1. v. PCB 77-320
      2. ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTALPROTECTION AGENCY,
      3. VILLAGE OF ~INNETKA,
      4. 4) To provide a periodic update of inventory infor—mation; and,
      5. 5) To simplify enforcement; and,
      6. 6) To generate revenue.
      7. sorb a system could be justified.
      8. Si on 31 (b).
      9. mes L. Young

ILLINOIS
POLLUTION
CONTROL
BOARD
February
2,
1978
WINNETKANS
INTERESTED
IN
PROTECT ING
THE
ENVIRONMENT
(WIPE)
Complainant,
v.
PCB
77-320
ILLINOIS
ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION
AGENCY,
and
VILLAGE
OF
~INNETKA,
Respondents
DISSENTING
OPINION
(by
Mr.
Ycunq~
Although
I agree
bhat the
Co:npiaimt
must
be
dismissed,
it
should
he dismissed
for rant
of
jurisdiction, rather than
for
the
reasons
set
forth in the Tna9orsty
position.
It
is
not
an
accident,
that
there
is
no
provision
in
the
Environmental
Protection
Act:
for a
contest
of the Agency grant
of
a
nermit;
the
permit
funcuico
established
by the Act was
not
structured
to
authorize
such
a
oroceeding
nor
is
one
necessary to accomplish the
purroses of
the
statute.
The principar
uz~ef1
105
t~me
t
L~ìestate of a permit
system such as that
established by the Act
are as follows:
1)
To
orovide
an accurate
rr:Lonti
tativc’ and qua
lita—
ti
VC
invontory
Oi
the
CfflSSSlOfl,
d,i
sc!iarqc
or
disposal
of
contaminants
t;o
ti-ic
air,
water
and
land;
and,
2)
To
provide
an accurate invensory
of
the
loca-
tion and
ideftib:icanion
of
facilities
and
equip-
ment
capable
of
and
necessary
to
the
removal
of
contaminants
orbs
to
beneficial
use
or
the
emission,
discharqe or disposal
to the
air,
water
and
land;
andy
3)
To
provide
reasonable assurance
that
proposed
facilities
and
equinment
necessary to the
removal
of
notential contaminants
have
sufficient
capability
to
remove
such
contaminants
to
levels
necessary
to
comply
with existinq
regulatory
and
statutory
limitations
or
standards;
and,

—2--
4)
To provide a periodic update of inventory infor—
mation;
and,
5)
To simplify enforcement;
and,
6)
To generate revenue.
The
permit system performs the following useful functions
~:‘~r
the nermittee as follows:
Reasonable assurance by the state that the
facilities and equipment
proposed for the
removal of potential contaminants have
sufficient capability to
remove
such
con-
taminants
to
the
levels necessary to comply
ciith
existing
regulations and statutory
limitations or standards;
and,
Concise summation by the state of operational
parameters for facilities and equipment necessary
for compliance with existing regulations and
statutory limitations or standards.
Ththss
the permit system with the issuance of
a
permit
mbes
the degree of finality which can be relied
upon
oern:ittee sufficient to justify his commitment
of
resc’r’~
~
c’:~e initiation of construction, the system is of
no
va:.’~:e
tre nermittee and there is serious question
if the exp~:~
sorb
a system could be justified.
:1
it
was intended that the decision
of
the Agency
i
en:::rou a permit be subject to Board review on
complaint
are’ person it
would be necessary,
in order
to satisfy
i~
‘oress requirements, for the Act to require
publicatior
:eticu
of
permit applications and opportunity
for
public Hr
ection
and hearing before the Board.
No such
provisior
1
sopears
except as the Act was amended to do just that to
utooid~authorization for Agency issuance of National
PolJutent
schrrqo
El
imination
System (NPDES )
perrni U;
for di
schui
qes
to
~:I:u
u~tors
of
LIie State.
The sections added (Sections il(a)2
~rrouqt
ll(a)6, 11(b),
12(f),
13(b)
and 39(b)) do not extend
:hat authorization to other than NPDES permits.
The
sheer volume of oermits issued annually by the Agency
uiL5’rrtes
against
a
system
which
would
require
public
notice
orrmIt
issuance;
the
cost
of
publication
of
notice
alone
would
orchibitive.
Such
a
system
is
unnecessary
with
the
existence
a
erovision,
as
in
Section
31(b)
of
the
Act,
which
allows
‘rerson
to
bring
a complaint for revocation of a permit for
~:~on
of any provision of the Act,
the Board’s regulations,
any permit or term or
condition
thereof.
Section
45(h)
hot
further provides that any person adversely affected
:tor injunctive relief if denied relief by the
Board
Si on
31 (b).
29—188

