ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    January 21,
    1982
    AMERICAN FLY ASH CO.,
    et al.,
    )
    Petitioner,
    )
    PCB
    81—188
    ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
    Respondent.
    ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (by 3. Anderson)~
    American Fly Ash
    (AFA)
    applied for a permit for a solid
    waste
    management site which the parties have impliedly assumed
    is an
    SB 172,
    (P.A.
    82_0682)* “new regional pollution control
    facility”.
    Application was made July
    27,
    1981 and the permit was Iranted by
    the Agency on October 27,
    1981.
    This matter is before the Board
    on the appeal
    of only one condition of that permit,
    requiring
    “written evidence that the applicant and Tazewell County have an
    agreement relative to road maintenance and load limits.”
    In
    ZYX-Dixon
    v.
    IEPA,
    PCB 81—167
    (December 3,
    1981) the Board
    noted the chronological legislative history of
    SB
    172.
    Briefly,
    again,
    SB 172 was passed by the legislature and consequently reFer-
    red for gubernatorial review and action,
    if any,
    on July
    1,
    1981.
    The Governor issued an amendatory veto message on September 24,
    1981.
    The changes suggested
    in the amendatory veto were accepted
    by the Senate October 15 and by the House October 28,
    1981.
    The
    changes were thereafter certified by the Governor November 12,
    1’~81.
    In
    ZYX,
    for reasons there stated and incorporated herein
    by reference,
    the Board determined that SB 172 was a procedural
    statute legislatively intended to have retroactive application
    in
    a situation where
    a) the permit for what has been defined by SB
    172 as a “new regional pollution control facility” was initially
    *In pertinent part,
    SB 172 amends Section 39(c)
    of
    the
    Environmental Protection Act to provide that “no permit for the
    development or construction of
    a new regional pollution control
    facility may be granted by the Agency unless the applicant submits
    proof
    to the Agency that the location of said facility has been
    approved by the County Board...if
    (the facility is to be located
    in
    an unincorporated area.”
    New Section 3(t) defines a “new
    regional pollution control facility” as one “initially permitted
    for development or construction after July 1,
    1981.”
    45—
    159

    applied for after July 1,
    1981, and b) was denied by the Aqency
    prior
    to November 12,
    1981,
    the effective date of
    SB 172.
    The
    ZYX action was dismissed, the Board holding that both it and
    Th~Agency would
    lack statutory authority at this time
    to cause
    issuance of a permit where county approval had not been receive-i.
    Before this appeal can proceed, the threshold question
    is
    whether there exists
    a validly issued permit over which the Board
    can exercise jurisdiction, or whether Sn 172 retroactively applies
    to invalidate this permit.
    As the Agency in its December 24,
    1981
    brief,
    and AFA
    in
    its December
    29 brief correctly point out,
    a
    retrospective application of
    SB 172 could invalidate all landfiU
    development and construction permits issued by the Agency in the
    “gap” between July 1,
    1981 and November 12,
    1q81.
    The Board has not discovered direct evidence
    of legislative
    consideration of the effect oE
    SB 172 on permits issued during
    the “gap”.
    However,
    in House debate immediately prior to rouse
    passage
    of
    SB 172 on July 1,
    1981,
    Rep,
    Breslin perhaps indirectly
    addressed the
    issue during her presentation of the bill,
    In
    response
    to
    a question by Rep. Keiley as to whether persons could
    receive permits without local
    approval “if they hadn’t done
    so by
    the first”,
    Rep. Breslin stated that
    “If EPA has not granted them a permit by the time this
    Bill
    is signed then the siting provisions of
    this Bill
    will apply to them.”
    (Transcription Debate,
    82nd Iii.
    General Assembly.
    House of Representatives,
    3uly 1,
    1981 at 3).
    On the other hand,
    the Board again notes that the Governor’s
    amendatory veto message of September 24,
    1981 specifically referred
    to this date in stating that “Only those new sites seeking ~irst—
    time approval
    after July
    1,
    1981 should be included.”
    The Board
    continues to find the legislature’s acceptance of the amendatory
    veto to be more compelling evidence that
    a retroactive effect
    was intended.
    To construe the statute as not having retroactive
    application is to render meaningless
    the July
    1,
    1981 permit
    issuance deadline solely for “new regional pollution control
    facilities,”
    The statute does not make exceptions,
    or otherwise
    contain
    a savings clause
    for such facilities not possessing
    a
    permit on or before July
    1,
    1981.
    AFA and the Agency argue that SB 172 should not be given a
    retroactive effect
    in this case,
    even putting aside the question
    of
    legislative intent, on the ground that to do
    so would deprive
    AFA of
    a vested property right.
    The Agency points out that
    Hogan
    v. Bleeker,
    29
    Ill.
    2d 181,
    193 N.E.2d at 848, upon which
    the Board relied in
    ZYX,
    goes on to hold that
    “However, even procedural or remedial statutes are
    not construed retroactively where
    to do so would
    deprive one of
    a vested property right
    entitled
    to
    constitutional protection).” 193 N.E.2c1 at 849.
    45—160

