ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
July 9,
1992
BURWELL OIL SERVICE,
INC.,
)
)
Petitioner,
)
v.
)
PCB 92—42
)
(Underground Storage Tank Fund
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
)
Reimbursement Determination)
PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
)
Respondent.
DISSENTING OPINION
(by B.
Forcade and R.C. Flemal):
We respectfully dissent from the July 9,
1992,
opinion and
order in this proceeding in which the majority fails to address
the issue of whether Burwell Oil can access the Underground
Storage Tank Fund (UST Fund)
at all.
We dissent for reasons
previously expressed in our dissenting opinion in Clinton County
Oil Co.,
Inc., Hoffinan/Meier’s Shell and Clarence Meir v.
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, PCB 91—163
(Dissenting
Opinion, March 24,
1992).
Here,
in an effort to prove that they had no constructive
knowledge of a petroleum leak prior to July 28,
1989, Burwell has
provided ample evidence to conclude that the tanks removed in
September 1988 did not in fact leak.
The Board should allow the
Agency to evaluate this newly produced evidenôe and reach the
conclusion that the tanks were not respcnsible for the leak.
Accordingly, Burwell is not eligible for any reimbursement for
the removal of these tanks.
Instead, the majority precludes the
Agency from reevaluating its position based on newly presented
evidence.
This means, in effect, that if a petitioner can hide
the information from the Agency long enough, the petitioner may
prevail in reimbursement decisions.
There is no indication
Burwell did so, but others may.
We do not believe this to be a
proper procedure.
As we stated in our Clinton CountY dissent:
We
believe
that
the
majority,
in
the
interest
of
procedural. “correctness”
and
an
intense
desire
to
recognize
procedural
limitations upon
the
Illinois
Environmental
Protection Agency,
ignores a most key element
in this
case;
that the
facts
in the record
alone suPPort a finding that the petitioner is
ineligible
to
access
the
UST
Fund,
irrespective
of
the
issue
of
whether
the
Agency
can
change
its
own
eligibility
determination.
(Emphasis in Original)
01 35-0Oe9
2
The majority interpretation creates a problem from two
perspectives.
First,
the majority precludes te Agency from
reevaluating the new evidence asserting that it would constitute
a prohibited “reconsideration” and it would violate fundamental
fairness to allow the Agency to cite a new basis for its
decision.
Second, the majority will not allow this Board to
evaluate the newly presented evidence because it applies to a
legal theory not cited in the Agency’s denial letter. This is a
classic Catch-22 situation.
Such an interpretation might have merit if Board review were
limited to the existing factual paper record and legal briefs
from the parties.
However,
as long as the Board hearings allow
new evidence in the form of testimony and documents, problems
will surface.
It is important to remember that the money in the UST fund
is taxpayers’ money.
It is derived from a gasoline tax pursuant
to Ill. Rev. Stat.
1991,
ch.
120 par.
428a.
We are reluctant to
give away taxpayers’ money to people who do not meet the
statutory criteria to receive that money,
simply because the
Agency made a different decision before it had access to this
newly presented evide
e.
Accordingly
we dissent.
c
\
c
Bill S.
Forcade
Ronald
C. Flemal
Board Member
Board Member
I, Dorothy M.
Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereb~certifythat
e above dissenting opinion was filed
on the
i?
day of
___________________,
1992.
‘V
~
i~.
/
Dorothy N. G~inn,Clerk
Illinois P~IlutionControl Board
0135-0050