ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    March 14,
    1991
    AR.A.
    LAND,
    INC.,
    )
    Petitioner,
    v.
    )
    PCB 90—177
    )
    (Underground Storage
    ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
    )
    Tank Fund Reimbursement
    PROTECTION AGENCY,
    )
    Determination)
    Respondent.
    DAVID
    L. ANTOGNOLI APPEARED ON BEHALF OF THE PETITIONER, AND
    RONALD SCHLLAWITZ APPEARED ON BEHALF OF THE RESPONDENT.
    OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (by J. Anderson):
    This matter comes before the Board on a petition filed by
    A.K.A. Land,
    Inc.
    (AKA)
    on September 26,
    1990.
    AKA requests
    review of a determination by the Illinois Environmental
    Protection Agency (Agency)
    to impose a $100,000 deductible,
    rather than a lesser amount, as a condition for reimbursement
    from the State’s Underground Storage
    •Tank Fund
    (State Fund)
    following AKA’s removal of
    a number of Underground Storage Tanks
    (UST’s).
    The provisions
    related to the State Fund are found in
    Sections 22.18,
    22.l8a,
    22.18b, and 22.18c of the Environmental
    Protection Act
    (Act).
    (Ill. Rev.
    Stat.
    lii 1/2, pars.
    1001 et
    seq.) The deductibility provisions are found
    in Section
    22.18b(d)(3)(A),
    (B), and
    (C) of the Act.
    Hearing was held on November
    15, 1990, and no members of the
    public were present.
    At hearing, the Agency presented
    a
    statement of the Illinois Petroleum Marketers Association
    (IPMA),
    which was not present at hearing.
    The statement and a response
    by AKA were filed without objection.
    The Agency filed its brief
    on December 14,
    1990,
    and AKA filed its reply brief
    on December
    20,
    1990.
    On February 7,
    1991,
    the Board entered an Interim Order
    requesting responses
    to questions posed in that Order.
    On
    February 13,
    1991, ARA,
    the Agency, and the IPMA filed
    responses.
    (Because the responses essentially repeat arguments
    already contained in the record,
    we will not separately address
    them in this Opinion.)
    120—35

    —2—
    SUMMARY
    At the outset, we note that the issues raised
    in this matter
    not only were intertwined to an unusual degree, but also tended
    to evolve during the course of the proceeding.
    We believe that
    the following brief explanation and identification of the major
    issues raised,
    as well as the Board’s conclusions, may enhance
    the reader’s understanding when subsequently more fully addressed
    in this Opinion.
    AKA, after finding on its property some abandoned
    underground gasoline tanks
    that had leaked,
    had the tanks and
    contaminated surrounding soil removed.
    AKA applied to the Agency
    for reimbursement from the State Fund.
    The State Fund was
    created by statute and provides for corrective action
    reimbursements,
    after
    a varying deductible amount
    is imposed,
    to
    eligible owners and operators of tJST’s containing petroleum.
    The
    Agency found AKA eligible for reimbursement, but imposed the
    highest deductible ($100,000).
    AKA appealed the Agency’s
    deductibility determination.
    How the State Fund operates, and who
    is covered,
    is linked
    to the UST regulatory program adopted by the USEPA.
    The USEPA’s
    regulations have vastly expanded the standards applying to
    UST’s.
    Among them are the requirements
    for “private” financial
    assurance.
    It
    is the financial assurance provisions that provide
    for the State Fund as an alternate compliance route,
    a route that
    is potentially more accessible and less expensive.
    Although the
    monies for the State Fund come from tank registration fees
    collected by the Office of the State Fire Marshal (OSFM),
    the
    Agency determines who gets the reimbursements and what the
    deductible amount
    is.
    In the State Fund deductibility provisions, whether the
    phrase
    “in use” means that the
    tJST’s petroleum is actively being
    utilized,
    or •whether it means
    that the UST simply contains
    petroleum,
    affects whether the full $100,000 deductibility
    imposed on AKA was correct.
    Additionally, when applying the
    phrase
    “in use”
    in the “active”
    sense to other language,
    particularly to the federally derived definitions of “owner” and
    “operator”,
    the question was argued as to whether AKA was an
    owner and if not an owner,
    then an operator.
    If neither, then
    it
    was argued that AKA was not eligible for any reimbursement at all
    from the State Fund.
    The Board has construed
    “in use” as meaning that the UST’s
    are utilized in the
    “active” sense;
    that AKA is not the “owner”
    but
    is an “operator” and is thus eligible for the State Fund; and
    that the $100,000 deductible does not apply.
    The Board is
    remanding this matter
    to the Agency for
    it
    to determine whether
    the $50,000
    or the $10,000 deductible applies, as that issue was
    not fully aired in this proceeding.
    120—36

