ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
February 17,
1982
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
Complainant,
v.
)
PCB 81—190
CITY OF CHICAGO, JOHN B.W. COREY and
INGERSOL PRODUCTS,
CORP.
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by J.
Anderson):
On December 31,
1981, the City and John Corey moved to
dismiss counts V through VII.
On January
21,
1982 the Attorney
General
filed a Response in Opposition.
The motion
is denied as to Counts V and VII, which the Board
finds sufficient
in stating
a cause of action.
The issue concerning Count VI can be framed as whether
allegation of the violation of Technical Policy Statements
314(c)
and (d)(4), without allegations of
a resulting violation of any
underlying Board regulation or provision of the Act,
is sufficient
to state a cause of action under the Act.
The City respondents assert that the Board has no
jurisdiction under Section 31(b)
of the Act to consider violations
of Rules which have not been adopted by the Board itself,
and that
alternatively, Section 31(b) jurisdiction
is limited to a complaint
brought by the Agency.
As the City respondents themselves note,
Rules 314(d)
of
Chapter
6:
Public Water Supplies authorizes the Agency’s adoption
of “specific conditions for control of unsafe cross—connections”
in accordance with Rule 212 procedures concerning “Technical
Policy Statements”
(TPS).
Attorney General Opinion S—1408
(January
10,
1979)
determined that the Agency has authority to
adopt Technical Policy Statements,
finding that the Board
“has not
improperly
delegated its authority to adopt
regulations concerning public water supplies to the
Environmental Protection Agency.
The Agency’s
statutory
powers to approve and monitor public water suppies and
to administer the Board’s permit requirements authorize
the Agency to adopt technical policy statements for
public water supplies”
(at p.
6).
45—431
This Opinion of the Attorney General does not however address
the issue as
to whether these
TPS are enforceable under the Act
independent of citation to underlying Board regulations or the
Act.
Section 4 of the Act, establishing the Agency’s duty and
authority,
gives the Agency rulemaking authority only to carry out
its authority “to accept,
receive, and administer...any grants,
gifts,
loans or other funds”
Section
4(1).
Section
5,
defining
the Board’s authority, provides that the Board “may adopt rules
and regulations
in accordance with Title VII of this Act”
(Section
5(g).
Section 31(b)
of the Act provides that “any person may
file with the Board a complaint,
...,
against any person allegedly
violating this Act or any rule or regulation thereunder or any
permit or term or condition thereof”.
Reading these sections together, the Board finds no
legislative direction to it to consider complaints based on
violations
of what the Attorney General has characterized as
“guidelines
as to how the Agency administers the Board’s
regulations”
(5-1408 at p.5).
Count VI
is accordingly dismissed.
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
~7~-~day of
___________________,
1982 by a vote of
~
-~f.
~
~)
Christan L.
Mof ett, C(Q~S
Illinois Pollution Control Board
45—432