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CONTROÔE
COUNTY OF
KANKA
(
L
NOV
27
2002
SMITH, STATE’S ATTOR
/‘4k’\-J
Ii
Li
J1J
iLJ
STATE OF ILLINOIS
KANKAKEE COUNTY,
)
Pollution
Control
Board
)
Petitioners,
)
No. PCB 03-3
1
)
(Third-Party
Pollution
Control Facility
Siting
vs.
)
Appeal)
)
THE
CITY
OF KANKAKEE,
ILLINOIS,
CITY
)
COUNCIL,
TOWN
AND COUNTRY
)
UTILITIES,
INC. and
KANKAKEE REGIONAL)
LANDFILL,
L.L.C.,
)
)
Respondents,
)
)
)
BYRON SANDBERG
)
)
Petitioner,
)
)
PCB 03-33
vs.
)
(Third-Party
Pollution
Control
Facility
Siting
)
Appeal)
THE
CITY
OF KANKAKEE,
ILLINOIS,
CITY
)
COUNCIL,
TOWN AND
COUNTRY
)
UTILITIES,
INC. and
KANKAKEE REGIONAL)
LANDFILL,
L.L.C.,
)
)
Respondents,
)
)
)
)
PCBO3-35
WASTE
MANAGEMENT
OF ILLINOIS, INC.,
)
(Third-Party
Pollution Control
Facility
)
Siting
Appeal)
Petitioner,
)
(Consolidated)
)
vs.
)
)
THE CITY OF
KANKAKEE,
ILL1NOIS, CITY
)
COUNCIL, TOWN
AND COUNTRY
)
UTILITIES,
INC.
and KANKAKEE
REGIONAL)
LANDFILL,
L.L.C.
)
)
Respondents.
)
)
)
Table of Contents
I.
STATEMENT OF FACTS
.2
A.
Facts Concerning the
Failure
of Applicant to Establish the
Jurisdiction
of the City
of
Karikakee to Hear Request for Landfill Siting Approval
2
1.
No
Section 39.2 notices were sent before the City Council held the
February 19, 2002 hearing wherein the request of the
Applicant
to site a
landfill was considered
3
2.
The owners of Parcel 13-16-23-400-001 were not sent notice
4
3.
The
notice to
Illinois Central Railroad Company was not sent at least 14
days before application was filed
6
4.
The return receipts of numerous parcel were not signed by
the owners of
the properties
6
B.
Facts Concerning Fundamental Fairness
8
1.
The public was
denied
the
opportunity
to
participate in the City hearing. . .8
2.
The Public was also denied the opportunity to
attend the first night of the
hearing
12
3.
The City failed to
follow
the notice that indicated
the June 17, 2002
hearing would cease at 10:00 p.m
14
4.
The City failed to provide copies of the
application
to
the County of
Kaiikakee
14
5.
Pre-filing contacts and evidence of
bias
16
6.
Improper and prejudicial visit to other
landfill facilities
19
7.
The
February 19, 2002 meeting was a pre-adjudication of
facts and
impeachment of the Section
39.2
Hearing
19
8.
The City
required FOIA requests for fundamental
information concerning
the landfill siting hearings
25
9.
Facts concerning
hearing
officer bias
25
10.
Facts concerning post-filing ex parte
communication
26
C.
Facts Concerning Criteria
27
Table of Contents
(continued)
II. EVIDENTIARY RULINGS WHICH SHOULD BE RECONSIDERED BY THE
ILLINOIS
POLLUTION
CONTROL BOARD
27
A.
The
Hearing Officer’s Ruling that Evidence of Pre-Filing Contacts was
Inadmissible was Erroneous
27
1.
All of the evidence of prefihing contacts
should
have been allowed because
the applicant admitted that
the
adjudication of the merits commenced with
these contacts
27
2.
Any and all evidence concerning the February 19,
2002 meeting should
have been admitted because the meeting minutes were part of the
underlying record and evidence prejudgment of adjudicative facts
31
3.
The
Hearing
Officer’s ruling as to
the inadmissibility of the March 12,
2002 letter from the Applicant’s counsel to the
City Attorney/Hearing
Officer Bohlen was erroneous
32
B.
The Applicant’s Attempt to Supplement the Record with Testimony Concerning
Jurisdiction at the Illinois Pollution Control Board Hearing
Should
not have
been
Allowed
33
III. THE DECISION OF THE CITY
COUNCIL
MUST BE
OVERTURNED BECAUSE
THE APPLICANT FAILED TO ESTABLISH JURISDICTION
35
A.
The City Council does not have Jurisdiction Because the
Applicant First made
its
Request for Site Location Approval to the City Council on
February 19, 2002
Without any Notice as Required by
Section 39.2
36
B.
The
Applicant Failed
to
Establish Jurisdiction Because it Presented No Evidence
that it Served each of the Owners of Parcel
13-16-23-400-001
37
C.
There is No
Jurisdiction
Because
Service Upon the Illinois Central Railroad
Company
was not Effectuated at
least 14 days Before the Application was Filed.38
D.
The Return Receipts of Numerous Parcels were Signed by Individuals
other
than
the Owner of the Property and the Authority to Accept Service of
Process on
Behalf of the
Owner(s)
was not
Established
by
the Applicant
39
IV. THE CITY COUNCIL
PROCEEDINGS
WERE NOT FUNDAMENTALLY
FAIR
40
A.
The Public was Denied the Opportunity to Participate in the
City hearing
40
11
Table of Contents
(continued)
1.
The conflicting notices on registration and the City Police barring
people
from entering the chamber resulted in the public not being allowed
to
participate
41
2.
Members
of the public that registered to participate were not allowed to
do
so by the City of Kankakee
43
B.
The Public was also Denied the
Opportunity to Attend the First Night of the
Hearing
43
C.
The
Public was Denied
Access to the Hearing Because the Hearing Officer did
not Follow the Notice that Indicated
the Hearing Would Cease at 10:00 p.m
46
D.
The City Failed to Follow its own Siting Ordinance
by
Failing
to
Provide Copies
of the Application
to
the County
of Kankakee
47
E.
The City Council had Improper Communications with the Applicant Including the
Pre-Judgment
of
the Merits
of the Application
49
1.
Pre-filing contacts and evidence of bias
49
2.
The Applicant hosted
an
improper
and prejudicial visit to
other landfill
facilities
51
3.
The February 19, 2002 meeting was a pre-adjudication of facts and an
improper impeachment
of the Section 39.2 Hearing
52
F.
The City Required FOIA Requests to Impede the Dissemination of Fundamental
Information Concerning the Landfill Siting Hearings
55
G.
The Hearing Officer was Biased
56
H.
The
Applicant had an
Improper
Post-filing Ex Parte Contact
with the City
Attorney/Hearing Officer Bohlen who was Communicating with the Decision-
Maker
57
V.
THE COMBINATION OF NUMEROUS UNFAIR PROCEDURES IN THIS
CASE
RESULTED IN A FUNDAMENTALLY UNFAIR LANDFILL SITING
HEARING
58
VI. THE DECISION OF THE CITY OF KANKAKEE SHOULD BE OVERTURNED
BECAUSE THE APPLICANT FAILED TO MEET THE SECTION 39.2
STATUTORY
CRITERIA
60
111
Table of Contents
(continued)
A.
The Application was
Inconsistent
with
the County’s
Solid
Waste
Management
Plan
in Violation of Criterion viii
60
1.
Standard of
review
60
2.
The plain language of the Solid Waste Management Plan
establishes
that
the County
desired only
one landfill and
that landfill would be the existing
landfill
when expanded
61
3.
The Applicant
failed
to present any
testimony or
evidence
in regard
to
Criterion viii
67
4.
The County presented evidence as to the
lack of consistency with the Solid
Waste Management Plan
67
B.
The Finding as to Criterion ii was Against the
Manifest
Weight
of
the Evidence.70
C.
The
Finding
as to
Criterion v was Against the Manifest Weight of the Evidence.73
VII. CONCLUSION
74
iv
PETITIONERS’ COUNTY OF
KANKAKEE
AND EDWARD D. SMITH POST-
HEARING
BRIEF
NOW COMES Petitioners COUNTY OF KANKAKEE and EDWARD D. SMITH,
STATE’S ATTORNEY OF KANKAKEE COUNTY,
by
and through their attorneys, HINSHAW
&
CULBERSON, and as and for their Post-Hearing Brief,
state as
follows:
I. STATEMENT OF FACTS
The facts contained in this section are an attempt to summarize
the most relevant
evidence and testimony of the referenced issues. Attached hereto as Appendix A
is an additional
summary of certain testimony of many of the witnesses that testified at the IPCB
hearings
on this
matter.
A.
Facts
Concerning the Failure
of
Applicant
to
Establish
the
Jurisdiction of the City
of Kankakee to Hear Request for
Landfill Siting Approval.
Section 39.2(b) requires that:
No later than 14 days prior to a request for location approval the
Applicant shall
cause
written notice
of such request 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 relocated; 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
requirement; provided further, that in no event shall this
requirement exceed 400 feet, including public streets, alleys and public ways.
415 ILCS 5/39.2(b)(2000) (emphasis added).
In this case, the only evidence admitted at the local hearing by the Applicant,
Town
and
Country Utilities, Inc. and Kankakee Regional Landfill, LLC, (hereinafter “Applicant”), of the
notice to landowners
was
the affidavit of Mr.
Tom
Volini with Exhibits.
(Applicant’s
Ex.
2)1.
The record of the City
of
Kankakee shall be cited as (C). The exhibit to the City
record shall
be
identified
by
the name of the person or
entity
offering the exhibit
as
follow (Applicant’s Ex.). The transcript of the
IPCB Hearing of November 4, 2002 shall
be
cited (11/4 Tr.). The second day of the IPCB hearing on
11/6/02 shall
be
cited
(11/6 Tr.). The exhibits to the IPCB hearing are
identified
as
(Petitioners’
Ex.
2
Mr. Volini, President of the
Applicant,
determined
that the individuals whose names were
identified in Paragraph 5 of the affidavit were the “necessary” owners of all those parcels within
400
feet
of the
subject
property,
which were entitled
to receive service of the “pre-filing” notice
required by 415 ILCS 5/39.2(b). (Applicant’s Ex. 2).
The
Affidavit further provides that the
registered mail receipts attached to the Affidavit evidence the landowners that were served the
required pre-filing notice. (Applicant’s Ex. 2,
Para. 5).
1.
No
Section 39.2 notices were
sent before the City
Council
held the
February
19,
2002 hearing wherein the
request of the Applicant to site a
landfill
was
considered.
On or
about
February 19, 2002, corporate
representatives of the Applicant,
their
attorney,
the
project engineer
and other
Applicant witnesses met with the entire City Council of the City of
Kankakee. (11/4 Tr. 229). The official minutes
of that meeting,
2
reflect that
the
Mayor
of the
City of Kankakee told the City Council:
OK, we’ve
got a
special
presentation tonight but before I start
with that
presentation I’m going to ask the City Council for special indulgence on this
particular issue. As you well know, people
from
the
audience
are
not
allowed
to
speak
at a
regular
City Council meeting. But I believe this issue is of extreme
importance to the City of Kankakee. We are talking
about
the siting of
a
landfill
within our community. . . As we go through this presentation, we want you to ask
questions, you members of the City Council, you the members of the Planning
Commission, and there are three members of the press over here that we will open
it up if the Council
so
gives them permission
to do
that.
So,
the members of the
Council, our department heads, the planning commission and the press will have
the
opportunity to ask questions of Town and Country Utilities as we
go
through
this process . . . We started this process well over two years ago . . . And, we’re
going to continue that process and we’re
going to
have
a
presentation tonight
by
Town and Country Utilities . . . so, with that, I am going to ask Mr. Volini to
come forward.
He’s got a
presentation
that they want to make, to talk about .
where we are,
and where we started, to where we are today and what
direction
we’re going. And, at the proper time, giving the members of the City Council,
department heads, Planning Commission members or the press are welcome to
ask questions.
(C
3143-3 144)(emphasis added).
2
The City and the
Applicant
have stipulated that the minutes to the meeting are
fair
and
accurate and that every
statement that is referenced in those meetings was indeed made on February 19, 2002. (11/6 Tr.
180).
3
Mr.
Volini
then stated that “with
us
tonight
we have
our team that
is going to present
our
siting
case to you. .
.
Eand],
the
reason
that we’re going to
make the presentation
as George
Mueller,
our lawyer,
will explain
to
you
has to do with the
law.
And, the
reason we want to
be
able
to have
this
unfettered opportunity
to talk to you without
the filter
of lawyers, without
the
rancor and the
back and
forth
and that, unfortunately,
the
lawyers
bring to the process
is
we
want
to be
able to speak with
you person to
person about things
that
we
believe
in, concepts that
we’ve
proved
and
environmental
protection that we’ve
achieved.” (C
3145)(emphasis
added).
Mr. Volini indicated “at
tonight’s meeting
we will have
an opportunity
to have our
expert
witnesses
meet
with
you, talk to you about
their
fields
of expertise briefly,
talk
to
you about
the
process that’s
dictated by the
statute
that
George Mueller will
describe, talk
to you about the
proof.
You are called
upon to be judge
and jury.”
(C
3145)(emphasis
added).
Mr.
Volini also
mentioned
that “...I have
some packages
that will be
referred to in this
presentation
for each of
you”.
Id.
At the
conclusion
of the lengthy
presentation,
and before the
Applicant took
questions
from
the
city
council,
Mr.
Volini closed by stating,
“you’ll
hear this without so
much emotion
and with
a
bunch of
lawyers fighting
with each other
in about
120
days, but we
wanted you to
hear it from
us first.” (C
3155)(emphasis
added).
The
applicant and
its
witnesses
then fielded
numerous
City Council
questions concerning
the application
and
criteria
for the
majority of the
remainder
of the meeting.
(C
3155-3165).
2.
The owners of
Parcel 13-16-23-400-001
were
not sent notice.
The
affidavit of Mr.
Volini indicates that
the
following
owners of
Parcel
13-16-23-400-
001: Gary L.
Bradshaw,
James
R.
Bradshaw,
Jay D. Bradshaw,
Ted a. Bradshaw,
Denise
Fogle,
and
Judith A. Skates
were
entitled
to
prefihing
notice.
(Applicant’s
Ex.
2). The affidavit
indicates
the
address
for these
individuals
was determined
to be
22802 Prophet
Road, Rock Falls,
4
IL.
Id. However, there
is no
return
receipt
for Gary
L.
Bradshaw,
James
R. Bradshaw,
Jay D.
Bradshaw, Ted
A.
Bradshaw,
Denise Fogle).
(11/6
Tr. 297). There
is a receipt for
only
Judith
Skates, but it
was sent to an
Onarga, Illinois address,
and was
signed
by one Richard Skates.
Id.
Ms.
VonPerbandt
testified at the IPCB
hearing that she is the
secretary
of
the applicant’s
counsel and operated
a
process
serving business and
was the
individual
that coordinated
the
service
of the Section
39.2 notices. (11/6
Tr. 282). She admitted
that
she has
worked for the
Applicant’s
attorney for 3
2
V
years and that
she is aware that the
failure to
provide notice is an
important
matter in
landfill siting hearings
and could cause
problems for her
boss’s case. (11/6
Tr. 294-295).
Despite
her obvious biases
she confirmed the
receipts attached
to Mr. Volini’s
affidavit,
(Applicant’s
Ex. 2), “appear”
to reflect all
of the notices that
were
sent out.
(11/6 Tr.
296). Ms.
VonPerbandt
also admitted that there
was no
return receipt for
James Bradshaw.
(11/6 Tr.
297).
She also admitted
that
there
are
no receipts for J.D.
Bradshaw or
Ted Bradshaw.
Id.
Applicant’s
Ex. 2 also shows
no
such
receipt for Gary
Bradshaw nor
Denis Vogel.
(Applicants
Ex. 2).
Ms.
VonPerbandt
then admitted that
at
least 14
days before the
application was filed
she
attempted to
personally serve
Gary
Bradshaw,
James Bradshaw,
J.D.
Bradshaw,
Ted
Bradshaw,
and
Denise
Vogel, but was
unsuccessful.
(11/6 Tr. 297-298).
She
also testified
that
during
the
week of
February 18,
2002 she was told that
the property
near
the landfill
was
held in trust
but
Ms. VonPerbandt
never acquired
service
on the trust. Id. at 299.
She never
went to
the
clerk’s
office
to acquire the trustee’s
deed
(which would
have indicated the
trustee’s identity).
Id.
Instead,
all the server did
was speak
with an unnamed
individual at the
Prophet address
who
allegedly
told Mr. VonPerbandt
that
she was the
daughter of Judith
Skates and provided
the
address
of Ms. Skates,
in Onarga, Illinois.
This unnamed
individual
stated that
Ms. Skates was
5
handling
the
property!?
which
was
held in
trust. Id. at 286. Ms.
VonPerbandt
did not ask this
unnamed
person if she knew
the addresses
of any
of
the other
owners of the
property such as
Gary, James,
or J.D. Bradshaw.
Id.
at
300.
She also never asked
this
unnamed
individual if she
had the
legal authority to appoint
anyone
as
the agent for service
of process
for Gary Bradshaw,
James
Bradshaw, J.D.
Bradshaw, Ted
Bradshaw,
Denise Vogel, or Judith
Skates.
Id. at 301.
Ms.
VonPerbandt admitted
that she assumed
the individual
she spoke with did not
have
the legal
authority to
name an
agent
for the service of process
of
the
owners
of the parcel at
issue.
Id.
3.
The
notice
to
Illinois Central Railroad
Company
was
not sent
at least
14
days
before application
was
filed.
Exhibit B to
Mr. Volini’s
affidavit contains
the only receipt
for the
owner
“Illinois
Central
Railroad
Company”
as identified
in
Paragraph
5
of the affidavit. (App.
Ex. 2,
Para.
5,
Ex. B).
The return
receipt for this owner
is dated “3/6/02”.
Id. The Application
was filed on
March 13,
2002. (11/4
Tr. 209).
4.
The
return
receipts of numerous
parcel
were not signed by
the
owners
of the
properties.
Service
was
not
properly effectuated
on the
following properties
as
evidenced
by Mr.
Volini’
s
affidavit:
1.
Parcel
13-16-23-400-001.
Mr.
Volini indicates
that the
following
individuals
are
identified
as
owners
of the property by the
Kankakee County
Supervisor
of
Assessment:
Gary L.
Bradshaw,
James
R. Bradshaw,
J.D.
Bradshaw, Ted A. Bradshaw,
Denise
Fogel, and Judith
A.
Skates with
an address of 22802
Prophet
Road,
Rock Falls, Illinois
61071.
However,
there
is no
registered
mail
receipt
indicating
that
anyone
at 22802 Prophet Road
was served.
The
same
parcel
number is
listed in the
affidavit with an identification
of
Judith A. Skates,
203
South
Locust, Onarga, Illinois
60955 as
the owner of record.
However,
the registered
receipt is not
signed
by Judith Skates
instead is signed
by a Richard
Skates, and no
verification
is included
that;
1) he is the authorized
agent
of Judith Skates, or
2) that
Judith
Skates actually
was
given
a
copy
of
the Applicant’s
pre-fihing
notice not less than
14 days prior to
filing of the
application in
this matter.
Accordingly, the record
established
in this matter only
reflects at
best
that
a
non
owner of the property
signed
the
registered
receipt, and there is
no
evidence
that any, (let
alone
all) of
the actual
owners as
appear on the appropriate
County
tax records
received the notice.
6
2.
Parcel
Number
13-16-24-300-017.
The affidavit indicates
that the owners
of this
property are Linda
Skeen and
Robert Skeen. However,
the registered mail
receipts are signed
by
one
C.