    —3.—
    THE STATE FUND
    A summary of the pertinent provisions of the State Fund follows.
    As a general observation, we recognize the concern of the
    Agency and the IPMA about
    the sufficiency of the State Fund
    if
    AKA’s arguments were to prevail.
    However, we emphasize that the
    arguments put forth by the parties and the IPMA have raised
    issues that, by implication, affect the liability provisions of
    the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
    (RCRA)
    UST enforcement
    program as well as the State Fund deductibility provisions
    in
    dispute here.’
    The arguments over the meaning of the phrase “in
    use” in the State Fund deductibility provisions has raised a
    fundamental problem with the Agency’s view as
    to who is an
    “owner” and who is an “operator”, as defined in the federal RCRA
    regulations.
    This Opinion will focus on the intertwining aspects
    of these issues as they arise.
    The State Fund provides
    that eligible owners or operators of
    UST’s may receive reimbursement for the costs of corrective
    action taken when there has been a release of petroleum; however,
    the State Fund also provides for a deductible of $10,000,
    $15,000,
    $50,000 or $100,000.
    The amount depends on such factors
    as the timing of the removal, when the leak first occurred, when
    the tanks were registered,
    etc.
    The State Fund implements a provision of the RCRA.
    RCRA
    requires that UST owners/operators have “private” financial
    assurance to cover
    a release, and details what must be covered in
    the financial assurance.
    RCRA also permits the establishment of
    an “equivalent” State Fund.
    (40 CFR 280.101
    (1990)).
    The Board
    has incorporated the State Fund into its RCRA “identical
    in
    substance” regulations.
    (See R89—l9, April
    26, 1990;
    35
    Iii. Adm.
    Code 731.200, adopted at 15
    Ill. Reg.
    9454, June
    15,
    1990).
    It
    is important to note that the State Fund defines “owner”,
    “operator”,
    and “underground storage tank”
    by directly
    referencing these definitions
    in RCRA’s Hazardous and Solid Waste
    Amendments of 1984
    (HSWA).
    The Board has adopted these
    definitions as part of its adoption of other HSWA provisions as
    identical in substance.
    (See R88—27, April
    27, 1989).
    The
    definitions are found at 35
    Ill. Adm. Code 731.112.
    One requirement
    for eligibility to the State Fund is a
    showing that the tanks be
    registered and fees paid into the State
    Fund.
    This activity
    is under the jurisdiction of the OSFM,
    pursuant to Section 4 of “An Act
    to regulate the storage,
    transportation,
    sale and use of gasoline, violatile oils and
    other regulated substances”.
    (Gasoline Act)
    (Ill. Rev.
    Stat.
    1989,
    ch.
    127 1/2,
    par.
    156).
    RCRA corrective action, on the
    other
    hand,
    is under the jurisdiction of the Agency.
    Thus,
    it
    is
    the Agency that oversees the State Fund’s expenditures.
    The
    120—37

    —4—
    Agency determines eligibility and the applicable deductible and
    processes claims.
    In this case,
    the Agency determined that AKA
    was eligible for reimbursement from the State Fund,
    and that its
    deductible was $100,000.
    (See Section 22.18b and c of the Act
    generally).
    If the Agency refuses to reimburse,
    in whole or in part,
    then the affected owner/operator may petition the Board pursuant
    to the permit appeal provisions of Section 40 of
    the Act.
    (See
    Section 22.l8b(g) of the Act).
    AKA’s appeal
    is based on a
    dispute over the Agency’s decision to impose the $100,000
    deductible.
    THE DEDUCTIBILITY PROVISIONS
    The base deductible amount
    in the Act
    is $10,000, except
    that the deductible increases to $15,000, $50,000
    or $100,000
    under certain circumstances.
    The $15,000 deductible
    is not at
    issue here.
    When one
    is determining which deductible applies to
    AKA.,. the point at which the following events occurred in relation
    to the State Fund’s “break point” date of July 28,
    1989 are
    highly relevant:
    a)when
    the tanks were registered with the
    OSFM,
    b) when the tanks were “in use”, and
    c) when the release
    first occurred.
    It
    is undisputed that AKA purchased the property containing
    the UST’s prior
    to July 28,
    1989.
    It
    is also agreed by the
    parties that AKA’s tanks were registered after that date, on
    August
    15,
    1990, and that the release occurred before July 28,
    1989
    (an event that becomes important if the $100,000 deductible
    does not apply).
    (R.
    4,
    56; Agency Record,
    p.
    20).
    What is
    in
    dispute
    is whether the tanks were “in use” prior
    to July 28,
    1989, which in turn depends on what
    “in use” means.
    As quoted
    later in this Opinion,
    the phrase
    “in use”
    is used
    in both the
    deductibility provisions of the Act and
    in the RCRA regulations
    defining “owner”,
    but
    is not expressly defined in either place.
    Generally, the Agency and the
    IPMA
    argue that “in use” means
    “containing”, even residual amounts,
    of petroleum.
    AKA, on the
    other hand,
    argues that
    “in use” should be construed
    in the
    active sense of the tanks being used for some purpose.
    The Agency’s and the EPMA’s interpretation supports the
    imposition of the $100,000 deductible, and AKA’s interpretation
    supports
    a lesser deductible (either $10,000 or $50,000).
    We
    note that the IPMA,
    in its statement filed at hearing, asserts
    that applying the minimum $10,000 deductible would inadvertently,
    by expanding the scope of the program, deplete the State Fund;
    however,
    the IPMA does not discuss the $50,000 deductible
    (Ex. A
    of Agency Brief, December
    14,
    1990).
    The Agency based
    its $100,000 determination on Section
    22.18b(d)(3)(B)(i) of the Act, which states
    in pertinent part:
    120—38

    If
    prior
    to
    July
    28,
    1989,
    the
    owner
    or
    operator
    had
    registered
    none
    of
    the
    underground
    storage
    tanks
    in
    use
    on
    that
    date.. .the
    deductible
    amount.. .shall
    be
    $100,000
    rather
    than
    $l0,000....(Emphasis
    added).
    AKA contends that the $100,000 deductible would not apply
    because the tanks were not “in use” prior
    to July
    28, 1989.
    If
    such is the case then the $50,000/$lO,000 deductibility
    provisions of Section 22.18b(d)(3)(B)(ii) of the Act come
    into
    play.
    That Section states
    in pertinent part:
    If
    the
    costs
    incurred
    were
    in
    response
    to
    a
    release
    of
    petroleum
    which
    first
    occurred
    prior
    to July
    28,
    1989,
    and
    the owner
    or the
    operator
    had actual
    or constructive knowledge
    that such a release had occurred prior
    to July
    28,
    the
    deductible
    arnount...shall
    be
    $50,000
    rather
    than
    $10,000,
    unless
    the
    $100,000
    deductible
    applies,
    in
    which
    case
    the
    deductible amount shall be $100,000.
    If...the
    owner
    or
    operator
    had
    no
    actual
    or
    constructive knowledge that such a release had
    occurred
    prior
    to
    July
    28,
    1989,
    the
    deductible
    amount
    shall
    be
    $10,000.
    It
    shall
    be
    the burden
    of
    the
    owner
    or
    operator
    to
    prove
    to
    the
    satisfication
    of
    the
    Agency
    that
    the
    owner
    or
    operator had
    no
    actual
    or
    constructive
    knowledge
    that
    the
    release
    of
    petroleum for which a claim is submitted first
    occurred prior
    to July 28,
    1989.
    As noted earlier,
    it was agreed that the release occurred
    before July 28,
    1989.
    Thus, AKA’s deductible would be $50,000
    rather than $10,000, unless
    it can prove that it had no actual or
    constructive knowledge of the release before July
    28,
    1989.
    We will now summarize the testimony at hearing,
    as
    it will
    help place into perspective the issues as identified by the
    parties as well as the underlying issues affecting the outcome of
    this matter.
    HEARING TESTIMONY
    At hearing,
    the president of AKA, Mr. Thomas
    C. Armstrong,
    testified that the company had been in the business of buying,
    selling,
    and developing real estate
    for approximately two years
    (R.
    9).
    In November of 1988, AKA acquired what was then vacant
    property located at 755 South Belt West
    in Belleville,
    Illinois
    (R.
    16).
    The purpose of the purchase was to develop the property
    120—39

