1
    1
    ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    2
    3 PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
    )
    ILLINOIS,
    )
    4
    )
    Complainant, )
    5
    )
    -vs-
    ) No. PCB 03-191
    6
    )
    COMMUNITY LANDFILL COMPANY, )
    7 INC., and CITY OF MORRIS, )
    an Illinois corporation, )
    8
    )
    Respondents. )
    9
    10
    Proceedings held in the above-mentioned
    11 cause taken before Tamara Manganiello, Registered
    12 Professional Reporter and Notary Public, at 1320
    13 Union Street, Morris, Illinois, on the 11th day of
    14 September, A.D., 2007, commencing at 9:02 a.m.
    15
    16
    17
    18
    19
    20
    21
    22
    23
    24
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    2
    1
    A P P E A R A N C E S:
    2
    ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD,
    100 West Randolph Street
    3
    Suite 11-500
    Chicago, Illinois 60601
    4
    (312) 814-3461
    MR. BRADLEY P. HALLORAN, HEARING OFFICER
    5
    6
    OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL,
    STATE OF ILLINOIS, ENVIRONMENT BUREAU,
    7
    69 West Washington Street
    Suite 1800
    8
    Chicago, Illinois 60602
    (312) 814-5388
    9
    BY: MR. CHRISTOPHER J. GRANT and
    MS. JENNIFER A. TOMAS,
    10
    Appeared on behalf of the Complainant;
    11
    ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
    12
    101 North Grand Avenue East
    P.O. Box 19276
    13
    Springfield, Illinois 62794-9276
    (217) 782-8858
    14
    BY: MR. MICHAEL S. ROUBITCHEK,
    15
    Appeared on behalf of the Illinois
    Environmental Protection Agency;
    16
    HINSHAW & CULBERTSON, L.L.P.,
    17
    100 Park Avenue
    P.O. Box 1389
    18
    Rockford, Illinois 61105-1389
    (815) 490-4900
    19
    BY: MR. RICHARD S. PORTER,
    20
    Appeared on behalf of the Respondent, City
    of Morris;
    21
    22
    23
    24
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    3
    1 A P P E A R A N C E S
    2
    LAW OFFICES OF SCOTT M. BELT & ASSOCIATES, P.C.,
    105 East Main Street
    3
    Suite 206
    Morris, Illinois 60450
    4
    (815) 941-4675
    BY: MR. SCOTT M. BELT,
    5
    Appeared on behalf of the Respondent, City
    6
    of Morris;
    7
    LaROSE & BOSCO, LTD.,
    200 North LaSalle Street
    8
    Suite 2810
    Chicago, Illinois 60601
    9
    (312) 642-4414
    BY: MS. CLARISSA CUTLER GRAYSON,
    10
    Appeared on behalf of the Respondent,
    11
    Community Landfill Company, Inc.
    12
    13
    14
    15
    16
    17
    18
    19
    20
    21
    22
    23
    24
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    4
    1
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Good
    2
    morning, everyone. My name is Bradley
    3
    Halloran. I'm a hearing officer with the
    4
    Illinois Pollution Control Board. I'm also
    5
    assigned to this matter entitled People of
    6
    the State of Illinois, Complainant, versus
    7
    Community Landfill Company, Inc., and City of
    8
    Morris, an Illinois municipal corporation,
    9
    Respondents. It's docketed with the Board as
    10
    PCB 03-191 and it's an enforcement matter.
    11
    It is September 11, 2007. It's
    12
    approximately 9:03 a.m. This hearing was
    13
    noticed up for September 10th, 11th, 12th and
    14
    13th. The record was open yesterday,
    15
    September 10th, but due to some unforeseen
    16
    circumstances with the Complainants, it was
    17
    continued until today.
    18
    This hearing was scheduled in
    19
    accordance with the Illinois Environmental
    20
    Protection Act and the Pollution Control
    21
    Board rules and procedures. It will be
    22
    conducted according to procedural rules found
    23
    at Sections 101 and 103 of the Board's rules.
    24
    I don't really see any people of
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    5
    1
    the -- citizens of the public or anybody out
    2
    there not related to the proceeding. But if
    3
    there were, they'd be allowed to speak when
    4
    the time allots them.
    5
    As most of you guys know, I don't
    6
    make the ultimate decision in the case. The
    7
    Board does that. I'm just here to rule on
    8
    evidentiary matters and make sure the hearing
    9
    goes smoothly.
    10
    When this is finished, they'll
    11
    look at the record, the transcript and the
    12
    post-hearing briefs and render a decision.
    13
    In this matter, the Board rendered
    14
    a decision on February 16th, 2006. They
    15
    granted Complainant's motion for summary
    16
    judgment in part and directed the parties to
    17
    present evidence on a specific issue of
    18
    remedy including penalty, costs and
    19
    attorneys' fees, if appropriate. The parties
    20
    are only to present evidence that is relevant
    21
    under Sections 33C, 42F and 42H of the Act.
    22
    The Board directs the parties to
    23
    provide specific figures and justifications
    24
    of any proposed penalty. And I'm reading
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    6
    1
    that from the February 16th, 2006 Board
    2
    order, Page 16.
    3
    With that said, would the parties
    4
    like to introduce themselves? Mr. Grant?
    5
    MR. GRANT: Yes. My name is
    6
    Christopher Grant and I'm an assistant
    7
    attorney general with the Attorney General's
    8
    Office.
    9
    MS. TOMAS: Jennifer Tomas. The last
    10
    name is spelled T-O-M-A-S. I'm also an
    11
    assistant attorney general with the Illinois
    12
    Attorney General's Office.
    13
    MR. ROUBITCHEK: Michael Roubitchek.
    14
    I'm assistant counsel with the Illinois EPA.
    15
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you.
    16
    We're going to have to all remember to try to
    17
    speak up or turn our mics on so that Tammi
    18
    can hear us. Ms. Grayson?
    19
    MS. GRAYSON: Clarissa Grayson,
    20
    counsel for Community Landfill Company with
    21
    LaRose & Bosco, Limited.
    22
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you.
    23
    Mr. Porter?
    24
    MR. PORTER: Good morning, Mr.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    7
    1
    Halloran. Rick Porter on behalf of the City
    2
    of Morris.
    3
    MR. BELT: Good morning, your Honor.
    4
    Scott Belt on behalf of the City of Morris,
    5
    as well.
    6
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Good
    7
    morning, Mr. Belt.
    8
    Before we go any farther and the
    9
    Complainant presents his case in chief, it
    10
    appears that Community Landfill Company, CLC,
    11
    filed a request on September 6th, I believe.
    12
    I didn't find it until yesterday. I had to
    13
    go into the office after this hearing. It's
    14
    a request to incorporate documents. I
    15
    believe they're the testimony from another
    16
    case. And that case was PCB 01-170. Ms.
    17
    Grayson, would you like to address that?
    18
    MS. GRAYSON: Yes, your Honor. We
    19
    think that it's appropriate for the issue of
    20
    remedy and penalty to incorporate this
    21
    testimony and the documents that were related
    22
    to the testimony pursuant to Board rule
    23
    Section 101.306, which allows the
    24
    incorporation of documents by reference upon
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    8
    1
    the written request of any person on its own
    2
    initiative.
    3
    The Board or hearing officer may
    4
    incorporate materials from the record of
    5
    another Board docket into any proceeding.
    6
    The Board is then allowed to give the
    7
    incorporated matter the appropriate weight
    8
    upon review.
    9
    And we feel that these documents
    10
    are appropriate and also to save -- in the
    11
    interest of judicial economy, to save the
    12
    time of having these people testify. We felt
    13
    that since the Board has promulgated this
    14
    rule, that it was an appropriate use of it.
    15
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you,
    16
    Ms. Grayson. I'll go first to Mr. Grant.
    17
    MR. GRANT: Mr. Halloran, prior to
    18
    seeing this, I was unfamiliar with the rule
    19
    and was prepared to file a response and
    20
    objection on the basis of hearsay and
    21
    relevance and that sort of thing.
    22
    But after looking at the rule,
    23
    it's obvious that it seems to be at the
    24
    hearing officer or the Board's discretion do
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    9
    1
    review this. And, certainly, this is sort of
    2
    the last in a long line of Board proceedings
    3
    that are related to financial assurance at
    4
    the Morris Community Landfill Company.
    5
    So, although, I don't think it's
    6
    particularly relevant to this case since the
    7
    issues were different, in other words in the
    8
    2001 case it was a question of whether the
    9
    Frontier bonds were valid financial
    10
    assurance, that's been decided and has gone
    11
    up through the Third District Court of
    12
    Appeals. I'm not going to formally object
    13
    but rather just, you know, point out to the
    14
    Board that we don't think it's particularly
    15
    relevant, but not make a formal objection to
    16
    the use of that section.
    17
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you,
    18
    Mr. Grant. Mr. Porter?
    19
    MR. PORTER: We have no objection. As
    20
    a matter of fact, we would join in the
    21
    motion. And as to Mr. Grant's point, I just
    22
    want to make a brief record. Part of this
    23
    hearing, if not one of the primary bases for
    24
    this hearing is to show the reasonableness of
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    10
    1
    the conduct, particularly my client, City of
    2
    Morris.
    3
    And if, indeed, there was a good
    4
    faith basis believing the Frontier bonds were
    5
    valid, that certainly explains my client's
    6
    conduct and reasonableness of that conduct,
    7
    therefore, it is certainly relevant to this
    8
    hearing and we have no objection to the
    9
    admission of the documents.
    10
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Okay.
    11
    Thank you. CLC and the City of Morris has
    12
    just recently joined in. Their request is
    13
    granted. The documents and the testimony
    14
    that was filed on September 6th will be
    15
    incorporated into the record. Thank you.
    16
    Mr. Grant, do you want to give an
    17
    opening?
    18
    MR. GRANT: Well, yes. But I have one
    19
    preliminary matter. I'm going to request
    20
    that our witness list be amended to add
    21
    Robert Prium as a witness. And I apologize
    22
    for doing this at such a late date.
    23
    It was my intention last week to
    24
    reach agreement on a few facts that were
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    11
    1
    contained in Community Landfill Company's
    2
    interrogatory responses. I was unable to do
    3
    that. And, you know, frankly, a lot of that
    4
    was my fault that it didn't happen.
    5
    However, I think it's important
    6
    that the Board get all of the pertinent
    7
    facts. We have interrogatory responses that
    8
    were verified by Mr. Prium on behalf of
    9
    Community Landfill Company. And I've
    10
    discussed it with counsel. Mr. Porter
    11
    doesn't have an objection to just admitting
    12
    those interrogatories responses, but
    13
    Ms. Grayson understandably needs to consult
    14
    with Mr. LaRose before she can agree to that.
    15
    MS. GRAYSON: If I may interrupt a
    16
    moment? I have consulted with him and we
    17
    will stipulate to the amounts that --
    18
    THE COURT REPORTER: I can't hear you.
    19
    MS. GRAYSON: I'm sorry. We will
    20
    stipulate to the amounts that are in the
    21
    interrogatories.
    22
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: I'm sorry.
    23
    Ms. Grayson, I didn't hear again. You will
    24
    stipulate to the amounts?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    12
    1
    MS. GRAYSON: Isn't that what --
    2
    MR. PORTER: Can we go off the record
    3
    for a moment?
    4
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Sure.
    5
    Let's go off the record.
    6
    (Whereupon, a discussion
    7
    was had off the record.)
    8
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Before I
    9
    forget, I'm going to mark Hearing Officer
    10
    Exhibit A the documents I just accepted into
    11
    evidence regarding the incorporation of
    12
    materials. So that will be labeled Hearing
    13
    Officer A. Mr. Grant?
    14
    MR. GRANT: Mr. Halloran, we've
    15
    reached a stipulation which I think will
    16
    solve my witness problem. We've agreed to
    17
    stipulate as admissible Community Landfill
    18
    Company's interrogatory responses. And,
    19
    specifically, it's Community Landfill's
    20
    response to Complainant's first set of
    21
    interrogatories, Community Landfill Company's
    22
    first supplemental response to Complainant's
    23
    first set of interrogatories and request for
    24
    the production of documents, this is also
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    13
    1
    identified as CLC Exhibit No. 2, and also
    2
    Respondent, Community Landfill Company's
    3
    response to complainant's second set of
    4
    interrogatories and the request for
    5
    production of documents.
    6
    All except for CLC Exhibit No. 2
    7
    are contained as part of Complainant's
    8
    Exhibit No. 13 and the stipulation is that we
    9
    can admit them as what Robert Prium would
    10
    have testified to had he been called as a
    11
    witness.
    12
    MR. PORTER: So stipulated.
    13
    MS. GRAYSON: So stipulated.
    14
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Do you want
    15
    to present those now, Mr. Grant?
    16
    MR. GRANT: Yes, your Honor. I offer
    17
    the documents that I just described, which
    18
    include portions of Complainant's Exhibit
    19
    No. 13, specifically Respondent, Community
    20
    Landfill Company's response to complainant's
    21
    first set of interrogatories and requests for
    22
    the production of documents.
    23
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Do you have
    24
    it physically with you?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    14
    1
    MR. GRANT: I do. As a matter of
    2
    fact, we should probably give you an exhibit
    3
    book.
    4
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Ms. Tomas
    5
    did.
    6
    MR. PORTER: Mr. Halloran, may we go
    7
    off the record for one more moment, please?
    8
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Sure.
    9
    We're off the record.
    10
    (Whereupon, a discussion
    11
    was had off the record.)
    12
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Back on the
    13
    record.
    14
    MR. GRANT: Counsel for the parties
    15
    have met and we've agreed to stipulate to the
    16
    admissibility of exhibits from all three
    17
    parties.
    18
    MR. PORTER: Exhibits 1 through 14 of
    19
    yours, I think, correct?
    20
    MR. GRANT: Yes, Plaintiff's Exhibits
    21
    1 through 14.
    22
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: You know, I
    23
    do have this binder and this is going to be
    24
    presented and taken into evidence.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    15
    1
    MR. GRANT: Yes.
    2
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: What I
    3
    think I will do is label it Complainant's
    4
    Group Exhibit A.
    5
    MR. GRANT: And then we'll have A1
    6
    through A14?
    7
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Right. I
    8
    think might be easier. I don't know.
    9
    MR. GRANT: Yeah.
    10
    MR. PORTER: And the state and CLC has
    11
    agreed to stipulate to the foundation
    12
    necessary for my Exhibits 1 through 10, which
    13
    I have tendered to Mr. Halloran along with
    14
    that exhibit list. I will have the exhibits
    15
    marked at lunch.
    16
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: And do we
    17
    want to name this City of Morris Group
    18
    Exhibit A?
    19
    MR. PORTER: Sure. A1 through 10.
    20
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Okay.
    21
    Ms. Grayson?
    22
    MS. GRAYSON: Yes. We have agreed to
    23
    the admissibility of CLC's exhibits. Now, 2
    24
    was previously admitted, so these are
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    16
    1
    Exhibits 3 through 18.
    2
    MR. GRANT: I don't believe that we
    3
    got to the point of admitting CLC No. 2. We
    4
    were just in the process of that.
    5
    MS. GRAYSON: All right. We were in
    6
    the process of that. So we have Exhibits 3
    7
    through 18 for CLC that have been agreed to.
    8
    MR. GRANT: And, also, CLC Exhibit 2,
    9
    which is the first supplemental interrogatory
    10
    responses.
    11
    MS. GRAYSON: So it would be 2 through
    12
    18?
    13
    MR. GRANT: Yes.
    14
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: When we get
    15
    this all fleshed out, we're going to have to
    16
    address them individually for the record so
    17
    the Board knows what we're talking about.
    18
    MS. GRAYSON: I'm going to tender a
    19
    set of our documents to the hearing officer.
    20
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: I think
    21
    I'll wait and do all these exhibits together
    22
    before lunch or before the close of the day
    23
    just to make sure it's in the record.
    24
    The exhibits talked about are
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    17
    1
    admitted into evidence pursuant to the
    2
    stipulation. Any other housekeeping
    3
    so-to-speak activities?
    4
    MR. GRANT: I believe we'd like to
    5
    maybe deal with the City of Morris' motion
    6
    that was filed last week, at least discuss
    7
    it.
    8
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Sure.
    9
    MR. GRANT: We were served with the
    10
    motion. I think you mentioned it was
    11
    directed to the Board. Should we present
    12
    this motion at this -- or should they present
    13
    the motion at this time or should we --
    14
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: This is the
    15
    motion for leave to file amended affirmative
    16
    defense?
    17
    MR. GRANT: Yes.
    18
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Okay. That
    19
    is directed to the Board. And, secondly, it
    20
    involves a substantive type ruling, so I
    21
    cannot do that. But you may make your
    22
    argument on record and the Board will take a
    23
    look at it or you can make a written
    24
    response, as well.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    18
    1
    MR. GRANT: I think we filed a
    2
    response, at least a brief response just to
    3
    have something on the record. Maybe we'll
    4
    supplement that response. We can talk about
    5
    it. But I just wanted to know if that was
    6
    something that you wanted to treat today.
    7
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: I have no
    8
    preference.
    9
    MR. GRANT: That's it. I'm ready to
    10
    proceed.
    11
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Do you want
    12
    to do an opening?
    13
    MR. GRANT: Yes. Just for the record,
    14
    I'm going to do an opening statement.
    15
    My name is Christopher Grant with
    16
    the Attorney General's Office. This hearing
    17
    is set to provide evidence to the Board on
    18
    the penalty factors from Section 33C and 42H
    19
    of the Illinois Environmental Protection Act,
    20
    which I will refer to as the Act.
    21
    The Board has already determined
    22
    that the Respondents, Community Landfill
    23
    Company and the City of Morris, have violated
    24
    Section 21D(2) of the Act and two sections of
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    19
    1
    the Board's financial assurance regulations.
    2
    This case is all about financial
    3
    assurance, foreclosure and post-closure care
    4
    of the Morris Community Landfill, Morris,
    5
    Grundy County, Illinois.
    6
    Financial assurance assures that
    7
    existing landfills will be properly closed at
    8
    the end of their working life and monitored
    9
    thereafter to prevent harm to local residents
    10
    and to prevent pollution from causing harm to
    11
    the environment. It's provision is a
    12
    condition of the privilege of conducting
    13
    landfill operations.
    14
    The City of Morris and Community
    15
    Landfill Company wanted to continue operating
    16
    a waste disposal at the Morris Community
    17
    Landfill. This required them to post more
    18
    than $17 million of compliant financial
    19
    assurance.
    20
    The evidence will show that the
    21
    City and CLC agreed to this condition and
    22
    posted over $17 million using surety bonds
    23
    issued by the Frontier Insurance Company.
    24
    More than half of this amount was posted by
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    20
    1
    the City of Morris.
    2
    We will show that soon afterward
    3
    these bonds were determined to be inadequate
    4
    under the Board's regulations.
    5
    We will also show that despite the
    6
    requirements of the Act and Board
    7
    regulations, Community Landfill Company and
    8
    the City of Morris did not replace these
    9
    bonds with any other legally sufficient
    10
    financial assurance. Despite this, they
    11
    continue to dispose of waste at the landfill
    12
    they own and operate.
    13
    The Board has found that these
    14
    actions institute violations of the Act and
    15
    the Board's own regulations. The State,
    16
    after this hearing, will ask that the Board
    17
    provide an effective and permanent remedy.
    18
    The State will request that the Respondents
    19
    be required to post at least $17.4,
    20
    compliant, legally sufficient financial
    21
    assurance for proper closure and post-closure
    22
    care of the Morris Community Landfill. This
    23
    relief is a the minimum necessary to protect
    24
    the public.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    21
    1
    The State will also ask the Board
    2
    to impose a significant penalty. The State
    3
    will ask that the Board recoup via penalty
    4
    all of the economic gain realized by the
    5
    Respondents during the period of violation,
    6
    some seven years.
    7
    The State will ask the Board to
    8
    increase this penalty to reflect the duration
    9
    and gravity of these violations and impose a
    10
    penalty sufficient to deter those similarly
    11
    situated from these significant violations.
    12
    Finally, the State will show that
    13
    these violations were willful and knowing.
    14
    We'll ask the Board to award it fees and
    15
    costs incurred through prosecution of this
    16
    matter.
    17
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you,
    18
    Mr. Grant. Ms. Grayson, would you like to
    19
    give an opening?
    20
    MS. GRAYSON: Could we go off the
    21
    record for a moment, please?
    22
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Sure.
    23
    We're off the record, Tammi.
    24
    (Brief pause.)
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    22
    1
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you.
    2
    You may proceed.
    3
    MS. GRAYSON: Thank you. At issue in
    4
    this matter are three bonds. Community
    5
    Landfill is the principal for two of the
    6
    bonds, which issued by Frontier Insurance
    7
    Company on June 14th, 1996, and May 31st,
    8
    2000. The two bonds issued to CLC were in
    9
    the amounts of -- or totaling $7,345,736.
    10
    The third bond that's at issue
    11
    is -- has the City of Morris as the principal
    12
    and was issued by Frontier on May 31st, 2000.
    13
    That bond is in the amount of $10,081,630.
    14
    These bonds were purchased, paid
    15
    for and issued to the Illinois Environmental
    16
    Protection Agency in good faith based on the
    17
    Agency's express approval of the bonds as
    18
    conforming with the regulation.
    19
    The State is still holding CLC's
    20
    collateral hostage and is making claims on
    21
    the very bonds it later rejected as
    22
    non-conforming.
    23
    Without an operating permit to
    24
    dispose of waste, CLC has no funds available
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    23
    1
    to substitute financial assurance. Under
    2
    these circumstances, any penalty would be
    3
    inappropriate.
    4
    Procedure work like this from June
    5
    to August 2000, a procedure was established
    6
    between CLC's counsel, John Taylor, and
    7
    Agency lawyer, John Kim, whereby CLC would
    8
    tender copies of the bonds that have been
    9
    issued to Petitioners by Frontier Insurance.
    10
    Taylor would review the bonds to
    11
    see if they were acceptable. And if
    12
    acceptable, the parties would have a closing
    13
    whereby CLC and the City would tender the
    14
    original bonds and the Agency would tender
    15
    the permits.
    16
    On August 4th, 2000, these bonds
    17
    were accepted by the Agency pursuant to the
    18
    recommendation of its own financial assurance
    19
    expert, John Taylor, who on August 3rd, 2000,
    20
    wrote, Community Landfill has tendered three
    21
    acceptable performance bonds totaling
    22
    $17,427,363. The bonds appear to comply with
    23
    the relevant regulations in all respects,
    24
    signed, John P. Taylor.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    24
    1
    When the bonds were approved on
    2
    August 4th, 2000, John Taylor, John Kim and
    3
    then Bureau of Land permit manager, Joyce
    4
    Munie, all knew that Frontier had been
    5
    removed from the Department of Treasury 570
    6
    list on June 1st, 2000. They all also
    7
    understood that if the bonds were found to be
    8
    unacceptable, no permit would issue and no
    9
    additional financial assurance would be
    10
    tendered.
    11
    John Taylor testified that Joyce
    12
    Munie was aware that if the bonds were not
    13
    accepted, no additional financial assurance
    14
    would be tendered and the Agency would be
    15
    left with only one 1.4 million in financial
    16
    assurance covering the entire site.
    17
    Taylor testified that Joyce Munie
    18
    directed him to, quote, find a way to accept
    19
    the bonds and put the operators on the hook
    20
    for 17 million, unquote, in financial
    21
    assurance.
    22
    Taylor also testified that he
    23
    recommended the bonds be accepted in
    24
    August 2000 because they complied with even
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    25
    1
    the most stringent interpretation of the
    2
    regulations.
    3
    When all three of the bonds were
    4
    issued, Frontier was both licensed by the
    5
    Illinois Department of Insurance and was on
    6
    the U.S. Department of Treasury's 570 list of
    7
    approved sureties.
    8
    Taylor further testified that he
    9
    had specific discussions with the Illinois
    10
    Department of Insurance and received
    11
    sufficient assurance that Frontier was still
    12
    licensed and that its bonding operations were
    13
    viable, sound and well run.
    14
    Taylor testified there is no law,
    15
    rule or regulation that allows the Agency to
    16
    take any action to disprove a bond that was
    17
    valid when issued, but when the bonding
    18
    company is later removed from the U.S.
    19
    Department of Treasury's 570 list of approved
    20
    sureties.
    21
    CLC then filed a supplemental
    22
    permit application to receive approval for
    23
    the construction of a separation layer and to
    24
    receive authorization for the acceptance of
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    26
    1
    waste for disposal in a newly constructed
    2
    area.
    3
    In spite of the absence of any
    4
    law, rule or regulation, however, Agency
    5
    employee, Blake Harris, recommended on May
    6
    9th, 2001, that the Frontier bonds be denied
    7
    because Frontier was no longer on the 570
    8
    list. Harris testified he made this
    9
    determination without even looking at the
    10
    bonds or determining their effective dates.
    11
    Harris' recommendation was
    12
    accepted without question by permit manager,
    13
    Joyce Munie.
    14
    On the contrary, John Taylor's
    15
    opinion was that the bonds still conformed
    16
    with the most stringent reading of the Act
    17
    and regulations as of May 2001 since, one,
    18
    they were issued when Frontier was listed on
    19
    the 570 list and, two, there is no
    20
    requirement -- there's no provision of the
    21
    Act's rules or regulations that requires or
    22
    even allows the Agency to deny permits based
    23
    on subsequent removal from the list.
    24
    On May 11th, 2001, the Agency
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    27
    1
    denied CLC's supplemental permit in part on
    2
    the grounds that CLC had failed to comply
    3
    with Section 811.712(b) of the Illinois
    4
    Administrative Code which requires that the
    5
    surety company that guaranties the bond or
    6
    other financial assurance for a permit be
    7
    licensed by the Illinois Department of
    8
    Insurance and approved by the U.S. Department
    9
    of Treasury in the Circular 570 even though
    10
    the Agency knew the Frontier had been
    11
    delisted at the time it pre-approved the
    12
    bonds in August of 2000.
    13
    The agency got them. CLC and the
    14
    City of Morris had done exactly what the
    15
    Agency had told them to do. They trusted the
    16
    Agency to keep up their end of the bargain.
    17
    Instead, in the words of Joyce Munie, they
    18
    were on the hook. The resulting harm to CLC
    19
    and the City of Morris was obvious.
    20
    It's uncontradicted that if the
    21
    Frontier bonds had not been approved in
    22
    August 2000, no additional financial
    23
    assurance would have been tendered by CLC or
    24
    the City. In that case, CLC would have been
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    28
    1
    responsible for one year's premium on only
    2
    $1.4 million or $26,850.
    3
    Instead, thanks to Joyce Munie's
    4
    directive to Taylor, find a way to accept the
    5
    bonds and the Agency's acceptance of the
    6
    bonds, CLC and the City tendered an
    7
    additional is $15.6 million in financial
    8
    assurance bonds with a five-year commitment
    9
    to pay annual premiums totaling more than
    10
    $200,000 per year or more than a million
    11
    dollars over five years.
    12
    CLC made payments for the bond
    13
    premiums in 2001 and -- through 2000 and 2001
    14
    for the following amounts: For the two bonds
    15
    for which CLC is the principal, CLC paid
    16
    $174,532 in fees and premiums. For the bonds
    17
    for which the City of Morris is the
    18
    principal, CLC paid $252,040 in fees and
    19
    premiums for a total of $426,572.
    20
    At the same time, because the
    21
    permit was denied, CLC was unable to accept
    22
    ways to which, quote, would certainly
    23
    eventually shut the facility down in the
    24
    words of CLC engineer, Mike McDermott.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    29
    1
    After litigating this matter all
    2
    the way up to the Supreme Court of Illinois,
    3
    the People of the State of Illinois filed the
    4
    present enforcement action on April 17th,
    5
    2003.
    6
    The story of the bonds isn't over,
    7
    however. This is where the story picks up
    8
    with information that is new to the Board and
    9
    which must be heard in order for the Board to
    10
    fully understand exactly what it is the State
    11
    has and continues to try to accomplish.
    12
    On January 23rd, 2003, Frontier
    13
    Insurance Company demanded that CLC pay its
    14
    premium for bond number 158465 in the amount
    15
    of $73,825.
    16
    By letter dated March 20th, 2003,
    17
    counsel for CLC explained the foregoing
    18
    situation to Frontier and asked Frontier to
    19
    consider its nonpayment of the premiums on
    20
    the bonds against that backdrop stating that
    21
    the landfill has been effectively shut down
    22
    because the agency rejected the Frontier
    23
    bonds rendering CLC unable to generate the
    24
    necessary income to pay the premium on the
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    30
    1
    bonds. Even if CLC had the money, it would
    2
    be difficult to imagine paying premiums on
    3
    the bonds that the IEPA claims are worthless.
