ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
July 11, 1986
EVERETT ALLEN, INC.,
)
)
Petitioner,
)
)
v.
)
PCB 86-34
)
CITY OF MOUNT VERNON,
)
)
Respondent. )
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD (by B. Forcade):
This matter comes to the Board on a March 6, 1986, Petition
for Review filed by Everett Allen, Inc., an Illinois Corporation
d/b/a/ Allen Waste Management (hereinafter “Everett Allen”). The
petition seeks review of a February 3, 1986, decision by the City
of Mount Vernon (hereinafter “Mt. Vernon”) denying Everett
Allen’s August 12, 1985, application for local site location
approval for a new regional pollution control facility. The
Pollution Control Board hearing in this matter was held on May 7,
1986, in the Jefferson County Courthouse. Final briefs ~re
filed by Everett Allen on May 28 and June 3, and by Mt. Vernon on
May 29 and June 2, 1986.
As a threshold issue, Mt. Vernon has raised the question of
jurisdiction in light of the Second District’s opinion in The
Kane County Defenders’ Inc~v. Pollution Control Board, 93 Ill.
Dec. 918, 487 N.E.2d 743 (1985) (hereinafter “Kane County”). Mt.
Vernon claims that:
“Allen Waste Management both within the
publication notice and within the notice to
adjoining property owners misstated the rights
of persons to comment on the request and also
misstated the time requirements for a public
hearing.” (Brief, p. 3)
Consequently, the Board must review the requirements for siting
requests and the facts of this case. Mt. Vernon’s arguments are
poorly developed in that the Board is left to discover what
“misstatements” occurred, but the Board will evaluate the matter
as it is jurisdictional.
Requests for landfill siting approval are governed by
Section 39.2 of the Environmental Protection Act (“Act”). That
section sets certain procedural requirements for filing landfill
siting applications and local governmental determinations. It
also establishes certain requirements regarding the timing and
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content of public notice regarding the process. At the outset,
the Board notes that, effective July 1, 1985, Sections 39.2(c)
and (d) were substantially amended regarding the timing of both
the public comment period and the municipal (or county)
hearings. Section (b) was not amended. Prior to July 1, 1985,
the county was required to consider any comment submitted within
30 days after the filing of the application, and hold at least
one public hearing within 60 days of the filing of the
application. Since the application in this proceeding was filed
after July 1, 1985, the relevant portions of Section 39.2 are as
follows:
b. No later than 14 days prior to a request
for location approval the applicant shall
cause written notice of such request to
be served either in person or by
registered mail, return receipt
requested, on the owners of all property
within the subject area not solely owned
by
the applicant, and on the owners of
all property within 250 feet in each
direction of the lot line of the subject
property, said owners being such persons
or entities which appear from the
authentic tax records of the County in
which such facility is to be located;
provided, that the number of all feet
occupied by all public roads, streets,
alleys and other public ways shall be
excluded in computing the 250 feet
requirements; provided further, that in
no event shall this requirement exceed
400 feet, including public streets,
alleys and other public ways.
Such written notice shall also be served
upon members of the ~neral Assembly from
the legislative district in which the
proposed facility is located and shall be
published in a newspaper of general
circulation published in the county in
which the site is located. •Such notice
shall state the name and address of the
~pp1icant, the location of the proposed
site, the nature and size of the
development, the nature of the activity
proposed, the probable life of the
proposed activity, the date when the
request for site approval will be
submitted to the county board, and a
description of the right of persons to
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comment -on such request as hereafter
provided.
c. An applicant shall file a copy of its
request, accompanied by all documents
submitted as of that date to the Agency
in connection with its application except
trade secrets as determined Under Section
7.1 of this Act, with the county board of
the county or the governing body of the
municipality in which the proposed site
is located. Such copy shall be made
available for public inspection at the
office of the county board or the
governing body of the municipality and
may be copied upon payment of the actual
cost of reproduction.
