ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL
BOARD
November 18,
1983
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
)
PROTECTION AGENCY,
Complainant,
v.
)
PCB 83~28
TOP CHOP,
INC., an Illinois
)
corporation,
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by W.
3,
Nega):
On June
2,
1983, the Board issued an Opinion and Order in
this enforcement action, accepting a stipulated settlement of
this matter provided that the parties would agree to modification
of the penalty figure from $1500.00 to $5000.00.
The Order
provided that Top Chop was to certify its acceptance in writing
within 30 days
(i.e., by July 2), or “the Stipulation and Proposal
for Settlement
would)
be rejected in toto by the Board and the
case
would
be remanded to the parties for appropriate action”
(Opinion,
p.
4).
No written certification of acceptance of the
$5000.00 penalty was filed.
On June 30,
1983,
Top Chop submitted a letter to the Board
containing information relating to its financial condition,
The
Attorney General, on behalf of the Agency, requested that the
letter be stricken on several grounds:
1)
as being an ex parte
contact,
2)
as containing information of a mitigating nature
which the Agency had not “had the opportunity to investigate...
and obtain.. .through discovery procedures”, and to which “the
Agency had not been given the opportunity to respond..
.
or to
subject.. .to the scrutiny of cross examination”,
(July 15 Motion,
p,2),
3)
as being a procedurally improper motion
for reconsider~
ation, and 4) as being inconsistent with the terms of the Board’s
Order providing that if the $5000 penalty were not accepted,
that the case would be remanded to the parties.
In the latter
context, the Agency noted that it intended “to initiate discovery
of
Top
Chop’s financial condition to evaluate whether a
substantial penalty will impose an undue financial hardship on
Top Chop.”
The
Board granted the Agency’s motion to strike on
July 26,
1983.
54-363
2
On October 24,
1983, Top Chop filed what it has called a
“Resolution
for Reconsideration and Modification of the Order
of the Board”.
(The cover letter from Senator Vince Demuzio will
be included in the record as a public comment,
as
is the Board’s
usual practice with communications from the public,
including
elected officials,)
The motion,
submitted assertedly on the advice
of the Agency~requests the Board to reconsider
its rejection of the
$1500 penalty.
Appended thereto are answers to Agency interroga—
tories.
Top Chop’s motion does not contain proof that service was
made on the Attorney General; however, the Clerk of the Board pro—
vided a copy to the Attorney General.
On November 16,
1983, the
Attorney General filed a Response to Top Chop’s motion, requesting
that the motion be stricken,
The essence of the Attorney General’s
response is that Top Chop has again presented “evidence” which
has not been subject to Agency cross—examination or rebuttal, and
that Top Chop’s “resolution raises several issues which would
bear on the appropriate penalty that should be imposed and to which
the Agency should be allowed to respond at a public hearing after
additional discovery”
(Agency Response,
p.
1).
Top Chop’s October 24,
1983 “Resolution” is stricken from
the record.
To set this matter once again on a proper track and
consistent with the Board’s Order of June
2,
1983,
the Stipula-
tion and Proposal for Settlement submitted by the parties April
28,
1983 is rejected by the Board in_toto,
and the case is remanded
to the parties for further action,
In so ordering,
the Board
is not implying that the parties are foreclosed from the stipulat-
ing
to uncontested
facts.
However, any such subsequent stipula-
tion(s),
as well as any contested penalty or other issues, must be
fully presented at an additional hcaring.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Board Member
3. Marlin abstained.
I,
Christan L,
Moffett,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, hereby certify that the above Order was adopted
on the
~
day of
~
1983
by
a vote of
Illinois Pollution
~tro1Board
54-364