    4
    In fact, on April 7th, 2003,
    5
    Frontier agreed with CLC that no further
    6
    billing premiums were warranted on the bonds
    7
    since the permit application was denied on
    8
    May 11th, 2001. Frontier reversed all
    9
    renewal billings for the above bonds and
    10
    closed their file based on they May 11th,
    11
    2001 date.
    12
    On April 16th, 2003, CLC made a
    13
    demand to Frontier for the return of its
    14
    collateral. When Frontier confirmed on May
    15
    30th, 2003, that Frontier was unable to
    16
    refund any premiums until authorized by the
    17
    State Department of Insurance, Frontier and
    18
    counsel for CLC began exchanging drafts of a
    19
    proposed release of collateral. CLC sent its
    20
    proposed form of release to Frontier on
    21
    June 19th, 2003.
    22
    On July 2nd, 2003, however,
    23
    Frontier sent a form to the IEPA to be
    24
    executed for the release of CLC's collateral.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    31
    1
    However, it was not until November 5th, 2003,
    2
    some three or four months later, that
    3
    Frontier informed CLC it would be unable to
    4
    proceed with the return of any collateral
    5
    based on the August 21st, 2003 letter from
    6
    Agency employee, Blake Harris.
    7
    In that letter, Mr. Harris
    8
    informed Frontier the Agency could not
    9
    release Frontier from claims on bonds
    10
    numbered 191507, 158465 and 158466 because
    11
    alternate financial assurance had not been
    12
    received.
    13
    The Board should find that because
    14
    the Agency has already rejected the bonds as
    15
    invalid and, in fact, filed the present
    16
    enforcement action to that effect, it is
    17
    inevitable for the Agency to at the same time
    18
    refuse to release the bonds simply because
    19
    alternate financial assurance has not been
    20
    received.
    21
    The story is not over yet,
    22
    however. Apparently, the Agency was not sure
    23
    of the situation. On January 27th, 2004,
    24
    Beverly Anderson, an accountant in the
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    32
    1
    Compliance Unit of the IEPA Bureau of Land
    2
    wrote to surety underwriting manager,
    3
    Frontier, and stated, our records indicate
    4
    that Morris Community Landfill is providing
    5
    financial assurance for closure and
    6
    post-closure costs through three Frontier
    7
    performance bonds.
    8
    CLC has offered the collateral
    9
    numerous times to the State if it will only
    10
    agree to release that, which it will not.
    11
    On May 27th, 2005, the Agency,
    12
    through its former director, Renee Cipriano,
    13
    made a demand on bonds for which CLC is the
    14
    principal, specifically demanding that
    15
    Frontier pay the Agency the penal sum of the
    16
    bond, $7,345,736.
    17
    Similarly, on May 26th, 2006, the
    18
    Agency, through its director, Douglas Scott,
    19
    made a demand on the bonds for which the City
    20
    of Morris is the principal, demanding that
    21
    Frontier pay the Agency the penal sum of the
    22
    bonds, $1,081,630.
    23
    The Board should consider the
    24
    Agency has already elected its remedy, which
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    33
    1
    in this case is making a demand on Frontier
    2
    for the sum of the bonds. Bonds which, by
    3
    the way, determined were no good more than
    4
    six years ago.
    5
    In summary, CLC should not be
    6
    penalized for simply doing in good faith what
    7
    it was told to do by the Agency. These bonds
    8
    were purchased and paid for by CLC and issued
    9
    to the Environmental Protection Agency in
    10
    good faith based on the Agency's express
    11
    approval of the bonds as conforming with the
    12
    regulation.
    13
    The State is still holding CLC's
    14
    collateral hostage and is making claims on
    15
    the very bonds that it later rejected as
    16
    non-conforming.
    17
    Without an operating permit to
    18
    dispose of waste, CLC has no funds available
    19
    to substitute financial assurance. And,
    20
    therefore, under these circumstances, any
    21
    penalty assessed to CLC would be unfair and
    22
    inappropriate.
    23
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you,
    24
    Ms. Grayson. Mr. Porter?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    34
    1
    MR. PORTER: Thank you, Mr. Halloran.
    2
    Good morning. My name Richard Porter and I
    3
    and Mr. Scott Belt and Charles Helston
    4
    represent the respondent, City of Morris.
    5
    The Pollution Control Board has
    6
    directed a hearing be held to discuss whether
    7
    to impose a remedy, if any, considering the
    8
    Section 33(c) factors, and to address a civil
    9
    penalty, and I'll quote, if any, considering
    10
    the 42(h) factors.
    11
    In this case, the State alleges
    12
    that Community Landfill Company, CLC, and the
    13
    City of Morris failed to provide adequate
    14
    financial assurance for closure and
    15
    post-closure operations. CLC and the City of
    16
    Morris have filed motions for summary
    17
    judgment in this matter.
    18
    The City of Morris hereby adopts
    19
    and incorporates all the pleadings and
    20
    arguments associated with those summary
    21
    judgment motions by way of reference into
    22
    this record.
    23
    In its order regarding those
    24
    motions for summary judgment, the Illinois
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    35
    1
    Pollution Control Board found that Morris
    2
    Community Landfill is approximately 119 acres
    3
    and divided into two parcels designated as
    4
    Parcel A consisting of 55 acres and Parcel B
    5
    consisting of approximately 64 acres.
    6
    The Board also found that CLC --
    7
    and, again, I will quote, CLC operates the
    8
    Morris Community Landfill and manages the
    9
    day-to-day operations of both parcels at the
    10
    site. Therefore, the City of Morris is not
    11
    responsible for implementation of a fine
    12
    remedy.
    13
    In addition to those arguments
    14
    stated in the summary judgment motion, the
    15
    City of Morris will present a post-hearing
    16
    brief establishing that under the Tort
    17
    Immunity Act, the City is immune from
    18
    liability from penalties and attorneys fees,
    19
    which are being sought by the state of
    20
    Illinois.
    21
    Furthermore, because the PCB has
    22
    relied upon certain permits given by a prior
    23
    city official who was never authorized to
    24
    obligate the City of Morris to pay for
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    36
    1
    closure and post-closure care, said acts were
    2
    done ultra vires and cannot be the basis for
    3
    imposition of final remedy against the City
    4
    of Morris.
    5
    Nonetheless, we will present
    6
    evidence during this hearing that the
    7
    $17 million closure/post-closure cost
    8
    estimates that the government is utilizing to
    9
    formulate its proposed remedy are excessive
    10
    and unnecessary.
    11
    We'll present testimony from Shaw
    12
    Environmental, which is a highly reputable
    13
    environmental consultant experienced in the
    14
    landfill industry, that the closure and
    15
    post-closure costs will total about
    16
    $10 million, not $17 million.
    17
    Furthermore, we'll present
    18
    testimony from an independent auditor,
    19
    William Crawford, that the City of Morris may
    20
    avoid posting any bond or paying any
    21
    insurance vehicle by merely posting a
    22
    municipal guaranty.
    23
    Therefore, the evidence will be,
    24
    unlike what Mr. Grant indicated earlier, that
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    37
    1
    the City of Morris enjoyed absolutely no
    2
    financial gain or realized any economic
    3
    benefit from failing to post financial
    4
    assurance.
    5
    The evidence will be it could
    6
    have -- or it could do so by merely posting a
    7
    municipal guaranty, but it's been the
    8
    position of the City of Morris and continues
    9
    to be the position of the City of Morris that
    10
    closure and post-closure is the
    11
    responsibility of CLC.
    12
    We'll also present evidence of the
    13
    impracticability of purchasing a bond or
    14
    insurance vehicle at this stage, as the
    15
    government -- the state of Illinois is of the
    16
    position that Parcel B of the landfill must
    17
    be closed immediately. And from what I heard
    18
    in opening statements, it appears that the
    19
    government has taken the position that the
    20
    entire landfill must be closed immediately.
    21
    Well, if we have to close the
    22
    landfill now, it makes absolutely no sense to
    23
    be spending money on an insurance vehicle or
    24
    a bond. Rather, any funds that are available
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    38
    1
    from any source ought to be used to close the
    2
    landfill.
    3
    Logic dictates that the money
    4
    shouldn't be given to an insurance company or
    5
    a bonding company and instead it should be
    6
    used to protect the environment.
    7
    It would simply be detrimental to
    8
    the public health, safety and welfare to
    9
    impose the remedy that the State is
    10
    suggesting. The posting of financial
    11
    assurances should have occurred in the
    12
    30 years that the landfill was in operation.
    13
    And, indeed, it was the
    14
    understanding of the City of Morris that it
    15
    was being accomplished by Community Landfill
    16
    Company, which was the only entity that had
    17
    the operating and developing permits for the
    18
    landfill.
    19
    It was entirely reasonable for the
    20
    City to believe that it bore no
    21
    responsibility for the posting of financial
    22
    assurances, as the State has never indicated
    23
    a difference until these proceedings
    24
    commenced. And it wasn't until June 1 of
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    39
    1
    2006 that the PCB has ruled that financial
    2
    assurance must now be accomplished by the
    3
    City of Morris.
    4
    Therefore, the City of Morris has
    5
    not had the opportunity to establish a fund
    6
    that can even come close to paying for the
    7
    financial assurances, which the State says
    8
    must be posted in this case.
    9
    Furthermore, the government has
    10
    indicated that Parcel B at a minimum of the
    11
    landfill should have been closed within
    12
    90 days of reaching its allowable height.
    13
    That was over a decade ago. Therefore, the
    14
    State should have required the timely closure
    15
    of the landfill by CLC, its operator and
    16
    developer. And if CLC had failed to do so
    17
    ten years ago, the Frontier bonds could have
    18
    been utilized at that time to pay for closure
    19
    and post-closure.
    20
    It wasn't until 2000 or 2001 that
    21
    we came to the conclusion that the Frontier
    22
    bonds were no longer valid. Therefore, the
    23
    City sitting on its -- excuse me, therefore
    24
    the State sitting on its rights is what got
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    40
    1
    us to the position we are today.
    2
    Further, if the State had required
    3
    closure of Parcel B and it became apparent
    4
    that CLC wasn't accomplishing it, that at
    5
    least would have alerted my client of the
    6
    issue and perhaps we could have established a
    7
    fund at that time to pay for closure and
    8
    post-closure a decade later.
    9
    Of course, we did not have an
    10
    opportunity to do so because, again, the
    11
    State sat on its rights.
    12
    Therefore, the State should be
    13
    barred and estopped from now trying to impose
    14
    this liability upon the City of Morris.
    15
    However, if the Pollution Control
    16
    Board is going to demand the City fund this
    17
    remedy, that remedy should only utilize the
    18
    most reliable and recent closure/post-closure
    19
    numbers which have been submitted by Shaw
    20
    Environmental and, further, it should allow
    21
    the City to post its municipal guaranty of
    22
    closure/post-closure. That way, funds are
    23
    not siphoned away from closing and rather
    24
    we'll post a guaranty. And if we have funds
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    41
    1
    available, they could be used and actually
    2
    fund the closure.
    3
    The State should further assign
    4
    any of its right under the Frontier insurance
    5
    to the City of Morris and allow the City of
    6
    Morris to continue to operate Parcel A, which
    7
    has not yet met its height and, thereby, use
    8
    those proceeds from said parcel to defray any
    9
    closure costs. That's the most reasonable
    10
    remedy that could be accomplished here if
    11
    they're going to impose one against the City
    12
    of Morris, which it should not.
    13
    Section 33(c) requires the PCB to
    14
    consider the technical practicability and
    15
    economic reasonableness of requiring the City
    16
    to post financial assurance now.
    17
    It would be completely
    18
    unreasonable at this stage to require the
    19
    City to use its funds to buy an insurance
    20
    bond or buy an insurance vehicle.
    21
    Section 33(C) also requires the
    22
    PCB to consider that the City has been
    23
    spending its assets on closure activities
    24
    since February of 2006.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    42
    1
    Once it became apparent that the
    2
    State was taking the position that it was,
    3
    indeed, our responsibility, the City has
    4
    since then been moving toward closure and has
    5
    hired Shaw Environmental at a substantial
    6
    expense to perform the initial tests required
    7
    to determine what has to be done at the
    8
    landfill.
    9
    In conclusion, no remedy should be
    10
    imposed against the City of Morris. The only
    11
    party responsible for closure/post-closure
    12
    here is Community Landfill Company.
    13
    If the State was of the position
    14
    it was the City of Morris's problem to close
    15
    this landfill, it should have alerted the
    16
    City of Morris to that fact ten years ago.
    17
    However, if any remedy is allowed
    18
    or ordered by the Pollution Control Board,
    19
    the City of Morris should be able to use
    20
    whatever funds it has available to actually
    21
    close the facility, thereby protect the human
    22
    health, safety and welfare and our
    23
    environment.
    24
    Using those funds to buy an
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    43
    1
    insurance vehicle or a bond makes absolutely
    2
    no sense. And, as a matter of fact, the
    3
    course of such a vehicle is likely to be the
    4
    entire cost of closure because the State is
    5
    taking the position that we have to close
    6
    now. So any insurance company is going to
    7
    say, well, in order for us to give you a
    8
    $10 million insurance vehicle, you've got to
    9
    pay a $10 million premium. That makes
    10
    absolutely no sense to give that money to
    11
    insurance companies instead of protecting the
    12
    environment.
    13
    I have nothing further. Thank
    14
    you.
    15
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you,
    16
    Mr. Porter. It's my turn. We're going to go
    17
    off the record for five minutes for a break.
    18
    Thanks.
    19
    (Whereupon, after a short
    20
    break was had, the
    21
    following proceedings
    22
    were held accordingly.)
    23
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: We're back
    24
    on the record. We just finished with opening
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    44
    1
    statements. Ms. Tomas?
    2
    MS. TOMAS: We'd like to call our
    3
    first witness, Mark Retzlaff.
    4
    MR. PORTER: Mr. Halloran, before that
    5
    commences, we would make a motion to exclude
    6
    witnesses.
    7
    MS. GRAYSON: And we would join in
    8
    that motion.
    9
    MR. GRANT: No objection.
    10
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Okay.
    11
    (Whereupon, a discussion
    12
    was had off the record.)
    13
    MR. GRANT: This lady is not our
    14
    witness.
    15
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: And you
    16
    are, ma'am?
    17
    UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: I work for the
    18
    solid waste department here.
    19
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Okay.
    20
    Thank you. So there's nobody to sequester.
    21
    Okay.
    22
    If you would just raise your right
    23
    hand, sir, and Tammi will swear you in.
    24
    (Witness sworn.)
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    45
    1
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you.
    2
    You may have a seat.
    3 WHEREUPON:
    4
    MARK RETZLAFF
    5 called as a witness herein, having been first duly
    6 sworn, was examined and testified as follows:
    7
    DIRECT EXAMINATION
    8
    By Ms. Tomas
    9
    Q. Could you please state your name for
    10 the record?
    11
    A. Mark Retzlaff. It's R-E-T-Z-L-A-F-F.
    12
    Q. And where do you live, Mark?
    13
    A. Lombard.
    14
    Q. And where how long have you lived in
    15 Lombard?
    16
    A. Approximately 12 years.
    17
    Q. What is your highest level of
    18 education?
    19
    A. Bachelor's of science.
    20
    Q. And where did you get that from?
    21
    A. Eastern Illinois university.
    22
    Q. When did you graduate?
    23
    A. 1982.
    24
    Q. Where are you currently employed?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    46
    1
    A. State Environmental Protection Agency.
    2
    Q. And that's commonly known as Illinois
    3 EPA?
    4
    A. That's correct, yes.
    5
    Q. How long have you been with the
    6 Illinois EPA?
    7
    A. About 18 years.
    8
    Q. And what is your title there?
    9
    A. Inspector.
    10
    Q. And how long have you held the
    11 position of inspector?
    12
    A. Eighteen years.
    13
    Q. Okay. Since you began with the
    14 Illinois EPA?
    15
    A. Yes.
    16
    Q. And is that with the Bureau of Land?
    17
    A. That's correct. Yes.
    18
    Q. If you could please describe your
    19 duties as a Bureau of Land inspector?
    20
    A. To conduct RCRA hazardous waste and
    21 solid waste inspections in facilities for compliance
    22 with the Act, the Environment Protection Act and
    23 Regulations.
    24
    Q. Are sanitary landfill inspections part
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    47
    1 of your duties?
    2
    A. Yes.
    3
    Q. And you said you inspect those
    4 landfills for compliance with the Illinois
    5 Environmental Protection Act, the Illinois EPA and
    6 Illinois Pollution Control Board Regulations,
    7 correct?
    8
    A. Yes.
    9
    Q. Do you also inspect for compliance
    10 with terms and conditions of Illinois EPA issued
    11 landfill permits?
    12
    A. Yes.
    13
    Q. Is the Morris Community Landfill
    14 within your inspection region?
    15
    A. Yes.
    16
    Q. And are you the primary field
    17 inspector for the Morris Community Landfill within
    18 the Bureau of Land?
    19
    A. Yes.
    20
    Q. If you could please just give me a
    21 general description of the Morris Community
    22 Landfill?
    23
    A. It's situated in a semi-rural area
    24 adjacent and across the street from another
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    48
    1 landfill, EnvironTech Landfill. It consists of two
    2 parcels; Parcel A, which is what I consider the
    3 newer section and Parcel B, which is the older,
    4 historical section.
    5
    Q. Do you know approximately when the
    6 last time Parcel B took in waste?
    7
    A. I've been told approximately 2002.
    8
    MR. PORTER: Objection, hearsay.
    9
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Ms. Tomas?
    10 BY MS. TOMAS:
    11
    Q. Who told you that?
    12
    A. James Pelnarsh, Sr., the site
    13 operator.
    14
    MR. PORTER: Same objection,
    15
    Mr. Hearing Officer.
    16
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Ms. Tomas?
    17 BY MS. TOMAS:
    18
    Q. And who do you know --
    19
    MR. PORTER: I guess I'll move to
    20
    strike. He did testify to something and it
    21
    turned out it was something that somebody
    22
    told him, so I'll move to strike that
    23
    testimony.
    24
    MS. GRAYSON: I'll join in that
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    49
    1
    motion.
    2
    MS. TOMAS: And we would state that
    3
    Mr. Pelnarsh is -- it's an admission by a
    4
    party deponent. And we will show that
    5
    through the (inaudible).
    6
    THE COURT REPORTER: You need to
    7
    repeat that. I can't hear you.
    8
    MS. TOMAS: We will show that Mr.
    9
    Pelnarsh is -- it's an admission by a party
    10
    deponent and we will show that through his
    11
    direct testimony of his understanding of who
    12
    Mr. Pelnarsh is.
    13
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Mr. Porter?
    14
    MR. PORTER: Unless there's a
    15
    foundation that Mr. Pelnarsh is a member of
    16
    the control group of CLC, which we all know
    17
    he is not, it is not an admission of a party
    18
    deponent. The party is CLC.
    19
    MS. TOMAS: Control group has nothing
    20
    to do with it. He is an agent of CLC and
    21
    authorized to speak on behalf of the company.
    22
    MS. GRAYSON: And I'll object --
    23
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Okay. I'm
    24
    going to sustain the City and CLC's
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    50
    1
    objection, however, I'm not going to strike
    2
    it. The Board will take note. You may
    3
    proceed.
    4 BY MS. TOMAS:
    5
    Q. What surrounds the area near the
    6 Morris Community Landfill?
    7
    A. Additional landfill, some commercial
    8 and very little residential. Primarily rural.
    9
    Q. Would you say that the Morris
    10 Community Landfill is suited to the area in which
    11 its situated?
    12
    A. Yes.
    13
    Q. And do you know if the Morris
    14 Community Landfill has any land permits?
    15
    A. Yes, they do.
    16
    Q. Do you know who owns the Morris
    17 Community Landfill?
    18
    A. It's my understanding, based on
    19 documents, the City of Morris.
    20
    Q. Okay. And you do you know who
    21 operates the Morris Community Landfill?
    22
    A. Yes.
    23
    Q. Who is that, please?
    24
    A. Community Landfill --
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    51
    1
    MR. PORTER: Well, I'm going to object
    2
    to the relevancy, Mr. Halloran. If we're
    3
    going to get into whether or not we are the
    4
    owner/operator of the landfill, that's going
    5
    to make this hearing a heck of a lot longer.
    6
    I thought we were trying to limit
    7
    this to the 33(c) and 42(h) factors. If we
    8
    want to open that door, I'm willing to walk
    9
    through it, but my understanding is that's
    10
    beyond the scope of this hearing.
    11
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Ms. Tomas?
    12
    MS. TOMAS: Your Honor, I'll just move
    13
    on.
    14
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Okay.
    15
    Sustained.
    16 BY MS. TOMAS:
    17
    Q. When was the first time you inspected
    18 the Morris Community Landfill?
    19
    A. Approximately 2000. Spring of 2000.
    20
    Q. How do you know it was in 2000?
    21
    A. A document review.
    22
    Q. What would be included in that
    23 document review?
    24
    A. My inspection reports.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    52
    1
    Q. Okay. Do you recall giving a
    2 different first inspection date on other occasions?
    3
    A. Yes.
    4
    Q. Can you please explain that?
    5
    A. On a previous hearing that I
    6 participated in, I believe I stated that my first
    7 time out there was 2002. And upon file review, I
    8 realized it was 2000.
    9
    Q. So would you like to correct those
    10 prior statements to reflect the fact that you
    11 discovered an earlier inspection report that
    12 confirms your first inspection of the Morris
    13 Community Landfill was in 2000?
    14
    A. Yes.
    15
    MR. PORTER: Mr. Halloran, I realize
    16
    that this is an administrative hearing but
    17
    we've got to have some -- I object to
    18
    leading.
    19
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Okay. You
    20
    know, I'm going to ask Tammi to read the
    21
    question back. I'm having a hard time
    22
    following you, Ms. Tomas you have slow down.
    23
    Tammi might be able to understand, but...
    24
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    53
    1
    (Whereupon, the requested
    2
    portion of the record
    3
    was read accordingly.)
    4
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: You know,
    5
    I'll overrule it for now and I think the
    6
    witness answered.
    7 BY MS. TOMAS:
    8
    Q. Approximately how many times have you
    9 inspected the Morris Community Landfill since 2000?
    10
    A. Approximately 18 times.
    11
    Q. And how many of those times did you
    12 inspect it in 2007?
    13
    A. Twice.
    14
    Q. Did you inspect both Parcels A and B
    15 every time you inspected the site?
    16
    A. No.
    17
    Q. When was your first inspection in
    18 2007?
    19
    A. June 26th.
    20
    Q. And did you inspect both parcels
    21 during that inspection?
    22
    A. No.
    23
    Q. What parcel did you inspect?
    24
    A. Parcel A only.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    54
    1
    Q. When you arrived at the landfill, was
    2 anyone there?
    3
    A. Yes.
    4
    Q. Who was that?
    5
    A. An employee by the name of Tricia
    6 Banks, I believe, is the last name.
    7
    Q. And who do you know Tricia Banks to
    8 be?
    9
    A. She's an employee of Community
    10 Landfill Company that I would describe as
    11 administrative-related, clerical, take tickets and
    12 so forth.
    13
    Q. Do you know who she works for?
    14
    A. I assume Community Landfill Company.
    15
    Q. Did she accompany you as you made your
    16 inspection?
    17
    A. No.
    18
    Q. Did you speak with anyone else during
    19 your inspection?
    20
    A. I spoke with James Pelnarsh, Sr., via
    21 telephone.
    22
    Q. And who was Jim Pelnarsh?
    23
    A. The site operator of the landfill.
    24
    Q. And do you know who he works for?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    55
    1
    A. Community Landfill Company.
    2
    Q. If you could please describe what you
    3 observed at the landfill during your June 2007
    4 inspection.
    5
    MR. PORTER: Objection, irrelevant.
    6
    MS. GRAYSON: Objection.
    7
    MS. TOMAS: Mr. Halloran, it goes
    8
    directly to 42(h) and 33(c) factors as to
    9
    diligence and gravity and duration.
    10
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: I agree.
    11
    Overruled.
    12
    MR. PORTER: May I make a brief
    13
    record, Mr. Halloran?
    14
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: You may,
    15
    Mr. Porter.
    16
    MR. PORTER: My understanding is the
    17
    issue here today is whether or not financial
    18
    assurances should have been posted by CLC and
    19
    the City of Morris.
    20
    We're now getting into apparently
    21
    physical inspections of the property and, I
    22
    guess, alleged violations concerning other
    23
    environmental regulations. That goes beyond
    24
    the scope of whether or not 33(c) -- the
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    56
    1
    33(c) and 42(h) factors as applies to posting
    2
    of financial assurance.
    3
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Ms. Tomas?
    4
    MS. GRAYSON: And I would also like to
    5
    make a record, Mr. Halloran. The testimony
    6
    of the current condition of the landfill
    7
    should be irrelevant here. It's not a
    8
    defense to not have financial assurance if
    9
    the landfill is beautiful. It doesn't make
    10
    any difference whether you have -- whether
    11
    the landfill is a beautiful landfill or not
    12
    in terms of whether there's adequate
    13
    financial assurance posted.
    14
    Any testimony regarding the
    15
    condition of the landfill should be reserved
    16
    for a separate enforcement action. It's a
    17
    whole separate matter.
    18
    MR. GRANT: May I respond?
    19
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Mr. Porter,
    20
    go ahead.
    21
    MR. GRANT: This is Mr. Grant.
    22
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Mr. Grant,
    23
    go ahead.
    24
    MR. GRANT: The issue here isn't
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    57
    1
    whether or not there's financial assurance.
    2
    That's already been determined. It's really
    3
    the case that there is no compliant financial
    4
    assurance and that the Respondents have both
    5
    violated the sections of the Act in the
    6
    complaint.
    7
    The 33(c) factors and the 42(h)
    8
    factors deal with the gravity of the offense.
    9
    We will show at this hearing that there is no
    10
    financial assurance that's been posted at any
    11
    time and that the condition of the landfill
    12
    is degrading significantly.
    13
    If financial assurance had been in
    14
    place, the State would be able to trigger the
    15
    financial assurance and these problems that
    16
    will be described with Mr. Retzlaff's
    17
    testimony would have been taken care of.
    18
    The fact that there is no
    19
    financial assurance is directly related to
    20
    the failure of the Respondents to take any
    21
    responsibility for maintaining the landfill
    22
    and for the current conditions of the
    23
    landfill.
    24
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Mr. Porter,
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    58
    1
    you know, under 42(h), duration and gravity
    2
    and presence or absence of due diligence,
    3
    those are two of the factors that the Board
    4
    will look at. My understanding is they're
    5
    talking about the 2007 inspection and I find
    6
    it relevant. So objection overruled. You
    7
    may continue.
    8
    MR. PORTER: Mr. Halloran, I've
    9
    noticed somebody entered the room.
    10
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: We have
    11
    sequestered and excluded witnesses, so exit
    12
    stage left or stage right.
    13
    (Whereupon Mr. Blake Harris
    14
    left the proceedings.)
    15
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: You may
    16
    proceed, Ms. Tomas.
    17 BY MS. TOMAS:
    18
    Q. Can you please describe the
    19 observations you made at the landfill during your
    20 June 2007 inspection?
    21
    A. In Parcel A, there was a freshly
    22 disposed load of waste consisting of demolition
    23 debris, remodeling materials, general refuse,
    24 wastewater treatment sludge apparently from the city
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    59
    1 and the other assorted materials.
    2
    Q. Did you observe these materials during
    3 any prior inspection of Parcel A?
    4
    A. No.
    5
    Q. Is Parcel A currently permitted to
    6 accept construction demolition debris waste?
    7
    A. No.
    8
    Q. Is Parcel A currently permitted to
    9 accept general refuse?
    10
    A. No.
    11
    Q. Did you include these observations in
    12 your inspection report?
    13
    A. Yes.
    14
    Q. At this time I'd like to turn to
    15 Complainant Group Exhibit A, Exhibit No. 7. If you
    16 can look at the narrative section of your inspection
    17 report, which is I believe the third page, the
    18 second to last sentence says, no new apparent
    19 violations were cited.
    20
    Can you please explain that
    21 statement given your observations?
    22
    A. Basically, that the violations are
    23 documented via photographs and through the narrative
    24 that new violations aren't cited because in our
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    60
    1 opinion or my opinion the existing violations that
    2 are on the books are there, so they're ongoing
    3 violations versus new violations. The same old
    4 violations.
    5
    Q. And did you take any pictures while
    6 you were inspecting Parcel A?
    7
    A. Yes.
    8
    Q. Are they attached to your inspection
    9 report?
    10
    A. Yes, they are.
    11
    Q. At this time I'd like to -- it's, I
    12 believe, Page 4. Looking at exposure number one,
    13 could you please describe what this picture is
    14 depicting?
    15
    A. That's a freshly disposed load of what
    16 I described as demolition debris and general refuse
    17 approximately 20 feet by 10 feet by 6 feet in size
    18 at the southeastern slope, south end of the site.