Skeen, and
there is no indication
that this individual
is
the
authorized service agent
of
Linda or Robert
Skeen.
3.
Parcel
Number
13-16-24-300-019.
The owners are
listed
as Gerald
M. Cann, Shirley
A.
Marion,
Delmar L. Skeen,
Robert
S.
Skeen,
Norma
J.
Staukkenberg, Judith
M. Trampanier and
Skeen Farms.
However, the
registered mail receipts
are all signed by
one
C.
Skeen,
and there is
no indication that
this
individual
is the authorized
agent of
any
of the known owners
of the
property. None of
the first names
of the
known
owners
of
the property
begin
with the
letter
C.
4.
Parcel
Number 13-16-24-400-001.
The owner
is
indicated as
being Skeen Farms
and the
registered mail
receipt is
signed
by
C.
Skeen; however,
there is
again no indication
that this
individual is
the authorized service
agent
for service
of process.
5.
Parcel Number
13-16-24-400-003.
The designated
owner
is listed as
William Ohrt,
however,
the
registered
receipt
is not
signed
by
William
Ohrt
and is
instead signed by
one
Marilyn
Ohrt and there is no
indication that
she is the authorized
service agent
of William Ohrt.
6.
Parcel Number
13-16-24-400-009.
Robert
S.
Skeen is
identified
as the owner,
however,
once
again the return
receipt
is signed
by
C.
Skeen with
no
indication
that
he is the
service agent
of Robert
S.
Skeen.
7.
Parcel Number
13-16-25-100-002.
The property
owner is identified
as
AT&T
Property
Tax,
however, it is signed
by one E.
Myers. There is no
indication that
he is the service agent
of
the identified
owner.
8.
Parcel
Number 13-16-25-100-003.
The
owner is identified
as
Benson
M. Hansen,
however,
the
receipt
is signed by one
Kevin Hansen
with no
indication
that
he is the
authorized
service agent
of the
owner for purposes
of service of
process.
9.
Parcel
Number 13-16-25-200-001.
The
affidavit indicates
the
owner
is one Willie
Walker, however,
the
receipt
was signed
by
a Leslie
Wilson, Jr.
and there is no
indication that
individual was the
authorized agent
of the
owner
for service of process.
10.
Parcel
Number
13-16-25-400-001.
The owner
is identified
as Frederick Forte
and Mary
Thompson,
however,
the
receipt is signed by
someone whose
name
appears
to be Oscar
Solvang
and
there is no
declaration that
Mr.
Solvang
was the service agent
of the identified
owners
for
purposes of
service of process.
11.
Parcel
Number
13-16-26-200-012.
The
identified
owners are
Adrien Guiterrez
and
Louise
Guiterrez,
however, the
receipt is
signed by a Candie
Martens with
no
declaration
that
individual was
the
authorized
service agent of
the identified
owners.
7
12.
Parcel
Number
13-16-26-200-013.
The
identified
owners
are
Adrien
Guiterrez
and
Louise Guiterrez,
however,
the receipt
is
again
signed
by
a Candie
Martens
with no declaration
that individual
was
the
authorized
service
agent
of
the
identified
owners.
13.
Parcel
Number
13-17-19-301-002.
The
affidavit
indicates
the owner
of
this
parcel
was
Charles
Burke,
however,
the mail
receipt
was
signed
by
one Mary
Grace with
no
indication
that
she was
the authorized
service
agent
of the owner.
14.
Parcel Number
13-17-19-100-003.
The
owner
is identified
as
William
Ohrt,
however,
the
mail
receipt is
signed
by
one
Marilyn
Ohrt with
no
indication
that
she
is
the agent
of
William
Ohrt for
service of process.
(Applicant’s
Ex. 2).
B.
Facts
Concerning
Fundamental
Fairness
1.
The
public was
denied the
opportunity
to
participate
in
the City hearing.
It is
undisputed
that conflicting
notices
of
the Section
39.2
hearing
were
published
to
the
public.
(11/4
Tr. 306-307).
Specifically,
the
siting
ordinance
(which
was
also
published
in
the
paper) required
“any
person or
attorney representing
such person,
or entity
wishing
to testify,
present
witnesses
and
cross-examine
witnesses
must
file a
written
appearance
in
the
Office
of the
City Clerk
not less
than
five
(5)
days prior
the to [sic]
first date
set for
public
hearings
pursuant
to
the
Siting
Ordinance.
(C
3237).
However,
the applicant
published
a notice
that provided
that
people could
register
up until the
day
of the
hearing.
(Applicant’s
Ex. 6).
On
the first
night
of
the hearing,
the
County
of
Kankakee
motioned
to
quash the
proceedings
partly on the
grounds
that
the
notice
of
the
proceeding
was improper.
(C
2191-
2197).
Oral argument
was had
on that
motion
wherein
counsel for
the County
warned
the
hearing officer
that
the
improper
notice
would
create
a chilling
effect
upon the
public
in
participating
in the
hearing.
(C
0036).
The hearing
officer
inquired
if
counsel was
aware of
any
specific
individual
that
did
not
participate
in
the
hearing because
of
the conflicting
notices.
(C
0036).
At
that time,
counsel
was
unaware
of
any specific
individual
that
was unable
to
8
participate
due to
the conflicting notice but again warned that it was possible that such
individuals existed.
(C
0036).
Indeed, at the
Illinois Pollution Control Board hearings, it became absolutely clear that
people were denied an
opportunity
to
participate in
part
because of the improper notices and in
part because
the
City
police barred people from entering the hearing room on the first night of
the
hearing and people could not hear an announcement made by the
hearing officer that
they
could have
registered at any
time that evening.
(11/4
Tr. 109,
306-307).
For example, Mr.
Darrell William Bruck
testified
at
the IPCB hearing that before the City
hearings commenced, he saw a legal notice that stated one set
of rules and a newspaper article
that
stated a different set of rules. (11/4 Tr. 100). He
recalled that the notice in the newspaper
indicated that people
wishing
to
sign
up to object
had until the day of the hearing, however, he
had seen
an
article in the same paper stating that the Kankakee City
Council
had set a
rule that
one
had to sign up five days
before the proceeding. (11/4 Tr. 100). The week before
the
hearing
(between June 12 and June 17), Mr. Bruck
telephoned the Kankakee City Clerk,
Anjanita
Dumas.
(11/4 Tr. 113). Mr. Bruck explained that the
reason he contacted the City Clerk was to
“attempt to sign up as an objector” (11/4
Tr. 117). The City Clerk told Mr.
Bruck
that the
advertisement that had been placed
in the newspaper
by
the applicant was
irrelevant
and rather
the
City Council rules applied. (11/4 Tr. 117). He was
told it was “too late” to register as an
objector with the
City Clerk.
(C
1549-1550).
Mr. Bruck did attempt to go to the
siting hearing on June 17, 2000, however, when he
arrived at
shortly after 8:00 p.m. (the time the hearing was
scheduled to commence), he was
unable
to
enter the hearing room due to the extreme crowd. (11/4
Tr. 109). He could not
get
into the
Council Chamber until after
10:00
p.m. and at
no time while he was in the hallway did
9
he
ever hear any announcement
that he
could sign up
and
register that evening.
(11/4 Tr. 109).
While
Mr. Bruck was in
the hallway,
he could not hear any
of the witnesses nor
the lawyers’
arguments nor
any announcements
regarding
the rules of the proceeding,
nor
any
declarations
regarding the rights
of the citizens.
(11/4
Tr. 105). At
no time did he see anyone
come
into the
hallway
from the City
Council
chambers
to make an
announcement to the
people
in
the
hail
about signing up to
participate. (11/4
Tr. 106). As a matter
of fact, at
no time on June 17th
did
he ever
hear an
announcement
that he
could sign in and
register that evening
(11/4 Tr. 107).
The Kankakee
City Clerk,
Anjanita Dumas
explicitly
testified that she
never read the
siting
ordinance before
the siting hearing
and at no time did
anyone
discuss
or instruct her
on
that
ordinance.
(11/6 Tr.
231).
Nonetheless,
she was the individual
at
the
City of Kankakee that,
pursuant
to the ordinance,
was left
with the responsibility
of
accepting
the appearances
of
individuals
who wished
to participate
in the hearing. (11/6
Tr. 239).
Ms.
Dumas
testified
that
she “didn’t know”
if anyone in her
office ever
informed the members
of the
public
that
they had
to use the
word “participate”
in their
appearance forms
in order to effectuate
an appearance
as an
objector. (11/6 Tr.
248). The City
Clerk
maintains she
never had
any conversations with
any
member of the public
explaining
to
them what needed
to
appear in
their letter
which
they were
required
to file in order to
show that they
wanted to
participate
in the hearing.
(11/6 Tr.
248).
Her
only excuse
for not having
those conversations
was an
assertion
that “we
don’t give legal
advice
in the
office
and I can’t write a
letter
for someone.”
(11/6 Tr. 248).
Hearing Officer
Bohien admitted
that unless
someone
used the
word
participate
in their
appearance
form,
that the form was
simply filed in
the record as
indicating someone
who
wished
to give
a
public
statement. (11/4 Tr.
332). What Mr.
Bohlen failed to
recognize is that
the siting
ordinance
requiring
five (5) days notice
explicitly
stated
“this rule does
not
apply to
a person or
10
entity who
desires
only
to
present an oral
or written
position
statement
to
the
City
Council.”
(C
3237).
Ms.
Patricia
O’Dell testified
that she was
aware that the legal notice
that was sent
said
anyone
could sign up until
the
day
of
the hearing, Monday,
June 17th, but she
read,
and heard,
another
statement that said
that anybody
who
wanted to
participate
had to sign
up five (5) days
before the hearing.
(11/6
Tr.
30-3
1). She, like
Mr. Bruck, attempted
to
clarify the
confusion by
telephoning
the City Clerk’s office.
Her confusion
was not cleared
up
during the
telephone call,
so she
went to the City
Clerk’s office
on June 12, 2002.
(11/6 Tr. 31).
At
that
time, she
asked
the City
Clerk
if there
was a form or document
that she
needed to sign in order
to be
able
to ask
questions and make
comments
at the public
hearing.
(11/6
Tr. 36-37). She
was
told “there
was
no document
and no
form and I was to write
a
letter saying
I wish to speak.”
(11/6 Tr. 37).
Ms.
O’Dell then asked
whether her
time for submitting
her appearance
was
the day of
the hearing or
five (5)
days before and
was told “if
[she] wanted to go by
the legal notice,
[she] was
welcome
to.” Id.
She then asked
Ms. Dumas who had the
final authority
on making
the deadline decision
and was told
the City Clerk
had
such authority.
(11/6
Tr.
37).
She asked the City
Clerk
if they
had
the
final
authority “then
what
did they say
was the final day
that I could file
a
document
to
participate.” (11/6
Tr.
37).
She was
finally told it
was five days ahead
and
therefore
she had to
file it by
June 12th.
(11/6 Tr. 37). She
then drafted a letter
pursuant to
the City Clerk’s direction
and
gave it
to
the City
Clerk on June
12, 2002.
(C
2230).
This letter
provided “I would
like to
Ms.
O’Dell’s
appearance form is
found at two places
in the
City
of Kankakee
record.
First
at Pg. 2230, which is
not date stamped, an
again at Pg.
2233,
and at
this time date stamped
June 19,
2002
at
6:27
p.m. For some
reason, a Ms. Olivia
Wagner
and
Ms. Ruth Romer find themselves
in a
similar
circumstance
as Ms.
O’Dell
as to the appearance
form
which
is found in two different
locations within the
record. The first
location not
dated
stamped and the
second location date stamped
June 19 at
6:27 p.m. This is
particularly troubling
since Ms. O’Dell
explicitly
testified
that she filed her appearance
on June
12, 2002 at around noon.
11
speak at the
landfill
public
hearing being
held
on June 17, 18, 19,
20,
21
of
2002
and it was
signed and addressed
by
Ms. O’Dell
with her telephone
number. (C226).
Despite the fact
that she was told by
the City Clerk that
she had to
file
a letter saying she
wanted
to “speak” in
order to participate
and that she indeed
filed
that
letter, she was not
recognized
as an
objector
on June 17, 2002,
and was not
allowed into the
public hearing room
due to
the
overcrowding.
(11/6 Tr. 49).
It was not until the third
or
fourth
day of the hearing
that
Ms.
O’Dell
was successful
in convincing Hearing
Officer Bohlen
that
she
should
have been
recognized
as a participant
and at that
point, she was then
allowed to
ask questions and fully
participate.
Id. However,
by
that
time,
one of the witnesses
was
no longer
available
for cross-
examination,
Dr. Schoenberger,
the only
witness
called by
the applicant as to
Criterion viii.
Id.
He testified
and was
cross-examined
on June 17,
2002 during
which time Ms. O’Dell
was forced
to
stand in the hallway
where
she
could not hear or see
the
proceedings.
Id. Hearing
Officer
Bohlen
acknowledged
that all of the forms
that did
not
use
the word “participate”
were
simply
filed in
the City record
at Pgs. 2223-2235
and
referenced
in the table of
contents
as “written
requests
to
make public
comments.”
(11/4 Tr.
330).
2.
The Public was
also denied
the opportunity to
attend the first
night
of
the
hearing.
Hearing Officer
Bohien admitted
that he was
aware that the
crowds would be
substantial.
(11/4
Tr.
320). As
a matter of fact, the
applicant’s
representative,
Ms. Jaymie
Simmon,
informed
the
City
Council
at the February 19,
2002 meeting
that the hearings would
be
crowded.
(C
3154).
Furthermore,
the week before
the hearings
Ms. O’Dell explicitly
inquired
of both the City Clerk
and Hearing
Officer Bohlen
whether
there was
going
to
be
any backup plan
if the hearings were
overcrowded.
(11/4
Tr.
336).
Ms.
O’Dell had
viewed
the
room and knew that
a citizen’s group
she
was involved in alone
would
take
up the vast majority of
the seats
available
to the
public.
Id.
12
The City evidenced its expectation of substantial crowds
by
putting additional chairs in the City
Council chambers. (11/4 Tr. 321).
Explicit
objections
were
even
made before
any
opening
statement or
witness to the hearing proceeding on the grounds that the public was not being
allowed into the
hearing room and that of the public
could
not hear the announcement
by
the
hearing officer that
they could sign in to register
to participate. (C 0039). That
motion
was
joined by the
Kankakee County state’s attorney, Edward Smith
(C 0039).
Additionally, the
evidence was that the annexation hearings for the landfill, which
took place several months
before the landfill siting hearings, were also overcrowded. (11/6 Tr. 110). At those hearings,
people were allowed to stand in the back of the room, but for some reason the people that
attempted to stand in the back of the room of the Section 39.2
hearing were told
to
leave. Id.
On June 17, 2002, the seats to the Council chamber room
were
completely occupied well
before the meeting was scheduled to start at 8:00 p.m. (11/4
Tr.
63,
109, 123-124, 143). People
were
told they could not stand in the back of the hearing room. (11/4 Tr. 66, 143).
People filled
the
foyer outside the chamber room and the two stairwells and landing leading from the first
floor door. (11/4 Tr. 66). There were even people standing outside.
(11/4
Tr.
78).
From the hall
no one could see, nor hear, the proceedings. (11/4 Tr. 67, 75-76, 105,
125).
There were only six
chairs in the hall and the majority of people were forced to stand.
(11/4 Tr. 144). It was hot and
uncomfortable to people including the many elderly who
attempted to attend. (11/4 Tr. 67, 78,
79). Armed
policemen kept people from entering the building and from entering
the Council
chambers. (11/4 Tr. 68-69, 130, 143). No
one heard anyone from the City or make any
announcement that people could sign up to participate that evening.
(11/4
Tr. 80, 107). Many
people were disappointed in the lack of accommodation and
left after they realized they were not
13
going to
be
allowed
to
attend
the
hearing.
(11/4
Tr.
66,
108).
Many
people
never
returned
due
to their
experiences
on the
first
night.
Id.
On
the
first
night,
even
elderly
people
that
were
able
to
find
a seat
such
as
Ms. Betty
Elliott
were
told
by
armed
City
policemen
that
they
could
not
sit
in the
seats
that they
were
able
to find.
(11/4
Tr.
158).
This
happened
to
Ms. Elliott
on
four
different
occasions
until
she
was
finally
banished
to the
hallway
where
she could
neither
hear
nor
see the
proceedings.
Id. The
room
was
overcrowded
on
the
second
night
as
well,
but
by
that night
a
speaker
system
was
placed
in
the hallway.
(11/4
Tr.
323).
3.
The
City
failed
to
follow
the
notice
that indicated
the June
17,
2002 hearing
would
cease
at 10:00
p.m.
The
public
notice published by
the
Applicant
provided
that
the
first night
of
the hearings
would
commence at 8:00
p.m. and
conclude
at
10:00
p.m.
(Applicant’s
Ex. 6).
Members
of
the
public
that
were banished
to the
hallway
left the
hearing
shortly
before
10:00
p.m.
because
they
understandably
believed
that the
hearing
was going
to
conclude
at 10:00
p.m. and
they
had been
unsuccessful
in getting
into
the
room
by
that
time and
therefore
determined
that there
was
no
need
to
stay any
later.
(11/4
Tr. 133).
Obviously,
the
people
in the
hallway
could
not hear
the
statements
made
by
the
hearing
officer
that
the
hearing
would
continue
regardless
of the
hour
until
the
completion
of the
Applicant’s
witness
on Criterion
8,
Dr.
Schoenberger.
(C 0013).
Indeed,
the County’s
cross-examination
of Dr.
Schoenberger
did not
even
commence
until
around
11:00
p.m.
and
the
hearing
did
not
conclude
until
12:30
a.m.
June
18, 2002.
(C
0013).
4.
The
City
failed
to
provide
copies
of
the
application
to
the County
of
Kankakee.
The
City
of
Kankakee
ordinance
number
01-65
was
adopted
October
15,
2001,
and
provides
at Section
4(d)(1):
14
Upon
receipt of a
proper and
complete application
and payment of the
applicable
filing fee
deposit,
the
City Clerk shall date
stamp
all
copies and immediately
deliver
one
copy
to
the
Chairman of the County
Board
and one copy to
the
Kankakee
Solid Waste
Director.
Kankakee
County Siting
Ordinance,
01-65,
4(d)(l)
(October 15, 2001).
The
City
has
admitted that the
ordinance was not
followed
and copies of the
application were
not
provided
to
the County.
(11/4
Tr. 305;
11/6 Tr.
237-238).
The
City
has also
admitted that the ordinance’s
requirement
that
the application
be turned over
immediately
to
provide the County
with
every
possible
opportunity
to
review, analyze,
test and
comment
upon the
application before
the
39.2
proceeding
began.. (11/4
Tr. 305).
The City Clerk
Anj anita Dumas
admitted
that she
never
even read the
siting ordinance
before
her deposition
on
October 25,
2002 in discovery of
these proceedings.
(11/6
Tr. 232).
She
further admitted
that
no one
from
the
City, including
Mayor Green and
City Attorney
Bohien,
ever informed
her that
she was
supposed
to
send
copies of the
application to
the
Chairman
of the County
Board and
the County
Solid
Waste
Director.
(11/6 Tr.
234-235).
The
Mayor
and Mr.
Bohlen
both
admitted
that
in their
opinion the siting
ordinance
should have been
followed
but was
not.
(11/4
Tr. 305; 11/6,
237).
Furthermore,
the City
admitted that
the
reason
that
the copies were
supposed
to be
turned over
immediately
was to
provide
the County
with
every
opportunity to
review, analyze
and test
the
application of
a landfill that
was proposed to be
erected
in Kankakee
County. Id.
