ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    September 11, 1986
    IN THE MATTER OF:
    )
    TRADE SECRET DETERMINATION
    )
    PCB 86—146
    FOR ABBOTT LABORATORIES
    )
    ORDER OF THE BOARD (by J. D. Dumelle):
    This matter comes before the Board upon a September 11, 1986
    request for a determination of confidentiality filed on behalf of
    Abbott Laboratories and a September 10, 1986 motion for extension
    of time to respond to that request filed on behalf of the
    Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (Agency). Both of these
    documents were filed under docket R86—10. The unusual sequence
    of these filings results from Abbott’s submission of a
    justification to the Agency and the Board in response to an
    Agency request for such justification for certain materials which
    Abbott had submitted to the Agency under a claim of
    confidentiality. Those materials have also been submitted to the
    Board, also under a claim of confidentiality. A letter to the
    Clerk of the Board requesting a determination of confidentiality
    apparently was to have accompanied the materials submitted in
    justification of the claim, and a copy of such letter was
    apparently received by the Agency. However, the Board has no
    record of the receipt of that letter. It was only after receipt
    of the Agency’s September 10, 1986 motion that the Board made
    inquiries to Abbott and the Agency to attempt to determine to
    what document the motion was responsive. When the Board
    discovered that the request was missing, Abbott filed it
    immediately. Further, the Board redocketed the filings under PCB
    86—146 as a new case since confidentiality determinations are
    properly quasi—adjudicatory cases.
    Thus, confidentiality determinations have been requested of
    both the Agency and the Board concerning the same documents. The
    Board finds that proceeding before both forums concurrently is
    procedurally improper since the Board stands in an appellate
    posture regarding Agency trade secret determinations.
    Furthermore, such a procedure would result in administrative
    inconvenience. The materials at issue were originally submitted
    to the Agency in the underlying regulatory proceeding, and the
    Agency requested a justification which was submitted to it,
    thereby triggering the Agency decision process. If the Board
    were to make a decision at this time, the Agency process might
    either be rendered moot by the Board’s decision, or
    alternatively, the Board might be required to make a second
    determination regarding the same information in response to an
    appeal to the Board of the Agency’s decision.
    72-336

    —2—
    The Board finds that the proper procedure in this case is
    for the Board to dismiss this proceeding, thereby allowing the
    Agency to proceed to a determination regarding the information
    before it. If Abbott disagrees with that determination, it may
    appeal that decision to the Board which then will have the
    benefit of arguments by both Abbott and the Agency before it to
    reach a more fully reasoned decision. Of course, the Board will
    continue to protect the documents unless there is a final
    determination that some or all of the materials are subject to
    public disclosure. This decision renders the Agency’s motion
    moot.
    Therefore, the Board hereby denies the Agency’s motion for
    extension of time and dismisses this proceeding.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby certify that ~be above Order was adopted on
    the
    //~
    day ~
    ,
    1986 by a vote
    of
    ___________.
    Illinois Pollut Control Board
    72-337

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