    19
    Q. Again, this is just Parcel A?
    20
    A. Yes.
    21
    Q. Is exposure number two the same?
    22
    A. Yes, it is. It's just a close-up.
    23
    Q. Exposure number three?
    24
    A. That's an additional area at the outer
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    61
    1 edge of the slope where soils have been partially
    2 pushed on it to cover it up. So it's an additional
    3 disposal area.
    4
    Q. So that is a separate area from the
    5 pile depicted in pictures number one and two?
    6
    A. Yes. That's correct.
    7
    Q. What about picture number four?
    8
    A. That's an additional area extending to
    9 the southeast along the outer slope of general
    10 refuse and debris.
    11
    Q. Exposure number five?
    12
    A. A close-up. Another additional photo
    13 of that same area as depicted in four -- photo four.
    14
    Q. And exposure number six?
    15
    A. Wastewater treatment sludge from the
    16 City of Morris.
    17
    Q. Exposure number seven?
    18
    A. Kind of an overview of that southern
    19 slope looking to the east.
    20
    Q. And exposure number eight?
    21
    A. This was just a pile of what I -- I'm
    22 assuming they're water meters. I can't say, but
    23 it's some sort of meter device that were just
    24 disposed of on the ground to the side of the road.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    62
    1
    Q. Exposure number nine?
    2
    A. A close-up of one of the meters.
    3
    Q. And exposure number ten?
    4
    A. It's an overview looking to the
    5 southwest of kind of the active area, but it's being
    6 secondary use for like a brick salvage operation.
    7
    Q. And when was your most recent
    8 inspection of the Morris Community Landfill?
    9
    A. August 29th of 2007.
    10
    Q. Did you inspect both Parcels A and B
    11 at that inspection?
    12
    A. Yes.
    13
    Q. When you arrived at the landfill, was
    14 anyone there?
    15
    A. Yes.
    16
    Q. Who was that?
    17
    A. James Pelnarsh, Sr.
    18
    Q. Did he accompany you as you made your
    19 inspection?
    20
    A. Yes. On B only.
    21
    Q. On Parcel B only?
    22
    A. Yes.
    23
    Q. What did you observe at Parcel A
    24 during your August 2007 inspection?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    63
    1
    A. Again, general refuse strewn on the
    2 surface, refuse that was partially exposed through
    3 the soil on the southern slope, what I described as
    4 a leachate seep on the south end, erosion cuts,
    5 areas that lack vegetation, appropriate cover and so
    6 forth, exposed refuse.
    7
    Q. Okay. What is a leachate seep?
    8
    A. Leachate is contact water, rain water,
    9 groundwater that comes in contact with refuse or
    10 garbage/waste that seeps out of a landfill that
    11 isn't contained.
    12
    Q. What does a leachate seep tell you
    13 about the landfill?
    14
    A. That it's not being maintained
    15 properly.
    16
    Q. Were there any other observations you
    17 made that indicated the lack of maintenance?
    18
    A. Yes.
    19
    Q. What were those?
    20
    A. Just on the eastern slope, erosion
    21 cuts, areas that lacked vegetative cover that
    22 contribute to the erosion and then the exposed
    23 refuse.
    24
    Q. Did you include those observations in
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    64
    1 your inspection report?
    2
    A. Yes.
    3
    Q. I'd like to turn now to Complainant
    4 Group Exhibit A that's marked as Exhibit 8. And
    5 we'll go again to your narrative section, which is
    6 Page 2 of the narrative.
    7
    Again, you note no apparent
    8 violations. Is that for the same reason as in your
    9 June inspection report?
    10
    A. Yes.
    11
    Q. Did you take any pictures while you
    12 were at Parcel A in August 2007?
    13
    A. Yes.
    14
    Q. Turning now to Page 9 of 13 of Exhibit
    15 A, Exhibit No. 8, could you please explain what's in
    16 exposure number 17?
    17
    A. That's Parcel A. That's a photograph
    18 of leachate at the southeastern slope, outer edge.
    19
    Q. How do you know it's leachate?
    20
    A. From 18 years experience inspecting
    21 landfills.
    22
    Q. And what is exposure number 18?
    23
    A. Eighteen is the southeastern slope
    24 showing exposed refuse that lacks cover.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    65
    1
    Q. Exposure number 19?
    2
    A. It's just an overview of the general
    3 area, again, showing the brick salvage operation.
    4
    Q. Have you noticed any changes to this
    5 area from your June 2007 inspection?
    6
    A. Yes.
    7
    Q. What were those?
    8
    A. Again, additional refuse that wasn't
    9 previously observed was observed on the 29th.
    10
    Q. And exposure number 20?
    11
    A. That's the top portion looking
    12 northwest just showing lack of vegetative cover.
    13
    Q. Number 21?
    14
    A. It's a photograph of the eastern slope
    15 looking north/northeast showing pretty decent cover
    16 established.
    17
    Q. Number 22?
    18
    A. On top of the landfill, northeastern
    19 section, just showing uncovered refuse, exposed
    20 refuse.
    21
    Q. Number 23?
    22
    A. Again, that general area looking
    23 northeast on top of the landfill showing exposed
    24 asphalt shingles, refuse.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    66
    1
    Q. And number 24?
    2
    A. That's back to the Parcel A again.
    3 The southeastern slope. Just newly deposited refuse
    4 that's exposed.
    5
    Q. Number 25?
    6
    A. That's the southeastern slope of
    7 Parcel A, sandbags that apparently came from the
    8 Morris Hospital from the previous week's flooding.
    9
    Q. How do you know that?
    10
    A. James Pelnarsh, Sr., told me. In
    11 addition, there's drywall and other, like,
    12 demolition type debris there.
    13
    MS. GRAYSON: Objection to hearsay.
    14
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Ms. Grayson?
    15
    MS. GRAYSON: Objection as to how does
    16
    he know, because Mr. Pelnarsh told him.
    17
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Ms. Tomas?
    18
    MS. TOMAS: Your Honor, it's an
    19
    admission of a party deponent.
    20
    MS. GRAYSON: He's not a party.
    21
    Mr. Pelnarsh is an employee of the landfill.
    22
    He is not a party.
    23
    MS. TOMAS: He is an agent of CLC
    24
    authorized to speak on their behalf at the
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    67
    1
    landfill.
    2
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Ms. Grayson?
    3
    MS. GRAYSON: We stand on our
    4
    objection that it's hearsay testimony.
    5
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Overruled.
    6
    You may answer.
    7 BY MS. TOMAS:
    8
    Q. You said Mr. Pelnarsh?
    9
    A. Yes. James Pelnarsh, Sr.
    10
    Q. And exposure number 26?
    11
    A. That's, again, the southeastern slope
    12 of Parcel A with what appears to be a sofa or a
    13 related item, some drywall, plastic tubing, wood
    14 exposed.
    15
    Q. Are there any other observations you
    16 can recall on Parcel A from your August 2007
    17 inspection?
    18
    A. Not that I can recall. No.
    19
    Q. Let's move to your inspection of
    20 Parcel B in August of 2007. You stated that Jim
    21 Pelnarsh accompanied you on the inspection of this
    22 particular parcel, correct?
    23
    A. Yes.
    24
    Q. And what were your observations on
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    68
    1 Parcel B during your August 2007 inspection?
    2
    A. Again, Parcel B, there were some
    3 significant erosion cuts, areas that weren't
    4 properly vegetated, there were noticeable gas odors,
    5 leachate collection wells were not properly covered
    6 allowing gas to escape. The southeastern corner of
    7 the slope, based on Mr. Pelnarsh's words, had a
    8 significant collapse. It was -- you could see
    9 erosion and the area lacked vegetation, as well --
    10 there was leachate seeps, as well, at that location.
    11
    Q. You stated that you noticed odors
    12 while you were inspecting Parcel B?
    13
    A. Yes.
    14
    Q. Did you use any instruments while you
    15 were inspecting that parcel to determine the
    16 composition of those odors?
    17
    A. Yes.
    18
    Q. And what was that?
    19
    A. It's a Foxboro TVA 1000.
    20
    Q. What does TVA stand for?
    21
    A. Toxic vapor analyzer.
    22
    Q. Can you please explain what that is
    23 and how it works?
    24
    A. Well, it's an instrument that -- it
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    69
    1 analyzes organic vapors. So if a gas were to be
    2 generated, it would potentially read that gas and
    3 give you readings on parts per million.
    4
    Q. Did you take any background readings
    5 prior to your inspection on Parcel B?
    6
    A. Yes.
    7
    Q. Where did you take those?
    8
    A. At the entrance of the facility.
    9
    Q. Do you remember what they were?
    10
    A. There were two readings. The TVA has
    11 two components, a PID and FID. And I believe one
    12 was six-point-something and the other was
    13 two-point-something.
    14
    Q. What is PID?
    15
    A. Photo ionization detector.
    16
    Q. What does that mean?
    17
    A. It just -- it reads for vapors,
    18 organic vapors. There's different -- I can't get
    19 into it too much. I don't know all the technical
    20 aspects. But there's different bulbs that they use
    21 or lamps that can read different vapors.
    22
    Q. So the PID would read a different
    23 vapor than an FID?
    24
    A. Yes.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    70
    1
    Q. Did you take any pictures while you
    2 were at Parcel A?
    3
    A. Yes.
    4
    Q. I'm sorry. Parcel B?
    5
    A. Yes.
    6
    Q. Are they attached to your inspection
    7 report?
    8
    A. Yes, they are.
    9
    Q. At this time I'd like to look at
    10 Complainant's Group Exhibit A, Exhibit No. 8,
    11 beginning Page 1 of 1 of the pictures. And can you
    12 please explain exposure number one?
    13
    A. That's a leachate collection well that
    14 was identified as L104 and it's uncovered.
    15
    Q. And did you take a TVA reading at this
    16 location?
    17
    A. I believe so. I don't have -- I'm not
    18 looking at my narrative. I don't recall. I do
    19 recall odors were noted and I indicated that in the
    20 photo description.
    21
    Q. In exposure number two?
    22
    A. That's an erosion cut on Parcel B at
    23 the northern slope and about two feet wide by
    24 three feet deep.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    71
    1
    Q. Did you take a TVA reading at this
    2 location?
    3
    A. Yes, I did.
    4
    Q. And what were the results of that?
    5
    A. Thirty parts per million.
    6
    Q. What does that tell you?
    7
    A. It tells me that there's gases being
    8 generated and escaping and odors were noticeable.
    9
    Q. Okay. Exposure number three?
    10
    A. Again, that's Parcel B on the north
    11 slope. It's just an additional erosion cut, a
    12 gully.
    13
    Q. Did you take a TVA at this location?
    14
    A. Yes. I didn't -- no reading.
    15
    Q. I'm sorry. What was your answer?
    16
    A. There were no readings at that
    17 location.
    18
    Q. Exposure number four?
    19
    A. It's an additional erosion cut along
    20 the northern slope. And these were about 50 to
    21 100 feet apart in some areas.
    22
    Q. For each, if you made a TVA reading,
    23 would you have noted it in the notes that
    24 accompanied the photographs?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    72
    1
    A. Yes.
    2
    Q. Okay. Exposure number five?
    3
    A. Again, that's Parcel B, the northern
    4 slope. It's just showing another erosion gully and
    5 lack of vegetative cover.
    6
    Q. Is erosion number six the same?
    7
    A. Exposure number six?
    8
    Q. Exposure number six.
    9
    A. Yes. That's an additional area along
    10 the northern slope of Parcel B.
    11
    Q. Exposure number seven?
    12
    A. That is a leachate collection well
    13 identified as L103. Again, with the lid off.
    14
    Q. You note that -- in your notes next to
    15 the exposure, can you tell me whether or not you
    16 took a TVA reading?
    17
    A. Yes, I did.
    18
    Q. And what were the results of that?
    19
    A. It's hard to say because the device
    20 started to climb rapidly because of the strong gas
    21 that was being generated and it flamed out. It
    22 knocked it out.
    23
    Q. What does that tell you?
    24
    A. That it was -- the concentrations of
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    73
    1 gas were higher than oxygen. That it displaced the
    2 oxygen.
    3
    Q. Exposure number eight?
    4
    A. Number eight is Parcel B, the
    5 southwest slope that apparently had a slope collapse
    6 and some significant erosion.
    7
    Q. Exposure number nine?
    8
    A. Parcel B, that's identified as
    9 leachate collection well L102. It's been damaged
    10 and it's uncovered.
    11
    Q. Exposure number ten?
    12
    A. Ten is the -- is, again, Parcel B, the
    13 southern slope now as we're coming around. Just an
    14 erosion gully starting on the edge of the road.
    15
    Q. Exposure number 11?
    16
    A. Parcel B, southern slope showing a
    17 leachate seep along the road.
    18
    Q. Exposure number 12?
    19
    A. That's the south slope looking to the
    20 east just showing some erosion issues and lack of
    21 maintenance.
    22
    Q. Exposure number 13?
    23
    A. Parcel B, it's just a gas collection
    24 well on the southern slope.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    74
    1
    Q. Do you know if that was operating?
    2
    A. I can't say. No.
    3
    Q. Exposure number 14?
    4
    A. Parcel B, south slope, a leachate seep
    5 along the road and additional seeping.
    6
    Q. Exposure number 15?
    7
    A. Parcel B side, that's the gas flare
    8 which was operating at the time of the inspection.
    9
    Q. And exposure number 16?
    10
    A. That's a sign that's affixed to the
    11 side of the maintenance building, general office for
    12 the landfill.
    13
    Q. Are there any other observations that
    14 you can recall on Parcel B from your August 2007
    15 inspection?
    16
    A. No.
    17
    Q. Based on your observations of the
    18 Morris Community Landfill for the past seven years,
    19 what in your opinion needs to happen at Parcel A to
    20 come into compliance with the Act and Board land
    21 regulations?
    22
    A. Stop taking --
    23
    MR. PORTER: Objection, irrelevant.
    24
    MS. GRAYSON: Objection.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    75
    1
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: I'm sorry.
    2
    Mr. Porter?
    3
    MR. PORTER: Objection, irrelevant.
    4
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Ms. Tomas?
    5
    MS. TOMAS: Mr. Halloran, again, it
    6
    goes to duration, gravity, what exactly that
    7
    site looked like and what needs to be done to
    8
    get it to a position to close.
    9
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Mr. Porter?
    10
    MR. PORTER: That question wasn't
    11
    asked. The question that was asked is over
    12
    the past seven years, in your observations
    13
    there, what violations have you seen.
    14
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Sustained.
    15
    Ms. Tomas, do you want to rephrase?
    16
    MS. TOMAS: Absolutely.
    17 BY MS. TOMAS:
    18
    Q. Based on your observations at the
    19 Morris Community Landfill for the past seven years,
    20 what do you believe needs to happen in the future to
    21 get this landfill into compliance?
    22
    A. Stop taking in refuse.
    23
    MR. PORTER: I'm going to object to
    24
    the question being vague and unanswerable.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    76
    1
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: I agree,
    2
    Mr. Porter. Sustained. Ms. Tomas, can you
    3
    rephrase. That is rather vague and general.
    4 BY MS. TOMAS:
    5
    Q. Are you familiar with the Illinois
    6 Environmental Protection Act and Illinois Pollution
    7 Control Board regulations as they relate to
    8 landfills?
    9
    A. Yes.
    10
    Q. And during your observations of
    11 sanitary landfills, do you observe -- make
    12 observations based on the Act and the Board
    13 regulations and requirements?
    14
    A. Yes.
    15
    Q. Based on the Act and the Board land
    16 and pollution regs and your understanding of them,
    17 what does Morris Community Landfill need to do to
    18 come in compliance with the Act and Board land
    19 regulations?
    20
    MR. PORTER: Again --
    21
    MS. GRAYSON: Objection.
    22
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Ms.
    23
    Grayson?
    24
    MS. GRAYSON: Well, I'm going to
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    77
    1
    object on the basis that it hasn't been
    2
    established that he's an expert on the Board
    3
    regulations nor has he been identified as an
    4
    opinion witness to testify about those
    5
    regulations or about the Act.
    6
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Okay. I'm
    7
    going to overrule that objection. I think he
    8
    is well versed in the Act and regulations.
    9
    He's been an inspector for 18 years, so I
    10
    think he's probably pretty familiar with it.
    11
    He can give his opinion on any acts. In any
    12
    event, Mr. Porter?
    13
    MR. PORTER: My position is similar.
    14
    One, it's overbroad. It's still vague. I
    15
    don't know what violation she's asking about
    16
    and it's just an open-ended, give us a
    17
    discussion question.
    18
    Beyond that, if it's intended to
    19
    elicit testimony as to what needs to happen
    20
    from a design perspective to close Parcel B,
    21
    he is not qualified and they have not laid
    22
    the qualifications to provide that testimony.
    23
    He is not an engineer or at least
    24
    I haven't heard that he's an engineer with
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    78
    1
    the expertise of designing a closure plan for
    2
    a landfill.
    3
    So the problem starts with the
    4
    question being so broad that I'm not entirely
    5
    certain as to where we're going with it. But
    6
    if it is elicit -- if the object is to elicit
    7
    testimony which he's not qualified to opine,
    8
    I object.
    9
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: With that
    10
    explanation, I understand Ms. Grayson's
    11
    objection a little better, I think.
    12
    Ms. Tomas?
    13
    MS. TOMAS: Your Honor, I am trying to
    14
    elicit testimony as to regards to compliance
    15
    with the Board regulations and the acts. It
    16
    has nothing to do with closure or what needs
    17
    to be done for closure or design capacity at
    18
    all. It's just what needs to be done to fix
    19
    the problems that he observed at the
    20
    landfill, in his opinion.
    21
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: You know,
    22
    I'll allow a little latitude. It is rather
    23
    open-ended. And Ms. Grayson and Mr. Porter
    24
    already objected, so it was noticed. Thank
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    79
    1
    you.
    2
    MS. TOMAS: Thank you, Mr. Halloran.
    3 BY MS. TOMAS:
    4
    Q. Based on your observations of Parcel B
    5 (sic) and your familiarity with the Illinois
    6 Environmental Protection Act and Board regulations,
    7 what would you say needs to be done to remedy the
    8 violations that you noted at Parcel A?
    9
    A. Based on my observations, I would
    10 say --
    11
    MR. PORTER: I'm sorry, but I have to
    12
    object. I did not hear him testify as to
    13
    what Board regulations he believes were
    14
    violated.
    15
    I heard him describe a bunch of
    16
    photos of which may or may not depict a
    17
    violation, but I certainly didn't hear any
    18
    particular regulation that he identified as
    19
    having been violated. And so the fact -- the
    20
    question assumes facts which are not in
    21
    evidence, I guess, is my objection.
    22
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Ms.
    23
    Grayson?
    24
    MS. GRAYSON: I would agree with
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    80
    1
    Mr. Porter's objection.
    2
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: I somewhat
    3
    agree and I think that the Board -- I ask the
    4
    Board to take notice of those objections.
    5
    However, I am going to overrule them. And,
    6
    again, this is a little latitude I'm leaving
    7
    the Complainant and the witness. But we may
    8
    proceed.
    9
    MS. TOMAS: Can you please read back
    10
    the question?
    11
    (Whereupon, the requested
    12
    portion of the record
    13
    was read accordingly.)
    14
    THE WITNESS: Parcel B or A?
    15 BY MS. TOMAS:
    16
    Q. As to Parcel A.
    17
    A. Cease taking in waste and get adequate
    18 cover in place and vegetate the area that needs to
    19 be vegetated.
    20
    Q. And based on your observations, what
    21 in your opinion needs to happen at Parcel B to come
    22 into compliance with the Act and Board land and
    23 pollution regulations?
    24
    A. Again --
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    81
    1
    MR. PORTER: Same objection.
    2
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Overruled.
    3
    You may answer.
    4 BY THE WITNESS:
    5
    A. Again, get proper cover in place,
    6 prevent erosion, get the appropriate areas properly
    7 vegetated, keep the gas wells covered.
    8
    Q. Do you know why this work hasn't been
    9 completed to date?
    10
    MR. PORTER: Objection, conjecture.
    11
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Sustained.
    12
    MS. TOMAS: That's it.
    13
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you.
    14
    Ms. Grayson, do you want CLC to go first
    15
    since you're the first on the caption if you
    16
    so choose to cross?
    17
    MS. GRAYSON: That would be fine.
    18
    Could I take a couple of minutes?
    19
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Sure.
    20
    We're off the record.
    21
    (Brief pause.)
    22
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Back on the
    23
    record. Ms. Grayson is going to cross the
    24
    witness.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    82
    1
    MS. GRAYSON: Mr. Retzlaff, I'm
    2
    Clarissa Grayson and I represent Community
    3
    Landfill Company. I have a few questions for
    4
    you.
    5
    CROSS EXAMINATION
    6
    By Ms. Grayson
    7
    Q. Regarding your inspection report on
    8 Page 2 where you state -- and this is Exhibit 1
    9 for -- this is Exhibit 8, which would be your
    10 inspection report of August 29th, 2007. This is the
    11 People's Exhibit A/8. When you say that no new
    12 apparent violations were cited, is there a reason
    13 why you don't describe that as continuing violations
    14 as the way that you said to Ms. -- in response to
    15 Ms. Tomas' questions?
    16
    A. No. It's just the way we phrase --
    17 the way I phrased it.
    18
    Q. So no new apparent violations were
    19 cited is your statement, though, however --
    20
    A. Correct. Yes.
    21
    Q. -- correct?
    22
    How much time did you spend at the
    23 landfill on August 29th, 2007?
    24
    A. If I may look at my front sheets, I
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    83
    1 can tell you approximately.
    2
    Q. You may.
    3
    A. About three hours for both sites
    4 total.
    5
    Q. Three hours for both sites total?
    6
    A. Yes.
    7
    Q. How did you travel from one end of the
    8 landfill to the other?
    9
    A. On Parcel A?
    10
    Q. Well, let's start with Parcel A.
    11 Parcel A is how big did you say? Earlier you
    12 testified as to its size.
    13
    A. I don't believe I did testify to the
    14 size --
    15
    Q. I thought you did.
    16
    A. -- on Parcel A.
    17
    Q. Do you have an approximate idea of how
    18 large Parcel A is?
    19
    A. I believe somebody threw out the
    20 figure of 51 acres, possibly on A. I'm guessing.
    21
    Q. And how much time did you spend on
    22 Parcel A?
    23
    A. Probably about an hour.
    24
    Q. So 1 hour for 50 acres; is that
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    84
    1 correct -- approximately 50 acres?
    2
    A. That's correct.
    3
    Q. And how did you -- what was your mode
    4 of transportation?
    5
    A. Foot and vehicle.
    6
    Q. Can you describe a little bit of what
    7 your travels were like on that day in Parcel A?
    8
    A. Very difficult. I did not go
    9 throughout the entire site because of the
    10 difficulty.
    11
    Q. What was difficult about it?
    12
    A. The weeds were very high and thick,
    13 erosion cuts and so forth, mud, standing water.
    14
    Q. So you were on Parcel A for about
    15 one hour and then what did you do?
    16
    A. Well, actually, that was the second
    17 phase of my inspection. I then left.
    18
    Q. So you started at Parcel B?
    19
    A. That's correct. Yes.
    20
    Q. And how much time did you spend at
    21 Parcel B?
    22
    A. I would say approximately two hours.
    23
    Q. And, again, what was your mode of
    24 transportation?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    85
    1
    A. Vehicle and foot.
    2
    Q. How do you know something is leachate?
    3
    A. Based on experience from something
    4 that's coming out of a landfill, emitting from a
    5 landfill.
    6
    Q. Does it have an odor to it?
    7
    A. It may have an odor at times.
    8
    Q. And what were the wind conditions on
    9 that day.
    10
    A. I don't recall.
    11
    Q. Did you make a note of that in your
    12 report as to what the weather was?
    13
    A. Probably temperature and maybe soil
    14 conditions or clarity of the cloud coverage. I
    15 don't believe I got into wind issues.
    16
    Q. Would it make a difference if you --
    17 if there was wind and the wind was blowing and you
    18 weren't exactly sure of where the odor -- an alleged
    19 odor was coming from?
    20
    A. It's possible. Yes.
    21
    Q. So that would make a difference?
    22
    A. It could, yes.
    23
    Q. Isn't Community Landfill -- didn't you
    24 testify that Community Landfill is adjacent to
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    86
    1 another landfill?
    2
    A. Yes.
    3
    Q. Is it possible that any of the odors
    4 that you detected actually came from another
    5 landfill site?
    6
    A. Not all of them. No.
    7
    Q. Is it possible that some of them did?
    8
    A. It's possible. Yes.
    9
    Q. And but without knowing what the
    10 condition of the wind was that day, you can't be
    11 sure?
    12
    A. That's correct. Yes.
    13
    Q. So you can't be absolutely sure that
    14 any of the odors that you detected were coming from
    15 Community Landfill?
    16
    A. Some I could. Yes.
    17
    Q. But not all of them?
    18
    A. That's correct. Yes.
    19
    Q. And would that be the same for the
    20 previous inspection report -- inspection that you
    21 conducted -- was that Exhibit 7, June 21st, 2006?
    22
    A. Yes.
    23
    Q. I'm sorry. That would be Exhibit 8.
    24 We're talking about Exhibit --
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    87
    1
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Exhibit 7,
    2
    perhaps?
    3
    MS. GRAYSON: Yes. Okay. I'm sorry.
    4
    I'm looking at the wrong date.
    5 BY MS. GRAYSON:
    6
    Q. We have June 26th, 2007. How much
    7 time did you spend at the landfill on that day?
    8
    A. Approximately, based on this,
    9 two hours.
    10
    Q. And could you describe what your --
    11 what the sequence of events was on that day?
    12
    A. I checked in at the front office. I
    13 believe I met with Tricia Banks. Identified, you
    14 know, why I was there, to conduct an inspection and
    15 so forth.
    16
    Then I went over to Parcel A,
    17 drove on and got out of the vehicle and walked what
    18 I perceived as the active area, the area of recent
    19 dumping.
    20
    Q. And you did not go to Parcel B on that
    21 day; is that correct?
    22
    A. No.
    23
    Q. Parcel A only. And I'll ask you just
    24 the same question about why wouldn't you put in
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    88
    1 there -- or your statement is that no new apparent
    2 violations were cited; is that correct?
    3
    A. Correct.
    4
    Q. So you chose not to make note of any
    5 new apparent violations?
    6
    A. The violations, by simply having
    7 photographs and describing them, technically are
    8 there, I just am not engaging it into a new
    9 enforcement action.
    10
    Q. And that would be the same for the
    11 inspection that was conducted on August 29th,
    12 correct?
    13
    A. That's correct. Yes.
    14
    Q. And do you have any idea of the
    15 financial condition of Community Landfill?
    16
    A. Not specifically. No.
    17
    Q. Do you know whether or not they're
    18 intentionally not providing financial assurance or
    19 whether it's not providing and it's simply because
    20 it can't afford it?
    21
    A. No.
    22
    Q. Are you aware of the fact that a
    23 permit was denied for a new cell --
    24
    A. Yes.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    89
    1
    Q. -- some years ago?
    2
    A. Uh-huh.
    3
    Q. How do you think that they make any
    4 money?
    5
    A. I would guess that they don't make any
    6 money.
    7
    Q. Would you think that not being able to
    8 dispose of waste would hamper their ability to make
    9 money?
    10
    A. Yes.
    11
    MS. GRAYSON: I have nothing further.
    12
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you,
    13
    Ms. Grayson. Mr. Porter?
    14
    MR. PORTER: Thank you, Mr. Halloran.
    15
    CROSS EXAMINATION
    16
    By Mr. Porter
    17
    Q. You've never seen anyone from the City
    18 of Morris take waste to the Community Landfill, have
    19 you?
    20
    A. Not physically, no.
    21
    Q. And you've never spoken with anyone
    22 from the City of Morris indicating that they've
    23 taken waste to Community Landfill, correct?
    24
    A. No. Not that I recall.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    90
    1
    Q. You are aware that the operating and
    2 development permits for the Community Landfill were
    3 transferred from the City of Morris to CLC back in
    4 the early 1980s, right?
    5
    A. Yes.
    6
    Q. You're aware that that was approved by
    7 the Illinois EPA, correct?
    8
    A. Yes.
    9
    Q. The landfill still has an operating
    10 permit; isn't that right?
    11
    A. It's my understanding that they do not
    12 have an operating permit.
    13
    Q. Well, on what do you base that
    14 understanding?
    15
    A. The May of '01 denial.
    16
    Q. Well, they were denied the right to
    17 start a new cell, but that did not destroy their
    18 previously permitted rights, correct?
    19
    A. That's correct, yes.
    20
    Q. And do you know if they have met --
    21 strike that.
