ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    February 16, 1995
    WILMER BROCKNAN,
    JR. and FIRST
    )
    MIDWEST BANK/ILLINOIS, AS
    )
    TRUSTEE UNDER TRUST NO.
    757,
    )
    Petitioners,
    v.
    )
    PCB 94—207
    (Permit Appeal Land)
    ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
    PROTECTION AGENCY,
    )
    )
    Respondent.
    FRED PRILLANAN AND PATRICK D.
    SHAW,
    OF MOHAN, ALEWELT, PRILLAMAN
    & ADANI,
    APPEARED ON BEHALF OF THE PETITIONERS;
    JOHN KIM APPEARED ON BEHALF OF RESPONDENT;
    OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (by G.
    T.
    Girard):
    On August 2,
    1994, Wilmer Brockman,
    Jr.,
    and First Midwest
    Bank of Joliet as Trustee under Trust No.
    757
    (Brockinan or
    petitioners)
    filed a petition for review and reversal of the
    denial by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
    (Agency)
    of Brocknian’s permit application for a supplemental permit
    containing a closure, post—closure care plan,
    and cost estimates
    including a request for temporary suspension of waste acceptance
    at Brockman’s site
    in LaSalie County,
    Illinois.
    Hearing was held
    on October 12,
    1994,
    in Ottawa,
    LaSaile County,
    Illinois, with
    members of the public in attendance.
    On October 27,
    1994, the petitioners’
    brief was filed.
    Respondent’s brief was flied on November 14,
    1994,
    accompanied ~y
    a motion to file the brief instanter which the Board hereby
    grants.
    Brocknian filed petitioners’
    reply brief on November 18,
    1994.
    The Board’s responsibility in this matter arises from
    Section 40 of the Environmental Protection Act
    (Act).
    415
    ILCS
    5/40
    (1992).
    The Board
    is charged, by the Act, with a broad
    range of adjudicatory duties.
    Among these
    is adjudication of
    contested decisions made pursuant to the permit process.
    More
    generally,
    the Board’s functions are based on the series of
    checks and balances integral to Illinois’ environmental system:
    the Board has responsibility for rulemaking and principal
    adjudicatory functions,
    while the Agency
    is responsible for
    carrying out the principal administrative duties,
    inspections,
    and permitting.

    2
    Based on review of the record, the Board affirms the
    Agency’s denial of a permit to temporarily suspend waste
    acceptance for Brockman’s site
    in LaSalle County,
    Illinois.
    BACKGROUND
    The subject property is located west of the Village of
    Naplate, LaSalle County,
    Illinois.
    The site is referred to as
    the Brocknian II Landfill by petitioners
    (Pet.
    at
    1)’ or as
    Brockman II, Pioneer Processing, or the Carus Disposal Area by
    the respondent.
    (Res.
    Br. at 2.)
    For the purposes of this
    permit denial review, the Board will refer to the subject
    property as the “Brockman site” or “site”.
    The Brockman site consists of approximately 177 acres owned
    by First Midwest Bank of Joliet, Trust No.
    757.
    (Pet.
    at 2.)
    Brockman was originally granted development permit number 1975-
    23-DE by the Agency on March 14,
    1975, to develop a solid waste
    disposal site on the 177 acres.
    (St. R.
    Vol.
    I at 133.)
    Several
    modifications to this development permit were allowed by the
    Agency.
    The most litigated of these modifications was granted on
    December 22,
    1980,
    to Pioneer Development Company by supplemental
    permit number 1980—1944
    DE.
    (St. R. Vol.
    III at 527.)
    In the
    ensuing litigation contesting that modification, the permit was
    declared void by the Illinois Supreme Court
    in Pioneer
    Processing,
    Inc.
    et al.
    v. IEPA 102 Ill.2d 119,
    464 N.E.2d 238
    (1984).
    A reapplication was withdrawn on March 22,
    1988, and
    that withdrawal was confirmed by the Board by its order
    of April
    27,
    1989,
    in PCB 88—158.
    (St. R. Vol.
    I at 211—231.) The
    Brockman site only accepted special waste from the Carus Chemical
    Company pursuant to operating permit number 75-2-OP issued July
    9,
    1976
    (St. R. Vol.
    I at 152-153)and supplemental permit number
    76—686 issued November 29,
    1976
    (St. R.
    Vol.
    II at 154),
    and
    other supplemental permits.
    Waste was accepted only from 1975 to
    1982 from Carus.
    (St.
    R. at 46—47 and 127.)
    PRELIMINARY MATTERS
    The Agency record prepared for this proceeding will be
    cited as “R. Vol.
    at
    _“;
    the Agency record prepared for the
    proceeding in PCB 93-162 which was incorporated by stipulation
    will be cited as “St.
    R. Vol.
    at
    “;
    the petition for review
    of permit denial will be cited
    as “Pet.
    at
    _“;
    petitioners’
    brief will be cited as “Pet.
    Br. at
    “;
    petitioners’ reply brief
    will be cited as “Pet. R.
    Br. at
    _“;
    respondent’s brief will be
    cited as “Res.
    Br. at
    _“;
    the hearing transcript will be cited
    as “Tr.
    at
    “.
    The Board’s previous case Brockman v. IEPA will
    be cited as “P93—162 at
    “.
    Petitioners’s motion for order,
    order and memorandum of law in support of motion for order will
    be cited as “Memo at
    “.

