, 364 N.E.2d 929 (1977) (concerning state
certifications review of Agency decisions under Section 402 of
the FCWA), the court stated that
“We read Peabody as holding that where a Federal
permit system is at hand, the PCB, absent a statutory
grant of
power,
is without authority to become
65-284
-3-
involved in reviewing the state certification process
which must be followed before a Federal permit may
issue. This reading is consistent with the
restrictive view of the PCB’s authority to oversee
the IEPA’s activities which was noted by our supreme
court in Landfill, Inc. v. Pollution Control Board
1978, 74 Ill, 2d 541, 387 N.E.2d 258.**~~In light
of Landfill, Peabody is properly read as holding that
the PCB is without authority to hear an appeal from a
denial of section 401 certification.”
The Board believes that this analysis is equally applicable
Lo the Agency’s actions pursuant to Section 208 of the FCWA.
The Board’s rules governing NPDES permit appeals allow ‘any
person other than the applicant who has been a party to or
participant at an ~ hearing ‘~iithrespect to the issuance or
denial of an NPDES permit by the Agency” to file a petition for
review of such action. 35 Ill. Adm, Code 105.102 (b)(3)
.
“The
petition shall be filed and notice issued within 30 days from the
date the Agency’s final decision has been mailed to the applicant
and all other persons who have right
of appeal. The method of
Filing shall be in accordance with Sections 103.122 and
103.123.” 35 Iii. Adm.. Code 105.102 (b)(4). “The petition shall
contain a statement of the decision or part thereof to be
reviewed.” 35 Iii. Adm. Code 102.105 (b)(7).
The Agency asserts that, to the extent that the petition may
he construed as a challenge of an NPDES permit, that the action
should be
dismissed because a) the Village lacks standing to
pursue the action, b) the petition was untimely, since there was
no permit in existence at the time of its filing, and c) the
petition is insufficient, in that it does not specify which
portion or portions of the permit are to be reviewed. Floliday
Park also asserts that the petition was untimely, but on the
basis that the 30 day appeal time should run from May 28, the
date of the Agency’s IWQMP decision, rather than July
22,
~985
the date of issuance of the NPDES permit; this argument is
summarily rejected.
The Agency’s lack of standing argument is premised
on
the
position that Section 40 of the Act does not explicitly authorize
third party appeals of NPDES permits, and thus to the extent
Section 105.102 (b)(3) asserts such jurisdiction, the rule is
invalid pursuant to the holding of Landfill, Inc., supra.
However, this argument does not take into account Section
11
of the Act. Section 11(a) recites the legislative findings of
the desirability
of Illinois’
securement of NPDES
enforcement
primacy.
Section 11(b) “authorize(s),
empower(s), and direct(s)
the Board to adopt such regulations
...
as will enable
the State
to secure federal approval to issue NPDES permits
...“.
The
question then becomes one of whether third party appeals of NJPDES
p~?rmits is federally required.
65-285
—
4
The regulations
at issue were adopted in Docket R73-11 and
12, In The Matter of: National Pollutant Discharge Elimination
System Regulations Orders of August 29
and
September 5, 1974, and
Opinion of December 5, 1974.
In summary, the Opinion does not:
note that the third party appeal is federally required,
although
it does note at some length that the opportunity for pubLic
hearing at the Agency level is required prior to issuance or
denial of a permit.
(See esp. pp.
1,
4-7).
The Board has ~uis~
reviewed the October 20, 1977, USEPA/lilinois
Memorandum of
Agreement giving the State NPDES enforcement primacy; it does not
specifically
reference permit appeal procedures, although these
procedures were part of the package submitted to secure the NPDES
program for the state.
40 CFR Part 123 sets forth state program requirements
for
~4PDES, RCRA and other programs, and Part 124, set out procedures
for decisionmaking by USEPA,
Section 124.91 provides that third
parties may appeal NPDES permit decisions;
this is not a
requirement which has been made specifically
applicable to State
programs in Part 123.
However, it should also be noted that Section 124,19, ~Lving
third party appeal rights concerning RCRA and UIC permits, is
also not specifically
applicable to state programs pursuant to
the terms of Part 123.
Notwithstanding, LJSEPA interpreted third
party appeals
as being
an essential portion of the state RCRA
authorization package, so the Board adopted rules giving such
rights,
see R84-1O, In The Matter of RCRA and IJIC Procedural
Rules, Order of December 20, 1984, Opinion of January 10, 1985.
On this basis, the Board believes (JSEFA, if asked, would
conclude
that third party appeal rights are an essential
part of the NPDES
package.
If the Board does not allow appeals of NPDES permit;s to
proceed, the State’s NPDES primacy could be jeopardized.
However, the Board does believe the Agency’s arguments
concerning timeliness and sufficiency of the Village’s petit~on
have merit, and dismisses the action on these grounds. The Board
notes, however, that this does not preclude the Village From
initiating a new action by the timely filing of a sufficient
petition for review of the July 22, 1985 permit, specifying the
portion of the permit for which review is sought.
Finally, to the extent that the Village’s petition
may
charge violations of the Act, they have been made in a
procedurally improper manner.
If the Village’s intent is to
File
an enforcement action pursuant to Section 31(b)
of the Act, cf.
Landfill,
supra, a proper complaint should be filed and served i~n
accordance with 35 Ill, Adm, Code Part 1039 the Board’s
procedural rules governing enforcement cases
Accordingly, for all of the
foregoing reasons, this action
is dismissed.
—5—
IT S SO ORDERED.
J.
Theordore Meyer dissented.
I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois
Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify that the above Order was adopted on
the
~
day of _________________________, 1985, by a
vote
of
~
•
II)
/7
Dorothy
/~‘~
M./Gunn,
i2~.
Clerk
-
Illinois Pollution Control Board
85-287