ILLINOIS
POLLUTION
CONTROL
BOARD
April
5,
1984
OUTBOARD
MARINE
)
CORPORATION,
Petitioner,
V.
)
PCB 84-26
ILLINOIS
ENVIRONMENTAL
)
PROTECTION AGENCY, and
AMERICAN TOXIC DISPOSAL, INC.,
)
Respondents.
ORDER
OF
THE
BOARD
(by
J. Anderson):
This action is before the Board on a petition by Outboard
Marine Corporation
(OMC)
for review of
a trade secret determina-
tion made by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
(IEPA)
finding
that
articles
filed by American Toxic Disposal,
Inc.
(ATD)
constitute a trade secret.
This petition is filed pursuant
to Section 120.250 of the Board~sregulations governing the
Identification and Protection of Trade Secrets.
(35 Ill. Mm.
Code 120.)
Section 120.250(a) provides that “an owner or requester
who is adversely affected by a final determination of either the
Environmental Protection Agency or the Department of Energy and
Natural Resources pursuant to
the
Boards regulations governing
the identification and protection of trade secrets,
may petition
the Board
for review within 35 days after the entry of a final
agency determination.”
This petition alleges that OMC
is adversely affected by the
IEPAts determination that the sublect articles represent trade
secrets within the meaning of the Act, and that the petition
was
filed with the
Board
within
35 days after the entry of a final
IEPA determination
(notice of which was given by certified letter
dated January 26,
1984.)
On this basis,
the Board accepts this
petition for review.
Given the fact that neither the Environmental Protection Act
nor Part 120 establish specialized procedures for this review,
an
Outline of the procedural framework for this proceeding follows.
First,
the
parties
to
this
type
of
proceeding
are
the
requester
(as
defined
in Section 120.103(b)),
the owner of the article,
and
the agency whose determination is the subject of appeal.
While
an
agency is always the respondent on an appeal of its determina—
57-377
-2—
tion,
in this situation an owner or requester
(as the case
may
be, depending on the agency’s determination) is the “real party
in
interest”
and
should
be
named
as
a
co-respondent
in
each
case.
In this case,
the parties appear to be properly named.
To
commence
Board
review,
OMC
appears
to
have
properly
served
a
copy
a
of
the
petition
upon
all
respondents
and
filed
10
copies
of
the
petition
with
the
Clerk
of
the
Board.
Due
to
the
policy concern for expeditious decisions
in appeals of this type,
the
petition
should
be
verified
and
should
state
facts
and
argu-
ments
of
law
sufficient
to
enable
the
Board
to
rule
on
the
peti-
tion.
OMC will
be allowed
21 days from the date
of
this
Order
to
amend
its
petition,
if
necessary,
to
meet
the
requirements
of
this Order.
The IEPA will be responsible for filing
a certified copy of
the
record
which
forms
the
basis
of
its
determination,
including,
as
a
minimum,
properly marked copies of the article itself
(including
a
copy
of
any
version of the article containing the
trade secret which was given to the requester),
a copy of the
Statement of Justification and claim
letter submitted by ATD, any
material submitted by the owner pursuant to Part 120 and
any
other
material
the
IEPA relied upon in making
its determination.
In addition to the actual documents which comprise the record,
the
IEPA
shall
also prepare and file
a
list
of
the
documents
comprising the record.
IEPA’s
record must be filed with the
Clerk of the Board within 21 days from the date of this Order.
IEPA’s
and
ATD’S
answers
to
the
petition
must
be
filed
within
14
days
after
the
record
is
filed
or 14 days after an amended
petition
is filed, whichever
is later.
The trade secret article in question will be handled by the
Board
pursuant
to
the
applicable
Part
120
procedures.
In
addition,
upon
a
motion
by
any
party,
the
Board
may
order
that
the pleadings, transcripts and exhibits or any portion thereof be
segregated from materials which are open to public inspection and
be kept secure from unauthorized access in accordance with the
Part 120 procedures.
Unless a petitioner files a request for hearing with the
petition or,
in this case,
in an amended petition,
any right to a
hearing shall be deemed waived.
A hearing,
if necessary,
will be
scheduled expeditiously and will be conducted by a qualified
Board assistant or other Board
-
appointed hearing officer who
will have the authority to close the hearing or otherwise struc-
ture the hearing upon finding that such action may be necessary
to ensure the protection of the article
in question until the
issue is decided.
Other procedural aspects of such a hearing
will be addressed by a later Board order,
if a hearing
is
requested.
57-378
—3—
Th~~
burden of prooE
in those appeals rests with the
p~~titioner.
In
addition,
the Board notes that Part 120 does not
provide
an opportunity
for a roc~uesterto submit evidence to
rebut
a
claim
of
trade
secrecy
in
the
proceeding
below.
There—
core,
although the Board is standing
in a review posture,
new
evidence
will
he
accepted
upon
a
demonstration
1)
that
it
was
unavailable to the parties and the IEPA at the time that the IEPA
made
its
determination
or
2)
the
party
was
not
given
an
oppor-
tunity under Part 120 to present it to the IEPA.
IT
IS SO ORDERED.
I, Christan L.
Moffett, Clerk o
the Illinois Pollution
Control Board,
hereby certify that
the above Order was adopted on
the ___~~_dayof
~
,
1984 by
a vote of
_________
I
/
/
!—r~
______
...,c.
~
Christan L. Moffett, Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board
57-379
.
.