Not only did the
City
Clerk
fail
to
provide
copies
of the
application
but she
required
the
County’s
outside
engineering
expert to
issue an FOIA
request
for
the
application
and pay
approximately
$1,000.00
for the
application.
Id. It
was not
until over six
weeks after the
application
was
filed that an outside
engineering
consultant
hired
by
the County
was
finally
able
15
to
acquire
the application
and
it
was sometime
after
that
that
it was
able
to acquire
the drawings
that
came
with
the
application.
(11/6
Tr. 239).
Unlike
the
Rules
and Procedures
of
Ordinance
number
02-24,
which
provides
that
“in
order
to ensure
fundamental
fairness,
compliance
with
the
Act,
and to
protect the
pubic interest,
the hearing
officer
may waive
any
of
these Rules
and
Regulations”,
(C
3239),
Siting
Ordinance
number
01-65
does
not
contain
any
reference
that
any City
official
may
waive
any portion
of the
siting
ordinance.
See Kankakee
City
Siting
Ordinance,
01-65. On
the contrary,
the Kankakee
County
siting
ordinance
0-65 provides
“it
is apparent
to
the
Kankakee
City
Council that
due to
the
necessarily
technical
nature of
the
information
provided
to it relative
to the
above-mentioned
criteria, a
valuation
of
such
information
will require
the
analysis and
opinions
of qualified
professionals,
without
which
the
Council
will be unable
to properly
and
effectively
fulfill the
mandate
proposed
upon it
by
the General
Assembly.”
(C
3212).
The ordinance
further
provides
that
“deciding approval
procedures
and
criteria
provided for
in the Act
and
in this
ordinance
for
the
new
[Pollution
Control
Facilities]
shall be
the exclusive
siting
procedures
and
rules
and
approval
procedures.”
(C
3220).
Finally,
the Act
provides at
Section
10:
“this
ordinance
and
the
attached
rules and
procedures
(Ex. A)
shall
take effect
immediately
upon
its
passage and
approval
by the
Kankakee
City Council
as
provided
by law.”
(C
3220).
5.
Pre-fihing
contacts
and evidence
of
bias.
The Mayor
of
Kankakee,
Donald
Green,
testified
that
he
realized at
some point
that funds
could be
generated
for the City
by
negotiating
a
lucrative
Host
Agreement
with
a landfill
operator.
(11/6
Tr.
169). Mayor
Green
had
numerous
conversations
with
Tom
Volini and
other
representatives
of
Town
and
Country,
even before
a request
for proposal
was
made for
the
landfill to
be
constructed
in the
City
of Kankakee.
(11/6
Tr. 158-160).
Eventually,
Town and
Country
made a
request
for proposal
which
was
accepted
by
the City
of Kankakee.
Id.
16
However, the
land that Town
and Country
proposed
to build a landfill
upon
was not
within the
City of Kankakee
and instead
was located
in the
unincorporated
County lands over a
mile from the city streets
of the City
of Kankakee. (11/4
Tr.
229).
Therefore, the City,
through
Mayor
Green
and Christopher
Bohlen,
assisted Town
and Country in seeking
the
annexation
of
the property which
was not contiguous
to the City
of
Kankakee
except for a narrow
railway strip
that
extended from
the
City out into
County property.
(11/4 Tr. 225).
The Mayor and
Mr.
Bohien
both
admitted
that the proposed
area of the
landfill is actually surrounded
by
properties
that
are not annexed
into the City. (11/4
Tr.
224-227;
11/6
Tr. 153).
The
City
Attorney
Bohlen and Mayor
Green
both
acknowledged that
at
the time
the
annexation process was
going forward,
they
were aware
that once the
property was
annexed into
the
City that the City
would be
the
siting authority instead
of
the County.
(11/6 Tr. 153;
11/4
Tr.
224). No other
explanation for the
annexation has been
provided.
The
Applicant does
not
own
the land at issue and
as
was evidenced
by the
testimony
at
the underlying
hearing,
the landfill
will
actually
be placed into
an aquifer which
will
require
an unusual
“over-engineering
of the
landfill”.
With the
City’s
assistance,
the Applicant
was
successful
in annexing the
property into
the
City thereby
establishing
the City
as the
siting authority.
(11/4 Tr.
227).
At
the time
Mr. Bohlen was
assisting the
Applicant in
the annexation process,
Mr.
Bohlen
had reviewed
the county solid
management
plan and “believed by
then
it did
call for only
one landfill”.
(11/4
Tr. 222).
Mr. Bohlen knew
that
there already
was
a
landfill operating within
the County.
(11/4
Tr. 222-223).
At the
same time
that the City was assisting
and
hearing
the
annexation
petitions, Mayor
Green
and City Attorney
Bohlen were
also in the process
of negotiating
a
lucrative
Host
Agreement
with
Town and Country.
(11/4 Tr. 227-229).
Mr.
Bohlen admitted that
under
the
17
agreement the
City would receive
certain compensation
for every ton
of waste that
was accepted
by the
landfill.
(11/4
Tr. 232).
This agreement,
which is referenced
in the table of
contents
by
the City
of Kankakee
as an “Agreement
for Siting”
provided an estimate
that in the first
ten years
of
operation the landfill
would
generate
approximately
$42
million for the
City of Kankakee.
(11/4
Tr. 232).
Mr.
Bohien
was aware that the estimated
compensation
would
be between
$4
million and
$5
million
per year
for the life of the facility
which
was
estimated to be
open for 25
to 30 years. (11/4
Tr. 236).
Individual aldermen
were aware
that Mr. Bohlen was
negotiating,
drafting
and
communicating
with Town and Country
about the
Agreement for
Siting.
(11/4 Tr.
237,
238).
Mr.
Bohlen admitted that
he spoke
with agents of the
Applicant on
numerous
occasions regarding
the Host
Agreement and
he
personally
performed rewrites
on at
least seven
occasions.
(11/4
Tr. 241).
As
further
evidence
of the cooperative
effort
between
the City of
Kankakee and Town
and Country in
attempting to site
this
landfill,
the Applicant
even assisted the City
in drafting
its
Solid
Waste
Management
Plan. (11/4 Tr.
256).
Mr. Bohien
admitted
that
he received
examples
of such plans from
the Applicant.
Id.
Not only
did the Applicant
assist in
drafting the Solid
Waste Management
Plan,
but it is
also
apparent
from a
correspondence dated
March
12,
2002, that the
Applicant’s counsel
drafted
the
Rules and Procedures
for
the very landfill
siting hearing at issue.
(Petitioner’s
Ex. 2 attached
hereto
as
Petitioner’s
Appendix
C).
That
letter
explicitly
provides
that
Mr.
Mueller “previously
drafted
for Tom Volini
a
proposed
Facility
Siting
Ordinance and
Accompanying
Rules and
Regulations
which
I
believe have
been adopted.”
(11/4 Tr.
249). The letter
is sent to Mr.
Christopher
Bohlen
and says
“if you want to defer
cross-examination
until
after the
close
of the
applicant’s
case, and
then if
cross-examination is
conducted as
a “round table”
format
where
all
18
the witnesses are available at once, the City Council will need to amend Section 6(e)(14) of the
existing Ordinance
found on page 10 of my draft copy”.
Id.
Mr. Mueller then
explained how the rules and procedures should be amended to read as
follows:
Cross-examination of any party’s witnesses shall be deferred
until completion of
the direct testimony
of all of that party’s witnesses. Thereafter, all witnesses shall
be
simultaneously available for cross-examination so the
questions
are
directed
to
the witness most
qualified
to
answer. Any dispute between the parties as to which
witness
should
answer a question of cross-examination shall be resolved by
the
Hearing Officer.” (Petitioner’s Ex. 2, attached hereto as
Petitioner’s Appendix
C).
A review of
Section
5(e)
of the Rules and Procedures
(C
3236) establishes
that some of
this language
was adopted verbatim by the City Council.
Specifically, the reference to “cross
examination of any party’s witnesses shall be deferred until the
completion of the direct
testimony of all that party’s
witnesses” appears in the ordinance itself. Id.
Likewise,
the
language that “all witnesses
shall
be
simultaneously available for
cross-examination [so that]
questions [shall be] directed to the
witness most qualified to answer.. .“ appears
in the city
ordinance as
well. Id. Finally, the discussion that the
Hearing Officer shall resolve
any
dispute
is also contained within the
city ordinance. Id.
6.
Improper and
prejudicial visit
to
other landfill facilities.
Mr. Bohlen admitted
that the Applicant took the City Council on a
bus trip to an example
landfill,
before the application
was filed. (11/4 Tr. 270). He did not
recall any objectors being
invited. Id.
7.
The February 19, 2002 meeting was a
pre-adjudication of
facts
and
impeachment of the Section
39.2 Hearing.
At some
point before
the day
of February 19, 2002, a
meeting was held between
Mayor
Green, City Attorney Bohlen, Tom
Volini, and other agents of Town and
Country at which time
19
the idea was
suggested
of making
a
presentation
to the City Council
before the
required 39.2
notices would
be
sent out
on February 20, 2002.
(11/4 Tr.
210). The Mayor and
City
Attorney
Bohlen agreed
that the presentation
would be made. Id.
Specifically,
the
Mayor
agreed that he
would provide
a
“special
indulgence” to the
applicant to speak
on February
19,
2002, because
he
believed Town
and Country
could solve the financial
dilemma
of the City
of Kankakee.
(C3143). The City
did not place
any restrictions on
the
Applicant
as to
who could
speak
at
the
February
19 City Council meeting.
(11/4
Tr. 184). During this
initial
meeting,
the City never
told
the
Applicant
not
to attempt to
present its case
to the City Council
outside
of
the hearing
process. (11/4
Tr. 277).
No one at the City
ever
told Town
and Country that
they could
not
present expert
opinion statements
at the February
19,
2002 meeting.
(11/6 Tr. 186).
Prior
to
February
19,
2002,
the City
was aware that
the County of
Kankakee was opposed
to any new
landfill
being
erected in the City of
Kankakee.
(11/6 Tr. 186). No
notices were sent
to
potential objectors,
nor
individuals
within 250 feet of
the
landfill,
about the
February
19, 2002
meeting as
required by Section
39.2. Though
Mr. Bohlen
would not admit
that
before
2/19/02
he was aware that
Town and
Country was going to
give a
presentation
to discuss
how the Section
39.2 criteria
were
met, he acknowledged
that “I
certainly heard
it during the
meeting.” (11/4 Tr.
273).
A
review
of the City Council
minutes
indicates
the Mayor
described what
he believed
was the
financial problems
of
the City
of Kankakee and
the
benefits
that he
believed
the
application
brought.
(C
3143-3144).
Indeed, the
Mayor admitted that
on that
night
he made
public
statements
in favor of the
landfill. (11/6 Tr.
175). He
informed the City
Council
that
The Applicant
stipulated
that
no
39.2
notices were sent
with respect to the
February 19,
2002 City Council
meeting.
(11/6 Tr. 188, 190).
He also acknowledged
making other
biased
statements
to
the media (11/6 Tr.
175).
20
“we started this
process well over
two years ago”
(C 3143)
and that “I think
we’re on the right
track and
going
down the
right path.”
(C
3144). He
then introduced Mr.
Volini of Town and
Country
as
“having a
presentation they want
to make, to talk about
theirs and where we
are from
where we
started to where we
are today and what
direction we’re going.”
(C 3144).
He then
invited that, at
the proper time,
the City Council
and the City staff could
ask
questions
of the
Applicant
(C
3144).
Mr. Volini
then addressed
the City Council
and indicated that he
had
been
working for
the last 10
months with
City Attorney Chris Bohlen
negotiating
an agreement.
(C
3145). Mr.
Volini also
indicated his partner
who
was the
operator of a landfill
in Morris that
some of the
members of the
City Council came
to see. Id. Mr.
Volini then
made
the earlier referenced
statement about the
“unfettered opportunity
to talk to you
without
the
filter of lawyers” and
also
stated,
“we
want to be
able to
speak
with
you
person
to person about
things that we believe
in,
concepts
that
we’ve proved and
environmental
protection that we’ve
achieved.”
(C
3145).
Immediately
after stating
that he intended to
preserve the
Council from the
“rancor” and
“back and forth”
of lawyers,
Mr. Volini then
promptly introduced
his own
lawyer,
George
Mueller, to the
City Council
as “the dean of landfill
siting in Illinois.”
Id. He
also introduced
individuals
he
described
as “the best
experts we
can
find”, including,
Devin Moose,
P.E., Eric
Dippon, Mike
Donahue,
Mike Gingrich, Ph.D.,
Jaymie
Simmon
and JoAnne
Powers and these
people spoke
on (and
apparently
off)
the record
as to the
merits of the application
and in Ms.
Simmon’s case,
about the
untrustworthiness
of the Section
39.2 hearing. Id.
Mr. Volini
indicated “at
tonight’s
meeting
we
will have
an
opportunity
to
have our expert
witnesses meet
with you, to
talk to you about
their fields of
expertise briefly,
to talk to you about
the process
that’s
dictated
by
the statute that
George
Mueller
will describe, to
talk to you
about the
proof.
21
You are called upon to
be
judge
and jury.”
(C
3146). Therefore, it
is
clear that the intention of
the
meeting was
to
present “expert witness” testimony to the City Council.
6
Mr.
Volini then indicated that “we want you to know the proofs you’re called
upon
to
make sure that we make. Or you’re to vote no. That’s what the statutes say
and
the cases say.
So,
if, if Envirogen can’t convince you and Devin Moose can’t convince you of the
quality of his
calculations,
the integrity of his design and the compliance of that design the with
Environmental
Protection Act, you
get to vote no”. Id. He then indicated “I have some packages
that will be
referred
to
in this presentation for each of you. . .“ Id. Volini also stated
“So, that’s the
introduction to a
process that is really ten months old. In a sense, Mayor and
members
of the
counsel, and you who must vote on this, it’s ten months and 23 or 25 years
old because of our
involvement
in it.
We
expect
your questions, we expect your scrutiny, we expect
to be held to
the highest
standard. We’re on trial. The trial started a long time ago.
We’re on trial with you.
You’re on trial.” Id.
Mr. Volini then indicated “after tonight, we can’t talk to you.”
Id.
Then he introduced his attorney, George
Mueller, who explained that in his opinion
“once an application for local siting approval is filed, and
that will be three weeks from
tomorrow, I believe,
there
is, in effect,
a
ban on decision makers communicating
on substantive
issues
within any of the parties in the proceeding.”
(C
3148).
Mr. Devin Moose, the project
engineer
for the Applicant, then
addressed the City
Council.
(C
3149-3152).
He described his
company and the pride that they took
in preparing
applications based
upon the facts and data and then he began to describe the
siting criteria.
(C
3149).
Review of his testimony makes it clear that he
not only described the
criteria but also
how the Applicant believed it met that criteria. For
example,
as
to
Criterion 1, Mr. Moose
6
Surprisingly, at the IPCB hearings, the applicant and the City
objected to
the term “witness” being used to
describe the individuals that spoke on February 19, 2002.
22
explained the procedures
that
he
uses including doing
Freedom of Information
requests of
every
landfill
in Illinois and most
landfills
in Indiana, Michigan
and Wisconsin in order
to
“prove
to
you how much
garbage is
generated, to prove
to you how much is
recycled
and
how much, yet
needs to be
disposed of.”
(C
3150).
He
then
moved
on
to
Criterion
2 and explained
that
as
an
engineer, it
is
his oath
“not
to
return a profit
to my client, not to return
a profit to
my business,
my professional
oath is to protect
the public health,
safety
and welfare.”
(C
3150). He then
explained
his
procedures
for
determining
whether
the
protection of health,
safety
and
welfare
was met,
including doing drillings,
wells,
lab tests, in situ field
tests
and then
“marry
the design
into the hydro
geological setting”.
(C
3150). He
explained that
it is his firm’s
policy to “respect
nature and use
nature for the
design of the facility.”
Id. He
then explained
that
his designs
include
a clay
liner
which the City Council
could “rely
that when you bury
clay below
grade, it’s
going to be
there.”
Id.
He explained that
his
systems
include
plastic
liners and leachate
collection systems.
Id. He then
explained
how
leachate
is
monitored in his designs
and how
the
containment
system is included to
hold leachate
into the
system.
(C
3151). He
explained that
his
design involves
keeping
no more than one
foot
of leachate
in the bottom of the
landfill at
any
given time and that the
rest is pumped
out and
taken to a waste
water treatment
plant.
(C
3151)
He
continued
to
explain
how they deal with
surface water,
storm
water
and air
pollution.
Id. He
explained
that there are 50 to
70 gas
withdrawal
points
within their
application
that he puts
under
negative
pressure and a
vacuum will
be
applied
to the
landfill.
Id. The gas
would then be
routed
for
positive
energy use. Id.
Mr. Devin
Moose
told
the City
Council
that “there are
a
group of people
in
this
country
that
go around
fighting
landfills and
put
stuff on
the internet
with
no basis in fact.
And those
people earn a living
by going
around fighting landfills”.
(C
3152).
Even worse,
the
Applicant
23
introduced another
“expert
witness” by
the name of
Jaymie Simmon as
someone who
“will have
some
things to say tonight
about the
process
and
how
the
organized environmental
community
involves
itself in the process.”
(C
3146). Mr.
Volini
said
that Town and Country
would have
“Jaymie
Simmon
tell you
some of the
things she’s learned
about the community
side and
the
organizing
environmental
community side of the
these
hearings.”
(C
3153).
Ms.
Simmon then told the
City Council “we’ve
talked to some
people who
are experts
and who’ve
been
through
this process many
times. And based
on what they’re
telling
us, the
hearings
can
be
expected to be
crowded,
lively,
somewhat emotional.”
(C
3153).
She
explained
that there
would be
people upset about
the issue “some
of them, many
of
them from
Otto
Township,
from the
vicinity near the landfill.”
Id.
She
also said that
and then
there will be
those from outside the
community,
who don’t live
here, that
Devin eluded
to, who are
simply landfill opponents.
That’s
their passion.
That’s
their
job,
is go around
and oppose
landfills
wherever they are
proposed.
And,
these
people
are likely to come in,
not as
fist waiving
fanatics,
but as people
who
are
very
calm, appear
to be
very
professional, and
appear to be very
educated
and
very well
informed
on the issues.
Ah, one of the
things we need
to watch out
for,
and I’ll be the third
to
tell you
tonight, to
remember
to
make
decisions
based
on
science. This
should not, and must
not, be
allowed
to become
an emotional issue.
But,
there are
those
who will want to
make it that.
And,
they
will
tell stories,
for
example,
they
will
quote
an EPA report
from 1988 that
says that
all
landfill
liners
eventually will
leak. What
they won’t tell you,
is
that that report
was
based
upon
research of landfills
that
were
built
before 1979.
And, as you
well know,
the
standards changed
very dramatically
from 1979 to
the present day,
and that report
goes
on to say
that
indeed, leachate
collection systems
and
plastic
liners
and
clay
liners and treatment
of leachate
are, indeed
the best way to
protect
the
environment. They
won’t
tell
you
that part. Urn,
partial quotes and
out of
context
quotes
are
a pretty potent
tool that we
can expect
to be used by
the
environmentalists.
All
of it geared
to get
all involved to doubt
what they
know.
Urn, It is a concerted
effort, really,
to
create controversy
and
cause
confusion.
(C
3153).
Mr. Volini closed by
stating
“you’ll
hear this
without
so much
emotion
and with
a
bunch
of lawyers
fighting
with
each other
in about 120 days,
but we
wanted
you to
hear it from us
24
first.”
(C
3156). The City Council
then
posed
substantive questions
to the Applicant’s
witnesses.
(C3
156-66).
Both the Mayor and
Mr.
