ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
September 12,
1991
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY,
Complainant,
v.
)
AC 91—17
(Docket A
&
B)
(IEPA No.
159-91—AC)
RONALD
FLDMAN,
d/b/a FELCO
)
(Administrative Citation)
COMPANY,
Respondent.
MR. RICE~RDWARRINGTON,
JR., APPEARED ON BEHALF OF COMPLAINANT.
MR. GERALD
E.
FRANK APPEARED ON BEHALF OF RESPONDENT.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by J.C. Marlin):
This matter
is before the Board on an Administrative Citation
filed by the Ilinois Environmental Protection Agency (“Agency”)
pursuant
to the Illinois Environmental Protection Act
(hereinafter
“the Act”)
(Ill.
Rev. Stat.
1990 Supp.,
ch. lll~,
par.
1001 et
seq).
The citation was issued April
8,
1991 and
alleges that Respondent Ronald Feldman d/b/a Felco Company
(“Feldman”)
is
in violation of Section 2l(q)(l) of
the Act
for
causing or allowing open dumping of wastes that resulted in
litter.
A Petition
for Review was filed ~iiththe Board on May 7,
1991.
Hearing was held July
22,
1991 at
the State of
Illinois
Center, Chicago,
:llinois.
Mr.
Aaron Taylor testified on behalf
of the Agency.
Mr.
Feldman
testified in his own behalf.
No
nembers of
the public were present at hearing.
BACKGROUND
Mr.
Feldman
is
the present owner
of a parcel
of ground
located
in southern Cook County, Illinois.
The property
is
directly off the access ramp for the Calumet Expressway and U.S.
30.
The site,
of undescribed size and shape,
is located at the
end of an access road.
On February
6,
1991,
Mr. Aaron Taylor,
Agency field inspector,
inspected this site.
A prior inspection
of November
13,
1990 resulted in Mr. Feldman being issued an
Administrative Warning Notice
(AWN)
specifying that corrective
action was required at the site.
(Complaint).
The Agency
received no response
to the AWN.
(Complainant’s Exh.
1.)
The
initial
inspection was conducted in response
to a call from Felco
Company
to participate
in
the Agency’s used tire cleanup program.
126—115
2
APPLICABLE LAW
Section 31.1 of the Act provides that “the
prohibitions
specified in subsections
(p) and
(q)
of Section
21 of this Act
shall be enforceable either by administrative citation under
this
Section or as otherwise provided
in this Act.”
Section 21(p)
of
the Act applies to sanitary landfills permitted under
the Act
while Section 21(q)
applies to all dump sites.
The
administrative citation issued against Feldman alleges violation
of Section 21(q)(l).
Section 2l(q)(l) provides that no person
shall:
In violation of subdivision
(a)
of the Section, cause
or allow the open dumping of any waste
in a manner
which results
in any of the following occurrences
at
the dump site:
***
1.
litter;
Section 21(a)
of the Act sets forth the general prohibition
agai~stopen dumping by providing that,
“(nb
person shall cause
or allow the open dumping of any waste.”
Before a Respondent can be held liable pursuant
to Section
21(q),
the Board must find
1)
that the Respondent caused or
allowed open dumping and
2)
that the open dumping
resulted in
one or more of
the occurrences specified
in Section 21(q).
A
Respondent has two defenses to an Administrative Citation.
The
first
is
to show that the violation did not occur;
the second
that
t occurred but was due
to uncontrollable circumstances.
Ill. Rev.
Stat.
1989,
ch. lll~,par. lO3l.l(d)(2).
DISCUSSION
Mr.
Taylor
testified that, upon arriving at
the site,
he
observed
a “few thousand tires scattered about,
some construction
debris, old furniture, scrap metal and Landscape waste.
(R.8)
Mr. Tayloi took photographs which were appended to the filed
citation.
(Comp. Exh.
1
—
3;
R.16)
Some
of the tires appeared
to have been set on fire.
(R.10)
Mr.
Taylor testified that
a “rope gate” stretched across the
access road at its beginning.
The metal cable was suspended
between two poles,
but was down.
A sign was tacked on a tree
which said “No dumping, No hunting, No fishing, No trespassing.”
Mr.
Taylor did not observe any additional fencing or barriers.
He did not observe anyone present at the site.
(R.l2)
Upon questioning by Respondent’s attorney,
Mr. Taylor
stated
that
“he had no evidence at all that
Mr.
