ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
June
23, 1992
THE CITY OF
LAKE
FOREST, A
)
MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OF
)
ILLINOIS,
Petitioner,
PCB 92—36
vs.
)
(Underground Storage Tank
)
Fund Reimbursement
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
)
Determination)
PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
Respondent.
DISSENTING OPINION
(by 3. Anderson):
The gist of my problem with the outcome of the majority is
best expressed by quoting the following questions and answers
from page 74 of the hearing transcript in this case;
it involves
testimony of the Agency in response to questions from Lake
Forest’s attorney and an exchange between the hearing officer and
the attorney:
Q.
If you had known on January 27,
1992, that the tank
was filled partly with. sand and partly with gasoline,
would you have reached a different conclusion?
A.
No.
Q.
Why not?
A.
Because the fact of the matter is the tank was not
registered.
Q.
But it was exempt from registration?
A.
That is correct.
Q.
And from the payment of fees?
A.
Correct.
Hearing
Officer
Is there a Catch—22 here that I’m missing
as a Hearing Officer?.
Attorney
Yes.
It’s called the State of Illinois.
I agree with the Board’s holdings that the Agency was bound
to accept the OSFM’s decision that the tank in question here was
not registered, and could not be, because it was exempt from
registration.’
However,
I suggest that it was error to conclude
that this ended the issue as a matter of law.
In so saying,
I
fully share the ongoing difficulty the Board has had with the
It
is difficult,
though, to understand
-
certainly from
a
environmental perspective
—
how finding sand in a tank not emptied
of
its
gasoline
is
an
activity
that would
have
the
result
of
exempting the tank from a subsequent registration requirement.
134— 34
3
2
statutory language of the UST fund.2
The “registration required” language that allows access to
the UST Fund is in the Environmental Protection Act, not the
Gasoline Storage Act.
Thus, the interpretation of the “exempt”
question is within the purview of the Board.
I would argue that being exempt from registration satisfies
the registration and fee requirements of Section 22.18b(a)(4).
That Section requires that the person seeking access to the UST
fund is to register “in accordance with” Section 4 of the
Gasoline Storage Act and pay all fees required “in accordance
with Sections
4 and 5 of that Act (and OSFN regulations);
if
Section 4 exempts a person, and Sections 4 and
5 accordingly do
not require payment of fees, then should the Board not hold that
Section 22.18b(a) (4)
is satisfied?3
I do not believe that Section 22.18b(a)(4)
is plain on its
face, and
I know of no other statutory language related to the
UST Fund that would make plain the “exempt” question.
I would
argue,
therefore,
that we should construe the section from the
environmental perspective embodied in the Environmental
Protection Act as a whole, including its purpose as expressed in
Section
2.
Our fundamental perspective, after all,
is not limited
solely to questions of monetary claims, or implicitly to husband
the UST Fund for particular classes of tank owners.
The
majority’s decision can have a chilling effect on goal of
cleaning up the pollution caused by these leaking underground
storage tanks and I believe that shutting out a Lake Forest
-entirely from the corrective action program does this.
After
all, the UST Fund exists to make it easier to comply with RCRA
requirements for corrective action for UST’s;
indeed, the
environmental—related concerns flowing from the RCRA program are
why the Agency-administered UST Fund for corrective action is in
the Environmental Protection Act in the first place.
2
While there are certain facts distinguishing this case from
the Village of Lincoinwood
v.
IEPA
(June
4,
1992),
upon further
reflection and for the reasons presented here,
I have concluded
that my vote in that case was in ~rror.
~
Note
that
Lake
Forest
will
tender
whatever
fees
are
necessary
if it’s a question of paying registration fees
(See Tr.
p.
42.)
Note also that the Agency acknowledged that Lake Forest’s
failure to pay a fee was no longer a concern.
(See Tr.
p. 80)
I
14—
344
3
It is for these reasons that
I respectfully dissent.
Z4~’
~L~4~J
roan G. Anderson
I, Dorothy N. Gunn,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board hereby certify~tJiatthe above
issenting Opinion was
submitted on the
I
day of
~
,
1992.
Dorothy N.
Illinois
Control Board
134—34 5