Bohlen
testified
that during
the February 19, 2002
meeting, they
were
not concerned about
statements
made
by
applicant
and
at no time voiced
any
objection
to
any
of those
statements
nor
did they at
any time that evening
direct the City
Council to disregard
any statements
made by
the
applicant and its agents.
(11/4
Tr. 310;
11/6
Tr. 184).
8.
The
City required
FOIA requests for
fundamental
information concerning
the
landfill siting hearings.
The
Kankakee City Clerk
required the County
of
Kankakee
and other objectors
to file
freedom of
information requests
to acquire basic
information concerning
the landfill
siting
hearings.
(11/6
Tr. 239).
For example, the
City Clerk refused to
inform the
County
the names of
the people who had
registered
to
participate absent
submission
of a Freedom
of
Information
Act
(FOIA)
request and
payment of certain
costs.
(C003
1). The
City Clerk also
refused to provide
the
identities of the witnesses
that
had been
disclosed
by
the
Applicant and other
parties, though
the
City
Clerk
was
in possession of such
information, unless
and
until
a
FOIA request was made.
Id.
Furthermore, the City
Clerk
refused to waive
costs as to
the request for the
names of
the
witnesses and
parties, even though
the request was from
another
public body, the County
of
Kankakee. Id.
The
result of the
refusal
to
provide the
information absent a
FOJA request
and payment
of costs
was
that counsel for the
County did
know
what witnesses
had been
disclosed
until the
very
day the
39.2 hearings
were scheduled
to commence.
Id.
9.
Facts
concerning hearing
officer
bias.
On the first night
of the
hearing,
in response
to
a
Motion to
Disqualify
filed by Waste
Management, Mayor
Green recused himself
and at that
time recommended
that the
City
Council
25
appoint City
Attorney
Bohien,
as the Hearing
Officer.
(11/4
Tr. 308). The
Motion immediately
carried
and the
hearings commenced.
Id.
During
discovery
in this IPCB
case, it has
become obvious
that
Hearing
Officer Bohien
was also
biased
by not only
his direct superior
being the City Mayor,
but
also
because
he had
extensive
substantive
contacts with
the
Applicant
before
and during
the
RFP
process, the
annexation
process, drafting
the County’s
Solid Waste
Management Plan, drafting
the Rules
and
Ordinances for the
County, negotiating
the Host
Agreement, and
attending other
meetings with
the
Applicant. (11/4
Tr. 210,
212, 229, 255). The
depth of his
involvement with the
Applicant
and
its
attorneys
was
not
completely
discovered
until October 31,
2002, when the
March 12,
2002
correspondence
from George
Mueller
to
City
Attorney Bohlen
was found by
the
County.
(11/4
Tr. 242).
That
correspondence
makes it
clear that George
Mueller
was not only actively
communicating
with Attorney
Bohlen
but
actually
directing
the
course of the
Section
39.2
hearings
by
drafting the Rules
and Procedures
for those hearings
for Mr. Bohien
and
the City and
suggestions
that
discussions
could continue between
the
Applicant
and the City
after March
13,
2002. (11/4 Tr. 249).
10.
Facts
concerning post-filing
ex pane
communication.
The
March 12,
2002,
correspondence
from the
Applicant’s
attorney to
City Attorney
Bohlen
indicated
further
communications could
continue after the
filing of the
Application
on
March 13,
2002.
(Petitioner’s Ex.
2,
Appendix
C).
The letter
also attached Mr.
Mueller’s draft
of the Proposed Rules
for the hearing.
Id. The
letter was received by
regular mail
after the date
of filing
the application
(though it had
been received by
fax the day
before filing).
The letter is
described in more detail
infra
and
is attached hereto as
Appendix
C.
(11/4 Tr.
253).
26
C.
Facts
Concerning
Criteria.
The facts
concerning
the failure to meet Criteria
viii, ii, and v
are contained
in the body
of the argument
infra.
II.
EVIDENTIARY RULINGS
WHICH SHOULD
BE
RECONSIDERED
BY
THE
ILLINOIS
POLLUTION CONTROL
BOARD
A.
The Hearing
Officer’s Ruling
that Evidence of Pre-Filing
Contacts
was Inadmissible
was Erroneous
1.
All of
the
evidence of prefihing
contacts should have
been
allowed
because the
applicant admitted
that the adjudication
of the
merits
commenced
with these
contacts.
On the first day of
the IPCB hearings
testimony was
offered concerning
numerous
contacts that City
officials had
with
the Applicant
before the
filing
of the
application
on March
13, 2002. The
County described
these prefihing
contacts in
detail in its
opening statement. (11/4
Tr.
11-19).
The Applicant in
its opening also
referenced numerous
prefiling contacts
including
discussions
concerning the
annexation of the
property,
discussions
with
Applicant
concerning
financial
benefits
to the City, and
discussions
concerning
the
adoption
of a
City
Solid Waste
Management Plan.
(11/4 Tr. 50).
The City of Kankakee
Corporate
Counsel,
Christopher
Bohlen,
(who was also the
Hearing officer
for the City Council
Hearing)
testified
as to
the
nature
and
content
of several pre-filing
communications
with the
applicant before
any objection was
raised by
Counsel.
(11/4
Tr. 209-219).
The
Applicant
eventually objected
to
one
of the
questions
concerning
pre-filing contacts on
the grounds of
relevancy which was
sustained.
(11/4
Tr. 213). (The city
did not object to
any such questions
until after
the Hearing
Officer sustained
the
specific
objection
raised
by
the Applicant).
The hearing
officer made
it
clear that the
Applicant’s
objection would not
be
ongoing.
(11/4 Tr. 240).
There were
numerous other questions
about
pre-filing
contacts
to which no
27
objections
were
raised.
As
to the
questions
that
were objected
to, the
objections
were
sustained
and
the
witness
was allowed
to
answer
as
an
offer
of proof.
None
of the objections
should
have
been
sustained
because
the Applicant
“opened
the
door” to the
evidence
of prefihing
contacts
by
referencing
them
in his opening.
(11/4
Tr. 49).
Furthermore,
the
questions
were relevant
because
the
manner
in which
the
hearing
is conducted,
the opportunity
to be
heard, the
existence
of ex parte
contacts,
prejudgment
of
adjudicative
facts
and
the
introduction
of
evidence,
are
important
elements
in
establishing
and
assessing
fundamental
fairness.
See Hediger
v. D&L
Landfill, Inc.
(December
20,
1990),
PCB
90-163.
Furthermore,
evidence
of
bias on
the part
of the decision-maker
or a landfill
siting
hearing
officer is
relevant.
See American
Bottom
Conservancy
(ABC) v.
Fairmont,
PCB 00-200
(October 19,
2000).
The
sustaining
of the
relevancy
objections
by
Hearing Officer
Halloran
was based
on an
interpretation
of
Residents
Against
a Polluted
Environment
v.
the
Illinois
Pollution
Control
Board,
293
Ill.App.3d
219,
687
N.E.2d
552
(3d Dist.
1997),
proffered
by
the Applicant’s
attorney.
In
Residents,
the appellants
argued
that
the
applicant’s
involvement
in the County’s
amendment
of its solid
waste
management
plan constituted
an
impermissible
ex
parte contact
that
resulted
in pre-adjudication.
The
Third
District held
that such
contact
was
not
impermissible,
and
Section
40.1 only
allowed review
of
the fairness
of the
“procedures
employed
by
the County
during
the
siting process”.
Id. Notwithstanding
the
foregoing,
the
Residents
case does
not contain
a “bright-line”
test
that any
contacts that
occur
before the
filing
of the
application
are allowable
and not
relevant.
In this case,
it
is
the Petitioner’s
assertion
the
“siting
process”
actually
began before
the Application
was
filed on
March
13,
2002.
This siting
process
culminated
in a
City Council
hearing
on 2/19/02
in
which the
City
Council
gave
the
28
applicant
an
unfettered
opportunity
to
present its
expert
witness
testimony
without any
notice to
landowners
or
objectors.
The Mayor
of the
City
of
Kankakee,
explicitly
informed
the
City
Council
that
the siting
“process”
had actually
begun
two years
before
2/19/02
meeting.
(C
3144).
The Applicant
then
provided
substantive
expert
opinions
on the criteria
which
was heard
by the
City
Council
and
City Staff
who
then questioned
these
witnesses.
No
objector
was provided
a
chance
to cross-
examine
these witnesses
on
February
19, 2002.
The applicant
then
offered “expert
witness”
testimony
that the
section
39.2 hearing
that
would be
forthcoming
would be
a crowded,
confusing,
emotional
process
where people
who may
not
“appear”
to be fist waiving
fanatics
but would
offer
testimony
for environmental
groups
that
was
misleading
and untrue.
The relationship
that developed
between
the applicant
and
the City
Council
that
led up to the
City holding
the obvious
“pre-hearing”
of the application
is
not only
relevant
but
important
and
crucial
for the IPCB
to review
to
determine
whether
the
ultimate
proceeding
was tainted
by the pre-filing
biases,
contacts
and
pre-adjudication.
In effect
the Applicant
made
its first substantive
presentation
on the application
before
the
decision-makers
on February
19,
2002. The
Applicant
stated that
the
trial
had
actually
begun
when
the
Applicant
and
the City started
this cooperative
project.
(C
3146).
Moreover,
the
Applicant
characterized
potential objectors
and
the Section
39.2 hearing
itself
in a most
inflammatory
and derogatory
manner,
thereby
conveying
the clear
and
unequivocal
message
that
the
Section
39.2 hearing
should
be
viewed
with
doubt,
skepticism,
and
suspicion,
and that the
decision-makers
should
rely on
what they
heard
from
the Applicant
on and
before
February
19,
2002.
Therefore,
not only
is it clear
that the siting
process
began before
filing,
but the
2/12/02
presentation
by
the Applicant
caused
a ripple
effect which
spread
through
to
the
legally
29
recognized hearing
on
June 17, 2002 and caused the decision-makers to
pre-judge the
Application
at
the statutory hearing.
This is not a situation, as was the case in Residents Against a Polluted
Environment, in
which the Applicant
was
merely a participant in the amendment of a solid waste
management
plan review process. Rather, in this case the Applicant made a substantive presentation on its
completed Application before the City Council in a “dry run.” Nor is this merely a situation
in
which Board members
held
or
formed
personal
opinions
prior to the Application date, see, e.g.,
Waste Management ofIllinois, Inc. v. Pollution Control Board, 175 Ill.App.3d 1023, 530 N.E.2d
682 (2d Dist. 1988), but a situation in which the application process
by
admission of the
Applicant and the City themselves itself actually began before February 19, 2002. Residents
Against a Polluted Environment does not stand for the proposition that evidence of such
prejudicial
contact
may not
be admitted,
and the
holding
in that case
should
be
limited to its
facts.
The most instructive precedent on this issue is Land and Lakes Co. v. Illinois
Pollution
Control Board, 319 Ill.App.3d 41, 743
N.E.2d 188
(3l
Dist. 2000), where the court clearly
allowed
evidence of and reviewed allegations of pre-judgment of
a
siting application, where it
came to the conclusion that the contacts were not fatal because the communications by the
applicant were not with the decision-makers. In that case, Will County staff
members reviewed
and commented upon the application prior to its filing. Following the grant of siting
authority,
challengers appealed the decision of the local board and the IPCB. The
Third District found the
proceedings
fair
because
the
special assistant state’s attorney, Mr. Charles
Helsten, established a
procedure
that
avoided any contact between the applicant and the
decision-makers, which was
the County
Board,
not
County
staff See Land and Lakes Co. at 47. The court
stated
as follows:
30
Generally the PCB must confine itself to the record developed by the local siting
authority.
However, in some cases, such as the one at bar, it is proper for the PCB
to hear new
evidence
relevant
to the fundamental fairness of the
proceedings
where such evidence necessarily lies outside the record.
Id.
at48.
Given the
foregoing, this Board should allow
and
closely examine the evidence relating
to the pre-filing contacts in this siting proceeding. For the foregoing reasons the
Petitioners,
County
of Kankakee and Edward D. Smith, State’s Attorney of Kankakee County, pray that this
Honorable Board allow and admit the evidence adduced by Petitioner relating to
prejudgment
of
the Application and the prefiling contents.
2.
Any and all evidence concerning the February 19,
2002 meeting should have
been admitted because the meeting minutes were part of the underlying
record and evidence prejudgment of adjudicative
facts.
In addition to the reasons set forth in the preceding section
concerning the admissibility
of all the prefiling contacts offered in
this
case,
the
February 19, 2002 minutes and any questions
concerning that
specific meeting are obviously relevant because the minutes
are part of the local
siting record. The City of Kankakee admitted the City Council
minutes
from seven City Council
meetings that occurred
from October
15, 2002 through August 19, 2002, including
the February
19, 2002 minutes. (C
2949-3209). The City even supplemented the record during
the
IPCB
hearing with the minutes from June 3,
2002. (11/4 Tr. 281). Christopher Bohlen
explained that
the minutes of these
various
meetings were included in the section 39.2
record
by
the City
because
he understood that the inclusion of them was required as a
matter of law. (11/4 Tr. 281).
The minutes were also
included in the City record
as
an exhibit to the Motion of
Kankakee
County to Quash Proceeding
Because
of the Improper Meeting Between the City
Council and the
Applicant on February 19,
2002.
(C
2104-2190). Therefore, the minutes to the meeting were
clearly made a part of the underlying record on two occasions.
Furthermore, the Applicant and
31
the City stipulated
that
the minutes were
part of the record. (11/6 Tr. 177). Since the
minutes
were
admitted into the
record
by the City itself the questions by the Petitioners
concerning the
communications which led up to and included the 2/19/02 meeting, should have been admitted.
Furthermore,
the only objection raised to the testimony concerning the meeting (or the other pre
filing contacts) which was
sustained
was
“relevancy”.
Clearly
pre-fihing contacts of the nature of the 2/19/02 meeting are
relevant
to
the
question of whether
there was a pre-adjudication, particularly when the applicant
spoke directly
to
the decision maker and told the decision-maker that the
purpose of the meeting was to have an
“unfettered opportunity” to “speak directly” with the
decision-makers
about
the “proofs” and the
“environmental compliance.., achieved” without the “filter of lawyers”. The
Applicant then
indeed called its
expert witness (Engineer Devin Moose) to present the Applicant’s
case
that each
of the Criteria were met and the City Council
and its staff then questioned the expert
witnesses
for the Applicant. Again, the Applicant even
explicitly acknowledged the same in
its conclusory
statement
to the City
Council as follows:
that “[y]ou’ll hear
this without
so
much emotion and with a bunch of
lawyers
fighting
in about 120 days, but we wanted you to
hear it from us first” (C3156)
(emphasis added).
Therefore,
it is difficult to conceive of a more
relevant piece of evidence
and thus the
Hearing Officer
ruling of the inadmissibility of the questions
concerning the
2/19/02 meeting
was in error.
3.
The Hearing Officer’s ruling as to
the inadmissibility of the
March 12, 2002
letter from the Applicant’s counsel to the City
Attorney/Hearing Officer
Bohlen was
erroneous.
During
the Illinois Pollution Control Board Hearing, Mr. Christopher
Bohlen
was
shown
a copy of the aforementioned
correspondence
dated
March 12, 2002 which
was marked as
Petitioner’s Ex.
2.
This correspondence contained explicit, irrefutable
evidence that the
32
Applicant and its attorney were intimately involved in establishing the Rules and Procedures for
the
City
of
Kankakee landfill siting hearing. The correspondence explicitly provides that
Attorney Mueller drafted the Rules
and
Procedures for the City of Kankakee for the
Applicant
(Mr. Tom Volini) and
that
his
Rules and Procedures
were adopted.
(See Petitioner’s Ex. 2,
attached hereto as Petitioner’s Appendix
C).
It is fundamentally unfair to objectors for the Applicant to be involved in the review and
drafting of landfill siting procedures on behalf of the siting authority. Concerned
Citizens
for a
Better Environment vs. City ofHavana, page 10 (May 19, 1994). (The conduct
of the Applicant
and its counsel, George Mueller, is particularly troubling since Mr. Mueller was the objectors’
counsel in the City ofHavana case). Nonetheless, it is apparent that Mr. Mueller drafted the City
of
Kankakee’s Rules and Procedures. Furthermore, Hearing Officer Bohlen admitted that the
correspondence dated March 12, 2002 was received by regular mail on or after
the application
was
file March 13, 2002. Therefore, even if an erroneous “bright-line”
rule is applied, the letter
should have been admitted as evidence of an
improper post-filing ex parte communication.
B.
The Applicant’s Attempt to Supplement
the
Record
with Testimony Concerning
Jurisdiction at the Illinois Pollution Control Board Hearing Should not have been
Allowed.
The Kankakee City
Council lacked jurisdiction over the Application filed in
this matter
because
Town
and Country Utilities, Inc. and Kankakee Regional Landfill,
L.L.C. (collectively
the “Applicant”) failed to affirmatively demonstrate and prove that
it had satisfied the
jurisdictional requirement that proper notice was given to all
landowners located within a
statutorily prescribed
distance
of
the proposed pollution control facility pursuant to
415 ILCS
§
5/39.2. In
an eleventh hour, last ditch, attempt to cure that crucial failing, the
Applicant sought
to
introduce new evidence at the IPCB review proceedings in an attempt to
retroactively
perfect
33
its failed efforts
regarding
notice
by
calling
the Applicant’s attorney’s
secretary
and process
server, Ms.
Patricia VonPerbandt.7
Pursuant
to 415 ILCS 5/40.1(b),
the
hearing
on a petition for
review
appealing
the grant
of siting
approval
is to be based “exclusively
on the
record before the
county
board.
. .“ and no
new evidence
may
be
admitted except as
it relates to
issues
of fundamental
fairness.
See
Land
and
Lakes
Co.
v. Illinois Pollution
Control
Board,
252 Ill.Dec.
614, 319
Ill.App.3d
41, 743
N.E.2d
188 (3 Dist.
2000). Establishing
jurisdiction was the
burden of the
applicant
and its
failure to
do so at the
39.2 hearing may not
be cured
in a subsequent appeal.
The
Applicant’s
attempt to bootstrap
evidence
clearly
relating to
jurisdiction into
this
proceeding
impermissibly
extends ad
infinitum a process
which
is intended by
Illinois
law to begin
and
end
at the local
board siting
hearing.
The
Applicant has a duty
to
present
before the
local board a
complete
application,
either by the
application itself or
in
conjunction
with
evidence
adduced at
the local
hearing, and
to comply
with
the notice requirements
of the
statute. See
Spill v. City of
Madison
(March 21, 1996)
PCB 96-91. An
application
that
does not
adequately present
compliance with
all jurisdictional
pre-requisites,
is obviously
incomplete.
Since the
evidence of
notice was not
complete
at the time of the
hearing,
the decision
of the
City counsel
should
be vacated.
In Ogle
County
Board on behalf of
the County
of Ogle
v. Pollution
Control
Board,
272
Ill.App.3d
184,
649
N.E.2d 545, 208
Ill.Dec. 489
(
2
nd
Dist. 1995),
the court
held
that
the failure
by
the applicant
to
comply with
notice
requirements
could
be raised at the
IPCB
hearing.
Id. at
187-188.
However,
an applicant has
never been allowed
to
prove-up
jurisdiction
at the
IPCB
as
such
would only
provide the incentive
to
withhold
any
such information
at
the
39.2 hearing
to
avoid
the
scrutiny
of objectors.
Even
though
the testimony was
erroneously
allowed Ms.
VonPerbandt
actually
confirmed
that several
landowners
were
never
served. (11/6 Tr. 289,
298).
34
In
this case,
the
Applicant had
ample
opportunity
to
introduce
evidence regarding
its
alleged
compliance
with the notice
requirements
of
Section 39.2. The Applicant
failed to
present
this evidence.
