ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
February
17,
1972
FARNERS OPPOSED TO EXTENSION
OF
THE ILLINOIS TOLLWAY,
et al.
v.
)
##
71-306, 71_32~
ILLINOIS STATE TOLL HIGHWAY AUTHORITY
etal.
Opinion and Order
of the Board
(by Mr.
Currie):
The initial complaint
in this litigation we dismissed for
failure to state a cl~imthat would justify relief against the
construction
of
an extension of the Toliway to the Rock River,
with leave
to amend
(#71-159,
Aug.
13,
1972).
A motion for the
filing of the environmental statement required by section
of the Environmental Protection Act we construe&
as
a complaint
and authorized
for hearing
(#71-306,
Sept.
30,
1971).
The
amended complaint against the extension itself was assigned
a
new number and also authorized for
a hearing on certain narrowly
defined issues after a full opinion
(Nov.
11,
1971).
The complainants now move that the complaints be dismissed,
essentially on two grounds:
that our new proposed rule 4~R72-l,
which would require parties to pay the cost
of transcripts
because of the Board’s lack of funds,
imposes unforeseen litigation
costs;
and that during the pendency of these cases before the
Board construction has progressed and will further progress
“so far as to eliminate any possibility
of meaningful relief.”
If the sole issue were the ability of the complainants to
bear
a portion of the transcript costs, we might urge them to
apply for special relief as
is expressly provided
ir~
the proposed
regulation.
Presumably the petitioners are aware of that provision
and chose not to invoke it.
We may also be able to employ our
own court reporters and to assume more of the cost of transcripts.
But from the fact that the motion to dismiss came at a time when
the transcript rule had been merely proposed and not adopted, we
take it that the motion would have been made without regard to
the financial question simply because relief at this point would
come too late.
3
663
We regret the delay
in litigation.
But
our concern in
scrutinizing
the complaints carefully was
to
avoid the waste of
unnecessary hearings which the complainants would have had
no chance of winning.
As our last opinion pointed out, the only
possibility of success
for
the complainants was in the nature of
minor construction details to minimize pollution, not an
interdiction
of the highway itself
as was
the goal of the
complaint.
The principal issue in fact was one of
land use
planning,
over which this Board has no authority.
Any relief
~e could have granted would have been
too little from the
complainants’ point of view even if it had not been too late.
The motion to dismiss
is hereby granted and
the complaints
are hereby dismissed.
I, Christan Moffett, Clerk of the Pollution Control Board,
certify that the Board adopted the above Opinion and Order
this
/7~
day of February,
1972 by
a vote of
.~-
0
3
—
664