    22
    Do you know if they have gotten to
    23 their allowable height on Parcel A?
    24
    A. I really don't know.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    91
    1
    Q. Let me ask you this way: Isn't it
    2 true that there is substantial height left and
    3 available for Parcel A?
    4
    A. It's possible.
    5
    Q. And so isn't it true that they can
    6 accept waste, they just can't build a new cell?
    7
    A. I would say yes.
    8
    Q. So you would agree then that your --
    9 strike that.
    10
    So you would agree that they have
    11 not violated any permit condition or regulation
    12 concerning the acceptance of waste, correct?
    13
    A. Yes, they have.
    14
    Q. All right. I'll bite. How so if they
    15 can take waste and they're allowed to take waste
    16 under their current permit have they violated such a
    17 right?
    18
    A. It would appear based on years of
    19 going out there that they've exceeded the permitted
    20 area by filling to the southeastern slope. The
    21 materials that I observed on June 26th and
    22 August 19th would be outside of that permitted area.
    23
    Q. Have you had a survey done to
    24 determine whether or not it's outside of the
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    92
    1 permitted area?
    2
    A. No.
    3
    Q. So have you done anything to
    4 corroborate your eyeball opinion that it's outside
    5 of the permitted area?
    6
    A. No.
    7
    Q. Do you have any information that
    8 the City of -- strike that.
    9
    You're aware the City of Morris
    10 has leased the premises to Community Landfill
    11 Company, correct?
    12
    A. I'm not sure on the details.
    13
    Q. Well, you're not aware of any rights
    14 that the City of Morris would have to come onto
    15 Community Landfill's property and dictate to them
    16 what waste they can take and shouldn't take, right?
    17
    A. Right.
    18
    Q. You would agree that in order to close
    19 a landfill, the operator has to take waste to meet
    20 the appropriate slopes and stability, correct?
    21
    A. It's possible, yes.
    22
    Q. Now, you intimated that there may have
    23 been violations on this June and August 2007
    24 instances by taking us through a litany of
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    93
    1 photographs. But you're not indicating that each
    2 one of those photographs depicts a violation, are
    3 you?
    4
    A. Yes. Not every one, but some do, yes.
    5
    Q. Well, okay. There are some
    6 photographs that depict some areas that have erosion
    7 issues, correct?
    8
    A. Correct.
    9
    Q. Well, it's understood and allowable
    10 for land to erode, right?
    11
    A. Correct.
    12
    Q. The issue is whether or not there's
    13 sufficient cover over the waste, correct?
    14
    A. Correct.
    15
    Q. And the vast majority of your
    16 photographs don't depict any waste, they just show
    17 some erosion, right?
    18
    A. Correct.
    19
    Q. And did you do any tests to determine
    20 whether or not there were 12 inches of cover over
    21 the existing waste?
    22
    A. No.
    23
    Q. And that's the magic number, right?
    24
    A. Not necessarily. No.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    94
    1
    Q. Okay. But whatever the magic number
    2 may be, you did not make any determination of
    3 whether or not that number had been reached or not
    4 reached, correct?
    5
    A. Correct.
    6
    Q. So there were no borings done to tell
    7 us whether or not there's sufficient cover?
    8
    A. No.
    9
    Q. My statement was correct, right?
    10
    A. Yes.
    11
    Q. We heard earlier some, in opening
    12 statements, testimony concerning a $17 million
    13 figure for closure/post-closure. That figure was
    14 determined way before your June and August
    15 inspections, correct?
    16
    A. I would assume, yes.
    17
    Q. So your inspections have absolutely no
    18 import upon the dollar figure that the government is
    19 seeking, correct?
    20
    A. I would assume that also.
    21
    Q. You have no information that the City
    22 of Morris in any way willfully or intentionally
    23 violated any regulation, correct?
    24
    A. I suppose, yes.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    95
    1
    Q. I'm sorry. My statement was correct?
    2
    A. Yes.
    3
    Q. Okay. Do you even know when financial
    4 assurances were last posted and acceptable to the
    5 Illinois Environmental Protection Agency?
    6
    A. No.
    7
    Q. So you don't know if there's an
    8 ongoing violation concerning financial assurance
    9 then, correct?
    10
    A. I only know through letters that I
    11 have seen in the file.
    12
    Q. Okay. But it's not your job to make
    13 that determination, right?
    14
    A. No.
    15
    Q. That's somebody else's job?
    16
    A. Correct. Yes.
    17
    Q. So you have no opinions on whether or
    18 not there are financial assurances presently posted,
    19 correct?
    20
    A. That's correct. Yes.
    21
    Q. Now, you're not suggesting that the
    22 City of Morris has sustained any economic benefit
    23 from the violations you may or may not have seen,
    24 correct?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    96
    1
    A. Correct.
    2
    Q. If I heard you right, you agree that
    3 this is a good place for a landfill, right?
    4
    A. Correct, yes.
    5
    Q. You also agree that landfills
    6 themselves have -- are positive as far as providing
    7 a benefit to the public, correct?
    8
    A. Yes.
    9
    Q. If I heard you right, your proposed
    10 solutions for Parcel A were to stop taking in waste
    11 and that was based upon your conclusion that they
    12 weren't permitted, but we're no longer sure about
    13 that, right?
    14
    A. In that contested southeastern area,
    15 that's correct, yes.
    16
    Q. So they can keep taking in waste in
    17 Parcel A, so are you now amending your proposed
    18 solution for Parcel A?
    19
    A. Not completely, no.
    20
    Q. If I understand, then your solution is
    21 you can take in waste, but don't do it beyond your
    22 permitted area?
    23
    A. Correct. Yes.
    24
    Q. Okay. You mentioned get adequate
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    97
    1 cover, and in the photos I didn't see many
    2 depictions of the lack of adequate cover. Would you
    3 agree with that, first of all?
    4
    A. No. I don't agree.
    5
    Q. Well, over 50 acres I saw one or two
    6 instances of some erosion issues. But were there
    7 specific instances of a lack of adequate cover?
    8
    A. Yes.
    9
    Q. And did you quantify that?
    10
    A. I took a couple token photos, but the
    11 cover, the weeds were so thick, it doesn't show up
    12 in the photos.
    13
    Q. Well, let's talk about that for a
    14 minute. There's certainly nothing wrong with a
    15 landfill having weeds, right?
    16
    A. In my opinion, yes.
    17
    Q. Well, are you aware of any description
    18 under the regulations for a landfill having weeds?
    19
    A. No.
    20
    Q. And as a matter of fact, weeds
    21 actually can and do maintain the soil, keep it in
    22 place, right?
    23
    A. Not in this case.
    24
    Q. Well, as a general statement, you
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    98
    1 would agree with that, right?
    2
    A. It's not a very good cover source.
    3
    Q. Well, let's put this way: It's better
    4 to have some weeds there than just have blank soil,
    5 right?
    6
    A. I guess, yes.
    7
    Q. I mean, if you've got blank soil,
    8 you're going to have much more erosion than if you
    9 had weeds?
    10
    A. That's true.
    11
    Q. Okay. Did you -- do you have any
    12 opinion as to what it would cost to provide adequate
    13 cover, whatever that may mean, as to Parcel A?
    14
    A. No.
    15
    Q. And as for vegetation, do you have any
    16 opinion as to what it would cost to get rid of the
    17 weeds or provide what you believe is appropriate
    18 vegetation?
    19
    A. No.
    20
    Q. And, again, you have no opinion that
    21 my client sustained any economic benefit from the
    22 alleged failure to have adequate cover if there is a
    23 failure, right?
    24
    A. That's correct. Yes.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    99
    1
    Q. And, likewise, you have no opinion my
    2 client sustained any economic benefit for the
    3 alleged failure to have appropriate vegetation on
    4 Parcel A if, indeed, there isn't appropriate
    5 vegetation, right?
    6
    A. Correct.
    7
    Q. Now, as to Parcel B, you don't have
    8 any evidence or see any evidence that waste has been
    9 taken there, correct?
    10
    A. Recently?
    11
    Q. Right.
    12
    A. No.
    13
    Q. Now, are you aware that -- strike
    14 that.
    15
    Do you believe Parcel B is over
    16 height?
    17
    A. Just based on what I've been told or
    18 read in letters.
    19
    Q. You don't have any personal
    20 information of that?
    21
    A. No.
    22
    Q. And you've never been asked to
    23 determine that, correct?
    24
    A. No.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    100
    1
    Q. Do you have any knowledge or opinion
    2 as to when height was initially reached as to Parcel
    3 B?
    4
    A. No.
    5
    Q. Now, you mentioned, again, that the
    6 things that you think should happen at Parcel B are
    7 proper cover, prevent erosion, vegetate and keep gas
    8 wells covered. Proper cover and prevent erosion are
    9 the same thing, right?
    10
    A. They're tied in.
    11
    Q. And, again, you don't have any
    12 specific instance where cover was less than the
    13 mandated depth, correct?
    14
    A. It's not a matter of depth. It's
    15 whether cover is there or not. Inadequate cover is
    16 inadequate cover and that can mean vegetative or
    17 erosion cuts, whether it's a foot or two feet.
    18
    Q. Well, there has to be a certain amount
    19 of depth of cover over the refuse, correct?
    20
    A. That's correct. Yes.
    21
    Q. And you don't know if that depth was
    22 reached as to Parcel B, correct?
    23
    A. No. But I'm talking vegetative cover,
    24 greenery versus soil depth.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    101
    1
    Q. Okay. So you have no opinion that
    2 there's inadequate soil out on Parcel B, you're
    3 talking about vegetation, right?
    4
    A. It's both. If you have an erosion
    5 cut, it's inadequate cover, period.
    6
    Q. Okay. Well, let's talk about the soil
    7 first.
    8
    A. Okay.
    9
    Q. Again, you have no specific soil
    10 borings or tests to show a lack of the regulatory
    11 mandated amount of cover over the refuse, correct?
    12
    A. That's correct. Yes.
    13
    Q. Now, as to vegetation, you can't point
    14 us to any particular regulation that requires there
    15 to be no weeds in a landfill, correct?
    16
    A. That's correct, that I'm aware of.
    17
    Q. And is there any specific regulation
    18 that you're aware of -- strike that.
    19
    Overall, you would agree that
    20 there is greenery over the vast majority of Parcel
    21 B, correct?
    22
    A. Yes.
    23
    Q. And were there any areas where you did
    24 not see some type of greenery on the soil on Parcel
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    102
    1 B?
    2
    A. Yes.
    3
    Q. And did you quantify or determine how
    4 much it would cost to plant sufficient greenery on
    5 those areas?
    6
    A. No.
    7
    Q. So, again, you have no evidence of the
    8 economic benefit to either CLC or the City of Morris
    9 concerning the purported lack of vegetative cover,
    10 correct?
    11
    A. Correct.
    12
    Q. Now, you mentioned keeping gas wells
    13 covered. That's a pretty simple matter, just
    14 picking up the lid and sticking it on the gas well,
    15 right?
    16
    A. Correct.
    17
    Q. And you saw one that was uncovered?
    18
    A. All were uncovered.
    19
    Q. Do you know why?
    20
    A. Don't know.
    21
    Q. There are times when it's necessary to
    22 uncover the gas wells, correct?
    23
    A. Possibly. Yes.
    24
    Q. All right.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    103
    1
    (Brief pause.)
    2 BY MR. PORTER:
    3
    Q. Co-counsel has reminded me you saw
    4 evidence of leachate wells uncovered, not gas wells,
    5 correct?
    6
    A. That's correct, yes.
    7
    Q. All right. And there are times when
    8 one needs to uncover a leachate well; is that right?
    9
    A. That's correct.
    10
    Q. Okay. And as far as cost, we're
    11 talking negligible to go around and put the cap back
    12 on the well cover, right?
    13
    A. I would think so. Yes.
    14
    Q. Now, I believe the purpose of your
    15 testimony was to somehow indicate that things are
    16 getting worse out there. Isn't it actually true
    17 that --
    18
    MR. GRANT: I object. I think that
    19
    improperly mischaracterizes testimony. He
    20
    hasn't said that that was his purpose for
    21
    testifying.
    22
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: I will
    23
    allow him to answer.
    24
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    104
    1 BY MR. PORTER:
    2
    Q. Isn't it true that since the fall of
    3 2006 the gas flare has been in operation?
    4
    A. Yes.
    5
    Q. Isn't it true since the summer of 2005
    6 monthly sampling of perimeter gas probes has
    7 occurred?
    8
    A. Yes.
    9
    Q. Isn't it true that since January of
    10 2007 quarterly sampling of surface -- there has been
    11 quarterly sampling of the surface stands?
    12
    A. Surface?
    13
    (Brief pause.)
    14 BY MR. PORTER:
    15
    Q. Would you agree that since January
    16 of 2007 there has been quarterly sampling of surface
    17 methane?
    18
    A. That's my understanding. Yes. I
    19 haven't seen any reports.
    20
    Q. Since 2005 there has been sampling of
    21 groundwater monitoring wells, right?
    22
    A. Yes.
    23
    Q. Since March of '07 there's been
    24 sampling of landfill gas extraction wells, correct?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    105
    1
    A. I've heard, yes.
    2
    Q. All of this work, by the way, has been
    3 performed by Shaw Environmental; is that right?
    4
    A. Correct.
    5
    Q. And to your knowledge, that's been at
    6 the expense of the City of Morris; isn't that
    7 correct?
    8
    A. I believe so. Yes.
    9
    Q. You would agree that the involvement
    10 of Shaw Environmental has been a very positive
    11 development as it's concerning this landfill; is
    12 that right?
    13
    A. Absolutely. Yes.
    14
    MS. GRAYSON: If I could just
    15
    interrupt one minute? I would just like to
    16
    clarify testimony that the gas flare was
    17
    actually provided by (inaudible).
    18
    THE COURT REPORTER: I didn't hear
    19
    you.
    20
    MS. GRAYSON: I'm sorry. I just
    21
    wanted to clarify that the gas flare was
    22
    actually paid for, purchased and installed by
    23
    Community Landfill Company.
    24
    MR. GRANT: I object to -- you know,
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    106
    1
    without a witness, to putting that into
    2
    evidence.
    3
    MR. PORTER: I'll just ask the
    4
    question. That will make it easier.
    5 BY MR. PORTER:
    6
    Q. Do you know who paid for the gas
    7 flare?
    8
    A. No. I don't.
    9
    Q. Okay. That could have been paid by
    10 CLC, not the City of Morris; is that right?
    11
    A. It's possible. Yes.
    12
    Q. Okay. And I have no knowledge one way
    13 or the other. I'm asking you.
    14
    A. I don't know.
    15
    Q. Since summer of 2005 there's been an
    16 evaluation done of the leachate management system by
    17 Shaw; is that right?
    18
    A. I believe so. Yes.
    19
    Q. Since summer 2005 there's been an
    20 evaluation of all monitoring systems; is that right?
    21
    A. Yes.
    22
    Q. There's also been an evaluation of the
    23 landfill gas systems in February of '06; is that
    24 correct?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    107
    1
    A. Yes.
    2
    Q. And, as a matter of fact, Shaw
    3 Environmental drafted and devised and developed a
    4 revised closure plan and any cost estimates; is that
    5 correct?
    6
    A. Yes.
    7
    Q. And those cost estimates have been
    8 submitted to the EPA; is that right?
    9
    A. I believe so. Yes.
    10
    Q. And the EPA has not responded to those
    11 cost estimates; is that correct?
    12
    A. I don't know.
    13
    MR. PORTER: I have nothing further.
    14
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you,
    15
    Mr. Porter. Ms. Tomas, any redirect?
    16
    MS. TOMAS: Yes. Thank you,
    17
    Mr. Halloran.
    18
    RE-DIRECT EXAMINATION
    19
    By Ms. Tomas
    20
    Q. Mr. Retzlaff, can CLC or the City of
    21 Morris dispose of waste without an operating permit?
    22
    A. No.
    23
    Q. Do they currently hold an operating
    24 permit for Parcel A?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    108
    1
    A. No.
    2
    Q. And the waste accumulations you noted
    3 in your photographs, are those being used for
    4 contouring?
    5
    A. Well, in an unorthodox way, yes.
    6
    Q. And is daily cover required for
    7 contouring?
    8
    A. Yes.
    9
    Q. Are they -- is CLC or the City of
    10 Morris providing daily cover on the contouring waste
    11 piles?
    12
    A. No.
    13
    MR. PORTER: I'll object to the extent
    14
    it calls for a conclusion that the City of
    15
    Morris has any responsibility to do so. They
    16
    don't have a permit to do so.
    17
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Ms. Tomas?
    18
    MS. TOMAS: They are listed as the
    19
    owner of the landfill on multiple permits.
    20
    MR. PORTER: They do not have an
    21
    operating or developing permit for this
    22
    landfill. They can't provide for cover.
    23
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: I'm going
    24
    to allow the witness to answer. Overruled.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    109
    1
    If he's able.
    2
    THE WITNESS: Restate the question,
    3
    please.
    4
    MS. TOMAS: Can you please repeat the
    5
    question?
    6
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: You can ask
    7
    me and then I'll ask the court reporter.
    8
    Just a bit of a formality. Thanks.
    9
    MS. TOMAS: I apologize,
    10
    Mr. Halloran. I request to have it read
    11
    back.
    12
    (Whereupon, the requested
    13
    portion of the record
    14
    was read accordingly.)
    15 BY THE WITNESS:
    16
    A. No.
    17 BY MS. TOMAS:
    18
    Q. Do landfills that are unable to take
    19 in waste provide a benefit to the community?
    20
    A. To the community?
    21
    Q. Yes.
    22
    A. No.
    23
    Q. And in your opinion, is there a
    24 difference between weeds and vegetative cover?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    110
    1
    A. Yes.
    2
    Q. And is adequate vegetative cover
    3 required by the regulations?
    4
    A. Yes.
    5
    Q. Okay. Are leachate seeps prohibited
    6 by the regulations?
    7
    A. Yes.
    8
    Q. And is exposed waste in areas not
    9 covered by an operating permit prohibited by the
    10 regulations?
    11
    A. Yes.
    12
    MS. TOMAS: That's all.
    13
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you.
    14
    Mr. Grayson, re-cross?
    15
    MS. GRAYSON: I have nothing further.
    16
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: All right.
    17
    Thank you. Mr. Porter, I'm sure you have
    18
    re-cross questions.
    19
    MR. PORTER: A couple.
    20
    RE-CROSS EXAMINATION
    21
    By Mr. Porter
    22
    Q. Vegetative cover is required after
    23 closure, right?
    24
    A. It's during operation as well.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    111
    1
    Q. Well, to your knowledge, is there
    2 insufficient vegetative cover on Parcel B assuming
    3 it's still an operating landfill?
    4
    A. Is there a lack of proper vegetation?
    5
    Q. Let me ask it this way: Final
    6 vegetative cover happens after closure, correct?
    7
    A. It occurs after the receipt of the
    8 final load of refuse. There's clocks that kick in.
    9
    Q. And so in Parcel A we haven't had
    10 receipt of the final load of refuse yet, as a matter
    11 of fact, we're far from that, correct?
    12
    A. Well, it's a little different in
    13 Parcel A if they lack the operating permit and yet
    14 still continue to take in refuse, you know.
    15
    Q. Well, again, you don't have any
    16 information they lack an operating permit, right?
    17 They have an operating permit?
    18
    A. Not for -- to operate that parcel to
    19 take in waste. It was denied in 2001.
    20
    Q. But, again, you haven't -- strike
    21 that.
    22
    You don't have any opinions that
    23 they've started a new parcel, do you?
    24
    A. It appears that they have. Obviously,
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    112
    1 that's being contested, but it appears that they're
    2 outside the historical area.
    3
    Q. And not to retread it, but you have
    4 not done any survey or taken any measurements to
    5 determine if they're outside the historical area?
    6
    A. That's correct. Yes.
    7
    Q. So you would agree you don't have the
    8 basis as you sit here today to make that conclusion,
    9 correct?
    10
    A. Technically, no.
    11
    Q. Assuming that the government is
    12 correct that Parcel B is over height, you would
    13 agree that technically there may need to be some
    14 waste relocation, correct?
    15
    A. Yes.
    16
    Q. And then, obviously, you don't want to
    17 have your final cover down -- final vegetative cover
    18 down at a time if you're going to have to remove it,
    19 right?
    20
    A. Correct.
    21
    MR. PORTER: Nothing further,
    22
    Mr. Halloran. Thank you.
    23
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you,
    24
    Mr. Porter. Ms. Tomas?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    113
    1
    MS. TOMAS: Nothing further,
    2
    Mr. Halloran.
    3
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you.
    4
    You may step down. Thanks a lot. Off the
    5
    record.
    6
    (Whereupon, a discussion
    7
    was had off the record.)
    8
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: We're going
    9
    to adjourn until noon.
    10
    (Whereupon, after a lunch
    11
    break was had, the
    12
    following proceedings
    13
    were held accordingly.)
    14
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: We're back
    15
    on the record. It's approximately 12:06,
    16
    September 11th, 2007. The State just
    17
    finished with their first witness and I
    18
    believe they're ready to proceed to call
    19
    their second witness.
    20
    MR. GRANT: Yes, Mr. Hearing Officer.
    21
    The State calls Blake Harris.
    22
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Mr. Harris?
    23
    (Witness sworn.)
    24
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    114
    1 WHEREUPON:
    2
    BLAKE HARRIS
    3 called as a witness herein, having been first duly
    4 sworn, was examined and testified as follows:
    5
    DIRECT EXAMINATION
    6
    By Mr. Grant
    7
    Q. Mr. Harris, would you state your name
    8 and spell your name for the record, please?
    9
    A. Blake Olin Harris, B-L-A-K-E, O-L-I-N,
    10 H-A-R-R-I-S.
    11
    Q. Where are you employed?
    12
    A. Pardon me?
    13
    Q. Where are you employed?
    14
    A. Illinois EPA.
    15
    Q. How long have you been employed with
    16 Illinois EPA?
    17
    A. Since June of '93.
    18
    Q. Can you give us some idea of your
    19 educational background?
    20
    A. A business degree, Illinois College,
    21 '92. I've done some graduate work at SIU
    22 Edwardsville, environmental studies, taken a couple
    23 masters classes out at UIS in Springfield in
    24 geology, that kind of thing.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    115
    1
    Q. What is your current position?
    2
    A. I work for air monitoring. I'm an
    3 environmental protection specialist. We do
    4 forecasting for ozone and particulates for people
    5 who are asthmatics and have similar conditions.
    6
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Could you
    7
    speak up, please?
    8
    THE WITNESS: Okay. I'll try. I have
    9
    a cold. I'll try.
    10
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thanks.
    11 BY MR. GRANT:
    12
    Q. And what was your position before the
    13 one you have?
    14
    A. I was an accountant with the Bureau of
    15 Water. Worked with low interest loans for
    16 wastewater, drinking water improvement projects.
    17
    Q. And what sorts of things would you do
    18 working with the low interest loans?
    19
    A. People would come in with bids. We
    20 would issue them a loan. Along the process they
    21 would do change orders when things would change in
    22 the project if they had to add additional meters or
    23 something like that to extend out water service.
    24 And eventually we would close those loans out at the
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    116
    1 end of the project.
    2
    Q. And prior to being with the Bureau of
    3 Water, were you with the Bureau of Land?
    4
    A. Yes. I worked with financial
    5 assurance, Bureau of Land from February or March of
    6 '99 up through the end of '03.
    7
    Q. What were your responsibilities, sir?
    8
    A. I reviewed financial assurance
    9 instruments for landfills, hazardous waste
    10 facilities, underground injection wells, tire
    11 reclamation facilities to determine compliance with
    12 the regulations.
    13
    Q. Are you familiar with this case, that
    14 is this Pollution Control Board case?
    15
    A. Yes.
    16
    Q. Have you been deposed by the City of
    17 Morris and Community Landfill Company in this case?
    18
    A. Yes.
    19
    Q. Did you also testify before regarding
    20 financial assurance issues for the Morris Community
    21 Landfill?
    22
    A. Yes.
    23
    Q. And can you describe that testimony?
    24 Or rather, what case or what matter was it given in?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    117
    1
    A. My recollection there was a permit
    2 appeal back in 2001 I think it was. They just
    3 wanted to know the status of the financial
    4 assurance.
    5
    Q. Are you familiar with the financial
    6 assurance regulations pertaining to municipal solid
    7 waste landfills?
    8
    A. Yes.
    9
    Q. If you can turn to Exhibit 1, I ask
    10 you to take a look at what's there.
    11
    A. Okay.
    12
    Q. Are these the financial assurance
    13 regulations pertaining to municipal solid waste
    14 landfills?
    15
    A. Yes.
    16
    Q. And it's at 35 Illinois Administrative
    17 Code 811.707?
    18
    A. Yes.
    19
    Q. Okay. You mentioned tires and
    20 underground injection, that sort of thing. Are
    21 there other financial assurance requirements not
    22 pertaining to municipal solid waste landfills?
    23
    A. Correct. They apply to underground
    24 injection facilities, people who have shredded,
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    118
    1 like, tires, that kind of thing and hazardous waste
    2 disposal. They all require financial assurance.
    3
    Q. Does Illinois EPA consider financial
    4 assurance to be important?
    5
    A. Yes.
    6
    Q. Why?
    7
    A. Well, it's kind of like a safety net.
    8 If the owners don't clean up the facilities or close
    9 them properly, we have the ability to pay a third
    10 party to go in and properly clean up and close the
    11 facility.
    12
    Q. Are you familiar with the financial
    13 assurance requirements at the Morris Community
    14 Landfill?
    15
    A. Yes.
    16
    Q. How did you become involved with
    17 financial assurance issues for this landfill?
    18
    A. Initially, I was not working on this.
    19 I worked with another person and he had his sites
    20 and I had mine and we just tried to evenly divide
    21 them out.
    22
    I started working at this facility
    23 because he was not in the office one day and the
    24 permit section -- someone there had asked me what
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    119
    1 the current status was on the financial assurance
    2 for this site.
    3
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Mr. Harris,
    4
    can you turn this way just a tad and move the
    5
    mic kind of over my way little so we can see
    6
    you, as well.
    7
    THE WITNESS: Sure.
    8
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you.
    9
    You have a great profile, but...
    10
    THE WITNESS: My mother says thank
    11
    you.
    12
    (Brief pause.)
    13 BY MR. GRANT:
    14
    Q. You mentioned that you worked at --
    15 you were working on -- or there was a division of
    16 the work. Can you estimate how many separate
    17 facilities you've evaluated the financial assurance
    18 for?
    19
    A. Hundreds.
    20
    Q. Specific to the Morris Community
    21 Landfill at the time you became aware of it, did the
    22 Bureau of Land permit section advise you of the
    23 amount of financial assurance required?
    24
    A. Prior to when I started working with
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    120
    1 them?
    2
    Q. No. At the time when you first became
    3 involved with the Morris Community Landfill.
    4
    A. Yeah. It was when we worked with the
    5 permit section. They would just want to know if we
    6 had adequate financial assurance that was posted to
    7 cover whatever the cost estimate was. So their
    8 reviewers would come to me and say, you know, do
    9 they have a million dollars, whatever it might be.
    10 We would make sure they had adequate financial
    11 assurance to cover that.
    12
    Q. Now, when you say the cost estimate,
    13 can you describe what that is?
    14
    A. The cost estimate would be for closing
    15 and doing post-closure care on a landfill, in this
    16 case. It's a permit requirement to have a cost
    17 estimate.
    18
    Q. Now, does the permit section come up
    19 with the cost estimate or approve the cost estimate?
    20
    A. No. The facility provides the cost
    21 estimate --
    22
    Q. Okay.
    23
    A. -- to the permit section. They
    24 approve it or disapprove it or tweak it, whatever
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    121
    1 they have to do.
    2
    Q. Did you have any involvement with
    3 actually coming up with a specific amount of
    4 financial assurance required, in other words, the
    5 dollar amount?
    6
    A. Did I come up with a cost estimate?
    7 Is that what you're --
    8
    Q. Yeah. As part of your responsibility?
    9
    A. No.
    10
    Q. How did the City of Morris and
    11 Community Landfill Company provide financial
    12 assurance for the Morris Community Landfill?
    13
    A. From what I recall, at one point they
    14 had used a trust fund or something like that. But
    15 at the point when I became involved with it, they
    16 were using performance bonds.
    17
    Q. Can you turn to Exhibit No. 9, please?
    18 Are these the financial assurance instruments that
    19 were posted by Community Landfill Company and the
    20 City of Morris for the Morris Community Landfill?
    21
    A. Yes.
    22
    Q. And what type of estimates are these?
    23
    A. These are performance bonds.
    24
    Q. And how do these bonds work? In other
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    122
    1 words, how do they work as far as the Agency is
    2 concerned?