    —6—
    for use as a Super
    K convenience store with gasoline pumps.
    (R.
    10).
    At that time there was evidence of a former Texaco station
    on the property which, according to available records, closed in
    about 1975 and,
    in any event, was no longer operating in 1976.
    (R.
    18).
    Remaining on the lot at the time of AKA’s purchase were
    a building, partial paving, and an abandoned gasoline pump island
    with two service bays.
    (R.
    10,
    17).
    The gas pumps had been
    removed
    (R. 11,
    17).
    The only later use of the facility was as a
    muffler shop.
    (R.
    18).
    Mr. Armstrong testified that he was not aware of the
    presence of any UST5 at
    the time of acquisition.
    However, when
    AKA entered into a long—term lease agreement with Quick Trip
    Corporation (Quick Trip)
    for AKA to construct a facility for
    it,
    Quick Trip,
    as was its policy, had the property tested for the
    presence of hydrocarbons
    in November of
    1989.
    (R.
    12,
    13,
    23).
    The tests, conducted by Geo—Technology Environmental
    Inc.
    (Geo—
    Technology), showed that
    a release of petroleum had occurred, and
    that there were an undetermined number of tanks on the
    property.
    The Agency was notified at this time.
    (R.
    13,
    25).
    Mr. Armstrong,
    after determining what the alternatives were,
    including an additional—testing option, decided to proceed with
    the clean—up.
    Although no dollar amounts were given,
    Mr.
    Armstrong testified that the clean—up cost considerably more than
    the estimates.
    (R.
    26).
    AKA foundsix underground storage tanks
    when it had the tanks and the contaminated soil surrounding the
    removed in March/ April of 1990.
    The tanks contained residual
    petroleum sludge and dirt that could be contained in two or three
    55 gallon drums.
    (R.
    13,
    14,
    28).
    Mr. Armstrong testified that he had made no inquiries of
    either
    the muffler shop or adjoining land owners to determine
    if
    tanks were on the property and hadbeen removed,
    and that he
    assumed that Texaco, as a reputable company, would properly
    abandon any tanks.
    (R.
    20).
    He stated
    that,
    in his prior
    experience as a real estate developer
    for 7—Eleven stores,
    construction was overseen by a construction manager and that he
    had not personally experienced a situation where tanks weren’t
    properly abandoned,
    although he had knowledge of others being
    involved in such situations.
    (R.
    21,
    22,
    26).
    He stated that AKA
    had never been a member of IPMA or
    received materials from them,
    and was not even aware of the existence of the State Fund until
    told of
    it by Geo—Technology.
    (R.
    34).
    The other person who testified at hearing was Mr.
    Bur
    Filson., Agency, project manager of the UST program, whose duties
    in part were to review applications for reimbursements.
    (R.
    40).
    He reviewed AKA’s supplemental application and determined
    that AKA could access the fund and that the deductible was
    120—40

    —7—
    $100,000, which amount would have to be paid’before AKA could
    receive monies from the State Fund.
    (R.
    54,
    56).
    Regarding his understanding of
    “in use”,
    Mr. Filson
    testified that he had consulted with the then-head attorney
    in
    the Division of Land Pollution Control, Mr. Gary King.
    (R.
    60).
    Mr. Filson noted that the phrase “in use” appears in two
    subsections of the deductiblity provisions,
    those being the
    $15,000 and $100,000.
    He also testified that the July 28,
    1989
    “start” date was the same date the State Fund was amended in the
    legislature and applied to everyone, and that,
    if the phrase “in
    use” were not present
    in the deductibility provisions,
    “it would
    be cost prohibitive for someone to open up a service station
    today”.
    (R.
    61).
    As the Board understands Mr. Filson’s testimony,
    the reason
    he believed “in use” meant “in the ground” prior
    to July 28,
    1989
    was because there was nothing
    in the OSFM’s tank registration
    language that otherwise fit the scenario;
    there was a definition
    for “existing tanks”,
    which Mr. Filson testified was “in the
    ground or substantial construction had been begun on December of
    1988.
    So as a result of that, and the lag time from December of
    1988 to July of 1989, the “in use” was inserted to,
    I guess,
    in
    effect redefine what existing tank was for the purposes of the
    funds.”
    (R.
    61,
    62).
    Mr. Filson decided on the $100,000 deductible on the basis
    that the tanks were not registered on July 28,
    1989,
    but were in
    the ground on that date.
    (R.
    69).
    He did not consider the
    possibility of any other deductible applying, nor did he
    specifically consider whether Mr. Armstrong had any knowledge of
    the release before July 28,
    1989 (which, as earlier noted,
    is a
    consideration articulated in the $50,000 deductible provisions).
    (R.
    67).
    Mr. Filson agreed that indications were
    that the tanks were
    not dispensing fuel,
    but asserted that AKA was storing a
    regulated substance on July 28, 1989,
    and that “use” could mean
    employing something for
    a purpose, although he had no idea what
    purpose AKA’s tanks were being employed for before July 28,
    1989.
    (R.
    69).
    Regarding “storing”, Mr Filson felt that it did not
    require that
    there be a purpose;
    he felt,
    for example,
    that when
    a milk carton
    is used for storing and dispensing milk, the
    presence of remaining residue still constitutes storage even
    after
    the carton
    is thrown in the garbage.
    (R. 72).
    ARGUMENTS AND BOARD DISCUSSION
    In a lengthy brief,
    the Agency uses four arguments to
    support its interpretation of “in use”.
    The parties’
    and the
    IPMA’s arguments and responses are summarized,
    and the Board
    discussion of them follows.
    120—4 1

