ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BO1~RD
~1arch
5,
1981
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Complainant,
v.
)
PCB 79—41.
CALVIN GEISS,
d/b/a
C
& A DISPOSAL
COMPANY, AND FRED
D, BENNITT,
Respondents.
CONCURRING
OPINION
(by
J.
Anderson):
I
generally
agree
that
the
Board’s
decision
to
approve
the
Stipulation and Proposal for Settlement in
this
case
was
the
most:
acceotable option now available.
However,
I am concerned
that
such approval might be misread as approval of the flawed course
this case has taken.
A summary of the history of the proceedinq~
should,
in large measure, make this concern self—evident.
The Agency,
after filing a formal complaint on February
28,
1979,
filed the first Stipulation and Proposal for Settlement on
August
7,
1979.
This first Proposal’s penalty provisions,
in effect, were
as
follows:
a) No penalty
if the Respondent came into compliance
before October
1,
1979,
b)
$2,500 if the respondent came into
compliance between October
1,
1979 and November
1,
1979,
and
c)
$10,000 if compliance was not achieved by the November
1,
1979
deadline.
The Board,
in response to an Agency Motion for Expedited
Decision,
on August
8,
1979 issued an Interim Order finding these
“suspended” provisions unacceptable.*
It was not until January
20,
——
*The Act does not provide for a “reward” for compliance.
It
expects
it.
The “suspended” penalty as an enforcement tool
looks
good at first glance.
It isn’t.
Had the first Proposal contained
a penalty properly based upon the violations,
as the Act provides,
and had the Board adopted the order,
failure of the Respondent to
meet the agreed compliance deadlines would then have placed him in
violation of
a Board Order,
and thus exposed him
to further and
more serious court action.
Also, compliance before the end of the
proceedings may be a mitigating factor when considering a penalty
in an enforcement action;
however,
it does not forgive the
violations.
If such were the case, violators could abuse
the
environment with impunity until they are caught,
and only then
“voluntarily” comply.
41—25
1981 that a hearing was held on the second Stipulation and Pro-
posal
for Settlement,
this in response
to another Board order,
of
November
20,
1980,
that noted no activity in the case and makinq
it subject
to dismissal.
On January 20,
1981,
the Board received this second Propos~1
from the Agency.
This Proposal recommended a penalty of $1,100 a~
a “fair estimate of the economic benefit which accrued to Respon-
dents
by
failure to comply with the law and permits as aileqed
herein, and to be a fair amount based upon the nature and extent
of violations and upon Respondent’s ability
to pay”
(Stip.
5—6).
In addition,
the Agency withdrew none of its allegations in
the
Proposal
(although the summary list of the alleged facts and
cited regulations were inconsistent with the original complaint),
and the respondent made no admission of violations
(Stip.
¶6,
r•
4).
Nevertheless, both parties agreed that this proposal settled
the controversy and the Agency noted that the respondent was by
then in substantial compliance
(although
the
times when comt1iancc~
was reached were not specified)
(Stip.
¶5,
p.
4).
This contradictory pattern neither makes
sense nor
is it a
proper record when using the stipulation and settlement mechanisri
embodied
in Procedural Rule
331.
The Board has great difficulty
in determining the violations
on which the penalty was based,
in
•waluatirig the sufficiency of the penalty according
to Sec.
33(c)
of the Act,
and evaluating
the stated rationale used by the Agency
when recommending the penalty.
The Board’s decision, accepting the penalty and finding the
respondent in violation of some of the allegations and dismissinq
the others, while inconsistent, at least serves as a final reso-
lution of this complaint, and recognizes that no public purpose
would be served by prolonging this action.
~/
I
/
~
Joan G. Anderson
Board Member
I,
Christan L. Moffett,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, hereby certify that the above Concurring Opinion
was
filed with the Board on the
/7~’
day of
4~~t~j
,
19~1.
-~-~:
/~)(.V:•Y~
Christan L. Mof~t, Clerk
Illinois Pollutjdri Control Board
41—26