ILLINOIS
POLLUTION
CONTROL
BCARD
March
3,
1971
In
the
Matter
of
)
)
)
#R
71—7
NON—RETURNABLE
CANS
&
BOTTLES
)
Opinion
and
Order
of
the
Board
(by
Mr.
Currie):
This is a citizen petItion asking that we ban the sale
of beverages in nonreturnable cans and bottles.
The petition
is accompanied by an eloquent statement of reasons detailing
the enormous waste both of metal and glass and of land that the
throwing away of such containers entai:s, and it is signed by
at least 200 persons.
We have held no hearing on this subject
before.
Therefore, unless the petitIon is “plainly devoid of
merit,”
we
are required by sect!on
28 of the Environmental Pro-
tection Act to hold a hearIng.
We certainly cannot say that as a matter of policy the pro—
posed regulatIon is unthinkable.
But In the technical sense the
proposal is without “merit” in the sense that, whatever our
vIews on the desirability of adopting it, we have no authority
at this time to do so.
It is true that we are given power by
section 22 to adopt regulaticns
tc promote the purposes of Title
V of the Act, which specIfically refers to the desirability of
recycling and to the problems created by excessive quantities
of refuse.
It
is also true that the mere omission of a specific
grant of authority to ban nonreturnables, whIch was contained
in the original bill, does not necessarily impair our authority
to act under more general grants in the Act.
See In the Matter
ol’ Procedural Rules,
I R70~L,decided Oct.
8,
1970, where we
held the omissicn of statutory authorIzation for such matters as
intervention to have been intended to leave the issue to the
Board’s discretIon.
But In the case of nonreturnable contaIners we have more
than a mere omission.
The General Assembly in deleting specIfic
power to ban such items substituted in its place a carefully
drawn alternative that clearly represents a cor~romisebetween
the bill’s proponents, who desired the Board to have unrestricted
authority in thIs field, and those who opposed such authority
altogether.
That provisicn, found in section 6 of the Act,
specifically directs the Institute for Environmental Quality
to establish a Solid Waste Management Task Force to study the
entire waste problem and to report to the Board, among other
1-306
things, recommendations “to expedite development of systems for
the re—cycling and re—use of refuse” and “to assure compliance with
the purposes of this Act.”
Upon receiving such reports “the Boaxd
shall make rules and regulations on these subjects based on such
recommendations.”
In our view section 6 is a clear statement of legislative
intention of forbid the Board to ban nonreturnables until it
has received the recommendations of the Solid Waste Management
Task Force.
Otherwise the specific direction in section 6 that
the Board adopt regulations açter receiving such recommendations
would be wholly unnecessary.
We view section 6 as a deliberate
limitation on the general authority conveyed by section 22 to
issue solid—waste regulations.
This interpretation is confirmed
by the testimony of the administration’s spokesman for the bill,
who in explaining the compromise amendments to a Senate sub-
committee on the eve of the bill’s passage said the Administration
had accepted a “narrowing of the proposed novel power to adopt
regulations proposing the recycling of solid wastes.”
Testimony
of David p. Currrie before Subcommittee of Senate Executive Committee
on 3788’; May, 1970.
The same point was made even more explicitly
in the administration’s press release Immediately upon passage
of the bill:
“The proposed power to bar
or
limit
the
sale
of
non—returnable
bottles...was eliminated.
We...accepted an amendment allowing
limited regulation after a research study of waste recycling....”
Ill. News, #966—70 (May 29, 1970).
Accordingly, we hold that until
the recommendations of the
Task Force are received we are without authority to adopt the pro-
posed regulation, and no hearing therefore need be held.
We shall
refer a copy of the petition to the Institute for the benefit of
the Task Force in its deliberations, and we shall invite the petitioners
to testify in any hearings on the subject held after receipt of
the Task Force reports.
The petition is dismissed.
I, Regina E. Ryan, Clerk of the Pollution Control Board, c~’tify
that tlie).5oard adopted the above
Opinion
and
Order
this
.)it#
day
of
J/A”A-
-,
1971.
:~
~
1-306