    —8—
    RCRA/Board Definitions
    The Agency references, and partially quotes, definitions for
    “existing tank system”,
    “tank”,
    “underground storage tank or
    UST”, and “regulated substance” that are found in the Board’s
    identical in substance
    RCRA
    regulations at 35
    Ill. Adm. Code
    731.112.
    The Agency points out, with the Agency’s emphasis
    repeated here,
    that in the definition of:
    “Existing tank system”,
    the phrase used to contain is used;
    “Tank”, the phrase designed
    to contain is used; and that “underground storage tank or UST”
    means one or more tanks used to contain an accumulation of
    regulated substances
    (we note for later discussion purposes,
    that the UST definition also specifies that 10
    of the volume,
    including underground pipes connected thereto,
    is to be beneath
    the ground).
    The Agency also notes that “Regulated substance”
    means petroleum.
    The Agency then asserts that a
    tJST is a tank designed to
    contain petroleum,
    that the amount of petroleum is not specified,
    and that the federal view is that the purpose of a UST
    is that
    it
    is designed to contain a regulated substance,
    in this instance
    petroleum.
    We believe that the Agency’s arguments beg the question as
    to what the phrase “in use” means as it
    is used in the State Fund
    deductibility provisions
    in the State statute.
    It
    is because the
    “contained” language
    is already used
    in these definitions that
    the addition of “in use” becomes a useless redundancy if
    it means
    the same thing. People
    v. Wick,
    107 Ill.2d 62,
    481 N.E.2d 676,
    679 (1985).
    More specifically,
    if used
    to contain
    is already
    used in the definition of “underground storage tank”,
    then why
    would it be repeated directly after the words “underground
    storage tank”
    in the $100,000 deductibility provisions
    (i.e.
    “..underground storage tanks
    in use on that date at the
    site...(Section 22.lSb(d)(3)(B)(i))?
    As for the Agency’s
    assertion that “regulated substance” means “petroleum, we are
    uncertain as
    to its relevancy, because no one is arguing that
    point.
    We must conclude that, because the State Fund
    specifically relies on the federal definitions for “petroleum”
    and “underground storage tank”, and because “contain” language
    is
    already used, but the term “in use”
    is not used
    in those
    definitions, then “in use”
    is put
    in the deductibility provisions
    for a purpose and must mean something different.
    The Gasoline Act
    The Agency also quotes from the IPMA statement, which itself
    takes exerpts
    from the Gasoline Act.
    (Agency Brief pp.
    17—18).
    The IPMA notes
    that the Gasoline Act requires tJST’s which
    contained petroleum to register the tank withtheOSFM and notify
    the OSFM of their removal.
    120—42

    —9—
    Ironically, we find this to be additionalpersuasive
    evidence that “in use” does not mean “contained”.
    First, we see
    nothing inconsistent with using
    “contained” as a determinant for
    registration (and fee collection)
    purposes in the Gasoline Act,
    and using “in use” as a different determinant for deductibility
    purposes
    in the Act.
    It
    is obvious from this record that the
    OSFM’s registration
    (and fee) activities and the persons they
    affect operate independently from the Agency’s duty to oversee
    who get.s paid, and how much,
    from the State Fund.
    A State Fund
    applicant must simply show to the Agency that OSFM accepted the
    registration and that
    the fees were paid; OSFM’s statutory or
    regulatory language that served as a basis for OSFM’s
    determination is not for the Agency to review.
    The language of
    the Act, not the OSFM Act,
    is before the Board for
    interpretation.
    *
    Next, of particular note regarding the question of
    legislative intent as
    to whether the “contained” language in the
    Gasoline Act and the “in use” language
    in the Act mean something
    different,
    the “contained” provisions
    in the Gasoline Act were
    enacted at the same time
    in the same legislation as the “in use”
    provisions of Section 22.18b of the Environmental Protection Act.
    (see P.
    A.
    86—25).
    Deductibility for New Tanks Affected
    The Agency next argues that “in use” must be used in the two
    subsections of Section 22.l8b(d)(3)
    of the Act that describe the
    $100,000 and $15,000 deductibles,
    to cover the situation where
    the release was from a new tank, one that was installed after
    July 28,
    1989.
    Without
    “in use”, the maximum $100,000 deductible
    would be assigned to these new tanks.
    The Agency cites the
    definition of “new tank system”
    in 35
    Ill. Adm. Code 731.112,
    which refers
    to a “tank system that will be used
    to contain an
    accumulation of regulated substances and for which installation
    has commenced after December 22,1988.”
    (Agency emphasis).
    The
    Agency argues that, because the deductible sections focus on the
    date of July 28,
    1989, which
    is after the December
    22, 1988
    effective date of the federal
    rules, the term “new tank system”
    could not be used to clarify which deductible applies
    to a UST
    installed after July 28,
    1989.
    (Agency Br. pp.
    14, 15).
    We do not accept the Agency’s reasoning.
    The State Fund’s
    deductible definitions are State selected definitions
    implementing the State Fund program.
    The State Fund definitions
    *
    We also note that the Agency has argued in another UST case
    that
    it
    is bound, not by the OSFM regulations,
    but
    by the
    definitions
    in the Act and Board regulations. Rockford Drop Forge
    Company v.
    Illinois Environmental Protection Agençy,
    PCB 90—46,
    Opinion and Order
    of
    the Board
    p.
    7
    (December
    20, 1990)
    120—43