    3
    A. Well, like I was saying earlier,
    4 they're sort of a safety net. It's really the
    5 owner's ideal responsibility for them to close and
    6 do the post-closure care.
    7
    But if you go to the second page
    8 on the bottom there are triggers there that if they
    9 don't do that, if they abandon the site, if they're
    10 adjudicating, bankrupt, that type of thing, we have
    11 the money then to pay a third party to go do the
    12 clean-up work. Is that your question?
    13
    Q. Yeah. Basically, I was wondering, you
    14 know, how they function. Do the financial assurance
    15 regulations for landfills, specifically the ones we
    16 have in Exhibit 1, do they specify conditions of
    17 performance bonds?
    18
    A. Conditions of when those would be
    19 used? Is that what you're --
    20
    Q. Or the sort of performance bonds that
    21 may be used. Do the regulations, you know, have
    22 requirements for what types of performance bonds can
    23 be used?
    24
    A. In types, what do you mean?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    123
    1
    Q. As far as what the requirements are
    2 for a compliant performance bond.
    3
    A. Yes. They do state that. They have
    4 to be on the forms that are within the regulations,
    5 that are part of the regulations.
    6
    Q. Can you turn in Exhibit No.1 to
    7 811.712?
    8
    A. Okay.
    9
    Q. Is that the specific section that
    10 pertains to performance bonds?
    11
    A. Yes.
    12
    Q. Let me ask you -- I'm sorry to bounce
    13 you around. Let me ask you to turn back to number
    14 nine.
    15
    MR. GRANT: And for the record, that's
    16
    Complainant's A(9).
    17
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Group A,
    18
    Exhibit 9?
    19
    MR. GRANT: Group A, Exhibit 9. Thank
    20
    you.
    21 BY MR. GRANT:
    22
    Q. Now, I think you stated that you had
    23 seen these -- you'd reviewed these bonds before?
    24
    A. Yeah.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    124
    1
    Q. Based on your review of the bonds, can
    2 you determine the amount that the Respondents,
    3 specifically the Community Landfill and the City of
    4 Morris paid for the bonds?
    5
    A. Yeah. The premium is listed on the
    6 second page there. It's 2 percent of this current
    7 amount.
    8
    Q. Okay. So you mean 2 percent of the
    9 face value of the bond?
    10
    A. Two percent of the amount guaranteed
    11 by the bond, the face value.
    12
    Q. Is that your understanding that that
    13 is an annual premium?
    14
    A. Yes.
    15
    Q. And based on your experience with
    16 other financial assurance instruments, including
    17 surety bonds, is that a representative rate?
    18
    MR. PORTER: (Inaudible.)
    19 BY THE WITNESS:
    20
    A. That's the lowest rate I --
    21
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Excuse me.
    22
    Mr. Porter?
    23
    MR. PORTER: I'm going to object to
    24
    foundation. I don't believe there's been
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    125
    1
    sufficient foundation laid that he knows the
    2
    various rates paid on these financial bonds.
    3
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Mr. Grant?
    4
    MR. GRANT: He testified that he
    5
    reviewed hundreds of financial assurance
    6
    instruments and it was part of his job, he
    7
    was familiar with doing it and -- well, I can
    8
    ask one more question.
    9 BY MR. GRANT:
    10
    Q. Did you look at other -- during the
    11 time that you were reviewing financial assurance
    12 instruments, did you see bonds that were not issued
    13 by the Frontier Insurance Company?
    14
    A. Yes.
    15
    Q. In other words, from other companies?
    16
    A. Yes.
    17
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: I'm going
    18
    to overrule Mr. Porter's objection. You may
    19
    proceed. Thanks.
    20 BY MR. GRANT:
    21
    Q. And just to finish up that question,
    22 did those bonds also show the annual premium on the
    23 face of the bond?
    24
    A. Yeah.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    126
    1
    Q. Did there come a time in 2000 when the
    2 Illinois EPA determined that the Frontier bonds were
    3 no longer acceptable for closure/post-closure
    4 financial assurance?
    5
    A. Yes. It was -- they were delisted
    6 from the Federal 870 circular, June 1 of 2000. And
    7 soon after that I met with my supervisor and the
    8 section manager and legal counsel, as well, to see
    9 if they concurred with my interpretation of the
    10 regulations that said that they needed that as well
    11 as the Department of Insurance listing. So sometime
    12 after June 1 of 2000 we made that determination.
    13
    Q. Did other landfills besides the Morris
    14 Community Landfill have Frontier bonds as surety?
    15
    A. Yes.
    16
    Q. Approximately how many?
    17
    A. We sent out violation notices to
    18 approximately 30 landfills that were regulated under
    19 811 regulations. The 807 regulations did not
    20 specify that the circular -- the 570 Circular was a
    21 requirement. But of the 811s, there was
    22 approximately 30 that used Frontier.
    23
    Q. Okay. After making this
    24 determination, what action -- you sort of partially
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    127
    1 answered this question, but what action did Illinois
    2 EPA take?
    3
    A. Once we had basically come to the
    4 conclusion that everyone agreed that they did not
    5 meet the requirements of the regulations, we sent
    6 out violation notices to all of those facilities.
    7
    Q. Do you recall when the violation
    8 notices were sent out?
    9
    A. Sometime around late October I think
    10 they started. Maybe towards of end of November. In
    11 that one month period. That was quite a few to get
    12 out in a short period of time, so...
    13
    Q. And that was 2000 -- in the year 2000?
    14
    A. That was 2000, yes.
    15
    Q. Okay. Can you please turn to Exhibits
    16 10 and 11 and take a look at them. Let's do one at
    17 a time. Why don't we just go to Exhibit 10. Can
    18 you identify this document?
    19
    A. It's a violation notice.
    20
    Q. And who was it sent to?
    21
    A. City of Morris.
    22
    Q. Okay. What date was this violation
    23 notice sent out?
    24
    A. November 14th, 2000.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    128
    1
    Q. And does it refer to what -- the
    2 violation that Illinois EPA was considering? In
    3 other words, what is the violation? What violation
    4 is it noticing?
    5
    A. On Attachment A, it's a violation of
    6 811.700(f) and 21(d)(2) of the Environmental
    7 Protection Act.
    8
    Q. And does it relate to the Frontier
    9 bonds?
    10
    A. Yes.
    11
    Q. And does it provide a suggested
    12 resolution?
    13
    A. Yes, it does.
    14
    Q. And what does it suggest as the
    15 resolution?
    16
    A. To provide adequate financial
    17 assurance in the amount that equals or exceeds the
    18 current closure, slash, post-closure cost estimate.
    19
    Q. Okay. Please turn to Exhibit No. 11.
    20 And can you identify this document?
    21
    A. It's a violation notice.
    22
    Q. And who was it sent to?
    23
    A. Community Landfill Company.
    24
    Q. And is this violation notice also
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    129
    1 related to the Frontier bonds?
    2
    A. Yes.
    3
    Q. And does it also have a suggested
    4 resolution?
    5
    A. Yes, it does.
    6
    Q. Okay. Are these violation notices,
    7 Exhibits 10 and 11, similar to the violation notices
    8 that were sent out to all of the landfills that had
    9 Frontier surety bonds?
    10
    A. As far as I recall, they were all
    11 identical as far as the attachment because it was
    12 all the same violation. The only thing that was
    13 different was the contact on the front page.
    14
    Q. Did they all have a similar suggested
    15 resolution?
    16
    A. Yes.
    17
    Q. Okay. Of the 30 landfills or
    18 approximately 30 landfills that you referred to, how
    19 many of them subsequently replaced the Frontier
    20 bonds with compliant financial assurance?
    21
    A. All of them did. There was one
    22 exception from what I remember. A little landfill
    23 called Dowty. And as far as I know, they're now on
    24 the state's list of abandoned landfills.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    130
    1
    Q. But the Dowty location did not?
    2
    A. They did not substitute alternate
    3 financial assurance.
    4
    Q. Did Community Landfill Company or the
    5 City of Morris ever replace the Frontier bonds with
    6 compliant financial assurance?
    7
    A. No.
    8
    MR. GRANT: That's all I have.
    9
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you,
    10
    Mr. Grant. Ms. Grayson, cross?
    11
    MS. GRAYSON: Mr. Harris, my name is
    12
    Clarissa Grayson. I'm the attorney for
    13
    Community Landfill Company. I have a few
    14
    questions for you.
    15
    CROSS EXAMINATION
    16
    By Ms. Grayson
    17
    Q. Who was working on the Morris
    18 Community Landfill before you started working on it?
    19 You mentioned that you took it over from someone
    20 because that person wasn't there that day.
    21
    A. I answered the questions for the
    22 permit section because that person wasn't there that
    23 day. It was John Taylor.
    24
    Q. John Taylor. You also testified that
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    131
    1 everyone agreed with the decision that Frontier
    2 bonds were no longer good? Was that your testimony
    3 before?
    4
    A. I believe I said everybody I spoke
    5 with as far as Hope Wright, my supervisors, Dave
    6 Walters and legal counsel agreed with that.
    7
    Q. Did you speak with John Taylor?
    8
    A. Yes. John did not agree with them.
    9
    Q. So, in fact, everyone did not agree
    10 with the decision that the Frontier bonds were no
    11 longer any good; is that correct?
    12
    A. Correct.
    13
    Q. John Taylor, in fact, disagreed with
    14 that decision?
    15
    A. John Taylor felt that the 570 Circular
    16 from what I recall, while it was a requirement, that
    17 Frontier was in receivership, they had some medical
    18 malpractice claims or something to that effect and
    19 that they would be eventually put back on that list.
    20 And my opinion was it doesn't really matter if they
    21 are eventually put back on. The regulations say it
    22 requires it.
    23
    Q. Didn't he, in fact, believe that there
    24 was no law, rule or regulation that allowed the
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    132
    1 Agency to take the actions to disprove a bond that
    2 was valid when it was issued, but when the bonding
    3 company was later removed from the U.S. Department
    4 of Treasury's list?
    5
    A. Could you repeat that, please?
    6
    Q. Sure. Didn't he believe that there
    7 was no law or rule or regulation that allowed the
    8 Agency to take the action to disprove the bond
    9 because it was valid when the -- it was issued, but
    10 then only simply because the company later was
    11 removed from the Treasury's 570 list of approved
    12 sureties?
    13
    MR. GRANT: I'm going to object to
    14
    that question. First off, it's a multiple
    15
    question. Second off, I think that, as a
    16
    whole, it's vague.
    17 BY MS. GRAYSON:
    18
    Q. Did he originally recommend --
    19
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Yeah. I
    20
    sustain and overrule. So just rephrase it.
    21
    Thank you.
    22
    MS. GRAYSON: I'll rephrase it.
    23 BY MS. GRAYSON:
    24
    Q. Did he recommend -- do you know
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    133
    1 whether he recommended that the bonds be accepted?
    2
    A. At what point?
    3
    Q. In August of 2000.
    4
    A. I don't know. I recall there was some
    5 note that he had handwritten to Joyce or someone
    6 from the permit section that said he thought they
    7 should be exempted.
    8
    Q. In Exhibit --
    9
    MS. GRAYSON: Let's see. That would
    10
    be in our Exhibit 1 or is that that Hearing
    11
    Officer Group Exhibit?
    12
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Hearing
    13
    Officer Exhibit A incorporated --
    14 BY MS. GRAYSON:
    15
    Q. In Hearing Officer Exhibit A --
    16
    MS. GRAYSON: If I could? It will
    17
    take me a second to locate it.
    18
    (Brief pause.)
    19
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: I was going
    20
    to use that as my copy.
    21
    MS. GRAYSON: I have a copy. I'm
    22
    sorry. I can give this back to you.
    23
    (Brief pause.)
    24
    MS. GRAYSON: I'll try to direct
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    134
    1
    everyone's attention to where this particular
    2
    document is. After the deposition testimony
    3
    excerpts is a group marked Exhibit 1
    4
    excerpts. Does everyone have that?
    5
    MR. GRANT: It's at my offices.
    6
    MS. GRAYSON: Well, I can pass it
    7
    around.
    8
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: I gave
    9
    Mr. Harris a copy of mine.
    10
    MS. GRAYSON: He has a copy. Okay.
    11
    Just for the record, it is part of Hearing
    12
    Officer Exhibit A, the group marked Exhibit 1
    13
    excerpts and it's the last page of that
    14
    exhibit with the numbers 214 and 0053 marked
    15
    in the lower right-hand corner.
    16 BY MS. GRAYSON:
    17
    Q. Could you describe what this document
    18 is, Mr. Harris?
    19
    A. I don't know what this is. It looks
    20 like maybe John typed these on a page or something
    21 like that to list out their bond numbers. And then
    22 it says opinion and then it says the bonds appear to
    23 comply with the relevant regulation in all respects.
    24
    Q. That's correct.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    135
    1
    MR. GRANT: I'm going to object at
    2
    this point, basically, as to the relevance of
    3
    this testimony.
    4
    It's -- the invalidity of the
    5
    bonds has already been decided in the '01
    6
    permit appeal and that was upheld on appeal.
    7
    In this case, the Pollution
    8
    Control Board has affirmed the fact that the
    9
    Frontier bonds are not compliant. So as far
    10
    as, you know, evidence that goes to the
    11
    contrary, I think it's irrelevant. It's
    12
    also, you know, barred by collateral
    13
    estoppel.
    14
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Ms.
    15
    Grayson?
    16
    MS. GRAYSON: My point in this would
    17
    simply be that the witness testified that
    18
    everybody agreed that the bonds weren't any
    19
    good and I was simply trying to make -- and
    20
    it was his testimony that brought this up,
    21
    otherwise, I wouldn't have raised it.
    22
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Okay. I
    23
    think he clarified that and then we went on
    24
    to this exhibit.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    136
    1
    MR. PORTER: Mr. Halloran, may I
    2
    comment?
    3
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Sure,
    4
    Mr. Porter.
    5
    MR. PORTER: Part, if not the heart of
    6
    the issue here is deciding the reasonableness
    7
    of everyone's conduct. And how the City of
    8
    Morris and even CLC acted depends greatly
    9
    upon what the beliefs were as to the validity
    10
    of the Frontier bonds. And even though we
    11
    finally had a final decision on that in June
    12
    of 2006, clearly, the conduct up to that time
    13
    is relevant in this proceeding when the State
    14
    is seeking penalties and attorneys fees.
    15
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: I
    16
    understand that, Mr. Porter. I'm just
    17
    stating that Ms. Grayson has already brought
    18
    it out that, in fact, everybody did not
    19
    agree, and then Ms. Grayson went on to cite
    20
    these incorporated documents, which was John
    21
    Taylor's handwritten note.
    22
    But given the fact that -- you
    23
    know, I will allow a little latitude. And
    24
    given the fact that the State did not object
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    137
    1
    to the incorporation, I'll allow a little
    2
    latitude and let the answer stand.
    3
    Were you in the middle of a
    4
    question?
    5 BY MS. GRAYSON:
    6
    Q. Just that -- just wanted to -- if you
    7 can just read the notes that are on here and the
    8 date on there?
    9
    A. August 3, 2000, Community Landfill has
    10 tendered three acceptable performance bonds totaling
    11 17,427,366. The bonds appear to comply with the --
    12
    MR. PORTER: Mr. Halloran, I can't
    13
    hear the witness.
    14 BY THE WITNESS:
    15
    A. The bonds appear to comply with the
    16 relevant regulations in all respects.
    17 BY MS. GRAYSON:
    18
    Q. Thank you. Didn't the Agency accept
    19 and then later reject the bonds?
    20
    A. I don't know if the bonds were
    21 actually accepted. I wasn't really working on the
    22 financial assurance review at the time. I mean --
    23
    Q. Do you have knowledge of what the
    24 procedure was that was established by which the CLC
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    138
    1 would provide the bonds for the review of the IEPA
    2 who then agreed with them and so CLC went ahead and
    3 purchased the bonds and then at that point the bonds
    4 were rejected? Is that your understanding?
    5
    A. Well, typically, with financial
    6 assurance, they -- whoever, landfill, hazardous
    7 waste facility would purchase the bonds, submit them
    8 to the Agency and then we would approve them.
    9 Although, I don't know because I didn't work on it.
    10 Back then I didn't work on this when this note was
    11 written. Does that make sense to you? I wasn't the
    12 one who said this. I don't know.
    13
    Q. Okay. Are you aware of the financial
    14 condition of Community Landfill --
    15
    A. No.
    16
    Q. -- Company?
    17
    Do you know whether CLC had any
    18 intent to not provide financial assurance?
    19
    A. No.
    20
    Q. Do you have any knowledge as to
    21 whether CLC can afford financial assurance?
    22
    A. No.
    23
    Q. Do you have any idea how CLC makes
    24 money?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    139
    1
    A. I can guess, as they're a landfill, by
    2 accepting waste. But I don't know what they do to
    3 make money.
    4
    Q. And do you think that their ability to
    5 make money has been hampered by the fact that
    6 they're not permitted to put waste in certain areas,
    7 yet are required to post significant --
    8
    MR. GRANT: I'm going to object to
    9
    this question. I think it calls for him to
    10
    speculate in areas. He already testified he
    11
    has no knowledge.
    12
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: He can
    13
    answer if he's able. Overruled.
    14 BY THE WITNESS:
    15
    A. I don't know.
    16 BY MS. GRAYSON:
    17
    Q. Well, you said that you had an idea of
    18 how they made money?
    19
    A. I have an idea of how landfills in
    20 general make money, but I don't know if that's
    21 hampered their ability to make money.
    22
    Q. But do you think that their ability to
    23 make money would be hampered by not being allowed to
    24 deposit waste that would allow them to make money in
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    140
    1 order to come up with the financial assurance that
    2 is required?
    3
    A. I don't know if it would or not. I
    4 mean, I suppose a landfill could accept waste
    5 illegally and they would still make money.
    6
    Q. I'd like to draw your attention to CLC
    7 Exhibit 11. I believe you have a copy of that or
    8 perhaps the Hearing Officer?
    9
    A. Is it a violation notice?
    10
    Q. No. It's CLC's Exhibit 11.
    11
    MR. GRANT: It's not in the book.
    12
    Mr. Halloran, do you have a copy of the
    13
    exhibit?
    14
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: I do have a
    15
    copy. Thank you.
    16 BY MS. GRAYSON:
    17
    Q. Do you recall writing this letter,
    18 Mr. Harris?
    19
    A. I can see what I've written here but,
    20 no, I don't really remember writing that letter.
    21
    Q. Do you recall the circumstances of
    22 this letter?
    23
    A. Well, by reading it, it appears that
    24 they were requesting that alternative assurance had
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    141
    1 not been received and we couldn't release their
    2 bonds.
    3
    Q. Maybe I should start with a different
    4 exhibit to --
    5
    A. Yeah. I haven't looked at this for a
    6 long time.
    7
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: What
    8
    exhibit were we just on?
    9
    MS. GRAYSON: This was CLC's Exhibit
    10
    11.
    11
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you.
    12
    (Brief pause.)
    13 BY MS. GRAYSON:
    14
    Q. I'll give you a slightly better chain
    15 of events. Let -- I have two documents marked CLC
    16 Exhibit 9 and CLC Exhibit 10.
    17
    MS. GRAYSON: If I could approach and
    18
    give this to you?
    19
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: You may.
    20
    (Brief pause.)
    21
    MS. GRAYSON: Do you have Exhibits 9
    22
    and 10?
    23
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Yes. Thank
    24
    you.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    142
    1 BY MS. GRAYSON:
    2
    Q. Mr. Harris, Exhibit 9 is a letter from
    3 Deborah Monforte of Frontier Insurance Company --
    4 and this is just by way of background information
    5 for you -- wherein she sent a form to be executed by
    6 the IEPA, Dave Jansen, she sent it to the Bureau of
    7 Land, to release the collateral that Frontier
    8 Insurance Company was holding on behalf of CLC.
    9
    A. Okay.
    10
    Q. And Exhibit 10 is a fax coversheet
    11 from Ms. Monforte at Frontier Insurance Company,
    12 which attaches a copy of your letter?
    13
    A. Where are we at now? Which exhibit?
    14
    Q. Exhibit 10 is a fax coversheet from
    15 Ms. Monforte of Frontier Insurance Company and
    16 attached to the fax coversheet is a copy of your
    17 letter which is marked Exhibit 11.
    18
    A. Okay.
    19
    Q. So your letter is here twice. Once
    20 as an attachment to the fax coversheet and then the
    21 second time as an individual exhibit. But as you
    22 can see, it's the same letter. Do you have any
    23 recollections surrounding this?
    24
    A. To be honest, no. But what it looks
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    143
    1 like to me is they're just requesting we release
    2 their bonds.
    3
    Q. Can you read the letter -- Exhibit 9,
    4 can you read the first paragraph of that?
    5
    A. Enclosed please find New York State
    6 Department of Insurance form to be executed by your
    7 department for release of collateral, Frontier
    8 Insurance Company, in rehabilitation is in
    9 possession of for the above-mentioned. And I don't
    10 know -- it says enclosed. What was enclosed?
    11
    Q. Well, enclosed was a release of
    12 collateral, but it's not attached to this exhibit.
    13 It's just the letter.
    14
    A. Just curious what it said.
    15
    Q. It's a form to release the collateral.
    16 Is that the same thing as far as you're concerned as
    17 release the bond?
    18
    A. That's what it appears to be to me.
    19
    Q. So do you have any recollection of why
    20 you would have written this letter on August 21st?
    21
    A. However, alternate financial assurance
    22 of the above-mentioned bonds has not been received.
    23 So if we didn't have anything in our possession to
    24 replace the bonds, we would not have released their
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    144
    1 financial assurance.
    2
    Q. Does it matter that the bonds already
    3 had been determined -- didn't you previously testify
    4 the bonds had been determined to be no good?
    5
    A. Well, they don't comply with the
    6 regulations. I didn't say they were no good.
    7
    Q. How is there a difference?
    8
    A. Well, I guess it doesn't mean maybe
    9 that they would not pay on the bonds, you know, but
    10 it still doesn't really satisfy the requirements of
    11 regulation. That's what I am saying.
    12
    The bonds did not meet the
    13 requirements of the regulations, so they were not
    14 acceptable from that perspective.
    15
    Q. Then what would be the rationale
    16 between not refunding the collateral? If the bonds
    17 were not any good, as you're saying, that they don't
    18 comply with the regulations, why wouldn't you give
    19 the collateral back?
    20
    A. Well, we would have absolutely nothing
    21 then. So I guess if there's a potential that we
    22 could really still get something out of these bonds,
    23 if we were to release them without having any
    24 alternate financial assurance at all, we would have
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    145
    1 nothing. What would be the replacement?
    2
    Q. Well, that's the point is that if the
    3 bonds are no good, you don't have anything to begin
    4 with.
    5
    A. Well --
    6
    Q. How can you collect --
    7
    A. I wouldn't --
    8
    Q. How can the Agency collect on
    9 something --
    10
    A. I wouldn't agree with that. I would
    11 say if the bonds don't meet the regulations, they're
    12 not acceptable financial assurance. But from a
    13 practical perspective, if we have to clean up an
    14 abandoned landfill, you know, maybe we could get
    15 something out of these bonds. That would have been
    16 our way of thinking at the time with any landfill.
    17
    Q. Your way of thinking at the time?
    18
    A. With any landfill. If somebody -- a
    19 landfill comes in and says, oh, just give us back
    20 our financial assurance, what would we have to clean
    21 it up if they skipped the state?
    22
    Q. But if -- you're talking about bonds
    23 that -- I mean, normally, the bonds are in place and
    24 there is not a reversal of a determination that the
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    146
    1 bonds are good; is that correct? That's the -- it's
    2 not normal what happened in this situation?
    3
    A. It hadn't happened before that I know
    4 of.
    5
    Q. So in this situation there really
    6 aren't any regulations -- there's no regulation that
    7 says that the State may keep the collateral for
    8 bonds that are determined to not be compliant; is
    9 that correct?
    10
    A. I don't know that.
    11
    Q. Are you familiar with any regulation
    12 that allows the State to do that?
    13
    A. Without looking back through all the
    14 regulations, I don't know.
    15
    Q. In your experience as with a number of
    16 years in financial assurance and with reviewing the
    17 numbers of financial assurance documents that you
    18 did and with the work that you did with the number
    19 of landfills, are you familiar with any regulation
    20 that would allow the State to keep -- or to prohibit
    21 release of collateral when bonds have been
    22 determined to not be compliant?
    23
    A. I think within the regulations there
    24 is a section that does say that they have to provide
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    147
    1 acceptable alternate financial assurance before we
    2 release the mechanism.
    3
    Q. And what regulation is that?
    4
    A. Somewhere in 811, which I haven't
    5 looked at for four years.
    6
    Q. So there's something that you think
    7 may require that, but you're not sure?
    8
    A. I think there is something within the
    9 regulations that requires we have alternate
    10 financial assurance before we release a mechanism,
    11 yes.
    12
    MS. GRAYSON: I have nothing further.
    13
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you,
    14
    Mr. Grayson. Mr. Porter?
    15
    MR. PORTER: Thank you, Mr. Halloran.
    16
    CROSS EXAMINATION
    17
    By Mr. Porter
    18
    Q. You don't know whether or not CLC or
    19 City of Morris has failed to perform any closure or
    20 post-closure activities, correct?
    21
    A. Correct.
    22
    Q. Do you know what closure activities
    23 the City has performed since June of 2006?
    24
    A. No.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    148
    1
    Q. Are you aware the City has expended
    2 substantial funds in hiring Shaw Environmental to
    3 conduct several closure activities?
    4
    A. No.
    5
    Q. Do you know if Frontier Insurance
    6 Company is licensed to transact the business of
    7 insurance by the Department of Insurance?
    8
    A. Currently, no, I don't know that.
    9
    Q. Do you know if they ever lost their
    10 license to transact business of insurance by the
    11 Department of Insurance?
    12
    A. I seem to recall that they did.
    13
    Q. Isn't it true that as of June 1, 2000,
    14 Frontier Insurance Company indeed had a license to
    15 transact business of insurance by the Illinois
    16 Department of Insurance which is now handled by the
    17 Illinois Department of Financial and Professional
    18 Regulation?
    19
    A. Yes.
    20
    Q. So at the time that you are asserting
    21 that Frontier Insurance Company -- strike that.
    22
    So at the time that you're
    23 asserting CLC first failed to provide financial
    24 assurance, Frontier was actually licensed to
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    149
    1 transact business, correct?
    2
    A. With the Illinois Department of
    3 Insurance?
    4
    Q. Let me ask it again otherwise our
    5 record is difficult. I should have completed the
    6 question.
    7
    You would agree that at the time
    8 the State is alleging that CLC first failed to
    9 provide financial assurance, Frontier Insurance
    10 Company was licensed to transact business by the
    11 Illinois Department of Insurance, correct?
    12
    A. Correct.
    13
    Q. And you don't know when they lost that
    14 license, correct?
    15
    A. I don't know the exact date or even if
    16 they have at this point.
    17
    Q. Now, if you would, take a look at
    18 811.712(b) for me, which is one of the exhibits that
    19 the State has given you which is in front of you.
    20
    A. Okay.
    21
    Q. Now, 712(b) actually provides, does it
    22 not, that a surety company that is licensed to
    23 transact the business of insurance by the Department
    24 of Insurance may provide a bond, correct?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    150
    1
    MR. GRANT: I'm going to object on the
    2
    basis of relevance because it seems we're
    3
    going to whether or not the Frontier bonds
    4
    are valid, adequate financial assurance and
    5
    that's been decided. And it was decided, you
    6
    know, through denial asserted by Illinois
    7
    Supreme Court in 2002.
    8
    I guess maybe I'm asking
    9
    Mr. Porter to explain where he's going with
    10
    this because if we're going to get into
    11
    whether or not the Frontier bonds are valid,
    12
    that issue is gone.
    13
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Mr. Porter?
    14
    MR. PORTER: My response -- and I
    15
    somewhat sound like a broken record, but part
    16
    of this -- the major part of this is
    17
    determining the reasonableness of the conduct
    18
    of the parties involved.
    19
    And I will prove through this
    20
    witness that not only is it reasonable for
    21
    the City of Morris to believe the Frontier
    22
    bonds were sufficient and CLC to believe it
    23
    was sufficient, intelligent minds clearly
    24
    have reason to disagree with any contrary
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    151
    1
    conclusion that may have been reached by the
    2
    Pollution Control Board or even a court of
    3
    further jurisdiction.
    4
    We're getting now into penalty and
    5
    remedy and it has to do with reasonableness
    6
    of conduct.
    7
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: You know, I
    8
    agree with Mr. Porter. Reliability and the
    9
    remedy portions, especially to 33(c) and
    10
    42(h) some what overlap. I do find it
    11
    relevant and I will give the Respondents a
    12
    little latitude like I gave the Complainant
    13
    latitude on their first witness. So
    14
    objection overruled.
