ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL
    BOARD
    July
    3,
    1990
    CITY OF BATAVIA,
    )
    Petitioner,
    v.
    )
    PCB 89—183
    (Variance)
    ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
    PROTECTION AGENCY,
    Respondent.
    DISSENTING OPINION
    (by B.
    Forcade):
    I strongly dissent from today’s action by the majority.
    In
    my opinion
    it represents a profound departure from the prior
    practices of this Board.
    Now,
    the majority alone may determine
    what information will be placed in the record and addressed by
    the parties,
    thus stifling dissent.
    In this particular
    situation, the majority action results in striking from the
    record the only information on fatal health impacts of radium for
    Batavia’s water supply,
    which is one of the two most highly
    contaminated in the State of Illinois.
    The stricken information
    would allow calculation of the number of fatal head and bone
    sarcomas that would be expected to have occurred already from
    drinking Batavia water.
    Now the only information
    is an Agency
    calculation which vaguely refers to cancer.
    In short, today’s
    majority action has managed to strike totally from the record the
    anticipated incidence of death.
    It has been the practice at this Board
    (for at least my
    tenure of nearly seven years)
    that any individual Board Member
    who reviewed a variance petition and found
    it wanting could get a
    Board Order setting
    it for hearing
    asking the parties to
    address the troublesome issues.
    Or, they could get a Board Order
    incorporating relevant documents into the record and asking the
    parties to address their significance.
    The courtesy of allowing
    individual Board members to secure a Board Order setting hearing
    continued at least up to and including my request
    in City of
    Braidwood,
    PCB 89—212, Order of March
    8,
    1990.
    That hearing
    process produced the very health impact information which has
    been stricken from this proceeding by the majority action today.
    Certainly,
    the majority can continue to demand a hearing
    in any variance proceeding
    it wants.
    Pursuant to Section
    37
    (a)
    of the Act, any person can command that such
    a hearing take
    place.
    I requested a hearing in this proceeding to address the
    high radium levels and their health impacts, but
    it was not
    endorsed by the majority.
    This effectively curtailed the
    introduction of health impact information into this record.
    1 13—~3

    2
    A similar situation exists pertaining to the incorporation
    of documents into this record.
    The Board’s own regulations,
    at
    35 Ill.
    Adin.
    Code 101.106
    (a), provide that,
    “upon
    separate
    written request of any person or on its own initiative,
    the Board
    or hearing officer may incorporate..
    .“
    such documents into the
    record.
    Here, the request by two Board Members for a Board Order
    that health documents be placed
    in the record was not afforded
    the treatment granted by Section 101.106 to any person.
    Certainly this Board, by majority action, has repeatedly
    referenced extra-record documents
    (or placed them in the record,
    or asked the parties to place certain documents into the record)
    and then asked the parties to comment on them.
    Indeed,
    in this
    particular proceeding
    the Board has ~ ready ref~-enced an extra—
    record document, an Agency computer print—out
    C:
    ILled “Chemical
    and Radiological MAC
    violations”
    (See Order of
    rch 8,
    1990). It
    is regrettable that the majority would not sup~-
    t introduction
    of the only meaningful health information into
    ~is record.
    Since the majority would not support a Board Order
    introducing the health effects information,
    Boa”-~dMember Dumnelle
    and myself introduced it into the record as a public comment,
    ensuring that it would be sent to the parties,
    and requesting
    comment.
    Neither party expressed any objection to the
    introduction of this material into the record
    as a
    public
    comment.
    In an unprecedented move,
    a bare 4-3 majority decided
    to strike this health effects information.
    There was no request
    to the Board to strike this health effects information, and the
    majority provided no explanation for their action.
    The information in question was not vague speculation by a
    fringe of the scientific community.
    It represented the informed
    opinion of the two most
    respected experts on the subject to
    testify in any past radium proceeding of this Board.
    Under the
    theory of Ecko Glaco Corp.
    V.
    IEPA,
    542 N.E.2d ~74 (1st Dist.
    1989),
    and Caterpillar Tractor v.
    IPCB,
    363 N.E2d 419
    (3rd Dist.
    1977), this type of information cannot be considered by the Board
    Members
    in their decision making process unless
    it has been
    disclosed and put on the
    record for the parties to review.
    Because of the majority action striking this health effects
    information,
    it cannot be considered here.
    Perhaps the most
    troubling aspect is that the record now contains no basis for
    calculating the number of fatal cases of cancer expected from
    drinking Batavia water, nor information on how the existing
    cancer statistics were derived and what they encompass.
    I note that on page
    5 of the Recommendation, the Agency
    states that lifetime exposure to excess radium contamination in
    Batavia water will cause
    1.88 plus 1.11, or essentially
    3
    additional cancers; then, on page
    13
    it states that,
    “the radium
    level does not pose any significant health risk.”
    I believe that
    since three men, women,
    or children from Batavia are calculated
    to have developed cancer, the health risk is clearly significant.
    113- 3~

    3
    I,
    Dorothy M.
    Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, here~ycertify that’-t~ieabove Dissenting Opinion was filed
    on the
    i’V~-~
    day of
    1990
    Board Member
    -J
    /
    2
    Poll
    Control Board
    113—35

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