ILLINOIS
POLLUTION
CONTROL
BOARD
March
5,
1981
COUNTY
OF
LASALLE,
et
al.,
)
Petitioners,
V.
)
PCB
81—b
ILLINOIS
ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY; WILLIAM
CLARKE; PIONEER DEVELOPMENT,
et al.,
Respondents.
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by D. Satchell):
On February 13, 1981 Respondents William Clarke, Pioneer De-
velopment and Pioneer Processing,
Inc.
(Pioneer)
filed a rnotior~
to strike and a motion in limine requesting clarification of lan-
guage in Section
40(b)
of the Act and recently amended Procedural
Rule 503(a) concerning the scope of the hearing
in third party
permit appeals.
Pioneer asks the Board to take official notice
of the record in PCB 80-184, Alliance for a Safe Environment,
et
al.
v. Akron Land Corp., et al.
Pioneer questions certain rulinas
of the Hearing Officer in that matter.
Petitioners filed ob~jec-
tions
to the motions on February 18 and February
27, 1981.
The Board has not decided the ~kron case and declines to rule
on it in this context.
However, the Board will provide guidance
on the general questions.
The Hearing Officer in general should
allow offers of proof where there is reasonable
doubt
as to ad-~
missibility.
Extraneous material can later be stricken from the
record, but omitted material will require
a new hearing if it
is
later judged admissible by the Board or a higher court.
The uncertainty in this case lies in the application of the
following language of Section 40(h)
of the Environmental Protectic~n
Act
(Act):
“Such hearing shall be based exclusively on the record
before the Agency.”
A question arises as to what evidence may be
admitted at the hearing if the Board~sconsideration is to be based
exclusively on the record before the Agency
(Menard v. Bowman Dairy
Co., 296 Ill.
App.
323,
15 NE 2d 1014,
1015)
The Board has long held that a similar rule applies
in appeals
by the permit applicant
(Soil Enrichment
v. IEPA, PCB 72-364,
5 PCB
715, October 17, 1972; Oscar Mayer v.
IEPA,
PCB 78-14,
30 PCB 397,
32 PCB 243,
June
8 and December 14, 1978; Environmental Site De-
velopers v. IEPA, PCB 80-15,
38 PCB 443,
June
12, 1980).
41—49
—2—
Where
a third party contests the grant of a permit there is
an issue as to whether there was proof by the applicant that the
facility “will not cause a violation of the Act” or Board rules.
There is
a further issue
as to whether any conditions
in the issued
permit are “inconsistent with” Board regulations,
The third party
could seek to prove that conditions are not “necessary to accom-
plish the purposes of the Act,”
although the third party would
ordinarily argue for more stringent conditions.
There is also a
possibility that the third party may offer additional conditions,
not inconsistent with Board rules, and seek to prove that they ar.~
“necessary to accomplish the purposes of the Act”
Section
39(a)
of the ActJ.
The Board does not require mere repetition of evidence or
testimony which is already in the Agency record.
If evidence out-
side the Agency record is offered, the Board requests that the
Hearing Officer rule on its admissibility considering Section
39(a)
and Section 40(b)
of the Act, and the issues noted above.
If the
Hearing Officer admits evidence, the adverse parties may note
their objections to the Board.
If the Hearing Officer rules the
evidence inadmissible because it was not in the Agency record, he
should allow
the
party to proceed with an offer of proof where the
proffer is otherwise relevant.
In making offers of proof parties
should explain why the evidence is not a part of the Agency record.
At the hearing
the
Hearing Officer should allow a reasonable time
for members of the public who are not parties to comment.
This Order is intended only to offer guidance to the Hearing
Officer and parties
in the conduct of the hearing.
It is not in-
tended as a holding on any of
the
legal questions discussed.
Petitioners should be advised that Section 40(a)
of the Act
provides that Pioneer may deem the
permit issued
unless the Board
rules on the petition within ninety days of its filing.
In Akron
the Board held that this time may be extended only by the permit
applicant.
Petitioners should be further advised that Procedural
Rule 504 requires them to furnish a stenographic transcript of the
hearing at their expense.
The Board will decide the motion to
strike with the
case.
IT
IS SO ORDERED,
4 1—50
—3—
I, Christan
L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, hereby certify that the above Order was adopted
on the
,~
day of
___________,
1981 by a vote of
~
~‘.
Christan
L.
Moff’e~4~3
Clerk
Illinois Po1lutithtt~ontrolBoard
41—51