Attempts to cure
at the appellate
are in
contravention
of the statutory
scope of
review
set forth
in section 40.1 This
Board should
not
allow such lackadaisical
disregard
for a
jurisdictional
pre-requisite
to a Section 39.2 siting
hearing,
because then obviously
it would no
longer be a
“pre-requisite” as intended
by the legislature.
Therefore,
the
plain
language of
Section 40.1 should
be followed and
the applicant barred
from admitting
evidence of
compliance
with the
jurisdictional
pre-requisite
of notice for the first
time
on appeal.
III. THE
DECISION
OF THE CITY COUNCIL
MUST
BE
OVERTURNED
BECAUSE
THE APPLICANT
FAILED TO
ESTABLISH
JURISDICTION
Section
39.2(b)
makes
it absolutely clear that
service must
be obtained
“on the owners of
all property”, (which
appear
from the authentic tax
records of the
County in
which the facility is
to be located”)
“either in person
or by
registered
mail”. 415 ILCS
5/39.2(b).
Illinois case law
clearly
establishes
that
if an
owner is listed on the
authentic
tax records that
owner must be
provided with
the
applicable
notice.
Wabash
and Lawrence
County
Taxpayers
and Water
Drinkers
Association
v. Pollution
Control
Board,
198 Ill.App.3d 388,
555
N.E.2d
1081 (5thDist.
1990).
Furthermore,
“the civil
‘return
receipt’
provision of Section
39.2(b)
of the
Illinois
Environmental
Protection Act (“the
Act”)
reflects
the intent of the
legislature to
require actual
receipt
of
the notice,
as
evidenced
by
the signing of the
return
receipt.”
Ogle
County
Board v.
Pollution
Control
Board,
272 Ill.App.3d
184, 649
N.E.2d
545 (Ill.App.2d Dist.
1995).
Finally,
the
return
receipt
must be
signed
by
the
actual owner,
or
it should be
evidenced that
the
individual
signing
was
the
authorized
agent
of the
owner
for
service process.
Illinois
Environmental
Protection Agency
v. RCS, Inc. and
Michael Duvall,
AC 96-12
(Dec. 7,
1995).
35
But
see Sam Dimaggio
v.
Solid Waste
Agency
of
Northern
Cook County, PCB 89-138
(June
11,
1990
held that merely
sending notice was
sufficient).
The failure to acquire
service results
in the
local
siting authority
failing to
have
jurisdiction.
Ogle County Board,
272 Il1.App.3d at 193;
ESG Watts
v. Sangamon County
Board,
PCB
98-2, 1999 WL
43620
(June 17,
1999)(”Notice Requirements
contained
in
Section
39.2(b)
are
jurisdictional prerequisites
which must
be
followed
in order to vest the
siting
authority
with
the
power to hear a landfill
proposal.”).
In
this case, jurisdiction
was not acquired
because
notice
was
not
sent before the
February 19, 2002
hearing, five of the
owners of a parcel
were
never
sent
notice, and the return
receipts
of numerous parcels
were
signed
by
non-owners.
A.
The
City
Council does not have
Jurisdiction
Because the
Applicant First made
its
Request
for
Site Location
Approval
to
the City
Council on
February 19, 2002
Without any
Notice
as
Required
by Section
39.2.
Review of the
February 19,
2002 City Council
minutes reflect
that an unabashed,
unequivocal
intent
of the Applicant
was to
having a hearing in
front
of the
decision
makers
(the
City
Council) in this
matter on the
merits of the
application. It is
impossible to
review
his
testimony
without coming
to
the conclusion
that the
Applicant was putting
on
its case
before any
notice
was provided to
the public or the
landowners
in the vicinity of the
landfill.
Section
39.2
provides
that notice
must
be given prior
to a request
for location
approval
by
an applicant.
The
Mayor acknowledged
at
the February 19,
2002 meeting that
at a
normal
City Council
meeting
the public is not
allowed to speak.
Nonetheless,
the applicant was
allowed to
speak and present
evidence to the City
Council on the
Section
39.2
Criterion. (Just like
a
Section 39.2
hearing).
It
is,
therefore,
obvious that the February
19, 2002
meeting was not a
normal City Council
hearing,
but
rather it
was a
hearing
on whether the Section
39.2 criteria
were met. This
was not a
meeting
to discuss
the
general logistics and
procedures that
would follow. To
the contrary,
the
Applicant
presented its expert
witnesses,
presented
its evidence
on the
specific
criteria,
argued that
36
objectors
should
be
ignored, and argued that
it had proved
compliance with the criteria. At the
conclusion of the formal presentation, and before receiving and responding to the City Council’s
questions, the Applicant explicitly
admitted
that
its purpose
was
to present
its
case to
the
City
Council without the
involvement
of
the emotional
public or the
argument
of
lawyers.
Section 39.2(b)
requires 14
days notice to all landowners prior to a request
for location
approval. The
evidence
is
clear,
and stipulated
to by the Applicant, that no section
39.2 notices
to the landowners were issued before the February 19, 2002 hearing. Furthermore, 3
9.2(d)
requires notice in a newspaper published to the public and notice
by
certified mail to all members
of the general assembly before the hearing on the Section 39.2 criteria commences. 415 ILCS
5/39/2(b).
No
notices were issued before the siting hearing commenced on 2/19/02.
Furthermore, the objectors were not given a chance to cross-examine the witnesses who spoke on
2/19/02 as required under Illinois law. Because notice was not adequately provided, the City
Council lacked jurisdiction to consider this matter and the decision of the City Council should be
vacated.
B.
The Applicant Failed to Establish Jurisdiction Because it Presented No
Evidence
that it Served each of the Owners of Parcel 13-16-23-400-001.
It is also undeniable that jurisdiction was not established in this case because the
Applicant failed to provide evidence that each of the owners of Parcel
13-16-23-400-001 were
ever sent the
39.2(b) notice. Every owner listed in the authentic tax records must be served to
establish
jurisdiction.
Wabash and Lawrence Counties
Taxpayers and Water Drinkers
Association v. Pollution Control Board, 198 Ill.App.3d 388, 555. N.E.2d 1081 (5th Dist. 1990).
Five of the owners as identified
by
the
tax records were never sent notice as there is no return
receipt
for
the Prophet Road
property
contained
in the Applicants’
Ex.
No. 7.
This fact was even
confirmed
by a
witness called
by
the
Applicant, Patricia VonPerbandt who testified that the
37
receipts indicated
to
whom
notices were sent and
that she was unsuccessful
in
personally
serving
any
owner of
this
property.
(11/6
Tr. 297-298).
Therefore, it
is absolutely
clear from the record
that there was no service
upon
five
of the
identified
owners of Parcel 13-16-23-400-001.
Furthermore, it
is clear that the
Applicant’s agent
had no reason to
believe that
Mr. Richard Skates (who
signed the
receipt for Judith Skates
at the
Onarga
address) was the legally
authorized agent
for the
purpose
of serving Ms. Skates.
Since
there is no
evidence that each
of the owners of the
property were
sent a notice at the
address of
the
authentic tax records
of
the County
and the evidence
is clear
that personal
service was
not
obtained,
the
City Council
did not have
jurisdiction
to
hear the request for
siting approval.
Therefore,
the decision of
the City
should
be
reversed and the
application
denied.
C.
There is No
Jurisdiction
Because Service Upon
the
Illinois
Central
Railroad
Company
was not Effectuated
at
least
14 days Before
the
Application
was
Filed.
The
Kankakee
City Council
lacks jurisdiction as
a matter of
law because
service was not
effectuated at
least 14 days before
the filing
of the application.
The
affidavit
of Mr.
Volini
itself
confirms there is
no
jurisdiction,
as he determined
that
the Illinois
Central
Railroad
Co, c/o CTS
Corp., 208
LaSalle, Chicago,
IL, was an
owner
of property entitled
to
notice
as evidenced by
the
return receipt
which is attached
to the
affidavit.
The return receipt
is dated
“3/6/02”,
therefore
service
was not effectuated
on this owner
at least 14
days before the
application was
filed on
March 13,
2002. (The return
receipt
also
fails to indicate it
was
accepted
by an
agent
for service
of process).
(See App. Ex.
2, Ex. B).
Once
again,
obtaining timely
service
of the
39.2
notices is a
jurisdictional
requirement.
Ogle
County
Board
v. Pollution Control
Board, 272
Ill.App.3d 184,
649 N.E.2d 545
(Ill.App.2d
Dist. 1995).
Because service
was not
obtained 14 days
before
the
filing
of the
Notice
of Intent to
38
Request Site Location Approval, the City Council had no jurisdiction and therefore its decision
should be
vacated.
D.
The
Return Receipts of Numerous Parcels were Signed
by
Individuals other than
the
Owner of the Property and the Authority
to
Accept Service of Process on Behalf
of the Owner(s) was not
Established
by the Applicant.
In the
present case, the Kankakee City Council lacks jurisdiction in this matter because
the
Applicant has failed to provide sufficient evidence that those
owners of record, as evidenced
by the
authentic tax records of the County, actually received the
notice required by Section
39.2(b).
Specifically, notice was improper as to the parcels identified in the Statement
of Facts
because
on each of these parcels the box on the return
receipt which indicates that the signer was
the agent
of the addressee was not marked. Therefore, each
such
receipt, on its face, indicates
the signer was
not the agent of the addressee. No further
documentation was submitted by
Applicant to confirm either: 1) that the
individuals who did accept service
were the authorized
agents of the owners in question; or
2)
that the owners that appear in the
authentic tax records of
the County
actually received the pre-filing notice
in timely fashion.
Merely signing
the return receipt card is insufficient to
establish agency. IEPA v. RCS,
Inc. and
Michael Duvall, AC
96-12,
1995
WL 747694 (Dec. 7, 1995); but
see Sam Dimaggio v.
Solid Waste Agency of
Northern Cook County, PCB
89-138, (Jan. 11, 1990). In
the RCS, Inc. the
Pollution
Control Board agreed that even if a
signer marked “agent” on the
return receipt card,
this is
insufficient to establish agency. Rather, there must be
definitive evidence
when
the signer
is not the
addressee that the signer is the agent
for service of process. (To the
extent that the Sam
DiMaggio
case provides that merely
placing
the envelope in the
mail is sufficient, it
is
the
39
Petitioners’ position that case was wrongly decided).
In this case, the agency box was not
checked
and, therefore,
it is absolutely clear
that
there
is insufficient evidence of agency.
8
Pursuant to Section
39.2(b)
the owner must receive
notice and the actual owner identified
on the tax
record must be served either in person or
by
registered mail in order to
establish
jurisdiction.
It is the burden of the Applicant to establish this jurisdiction by proper
evidence. In
this case, the evidence on its
face indicates
that
each
of the above-named owners did not receive
notice
that a request
for a landfill location approval was going to be made by the
Applicant
because the
signers refused to mark agent on the receipt. Therefore, the City
Council
of
Kankakee did
not have jurisdiction to hear this matter and its decision should be vacated.
IV. THE CITY COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS
WERE
NOT
FUNDAMENTALLY FAIR
A.
The Public was Denied the Opportunity to
Participate in the City hearing.
The City of Kankakee instituted a
procedure, either
by
negligence or malfeasance,
which
virtually assured that
certain members
of the
public would not be able to participate in the
hearing.
Section 39.2(d) of the Act explicitly requires that “at
least one public hearing is to be
held
by
the County Board or governing body of the
municipality . . .“ 415 ILCS 5/39.2(d)
(2001). A non-applicant
who
participates
in
a
local pollution control facility siting
hearing has a
statutory
right
to
“fundamental fairness” in the proceedings before the
local
siting authority.
Land and Lakes Company v. Illinois Pollution Control
Board,
319 Ill.App.3d 41, 47, 743
N.E.2d
188, 193 (3d
Dist., 2000).
The local siting authority’s role is quasi-adjudicative and thus at a
minimum the
procedural due process
for Section 39.2 hearing requires that there be an
opportunity to be heard,
8
Pursuant to the RCS, Inc. case there is also insufficient evidence of service even if the
signer indicated he or she
was
the agent. Therefore, service is also insufficient as to owners Lawrence C.
Horrell, Yolanda M.
Belluso, Kevin Hansen, Vincent Hansen, ICC Railroad, Jill Hansen, Katie Cooper, Donald
Binoit, Barbara
Benoit, Randy Tobenski, Willi Walker, Bret Perreault, and Donald
Harenberg.
40
cross-examine
adverse
witnesses,
and receive
impartial rulings
on evidence.
Id. at 48 (citing
Daly v. Pollution
Control
Board,
264 Ill.App.3d 968,
637
N.E.2d
1153 (1994)); Abrahamson
v.
Illinois Department
of
Professional
Regulation, 153
Ill. 2d 76
(1992)). The American
Bottom
Conservancy (ABC)
vs.
Village
of
Fairmont City,
PCB 00-200
(October 19,
2000); case
acknowledged that
the
“public
hearing before
the
local
governing body
is
the most critical
stage
to
the
site
approval
process.” ABC
at page 5 (citing Land
of
Lakes
Company vs.
Pollution
Control
Board,
245 Ill.App.3d
631, 616
N.E.2d 349,
356
(3rd Dist. 1993)).
The
manner
in
which the
hearing
is conducted,
the
opportunity
to be
heard,
existence
of ex
parte contacts,
prejudgment
of adjudicative facts,
and
the introduction
of evidence
are important,
but not rigid,
elements in assessing
fundamental
fairness. Id.
The
City of
Kankakee
failed to
allow certain
members
of the public to enter
their appearances
as parties and
failed
to
allow
certain
members
of the public the
opportunity
to
participate in the
hearing
or
conduct
cross-examination,
and
failed
to
provide
a fair
ruling
on the motions to continue
the
hearing.
1.
The
conflicting
notices on registration
and
the City Police
barring people
from entering the
chamber
resulted in the public
not
being
allowed to
participate.
Mr.
Bruck,
and
any other member
of the
public
that attempted to
register during the
week
of June
12th
to
June 17th, was
turned
away
by
the City Clerk’s
office
which
was
operating
under
the understanding
that all participants
had to register
at
least
five (5) days
before the
hearing
(despite
the fact
that the Clerk
knew
the
legal
notice said registration
could
occur until
the
time
of the
hearing).
When the Hearing
Officer announced
on
June
17, 2002 that
they should be
allowed to
register at any
time on
June
17, 2002, due to the
confusion created
by
the
conflicting
notices,
the
75
to 100
people
standing
in the hallway
could
not
hear
such announcement.
Furthermore,
these
people were barred
from
entering
the
hearing
room anyway
by
armed
41
policemen. No
member of the public
testified
that he
heard anyone make
an
announcement
in
the
hallway that people
could come in and
register as
participants.
9
The City
Council
was even made
aware of this inequity
before
it rendered
its decision
because
Mr. Bruck
made a public comment
wherein he
informed the City
Council that he
“wished
to be an
objector
but
was
not allowed
to,
because of misinformation
by
the City Clerk’s
office.”
(C
1549-1550).
He was told
by the City
Clerk that “it was too
late” for
him
to sign up
Id. When he
arrived at the
first night of the
meeting, he was
not allowed
into
the
hearing room
and was
never informed
that he could
have
signed up assuming,
he
could even get into
the
hearing
room to do so. (C
1549-15
50).
It is
fortunate that
Mr. Bruck took the
initiative
to
inform the City
of Kankakee and
the
Illinois
Pollution Control
Board
of the inequities of
this situation
because
it can now be
corrected.
It
is unclear
how many
people found themselves
in the
same situation as
Mr. Bruck,
but it is
clear that the
conflicting
notices, the misinformation
of
the
City Clerk,
in conjunction
with the
armed
guards
at the City Council
doors, resulted
in
members
of the
public
not being
able to participate.
Therefore,
the
proceedings
were
fundamentally unfair
because
the
City
of
Kankakee
failed to
provide
a
public
hearing, failed to
allow people
wanting to participate
the
opportunity
to cross examine
witnesses,
and conducted
exparte communications
(since
members
of
the
public who
wanted should have
been
recognized
parties were not
allowed to be
present
on
June
17,
2002).
only Mr.
Power testified he
personally that he spoke
to
people in the
hail about this but
he could not identify
any
individual
that
we
spoke to
and
he was vague in his description
of
his alleged
conversations.
(11/6 Tr. 388-
390).
42
2.
Members of the public that registered to participate were not
allowed
to do
so by
the City of Kankakee.
If Mr. Bruck’s testimony alone was not enough. Ms. O’Dell testified
that she followed
the newspaper notice and went to the City
Clerk
to sign-up to
participate. She was told she had
to
do
so in writing by indicating she
wanted
to “speak”.
She drafted the memorandum requested
and gave it to the Clerk before
the end of the day June 12, 2002.
Despite Ms.
O’Dell’s efforts she was not recognized as an objector until the
third or
fourth night of the
hearing, because
she could not get into the hearing room the
first night and
could not
hear any of the announcements made by the hearing officer.
Furthermore, Assistant
City Attorney, Mr. Power ignored her request to ask questions the
first night.
A public
hearing before
the local unit of government charged
with decision-making
responsibilities
is
a
critical component in the siting process. Kane County
Defenders v. Illinois
Pollution Control
Board, 487 N.E.2d 743 (2d Dist. 1985). Obviously, no
public hearing
occurred
here
and the City Council decision should be vacated.
B.
The Public was
also
Denied the Opportunity to Attend the
First Night of the
Hearing.
The
IPCB has previously has ruled that a lack of adequate
seating
can lead to a
finding
of
fundamental unfairness in a public hearing. Daly v. Village of
Robbins, PCB 93-52,
PCB 93-54
(July 1, 1993). In Daly, the
Board held that taking public comment in a
second room, separated
from the
main hearing room, would render a hearing
fundamentally unfair if the
public was
compelled or coerced
into public comment room (thereby
requiring people to be outside of the
hearing room while the hearing was
going forward).
Id.
In City of Columbia v. County of St.
Clair, PCB 85-177 (April 3,
1986) the IPCB
considered the lack of seating a “dampening
prejudicial effect on the hearing
attendees.” Id.
Also, the IPCB looked to the
cumulative effect of the unfair procedures that
occurred, including
43
improper
notice
and
continuing the hearing
until the early
hours of the
morning to find a
fundamentally unfair
proceeding. Coincidentally,
those exact
same
unfair
procedures
occurred
in this case. The facts
in this case
are absolutely clear
that
75
to over 100 members
of
the
public
were
denied access to
the “public”
hearing
on the first
night.
This case
is even
worse
that City
of
Columbia,
because the Kankakee
City officials
were
aware
before June 17,
2002 that the crowds
would be substantial
but
still
failed to schedule
the
hearing at
an appropriate
venue.
Furthermore,
the
armed officials
of the
siting authority barred
people
from entering the
room or
expelled
people that were
able to find seats.
As
Ms. Barbara
Miller
indicated in her direct
testimony,
this
is
not what
one would expect
in
a
society which
cherishes its
freedoms and the ability
of the
public
to
participate in government.
Obviously, the
constellation
of facts at issue in
this case far exceeds
those referenced
in
the City
of
Columbia,
in
which the
IPCB found a lack of
fundamental
fairness. Unfortunately
the
very conduct that
Daly warned would
be
fundamentally
unfair occurred
here
when the public
was compelled
and
coerced
out of the hearing
room
and
into the crowded
hallway and stairwell
where
they
could
not hear nor see the
proceedings.
This
coercion
and
compulsion
cannot be
more
obvious than
the posting of armed
City
police at
the bottom of the
stairwell as
one entered
the
building
informing
people that they
could not
enter
and posting a second
police officer
at the
door
of the
chamber
room
to
inform people
that they
could not enter that
room. Therefore,
it is
obvious
that
the public was
indeed
compelled
to exit the
hearing room, which
pursuant
to Daly is
a
violation of
fundamental
fairness.