    3
    Before going to the merits of the case, the Board will
    address two outstanding motions in this matter.
    First,
    on
    October 12,
    1994, the petitioners filed
    a motion to supplement
    the record.
    A response by the Agency to the motion was received
    by the Board on October 18 and a motion to file a reply was filed
    on October 17 by the petitioners.
    At hearing, petitioners
    indicated that the petitioners would propose that the motion be
    taken with the case.
    (Tr. at 6.)
    The Board notes that the procedural rules allow a reply to
    be filed to a motion only as permitted by the Board or hearing
    officer “to prevent material prejudice”.
    (35 Ill.
    Adni.
    Code
    101.241(c).)
    The Board finds that a reply is not necessary to
    prevent material prejudice and the motion to file the reply is
    denied.
    The Board will also deny the motion to supplement the
    record.
    An examination of the record indicates that the LPC-PA15
    form at issue is included in the record
    (See St.
    R. Vol.
    I at
    174—175).
    The two pages offered as Joint Exhibit
    18 appear to be
    a compilation of the data already included in the LPC-PA15 form.
    Therefore, the Board will deny the motion to supplement as the
    information being offered is already included
    in the record.
    ~
    Brockman
    V.
    IEPA,
    PCB 93-162
    (January
    6,
    1994).)
    The second motion was filed by petitioners on December 23,
    1994,
    and is titled “Motion for Order, Order and Memorandum of
    Law in Support of Motion for Order”.
    On December 30,
    1994,
    the
    Board received a response filed by the Agency.
    For the reasons
    discussed below, the motion for order
    is denied.
    Petitioners assert that the Board has failed to take final
    action within the statutorily-prescribed decision time frame.
    The basis for this assertion is that petitioners have waived the
    decision deadline only until December 16,
    1994.
    Petitioners
    acknowledge that a waiver was filed on August
    9,
    1994, waiving
    the decision deadline date until February 16,
    1995.
    However,
    petitioners argue that the August
    9,
    1994, waiver was “withdrawn
    by the Board and by the petitioners”.
    (Memo at 2.)
    The Agency argues that the August
    9,
    1994, waiver
    is in full
    force and effect and cites to the Board’s opinion in Land and
    Lakes CompanY,
    et al.
    v. Village of Romeoville, PCB 91-7
    (April
    25,
    1991) to support its position.
    The Agency maintains that the
    Board’s September
    1,
    1994,
    order in this proceeding did not
    constitute
    a “withdrawal” of the August 9,
    1994, waiver.
    Further,
    the Agency argues that even if the Board were to
    determine that the Board failed to issue its final decision by
    the applicable deadline, the proper relief would not be to deem
    the permit issued.
    Rather, the relief would be to find that the
    application for permit as filed with the Agency was complete and
    to remand the case to the Agency for technical review.