    15 BY MR. PORTER:
    16
    Q. I'm going to get to it a different
    17 way. You mentioned that there was a meeting that
    18 was had where a decision was made that not only did
    19 Frontier Insurance Company have to have a license,
    20 but they also had to be on the 570 Circular?
    21
    A. Yes.
    22
    Q. And so who was that meeting with?
    23
    A. It's been over seven years, but I
    24 remember Bill Ingersoll was there, myself and I
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    152
    1 think it was Chris Perzan at the time. And they
    2 worked for the legal department.
    3
    Q. Now, isn't it true that that meeting
    4 was necessitated because the language of 811.712(b)
    5 arguably provides that the company need only be
    6 licensed to transact business or it may be an excess
    7 carrier and be beyond the circular?
    8
    A. Could you rephrase that question? I
    9 don't quite understand what you're saying.
    10
    Q. Let me try to attack it this way. I'm
    11 trying to avoid having to read the whole paragraph
    12 into the record, but maybe that's where we're going
    13 to have to go.
    14
    If you can take a look at
    15 811.712(b). It provides a variety of requirements
    16 for the bonding company, right?
    17
    A. Yes.
    18
    Q. And as a matter of fact, the first
    19 requirement is that the surety company issuing the
    20 bonds shall be licensed to transact the business of
    21 insurance by the Department of Insurance pursuant to
    22 the Illinois Insurance Code, right?
    23
    A. Yes.
    24
    Q. And then there is an "or". The next
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    153
    1 word is "or" and there's discussion of how else an
    2 insurance company can meet the requirement, correct?
    3
    A. Correct.
    4
    Q. And that "or" is that they may provide
    5 a minimum -- at a minimum, the insurer must be
    6 licensed to transact the business of insurance or to
    7 provide insurance as an excess or surplus lines
    8 insurer and be on the circular. So there are two
    9 ways. One, they can be licensed to transact
    10 business or, two, it can be an excess carrier and on
    11 the circular, right?
    12
    A. That's not how we interpreted that
    13 because it's any of those first combination of
    14 things, comma, and approved by the U.S. Department
    15 of the Treasury as an acceptable surety.
    16
    And part of the basis for -- I
    17 mean, not only does reading it how it appeared to us
    18 that it was requiring both things, but the Board
    19 rulemaking when 811 was being, you know, put
    20 together specifically mentioned that as a
    21 requirement, the 570 Circular.
    22
    Q. Again, the 570 Circular is a
    23 requirement if, indeed, it's just an excess or
    24 surplus line and isn't licensed to transact in
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    154
    1 Illinois, right?
    2
    A. I don't know how to answer that
    3 question.
    4
    Q. Let me ask it this way: You would
    5 agree that that section is susceptible to different
    6 interpretations as to what's required, correct?
    7
    A. Sure.
    8
    Q. As a matter of fact, you had to have a
    9 meeting with several individuals to decide, okay, do
    10 they have to be licensed to transact and on the
    11 Circular or do they just have to be licensed to
    12 transact?
    13
    A. Yes. I agree with that.
    14
    Q. And, ultimately, you guys came to the
    15 conclusion you had to be both?
    16
    A. Correct.
    17
    Q. But you understand that the statute
    18 can be read a different way, right?
    19
    A. I'm sure you could interpret it that
    20 way.
    21
    Q. And it's perfectly reasonable for the
    22 City of Morris or CLC to interpret it that way,
    23 correct?
    24
    A. I don't know how to answer that. I
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    155
    1 mean, I guess someone could have a different
    2 opinion. They don't -- you know, if you disregard
    3 the comma, it doesn't seem like that's --
    4
    Q. I mean, we're not making a big stretch
    5 here. It says "or". It doesn't say "and", right?
    6
    A. Well, it has all these first parts you
    7 were talking about and then it says, comma, and
    8 approved by the U.S. Department of the Treasury as
    9 an acceptable surety.
    10
    Q. Okay. But before all that --
    11
    A. It's any of those first things, comma,
    12 plus this second component, which is the 570
    13 Circular.
    14
    Q. Okay. So you're reading the last
    15 clause, the "and" as applying to all of the language
    16 in that entire paragraph, including that that comes
    17 before the first "or", right?
    18
    A. I'm reading that this is an additional
    19 requirement to any of the first things.
    20
    Q. Now, did you ever take a different
    21 position on that issue?
    22
    A. Did I believe that it could be
    23 interpreted that they don't need the 570 Circular
    24 requirement?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    156
    1
    Q. Right.
    2
    A. I don't even remember back at the
    3 time. I mean, I wanted to meet with, you know --
    4
    Q. Who in the room took the position that
    5 you only had to be licensed to transact business in
    6 Illinois?
    7
    A. I don't know if anyone in the room
    8 when we had that meeting took that position.
    9
    Q. You don't know when or if the City of
    10 Morris has ever been informed that Frontier
    11 Insurance Company is not licensed to transact
    12 business in Illinois, correct?
    13
    A. Correct.
    14
    Q. Isn't it true that the bonds that were
    15 issued in this case were valid, at a minimum,
    16 through the end of May 2005?
    17
    A. What exhibit is that?
    18
    Q. Well, I don't have a particular
    19 exhibit. If I need to, I'm going to refresh your
    20 recollection with your affidavit.
    21
    But right now my question is
    22 simply would you agree that the Frontier bonds were
    23 valid through, at a minimum, May of 2005?
    24
    MR. GRANT: I object.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    157
    1 BY THE WITNESS:
    2
    A. If I could see the bonds and see when
    3 they were issued, I could tell you that.
    4
    MR. GRANT: I think -- Actually, I
    5
    think there was a mistake. I think you meant
    6
    2000, didn't you, not 2005?
    7
    MR. PORTER: No. I meant 2005.
    8 BY THE WITNESS:
    9
    A. Can I look at the bond?
    10 BY MR. PORTER:
    11
    Q. Absolutely. I don't know what
    12 exhibit --
    13
    A. Which exhibit are we on?
    14
    Q. -- Counsel has marked that as.
    15
    MR. GRANT: Exhibit 9.
    16 BY MR. PORTER:
    17
    Q. In other words, as you sit here today,
    18 you don't recall but you need to look at something
    19 to refresh your recollection; is that right?
    20
    A. I would need to look at this to
    21 refresh my recollection, yes.
    22
    Q. Okay. Please feel free to look at
    23 whatever you need to.
    24
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: I'm looking
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    158
    1
    at the last page of Exhibit 9. I'm not sure
    2
    if there's more in there regarding the
    3
    expiration date.
    4 BY THE WITNESS:
    5
    A. Expiration date amended to 6/14/05
    6 through this rider, yes.
    7 BY MR. PORTER:
    8
    Q. Okay. So you would agree that those
    9 bonds are valid through 2005 at a minimum, right?
    10
    A. Yeah.
    11
    Q. And as a matter of fact, and I believe
    12 Ms. Grayson has pointed this out, the government has
    13 filed a claim under those bonds, correct?
    14
    MR. GRANT: I'm going to ask that
    15
    Mr. Porter either say "state" or -- I mean,
    16
    we're dealing with two governments here. One
    17
    is city government and --
    18
    MR. PORTER: I agree and will withdraw
    19
    the question.
    20
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Sustained.
    21 BY MR. PORTER:
    22
    Q. Furthermore, as Ms. Grayson has
    23 pointed out, you would agree that the state of
    24 Illinois has filed a claim under those bonds,
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    159
    1 correct?
    2
    A. I don't know if they have or not.
    3
    Q. Okay. You have no reason to dispute
    4 that, right?
    5
    A. I don't have enough information to
    6 dispute that.
    7
    Q. You have not been called upon to give
    8 any counsel regarding the claim that the state of
    9 Illinois has filed concerning those bonds?
    10
    A. No.
    11
    Q. Now, you would agree, would you not,
    12 that one of the methods for providing financial
    13 assurance of closure/post-closure activities is for
    14 a local governmental entity to provide its guarantee
    15 that closure will occur?
    16
    A. Is the question can they use a local
    17 government guarantee?
    18
    MR. PORTER: I don't normally do this.
    19
    Mr. Halloran, can I have the question read
    20
    back, please?
    21
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Yes, you
    22
    may. Tammi?
    23
    (Whereupon, the requested
    24
    portion of the record
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    160
    1
    was read accordingly.)
    2 BY THE WITNESS:
    3
    A. Are you speaking of the local
    4 government guarantee, the mechanism for financial
    5 assurance?
    6 BY MR. PORTER:
    7
    Q. Do you not understand that question?
    8
    A. I guess I don't.
    9
    Q. A local governmental entity can
    10 provide a guarantee that closure/post-closure
    11 activities will occur and that's one of the approved
    12 methods for posting financial assurance, correct?
    13
    A. Yeah. And then I was asking you are
    14 you speaking of the local government guarantee in
    15 the regulations? Yes.
    16
    Q. And as a matter of fact, that appears
    17 I believe under 811.717; is that right? You might
    18 want to take a look at Exhibit 1, the State's
    19 Exhibit 1.
    20
    A. So 716?
    21
    Q. No. 717.
    22
    A. Okay.
    23
    Q. That section is actually entitled
    24 Local Government Guarantee, correct?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    161
    1
    A. Right.
    2
    Q. And what that provides is that if a
    3 local municipality meets the financial test, that
    4 all they need to do then to post financial assurance
    5 is to guarantee that the local government itself
    6 will perform or pay a third party to perform
    7 closure/post-closure care or corrective action as
    8 required, right?
    9
    A. And they have to also meet the
    10 requirement 811.716.
    11
    Q. I think I prefaced that. Let's do it
    12 again.
    13
    A. Okay.
    14
    Q. They have to meet a financial test
    15 that's referenced in 811.716, correct?
    16
    A. Well, that or a bond rating.
    17 There's -- I think there's options.
    18
    Q. Okay. They have to meet certain
    19 financial requirements before they're going to be
    20 allowed to post --
    21
    A. Correct.
    22
    Q. -- their own guarantee?
    23
    A. Right.
    24
    Q. And assuming that they meet those
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    162
    1 requirements, then all they have to do is say we
    2 will perform or we'll pay a third party to perform
    3 any closure and post-closure or corrective action
    4 that might be required, right?
    5
    A. I guess is the question could any
    6 community who's got the bond rating or the financial
    7 wherewithal do this test; is that right?
    8
    Q. I want you to assume a hypothetical --
    9
    A. Okay.
    10
    Q. -- that the local municipal entity
    11 meets the financial test of 811.716.
    12
    A. Okay.
    13
    Q. Once they've met that, all they have
    14 to do is say we will guarantee performance or we'll
    15 pay a third party to perform, right?
    16
    A. I think they additionally have to
    17 submit the form and their financial statements, all
    18 that stuff, but yeah.
    19
    Q. Right. The form is where they would
    20 indicate that they'll perform?
    21
    A. That's where they would indicate that,
    22 correct.
    23
    Q. Now, you are aware, are you not, that
    24 the City of Morris long ago offered to provide a
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    163
    1 guarantee, correct?
    2
    A. No.
    3
    Q. You would agree that assuming the City
    4 of Morris meets the financial test, we spoke about
    5 811.716, that there is no cost savings for failing
    6 to give a local municipal guarantee, right?
    7
    A. I guess could you please rephrase that
    8 question?
    9
    Q. Well, you don't have to pay any money
    10 to get a local guarantee, correct?
    11
    A. Correct.
    12
    Q. And you don't have to go to a bonding
    13 company, you don't have to go to an insurance
    14 company, you don't have to shell out hundreds of
    15 thousands of dollars a year as a municipality if you
    16 meet the financial test; all you have to do is say
    17 we'll perform if the operator fails to, right?
    18
    A. Correct. If you're assuming they
    19 could meet the test, yes.
    20
    Q. Now, have you done the analysis to
    21 determine if the City of Morris meets the financial
    22 test?
    23
    A. No.
    24
    Q. And at any time from the time that the
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    164
    1 violation notices were sent out through today have
    2 you ever done that analysis?
    3
    A. No.
    4
    Q. So, again assuming that the City of
    5 Morris does meet that test and they for some reason
    6 believe that they were responsible for posting
    7 financial assurance, they could have done so by
    8 merely issuing this municipal guarantee, right?
    9
    A. Yes.
    10
    Q. So had the City of Morris known that
    11 it was going to be called upon to post financial
    12 assurance, they could have done so for free,
    13 correct?
    14
    A. I don't know if I would consider it
    15 free, but they could have done so.
    16
    Q. Well, they could have -- you would
    17 agree that they have not enjoyed any financial
    18 benefit for failing to post their own guarantee,
    19 right?
    20
    A. If they would have posted the
    21 guarantee, would they have been coming up with money
    22 to do that; is that sort of the question?
    23
    Q. That's another way to look at it. You
    24 would agree that they would not have to come up with
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    165
    1 any money to post their own guarantee?
    2
    A. Correct.
    3
    Q. And so they didn't save any money by
    4 failing to post their own guarantee, right?
    5
    A. Well, I guess I don't know how to
    6 answer that. I mean, they didn't do it, so I don't
    7 know. I mean, if they had done that, would they
    8 have had to pay any money? No.
    9
    Q. Okay. You would agree that there have
    10 been no savings to the City of Morris for allegedly
    11 failing to post financial assurances for 2000 to the
    12 present, correct?
    13
    A. If they would have used that guarantee
    14 you mean, right?
    15
    Q. (Nodding.)
    16
    A. If they had used that guarantee, I
    17 guess there would be no savings.
    18
    Q. You're not aware of the City ever
    19 having any history of environmental violations, are
    20 you?
    21
    A. Well, the violation notices. Is that
    22 what you're speaking of?
    23
    Q. Other than this case with the
    24 violation notices arising out of financial
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    166
    1 assurance, you're not aware of the City having any
    2 history of being an environmental violator, are you?
    3
    A. Correct. I am not.
    4
    Q. You don't have any reason to believe
    5 the City has not been diligent in attempting to
    6 comply with closure/post-closure once they found out
    7 in June of 2006 they were going to be required to do
    8 so, correct?
    9
    MR. GRANT: I object to the date. I
    10
    don't think -- you're assuming that 2006 was
    11
    when they found out. I think this witness
    12
    has testified it was November 14th, 2000 that
    13
    Illinois EPA notified them.
    14
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: You can
    15
    re-direct him on that, Mr. Grant. He may
    16
    answer if he's able.
    17 BY THE WITNESS:
    18
    A. Could you please state the question
    19 another way then? I just didn't understand.
    20 BY MR. PORTER:
    21
    Q. I guess I want you to be aware of
    22 where I'm coming up with that date. June of 2006 is
    23 when the Pollution Control Board decided a motion to
    24 reconsider filed by the City concerning the
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    167
    1 financial assurance issue.
    2
    You're not aware of any failure in
    3 diligence of the City of Morris since July of 2006
    4 in effectuating closure and post-closure of the
    5 landfill itself, are you?
    6
    A. I don't know anything about it.
    7
    Q. You're not aware of any environmental
    8 damage or damage to personal health, safety or
    9 welfare caused by the lack of alleged posting of
    10 financial assurance, are you?
    11
    A. No.
    12
    Q. You're not aware of any discharge or
    13 emissions caused by the alleged failure to post
    14 financial assurance, correct?
    15
    A. Correct.
    16
    Q. You would agree that the landfill is
    17 in a suitable location, right?
    18
    A. That it is in a suitable location?
    19
    Q. Right. We've heard today it's in a
    20 rural area by other landfills. You'd agree that
    21 that's an appropriate place for a landfill, correct?
    22
    A. Sure.
    23
    Q. And you would agree landfills have
    24 great social and economic value, in general?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    168
    1
    A. Yes.
    2
    Q. You would agree that it's reasonable
    3 for the City of Morris to take the position that if
    4 it's going to be required to pay any money, it ought
    5 to be used for closure/post-closure rather than
    6 buying some bond or insurance vehicle at this time?
    7
    A. I missed the first part of that
    8 question.
    9
    Q. You would agree -- strike that.
    10
    Are you aware that the government
    11 has taken the position that the landfill should be
    12 closed now?
    13
    A. No.
    14
    Q. All right. Then I'm not going to
    15 bother asking the next question.
    16
    Earlier on in Ms. Grayson's
    17 testimony there was a reference to a Mr. John
    18 Taylor. Who is that?
    19
    A. Somebody who worked at the EPA in the
    20 solid waste section.
    21
    Q. Well, actually, he's an attorney that
    22 advises concerning compliance with financial
    23 insurance; isn't that right?
    24
    A. He is now; is that what you're saying?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    169
    1
    Q. Well, wasn't he that at the time that
    2 he issued that letter?
    3
    A. No. I don't believe --
    4
    Q. Okay. He became an attorney after
    5 that date; is that right?
    6
    A. I think so.
    7
    Q. Okay. At the time, he was tasked or
    8 responsible for giving advice concerning compliance
    9 with financial assurance, and since then he got his
    10 law degree?
    11
    A. Yes.
    12
    Q. Have you seen the updated
    13 closure/post-closure costs prepared by Shaw
    14 Environmental?
    15
    A. No.
    16
    Q. You don't have any opinion as to
    17 whether or not the $17 million figure that the State
    18 is advocating is reasonable, do you?
    19
    A. No.
    20
    Q. Let me direct your attention, if I
    21 may, to City of Morris Exhibit Number A6, which I
    22 will hand you a copy. It is the January 27, 2004
    23 letter from Beverly Anderson to Frontier Insurance
    24 Company.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    170
    1
    THE COURT REPORTER: What was the date
    2
    on that?
    3
    MR. PORTER: January 27th, 2004.
    4
    MR. GRANT: May I see it?
    5
    MR. PORTER: Sure. Let me show
    6
    Counsel for a minute.
    7
    (Brief pause.)
    8
    MR. PORTER: Mr. Halloran, do you mind
    9
    if I stand here because that's my only copy
    10
    right now.
    11
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: That's
    12
    fine.
    13
    (Witness peruses document.)
    14 BY MR. PORTER:
    15
    Q. I really only have one question on it.
    16
    A. Okay.
    17
    Q. You would agree that as recent as
    18 January 27, 2004, the Bureau of Land for the
    19 Illinois Environmental Protection Agency was taking
    20 the position that Frontier Insurance Company was
    21 providing financial assurance for closure and
    22 post-closure costs, correct?
    23
    A. That's what it says.
    24
    Q. And so you would agree that it was
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    171
    1 reasonable for the City of Morris to believe that
    2 financial assurance was being provided at least as
    3 late as 2004, right?
    4
    A. Do I agree that they were providing
    5 financial assurance?
    6
    Q. You would agree that it was reasonable
    7 for City of Morris to believe that financial
    8 assurance was being provided at least as late as
    9 2004, correct?
    10
    A. Well, I would agree that it would be
    11 reasonable for them to say they were providing
    12 financial assurance, not that it satisfies the
    13 requirement of the regulations, but...
    14
    Q. And, also, as a matter of fact, those
    15 bonds were valid through 2005. We heard that
    16 earlier on the expiration date, right?
    17
    A. Right.
    18
    Q. And isn't there a rule that there's a
    19 way that they can be extended for 12 months if
    20 there's no alternative vehicle employed?
    21
    A. Correct.
    22
    Q. And so you would agree that it was
    23 reasonable for the City of Morris to believe
    24 financial assurances were still in place through the
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    172
    1 end of 2006, correct?
    2
    A. Yes.
    3
    MR. PORTER: Nothing further.
    4
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you.
    5
    Mr. Grant, re-direct?
    6
    MR. GRANT: Yes.
    7
    RE-DIRECT EXAMINATION
    8
    By Mr. Grant
    9
    Q. Mr. Harris, you testified that the
    10 violation notices were sent to the City of Morris on
    11 November 14th, 2000; do you recall that?
    12
    A. Yes.
    13
    Q. After November 14th, 2000, until the
    14 time that you left the financial assurance job with
    15 the Bureau of Land in 2003, did the City of Morris
    16 ever offer any other compliant financial assurance
    17 for the Morris Community Landfill?
    18
    A. No.
    19
    Q. In fact, I think you mentioned that
    20 you testified at that permit appeal that was related
    21 to financial assurance in 2001; do you recall that?
    22
    A. Could you say that again, please?
    23
    Q. I believe you testified earlier that
    24 you -- or that you stated earlier that you actually
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    173
    1 testified at a permit appeal that was held in 2001
    2 regarding financial assurance for the Morris
    3 Community Landfill --
    4
    A. Yes.
    5
    Q. -- is that correct?
    6
    A. Yes.
    7
    Q. And in that permit appeal, were the
    8 City of Morris and Community Landfill Company still
    9 attempting to defend the compliance of the Frontier
    10 Insurance bonds?
    11
    A. Yes.
    12
    Q. And do you recall the outcome of that
    13 permit appeal?
    14
    A. I believe the permit was not granted
    15 or was denied.
    16
    Q. Do you believe that it would be
    17 reasonable after receiving a violation notice from
    18 Illinois EPA after losing a permit appeal on the
    19 basis of the same Frontier bonds and after failing
    20 to supply any other financial assurance for the
    21 Morris Community Landfill for the City of Morris to
    22 believe that financial assurance was effective and
    23 in place for the landfill?
    24
    A. I guess they could believe it was in
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    174
    1 place, but I don't know how they could think it was
    2 acceptable.
    3
    Q. Okay.
    4
    MR. GRANT: That's all I have.
    5
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Ms. Grayson?
    6
    MS. GRAYSON: I have nothing further.
    7
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you
    8
    Mr. Porter?
    9
    MR. PORTER: Very briefly. Thank you.
    10
    RE-CROSS EXAMINATION
    11
    By Mr. Porter
    12
    Q. That permit appeal was regarding
    13 opening a new cell at the landfill; is that right?
    14
    A. I don't know.
    15
    Q. Okay. You don't know if it was the
    16 understanding of CLC and the City of Morris that
    17 financial assurance that had been in place for the
    18 existing landfill was still in place, correct?
    19
    A. Could you say that again?
    20
    Q. Actually, no.
    21
    MR. PORTER: I'm go going to withdraw
    22
    the question. I have nothing further. Thank
    23
    you.
    24
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    175
    1
    Mr. Grant?
    2
    MR. GRANT: Nothing.
    3
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you.
    4
    You may step down, Mr. Harris. Thanks.
    5
    We're taking a short five-minute break.
    6
    (Whereupon, after a short
    7
    break was had, the
    8
    following proceedings
    9
    were held accordingly.)
    10
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: We're back
    11
    on the record. It's approximately 1:26. I
    12
    believe the State is going to direct their
    13
    third witness.
    14
    (Witness sworn.)
    15 WHEREUPON:
    16
    BRIAN WHITE
    17 called as a witness herein, having been first duly
    18 sworn, was examined and testified as follows:
    19
    DIRECT EXAMINATION
    20
    By Ms. Tomas
    21
    Q. Could you please state and spell your
    22 name for the record?
    23
    A. Sure. It's Brian, B-R-I-A-N, White,
    24 like in the color or absence thereof, W-H-I-T-E.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    176
    1
    Q. And, Brian, where do you live?
    2
    A. I live in Chatham, Illinois.
    3
    Q. How long have you lived there?
    4
    A. Approximately ten years.
    5
    Q. And what was the last year of
    6 education that you completed?
    7
    A. I've got 44 hours towards a master's
    8 in public administration. I have a bachelor's from
    9 Illinois State University in environmental health in
    10 1983.
    11
    Q. And how many hours do you have left
    12 before you get your master's degree?
    13
    A. Four hours.
    14
    Q. And what is that in?
    15
    A. Public administration.
    16
    Q. Where are you currently employed?
    17
    A. I'm employed by the Illinois
    18 Environmental Protection Agency, Bureau of Land.
    19
    Q. And how long have you been with the
    20 Illinois EPA?
    21
    A. Since 1988.
    22
    Q. What's your title and the Illinois
    23 EPA?
    24
    A. My working title is compliance unit
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    177
    1 manager.
    2
    Q. Okay. And that's within the Bureau of
    3 Land?
    4
    A. Yes, it is.
    5
    Q. And how long have you held that
    6 position?
    7
    A. Since January of 1991.
    8
    Q. So approximately 16 of the 19 years?
    9
    A. Yes.
    10
    Q. And could you please describe your
    11 duties as a compliance unit manager?
    12
    A. As compliance unit manager, I've got
    13 two programs. A compliance program which is
    14 involved with compliance enforcement tracking up
    15 until the point of formal enforcement and the
    16 financial assurance program.
    17
    Q. Are you familiar with the Morris
    18 Community Landfill?
    19
    A. Yes, I am.
    20
    Q. And please tell us how you're familiar
    21 with that particular landfill.
    22
    A. Through the ongoing enforcement case,
    23 reviewing their permits, reviewing their violation
    24 notice and on-site visit.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    178
    1
    Q. Are you familiar with the financial
    2 assurance obligations of the landfill?
    3
    A. Yes, I am.
    4
    Q. And do you know who is responsible for
    5 the financial assurance obligations of the Morris
    6 Community Landfill?
    7
    MR. PORTER: Objection, calls for a
    8
    legal conclusion.
    9
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: I'm sorry.
    10
    Could you read the question back, Tammi?
    11
    (Whereupon, the requested
    12
    portion of the record
    13
    was read accordingly.)
    14
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Mr. White
    15
    can answer. Overruled.
    16 BY THE WITNESS:
    17
    A. The owner or operator would be
    18 responsible for the financial assurance obligations.
    19 BY MS. TOMAS:
    20
    Q. And do you know who the owner of the
    21 Morris Community Landfill is?
    22
    A. The owner would be the City of Morris.
    23
    Q. And do you know who the operator of
    24 the Morris Community Landfill is?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    179
    1
    A. Community Landfill. CLC.
    2
    Q. Please explain the financial assurance
    3 obligations for the Morris Community Landfill.
    4
    A. The financial assurance obligations
    5 are required by a statute in the regulations and
    6 then the permit covers. And it would be the August
    7 of 2000 permit is the one I reviewed with the costs
    8 and the permit for the landfill.
    9
    Q. Would that 2000 permit be the
    10 significant modification known as a SIGMOD?
    11
    A. Yes.
    12
    Q. And there was SIGMOD for Parcel A; is
    13 that correct?
    14
    A. Yes.
    15
    Q. And there was also one for Parcel B?
    16
    A. That is correct.
    17
    Q. And how much -- what amount of
    18 financial assurance was listed within those SIGMODs?
    19
    A. I would have to take a look at the
    20 permit, but the total was somewhere around 17.4
    21 million.
    22
    Q. How is the amount of financial
    23 assurance determined?
    24
    A. The owner or operator submits a permit
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    180
    1 application and it's reviewed by our permit section.
    2
    Q. Can an owner or operator request to
    3 change the amount of financial assurance required
    4 for a landfill?
    5
    A. Yes.
    6
    Q. So that is the obligation of the owner
    7 or operator?
    8
    A. Yes.
    9
    Q. Are there any regulations related to
    10 maintaining financial assurance for a landfill?
    11
    A. Yes. In the case of the Morris
    12 Community Landfill, it's under 35 Illinois
    13 Administrative Code, Part 811, Subpart G.
    14
    Q. Okay. And are you familiar with the
    15 Board financial assurance regulations?
    16
    A. Yes.
    17
    Q. What sections of Section 811.700
    18 require the City and CLC to maintain financial
    19 assurance for the Morris Community Landfill?
    20
    A. If I could look at the --
    21
    Q. It would be Complainant's Exhibit --
    22 the big binder -- Exhibit 1.
    23
    A. All right. We have 811.700(f) and
    24 811.701(a).
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    181
    1
    Q. Okay. Let's start with 811.701(a).
    2 The regulation requires the owner or operator shall
    3 maintain financial assurance. What do you take the
    4 term owner or operator to mean?
    5
    A. That is, it's the obligation of the
    6 owner and the operator to maintain financial
    7 assurance.
    8
    Q. So if the operator of a landfill did
    9 not maintain financial assurance, who would be
    10 required to maintain it?
    11
    MR. PORTER: Objection. Again, this
    12
    calls for a legal conclusion. The statute
    13
    speaks for itself. The Pollution Control
    14
    Board is in a much better position to decide
    15
    what that language means than this witness.
    16
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Mr. White
    17
    can give his opinion, if he's able. He's
    18
    been a manager for how long, 16 years?
    19
    THE WITNESS: Yes.
    20
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Overruled.
    21 BY THE WITNESS:
    22
    A. Could you repeat the question, ma'am,
    23 please?
    24
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    182
    1 BY MS. TOMAS:
    2
    Q. If the operator of a landfill did not
    3 maintain financial assurance, who would be required
    4 to maintain it?
    5
    A. It would be the owner.
    6
    Q. And vice versa if the owner did not
    7 provide it?
    8
    A. The operator, yes.
    9
    Q. Okay. And what does section -- if we
    10 turn to Section 811.706, what does that provide?