It is
particularly
egregious in this case
because the
people that
were banished to
the
hallway
appeared
to be almost entirely
composed
of people that would
be
neighbors
to the
proposed
facility. It just
so
happens that these
people
are County
residents
rather than City
44
residents
as
the
City
of Kankakee
annexed
the
proposed
real
estate
into
the
City
by
following
a
narrow
tentacle
of
annexed
property
out into
the County
land
and
at the
end
of
that tentacle
annexing
this property
to be surrounded
by
County
residents
rather
than the
City
of Kankakee
residents.
Accordingly,
the
citizens
that
are
actually
impacted
most
were
the very
individuals
that
the
City
would
not allow
enter the
hearing
room
on June
17,
2002.
This injury
was
compounded
by
the
fact
that
the witness
who
testified
on
June 17,
2002
was
the
Applicant’s
only
witness
on
consistency
with the
County’s
Solid
Waste
Management
Plan
(which
called
for only
one
existing
landfill
to
be operated
within
the
County).
Furthermore,
this
one
witness
was
the
only
witness
that
was
allowed
to be
cross-examined
immediately
after
providing
direct
testimony
and
was
not required
to be
recalled
at the
time
that
the “round-table”
cross-examination
would
occur
by the
objectors.
Therefore, the
people
that were
not
allowed
into
the
hearing
room
on the
first
night
did
not
hear any
testimony
from
the
Applicant’s
witnesses
as
to
how
the
proposed
landfill
could
be
consistent
with
the
Waste
Management
Plan
of the
people
of Kankakee
County.
Furthermore,
if those
individuals
had
been
allowed
to
attend
the
public
hearing
the
first night,
they
could
have then
heard
the
hearing
officer’s
announcement
that
they
were
eligible
to participate
by signing
up
at
any
time
that
first
night.
Indeed,
many
of
these
individuals
might
have
signed
up to
participate
in
order
to pose
questions
to
the
sole
witness
who would
testify
that
somehow
it
was
appropriate
to site
a second
landfill
in
the County
despite
the
plain
language
of
the
County
plan
to
the contrary.
Whether
by
design
or mistake,
it is
obvious
that
the
result was
the
residents
of
Otto
Township
in Kankakee
County,
who
are
most
directly
impacted
by
the
landfill,
were
denied
the
chance
to
hear or
question
the
one witness
offered
by
the
applicant
to explain
why
the
plain
language
of
the people
of
Kankakee
County’s
Solid
Waste
Management
Plan
did
not
need
to be
45
followed
in
the
opinion of the
Applicant.
In
other words,
the most
crucial
witness of the entire
proceeding,
as
far
as the people of the
County
of
Kankakee
were concerned,
was
allowed to
testify on the
very night
that the Kankakee
County
public
was
barred from attending
and
participating
in the proceeding.
Therefore, the
proceedings
were fundamentally
unfair.
C.
The Public was Denied
Access to the
Hearing Because the
Hearing Officer
did
not
Follow the Notice that
Indicated the Hearing
Would Cease at
10:00
p.m.
The Applicant
and the City
published notice that
the hearing on June
17, 2002 would
conclude
at 10:00 p.m. Once
the Applicant and
the
City
voluntarily
undertook
to
publish the
time that the hearing
would
conclude,
the members
of the public had the
right to rely upon
that
information. We
are aware that at least
two members
of the public left the
building because
they
had not gotten into
the
chamber
room and believed
the hearing would conclude
at 10:00
p.m. It
is likely,
that other
members of the public
who could have
attended after 10:00
p.m. also did
not
because of
the published
notice. (For example,
many people have
second
or
third shift work
schedules
might
have attended this
public
hearing
that continued into
the early
morning
hours of
June 18,
2002). However,
they were denied an
opportunity to do so
because a
notice had been
issued
indicating
that the hearing
would
conclude at
10:00 p.m.
The
County
acknowledges
that there
is no duty to
publish the ending
time
of
a
public
hearing, however,
once
it has
been published, it is
important
that
such
ending time be
honored
to
avoid the very
situation that
occurred
here. A failure
to honor that
ending time
results in a
fundamentally
unfair proceeding
because the public
was informed
that the proceeding
would not
be
taking
place
after 10:00
p.m.
when in reality it
was
occurring.
The public
should not have
been
left in the position
of having to
guess whether
a legal notice
actually means what
it says. In
this
case, the legal
notice was erroneous
in not only
the ending time
on
the first night,
but
also
46
the
procedures to be followed
for registering as
a
participant.
Therefore, the approval
by the City
of Kankakee
should
be vacated.
D.
The City Failed
to Follow its
own Siting Ordinance
by
Failing to Provide
Copies
of
the Application to
the
County
of Kankakee.
The
City of Kankakee
has admitted
that it failed to
follow the siting
ordinance requiring
the City
of
Kankakee
to immediately provide
copies of
the application
to the County
of
Kankakee
Solid Waste Director
and the chairman of
the
Kankakee
County Board. (11/4
Tr. 305;
11/6
Tr.
188, 237).
A motion was filed
by the County to
quash the siting
hearing for
failing
to
provide
the application
which
was denied
by City
Attorney/Hearing Officer
Bohien.
His only
explanation for that
denial was
his belief that it was
“harmless error”. (11/4
Tr.
305).
However,
he
acknowledged that
the ordinance
required
that the copies
of the application
be
turned over
immediately
and acknowledged
that
the
purpose
was
to
provide
the County
with
every
opportunity to review,
analyze, test and
challenge the
application before the
39.2
hearing.
Id.
Therefore, obviously
the error was not harmless
as
the
County had half as
much time to
review,
analyze
and test the application
as it should
have.
As
Waste
Management
of
Illinois v.
Pollution Control
Board, 175 I11.App.3d
1023,
1036,
530
N.E.2d 682,
692-693 (2d
Dist.
1988) established,
Section 40.1 of
the Illinois
Environmental
Protection Act “recognizes
that the
specific procedures
as to the conduct
of local hearings
may
be
established
by
[a
local
siting authority] and
also requires
that those
procedures
be
fundamentally
fair.” Id. Therefore,
“the Act does
not
prohibit
[a local
siting
authority] from
establishing
its
own rules and procedures
governing
conduct
of a local
siting hearing.”
Id.
Obviously,
such ordinance
is enforceable
not only against
the
public,
but especially the
City.
Unlike
the City of
Kankakee Rules and
Procedures Ordinance
02-24, the
Siting Ordinance
01-65
has
no
provision
that any of its requirements
may
be waived.
Therefore,
the
hearing
officer had
47
no authority
to
waive
the
requirement
that
the City
Clerk immediately
provide
a copy
of
any
application
to
the County
Board Chairman
and
another
copy to the
Kankakee
Solid County
Waste
Director.
In
Waste Management,
the
IPCB
found
that
failure
to provide
access to
the application
was
a fatal
flaw from
a
statutory
perspective
and
constituted
fundamental
unfairness.
Waste
Management,
530
N.E.2d
at 693.
Likewise,
Attorney
Mueller
successfully
argued
in Residents
Against
a Polluted
Environment
v.
County of
Lasalle, PCB
96-243,
that the
failure to allow
the
public
to
see
even an
irrelevant
portion of
the Application
was
a violation
of
fundamental
fairness.
Id.
at 7. Obviously,
the
County
of
Kankakee
represents
the
people
of Kankakee
County
who were
not
provided
the application
from
the city
as required.
In
this case,
undoubtedly
the City
and
Applicant
will
argue
that
the County
was
not
prejudiced
because more
than six
weeks after
the application
was
filed the
County’s
expert was
finally
able
to
acquire
a
copy
of
the application
by
filing
an FOIA
request and
paying
a fee to the
City,
though
he had
a limited amount
of time
to review
it before
the
siting
hearing.
Such
an
argument
is disingenuous
as the entire
purpose
of the City
Ordinance
was
to
give the
County a
copy
of the
application
immediately
without
cost
to
the County.
It
seems
apparent
that when
it
became
obvious
to the
City that the
County
wanted to
limit the
impacts
from landfilling
within
its
jurisdictions
to
only
the existing
Kankakee
County landfill,
the
City was
no
longer
concerned
about
sending
a copy of
the application
to the
County;
which
is why
Anjanita
Dumas
was never
directed
to do so by
the Mayor
or the City
Attorney
and
never took
the initiate
to
do so herself.
American
Bottom Conservancy
(ABC) v.
Fairinont,
PCB
00-200 (October
19,
2000)
establishes
that
even a
delay
in
providing
the
application
is fundamentally
unfair.
In
ABC,
an
objector
attempted
to
acquire
an application
from
the City
Clerk but
was
told that the
cost
would
48
be between
$600
and
$670,
she then asked to simply view the application but it was not available
on
the date she requested it. The applicant itself made the application
available
to
the objector
two
weeks before the hearing commenced and even allowed the objector to use its office and
copy
machine, apparently at no cost. Id at page 6. The objector argued that only having two
weeks to review the application was insufficient and indeed the board found that
even though the
applicant allowed the objector to view the application in its own facility
and use its copy
machine two
weeks before the hearing this “did prejudice petitioner as they were less able to
prepare for the siting hearing” and rendered the proceedings fundamentally unfair. Id.
Obviously, the City’s failure to ever provide the required copies of
the application is
much more egregious than the ABC case.
Furthermore,
the fact
that the County’s expert finally
acquired a copy six to eight weeks after he was supposed to
is prejudicial as a matter of law
under ABC
because the County had substantially less time to prepare
than
it was entitled.
Therefore, the proceedings were fundamentally unfair.
E.
The City
Council had Improper Communications with the
Applicant Including the
Pre-Judgment of the Merits of the Application.
1.
Pre-fihing contacts and evidence of bias.
If a
local siting authority is biased against, or for, an
application, such can impact
fundamental fairness. E
&
E Hauling v. Pollution
Control Board, 115 Ill.App.3d 899,
451
N.E.2d 555, 565
(2nd Dist. 1983);
aff’d.
on other grounds, 107 Ill.2d 33, 481
N.E.2d 664 (1985).
E &
E Hauling established that the standard that would
apply in landfill siting hearings would be
whether a
“disinterested observer might conclude that he, or it, had
in some measure adjudged
the facts as well as the law
of the case in advance of hearing it.” Id. (See
also Concerned
Citizens
for a Better Environment v. City ofHavanna, PCB
94-44,
page 8
(May 19, 1994).
49
In this case, there
is ample evidence of
bias
on behalf
of the City of Kanicakee
in
favor
of
the application.
As more
fully explained in the
Statement of Facts,
both
the Mayor
and Hearing
Officer
Bohlen had
substantial prefiling
contacts with the Applicant.
The Mayor
even advocated
for
the project. The City
Council
participated in a bus
trip sponsored and
hosted
by
the
Applicant, participated
in the
annexation process,
and was informed
of the Host
Agreement
negotiations.
The Applicant
assisted
the City in drafting
a
Siting Ordinance
and
the Rules
and
Procedures for the hearing.
Finally,
the extensive contacts
culminated with
the
City Council
inviting and allowing
the Applicant to
presents its evidence
without notice to
any interested
party
on
February 19, 2002.
This case
is unlike Fairview
Area Citizens
Task Force v.
Pollution Control
Board,
198
Ill.App.3d
541, 555
N.E.2d 1178 (3rd
Dist.
1990) wherein
petitioner’s argument
centered on
a
mere
prior approval of
an annexation
agreement. In this case,
the City Council
through its agent,
corporate
City
Attorney Christopher
Bohien
actually
assisted
the
applicant in acquiring
annexation,
was assisted
by
the
applicant
in drafting the
siting ordinance,
and had extensive
discussions
regarding the Host Agreement.
(Furthermore,
it should
be noted the
FACT case
supports the
petitioner’s assertion
that the evidence of
pre-filing
contacts
of the IPCB
should
have
been
admitted
into evidence
as FACT acknowledges
that
if bias had been proved
by
evidence of
pre-filing contacts then
the proceedings would
have
been
fundamentally unfair).
Id.
This case is
very similar to Concerned
Citizens
for
a
Better Environment
vs.
City
of
Havana, PCB
94-44,
wherein
there was evidence
the City allowed
the
applicant to
“review the
siting ordinance,
which set
forth
procedures
to
be
followed throughout
the process.”
Id. The
Pollution
Control Board explained
that
allowing
the applicant to
review the siting
ordinance
was
one of the
elements that
showed that the City
was allowing
the applicant to have
control over
the
50
hearing process. Id. It is obvious from review of the record that the applicant at issue in this
case had significant control over the hearing process as its attorney not only reviewed but
actually drafted the
Rules
and
Procedures for
the hearing. (though this was
denied
by Hearing
Officer Bohlen, the March 12,
2002 correspondence
is a smoking
gun
to
the fact that the
applicant drafted the ordinance). Furthermore, the applicant was counseling the
City on how
to
effectuate its “round-table” examination and it would be futile for the City to
attempt to
deny
that
the
language suggested
by
the Applicant’s counsel was indeed adopted by the City. These
improper contacts were fundamentally unfair.
2.
The Applicant hosted an improper and prejudicial visit to
other landfill
facilities.
The IPCB has held on numerous occasions that visits to
“example landfills” by the
decision-makers that are hosted by the applicant are improper. Concerned
Citizens vs. City of
Havanna, PCB 94-44, page 5 (May 19, 1994); Spill vs. City of
Madison, PCB 96-6 1 Southwest
Energy vs. IFCB, 655
N.E.2d
304
(4th Dist. 1995); (affirmed the IPCB decision because no
opponents were invited to take the tour); Beardstown Area
Citizens vs. City ofBeardstown, PCB
94-98 (January 11, 1995). Though all of these cases involved
trips that took place after the filing
of
the application, and before the hearing, none of the cases rested
solely on that fact to find that
the trips hosted by the applicant were
fundamentally unfair. Rather, each case
concerned the
lack of opportunity for an objector to attend such viewings.
Likewise, in this case, the Applicant
and
its counsel, crafted a very specific agenda for pre-filing
adjudication of the merits of this
application
and the creation of pre-filing bias on behalf of the
decision-makers. In accordance
with this agenda,
Mr. Volini and Town and Country hosted the City Council
members on a bus
trip to example landfills. (11/4 Tr,
270). The City Attorney, Mr. Bohlen was
not
aware of any
opponents being invited on the bus trip. (11/6
Tr. 271).
51
Each of the
aforementioned cases found
improper conduct
when the decision-maker
attended a site viewing
with
an applicant
that
was not
available
to
objectors. In this case, Mr.
Bohlen and the Mayor
were
well aware that there were
individuals strongly opposed to the
landfill, at the time of the bus trip. It would be disingenuous to establish a
procedure that
encourages
applicants to take the decision-makers on these trips,
without inviting known
objectors, and find that such
is not fundamentally unfair, merely because the trip
occurs before a
filing date. If the only consideration
was the
date of the
trip, then applicants (such as Town and
Country did
here) would be encouraged to develop biases and even seek
pre-hearings of their
evidence all before
filing an application, in an effort to render the Section
39.2 process
meaningless.
3.
The
February 19, 2002 meeting was a pre-adjudication
of facts and an
improper impeachment of the Section
39.2 Hearing.
As evidence that the
Applicant embarked on a procedure designed to
acquire a pre
adjudication of its application, the Applicant
culminated
its pre-fihing contacts with
the decision-
maker by
making a previously described formal
presentation on February 19,
2002, to the City
Council on the
merits of the application. When one reads
the minutes of that meeting in toto
it is
undeniable that it was the purpose of
the meeting to provide an
“unfettered opportunity” for the
applicant
and its “expert witnesses” to have a direct hearing
with
the decision-makers
without the
filter
of any other participant or lawyer. It is
further clear that the purpose of the
Applicant was
to
present its case to the decision-maker as to the
Section 39.2 criteria through
its expert witness,
Mr. Devon Moose. It is
further clear that the purpose of the meeting was to
inform the City
Council members that the Section 39.2 proceeding
could not be trusted because it
would involve
hired-gun
environmental testifiers, rancorous
lawyers, and
objectors’ witnesses who though they
would
not appear to be fist-waiving fanatics, would tell
partial truths and could not be trusted.
52
At no time
did the Mayor
or
City Attorney Bohien
voice
any objection
to
the statements
that were made at the February 19,
2002
meeting. At no time that evening
did
they
direct the
City Council to
disregard any statements made
by
the applicant and its witnesses.
Town and Country
obviously
believed
as their counsel put
it
at
the IPCB hearing, that
there
was a “bright-line test” as to when the Applicant would
have
to be
sure that it only had
proper
communications with the decision-makers. (11/4 Tr. 216). In other words, it was
Applicant’s
position that “anything goes” until the filing of the application. However, no case
decided by
the IPCB, nor the Appellate Courts, establishes such an irresponsible
procedure.
Third District precedence demonstrate that there is no bright line based
upon the date of
the filing of the
application. As
a
matter of fact, the most recent Third District case to
address
the issue of
pre-judgment was Land
of
Lakes Company vs. IPCB, 319 Ill.App.3d
41, 743 N.E.2d
188 (3rd Dist.
200). In that
case,
the court clearly reviewed the prefiling contacts to
determine of
the specific contacts were proper. (Will County staff members had
reviewed and commented
upon the application prior to its filing but the court found
that there was no
improper conduct
because
the Special Assistant State’s Attorney for Will County,
Charles Helsten, cautioned the
County’s staff
members and other Will County departments that they
“should
not communicate
with county board members concerning the...
application”.) 319 Ill.App.3d
42-43. After
reviewing the prefiling contacts,
the
court
ultimately found that those hearings
were not
“virtually meaningless” because there was an “absence
of any pre-filing collusion
between the
applicant and the actual decision-maker.” Land ofLakes
Company
vs. Illinois Pollution
Control
Board, 319 Ill.App.3d 41, 49, 743 N.E.2d 188,
194
(3rd Dist.
2000).
The
court also noted that the County Board was
undoubtedly aware that its staff
might
have
potential bias due to the
pre-fihing contacts but the County Board
was free to accept its
53
proposed
Finding of Facts just like it would have been free to accept proposed finding of any
other party, including the
applicant itself.
Id at 51, 743 N.E.2d at 195.
Therefore, under Land of
Lakes the
important analysis is whether or not the pre-filing contact was with the
decision-maker
and likely to lead to
bias. In this case, the communications were directly
with
the
decision-
makers
and were highly likely to
lead
to bias.
It is blatantly
obvious that the applicant presented expert testimony to the City Council
regarding the criteria. It
also provided them documentary evidence.
10 Therefore, it is undeniable
that the
applicant indeed used the February 19, 2002 meeting as an opportunity
for the decision
maker to
have a pre-adjudication (i.e. pre-hearing) of the very
opinion testimony that would be
used
at the
siting hearing. Again, this was explicitly admitted by
Mr. Tom Volini at the
conclusion
of the lengthy presentation and before questioning by the City
Council, when Mr.
Volini closed by stating “you’ll hear this without so
much emotion and with a bunch of lawyers
fighting
with each other in about 120 days, but we wanted you to
hear it from us first.”
(C
3156).
Furthermore, not only did the Applicant
seek
to
have a prejudgment of facts
that were
supposed to only be adjudicated at the Section
39.2 hearing, but it also tainted the
very integrity
of the
hearing itself. The objector’s witnesses did not walk into the
hearing room on equal
footing with the witnesses of the applicant because the
City Council had already been
informed
that such
witnesses could not be trusted.
Likewise, since the applicant had
already hired
the
“best experts” in the field and had the “dean of
landfill” siting for its attorney, the
attorneys
and
experts for any
other participant in the hearing found themselves at an
improper disadvantage.
