ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    October
    6,
    1988
    MONSANTO COMPANY,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    )
    PCB 85—19
    ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
    )
    PROTECTION AGENCY and
    )
    JOHN E. NORTON,
    Respondents.
    ORDER OF THE BOARD (by B. Forcade):
    Monsanto Company
    (“Monsanto”)
    has filed
    a September
    30,
    1988
    agreed motion for a 90—day stay of Board decision.
    Monsanto
    seeks
    this stay
    to allow settlement negotiations with the
    Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (“Agency”).
    The stay
    is
    denied.
    The Board will proceed to schedule this matter
    for
    decision at its November
    3,
    1988 regularly—scheduled meeting
    absent some request for viable Board action.
    The Board’s decision to deny the requested stay
    is premised
    on its perception that the only viable outcomes are those
    outlined below.
    For the reasons articulated
    in Caterpillar
    Tractor Company v.
    EPA, PCB 79-180
    (July 14, 1983)
    and Album,
    Inc.
    v,
    EPA,
    PCB 81—23
    (March
    19,
    1981),
    the Agency now lacks
    the
    jurisdiction to alter
    its decision, and its underlying factual
    and legal conclusions,
    by negotiation with Monsanto.
    The motion
    for
    stay of decision
    is denied
    for these reasons.
    The Board perceives only three viable alternative courses
    of
    action:
    1.
    Monsanto
    could
    voluntarily
    move
    to
    dismiss its petition;
    2.
    Norton
    could
    move
    to
    formally
    withdraw
    his
    information request on file with
    the
    Agency.
    Monsanto
    and
    the
    Agency
    could
    then jointly move
    to dismiss this action;
    or
    3.
    The
    Board
    could
    proceed
    to
    render
    its
    decision.
    Under the
    first alternative,
    the Agency’s decision under review
    would become final,
    and
    the documents would then
    fall into
    the
    93—01

    —2--
    public domain.
    The second alternative would result
    in the
    Agency’s decision being vacated
    and this matter being dismissed
    as moot.
    The third alternative would
    result
    in
    a final opinion
    and order by the Board on the substance of the claims raised in
    this controversy.
    Notwithstanding the above articulated basis
    for denial,
    the
    Board wishes
    to supplement its Opinion with an aside note on the
    peculiar timing of the Monsanto motion.
    This matter was publicly
    listed
    for discussion
    at the September
    8 and September
    22,
    1988
    Board meetings.
    The case was ready for
    a final vote on October
    6,
    1988.
    Monsanto filed
    its motion
    for stay on September
    30,
    1988.
    The Board believes that motions submitted
    in adjudicatory
    proceedings are inappropriate subsequent
    to the Board’s public
    discussion
    of the articulated probable outcomes
    of
    a matter under
    review.
    The Board believes that public discussion of the merits
    of
    proceedings serves
    a valuable function in an open
    government.
    The Board frequently furthers that goal by extended
    and detailed debate of the
    facts,
    the law, and possible
    outcomes.
    The Board finds
    such discussions useful, but
    it
    feels
    that they should not become
    an opportunity for parties
    to
    forestall or challenge
    a probable outcome
    as soon as
    it
    is
    reasonably apparent,
    but prior
    to a Board vote.
    For that reason,
    the Board must discourage motions subsequent to the public
    discussion of adjudicatory matters.
    IT IS SO ORDERED
    Chairman J.D. Dumelle concurred.
    I, Dorothy
    M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby certify tha~theabove Order was adopted on
    the
    ~
    day of ________________________,
    1988,
    by
    a vote
    of
    7-a
    Dorothy M4~unn, Clerk
    Illinois P’ollution Control Board
    93—02

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