ILLINOIS
    POLLUTION
    CONTROL
    BOARD
    May 19,
    1994
    CONCERNED CITIZENS FOR A
    BETTER
    ENVIRONMENT,
    Petitioners,
    PCB
    94—44
    )
    (Landfill Siting Appeal)
    CITY OF
    HAVANA
    and
    SOUTHWEST
    ENERGY
    CORPORATION,
    Respondent.
    GEORGE MUELLER AND RICCA C. SLONE,
    APPEARED
    ON BEHALF OF
    THE
    PETITIONERS;
    DONALD
    BOGGS,
    APPEARED
    ON
    BEHALF
    OF
    THE
    RESPONDENT
    CITY OF
    HAVANA;
    AND
    ROBERT N.
    OLIAN,
    OF
    SIDLEY
    &
    AUSTIN,
    APPEARED
    ON
    BEHALF
    OF
    THE
    RESPONDENT
    SOUTHWEST
    ENERGY
    CORPORATION.
    OPINION
    AND
    ORDER
    OF
    THE
    BOARD
    (by G.
    T. Girard):
    This matter is before the Board on a third—party appeal of a
    decision by the City of Havana (Havana) granting site location
    suitability approval for a new regional pollution control
    facility to Southwest Energy Corporation (Southwest).
    This
    appeal is filed pursuant to Section 40.1(b) of the Environmental
    Protection Act
    (Act)
    (415 ILCS 5/1 ~
    (1992)).
    Concerned
    Citizens for a Better Environment (CCBE)
    filed this appeal on
    January 25,
    1994.
    The Board’s responsibility in this matter arises from
    Section 40.1 of the Act.
    (415 ILCS 5/40.1
    (1992).)
    The
    Board is
    charged, by the Act, with a broad range of adjudicatory duties.
    Among these is adjudication of contested decisions made pursuant
    to the local siting approval provision for new regional pollution
    control facilities, set forth in Section 39.2 of the Act.
    More
    generally, the Board’s functions are based on the series of
    checks and balances integral to Illinois’ environmental system:
    the Board has responsibility for rulemaking and principal
    adjudicatory functions, while the Board’s sister agency, the
    Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (Agency) is responsible
    for carrying out the principal administrative dutjes,
    inspections, and permitting.
    The Agency does not have a
    statutorily-prescribed role in the local siting approval process
    under Sections 39.2 and 40.1, but would make decisions on permit
    applications submitted if local siting approval is granted and
    upheld.

    2
    Hearing on this matter was held on April
    6,
    1994, before
    hearing officer Phillip Van Ness.
    Several
    members
    of the public
    attended and presented testimony at hearing.
    Briefs were due to
    be simultaneously filed on April 19,
    1994.
    Southwest’s brief was
    received on April
    19, 1994, and CCBE’s brief was received on
    April 20,
    1994.
    For the reasons detailed in this opinion, the Board finds
    that the siting proceedings before the City of Havana were
    fundamentally unfair.
    Outstanding Motion
    On May 6,
    1994, the Board received a motion filed by
    petitioners to supplement authority.
    The motion asked the Board
    to accept a copy of a U.S. Supreme Court case which deals with
    whether incinerator ash is a hazardous waste.
    Because the Board
    does not reach the criteria, the motion is denied as moot.
    BACKGROUND
    Southwest
    submitted an application for siting approval of a
    new regional pollution control facility to accept and incinerate
    refuse—derived fuel for the production of electricity on July 9,
    1993.
    (C000001—0055)’
    Southwest submitted this application
    after a request was made by Havana asking Southwest to file an
    application.
    Southwest had previously submitted an application
    to Havana which was withdrawn.
    (Tr. at 144-145; C003268.)
    Southwest’s application indicates that it will subcontract
    the construction and operation of the facility to companies
    experienced in “their design and operation”.
    (C000004.)
    Southwest proposes to convert 1,800 tons per day of refuse-
    derived fuel
    (RDF)
    to energy.
    (C000008.)
    RDF
    will be produced
    offsite and shipped to Havana.
    (C000009.)
    In September,
    1993,
    after the application was filed, the
    Havana Chamber of Commerce hosted a luncheon featuring Energy
    Answers president Pat Mahoney.
    (Tr. at 242.)
    Energy Answers
    would be contracted to construct and operate the facility.
    (C000226.)
    Also in September of 1993, Southwest sponsored a trip
    to visit a municipal waste incinerator operated by Energy Answers
    in Massachusetts.
    (Tr. at 75,
    97,
    126,
    164, and 237—239.)
    The
    facility is called Semass.
    3The
    record before the City of Havana will be cited as “C00_
    “;
    the transcript from the hearing before the Board will be cited
    as “Tr. at
    _“;
    the petitioners’
    brief will be cited as “Pet.
    Br.
    at
    _“;
    petitioners’ exhibits will be cited as “Pet.
    Exh.
    _“;
    respondent’s brief will be cited as “Res.
    Br. at
    _“.