Any person may file written comment with
the county board or governing body of the
municipality concerning the appropriate-
ness of the proposed site for its
intended purpose. The county board or
governing body of the municipality shall
consider any comment received -or post-
marked not later than 30 days after the
date of the last public hearing~.
d. At least one public hearing is to be held
by the county board or governing body of
the municipality no sooner than 90 day~
but no later than 120 days from receip~
of the request for site approval, such
hearing to be preceded by pu~1ished
notice in a newspaper of general
circulation published in the county of
the proposed site, and notice by
certified mail to all members of the
General Assembly from the district in
which the proposed site is located and to
the Agency. The public hearing shall
develop a record sufficient to form the
basis of appeal of the decision in
accordance with Section 40.1 of this
Act. tEmphasis added
The provisions of the statute relating to notice were first
interpreted in City of Aurora v. Kane County Board, et al, No.
84-940 (Ill. App. Second District, December 30, 1985). In the
Kane County case, the Elgin Sanitary District (“ESD”) filed its
application August 11, 1983. Newspaper notice was not published
until August 10. However, as this notice stated only that the
71.28
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application would be filed “within 14 days,” ESD published a new
notice on August 20 which stated the date the application was
filed, the last date of the comment period, and the date of the
public hearing. The petitioners in that case argued that the 14-
day notice provision of paragraph 1 of Section 39.2(b)
(individual notice to land owners) applied to paragraph 2
(newspaper notice), and that ESD violated the notice provisions,
“thereby substantially shortening the length of the comment
period available to the general public.” The Board takes
administrative notice of the fact that, had notice been published
14 days in advance of a specified filing date, the public would
have had 44 days to consider and to formulate written comments.
Because notice of the filing date, from which the comment period
ran, was not published until August 20, the period was
effectively reduced from 44 to 22 days.
The Appellate Court for the Second District held that “ESD’s
failure to publish appropriate newspaper notice and notice of the
date it filed the site location request rendered the Kane. County
Board hearing invalid for lack of jurisdiction,” finding the
notice requirements of Section 39.2(b) to be “jurisdictional
prerequisites which must be followed in order to vest the county
board with the power to hear a landfill proposal.” In reaching
this result, the court applied the reasoning employed by the
Third District Appellate Court in Illinois Power Co. v. IPCB, 137
Ill. App. 3d 449, 484 N.E.2d 898 (1985). In Illinois Power, in a
situation where the Board had failed to give both the 21-day
notice to individuals and the newspaper notice to the general
public required by Section 40(b), the court found that the
statutory notice requirements were jurisdictional, given the
statutes’ use of the mandatory term “shall,” and the general
principle that an administrative agency derives power solely from
its enabling statute.
In Kane County, the Second District asserted the Illinois
Power rationale applied “even more strongly” because
“This broad delegation of adjudicative
power to the county board clearly reflects a
legislative understanding that the county
board hearing, which presents the only
opportunity for public comment on the proposed
site, is the most critical stage of the
landfill site approval process. We find
support for this view also in the statutory
notice requirements themselves, which are more
demanding at the county board phase of the
process. In view of the significance of this
critical stage, we apply the reasoning of the
Illinois Power Co. court, which recognized
jurisdictional safeguards at the review stage
of site approval proceedings, to the county
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board proceedings. The notice requirements
contained in Section 39.2(b) of the
Environmental Protection Act (Ill. Rev. Stat.
1983, ch. lll’/2, par. 1039.2(b)) are
jurisdictional prerequisites which must be
followed in order to vest the county board
with the power to hear a landfill proposal
(citations omitted).
The Board recently applied the Kane Cou~y rationale in City
of Columbia,-et al., v. County of St. Clair, et al., PCB 85-177,
flO, 223 (April
3,
1986) (hereinafter “Columbia”). In Columbia,
the Board found that a one day deficiency in notice directives
rendered the application deficient. The Secor~dDistrict recently
applied the Kane County decision to a factually similar situation
involving a one-day deficiency in notice in Concerned Boone
Citizens v. M.I.G. Investments, No. 85-309 (Ill. App. Second
District, June 4, 1986). Against this background, the Board must
consider the facts presented today.
The site location approval process began when Everett Allen
prepared a notice of intent to file a site location suitability
approval application. That notice was mailed, by certified mail,
to the adjacent property owners on July 25, 1985. The legal
notice was published in the Mt. Vernon Register-News on July 29,
1985. The actual application was filed with the City of Mt.
Vernon on August 12, 1985. Both the notice to adjacent property
owners and the newspaper notice contained the following language:
Any person may file written comment with the
Office of the City Clerk, 1100 Main Street,
Mount Vernon, Illinois, concerning the
appropriateness of the proposed site for its
intended purpose. The City Council of the
City -of -Mount Vernon
-
shall consider a~y~
comment received or postmarked not later than
30 days from the date of
-
receipt of the
request in making its final determination.