    3
    AFA
    has
    drawn
    the
    Board’s
    attention
    to
    numerous
    cases
    involving the retroactive effect of legislation which changes
    prior
    zoning.
    In
    the
    case most nearly on point Deer Park
    Civic
    Assn.
    v. C~y~~Chicagp,347 Il1.App.346,
    106 N.E.2d 823
    (1st
    ~p.t5Ist. 1952) the court refused to issue a judicial declaration
    that a building permit,
    previously
    issued, had been revoked by
    an amendatory ordinance changing the zoning from manufacturing
    to family dwelling.
    The general rule stated there
    that
    “any substantial
    change of position, expenditures,
    or incurrence of obligations under a building permit
    entitle the permittee to complete the construction
    and use the premises
    for the purpose authorized
    irrespective of subsequent zoning or changes
    in
    zoning”
    (106 N.E.2d at 825).
    This general rule has been subsequently embraced and applied
    by
    the Supreme Court
    ~.
    Pioneer_Trust
    arid
    Savip~
    Bank
    V.
    Co~p~y
    of
    Cook,
    71 1112d
    5.10,
    377 N.E.2d 21
    (1978).
    In Exhibit
    A to AFA’s
    brief,
    and the affidavit of AFA
    Operations/Products Manager Mitchell
    L. Nowicki,
    AFA details
    the
    1980 and 1981 month by month expenditures made in selection of
    the Tazewell County
    site,
    preparation of the permit application,
    and participation in a public hearing concerning that application
    held in Pekin on October
    1, 1981.
    A total
    of approximately
    $96,000 was expended,
    $49,000 by AFA and the remainder by Common-
    wealth Edison Co.
    (The AFA site is to receive fly ash and wet
    bottom boiler slag generated by Commonwealth Edison.)
    ATh’s
    expenditures were all made prior to June,
    1981.
    Between July and
    October,
    1981 Commonwealth Edison expended
    in excess of $34,000.
    Between November 1-12,
    it expended an additional
    $4,800.
    AF2\
    contends that the expenditure
    of these
    funds has given
    AF1\
    a
    vested property right
    in the October 27, 1981 permit.
    The Agency does not refer to this body of zoning
    law.
    It
    does, however,
    draw the Board’s attention to cases
    in which the
    Agency and the Board have been held to be equitably estopped
    from revoking sewer construction permits
    granted by the Board’s
    predecessor Sanitary Water
    Board,
    where the developers had
    expended substantial sums of money and incurred heavy liabilities
    in reliance upon the issuance of these permits Wachta
    v.
    PCB,
    8
    Ill.
    App.3d
    436,
    289 N.E.2d 484
    (1972),
    Bederman
    v.PCB,
    22
    Ill.
    App.2d 31,
    316 N.E.2d 785
    (1974),
    Kaeding
    v.
    PCB,
    22
    Ill.
    App.3d
    36, 316 N.E.2d 788 (1974).
    Finally,
    the Agency refers to Martefl.
    v~au~y,511
    F.
    Supp.
    729
    (N.D.
    Ill.
    1981), holding
    that the
    ~qency’s
    denial
    of
    an
    operating
    permit
    for
    a
    sanitary
    landfill
    on the
    basis
    of
    unad~udicated
    charges
    of
    prior
    misconduct
    was
    impermissible.
    Expenditure of substantial
    sums
    in
    reliance
    on
    a developmental permit was found to have created a legitimate
    claim of entitlement
    to an operating permit,
    a possessory
    interest
    in real
    estate,
    and a liberty interest deserving of
    constitutional protection.
    45—16 1

    4
    As balanced against the
    Board’s
    finding
    of
    legislative
    intent
    that SB 172 be given retroactive application,
    the Board
    finds
    that
    AFA’s
    allegations
    and
    evidence are of insufficient wethht
    to
    “save”
    its permit by means of an equitable estoppel.
    The gravemen
    of
    Wachtae~al~
    was the permittee’s expenditure of substantial
    sums
    in ~easonahle reliance on issued permits.
    The $4,800 spent
    in
    November,
    1981
    arguably in reliance on the issued permit was
    expended
    by
    Commonwealth
    Edison, not AFA.
    AFA made no expenditures
    later
    than
    June,
    1981.
    It
    cannot
    here claim
    estoppel
    based
    on
    actions taken by another entity,
    not party to this action,
    The Board must observe that the reasonableness of Edisori~s
    reliance on the permit in making even this insubstantial expend-
    iture is highly questionable.
    The permit was issued well after
    the Governor’s arnendatory veto message of September 24,
    1981
    and
    only one day before final legislative action was taken on
    Sri
    172
    on October 28,
    1981 accepting the Governor’s veto~suggestedamond’~
    ments,
    Under these circumstances,
    the reasonable person would
    be
    lead to believe at the very least that there was
    a “cloud” over
    the
    permit.
    In
    addition, the initial
    legislative passac~eof
    SB
    172 on July
    1,
    1981 makes the reasonableness of Edison’s $34,000
    expenditure between July and October,
    1981 similarly questionable,
    in view of the “risk”
    of gubernatorial acquiesence to the bill as
    passed July 1, 1981.
    Given the Board’s
    findings on the equitable estoppel
    issii~,
    the Board need not exercise any
    authority
    it may possess to
    ac1~udicatethe constitutional
    “vested property rights” claims,
    although the Board notes that the zoning cases’
    tests
    for
    concluding if and when property rights have vested are nearly
    identical
    to those
    in the environmental cases regarding
    application of equitable estoppel.
    This appeal
    is dismissed.
    Giving
    SB
    172
    retroactive effect,
    the Board finds that no valid permit exists over which the Board
    can
    exercise jurisdiction.
    While
    the
    Board
    agrees
    that
    this
    might
    he considered a harsh result,
    it
    believes
    that
    it
    is
    the
    result
    intended by the legislature.
    IT
    IS
    SO ORDERED,
    I,
    Christan L.
    Moffett, Clerk
    of
    the
    Illinois
    Pollution
    Control Board, hereby certify that the above Order was
    adopted
    on
    the
    ~
    day of
    ~
    ~,
    1982
    by
    a
    vote
    of
    (3
    Illinois Polluti
    45—162

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