—3—
No permit system, which issues permits prior
to the con—
traction and actual ooeration of a facility or equipment, can
urttrmitee
operation
of that facility or equipment without
a
o
ition any more than operation of facilities and equipment
cc
npliance with the law during one period of time guarantees
orip
rance during the following period.
In the system established
b~
~the
Act,
the issuance of a permit is no defense against any
)latiofl of the Act,
regulations or permit terms
or conditions,
~-e
that
of
operating
without a permit.
I am unable
to find any authorization in the Act which
ta
~shes
an action before the
Board to contest the Agency
rermination
on
a
permit aoplication except by the applicant
one
pursuant
to
Section
40,
After commenting on the right
o
ti
s applicant to contest Agency denial of a permit under
~
ori)n
40 of the Act
in
70 Northwestern L.R.
389
(1975),
o ~
P.
Currie, Professor of Law,
University of Chicago and
~Lrst Chairman of the Pollution Control Board,
states
(at
~The statute makes
no comparable provision for
review of the Agency~sgrant of a permit.
One
receiving
a permit for activity that allegedly
violates the law can be charged with causing
or threatening to cause such violation in
a
citizen complaint under Section 31(b), and the
regulations expressly provide that the existence
of a
permit
is no
defense
to such a complaint.’t
)ecisions
of
the
Pollution Control Board are subject to
mu
c. ci review pursuant to the Administrative Review Act
(ARA)
exressly
provided
by Section 41 of the Environmental Pro—
n
Act.
The Environmental Protection Act makes no similar
,
ov~eionfor the review of Agency decisions, and since the Act
~c
s
mt by express reference adopt the provisions of the ARA
imjency decisions, Agency grant of a permit is not subject
~o
ilicial review under the ARA
(Ill,
Rev.
Stat.
1975 Ch, 110,
S
Nor is the issuance of a permit~’iThjectto review under
\tministrative
Procedure
Act
(effective
on
January
1,
1978)
he
a
e
the Agency permit action is not required
to be preceded
re’
notice
and opportunity for
hearing
and
exempt
by
Section
16(a)
N
zt
Act.
Since
the
ourpose
of the ARA
was
to
dispense
with
the
use
o
muidamus,
certiorari,
injunction and the other extraordinary
moos
as
the
means
of reviewing
administrative
decisions
(Quin-
mind
Tyson,
Inc.
v.
City of
Evanston,
324 N.E.2d 65,
25 Ill.
Z~o~3rd
65;
People
ex
rel,
Builders
Supply
and
Lumber
Co.
v.
~“
la~j
aood,
160 N.E,2d,
22
I11.App.
283),
it
would
seem
~
i~f
the
Agency
issuance of the permit is subject to review,
review
must be sought
in
circuit
court under one of the extra—
othinary
writs.
29
189

—4—
The Environmental Protection Agency haE the duty to
administer, under Section 4(g) of the Act, such permit systems
as
are established by the Act or regu1ati~isthereunder and
are constrained to do so in accordance
with Title X of the
Act.
Under
Section 39, the Agency is required to adopt such
procedures
as necessary to carry out its duty to issue a permit
upon
proof by the applicant that issuance of the permit will
not
cause
a
violation
of
the
Act
or
of
the
regulations.
It appears, especially from
the absence of any provision
of
the Act which purports to authorize administrative review
of
Agency grant of a permit by the courts or the Board, that
the
action of the Agency in the grant of a permit was deemed
a
purely
ministerial action and for that reason not made subject
to the review usually reserved to discretionary administrative
decisions.
Finally,
I must conclude the Agency,
in the exercise of
its
duties under Section 4(g)
and Title 10 of the Act, is not
subject to a complaint before the Board under Section 31(b)
of
the
Act.
For this reason,
I do not believe that the Board
Procedural
Rule 503(a), which purports
to establish
an action
before the Board
seeking revocation of
a permit on the ground
that it was issued by the Agency in violation
of the Act or the
regulations,
is
valid.
Although
I appreciate that it is of no significance,
I am
a
bit vexed by the proposition that the
issuance, of a permit
by the
Agency,
which
in
express
terms
prohibits
any
violation
of the
Act
or
the
regulations,
somehow constitutes
an Agency
violation of the Act or the regulations.
Since
the
action
here
is
nothing more than a petition for
the review of the Agency grant of a permit
over which the Board
has no
jurisdiction,
the
action
should
have
been dismissed on
that
basis.
mes L. Young
I,
Christan
L.
Moffett,
Clerk
of
the
Illinois
Pollution
Con-
trol Board, hereby certify,that
the
ov
Dissenting Opinion was
submitted
to me on the
IL~
day of
__________________,
1978.
ChristanL.
of
f~t~)
Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control
Board
29
190

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