ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
April 25, 1991
SEXTON ENVIRONMENTAL
I
INC.,)
)
Petitioner,
V.
)
PCB 91—4
)
(Permit Appeal)
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
)
PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
)
Respondent.
DISSENTING OPINION
(by B.
Forcade and J.D.
Dumelle):
We cannot support the language adopted today because
it
holds that SES’s process is not “treatment”.
Section 3.49 of the
Illinois Environmental Protection Act defines “treatment”:
Section 3.49
“TREATMENT”
when
used
in
connection
with
hazardous waste means any method, technique or
process, including neutralization, designed to
change the physical,
chemical,
or biological
character
or
composition
of
any
hazardous
waste so as to neutralize such waste or so as
to
render such waste nonhazardous, safer
for
transport, amenable for recovery, amenable for
storage,
or
reduced
in
volume.
Such
term
includes
any activity or processing designed
to
change
the
physical
form
or
chemical
composition of hazardous waste so as to render
it nonhazardous.
(Emphasis Added)
SES’s permit applications was for
,
“a novel treatment process”,
SES designates the facility
in its general application as a
treatment facility, the Agency permit allows SES to treat the
waste,
SES agrees that the process will reduce the waste in
volume
(see emphasized language above), SES agrees that the
process will change the physical and biological character of the
waste so as to render
it amenable for recovery or storage
(see
emphasized language above). This must be “treatment”.
The opinion seems to adopt a standard that “treatment”
is
not treatment
if the resulting final product is not rendered
totally non-hazardous.
That is not what the statutory definition
says.
The statute talks about making the resulting product
safer,
smaller. In short, the statute talks about comparative or
proportional reductions
in danger or volume as being treatment.
SES agrees that their process makes such a comparative reduction.
121—643
2
Also, the opinion language could result in removing
a large
part of hazardous waste “treatment” from the fee system in
Illinois.
Assume a hazardous waste is hazardous because it
contains a listed waste and is flammable.
Would a process that
only removed its flammability be treatment? It would not under
today’s alternative opinion language.
This is not the result we
believe the General Assembly intended.
The only other
possibility is that the definition of treatment is different when
applied to some wastes compared to when it is applied to others.
The General Assembly only provided one definition to treatment.
Years later the General Assembly adopted the tax on treatment.
If they had intended the tax only to apply to certain types of
treatment or treatment of certain wastes, they would have said
so.
The Board in its rulemaking process cannot lessen a
statute’s scope.
Section 3.15 of the Act defines “hazardous
waste” to include wastes with “infectious characteristics.”
That
portion of the definition is separated by a semi—colon from other
text made dependant upon RCRA designations or Board rules.
Thus,
since the wastes here at issue had “infectious characteristics”,
it falls under those wastes covered by the General Assembly’s tax
for treatment.
We would hold that SES’s process is treatment and affirm the
Agency determination.
Bill S. Forcade
‘~
~‘
.
D. Dumelle
Board Member
/Board Member
I, Dorothy M. Gunn,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify that th~bove Dissenting Opinion was filed
on the
~~‘~day
of
________________,
1991.
~
~
Dorothy M. G4in, Clerk
Illinois Po3~utionControl Board
12 1—644