ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
November 29,
1990
THE GRIGOLEIT COMPANY,
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 89—184
(Permit Appeal)
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
DISSENTING OPINION
(by B.
Forcade and J.
D.
Dumelle):
We respectfully dissent from today’s action.
We believe the
Agency’s denial should have been affirmed.
Additionally, we note
that the “Opinion and Order of the Board” contains the
unqualified support of only three Board Members, with four Board
Members either dissenting or specially concurring.
We are
therefore uncertain what,
if any, precedent attaches to that
Opinion’s language.
Today’s decision by the purported majority represents a
significant departure from prior Board holdings.
In our opinion
this new holding eliminates the Agency’s ability to deny
a permit
because the applicant fails to demonstrate compliance with the
Environmental Protection Act
(“Act”)
and Board regulations.
Now,
the Agency could only deny where the information clearly shows a
violation will occur.
Under this new rule the Agency must
somehow give the applicant a draft denial letter and allow the
applicant an opportunity to rebut the Agency’s proposed denial
reasons; otherwise,
this Board will remand.
We are curious as to
how this Board would react if the appellate courts required us td
give permit denial appellants a draft opinion and order affirming
denial prior to issuing a final sustainable denial opinion.
We
seriously doubt this Board could manage such activities within
the tight timeframes mandated by the Act, yet the prevailing
opinion has no difficulty placing such a burden on the Agency.
Our first objection to the prevailing opinion is that it is
unduly critical of Agency conduct.
For example, the prevailing
opinion finds fault with the Agency for providing a
“Notice to
the Board” that it could not support denial reason #1.
Without
citation of authority the purported majority concludes that,
“the
Agency cannot unilaterally retract a denial reason.
•“
We
thought any litigant could confess error of fact or law during a
proceeding.
To complain that this action flows from a Notice to
the Board rather than from a Notion seems overly pedantic.
As a
further example, the prevailing opinion complains about the
Agency’s use of CROPA to process permits.
Quite
frankly, how the
Agency chooses to internally process permits should be of no
116—26 5
2
concern to either this Board or Grigoleit.
No one has argued
that CROPA sets any substantive pollution control standard which
Grigoleit was required to meet; the question of who in the Agency
looks at permit application information seems irrelevant to the
permit appeal.
The prevailing opinion’s innuendo that these
“rules” need to be promulgated,
seems an unjustified invasion of
internal Agency procedures.
Overall, the purported majority
language has
a tone of “Agency bashing” that clearly seems one
sided and out of place.
If the Board is going to get indignant about improper
conduct in this proceeding, then more attention to Grigoleit
seems appropriate.
The Agency has correctly noted that
Grigoleit’s application was internally inconsistent and simply
could not be accurate
Petitioner has alleged that the Agency has all
of
the
information
necessary
to
determine
compliance, since Grigoleit
certified
“that
all
previously
submitted
information
referenced
in this application remains true,
correct,
and current”.
The increase in usage
of
raw
materials,
the
switch
to
electric
infrared
dryers,
the
addition
of
the
lithograph
machine
and
the
paint
mixing/cleaning
room
are
all
changes
to
Petitioner’s previously submitted information.
(Respondent’s Brief,
p.11)
A less charitable person could conclude that Grigoleit’s permit
application information contained outright lies.
Certainly,
the
prevailing opinion’s absolute silence on this issue raises
questions of bias.
Grigoleit’s subsequent histrionics in the
reply brief
(p.
2) claiming Agency perjured testimony, dishonesty
and arrogance seems to be a diversionary smoke screen in light of
Grigoleit’s conduct,
yet no criticism is present in the
prevailing opinion.
In our view,
the prevailing opinion chooses
to only see half of the misconduct that could be described in
this proceeding
-
the Agency’s half.
Our second,
and most important,
objection is that the Agency
permit denial for failure to show compliance with 215.301 must be
affirmed unless two facts are clearly evident in the record.
The
first fact is adequate information to prove that Grigoleit emits
less than 25 tons per year so that only the provisions of
35 Ill.
Adm. Code 215.301 apply.
The second fact is that Grigoleit show
that they comply with the
8 pound per hour limit of that section.