Additionally,, at least one public hearing is
to be held by--the City Council of the City of
Mount- -Vernon within 60 days of
receipt of the
request for site approval, such hearing to be
preceded by published notice in a newspaper of
general circulation published in Jefferson
County, Illinois. (Emphasis added)
While this notice was published and mailed in a
timely
manner, it did not
accurately describe the right of persons to
comment on the request.
At all times relevant to this
proceeding, the statute has provided for a public
hearing to be
held not less than
90
days nor more than
120
days from filing the
application and provided that comments postmarked not later than
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30 days after hearing must be accepted. Under the statute, the
public and adjacent landowners have a minimum of 104 days to
prepare for hearing and a minimum of 134 days to provide written
comment. Under the time frames described in the notice, the
public and adjacent landowners had a minimum of 14 days to
prepare for hearing and 44 days to provide written comment.
The importance of the public comment opportunities before
the local government body was clearly recognized by the Second
District in Kane County, supra.
The Board has previously recognized the importance of the
public comment opportunities and the key role of proper notice in
allowing the public adequate time to prepare for hearing and
comment. “The function of notice and the required time period
between notice and hearing is first to inform the affected public
that a landfill site suitability approval process has been
initiated and, second, to allow time for the public to review the
application to determine whether, or in what manner, further
participation is warranted.” McHenry County Landfill, Inc., et
a?., v. County Board of McHenry et al., PCB 85-56, 61-66
(September 20, 1985, at 4). Also, the Board has previously held
that where a defective notice is exclusively the fault of the
applicant and the defective notice can be cured by an alternative
mechanism (filing a new application), the site applicant is held
to the letter of the law regarding notice:
“...the rationale here is that the intent of
the Act is to provide a mechanism and a county
or municipal forum for the consideration of
site location suitability issues. Where an
alternative mechanism for resolution and
review of an issue defective notice exists,
e.g. filing of a new application, a party may
be held to the letter of the law, when that
party alone bears the burden of any
omission. Where a slight omission may
substantially impair, if it does not
extinguish, a right of a party who bears no
culpability, e.g., a deemed issued approval,
the Board must look to the spirit of the law.”
(Id. at 12)
The Board finds that the incorrect description published by
Everett Allen constitutes a substantial and material failure to
state “...a description of the right of persons to comment on
such request as hereafter provided” (Section 39.2(b) of the
Act). The magnitude of that failure is apparent when viewed from
the perspective of a member of the public or adjacent landowner
who relied on the notice to prepare for hearing or to prepare
comments.
71.31
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Time to Prepare
Time to Prepare
For Hearing
Public Comments
Under the Terms
of the Statute
Minimum
104 days
Maximum
134 days
Minimum
134 days
Maximum
164 days
According to
the Notice from
Everett Allen
14 days 74 days
44 days 44 days
After the August 12, 1985, application had been filed,
Everett Allen republished notice. That notice was mailed to
adjacent landowners on November 12, 1985, and published in the
Mt. Vernon Register—News on November 13. That notice more
accurately reflects the statutory provisions for public comment;
however, it cannot fulfill the statutory notice requirements
since it was mailed and published about 90 days after the
application was filed. Also, while the notice is not required to
contain the date of public hearing, this notice contained a
hearing date that was incorrect.
The notices provided by Everett Allen do not fulfill the
mandate of Section 39.2(b) of the Act. Consequently, under the
theory of Kane Cou~L, the application was invalid and Mt. Vernon
lacked jurT~dI~?T~nto proceed. The Board will, therefore,
vacate the February 3, 1986, decision by Mt. Vernon in this
matter.
ORDER
The February 3, 1986, decision of the City of Mt. Vernon
denying Everett Allen’s August 12, 1985, application for site
location suitability approval is hereby vacated, as the City
could not exercise jurisdiction over the improperly noticed
app ii cat ion.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certj~y that the abpve40pinion and Order was
adopted on the
//(_~~~
day of
1986, by a vote
of
_______*
Illi
Pollu
Control Board
71.32