10
These
documents
included the Property Value Guarantee
Plan,
a
document
concerning
the
needs
assessment, and a diagram of the proposed
landfill which is described in detail by Mr.
Volini.
(C 3
153-
3156).
This
handout was attempted to be admitted into the
record
by
petitioner’s counsel, but
was
not
allowed by Hearing Officer Halloran on the
grounds that it was an irrelevant
pre-fihing contact. For the
reasons cited above, petitioners believe that decision was erroneous as
the handout was
part and parcel of
the pre-filing of the facts
by
the City Council. Petitioner’s
Ex.
3
is contained in the
record
as
an offer of
proof.
54
Despite the applicant’s protestations to the contrary, this was not a meeting to discuss the
general logistics and procedures that would follow in a Section 39.2 hearing. To
the contrary,
the applicant presented its expert witnesses, presented its evidence on the specific
criteria, argued
its witnesses
were highly credible,
argued
that objectors’ witnesses were incredible and should
be
ignored, and argued that it proved
compliance
with the
criteria.
At the conclusion of the
formal presentation, and before receiving and responding to the
City Council’s questions, the
Applicant explicitly admitted that its purpose was to present its case to the City
Council without
the involvement of the emotional public or
the argument
of rancorous
lawyers.
Therefore, the City Council of the City of Kaiikakee conducted an
improper pre-hearing
of the case
that should have only been adjudicated at the Section 39.2
proceeding. Because this
prejudice is irreparable, and caused by the actions of the
Applicant, the decision of the City of
Kankakee should be
reversed with an order denying site location approval with
prejudice.
F.
The City Required FOIA Requests
to
Impede the Dissemination of
Fundamental
Information Concerning the Landfill Siting Hearings.
As further evidence of the City’s fundamentally unfair procedures,
confusion and lack of
coordination in handling the Section 39.2 hearing process, the City Clerk,
Anjanita Dumas,
refused to provide the most basic information to the
County
of
Kankakee and other participants
in the
hearing such
as
the names of the parties, witnesses and hearing dates,
absent
a
Freedom of
Information Act request and a payment of copying costs. (11/6 Tr. 249).
Apparently, the City
Clerk failed to
understand that this was a quasi-adjudicative process and
therefore the City Clerk
was no longer just a keeper of records but was also acting as a Court
Clerk in regard to this
proceeding.
The result of the City Clerk requiring the FOJA request for the
names of the parties and
witnesses was that counsel for the County of Kankakee did not
receive this information until
55
Monday, June
17,
2002,
the very
day of
the
commencement
of
the
first
night
of
hearings.
(C
0031).
The
City Clerk also refused
to waive costs to
the county even though
the
County
was a
public
entity and one that
had already been
denied its right to two
immediate copies
of the
application.
(C
0031). Once again,
this procedure was
fundamentally unfair
to
the County
of
Kankakee and other
participants who were
subjected
to it.
G.
The Hearing
Officer
was
Biased.
On the first night
of the hearing, Mayor
Green was originally
scheduled
to
be the Hearing
Officer.
(11/4
Tr. 308).
However, on Friday,
June 14,
2002,
objector,
Waste
Management,
filed
a
Motion to
Disqualify Mayor Donald
Green from serving
as the Hearing Officer
based primarily
upon the
evidence of
bias displayed at
the February 19, 2002
hearing. (C2059-2067)..
In
addition
to the 2/19/02 meeting,
the Motion pointed
out that a Kankakee
Daily Journal
article
indicated
that the Mayor had
refused to appoint an
individual to a vacant
seat on the
City
Council
because
of his lack of support
for bringing a landfill
to the City.
(There was evidence
admitted
at the hearing
that
the Mayor and
several City
Council
members
interviewed prospective
Aldermen
on whether they
were in favor of siting
a landfill in
the City, before appointing
him to
the
City Council). (11/6
Tr. 164; Petitioner’s
Ex. 6, attached hereto
as
Appendix
F).. The
objector
argued that by
Mayor Green’s
conduct
a
disinterested
observer might conclude
that
he
had
prejudged the landfill
siting application
in violation
of
Waste Management
vs. Pollution
Control
Board,
175
Ill.App.3d 1023,
530 N.E.2d 682,
696
(2nd Dist. 1988)
and EYE Hauling
Incorporated vs. Pollution
Control Board,
116 Ill.App.3d 586,
451
N.E.2d
555, 566
(2nd Dist.
1983) aff’d
107
Ill.2d
33,
481
N.E.2d 664
(1985). The Mayor stepped
down and
Mr. Bohlen was
immediately appointed
as hearing officer.
‘
This was
one of the grounds for
the
additional Motion
to
Quash filed by the
County on
June
17, 2002 and denied
by Hearing
Officer
Bohlen (C21912197).
56
The biases and predisposition of Mr. Bohien for the Applicant are evidenced not only by
the
extensive pre-fihing contacts that were discovered during
these
IPCB proceedings, but also by
his
admission that he believed the application would be financially beneficial to the City, and by
his rulings on the Motions to Quash of the County that were heard and immediately denied on
June 17,
2002. Obviously,
a
disinterested observer might understandably conclude that Mr.
Bohlen favored the Applicant. Furthermore, biases of a hearing officer which
could
not have
been discovered at the 39.2 hearing are an appropriate basis for a finding of fundamental
unfairness. American Bottom Conservancy (ABC) v. Fairmont, PCB 00-200
(October
19,
2000)
Mr.
Bohlen admitted that before the hearing commenced he had discussions with the
Mayor (and the Applicant) about
hiring
an individual
unaffiliated with the City to act as the
Hearing Officer. (11/4 Tr. 309). The City was aware that the cost of such a
Hearing Officer
would
have been the responsibility of the Applicant. Regardless, the City
council decided
to
appoint
only hearing officer’s that
had
substantial pre-fihing contacts with the Applicant. In
reviewing these facts, it is undeniable that the reason the City Council wanted
either the Mayor,
or Attorney
Bohien,
as
the Hearing Officer was because they both were intimately involved in
facilitating this Applicant’s request for siting
approval.
Therefore, the proceedings were
fundamentally unfair and should
be
remanded to the City of Kankakee with
direction
that a
fundamentally fair process be conducted.
H.
The Applicant had an Improper Post-filing Ex Parte Contact
with the City
Attorney/Hearing Officer Bohien who
was
Communicating with the Decision
Maker.
The
correspondence from
the
Applicant’s attorney, George Mueller, to
Hearing
Officer
Bohlen dated March 12, 2002 is not only evidence of improper control by
the Applicant over the
hearing process, but it is also an improper post-filing ex parte
communication and is evidence
that those communications were going to continue.
Mr. Bohien
acknowledged that the
57
correspondence was received by regular mail after the filing of the application
(though it had
been received previously by
tealeaf)(1 1/4
Tr.
253).
When a member of a decision-maker’s staff is acting on
behalf
of
the City Council,
communications of that staff member with the applicant are ex
parte. Residents Against a
Polluted Environment v. County of LaSalle, PCB
96-243 (Sept. 19, 1996). In the
March 12,
2002 correspondence George
Mueller informed Attorney Bohien that the Applicant
and the City
could continue to converse concerning the terms of the host
agreement even after the
filing
of
the
application. (11/4 Tr.
249-253). Furthermore, the correspondence directs the
Hearing Officer
how to
amend the Rules and Procedures for the
upcoming 39.2 hearing of the
Applicant.
Therefore,
it was an improper ex parte communication and
fundamentally unfair.
V.
THE COMBINATION OF NUMEROUS
UNFAIR PROCEDURES IN
THIS CASE
RESULTED IN A FUNDAMENTALLY UNFAIR
LANDFILL SITING HEARING.
The IPCB has held that though a specific
occurrence may not rise to the level of
fundamental unfairness, when the various
unfair practices are viewed in
combination, the
proceedings as a
whole may
be
ruled fundamentally unfair.
American Bottom Conservancy
(ABC) vs. Village of
Fairmont City, PCB 00-200 (October 19,
2000); City
of
Columbia v. St.
Clair, PCB 85-177 (April 3, 1986)..
In this case,
like ABC and
City
of
Columbia, the
combined unfair practices resulted in a
fundamentally unfair
proceeding. Numerous members of the
public were not allowed to
hear the
first
night of the testimony. Registered
objectors such as Ms. O’Dell,
were not recognized as
participants
and therefore could not conduct
cross-examination or even hear the
testimony of Dr.
Schoenberg on
the only night he was available, June 17.
Individuals like Mr.
Bruck were given
misinformation by the City
Clerk’s Office that they could not
sign up to participate
after June 12,
2002, and then were barred from
entering the chamber room
on June 17, 2002, to
hear the
58
announcement
that they could
have
signed up that evening.
Participants were
restricted
from
receiving names
of witnesses and
participants and other
fundamental
information
concerning the
hearing
by
the City Clerk in a timely
fashion. Kankakee
City Police made
people
relinquish
their seats in the
hearing room
so
that individuals
that came with the
Applicant or
other
“preferred”
persons
would
have
a
seat as
happened
to
Ms. Barbara
Miller, an
elderly woman
who found
herself in the unenviable
position of
either having to
disregard an
armed City
policeman
or be banished to
the
hallway
to
attend this “public”
hearing. (11/4 Tr. 107).
Elderly
people
were forced to stand
for
hours in
a
crowded hallway and
stairwell. 75-100
people
were
barred
from entering
the City Council
Chambers
at all. Dozens upon
dozens
of people
were
forced to
stand shoulder
to shoulder in a crowded,
hot
corridor
and stairwell where
they could
neither see
nor hear the
proceedings. The first
night of the hearing
continued
long past the
posted cessation
time
resulting
in members of
the public not
attending
because
they thought the
City would
abide by the notice.
The first night
of the hearing was allowed
to proceed
until 12:30
in the a.m. the next
morning prejudicing
the County of
Kankakee and
other objectors who
were
forced to
attempt to
conduct cross-examinations
at
such
an unreasonable hour.
The
published
notices
of the
hearings
were conflicting, confusing
and
improper. The City
even
failed
to
follow
its
own siting ordinance
regarding the
procedures
to
register
to participate,
and failed to
follow
its own
ordinance
requiring
copies of the
application
to
be immediately
delivered to the
County
Solid Waste Director
and
Chairman
of Kankakee
County
Board.
Furthermore
the City allowed
the
applicant
to
take the City Council
on a bus
trip to an “example”
landfill
before
the
application was
filed.
If that is
not enough to
establish fundamental
unfairness,
we also have
the egregious
meeting on February
19, 2002,
where the applicant
explicitly
confessed
that he
wanted to have a
59
chance
to talk
directly
with the City Council
without the filter
of lawyers to
present his expert
witnesses
on
how the
criteria were met.
The
applicant,
with
the
City’s
apparent
endorsement
and
approval,
even
went
on to inform the
City
Council that the
Section 39.2 proceedings
could
not
be
trusted because
objectors’ witnesses
were merely hired
to go
around
and testify against
landfills
and
tell half-truths.
Finally, the refusal
of the City Council
to
appoint
an unbiased Hearing
Officer
was the
culmination of the fundamentally
unfair
conduct
in
this case.
Obviously, when
all these factors
are viewed in
combination,
these proceedings were
extremely
tainted
(much
more so than even ABC
or City of
Columbia) and the
decision of
the
City of Kankakee
should obviously
be vacated. When
adding up
these
fundamentally
unfair
procedures, it is clear
that a
remand
of this case
to
the
same
City
Council
would not correct
the
prejudice that occurred.
Accordingly,
the County of Kankakee
prays
that
the Illinois Pollution
Control
Board issue
an
order disapproving
the application
with prejudice.
In the
alternative, the
City
of
Kankakee
decision
should be vacated
and the
matter
remanded with
the mandate
to hold
a
fundamentally
fair
hearing.
VI.
THE DECISION
OF THE CITY
OF
KANKAKEE
SHOULD
BE
OVERTURNED
BECAUSE
THE APPLICANT
FAILED
TO
MEET
THE
SECTION
39.2 STATUTORY
CRITERIA
A.
The
Application
was Inconsistent
with the County’s
Solid
Waste
Management
Plan
in Violation of Criterion
viii.
1.
Standard of review.
Though
generally the standard
that the
IPCB employees to
review a decision
of a
local
siting authority
is whether the
decision is
against the manifest
weight of
the evidence;
compliance
with Criterion 8
is subject to de novo
review because
it
involves
a
pure question
of
legal
interpretation rather
than
weighing
of factual evidence.
(See, 415
ILCS
5/41(b)(1998);
Fairview
Area Citizens Task
Force
v.
Illinois Pollution Control
Board,
198 Il1.App.3d
541, 552,
60
555
N.E.2d 1178 (3d
Dist.
1990); Land
and
Lakes v. Illinois
Pollution
Control Board, 319
Ill.App.3d 41, 48; 743
N.E.2d
188, 193 (3d
Dist. 2000)).
In
Land and Lakes,
the Third District
Court determined
that
not every issue in
regard to a siting appeal
is decided by
the manifest
weight of the evidence
standard. 319
Ill.App.3d at
48.
On
the contrary,
if an agency
determination is a pure
question
of
law, it will be subjected
to de
novo review.
Id. (citing Branson
v. Department of
Revenue, 168
Ill.2d 247, 659
N.E.2d
961
(1995). Furthermore,
where an agency
determination
presents a mixed
question
of law and
fact,
it will be set aside if
it is clearly
erroneous which is a middle
ground
between the deferential
manifest weight
of the evidence
standard
and
the de novo standard.
Id.
(citing City
ofBelvidere
v. Illinois State
Labor Relations Board,
181 Ill.2d 191,
692 N.E.2d 295
(1998).
In
this
case,
the language
of the Solid Waste
Management
Plan and its amendments
is
undisputed and therefore
the only
issue is to interpret
the
meaning
of that Plan as amended.
Since
this
is
a
pure legal interpretation,
it
should
be
subjected
to de novo
review. Even if the
Board
employs
the clearly erroneous,
or the
manifest
weight of the evidence
standard,
the City
Council
decision
should still be reversed
because
the
language of the plan
is clear.
2.
The
plain
language
of the Solid Waste
Management
Plan establishes
that the
County desired
only one
landfill
and
that landfill
would be
the existing
landfill
when expanded.
Section 39.2(a)(viii)
provides that
an applicant
for local siting
approval
of a pollution
control
facility must demonstrate
that:
If
the facility is to be
located in
the
County where the County
Board has
adopted a
Solid
Waste
Management
Plan consistent
with the
planning requirements
of
the
Local Solid Waste
Disposal Act or
the Solid Waste
Planning and Recycling
Act,
the
facility is consistent
with that plan.
415 ILCS 39.2(a)(viii)(2001).
61
The Applicant
has acknowledged in its
application that
uKankakee
County adopted its
Solid Waste
Management Plan on October 12,
1993
outlining the recommended Solid Waste
Management System
for the County. This plan was readopted August 18, 1995 and the five
year
update
was approved on July 31, 2000. The Kankakee County
Board
approved
an amendment
to
the plan on October 9,
2001.”
(Applicant’s Ex. 1, 10464). The
unsigned portion of the three
pages of the application (which is the only portion that addresses
Criterion viii) acknowledges
that the following statement
appeared
in
the Plan
as amended
on October
9,
2001:
An expansion of the [existing Kankakee County] landfill, if approved,
will satisfy
the County’s waste disposal needs for an additional twenty
years.
No
new
disposal facilities will be necessary or desired in
Kankakee County for purposes
of
implementing the Plan.
(Applicant’s Ex.
1,
10464).
The Applicant
further noted that the 10/9/0 1 Plan Amendment provided:
Kankakee County will not support and
will
contest
the development of any
other
landfill
in the County, unless the
expansion of the existing landfill is not
approved.
Id.
Despite the fact that the operator of the Kanicakee
County Landfill is presently seeking an
expansion, the Applicant nonetheless concluded that
the new landfill it proposes is not
inconsistent with the County
Solid
Waste Management Plan. (Applicant’s Ex.
1, 10464).
At hearing, on this matter, a copy of the
Solid Waste Management Plan was
admitted into
evidence by Kankakee County. In
addition,
the
amendments to the plan of October 9,
2001 and
March 12, 2002 were also admitted into
evidence. Though the application makes no
reference
to
the March 12, 2002 amendment;
a
resolution was passed by the County
Board of Kankakee on
that date which amended the first two
paragraphs
of
Section 6: Available
Landfill Capacity in
Kankakee County of the Kankakee County Solid Waste
Management Plan, to read as follows:
Kankakee County has
a
single landfill owned and operated by Waste
Management, Inc. This
landfill has
provided
sufficient capacity to dispose of
62
waste
generated in Kankakee County and its owner has advised the County
that it
plans
to
apply for local siting approval to expand the facility to
provide additional
disposal
capacity for the County. Operation of the landfill has been
conducted
pursuant to a
Landfill Agreement signed
by
the County and Waste
Management
in 1974, and subsequently
amended from time to time. In the event
siting
approval for expansion is
obtained, the landfill would provide a
minimum of
twenty
(20) years of long term disposal capacity through expansion of
the existing
landfill.
An
expansion of the existing landfill, if approved, would then
satisfy the County’s
waste
disposal needs
for at
least an additional twenty years and in
accord with the
Kankakee Solid Waste Management Plan (as amended) as
well as relevant
provisions
of the Local Solid Waste Disposal Act and the Solid
Waste Planning
and Recycling
Act, no new facility would be necessary.
Kankakee Solid Waste
Management Plan as Amended March 12,
2002 (Kankakee County Ex.
2).
Additional text
was included in the Solid Waste Management Plan as
of March 12, 2002
that:
[t]he owner/operator of any new
or expanded regional and
pollution control
facility (as that term is defined by
Section 3.32(a) of the Illinois
Environmental
Protection
Act) in the County shall be
required to post and maintain
for the life of
such regional pollution
control facility either: (1) an
environmental contingency
escrow fund of a minimum of
$1
million
dollars
based
upon
an annual
payment
not to exceed (five
years), or (2) some other type of payment or
performance bond
or policy of on-site/off-site
environmental impairment insurance
in
an amount
acceptable to the
County. This requirement shall be in
addition
to
the
satisfaction
of
any and all financial assurance requirements
established by state or
federal law
and/or
regulation.
Kankakee County Solid
Waste
Management Plan Amendment,
March
12, 2002, Pg 3 (Kankakee
County
Ex.
2).
Furthermore, the
March 12, 2002 Amendment explicitly required
that:
[T]he owner or
operator
of a
proposed new landfill or
landfill expansion in the
County shall be
required
to establish a property value
guarantee program
for
households
within
a
site-specific distance from the
proposed landfill site,
such
property value guarantee program to be
prepared
by
an independent
entity
satisfactory to the County. Id.
63
The
language of the October
9,
2001
Amendment was
clarified
by
the
March
12, 2002
Amendment, which explicitly
provided
that it was the County’s plan that no new facilities
would
be needed within the County borders as long as the existing landfill’s proposed
expansion is
approved. The resolution makes it clear that the owner of the existing Kankakee County Landfill
has “advised the County that it
plans
to apply for local siting approval to
expand the facility to
provide additional disposal
capacity for
the County.” Id.
In fact,
an application for expansion was filed by the Karikakee County
Landfill
operator.’
2It
is obvious from reading the Amended Plan that the County intends
for only one
landfill to be
operating within its borders
(as
long
as
that landfill is sufficient to provide twenty
years of long term disposal capacity),
and that
the
County prefers that the present landfill simply
be
expanded rather than a new facility (and its resultant impacts)
be erected within the County
borders. Furthermore, it
is
clear from the Plan that the Kankakee County landfill
operated
by
Waste
Management shall
be
the sole facility unless its explanation is disapproved.