Grigoleit’s arguments for emitting less than 25 tons relies on
the Agency knowing which part of the admittedly false application
data
is in fact true.
However, as regards the
8 pounds per hour
data, Grigoleit’s arguments are totally specious:
(1)
the
calculations are presented for the first time in the company’s
116—266
3
briefs,
not in information that was before the Agency,
(2) the
calculations use the 6,000 gallon figure for VOlATILE organic
material,
not the presumable 11,988 gallon figure for ORGANIC
MATERIAL, and
(3)
assuming the 2080 hours of operation was
legally enforceable,
it only shows that the annual average hourly
emission rate
is not above 8.0 pounds per hour.
Our regulations
are never to exceed values,
not annual averages.
Unless this
Board can show a calculation that proves Grigoleit never emits
more than 8 lbs per hour of organic material, we
cannot conclude
Grigoleit demonstrated compliance.
No such showing can be made.
The prevailing viewpoint candidly admits that Grigoleit
failed to submit adequate information to demonstrate compliance:
Moreover, even
if we were not to rely on the
above
cases,
we
note that we have difficulty
in ruling fully on the merits of this denial
reason
because
there
was
insufficient
information submitted as
regards Grigoleit’s
compliance with 35 Ill. Adm. Code 215.301, and
because we are restricted to a review of the
information that was before the Agency during
its permit review.
(Opinion, p.
13)
Historically, when the applicant provided insufficient
information to demonstrate compliance with Board regulations, the
permit denial was affirmed.
For whatever precedential value it
may have,
the prevailing opinion today creates a new rule.
The prevailing opinion relies on Wells Manufacturing Company
v.
IEPA,
195 Ill. App.
3d
593,
552 N.E.2d 1074
(1st Dist.
1990),
to support its conclusion.
We find this to be a substantial and
totally unwarranted extension of the holding in Wells.
The Wells
court was faced with a situation where an existing facility
sought renewal of an existing permit by filling out a two page
certification that the operations at the facility had not
changed:
In December 1985,
the Agency sent a two-page
renewal
form
to
Wells
in
which
Wells
was
required
to
certify
that
its
equipment
remained unchanged or,
if changed, to explain
those
changes.
Wells
executed
the
form
certifying that no changes had been made and
returned it to the Agency on December 5.
The
next communication received by Wells from the
Agency was dated
February
28,
1986,
and was
notification that Wells application to renew
its operating permit was denied.
Supra,
at 335.
116—267
4
Wells’ permit renewal was not denied for failing to demonstrate
compliance with the specific numerical emissions limitations
under which Wells was seeking a permit, but for possible
violations of a totally unrelated statutory narrative standard
about unreasonable interference with the enjoyment of life or
property.
The court noted that an actual enforcement action
charging unreasonable interference would invoke the factors in
Section
33
(c)
of the Act,
factors which were not considered in
the Wells permit decision.
Certainly,
Wells controls regarding
Agency permit renewal denials where “unreasonable interference”
forms the basis for denial.
However, to extend the Wells holding
to cover situations where
(1)
there have been substantial changes
to the facility and its operations,
and
(2) the applicant simply
fails to demonstrate compliance with the specific numerical
emission limitation under which
a permit
is sought represents an
unwarranted and irrational extension.
The Environmental Protection Act,
at Section 39
(a),
requires the Agency to issue a permit,
“upon proof by the
applicant that the facility.
.
.will not cause a violation of this
Act or of regulations hereunder.”
Today’s prevailing opinion
changes that language to require a permit be issued unless the
facts prove a violation will occur.
We do not agree,
therefore,
we dissent.
One additional factor about the prevailing opinion must also
be mentioned.
Grigoleit has added two new emission sources that
were never previously permitted: the Lithograph machine,
and a
new Systems Group H.
The prevailing opinion does not discuss
these new sources in any manner.
We presume the Agency is free
under today’s decision to address these new sources in any
appropriate manner.
___________________
~
Bill S. ~±c~de
/,3.
D. Dumelle
Board Member
1Board Member
I,
Dorothy M. Gunn,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, here~ycertify that the above Dissenting Opinion was filed
on the
/~“~-~
day of
__________________,
1990.
~
,~.
Dorothy N.~unn, Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board
116—268