    —10—
    reference the federal definitions of “petroleum” and “UST’s”, but
    make no use of the term “new tank system” by reference or
    otherwise.
    Moreover, the only “triggering date”
    in the State
    Fund for determining deductibility is July 28,
    1989.
    Most
    important, until the tank
    is installed below the surface
    (i.e.
    to
    comport with the 10
    or more petroleum by volume “beneath the
    surface of the ground”
    language in the UST definition)
    it
    is not
    yet an underground storage tank.
    (35 Ill. Adm. Code 731.112).
    Until
    a tank is an underground storage tank,
    the deductibility
    distinctions, including the registration requirements, do not
    apply, no matter which interpretation, AKA’s or the Agency’s,
    is
    given to the phrase “in use”.
    Except
    for the $10,000 deductible,
    all of the deductibility provisions refer to UST related events
    occurring prior to July 28,
    1989.
    Put another way, how can a
    “new”
    storage tank be “in use” prior
    to July 28, 1989,
    if
    it was
    not yet a UST?
    We agree with AKA that the statutory phrase “in use” must
    mean something else.
    AKA argues that the only plausible
    explanation is that the phrase was intended
    to mitigate the
    consequences of failure
    to register tanks not being used for
    storage or dispensing fuel.
    (AKA Reply Br.
    p.
    3).
    The Board
    finds that the term “in use” means “use for
    a purpose”
    as
    interpreted by AKA.
    The deductibility provisions can be read
    rationally with this interpretation, the words
    “in use” are not a
    meaningless redundancy,
    or surplusage as AKA calls
    it, and the
    Board’s interpretation is consistent with how “in use” is used in
    the RCRA definition of “owner”.
    The discussionbelow addresses
    this latter
    issue.
    “Owner” as defined
    The Agency next claims that AKA would not be an “owner”
    if
    AKA’s construction of “in use” prevails.
    The Agency then asserts
    thatAKA is not an “operator”,
    so then AKA would be precluded
    from access
    to the State Fund.
    We’ do agree that AKA would not be
    an owner of the tanks under
    the RCRA definition of “owner”,
    but
    do not agree that AKA is not an operator under the RCRA
    definition of “operator”.
    We note again that,
    if the Agency’s arguments are implying
    that AKA could be neither the owner
    nor operator, such arguments
    suggest consequences that go well beyond the issue of who has
    access
    to the State Fund;
    only owners or operators fall within
    the jurisdictional purview of the whole federal RCRA and State
    UST regulatory program.
    The Agency clearly granted AKA access to the Fund and thus,
    that determination was not raised as an issue here p~ se.
    However,
    the Agency argues
    that it based its determination on its
    conclusion that AKA,
    as the current owner, was an “owner”
    as
    defined
    in the RCRA regulations, which definition
    is relied on by
    120—44

    —11—
    reference
    in the State Fund.
    In fact, the Agency prepared its
    forms on the assumption that the current owner of the tanks was
    the owner under the RCRA definition, and essentially ignored the
    “in use” language.
    In its formsrequired to be filled out for
    access
    to the Fund, the Agency asked for the name of the current
    owner/operator (Agency Record p.
    18)
    The Board will first address the owner
    issue.
    In Section
    22.l8(e)(l)(B) of the Act,
    “owner”
    is defined as follows:
    For purposes of this Act:
    When
    used
    in
    connection
    with,
    or
    when
    otherwise
    relating
    to,
    underground
    storage
    tank,
    the
    terms
    “owner”,
    “operator”,...shall
    have the meanings ascribed to them in Subtitle
    I of the Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments
    of
    1984
    (P.L.
    98—616),
    as
    amended,
    of
    the
    Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976
    (P.L.
    94—580),
    as
    amended.
    (Also see
    35
    Ill.
    Adm Code 731.112).
    Owner is defined
    in the federal regulations
    (also see
    35
    Ill. Mm. Code 731.112) as follows:
    “Owner”
    means
    (A)
    in
    the
    case
    of
    an
    underground storage tank in use on November
    8,
    1984, or brought into use after that date, any
    person
    who
    owns
    an
    underground
    storage
    tank
    used
    for
    the
    storage,
    use,
    or
    despensing
    of
    regulated substances,
    and
    (B)
    in
    the case
    of
    any
    underground
    storage
    tank
    in
    use
    before
    November
    8,
    1984,
    but
    no
    longer
    in
    use
    on
    November
    8,
    1984,
    any
    person
    who
    owns
    such
    tank immediately before discontinuation of its
    use.
    42 U.S.C.
    §6991(3).
    (Emphasis added).*
    Given the facts of this case, since
    the Board intreprets
    “in
    use”
    in the active sense
    that AKA would have those words
    interpreted,
    it
    is clear
    that AKA is not an owner
    under the Act,
    RCRA,
    or for purposes of access
    to the State Fund.
    If the tanks
    were not,
    as AKA asserts,
    in use on November
    8, 1984 or
    thereafter,
    AKA would not be an owner under subsection
    (A).
    If
    the tanks were in use prior
    to November
    8,
    1984,
    then, under
    subsection
    (B), the owner would not be AKA, but Texaco because
    it
    was Texaco that under
    subsection
    (B)
    had the UST’s in use before
    November
    8,
    1984 and then discontinued their use before that
    date.
    *
    For clarity,
    the Board removed the
    (A) and
    (B) from the
    definition.
    See 35
    Ill. Adm. Code 731.112.
    120—45