The
Waste
Management
application was filed, and at this point has not been disapproved.
Therefore, the
siting
of another facility before the Kankakee County
Extension Facility is disapproved is
blatantly and plainly inconsistent with the
County Plan.
The
unsigned conclusions of the Applicant Town &
Country of consistency are based
solely upon the October 9,
2001 Amendment, and fails to even acknowledge by
the March 12,
2002 amendment. At no time has the
Applicant attempted to amend its
application to explain
how it could possibly be consistent with the
Solid Waste Management Plan as
amended on
March 12, 2002.
12
The Section
39.2 hearing on
the
application for expansion of the Kankakee County
Landfill
is presently in front
of the Kankakee County Board and began on
November 18, 2002 and is continuing
through the date of the
filing of this brief.
64
Furthermore,
even the anonymous
conclusion in the
application
(which was adopted
by
the City Council)
relating
to
the October
9,
2001
Plan Amendment is
illogical and
unsupportable.
The October 9,
2001 Amendment
made it clear that the
County
wanted
one facility within
its
borders, and that
facility should be
at its present location,
thereby
minimizing
the impacts
to the
County (so long as
an expansion
of that facility is approved).
The
Applicant
and City Council’s
assertion
that there
must
be final approval
of an expansion of the
existing facility
in the County
before a new
siting application
is inconsistent with
the Solid Waste
Management Plan,
is
simply
disingenuous and
illogical. There
is nothing in the
Solid Waste Management
Plan that
provides
that
the Kankakee
County
Landfill expansion
must
be finally
approved to make
the Plan
restriction on the
number of
landfills located within
the County
effective. On the contrary,
the
County
Solid Waste
Management Plan
is plain and
unambiguous in that
the County
planned
that
the present Kankakee
County
Landfill would be
the only
landfill
within the County
borders,
and
the County
instituted
this
restriction based upon
the anticipated
filing of
an
application for
extension.
As this extension application
has
now been filed, it is
even more
obvious
that the
Town &
Country
application
is inconsistent
with the County
Solid Waste
Management
Plan
Therefore,
the
finding of the City
Council as to Criterion
8
was erroneous
as
the
plain
language
of the Plan establishes
the
application
is inconsistent
with
the
Plan. The obvious
inconsistency
with the County
plan
is
a
dispositive issue of
this entire case.
Though the
fundamental
fairness
problems are substantial,
the City Council
decision
should simply be
reversed
and the application
denied
with
prejudice
as
the County
is the
primary
planning body
for Waste
Management and the
application is not
and cannot be
consistent
with
Criterion viii.
65
a.
The County
Solid Waste Management
Plan as
amended
requires
that
a
Property
Value Guarantee Program
be prepared
by an
independent
entity satisfactory
to the County;
however, there is no
evidence that
an
independent
entity
prepared
the program contained
within the
application or
that the County approved
it.
As indicated
above,
the
March
12, 2002 Amendment
explicitly
provided that
any
application for a proposed
facility must
include
a Property
Value Guarantee
Program
prepared
by an
independent
entity satisfactory
to
the
County. However,
no evidence was
contained in the
application or presented
by
the
Applicant in the hearing
that such a program
was established
by
an
independent
entity. Furthermore,
no evidence was introduced
by
the Applicant that
the
County
ever
approved
the independent
entity that was to
develop the
program. No expert
testimony
was offered by
the Applicant that these
Plan requirements
were
met.
To the contrary,
Dr. Schoenberger (whose
testimony
mainly revolved around
the legality
of the
amendments,
and
was, therefore,
stricken)
admitted that he
did
not
know
whether
an
independent entity
being
approved
by
the County
had prepared the
Property
Value Guarantee
Program proposed
by
Applicant. (6/17/02
Tr. 162). Because
the
Applicant
failed to present
expert testimony
of
consistency
with this
requirement, and because
the
application
fails to even
address the issue,
the
application on its
face is
inconsistent
with the County
Solid
Waste
Management
Plan.
b.
There was no
evidence
that any
environmental
damage
fund or
insurance
was
accepted, or even
offered to
the County,
for approval.
The
Solid
Waste Management
Plan
explicitly
required that any
entity that
intended to
operate
a landfill
within
its
borders
provide
either an
environmental contingency
escrow
fund
with a
minimum
deposit of
$1
million dollars
or some other
type of payment
or
a
performance
bond or policy
approved
by
the County.
The
application
entirely
fails
to
address
the
requirement
of
County approval
and the
applicant offered no
expert
testimony
on the issue.
Dr. Schoenberger
admitted
that he did not know
whether
the County had approved
any insurance
policy
offered by
66
the applicant.
(6/17/02 Tr.
167). Therefore, the Application is inconsistent with the Plan as a
matter
of
law.
3.
The Applicant failed to present any testimony
or evidence
in regard
to
Criterion viii.
Though the Applicant attempted to present testimony of consistency with the Solid Waste
Management Plan through Professor Alan Schoenberger (who attempted to attack the validity of
the Amendments as opposed to testifying regarding consistency of the application with the Plan
as
amended), such testimony was correctly stricken
by
Hearing
Officer
Bohlen as legal
conclusion and beyond the scope of inquiry in a Section 39.2 hearing. Stricken testimony cannot
be considered by
the City Council
in
reaching
its decision.
Because Professor Shoe Berger’s entire opinion was based upon an improper assumption
(as a matter of law) that some of the text of the Plan could be ignored
by
the City Council, none
of his opinions regarding consistency are persuasive. Indeed, the IPCB has already
ruled
that it
is
not within the scope of its review to consider how a Plan is adopted. Residents
Against
a
Polluted Environment v.
County of LaSalle and Landeomp Corp,
PCB 97-139 (June 19,
1997)(citing Residents Against a Polluted Environment v. County of LaSalle and Landcomp
Corp, PCB 96-243 (July 18, 1996).
Therefore, Dr. Schoenbergers testimony that the
amendments to the Plan were not properly adopted is not reviewable and rather the
only
issue
is
whether the Application is consistent with the Plan. Clearly, it is not
consistent and
the
Applicant has failed to present any competent testimony concerning the basis for the
Applicant’s
conclusion that its request is consistent with Criterion viii.
4.
The County presented evidence as to the lack of consistency
with the Solid
Waste Management Plan.
Unlike the Applicant,
the
County did submit
evidence
that Criterion 8 was not met.
Specifically, the Kankakee County Board Chairman Karl Kruse testified by
sworn affidavit that
67
he had firsthand knowledge about the intent of the Kankakee County Solid Waste Management
Plan and the amendments to
the Plan.
(C
2295-
C
2305). Mr. Kruse testified
by
affidavit
that
the Kankakee County Board first adopted its
Solid Waste Management Plan on October 12, 1993
and it was amended on August 8, 1995.
(C
2295).
Chairman Kruse explained that when the
Plan was first
adopted,
a facility was identified
to address the future disposal needs of the County
and that facility was the
Waste
Management
Landfill.
(C
2296).
In
the summer of 2001, Waste Management
publicly announced its intention to expand
its existing facility
in
Kankakee County.
Id. At the same time, the County learned of possible
efforts to develop a second landfill within
the County which was the subject of the City of
Kankakee
proceeding.
Id. Because
the existing facility operated by Waste Management
provided
the residents of the County with safe, convenient, reliable disposal capacity, since the
adoption of the County’s Solid
Waste
Management Plan
in
1993,
a
resolution
was
brought
on
October 9, 2001 to continue designation of this facility to meet the long-term needs of Kankakee
County. Id.
That resolution also identified the potential additional impacts that might occur if
a
second landfill was located within
the County
(C
2296)
and as
explained above, the
plain
language
of that October 9, 2001 amendment made it clear that the County opposed opening its
second landfill within its borders. Id. Mr. Kruse noted that the County Board voiced its
overwhelming support for that October
9,
2001 resolution which received 26 affirmative votes
and only
one
negative
vote. Id.
In early 2002, the County Board became aware of the proposal for location of a third
landfill within Kankakee was forthcoming. Id. On March
12, 2002, another resolution was
passed
before the County
Board which, among
other things, again reiterated that if Waste
Management received siting and permitting approval for its proposed expansion, no further
68
disposal facilities would
be necessary to meet
the long term needs
of the County. Id.
Mr. Kruse
further
testified that the March
12, 2002 resolution
reflected the County
Board’s concern
over
the additional
impacts
that might
occur if a second
(or even third) landfill
were
sited in
the
County.
Id. Once again, the
Board voiced its overwhelming
support
for
the
resolution
with 21
affirmative
votes (and the negative
votes were
from Board Members
that did not
want
the
restriction
on acceptance
of out of County
waste
removed
and all were opposed
to a second or
third
landfill
in the County).
Id. Mr. Kruse
noted that he
presided over and
witnessed the
deliberations
that took place
concerning both of
the resolutions
and
based
upon
his
role as Chief
Executive
of the County’s
government,
he firmly
believed that unless
and
until
the proposed
expansion
of
the Waste Management
facility was
disapproved, no
further proposed facilities
were needed
to
meet
the long-term disposal
needs of the County
and that
those
facilities do not
comport
with the County’s Solid
Waste
Management
Plan.
(C
2297).
Worthen vs. Village
of
Roxanna,
253 Ill.App.3d 378, 623
N.E.2d 1058,
1063-1064 (5th
Dist.
1993)
establishes
that
Mr. Karl Kruse’s
testimony should
be
given
great weight. In
Worthen,
the
local siting authority,
employed
an interpretation
of a
county plan which
differed
from
a petitioner’s
witness. The court
noted that
the “petitioner’s
witness
was not a person
in
authority
in the
county” whose opinion
should be
followed. Id. However,
in
this
case, the
County
Board Chairman
himself testified
as to
his
understanding of the
intent
of
the County
Board
in passing the
Solid Waste Management
Plan and
its
overwhelming
support
for the
amendments
passed by
resolution. Therefore,
Mr. Kruse’s testimony
should
be
given
great
weight
particularly
in light of the
fact that there was
no contrary
testimony
presented
by the
Applicant.
Accordingly, the City
Council decision as
to
criteria viii
should be
reversed as it is
clear that the
application
is inconsistent with the
County’s
Solid
Waste
Management
Plan.
69
B.
The Finding
as to Criterion ii was Against the Manifest Weight of the
Evidence.
The
application provides that Thedrock five feet below
the bedrock surface became
competent and serves as an
aquitard.” (Applicant’s Ex. 1,
pg
10122). However, the evidence
was
clear
at
the hearing that the Niagaran dolomite
immediately
beneath the landfill was not an
aquitard and,
on the contrary, was actually an aquifer. It was
explained at the hearing that
an
aquitard is an area that
is retardant to water, in other words is impermeable to
such a degree that
water is precluded
from entering or exiting an adjacent area at
any significant velocity, whereas
an aquifer is an area that contains
water
which may
be used
as a source for wells.
The evidence
admitted
at the hearing clearly showed that the
fundamental assumption
and the linchpin of the
application
was that the bedrock was an aquitard.
The Applicant’s
conclusion that the unweathered
portion
of
the Silurian dolomite was an
aquitard was, at a
minimum, conjectural, and not supported by
appropriate study and clearly
irrational
under the
evidence presented to the
City Council at hearing. The diagram contained
within the application
establishes that the
landfill liner will be located directly
upon Niagaran dolomite. (Applicant’s
Ex. 1, 10237). For some
unpersuasive reason the Applicant did
only one “deep” soil boring
within the landfill footprint.
That one “deep” soil boring demonstrated
that the upper five feet of
the Niagaran dolomite bedrock was weathered,
incompetent,
and fractured to
such an extent that
water would pass
readily through this portion of the
bedrock. Nonetheless, the
Applicant
concluded from this one
soil
boring that after five feet the
dolomite became sufficiently less
permeable such that water
would
not pass through it.
Hydrogeologist Steven
VanHook testified that he did not
believe there was enough
information provided by
Applicant to reach the conclusion that
dolomite is an aquaclude, as only
one boring, was obtained to support
this assumption, and a significant
number of wells in the
area located in this rock
formation were
producing water. (C1230). Stuart
Cravens, also a
70
hydrogeologist with a Bachelor’s Degree in Geology and Hydrogeology from the University of
Toledo,
and a Master’s of Science Degree in
Geology
from the State University of New York at
Albany with eight years of experience as
a
professional scientist
with the
Illinois State Water
Survey (with
a
principal focus on characterizing the ground water resources in Northeastern
Illinois including
Kankakee
County,
within
500 feet
of
the subject’s site),
personally inspected
three wells
and reviewed well logs near and on the site and concluded that the proposed facility
sat
within
a
Silurian dolomite aquifer, and that the bedrock was not an aquitard.
(C
1309-1315,
1369, 1391, 1395-1397, 1406-1409). In turn, he testified that the location of
the proposed
facility would be detrimental to the public health, safety and
welfare
because
the landfill was
actually being carved into a regional aquifer with no retardant in situ geology
between the
landfill and the drinking water supplies of tens of thousands of
people.
(C
1452).
The fact that the dolomite beneath the landfill was improperly
characterized
as an
aquitard is emphasized
by
the evidence that within a two mile radius of the site the
average
well
depth
is 115 feet, with a minimum well depth of 30 feet
and
a
maximum well depth of
411
feet.
(C1406). Accordingly, the evidence strongly suggests
that the wells in the area are certainly
drawing water from depths deeper than five feet below the top of the
Dolomite layer, and are
indeed drawing water from the dolomite into
which the Applicant proposes to build its landfill.
In other words, the Applicant is proposing the
building of
a
landfill within the very
aquifer
from
which over 300 wells in the immediate area draw their
water.
The written application itself contains numerous
and explicit admissions that the
unweathered lower dolomite is actually an aquifer rather than an
aquitard. For example, the
Applicant’s project engineer, Devin Moose, conceded
the application acknowledges such at
Volume I
Section 2.2-26 that “Chebanse is the closest community which uses
the Silurian
71
dolomite aquifer
[for
well
water]”.
(C681: Applicant’s
Ex.
1,
10112).
Furthermore,
well
No.37
(which is immediately
outside
the
proposed facility),
the
application
obtained its
water between
47 feet and
100 feet within
the bedrock. (Applicant’s
Ex. 1,
30021; C672). Mr.
Devin Moose
also conceded
that other than this
application, he
was unaware of
the Silurian
dolomite
ever
being described
in any
geological study as
an aquitard. (C688-689).
Therefore,
the conclusion
that
the
dolomite is an aquitard
(which the design
relies upon)
is not supported by
the evidence
or
even
the application itself.
This is a
fundamental
concern.
The
hydrogeologist
Mr. Cravens
unequivocally testified
that the Silurian
dolomite
bedrock
is
simply
not an aquitard, and
the application’s
assertion that it is
an aquitard
“is the first
representation
[of such]
I’ve seen
in 20
years”.
(C1446).
Hydrogeologist
Sondra Sixberry also
unequivocally
testified
“The
Silurian dolomite
is a
known
aquifer
in this area
and should
be
recognized
as such.”
(C1288-1289).
Mr. Moose admitted
that
the application
acknowledges
“the
groundwater for the
wells is obtained
from the Silurian
dolomite
aquifer”.
(C677).
Hydrogeologist
Steven Van Hook
testified
that the
applicant used
only
one
test boring to
conclude
that the
Niagaran
dolomite was
an aquitard.
(C1212). Professor
Sondra
Sixberry
and
Hydrogeologist
Stuart Cravens
both agreed
that one soil
boring over a 265 acre
site is a
woefully
insufficient
basis to
reach
a conclusion that
a bedrock
formation
which is
(well-recognized
to be
an
aquifer
in this area) will
somehow act as
an aquitard at this
specific
site.
(C1298, C1442-
1443).
The
Applicant
admitted that further
borings will be
necessary to
confirm its
“theory”
that
the Silurian Dolomite
may
act
as an aquitard, this is
evidence that
the applicant has failed
to meet
its burden
of proving that
the site is an appropriate
location
for
the
landfill.
Given the fact
that
it
is undisputed
that
tens
of thousands of people
use the
Silurian dolomite
aquifer for their
water
72
source, and further given that the Applicant proposes to actually carve its landfill into the
aquifer, the lack of
sufficient
study
of the characteristics of the dolomite surrounding the
landfill
requires
the
inescapable conclusion
that
the applicant has failed to show that the landfill will be
designed, operated, and
especially located
so as to protect the
public health and welfare.
Therefore,
the Kankakee City Council’s finding that criterion ii was met
is against the
manifest
weight of the evidence.
C.
The Finding as to Criterion v was Against the Manifest
Weight of the Evidence.
Criterion v requires that there be a showing that “the
plan of operations for the facility is
designed to
minimize the danger to the surrounding area from
fire, spills or other
operational
accident&’. 415 ILCS 5/39.2(a)(viii)(2001). The
application contains a Health
and Safety Plan
to be used by the
landfill which provides that the local City of
Kankakee Fire Department shall
respond to all fire,
spill or operational accidents at the facility.
(Applicant’s Ex. 1,
p.
10404;
C5 16-517).
However, at the hearing the Applicant
admitted
that it has never
spoken with the
City of Kankakee
Fire
Department personnel to determine
if they are equipped,
staffed, and
trained to handle those fires,
spills and operational accidents which
might occur at a landfill site.
(CS
17-5
18).
The
opinion of the Applicant’s project
engineer
that Criterion v is met
was based
squarely upon
the capability of the Kankakee
Fire Department to respond to
accidents at the
facility, but
neither the project engineer nor
the Applicant ever verified that
this local department
could
respond in
the manner outlined in the application.
Therefore, Applicant’s
opinion that
Criterion v was met is based upon pure guess
and speculation. Accordingly,
the Kankakee City
Council’s finding that Criterion v was
met was against the manifest
weight of the evidence
and
the decision of the
City approving the siting application
should
be
reversed.
73
VII. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons the County of Kankakee
prays
that
the
Illinois
Pollution
Control
Board order that the decision of the City
of Kankakee reversed, thereby
entering an order
denying site location approval with prejudice. This is particularly appropriate as the application
is not, and cannot be, consistent with Criterion viii. In
the
alternative, the County prays that the
City
of Kankakee decision be vacated and this matter remanded to the City Council of Kankakee
with a mandate to hold a fundamentally fair proceeding.
Dated: September 18, 2002
Respectfully submitted,
EDWARD D. SMITH
KANKAKEE
COUNTY
STATE’S ATTORNEY AND THE COUNTY
OF KANKAKEE
By: HTNSHAW
&
CULBERTSON
Edward D.
Smith
State’s Attorn
Charles F. Helsten
tsAttne7
Richard S. Porter
One of Its Attorneys
HINSHAW AND CULBERTSON
100 Park Avenue
P.O. Box 1389
Rockford, IL 61105-1389
815-963-8488
Printed
on 100% Recycled
Paper
70335769v1 815142
74
TABLE
OF
CONTENTS
TO
APPENDIX
1.
Appendix
A
— Summary
of Certain
Testimony
of
Pollution
Control
Board
Hearings
(11/04/2002
through
11/06/2002);
2.
Appendix
B — Minutes
to
February
19,
2002
Pre-Application Hearing
3.
Appendix
C
— Petitioner’s
Exhibit
2 (March
12,
2002 Correspondence
from
Applicant’s
attorney
to
Christopher
Bohlen.)
4.
Appendix
D
— Amendment
to
Kankakee
County
Solid
Waste
Management
Plan,
March 12,
2002
5.
Appendix
E
— Amendment
to Kankakee
County
Solid Waste
Management
Plan,
June
17,
2002
6.
Appendix
F — Interview
Questions
Fifth
Ward
Alderman
70335772v1 815142