    4
    The Agency has correctly cited the Board’s previous
    decisions regarding the waiver of a decision deadline.
    Although
    appended to a motion, the August
    9,
    1994 waiver
    is unconditional
    by its terms.
    A waiver may not be contingent or conditional and
    a waiver may not be withdrawn.
    (See 35 Ill. Adm. Code 101.1052
    also see, Natural Gas Pipeline Company of America v.
    IEPA,
    PCB
    87-150 (September 8,
    1988)
    and Commonwealth Edison Company v.
    IEPA, PCB 91-70
    (May
    6,
    1991).)
    Therefore,
    the motion for order
    is denied.
    REGULATORY
    FRAMEWORK
    A
    Petition for review of a permit denial
    is authorized by
    Section 40(a)(l)
    of the Act 415
    ILCS 5/40
    (a)(1)) and 35 Ill.
    Adm. Code Section 105.102(a).
    The Board has long held that in
    permit appeals the burden of proof rests with the petitioners.
    The petitioners bear the burden of proving that the application,
    as submitted to the Agency, would not violate the Act or the
    Board’s regulations.
    This standard of review was enunciated
    in
    Browning-Ferris Industries of Illinois,
    Inc.
    v. Pollution Control
    Board,
    179
    Ill.
    App.
    3d 598,
    534 N.E.
    2d 616,
    (Second District
    1989)
    and reiterated
    in John Sexton Contractors Company
    v.
    Illinois
    (Sextoni, PCB 88-139, February 23,
    1989.
    In Sexton the
    Board held:
    that the sole question before the Board
    is whether the
    applicant proves that the application,
    as submitted to the
    Agency, demonstrated that no violations of the Environmental
    Protection Act would have occurred if the requested permit
    had been issued.
    Therefore, petitioners must establish to the Board that the
    permit would not violate the Act or the Board’s rules
    if the
    requested permit were to be issued by the Agency.
    In addition,
    2
    Section 101.105 of the Board’s rules provides:
    A waiver of a deadline for final Board action,
    as
    specified in Sections 3B,
    40,
    40.1 and 41 of the Act,
    shall be filed as
    a separate document.
    The waiver
    shall be clearly titled as such,
    identify the
    proceeding by name and docket number, and be signed by
    the party or by his authorized representative or
    attorney.
    The waiver shall be an open waiver or a
    waiver until a calendar date certain.
    However, the
    Board reserves the right to accept waivers in other
    forms where
    it finds
    it necessary to prevent undue
    delay or material prejudice.
    A contingent waiver is
    not acceptable.

    5
    the Agency’s written response to the permit application frames
    the issues on appeal from that decision.
    (Pulitzer Community
    Newspapers,
    Inc.
    v.
    Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, PCB
    90—142, at
    6
    (December 20,
    1990); Centralia Environmental
    Services,
    Inc.
    v.
    Illinois Environmental Protection Agency,
    PCB
    89—170, at
    6
    (May 10,
    1990);
    City of Metropolis v. Illinois
    Environmental Protection Agency, PCB 90-8 (February 22,
    1990).
    The Agency’s denial of the permit application was based on
    the insufficiency of the Nay 31,
    1994,
    application for a
    supplemental permit containing a closure, post—closure care plan,
    and cost estimates,
    including a request for temporary suspension
    of waste acceptance at the Brocknian site.
    (R.
    Vol.
    II at 365-
    418.)
    The language of
    35
    Ill.
    Adin. Code 807.205(f)
    provides the
    Agency with the authority to deem applications incomplete if they
    lack the information, documents, and authorizations required by
    Board rules and Agency procedures.
    The Agency determined that
    the application was insufficient because the “Agency records for
    the Brockman #2 facility indicate that this facility is closed
    pursuant to Ill.
    Adm. Code 807.318(c)”.
    (R.
    Vol.
    I at
    15.)
    DISCUSSION
    Brockman asserts that to maintain its status as an “existing
    landfill”,
    Brocknian was required to apply for a temporary
    suspension of waste acceptance permit pursuant to Section 39(c)
    of the Act.
    (Pet.
    Br.
    10-11.)
    Section 39(c)
    provides:
    After the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1993,
    if
    a solid waste disposal facility, any portion for which an
    operating permit has been issued by the Agency, has not
    accepted waste disposal for
    5 or more consecutive calendars
    years,
    before that facility may accept any new or additional
    waste for disposal, the owner and operator must obtain a new
    operating permit under this Act for that facility unless the
    owner and operator have applied to the Agency for a permit
    authorizing the temporary suspension of waste acceptance.
    The Agency may not issue a new operation permit under this
    Act for the facility unless the applicant has submitted
    proof to the Agency that the location of the facility has
    been approved or re—approved by the appropriate county board
    or municipal governing body under Section 39.2 of this Act
    after the facility ceased accepting waste.
    Brockinan applied to the Agency for a permit to temporarily
    suspend waste acceptance as a supplemental permit for the
    Brockman site in 1993.
    The Agency denied the permit and upon
    appeal to the Board the denial was affirmed.
    (Brockman v.
    IEPA,
    PCB 93-162
    (January
    6,
    1994);
    Wilxner Brockman. Jr. and First
    Midwest Bank of Joliet v. IEPA and IPCB,
    No.
    3-94-0175
    (3rd
    Dist.).)
    The Board determined that a temporary suspension of
    waste acceptance permit could be evaluated only in the context of