    —12—
    As noted,
    the Agency
    (and the IPMA)
    read “owner”
    to mean
    that if a storage tank
    in
    a UST system contains even a residual
    amount of petroleum,
    then a $100,000 deductible would be
    appropriate
    for AKA, because those tanks were not registered
    until after July 28,
    1989.
    Basically, the Agency and the IPMA
    contend that it is their “containing petroleum”
    interpretation
    that makes AKA eligible for the State Fund,
    and that their
    interpretation is assertedly correct on this basis alone.
    As earlier noted, we disagree with the Agency’s
    interpretation of “in use”.
    However, the Agency is correct
    insofar as,
    if the proper interpretation is applied,
    then the
    definition of
    “owner” would be construed to mean that Texaco,
    not
    AKA,
    is the owner.
    We note that AKA appears to concede the point
    on the “owner” issue, while asserting that
    it is an
    “operator”.
    (see Reply Brief p.
    3).
    In any event,
    the definition of
    “owner” supports AKA’s
    interpretation of “in use”
    in the active sense as meaning for
    a
    purpose.
    If used in the passive sense as meaning “contained”,
    the words used in the definition of “owner” would not make sense,
    and, the very least,
    one would have to ignore the phrase
    “storage, use or dispensing of”
    regulated substances.
    This
    language distinguishes between UST’s being used for storage, use
    or dispensing of regulated substances and those which are not,
    and would be unnecessary surplusage under
    the Agency’s
    interpretation.
    The Agency claims
    “in use” means
    “containing”,
    and that “used for”,
    “storage” and “use”
    (but not “dispensing”)
    also means “containing”,
    (although the Agency agreed at hearing
    that
    “use” could mean employed for
    a purpose).
    (R.
    70).
    In any
    event,
    if all this means “containing”, the words “storage” and
    “use” are useless, and the phrase “dispensing of”
    is rendered
    meaningless.
    Also,
    it
    is particularly noteworthy that the
    definition of UST itself already includes the phrase “used to
    contain regulated substances”.
    In the definition of
    “owner”,
    the
    “used for storage, use or dispensing of regulated substances”
    would have to be ignored to have the Agency’s argument make
    sense.
    Finally,
    we note that substituting “containment” for
    “use”
    in the last word of the definition makes
    for awkward
    interpretation indeed.
    Operator
    as defined
    With regard to the issue of whether AKA is an “operator”,
    35
    Ill. Adm. Code 731.112, defines the term as
    follows:
    “Operator” means
    any person in control of,
    or
    having responsibility for,
    the daily operation
    of the UST system.”
    Somewhat ironically,
    the Agency construes “operator11, unlike its
    construction of “owner”, as limited
    to those persons who are
    actively using the tanks.
    120—46

    —13—
    The Agency first contends that AKA has already admitted that
    it
    is not an “operator”.
    The Agency correctly notes that AKA
    stated both in its supplemental application for reimbursement
    (Agency ‘Record p.
    18)
    that it never operated the UST’s, and also,
    at hearing,
    that it never
    “operated,
    used or
    stored fuel
    in the
    USTs
    (see R.
    10—11,
    26—27).”
    (Agency Br.
    p.
    16.)
    We note that,
    in filling out the forms, AKA’s answers were consistent with the
    questions asked both on the Agency’s forms and at hearing, and
    with its understanding that the reference was
    to the current
    operator of
    a filling station.
    We also note that the Agency’s
    forms never inquired whether or when the tanks were
    “in use”;
    the
    closest
    it cOmes
    is a question as to when the tanks were “taken
    out of service”.
    (Agency Record p.
    21).
    The Agency, on the Application form asked for “current owner
    operator of
    tanks”.
    (emphasis added).
    AKA listed its name and
    then added in a footnote, “AKA owns the site where the tanks are
    located.
    It has never “operated”
    the tanks.
    They were
    previously abandoned and discovered after AKA Land,
    Inc.
    rpurchased the site.”
    (Agency Record p.
    18).
    On the next page,
    the Agency asked
    for the “current owner of the site property”,
    to
    which AKA listed its name.
    (Agency Record pp.
    5,
    19).
    The context of these answers
    is also made clear
    in the
    hearing transcripts referenced by the Agency above:
    Q
    Agency
    After
    that
    date
    1975
    has
    the
    property
    ever
    been
    operated
    as
    a
    filling
    station?
    A
    AKA
    Not to my knowledge or
    information we
    could get.
    Q
    Now,
    what
    use
    is
    (sic)
    AKA Land,
    Inc. made
    of
    this
    property
    since
    it
    was
    acquired
    in
    November of 1988?
    A
    The property has remained vacant.
    The only
    activity
    that
    we
    have
    conducted
    there
    is
    to
    demolish
    the
    structure
    which
    existed
    at
    the
    time
    we
    acquired
    it,
    and
    to
    remove
    the
    gasoline
    tanks
    that
    were
    found
    to
    be
    there,
    and
    the contaminated
    soil around them and
    to
    refill the excavated space.
    (R. 10—12)
    In like manner, AKA verified that it had answered
    “no” when
    the Agency asked whether AKA had ever used the tanks.
    (R.
    26,
    27).
    It
    is clear that AKA was not the current operator of a
    filling station, and had never used the tanks
    for that purpose.
    However,
    the Board finds
    that AKA became an operator of the UST
    system when it became subject
    to the UST closure regulations.
    We
    120—47