    11
    A. These are the various mechanisms that
    12 an owner or operator can use to provide financial
    13 assurance.
    14
    Q. Have either CLC or the City ever
    15 utilized any one of these ten mechanisms for
    16 financial assurance at the Morris Community
    17 Landfill?
    18
    A. The only one I'm aware that they've
    19 ever used was a performance bond.
    20
    Q. Okay. And do those bonds still comply
    21 with the Board financial assurance regulations?
    22
    A. No, they haven't. They don't comply
    23 with the Board regulations and haven't since 2000.
    24
    Q. Can you please explain why?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    183
    1
    A. Yes. They used a performance bond
    2 from Frontier Insurance Company. And in 811.712(g)
    3 it requires that the bonds be on the U.S. Department
    4 of Treasury Circular 570, and Frontier was
    5 terminated from that circular back in June of 2000,
    6 therefore, it no longer complies with the
    7 requirements of 811.
    8
    Q. So is it your opinion that CLC and the
    9 City had non-compliant financial assurance since
    10 June of 2000?
    11
    MR. PORTER: Objection, leading.
    12
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Mr. Porter?
    13
    MR. PORTER: Objection, leading.
    14
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Yes, it was
    15
    leading. Sustained.
    16 BY MS. TOMAS:
    17
    Q. Do you know who the beneficiary of the
    18 Frontier bonds was?
    19
    A. The beneficiary would be the Illinois
    20 Environmental Protection Agency.
    21
    Q. And do you know if any claim has been
    22 made by the Illinois EPA on those Frontier bonds?
    23
    A. Yes.
    24
    Q. And what does it mean to make a claim
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    184
    1 on those bonds?
    2
    A. Well, on a performance bond,
    3 there's -- we first have to give the surety an
    4 opportunity to perform closure or post-closure.
    5
    And if they don't perform closure
    6 or post-closure, then they have to pay the penal sum
    7 of the bonds.
    8
    Q. Will Frontier be performing closure
    9 and post-closure at the Morris Community Landfill?
    10
    A. No.
    11
    Q. And do you know if Frontier will be
    12 paying on those claims then?
    13
    A. I've received information that
    14 Frontier has offered to settle the case at $400,000.
    15
    MR. PORTER: Object, Judge. It's
    16
    hearsay. It wasn't offered --
    17
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: I agree.
    18
    Sustained.
    19
    (Brief pause.)
    20 BY MS. TOMAS:
    21
    Q. Has Frontier offered to pay on a
    22 claim, to your knowledge?
    23
    A. Yes, they made an offer.
    24
    Q. Okay. Do you know how much that offer
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    185
    1 was for?
    2
    MR. PORTER: Well --
    3 BY THE WITNESS:
    4
    A. The offer was for --
    5
    MR. PORTER: Same objection.
    6
    MR. GRANT: This is personal
    7
    knowledge. He has personal knowledge of
    8
    this.
    9
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: I agree.
    10
    The question is phrased differently.
    11
    MR. PORTER: I still have a problem
    12
    with, I guess, two things. Number one, I'm
    13
    thrilled to hear that the government agrees
    14
    that the Frontier bonds are valid and
    15
    enforceable and they're trying to settle on
    16
    them. But, number two, how they're
    17
    negotiating in a lawsuit and whether or not
    18
    that's going to settle is irrelevant and
    19
    inadmissible in these proceedings. That's
    20
    settlement negotiations for another lawsuit.
    21
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: How is that
    22
    relevant, Ms. Tomas?
    23
    MS. TOMAS: I can answer. It's
    24
    relevant in the fact that Frontier is in
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    186
    1
    rehabilitation and what is being negotiated
    2
    in settlement is substantially less than what
    3
    would be required for closure and
    4
    post-closure.
    5
    MR. GRANT: I think it goes to gravity
    6
    and also goes to our common benefit. The
    7
    position of CLC and the City of Morris is
    8
    that we have made a claim on the bonds or the
    9
    bonds are valid, and I think it's highly
    10
    relevant as to how valid are the bonds.
    11
    I mean, frankly, if we can claim
    12
    on these bonds for the full amount of closure
    13
    and post-closure care, then that limits our
    14
    penalties substantially.
    15
    However, if nothing more than a
    16
    de minimis settlement offer has been made on
    17
    these bonds, it shows, you know, the amount
    18
    of damage to the State, the gravity of the
    19
    violation. The only financial assurance
    20
    that's ever been provided for $17.4 million
    21
    is now worth $400,000.
    22
    I mean, we've heard testimony that
    23
    it's been -- that it's not compliant
    24
    financial assurance at which point, you know,
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    187
    1
    the Respondents have challenged us --
    2
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Excuse me,
    3
    Mr. Grant. I kind of do find it somewhat
    4
    relevant. But the problem is that this
    5
    settlement is still up in the air and it's
    6
    heavy in conjecture and there's nothing that
    7
    I don't think from what I've heard so far is
    8
    substantive.
    9
    So I'm going to sustain
    10
    Mr. Porter's objection. However, I will let
    11
    it in as an offer of proof, if you so choose,
    12
    and the Board can consider it in their own
    13
    way.
    14
    MR. GRANT: Yes. We'd like to
    15
    continue on as an offer of proof.
    16
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Okay. Let
    17
    me know when the offer of proof is finished.
    18
    Thank you.
    19
    MS. TOMAS: Do you know if Frontier
    20
    will be paying on those claims?
    21
    THE WITNESS: I don't know if Frontier
    22
    will be paying on those claims, no.
    23
    MS. TOMAS: To your knowledge, have
    24
    they made an offer to pay on those claims?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    188
    1
    THE WITNESS: Yes.
    2
    MS. TOMAS: And what was that amount?
    3
    THE WITNESS: 400,000.
    4
    MS. TOMAS: That's the end of the
    5
    offer of proof.
    6
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you.
    7 BY MS. TOMAS:
    8
    Q. If CLC or the City provided compliant
    9 financial assurance tomorrow with one of the ten
    10 mechanisms listed within Section 811.706, would the
    11 Illinois EPA still be able to make a claim on the
    12 Frontier bonds?
    13
    A. No.
    14
    Q. And why is that?
    15
    A. Because we'd have substitute alternate
    16 financial assurances. And, basically, that's what
    17 we're looking for is that we have money that's
    18 obligated to close and to go through post-closure of
    19 the landfill.
    20
    Q. Okay. But as we sit here today, have
    21 either CLC or the City ever provided compliant
    22 financial assurance since those bonds?
    23
    A. No.
    24
    Q. To your knowledge, are they currently
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    189
    1 violating their SIGMOD permits and Board financial
    2 assurance regulations as they relate to financial
    3 assurance?
    4
    A. Yes.
    5
    Q. We're going to look now at
    6 Section 811.706, Subsection 8, the local government
    7 guarantee.
    8
    A. Okay.
    9
    MR. PORTER: That's 716.
    10
    MS. TOMAS: It's listed as 706.
    11
    MR. PORTER: I'm sorry. Excuse me.
    12 BY MS. TOMAS:
    13
    Q. Do you know if the City of Morris
    14 could provide a local government guarantee to meet
    15 the financial assurance regulations?
    16
    A. I don't -- as the local government, it
    17 doesn't really make a lot of sense for them to.
    18
    Generally, the local government
    19 guarantee is designed for a situation where the
    20 local government is neither the owner or the
    21 operator. But they do have to pass the local
    22 governmental financial test, which is 811.716 as
    23 part of the local government guarantee. So they
    24 need to comply with both -- in order to do that,
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    190
    1 they would need to comply with both 811.716 and 717.
    2
    Q. And do you know if they currently meet
    3 those requirements?
    4
    A. No, I do not.
    5
    Q. Has the City ever submitted
    6 information to the Illinois EPA, to your knowledge,
    7 for an evaluation of the local government guarantee
    8 for the Morris Community Landfill?
    9
    A. To my knowledge, they have not.
    10
    Q. And has the City provided any
    11 information for any of the ten mechanisms since the
    12 Frontier bonds were deemed non-compliant?
    13
    A. No, they have not.
    14
    Q. Has CLC provided any information for
    15 any of the ten mechanisms since the Frontier bonds
    16 were deemed non-compliant?
    17
    A. No, they have not.
    18
    Q. So is it your opinion as of today's
    19 date that no compliant financial assurance exists
    20 for the Morris Community Landfill?
    21
    A. Yes.
    22
    Q. And what would either the City or CLC
    23 need to do to provide compliant financial assurance
    24 for the Morris Community Landfill?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    191
    1
    A. They would need to provide financial
    2 assurance that is compliant with the Act and the
    3 regulations in the amounts of the most recent
    4 approved closure cost estimate and post-closure cost
    5 estimate and they would need to use one of the ten
    6 mechanisms that are applicable to them that are
    7 listed in 811.706.
    8
    Q. And the most up-to-date financial
    9 assurance closure/post-closure amount was for 17.4
    10 million?
    11
    A. Yes.
    12
    Q. Okay.
    13
    MS. TOMAS: I'm finished.
    14
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you,
    15
    Ms. Tomas. Ms. Grayson?
    16
    MS. GRAYSON: Could I take a couple
    17
    minutes? Just a few.
    18
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Sure.
    19
    Two minutes. Off the record.
    20
    (Whereupon, after a short
    21
    break was had, the
    22
    following proceedings
    23
    were held accordingly.)
    24
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: We're back
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    192
    1
    on the record. Mr. Porter has volunteered to
    2
    cross first. Thank you, Mr. Porter.
    3
    CROSS EXAMINATION
    4
    By Mr. Porter
    5
    Q. Are you aware that there have been
    6 revised cost estimates provided to the state of
    7 Illinois?
    8
    A. No.
    9
    Q. Assume hypothetically those were
    10 provided in July of this year, have you had any --
    11 strike that.
    12
    Have you had any discussions as to
    13 why the State has not responded to those revised
    14 cost estimates?
    15
    MS. TOMAS: Objection, your Honor. He
    16
    said he's not aware of them.
    17
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Sustained.
    18 BY MR. PORTER:
    19
    Q. You would agree, would you not, that
    20 if the City of Morris meets the financial tests and
    21 had they posted their municipal guarantee, that
    22 would not have cost them anything?
    23
    A. I have really no opinion on that, I
    24 mean, if it would affect their bond rating, for sure
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    193
    1 if they did something -- if they were to -- if they
    2 were to give the financial test -- local government
    3 financial test.
    4
    Q. Well, you said affect their bond
    5 rating. Do you mean it might affect their bonding
    6 authority?
    7
    A. Their ability to borrow. I'm sorry.
    8
    Q. And you don't know whether or not the
    9 City of Morris has adequate bonding authority to
    10 also meet the financial tests, correct?
    11
    A. I'm not sure what the City of Morris
    12 has because I haven't received anything from them.
    13
    Q. Now, whether or not it affects the
    14 bonding authority might be an interesting topic, but
    15 that doesn't mean it would cost the City of Morris
    16 any money to give their financial guarantee, right?
    17
    A. I'm not sure about that.
    18
    Q. In your experience, have you ever
    19 heard of any municipality paying itself, I guess, to
    20 post a financial guarantee?
    21
    A. Once again, I'm not aware of the
    22 municipality's innerworkings.
    23
    Q. You're not aware of any financial gain
    24 that the City of Morris has enjoyed for failing to
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    194
    1 post its own financial guarantee assuming they had a
    2 responsibility to do so, right?
    3
    A. Could you repeat the question?
    4
    Q. Well, are you aware that it wasn't
    5 until June of 2006 that we had a final ruling that
    6 would suggest the City of Morris is responsible now
    7 for posting financial assurance?
    8
    A. I have -- I'm not familiar with that.
    9
    Q. Now, assuming that the City of Morris
    10 meets the financial test and could have posted its
    11 own financial guarantee, you would agree that it did
    12 not enjoy any cost savings for failing to do that,
    13 right?
    14
    A. I don't have an opinion on that.
    15
    Q. So, likewise, you don't have any
    16 opinion that there's been any economic benefit to
    17 the City of Morris for failing to post financial
    18 assurance, correct?
    19
    A. Well, the only thing I can think of,
    20 it might affect their ability to borrow because I
    21 have to list the financial obligation of $17.4
    22 million in their comprehensive annual financial
    23 report filed with the comptroller's office of the
    24 state of Illinois.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    195
    1
    Q. Well, that's assuming, number one,
    2 that the 17.4 is the most recent cost estimate,
    3 right?
    4
    A. It is the most recent approved cost
    5 estimate. Yes.
    6
    Q. Okay. How do you know that?
    7
    A. From reviewing the most recent
    8 approved permit.
    9
    Q. And when did you do that?
    10
    A. The last time I looked at the permit
    11 was this week.
    12
    Q. And when you went to look at the
    13 permit, did you speak to Ms. Roque about it?
    14
    A. I spoke with Ms. Roque regarding
    15 access to the August 4, 2000 permit because the
    16 files were in her office.
    17
    Q. And the files were in her office
    18 because a revised cost estimate had been sent to
    19 her, right?
    20
    A. I'm not sure.
    21
    Q. Did you tell her you were looking at
    22 it to determine whether or not financial assurance
    23 had been posted for the most recent cost estimate?
    24
    A. I just asked her to see the
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    196
    1 August 4th, 2000 permit.
    2
    Q. Okay. You personally had no
    3 involvement in the issuance of violation notices in
    4 this case, right?
    5
    A. With the violation notice, in my other
    6 part as a compliance unit manager, we track the
    7 notice going out and any subsequent actions after
    8 the notice.
    9
    Q. Well, the individual who actually
    10 reviewed the financial assurance records and issued
    11 the notice of violation was Blake Harris, right?
    12
    A. That is correct.
    13
    Q. You had no part in that, correct?
    14
    A. Well, I had no part in actually
    15 issuing that particular notice. As far as doing the
    16 reviews, no comments on it.
    17
    Q. Okay. So my statement is correct, you
    18 had no part in issuing the notices here for
    19 violation, right?
    20
    A. Once again, we track the violation
    21 notice. In other words, we put the violation notice
    22 into our tracking system.
    23
    Q. All right. Do you recall I took your
    24 deposition in 2005, the 20th day of September of
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    197
    1 that year?
    2
    A. I recall doing a deposition, yes.
    3
    Q. And you told the truth in that
    4 deposition, correct?
    5
    A. Yes.
    6
    Q. As a matter of fact, your recollection
    7 back in 2005 of the events around the year 2000
    8 would have been fresher than they are today,
    9 correct?
    10
    A. Reasonable to assume.
    11
    Q. And isn't is it true at Page 30, Line
    12 5 I asked you: So you had absolutely no input of
    13 whether or not that notice of violation should be
    14 issued; is that correct? And you responded: That
    15 is correct.
    16
    A. I have to see my deposition.
    17
    Q. Okay. Do you recall making that
    18 answer to that question?
    19
    A. No, I do not recall.
    20
    Q. Have you ever been to the site?
    21
    A. Yes.
    22
    Q. And when you were at the site, you
    23 didn't notice any violations, correct?
    24
    A. That -- I'm not there to evaluate the
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    198
    1 site for compliance at that time.
    2
    Q. Well, you certainly have no opinion as
    3 to whether closure/post-closure activities which
    4 need to be performed were or were not being
    5 performed at that time, correct?
    6
    A. Once again, that is not my
    7 responsibility with the Agency to make that
    8 determination.
    9
    Q. My statement is right?
    10
    A. Could you repeat the question?
    11
    Q. So you have no opinion as to whether
    12 closure/post-closure activities which allegedly need
    13 to be performed were or were not being performed,
    14 correct?
    15
    A. No, I don't have an opinion -- an
    16 official opinion on that.
    17
    Q. While you were there, you didn't see
    18 any waste being taken at the facility; is that
    19 right?
    20
    A. I did not see any waste that day, no.
    21
    Q. To your knowledge, the City of Morris
    22 has never been the permitted operator; is that
    23 correct? Strike that.
    24
    To your knowledge, the City of
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    199
    1 Morris has not been the permitted operator since
    2 1982; is that correct?
    3
    A. I'm not sure because I haven't
    4 reviewed the file that far back.
    5
    Q. You've never seen anywhere where the
    6 City of Morris was the permitted operator then,
    7 right?
    8
    A. I have not seen that, no.
    9
    Q. The statute actually provides that the
    10 operator or owner shall post financial assurance; is
    11 that correct?
    12
    A. The regulations say the owner or
    13 operator shall provide financial assurance. The
    14 statute says the same.
    15
    Q. And as the owner or operator of the
    16 facility; is that right?
    17
    A. The responsibility would be the
    18 owner's and the operator's to make sure that it's
    19 provided one or the other or both.
    20
    Q. Okay. My question now is it's the
    21 owner or operator of the facility, correct?
    22
    A. It's, yes, the owner or operator.
    23
    Q. And you would agree then that if the
    24 operator posts financial assurances, there's no
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    200
    1 responsibility of the owner to do so, correct?
    2
    A. One or the other has to provide it.
    3 It doesn't matter which one does. Either one can do
    4 it or both can do it.
    5
    Q. And at least through when we took your
    6 deposition at all times Community Landfill Company
    7 had indeed posted financial assurance; isn't that
    8 right?
    9
    A. Once again, without seeing the
    10 deposition, I know that the bonds were issued, that
    11 a bond came -- one of the bonds was with the City of
    12 Morris and two of them were with CLC from Frontier,
    13 so both had provided financial assurance.
    14
    Q. Well, actually, the City of Morris
    15 guaranteed the leachate collection; isn't that
    16 correct?
    17
    A. Not to my knowledge.
    18
    Q. Now, you would agree the bonds were in
    19 full force and effect through at least 2006,
    20 correct?
    21
    A. No, I would not agree.
    22
    Q. When did the bonds no longer become in
    23 effect, in your opinion?
    24
    A. The bonds ceased to be considered
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    201
    1 acceptable financial assurance when Frontier was
    2 terminated from the U.S. Department of Treasurer's
    3 Circular 570, which would have been June of 2000.
    4
    Q. Okay. But the bonds were in full
    5 force and effect through the end of 2006? I'm not
    6 talking now about whether or not you believe that
    7 they were not adequate as far as the EPA is
    8 concerned.
    9
    A. That would probably be a question
    10 better answered by the Department of Insurance and
    11 the State of New York.
    12
    Q. Well, don't the bonds have a date on
    13 them by which they're effective?
    14
    A. I would have to see the bonds. But
    15 the bonds did have an expiration date, yes.
    16
    Q. And that expiration date was sometime
    17 in 2005, right?
    18
    A. I believe so.
    19
    Q. And there's a statutory provision that
    20 allows for that expiration date to be extended by
    21 12 months if there is no alternative financial
    22 assurance posted; is that correct?
    23
    A. That is correct.
    24
    Q. So the bonds were good through 2006,
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    202
    1 correct?
    2
    A. Once again, that's something that the
    3 Department of Insurance and state of New York are
    4 probably better suited to answer.
    5
    Q. You don't know?
    6
    A. I don't know the Frontier case.
    7
    Q. That isn't what I asked you. You
    8 don't know if the bonds were valid in 2006, correct?
    9
    A. I do not know.
    10
    Q. All right. Do you know when
    11 Frontier -- strike that.
    12
    Do you know when or if Frontier
    13 Insurance Company ever lost or had its license
    14 suspended by the Illinois Department of Insurance?
    15
    A. I'm not aware of their dealings with
    16 the Illinois Department of Insurance.
    17
    Q. So it's possible that they still have
    18 a license with the Illinois Department of Insurance?
    19
    A. I have no opinion on that.
    20
    Q. Wouldn't you agree that Section 712 of
    21 the financial assurance regulations provides that a
    22 bonding company is acceptable if it's licensed by
    23 the Illinois Department of Insurance?
    24
    A. There is more to the statement than
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    203
    1 that. There's a conjunction in there. It says that
    2 the -- and approved by the U.S. Department of
    3 Treasury is an acceptable surety.
    4
    Q. All right. Let's take a look at it.
    5 Section 811.712 says if you're licensed by the
    6 Department of Insurance or, and then it provides the
    7 language that you were talking about, correct?
    8
    A. Yes.
    9
    Q. Okay. But you've never determined
    10 whether or not Frontier Insurance Company is indeed
    11 licensed by the Illinois Department of Insurance,
    12 right?
    13
    A. I personally have not.
    14
    Q. Do you know if anybody has at the
    15 state of Illinois?
    16
    A. I'm not sure.
    17
    Q. You are aware that the City at one
    18 time offered or discussed with the state of Illinois
    19 that it would post financial assurance by providing
    20 its guarantee of performance, correct?
    21
    A. I'm not sure that you mean by that,
    22 guarantee of performance.
    23
    Q. Well, you know what a municipal
    24 guarantee is, right?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    204
    1
    A. A local government guarantee.
    2
    Q. Okay. Do you know what a local
    3 governmental guarantee is, correct?
    4
    A. Yes.
    5
    Q. And that is a guarantee that the local
    6 governmental body will either perform or see to it
    7 that a third party performs, right?
    8
    A. Could you repeat that, please?
    9
    Q. And what that provides -- what that
    10 means is a local governmental body will guarantee
    11 that the body itself will perform or see to it that
    12 a third party performs, correct?
    13
    A. For the local government guarantee --
    14 once again, I explained before with the local
    15 government guarantee, this is an unusual case
    16 because generally that's designed for somebody
    17 that's neither the owner or operator to use the
    18 guarantee because they have to qualify under the
    19 local government financial tests first.
    20
    And if they qualify under the
    21 local government financial tests and they are an
    22 owner or operator -- in this case, they're the
    23 owner -- it really wouldn't make a whole lot of
    24 sense to use the local government guarantee, just
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    205
    1 complete the necessary work for the local government
    2 financial test, which is 811.716.
    3
    Q. You're saying it wouldn't make sense
    4 for a local governmental entity to post its own
    5 guarantee that it will perform. Upon what do you
    6 base that?
    7
    A. The local government guarantee
    8 requires that they guarantee for an owner or
    9 operator that they'll put up the money or they'll
    10 insure an owner or operator and, generally, they are
    11 not the owner or operator of the situation and that
    12 they have to comply with 811.716, which is the local
    13 government financial test first. And then as part
    14 of that, they provide the local government
    15 guarantee.
    16
    Q. You would agree that the City of
    17 Morris, had it known that it was going to be
    18 responsible for posting financial assurance, could
    19 have provided its own guarantee, correct?
    20
    A. I'm not really sure what the City of
    21 Morris' financial situation is.
    22
    Q. Okay. Assuming the City of Morris
    23 meets the financial test, you would agree that they
    24 could post their own financial guarantee, correct?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    206
    1
    A. I can't assume that they'd meet the
    2 local government financial test.
    3
    Q. I'm asking you to assume. It's a
    4 hypothetical for the purpose of this question.
    5
    Assume that the City of Morris
    6 meets the financial test. If, indeed, they meet
    7 that, they could post a local municipal guarantee,
    8 correct? It doesn't matter that they are the owner,
    9 according to the PCB, of the facility, right?
    10
    A. Well, if they meet the local
    11 government financial tests, they could stop there
    12 much. They wouldn't need to provide the guarantee
    13 because --
    14
    Q. Upon what do you base that?
    15
    A. Because the local government guarantee
    16 generally is used for somebody when a local
    17 government guarantees something for which they are
    18 neither the owner or the operator because they have
    19 to meet the local government financial tests first.
    20
    If they meet local government
    21 financial tests, it doesn't make any sense to go for
    22 the guarantee after that. I mean, they meet all the
    23 requirements by that point.
    24
    Q. Okay. We clearly had a
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    207
    1 miscommunication. You're indicating that financial
    2 assurance can be met merely by the City of Morris
    3 meeting the financial tests; is that right?
    4
    A. If they meet the local government
    5 financial tests, they could post that as acceptable
    6 financial assurance. That's one of the ten items
    7 listed in 811.706.
    8
    Q. And do you know if they meet that
    9 financial test?
    10
    A. I don't know because they haven't
    11 provided us with anything to evaluate them on.
    12
    Q. You are aware that early on in this
    13 case there was discussion of the City of Morris
    14 providing its own municipal guarantee, which was
    15 rejected, correct?
    16
    A. I have no knowledge of that because,
    17 to my knowledge, they've never submitted anything
    18 for us to evaluate.
    19
    Q. You're aware that there was talk of
    20 it; is that right?
    21
    A. I know they had talked about a local
    22 government guarantee, yes.
    23
    (Brief pause.)
    24
    MR. PORTER: Nothing further. Thank
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    208
    1
    you.
    2
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you.
    3
    Ms. Grayson?
    4
    MS. GRAYSON: Yes. A few questions.
    5
    Mr. White, I'm Clarissa Grayson, counsel for
    6
    Community Landfill Company.
    7
    CROSS EXAMINATION
    8
    By Ms. Grayson
    9
    Q. Are you aware of the financial
    10 condition of Community Landfill Company?
    11
    A. No, I'm not.
    12
    Q. Do you know whether CLC had any intent
    13 to not pay the financial assurance?
    14
    A. The only thing I know is that there
    15 isn't financial assurance by the owner or operator
    16 at this time that complies with the statutes or the
    17 regulations.
    18
    Q. Do you know how much in premiums that
    19 CLC has paid over the years for financial
    20 assurance --
    21
    A. No, I do not.
    22
    Q. -- for the Frontier bonds?
    23
    Do you have any knowledge as to
    24 whether Community Landfill Company can afford to
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    209
    1 provide financial assurance?
    2
    A. I have no knowledge.
    3
    Q. Do you think that the company's
    4 ability to make money and generate income is
    5 hampered by the fact that they're not allowed to
    6 deposit waste in certain parts of the landfill?
    7
    A. I have no opinion on that.
    8
    Q. When did you visit the landfill?
    9
    A. I would have to look back at the
    10 records to say with any certainty.
    11
    Q. Who were you with?
    12
    A. I was with Mark Retzlaff, Chris
    13 Liebman, who is with our permit section. Mark is
    14 with our field operations section. And Beverly
    15 Anderson was there.
    16
    Q. What was the purpose of the visit?
    17
    A. Because Mark was going up there to
    18 evaluate the landfill. Chris Liebman, from our
    19 permits section, went up there to -- and somebody
    20 else might have been up there, too, I don't really
    21 recall -- as a permit reviewer to get a better idea
    22 and we just came along with him, the financial
    23 assurance folks.
    24
    Q. The financial assurance folks just
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    210
    1 came along?
    2
    A. Yes.
    3
    Q. And did you have a reason to go?
    4
    A. Just become familiar with where the
    5 landfill was, get a little better idea about the
    6 landfill.
    7
    Q. Do you normally go and visit
    8 landfills? Is that part of your job?
    9
    A. It certainly could be part of the job.
    10 Do we normally do it? No.
    11
    Q. And why did you do it this time?
    12
    A. Because there was an ongoing
    13 enforcement case.
    14
    Q. Do you ever visit other landfills
    15 where there are ongoing enforcement cases?
    16
    A. There is the possibility that we
    17 would, yes.
    18
    Q. Have you ever?
    19
    A. No, I have not.
    20
    MS. GRAYSON: I have nothing further.
    21
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you.
    22
    Mr. Grant or Ms. Tomas?
    23
    MS. TOMAS: Nothing further.
    24
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: All right.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    211
    1
    Sir, you may step down. Thank you so much.
    2
    We're off the record.
    3
    (Brief pause.)
    4
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: We're back
    5
    on the record. It's approximately 2:20. I
    6
    believe the State will call their fourth
    7
    witness.
    8
    MR. GRANT: Yes, Mr. Halloran. This
    9
    is our final witness.
    10
    (Witness sworn.)
    11 WHEREUPON:
    12
    CHRISTINE ROQUE
    13 called as a witness herein, having been first duly
    14 sworn, was examined and testified as follows:
    15
    DIRECT EXAMINATION
    16
    By Mr. Grant
    17
    Q. Ms. Roque, would you please state your
    18 name and spell it for the record, please?
    19
    A. My name is Christine Roque,
    20 C-H-R-I-S-T-I-N-E, R-O-Q-U-E.
    21
    Q. And where do you reside?
    22
    A. I reside in Springfield, Illinois.
    23
    Q. And who are you employed with?
    24
    A. I'm with the Illinois Environmental
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    212
    1 Protection Agency.
    2
    Q. How long have you been with the
    3 Agency?
    4
    A. I started in July 1992.
    5
    Q. Can you give me a description of your
    6 educational background, please?
    7
    A. I received my bachelor of science in
    8 industrial engineering management from U of I in
    9 Chicago in 1991.
    10
    Q. And what is your current position at
    11 Illinois EPA?
    12
    A. My current title is environmental
    13 protection engineer III.
    14
    Q. And do you work in the permit section?
    15
    A. Yes, I do.
    16
    Q. Okay. What are your responsibilities?
    17
    A. I work in the solid waste unit of the
    18 permit section. I review applications for
    19 development, operation and closure of non-hazardous
    20 waste facilities.