    6
    a closure plan.
    Brockman reapplied for a temporary suspension of
    waste acceptance permit and included a closure plan.
    That
    application is the subject of the instant appeal.
    Brockman asserts that it is an existing landfill based on a
    development permit issued in 1975 known as Permit No. 1975-23-DE
    (R. Vol.
    I at 20-21) and a supplement to that permit issued in
    1978 known as Permit No. 78-2180.
    (R.
    Vol.
    I at 24—25.)
    Brockman argues that petitioners are seeking this permit to
    temporarily suspend waste acceptance as a supplemental permit to
    the development permit.
    (Pet.
    Br. at 21.)
    “The only
    prerequisite to a permit to temporarily suspend waste acceptance
    aside from a closure plan is an existing permit to be modified.”
    (Pet. Br. at 21.)
    Petitioners maintain that “Development Permit
    No. 1975—23—DE” and “Supplemental Permit No. 78-2180” have not
    been revoked or rescinded and since No. 1975—23—DE “is
    a
    development permit,
    it does not become invalid by operation of a
    regulation once the site is completed or closed”.
    (Pet.
    Br. at
    21.)
    Brockman concedes that the only operating permits issued
    were for the “Carus Disposal Area” which was closed in 1982.
    (Pet.
    Br. at 4-6.)
    An experimental permit was issued to Amoco
    for a disposal area on the 177 acre site, but it was never
    utilized.
    Pioneer ultimately withdrew its application for
    operation on the 177 acre site.
    (Pet.
    Br.
    at 4-6.)
    The Board
    is not persuaded by Brockman’s argument.
    The
    plain reading of Section 39(c)
    of the Act requires that an
    operating permit must be in place before a temporary suspension
    of waste acceptance may be issued.
    Although the language of the
    statute refers to a site “any portion for which an operating
    permit has been issued”,
    the Act continues on to state that an
    operator must “obtain a ii~operating permit” (emphasis added)
    unless the owner or operator has applied for a temporary
    suspension of waste acceptance.
    Thus, the Illinois General
    Assembly clearly intended that an operating permit would be in
    effect before a temporary suspension of waste permit would be
    issued.
    Further, to read Section 39(c)
    any differently leads to
    absurd results.
    For example,
    if
    a facility is not permitted to
    accept waste,
    issuance of a permit to suspend waste acceptance is
    absurd.
    A development permit does not allow acceptance of waste.
    Therefore,
    a permit for suspension of waste acceptance can only
    be issued if a valid operating permit is in place.
    As regards the entire 177 acre Brockman site only one
    operating permit was issued.
    That permit was for the Carus
    Disposal Area which is now closed.
    (St. R. Vol.
    I at 169.)
    Further,
    one of the express conditions of supplemental Permit
    Number 78—2180 states that “tjhis
    supplemental permit is for
    modification of development only.
    No wastes shall be accepted or
    disposed until such time as an operation permit is issued by the

    7
    Agency.”
    (R.Vol.
    I at 24.)
    Therefore, the petitioners do not
    currently hold an operating permit for the Brocknian site or in
    any other permit which would arguably allow the acceptance of
    waste.
    The Board need not examine the other arguments put forth by
    the parties as to whether or not the site was “closed”
    in 1982.
    The Act, although “grandfathering” some facilities,
    clearly does
    not anticipate allowing a facility which does not have a valid
    operating permit to “continue” accepting waste without receipt of
    siting approval pursuant to Section 39.2 of the Act.
    Therefore,
    the issuance of a permit to temporarily suspend waste acceptance
    for a facility without
    a valid operating permit would violate
    Section 39(c)
    of the Act.
    The Board finds that the Agency
    properly denied the application on the basis that the site was
    “closed” as the only operating permit issued was for an area of
    the site which was closed.
    This opinion constitutes the Board findings
    of
    facts and
    conclusion of law.
    ORDER
    The denial by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
    of a request by Wilmer Brockman Jr. and First Midwest
    Bank/Illinois as trustee under trust No.
    757 for a supplemental
    permit containing a closure, post—closure care plan,
    and cost
    estimates including a request for temporary suspension of waste
    acceptance at the site in LaSalle County, Illinois is affirmed.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    Chairman Claire A. Manning and Board Member Narili McFawn
    concur.
    Section 41 of the Environmental Protection Act
    (415 ILCS
    5/40.1) provides for the appeal of final Board orders within 35
    days of service of this decision.
    The Rules of the Supreme Court
    of Illinois establish filing requirements.
    (But see also,
    35
    Ill.
    Adin.
    Code 101.246, Motions for Reconsideration.)
    I, Dorothy
    M.
    Gunn,
    Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby cer~4~ythat the above opinion and order was
    adopted on the
    /&~~
    day of
    ~2~A~4~.’.tl_
    ,
    1995,
    by a
    vote of
    7_i)
    A.
    Dorothy M./7~unn,Clerk
    Illinois F~llutionControl Board

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