    —14—
    do not construe the definition of “operator”
    as applying only to
    those persons in daily operational control only of tanks in
    active service.
    We construe “daily operation” as meaning
    “on an
    ongoing basis”, not only when tanks are in active use, but
    throughout
    their life.
    We first point out that “operational life”
    in 35 Ill. Adm.
    Code 731.112 is defined as follows:
    “Operational
    life”
    refers
    to
    the
    period
    beginning
    when
    the
    installation
    of
    the
    tank
    system has
    commenced
    until
    the
    time the
    tank
    system is properly closed under Subpart G.
    The breadth of the beginning—to—end compliance
    responsibilities are included in the tJST rules at
    35
    Ill. Adm.
    Code 731.
    These regulations address the proper design and
    operation of the tanks,
    installation and operation of release
    detection,
    confirmation of suspected releases, and corrective
    action and removal of the tanks.
    The UST regulations place continuing and enforceable
    responsibilities
    for the proper operation of an UST system
    specificially and exclusively on an owner/operator, whomever
    those owner/operator persons may be at a particular point
    in time
    during the operational life of the tank.
    As will be discussed
    below,
    the USEPA specially addressed the effect of its
    regulations on owners and operators of closed’ or abandoned
    tanks.
    The USEPA, after reconsidering how the closure aspects of
    its regulations should be implemented with regard to tanks
    already closed or abandoned, determined that the owner/operator
    closure responsibilities may be applied selectively.
    By the
    language of that determination, it is clear
    that a person may be
    an operator,
    as opposed to an owner,
    of a closed or abandoned
    tank.
    Such language is found in the USEPA preamble at
    53 Fed.
    Reg.
    37185,
    September
    23, 1988, and is quoted below:
    EPA
    now
    believes
    that
    for
    tanks
    closed
    or
    abandoned before the effective date of
    today’s
    regulations,
    the
    closure
    provisions
    should
    only
    be
    applied
    se1ectivel~y
    under
    the
    discretionary
    authority
    of
    the
    implementing
    agency.
    These
    agencies
    are
    in
    the
    best
    position
    to
    identify abandoned
    tanks
    that may
    have been improperly
    closed,
    and to gauge the
    nature and extent of the threat posed by those
    tanks.
    They
    are also better able
    to
    identify
    the
    responsible
    owners
    and
    define
    the
    appropriate
    site assessment
    techniques.
    This
    approach
    is
    intended
    to
    enable
    the
    implementing agencies
    to effectively allocate
    their
    resources and only focus
    upon abandoned
    120—48

    —15—
    tanks that are suspected of posingpotentially
    significant
    problems.
    This
    revised
    approach
    also
    reduces
    the
    unnecessary
    burden
    upon
    owners
    and
    operators
    of
    the
    discovered
    abandoned tanks by eliminating the requirement
    for
    them
    to
    revisit
    and
    conduct
    a
    site
    assessment
    at
    all
    tanks
    that
    have
    been
    previously closed and
    removes the uncertainty
    associated
    with
    the
    “improper
    closure”
    standard.
    Ther~efore,the final
    rule deletes the proposed
    requirements
    to
    conduct
    site
    assessments
    at
    all
    tanks
    improperly
    closed
    before
    the
    effective date of the
    final
    regulations.
    The
    final
    rule,
    however,
    requires
    owners
    and
    operators
    of
    abandoned
    tanks
    to
    comply
    with
    the closure
    provisions
    if
    so directed
    by
    the
    implementing
    agency when
    it
    determines
    there
    is a resonable probability that the tank poses
    a
    potential
    threat
    to
    human
    health
    and
    the
    environmental either now or
    in the future.
    (Emphasis added)
    It
    is clear from the above language that anyone who removes a
    closed or abandoned tank must be either an owner
    or an operator
    who must comply with the closure provisions
    if so directed by the
    Agency.
    One could argue, though,
    that AKA was not first notified by
    the Agency.
    However,
    it would be a strained interpretation
    indeed to say that AKA was not an operator because
    it initiated
    the contact with the Agency before the Agency contacted AKA.
    The
    intent was to not require a revisiting and site assessment of all
    such tanks;
    it
    is not the federal ‘intent
    to have the Agency lose
    jurisdiction and the closure regulations not apply.
    Compliance with the corrective action requirements involves
    repeated notifications
    to the Agency, and the filing and approval
    of
    a series of plans and studies.
    (35 Ill. Adm. Code 731.161,
    731.162(b)
    and Section 22.l8b(d)(4)
    of the Act).
    The statute
    anticipates that corrective action can take place over a year.
    (see Section 22.l8b(d)(3)(A)).
    There is no indication that the
    Agency ever objected on the basis
    that AKA was not, strictly
    speaking,
    an “operator”.
    Had AKA initiated corrective action and removal without
    notifying the Agency, filing the plans,
    or obtaining the
    necessary approvals,
    it would have been in violation of the UST
    rules;
    however,
    unless
    it became an “operator”, how would AKA be
    subject
    to enforcement?
    In this case,
    though, AKA complied with
    the rules,
    and
    is hence entitled
    to compensation.
    120—49

    —16—
    We also emphasize that,
    in contrast to the federal
    definition of
    “owner”,
    there
    is no language
    in the definition of
    “operator”
    that reaches back to a prior operator before the tanks
    were closed or abandoned.
    That the USEPA intended this
    difference
    is buttressed by the reference only to past “owners”,
    not “operators”,
    in the above quoted USEPA preamble, where it
    states:
    “They
    state
    agencies
    are also better able to identify
    the responsible owners....”
    Thus,
    if one construes
    “daily
    operation”
    to be only the active use period
    in the operating life
    of a tank,
    there can be no operator, past
    or present,
    for closed
    or abandoned tanks;
    it would be
    a contradiction.
    This
    interpretation directly conflicts with the tJSEPA preamble quoted
    above,
    and cannot stand.
    We cannot ignore the USEPA’s statement,
    nor can we interpret the meaning of language in an “identical
    in
    substance” program that is contrary to the tJSEPA’s intent.*
    We note that this is not the first time that the issue of
    whether a person, other than the owner,
    is entitled to
    compensation when initiating a cleanup.
    In Union Petroleum Corp.
    ~v..United States,
    651 F.2d 734,
    743
    (Ct.
    Cl.
    1981), Union sought
    reimbursement,under the Federal Water Pollution Control Act,
    for
    costs incurred for cleaning up an oil spill at
    its terminal from
    tanks
    it did not own.
    The Court stated
    in footnote 23:
    That
    Union
    was
    not
    the
    “owner”
    of
    the
    tank
    cars or the oil
    is not a reason for denying it
    access to the fund
    That
    Union
    was
    not
    the
    “owner”
    of
    the
    tank
    cars or the oil
    is not a reason
    for denying
    it
    the
    benefit
    of
    the
    reimbursement
    provision.
    To
    take
    an
    analogy
    from
    the
    law
    of
    sales,
    under
    the Uniform Commercial Code ownership or
    “title”
    of
    goods
    does
    not determine who must
    bear
    the
    risk
    of
    loss.
    tJCC
    §
    2—509
    attempts
    to “place the
    loss upon the one most likely
    *
    *
    *
    to
    take
    precautions
    to
    protect
    against
    loss,”
    and
    that
    means
    in most
    cases
    the
    one
    who
    has possession
    and control
    of
    the
    goods.
    White
    &
    Summers,
    Handbook
    Of
    The
    Uniform
    Commercial
    Code
    (1972)
    at
    138.
    Likewise
    in
    this
    case
    it
    is
    clearly
    Union
    which
    was
    responsible in
    the sense of having possession
    and
    control
    of
    the
    tank
    cars,
    despite
    Hartwell’s ownership
    of
    the oil and
    lease
    of
    *
    The Board notes that
    it has experienced
    in an “identical
    in
    substance” setting,
    in this and other media,
    federal language
    that gives one pause
    ——
    requires interpretation to give a program
    a coherent whole.
    For example,
    the tJSEPA’s use of “owners and
    operators”
    (e.g.
    see the preamble) clearly means
    “owners or
    operators”
    (i.e.
    a person regulated is one or
    the other, or
    both).
    120—50