Feldman
actively
126—116
3
allowed someone to use this site as
a dump”
or that Feldman
allowed third parties
to use
it as
a dump.
(R.15)
Taylor
admitted that the access road was the only access
to the site.
(R.19)
When questioned about an additional sign on the guardrail
stating “No trespassing”, as shown
in pictures taken by Mr.
Feldman,
Mr. Taylor stated he did not remember seeing
it.
Ronald Feldman, of 70 North street,
Park Forest,
Illinois,
testified that he is
a principal of Felco Company and the owner
of the site
in question.
(R.22)
He stated that he has never
knowingly allowed anyone
to use the site as
a dump site.
Felco
restricted access
:o the site,
he testified,
through the
placement of the cable running across
the access
road.
(R.25)
It has been there many years,
he stated.
(R.26)
On examination
by the Agency attorney, Mr. Feldman testified
that the cable ha.~a lock on
it.
The key is kept at the office.
ANALYSIS
The Respondent argues
at hearing that the evidence presented
snows that he took all
reasonable steps to secure this property
and that the Agency’s case
is, therefore,
insufficient as a
matter of law.
In essence,
the Respondent argues that he did not
“cause or allow” dumping to take place on his property within the
meaning of the statute.
The Agency countered that the “testimony
of
a
loose cable
and
of potential access around
it indicates
that Mr. Feldman... allowed..,
an open dump and litter...”
The uncontroverted evidence
is that the site contained
a
substantial amount
of debris which constitutes litter.
The
evidence also shows that access
to the site
is limited
to a
single road that was intended
to
be restricted by a locked cable
strung between a post and a guardrail at
the beginning of the
site’s access road, but that on the day of inspection,
the cable
was down.
At least one sign
is present which states that litter
and trespassing are prohibited.
Mr. Feldman testified that he
has not allowed the site
to be used as a dump site.
We conclude that, on the evidence presented,
Mr. Feldman
caused or allowed the open dumping of waste
on his property.
Waste
is certainly present.
c’7hile no testimony was presented
that Respondent actively caused the waste,
the Agency inspector
testified that, on the day of the inspection,
the cable was not
hooked up, thereby allowing him full access
to the site.
The
amount of refuse on the site indicates that others also found
ready access.
The evidence
is therefore sufficient to
demonstrate that Mr. Feldman did not adequately restrict access
to this site and thereby allowed open dumping resulting in
litter.
Additionally
the Board finds that the Respondent has not
126—117
4
demonstrated that the violation was due
to uncontrollable
circumstances.
This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact and
conclusions of law in this matter.
ORDER
1.
Respondent
is hereby found to have been in violation on
February
6,
1991 of Ill. Rev.
Stat.
1990 Supp.,
ch. lll~,par.
1021(q) (1).
2.
‘Within 45 days of this Order Respondent shall,
by
Certified check
or money order, pay a civil penalty in the amount
of $500.00 payable
to the Illinois Environmental Protection Trust
Fund.
Such payment shall be sent to:
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
Fiscal Services Division
2200 Churchil Road
Springfield,
Illinois
62706
Respondent shall also place his Federal Employee Identification
Number or Social Security Number upon the certified check
or
money order.
Any such penalty not paid within the time prescribed shall
incur
interest at the rate set forth
in subsection
(a)
of Section
1003 of
the Illinois Income Tax Act,
(Ill. Rev.
Stat.
1989,
ch.
120, par.
10—1003), from the date payment
is due until the date
payment
is received.
Interest shall
not accrue during the
pendency of an appeal, during which payment of the penalty
is
stayed.
.
Docket A in this matter
is closed.
4.
Within
30 days of this Order,
the Agency shall file a
statement
of
its hearing costs,
supported by an affidavit,
with
the Board and with service upon Respondent.
~Jithinthe same
30
iays,
the Clerk of
the Pollution Control Board snall file
a
statement of the Board’s costs, supported by affidavit and with
service upon Respondent.
Such filings shall
be entered in Docket
B
in this matter.
5.
Respondent is hereby given leave
to file a
reply/objection to the filings as ordered in paragraph
4 of this
Order within
45 days of this Order.
Section 41 of
the 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.
126—118
5
IT IS SO ORDERED.
I, Dorothy M. Gunn,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify that the above Opinion and Order was
adopted on the
/~tZ~ day of
c~/7~~
,
1991, by
a vote of
7-~
~
•
~
~
/~.
~
~Dorothy M., ~unn, Clerk
Illinois ~dllution Control Board
126—119