    21
    Q. Okay. Approximately how many
    22 non-hazardous solid waste facilities have you been
    23 responsible for?
    24
    A. Over the course of 15 years, probably
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    213
    1 around 30 I've worked on.
    2
    Q. And are you familiar with the
    3 Environmental Protection Act and the Board
    4 regulations pertaining to municipal solid waste
    5 landfills?
    6
    A. Yes, I am.
    7
    Q. Do you refer to the Environmental
    8 Protection Act and these regulations on a regular
    9 basis?
    10
    A. Yes, I do.
    11
    Q. Are you familiar with the Morris
    12 Community Landfill?
    13
    A. Yes, I am.
    14
    Q. Are you responsible for that landfill
    15 in the permit section?
    16
    A. Yes, I am.
    17
    Q. How long has it been your
    18 responsibility?
    19
    A. I believe I started working on it in
    20 1996.
    21
    Q. Can you tell me who the permitted
    22 owner and permitted operator of the Morris Community
    23 Landfill is?
    24
    A. The permitted owner is the City of
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    214
    1 Morris and the permitted operator is the Community
    2 Landfill Company.
    3
    Q. Approximately how many Bureau of Land
    4 permits have been issued to the City of Morris as
    5 owner -- strike that.
    6
    Approximately how many land
    7 permits have been issued to the City of Morris for
    8 the landfill?
    9
    A. Approximately, around 50 or 55.
    10
    Q. And, likewise, approximately how many
    11 permits have been issued by Illinois EPA to
    12 Community Landfill Company for the Morris Community
    13 Landfill?
    14
    A. As operator, I believe around 50.
    15
    Q. Okay. And I'm going to ask you to
    16 turn in that binder in front of you to Exhibit
    17 No. 12.
    18
    A. Exhibit 12?
    19
    Q. Yes.
    20
    A. Okay.
    21
    Q. Can you take a look. They're
    22 separated by a gold sheet. There's actually two
    23 documents there. Can you take a look at them?
    24
    A. Okay.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    215
    1
    Q. Can you just briefly describe what
    2 they are?
    3
    A. One document is the permit number
    4 2000-156 LFM for Parcel B and the other permit is
    5 permit number 2000-155 LFM for Parcel A.
    6
    Q. And these are the two parcels of the
    7 Morris Community Landfill?
    8
    A. Yes.
    9
    Q. And do the permits themselves identify
    10 the owner and the operator?
    11
    A. Yes.
    12
    Q. And what does it list?
    13
    A. The owner is City of Morris and the
    14 operator is Community Landfill Company.
    15
    Q. Did the City of Morris and Community
    16 Landfill Company apply for these permits?
    17
    A. Yes.
    18
    Q. Do the permits identify the amount of
    19 closure/post-closure financial assurance required
    20 for the Morris Community Landfill?
    21
    A. Yes.
    22
    Q. Okay. And about how much is that
    23 approximately?
    24
    A. The total for both is 17.4 million,
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    216
    1 approximately.
    2
    Q. Okay. How are figures for the amount
    3 of closure and post-closure financial assurance
    4 arrived at?
    5
    A. The applicant will propose the cost
    6 estimate in an applications and the EPA will review
    7 it and approve it eventually.
    8
    Q. Okay. Can these amounts be modified?
    9
    A. Yes.
    10
    Q. How would you modify the amount of
    11 financial assurance? How would somebody who had a
    12 permit modify of amount of financial assurance?
    13
    A. The applicant needs to submit a
    14 significant modification application revising the
    15 cost estimate, then we will review it, meaning the
    16 IEPA will review it.
    17
    Q. Do these permits require annual
    18 updates of closure and post-closure costs?
    19
    A. Yes.
    20
    Q. For the cost estimate I think is the
    21 term?
    22
    A. Yes.
    23
    Q. Okay. And are annual updates also
    24 required under the Pollution Control Board
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    217
    1 regulations?
    2
    A. Yes.
    3
    Q. Have the City of Morris or Community
    4 Landfill Company ever submitted annual updates?
    5
    A. No.
    6
    Q. Between the time that the permit was
    7 issued and July of 2007, did either of the City of
    8 Morris or Community Landfill Company ever seek a
    9 permit modification for reduction in financial
    10 assurance?
    11
    A. July of 2007?
    12
    Q. Yes. Up to July of 2007.
    13
    A. No.
    14
    Q. Has the City of Morris now submitted a
    15 new estimate of closure and post-closure costs?
    16
    A. There is an addendum to the renewal
    17 application for a revised cost estimate.
    18
    Q. Do you know when the renewal
    19 application was submitted, the application itself?
    20
    A. The original submittal was in 2005, I
    21 believe. Around April 2005.
    22
    Q. So just so we're clear, though, there
    23 has been a new cost estimate for
    24 closure/post-closure submitted this year as an
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    218
    1 addendum to 2005 renewal application; is that
    2 accurate?
    3
    A. Yes.
    4
    Q. And is this new estimate of
    5 closure/post-closure costs currently under review by
    6 Illinois EPA?
    7
    A. It's under review.
    8
    Q. Okay. And is that under review in the
    9 permit section?
    10
    A. With the permit section.
    11
    Q. Okay. If Illinois EPA was to accept a
    12 new cost estimate, how would it become effective?
    13
    A. If we were to accept a new cost
    14 estimate, then we -- it will be reflected in the
    15 permit that will be issued.
    16
    Q. So you would issue a new permit?
    17
    A. Yes.
    18
    Q. Okay. And until that new permit was
    19 issued, would the old -- the former cost estimate
    20 still be effective?
    21
    A. Yes.
    22
    Q. Looking at Exhibit 12, which is the
    23 permits, and specifically permit number 156 for
    24 Parcel B, at the time that it was issued, what did
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    219
    1 this permit approve?
    2
    A. Permit 2000-156 LFM for Parcel B
    3 approved the development and closure of Parcel B.
    4
    Q. Okay. And does it also deal with
    5 overhead issues at Parcel B?
    6
    A. Yes.
    7
    Q. Okay. To the best of your knowledge,
    8 has closure of Parcel B been accomplished?
    9
    A. Not to my knowledge.
    10
    Q. To the best of your knowledge, has the
    11 over-height issues before been resolved pursuant to
    12 the permit's terms?
    13
    A. Not to my knowledge.
    14
    Q. Based on your knowledge, is closure
    15 now due for Parcel B?
    16
    A. I believe so.
    17
    Q. Are any operating permits in place now
    18 for disposal of waste in Parcel A at the landfill?
    19
    A. We have not issued any new operating
    20 permits for Parcel A.
    21
    Q. Okay. Did the City of Morris and
    22 Community Landfill Company apply for an operating
    23 permit for Parcel A back in 2001?
    24
    A. Yes, they did.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    220
    1
    Q. Okay. Was that permit denied?
    2
    A. Yes.
    3
    Q. Did they appeal that denial?
    4
    A. Yes.
    5
    Q. Did you testify at the Board hearing
    6 on that permit appeal?
    7
    A. Yes.
    8
    Q. Does a permit for Parcel A allow the
    9 acceptance of hazardous, non-petroleum contaminated
    10 soil -- I'm sorry -- non-hazardous petroleum
    11 contaminated soil?
    12
    MR. PORTER: I'm sorry. I need that
    13
    read back.
    14
    MR. GRANT: Let me withdraw the
    15
    question and restate it.
    16 BY MR. GRANT:
    17
    Q. Does the permit -- and, specifically,
    18 I'm taking about the permit that's in Exhibit 12 for
    19 Parcel A. Does it allow the acceptance of
    20 non-hazardous petroleum contaminated soil?
    21
    MR. PORTER: Objection, irrelevant.
    22
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Mr. Grant?
    23
    MR. GRANT: I think we're talking
    24
    about continuing waste disposal. It's -- I'm
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    221
    1
    going to go on to show that they have been
    2
    disposing of non-hazardous petroleum soil and
    3
    some other substances without a permit which
    4
    shows continued waste disposal.
    5
    The continued violation we've
    6
    alleged is operating -- is conducting a waste
    7
    disposal operation in violation of the
    8
    financial assurance regs. And where we're
    9
    going with this is to show continued waste
    10
    disposal, so a continual operation of a waste
    11
    disposal operation.
    12
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: That pretty
    13
    much coincided with my ruling earlier. Mr.
    14
    Porter?
    15
    MR. PORTER: And I'm going to stand by
    16
    the same objection I made earlier. But this
    17
    one and another one. No foundation. We
    18
    haven't heard that this witness was ever at
    19
    that site.
    20
    MR. GRANT: I'm asking about the
    21
    permit.
    22
    MR. PORTER: But this is the last
    23
    witness and he's now -- you know, we don't
    24
    have any evidence that any of this is
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    222
    1
    happening that he's alluding to. And this
    2
    witness -- we haven't laid the foundation
    3
    he's ever been there or a witness to any of
    4
    this.
    5
    MR. GRANT: And, actually, now that
    6
    you mention it, I don't think that came into
    7
    testimony today.
    8
    MR. PORTER: I didn't hear it.
    9
    MR. GRANT: There was -- in the
    10
    inspection reports that were admitted as an
    11
    exhibit, there was a report of a disposal of
    12
    sewage sludge from the City of Morris. I
    13
    think that was testified to today.
    14
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: I think
    15
    Mr. -- the first witness.
    16
    MR. GRANT: Yes. Mr. Retzlaff
    17
    testified to that. And so the question is is
    18
    this allowed? In other words, are they
    19
    disposing of waste -- the permit itself --
    20
    there's sort of a question of what is waste
    21
    and what isn't waste because the permit
    22
    itself does allow under certain circumstances
    23
    this material to be brought in and disposed
    24
    of.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    223
    1
    You know, what we're going to show
    2
    is that those conditions were not met and so,
    3
    therefore, what they brought in and discarded
    4
    there was waste. So it goes to show
    5
    continuing waste disposal. My question was
    6
    about petroleum-contaminated soil and I'm
    7
    going to withdraw that --
    8
    MR. PORTER: Okay.
    9
    MR. GRANT: -- specifically.
    10
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Go ahead,
    11
    Mr. Grant.
    12 BY MR. GRANT:
    13
    Q. Onto the next one. Does the permit
    14 for Parcel A allow the acceptance at Parcel A of dry
    15 sewage sludge?
    16
    MS. GRAYSON: Objection.
    17
    MR. PORTER: Same objection. Counsel,
    18
    I know we've stipulated to some documents. I
    19
    don't recall seeing any document that
    20
    referenced dry sewage sludge, therefore, I
    21
    don't believe there's the foundation
    22
    necessary to get into this. If you could
    23
    quickly show it to me, I might be able to --
    24
    MR. GRANT: Yeah. Sure. And I
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    224
    1
    appreciate the stipulation. But I think
    2
    Mr. Retzlaff also testified that when he
    3
    was -- it could have been the June inspection
    4
    that he saw an accumulation of sewage sludge
    5
    that had been deposited at the face of the
    6
    landfill. So it's not just a matter of --
    7
    it's somewhere in the exhibits we stipulated
    8
    to.
    9
    MR. PORTER: I don't recall it,
    10
    Mr. Halloran. I'll just object.
    11
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: You know,
    12
    I think I do recall that, Mr. Porter. And
    13
    I've allowed latitude so far and I will
    14
    continue to allow a little latitude. So
    15
    overruled. Mr. Grant?
    16
    MR. GRANT: And just for the record,
    17
    this is the June 26th, 2007 inspection
    18
    report, which is People's Exhibit 7 and it's
    19
    exposure number six. I believe that when we
    20
    were going through the photographs that
    21
    Mr. Retzlaff testified that he saw sewage
    22
    sludge there.
    23
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Proceed.
    24
    MR. GRANT: Okay.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    225
    1 BY MR. GRANT:
    2
    Q. Ms. Roque, does the permit for Parcel
    3 A allow for the acceptance of sewage sludge at the
    4 landfill for Parcel A?
    5
    A. The permit for Parcel A allows for
    6 acceptance of municipal waste and non-hazardous
    7 special waste, which includes sewage sludge and
    8 petroleum-contaminated soil.
    9
    Q. Okay. I think you testified that
    10 there's no current operating permit at the
    11 landfill -- or, I'm sorry, for Parcel A of the
    12 landfill?
    13
    A. We haven't issued any new permit for
    14 any new area to place waste.
    15
    MR. GRANT: Okay. That's all I have.
    16
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you.
    17
    Ms. Grayson, do you need a few minutes? Do
    18
    you want Mr. Porter to proceed?
    19
    MS. GRAYSON: I wouldn't mind a few
    20
    minutes.
    21
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Take your
    22
    time. Mr. Porter, are you ready?
    23
    MR. PORTER: Sure.
    24
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    226
    1
    CROSS EXAMINATION
    2
    By Mr. Porter
    3
    Q. Your duties don't normally involve
    4 determining whether or not any permit condition has
    5 been violated; isn't that correct?
    6
    A. No.
    7
    Q. My statement was right?
    8
    A. Your statement was right.
    9
    Q. That's normally a job for the Bureau
    10 of Land inspectors; is that right?
    11
    A. Yes.
    12
    Q. At this time, you don't have any
    13 opinion as to whether or not adequate financial
    14 assurances have been posted, right?
    15
    A. No.
    16
    Q. So my statement is correct, you don't
    17 have any opinion whether or not or not adequate
    18 financial assurance has been posted? Let me ask it
    19 this way. It's easier. Do you have any opinion
    20 that adequate financial assurances have not been
    21 posted?
    22
    A. I have an opinion.
    23
    Q. Okay. Do you recall when we took your
    24 deposition in -- I'm sorry. I have to get it out.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    227
    1 I actually don't have it right in front of me. I
    2 believe it was 2005 we when took your deposition.
    3 Do you remember giving a deposition in this case?
    4
    A. Yes.
    5
    Q. And at that time do you remember
    6 telling me you had no opinion as to whether or not
    7 adequate financial assurance had been posted at Page
    8 96, Line 24?
    9
    A. In 2005, I mean, I have an opinion,
    10 but now too.
    11
    Q. Okay. You understand that the
    12 violation notices went out in 2000?
    13
    A. I believe so.
    14
    Q. And so something has happened since
    15 2005 that has changed your opinions regarding this
    16 case?
    17
    A. Yes.
    18
    Q. What was it that happened?
    19
    A. I've read my transcript of my -- I
    20 read about the case.
    21
    Q. You don't have any opinion today, do
    22 you, that there's been any environmental damage or
    23 endangering of health, safety or welfare by an
    24 alleged failure to comply with any environmental law
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    228
    1 at issue in this case; is that correct?
    2
    A. Can you repeat your question?
    3
    Q. You don't have any opinion that
    4 anything the City of Morris has done has in any way
    5 caused any environmental damage or endangering of
    6 health, safety or welfare, do you?
    7
    A. No.
    8
    Q. You don't have any opinion that the
    9 City has enjoyed any cost savings concerning the
    10 alleged violations identified in this case, do you?
    11
    A. As far as cost savings? No.
    12
    Q. Now, there was a mention of a revised
    13 cost estimate that apparently was issued in July of
    14 2007. Do you recall that testimony?
    15
    A. Issued in July 2007 or submitted in
    16 July of 2007?
    17
    Q. Understood. Let me show you what
    18 we've had marked as City of Morris Exhibits Nos. 1
    19 and 2.
    20
    (Document tendered to the
    21
    witness.)
    22 BY MR. PORTER:
    23
    Q. Are those the revised cost estimates
    24 that were submitted on July 12 of 2007?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    229
    1
    A. Maybe.
    2
    Q. Isn't it true that those were sent
    3 directly to you?
    4
    A. Yes.
    5
    Q. And you do have a recollection of
    6 having reviewed those cost estimates, right?
    7
    A. Preliminary. I have not reviewed the
    8 whole technical review.
    9
    Q. Okay. When was it that you learned we
    10 were going to hearing today?
    11
    A. About a week ago.
    12
    Q. All right. And at that time -- strike
    13 that.
    14
    You got the cost estimates on or
    15 about July 12, 2007, but haven't yet reviewed them;
    16 is that correct?
    17
    A. That's correct.
    18
    Q. And at least a week ago you knew that
    19 the State was going to be presenting a case
    20 asserting that the cost of closure/post-closure care
    21 in this matter was $17.4 million, right?
    22
    A. Right.
    23
    Q. So isn't it true that you should have
    24 looked at the revised cost estimates and determined
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    230
    1 if they were reasonable?
    2
    A. I looked at them.
    3
    Q. You don't have any reason -- strike
    4 that.
    5
    You would agree that those cost
    6 estimates submitted by Shaw on July 12, 2007 are
    7 reasonable, correct?
    8
    A. I cannot make a determination today if
    9 they're reasonable or not.
    10
    Q. Well, what process is involved in
    11 making a determination of reasonableness of a cost
    12 estimate?
    13
    A. For this revised cost estimate
    14 submitted as part of the renewal, it involves us
    15 reviewing a revised closure plan that corresponds to
    16 the cost estimate.
    17
    Q. Okay. And the closure plan was also
    18 provided; is that right?
    19
    A. No.
    20
    Q. Okay. Have you requested a closure
    21 plan from CLC or Shaw or the City?
    22
    A. In one of the draft denials that was
    23 sent to them, we requested an operational plan and,
    24 consequently, a closure plan that would support the
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    231
    1 cost estimate.
    2
    Q. No denial has been sent, has it?
    3
    A. It's a draft denial.
    4
    Q. Okay.
    5
    A. For this pending application. The
    6 renewal application.
    7
    Q. And so if I understand correctly then,
    8 it's your intent to deny the revised cost estimates?
    9
    A. I'm not intending to deny cost
    10 estimates. We are reviewing it. I'm not the only
    11 one reviewing this cost estimate. The groundwater
    12 section also has to review the groundwater
    13 monitoring portion of that cost estimate.
    14
    Q. When do you expect to get a
    15 determination on the revised cost estimate?
    16
    A. I don't know.
    17
    Q. Is there any statutory requirement as
    18 to when you're supposed to provide a review of the
    19 cost estimate?
    20
    A. We have a 90-day review period for
    21 each application.
    22
    Q. And do you expect to at least meet the
    23 90-day review period?
    24
    A. Before the 90-day period is up, we
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    232
    1 will make a determination whether it's going to be
    2 approved or we will send them a draft denial letter
    3 allowing them to respond or correct the deficiency.
    4
    Q. Wouldn't you agree that it would be
    5 reasonable to await your determination before we try
    6 to craft a remedy in this case?
    7
    A. Could you repeat that, please?
    8
    Q. Wouldn't you agree that it would be
    9 reasonable for the Pollution Control Board, this
    10 body, to await your determination on the revised
    11 cost estimates before we try to craft a remedy?
    12
    A. I don't know.
    13
    Q. Now, you did say you preliminarily
    14 reviewed the cost estimates. Was there anything in
    15 those that jumped out at you as unreasonable?
    16
    A. Just there's no operational plan
    17 submitted with the renewal application. We
    18 cannot -- the cost estimate should be based on and
    19 consistent with the current operation of the
    20 landfill, current condition. We're not -- we don't
    21 have that information right now.
    22
    Q. Let me direct your attention to what
    23 we've had marked as Morris Exhibit No. 10.
    24
    MR. PORTER: May I see yours to make
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    233
    1
    sure I marked them correctly?
    2
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Yes.
    3
    (Brief pause.)
    4 BY MR. PORTER:
    5
    Q. Let me show you what we've had marked
    6 as Exhibit 10, which is a schedule of closure
    7 activities at the Morris Community Landfill, Parcels
    8 A and B, drafted by Shaw Environmental and a draft
    9 letter also drafted by Shaw Environmental that is
    10 admittedly own in draft form at this time. Have you
    11 seen either of these documents before today?
    12
    A. I don't remember.
    13
    Q. Are you aware that those documents
    14 have been shared with the state of Illinois well
    15 before this day?
    16
    A. I don't know.
    17
    Q. Other than the failure to have an
    18 operational plan -- well, strike that. Let me cut
    19 to the chase.
    20
    The revised cost estimates are
    21 $7 million less than the previous cost estimates.
    22 Did you notice that?
    23
    A. Yes.
    24
    Q. And did that reduction in amount give
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    234
    1 you any pause or concern?
    2
    A. Yes.
    3
    Q. And has it been explained to you as to
    4 how it is that that reduction has occurred?
    5
    A. Not through the application.
    6
    Q. Well, that wasn't my question. Has it
    7 been explained to you how that reduction has
    8 occurred?
    9
    A. No.
    10
    Q. Have you been informed that there has
    11 now been the testing to determine that the leachate
    12 monitoring system that was included in the prior
    13 cost estimate was actually amended in this cost
    14 estimate because the groundwater is a Class IV
    15 rather than Class I and there's a different system
    16 to be employed by Shaw? Has any of that been
    17 explained to you?
    18
    A. No.
    19
    Q. Are you familiar with Shaw
    20 Environmental?
    21
    A. Yes.
    22
    Q. And you would agree that they are a
    23 highly reputable organization when it comes to
    24 designing and implementing closure/post-closure
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    235
    1 plans?
    2
    A. I don't know.
    3
    Q. You would agree that they are one of
    4 the, if not the common engineering firm utilized for
    5 that purpose in Illinois?
    6
    A. I don't know.
    7
    Q. Do you have any reason to not trust
    8 Shaw Environmental's cost estimates?
    9
    A. No.
    10
    Q. When is it -- strike that.
    11
    Counsel brought up to you some
    12 statements in the SIGMOD permit concerning
    13 over-height. Do you remember that testimony?
    14
    A. Yes.
    15
    Q. And in particular -- strike that.
    16
    When is it that you believe
    17 over-height was reached in regard to Parcel B?
    18
    A. When was it reached?
    19
    Q. Correct.
    20
    A. I don't know when exactly it was
    21 reached. But during the review of the initial
    22 SIGMOD in 1996, that's when I questioned them.
    23
    Q. So as early as 1996 the EPA was aware
    24 or believed anyway that Parcel B was at over-height,
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    236
    1 correct?
    2
    A. Yes.
    3
    Q. At any time did you or anybody at the
    4 EPA direct CLC to close the landfill in 1996 or
    5 1997?
    6
    A. I informed or questioned the
    7 application in 1996 -- that's the application
    8 submitted by CLC's consultant at the time -- in
    9 question about the over-height.
    10
    Q. Okay. But you would agree, would you
    11 not, the regulations call for the closure of a
    12 landfill once it meets its height? As a matter of
    13 fact, it's supposed to be closed in 90 days; isn't
    14 that correct?
    15
    A. Correct.
    16
    Q. And at any time did you direct CLC to
    17 close Parcel B?
    18
    A. No. It was proposed in their
    19 application.
    20
    Q. And do you or did anybody at the EPA,
    21 to your knowledge, ever direct the City of Morris
    22 that it should somehow close the landfill as early
    23 as 1996?
    24
    A. No.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    237
    1
    Q. You would agree that the EPA had the
    2 authority to direct CLC to close that landfill as
    3 early then as 1996, correct?
    4
    A. Could you repeat your question?
    5
    Q. You would agree that the EPA had the
    6 authority to direct CLC to close Parcel B of the
    7 landfill as early at 1996, correct?
    8
    A. I believe so.
    9
    Q. And to your knowledge, the EPA never
    10 did that, correct?
    11
    A. I'm not aware.
    12
    Q. Okay. Would you agree, therefore,
    13 that the environment would be better protected by
    14 closing the landfill now rather than buying some
    15 insurance or a bond?
    16
    A. I don't know.
    17
    MR. PORTER: Nothing further.
    18
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you,
    19
    Mr. Porter. Ms. Grayson?
    20
    MS. GRAYSON: Yes.
    21
    CROSS EXAMINATION
    22
    By Ms. Grayson
    23
    Q. Did you work on reviewing the -- did
    24 you work on the permit review for the significant
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    238
    1 modification in August 2000?
    2
    A. Yes.
    3
    Q. And do you have any knowledge as to
    4 why CLC was required to post $17 million in
    5 financial assurance back in August 2000?
    6
    A. That was the cost estimate that they'd
    7 come up with.
    8
    Q. And what was included in that cost
    9 estimate? Do you have any recollection?
    10
    A. Closure of Parcel A. Pretty much a
    11 closure of Parcel A, closure of Parcel B, removing
    12 of -- there's some waste relocation costs and
    13 post-closure monitoring costs for up to 100 years.
    14
    Q. Part of the reason why that
    15 significant modification was granted, however, was
    16 because they posted the adequate financial assurance
    17 at the time; is that correct?
    18
    A. At the time, yes.
    19
    Q. In August 2004?
    20
    A. Yes.
    21
    Q. The permit was granted because there
    22 was adequate financial assurance?
    23
    A. Yes.
    24
    Q. I'm sorry. In August 2000. Not
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    239
    1 August 2004.
    2
    A. 2000.
    3
    Q. It was August 4th, 2000, just to
    4 clarify the record.
    5
    Did you then later review the
    6 supplemental permit application for the separation
    7 layer in the new cell that CLC submitted after that?
    8 It was sometime after that. Sometime before May
    9 of 2001.
    10
    A. It's the significant modification
    11 application for operating permit, Parcel A.
    12
    Q. Correct?
    13
    A. Yes.
    14
    Q. And you reviewed that. And do you
    15 know why that permit was denied?
    16
    A. One of the reasons is the financial
    17 assurance, they didn't have adequate -- or the right
    18 financial assurance document.
    19
    Q. So at the time that the permit was --
    20 the permit. I'm sorry significant modification was
    21 issued in August 2000, the financial assurance was
    22 adequate, and then nine months later it was not
    23 adequate; is that correct?
    24
    A. That's correct.
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    240
    1
    Q. And do you know how much financial
    2 assurance was posted by CLC prior to the issuance of
    3 the significant modification permit in August 2000,
    4 just roughly?
    5
    A. Okay. I'm not -- I don't remember the
    6 exact amount.
    7
    Q. Was it less?
    8
    A. I don't know.
    9
    Q. Okay. Do you have any knowledge of --
    10 are you aware of the financial condition of
    11 Community Landfill Company?
    12
    A. No.
    13
    Q. And do you know whether Community
    14 Landfill Company ever had any intention to not pay
    15 for financial assurance?
    16
    A. No.
    17
    Q. Do you have any knowledge as to
    18 whether CLC can afford financial assurance?
    19
    A. No.
    20
    Q. Do you think that the ability of the
    21 landfill -- of the company to make money has been
    22 hampered by the fact that they're not able to accept
    23 waste pursuant to the supplemental permit
    24 application?
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    241
    1
    A. Can you repeat that?
    2
    Q. Sure. Do you think that the company's
    3 ability to generate income has been hampered by the
    4 fact that that supplemental permit application was
    5 denied?
    6
    A. I don't know.
    7
    Q. Okay.
    8
    MS. GRAYSON: I have nothing further.
    9
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Is that
    10
    all, Ms. Grayson?
    11
    MS. GRAYSON: That's it.
    12
    HEARING OFFICER: Mr. Grant, redirect?
    13
    MR. GRANT: No.
    14
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Okay. You
    15
    may step down. Thank you so much. We can go
    16
    off the record for a second.
    17
    (Brief pause.)
    18
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: We're back
    19
    on the record. Mr. Grant, do you have
    20
    anything to say?
    21
    MR. GRANT: Mr. Halloran, the State
    22
    has presented all of its evidence and rests
    23
    its case in chief.
    24
    HEARING OFFICER HALLORAN: Thank you
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    242
    1
    very much. I think what we'll do is we'll
    2
    adjourn today. It's approximately 3:00
    3
    o'clock. We'll resume tomorrow at 9:00 a.m.,
    4
    September 12th. Thank you. Drive safely.
    5
    (Which were all the
    6
    proceedings had in the
    7
    above-entitled cause
    8
    on this date.)
    9
    10
    11
    12
    13
    14
    15
    16
    17
    18
    19
    20
    21
    22
    23
    24
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    243
    1 STATE OF ILLINOIS )
    ) SS.
    2 COUNTY OF WILL )
    3
    4
    I, Tamara Manganiello, RPR, do hereby
    5 certify that I reported in shorthand the proceedings
    6 held in the foregoing cause, and that the foregoing
    7 is a true, complete and correct transcript of the
    8 proceedings as appears from my stenographic notes so
    9 taken and transcribed under my personal direction.
    10
    11
    ______________________________
    TAMARA MANGANIELLO, RPR
    12
    License No. 084-004560
    13
    14
    15
    16
    SUBSCRIBED AND SWORN TO
    17 before me this ____ day
    of _______, A.D., 2007.
    18
    19
    _______________________
    20 Notary Public
    21
    22
    23
    24
    L.A. REPORTING (312) 419-9292

    Back to top