    —17—
    the
    cars.
    Just
    as
    possession
    and
    control
    would determine the responsibility for loss of
    the oil,
    so should it determine responsibility
    for
    operation
    of
    the
    “facility”
    involved
    in
    the
    spill.
    Union
    did
    not
    act
    as
    a
    mere
    volunteer
    in
    promptly
    initiating
    cleanup
    operations.
    It
    proceeded
    as
    the
    Act
    envisioned.
    We again emphasize that what
    is being regulated is tanks,
    not filling station operations.
    For example,
    if a person were an
    operator of a filling station and,
    like AKA, had found “problem”
    tanks on the property that were closed or abandoned,
    that person
    also would become an operator under the regulations addressing
    closed or abandoned tanks, and would have access to the Fund,
    if
    that person properly registered and removed those tanks.
    Put
    another way,
    the State Fund is set up for corrective action;
    the
    only “daily operations” left
    in the operating life of closed or
    abandoned tanks are the corrective action measures and reports
    under 35
    Ill.
    Adin. Code 73l.Subpart
    F operations,
    not gas
    dispensing operations.
    When AKA took control of, and became
    responsible for,
    on a daily basis, from start to finish, the
    removal of the tanks and the contaminated soil it became the non—
    owner person in daily responsible charge of the proper closure
    requirements.
    We believe that identifying the person responsible for the
    ‘“daily operation” language
    in particular serves
    to more clearly
    identify who actually is an operator, as distinguished,
    say, from
    a contractor or employee.
    This distinction is important from
    both a compliance and an enforcement perspective.
    The
    definitions of “operator”, where they exist at all, vary in the
    language used.
    However, while the language may vary,
    there
    is a
    consistent attempt to identify and regulate the person
    in control
    of or
    in responsible charge of all aspects of an activity on a
    continuous,ongoing basis.
    (See e.g.
    35
    Ill.
    Adm. Code 807.104
    and 810.103).
    Even where a definition of
    “operator”
    did not
    exist,
    the Board has articulated this reasoning in determining
    who was the operator.
    (See Richard W. Termat
    v. Milton Anderson,
    City of Belvidere, County
    of Boone, and the Belvidere Municipal
    Landfill No.
    2, PCB 85—129, October
    23,
    1986, an enforcement
    case,
    that revolved around the closure, post—closure care, and
    financial assurance requirements for waste disposal
    in Section
    21.1(a)
    of the Act and that identified whether the “operator” was
    the City or
    a contract employee.
    We also note that the Agency seems
    to give special weight
    to
    the use of the term “system”, which is found in both the
    definition of
    “owner” and
    “operator”.
    We find nothing
    significant
    in the use of that word for purposes of construing
    the State Fund deductibility provisions.
    We have a final observation regarding the owner/operator
    issue.
    As noted earlier,
    if AKA were neither the owner
    nor
    120—5 1

    —18—
    operator as defined, one could
    raise a question as to whether AKA
    could be held liable for the costs of corrective action or other
    liabilities articulated in Section 22.18 and the following
    sections of the Act relating to
    tJST’s,
    where the same definitions
    of owner/operator as in the State Fund portions apply.
    From an
    environmental perspective, which is what the Act
    is all about,
    it
    seems prudent not
    to construe the Act’s language in a manner that
    has a chilling effect on achieving prompt cleanup of a leaking
    UST.
    CONCLUSIONS
    The Board finds that the Agency incorrectly applied the
    $100,000 deductible to AKA.
    As requested by the Agency
    in its
    Brief, we will remand this matter to the Agency for its
    determination as
    to whether the $50,000 or $10,000 deductible
    applies.
    We note that,
    at hearing., AKA presented testimony and
    the Agenby asked questions relating to the constructive knowledge
    issue; however, neither AKA nor the Agency addressed this issue
    directly on point.
    This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact and
    conclusions
    of law
    in this matter.
    ORDER
    The Agency’s determination that the $100,000 deductible in
    the UST State Fund applied to A.K.A.
    Land,
    Inc.
    is hereby
    reversed.
    This matter
    is remanded to the Agency for its
    determination as
    to whether the $50,000 or $10,000 deductible
    applies pursuant to Section 22.18b(d)(3)(C)(ii)
    of the Act.
    Section 41 of the Illinois Environmental Protection Act,
    Ill.
    Rev.
    Stat.
    1989,
    ch. lll~,par.
    1041, provides
    for appeal of
    final orders of the Board within
    35 days.
    The Rules
    of the
    Supreme Court of Illinois establish filing requirements.
    IT
    IS SO ORDERED.
    J. Dumelle,
    B.
    Forcade and M. Nardulli dissented.
    R.
    Flemal issued a supplemental statement.
    I, Dorothy M. Gunn,
    Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board,
    hereby certify that the above Opinion and Order was
    adopt5 on the
    /~/‘~day of
    ~2Z~-~/~
    ,
    1991,
    by a vote
    of
    ~
    Dorothy
    M.
    c~4hn,
    Clerk
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    120—52

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