    3
    Ms. Christine Zeman was contacted by the mayor of Havana who
    inquired if Ms.
    Zeman was interested in serving as hearing
    officer for the siting hearing.
    (Tr. at 31.)
    The mayor
    additionally asked Ms.
    Zeman if she would “assist in the
    development of a siting ordinance to direct how the proceedings
    would go”.
    (Tr. at 31-32.)
    Ms. Zeman agreed to act as hearing
    officer and draft the siting ordinance.
    In addition, subsequent
    to the close of the record at the local level, Ms. Zeman
    presented a document entitled “Hearing Officer’s Report to the
    City of Havana:
    Recommended Findings of Fact and Proposed
    Conclusions of Law”.
    (C003238—3259; Tr. at 42.)
    Public hearings were held on October 26,
    27 and November 2,
    1993.
    (C000099-1084.)
    A public comment period followed and on
    December 21,
    1993, Havana voted to approve siting of the
    facility.
    (C001767—2864 and C000056—0077.)
    This appeal
    followed.
    LEGAL
    FRAMEWORK
    In appeals of local siting decisions, the Board must review
    the areas of jurisdiction and fundamental fairness.
    Section 40.1
    of the Act requires the Board to review the procedures used at
    the local level to determine whether those procedures were
    fundamentally fair.
    (415 ILCS 5/40.1
    (1992); E
    & E Hauling, 451
    N.E2d at 562.)
    In E
    & E Hauling.
    Inc.
    v. IPCB (2d Diet. 1983),
    116 Ill.App.3d 586, 594, 451 N.E.2d 555, 564, aff’d in Dart
    (1985),
    107 Ill.2d 33,
    481 N.E.2d 664, the appellate court found
    that although citizens before a local decision-maker are not
    entitled to a fair hearing by constitutional guarantees of due
    process, procedures at the local level must comport with due
    process standards of fundamental fairness.
    The court held that
    standards of adjudicative due process must be applied.
    (See also
    Industrial Fuels,
    227 Ill.App.3d 533,
    592 N.E.2d 148; Tate v.
    Macon County Board,
    188 Ill.App.3d 994, 544 N.E.2d 1176.)
    Due
    process requirements are determined by balancing the weight of
    the individual’s interest against society’s interest in effective
    and efficient governmental operation.
    (Waste Manaaement of
    Illinois Inc.
    v. IPC8 (2d Dist.
    1989),
    175 Ill.App.3d 1023, 530
    N.E.2d 682.)
    The manner in which the hearing is conducted, the
    opportunity to be beard, the existence of ex Darte contacts,
    prejudgment of adjudicative facts, and the introduction of
    evidence are important, but not rigid, elements in assessing
    fundamental fairness.
    (Hediger
    V.
    D
    & L Landfill. Inc.
    (December
    20,
    1990), Pea 90—163,
    117 PCB 117.)
    In addition, the siting process is governed by Section 39.2
    of
    the
    Act.
    Section
    39.2(a) provides that local authorities are
    to
    consider as many as nine criteria when reviewing an
    application
    for
    siting
    approval.
    These
    statutory
    criteria
    are
    the
    only
    issues
    which
    can
    be
    considered
    when
    ruling
    on
    an
    application
    for
    siting
    approval.
    Only
    if
    the
    local
    body
    finds

    4
    that all applicable criteria have
    been
    met by the applicant can
    siting approval be granted.
    Havana found that Southwest met its
    burden on all the criteria.
    (C000056—0077.)
    CCBE challenges
    Havana’s findings on all the criteria.
    When reviewing a local decision on the criteria, this Board
    must determine whether the local decision is against the manifest
    weight of the evidence.
    (McLean County Disposal v. County of
    McLean
    (4th
    Diet. 1991),
    207 I11.App.3d 352, 566 N.E.2d 26
    McLean
    County.)
    ISSUES
    CCBE challenges siting approval of the incinerator by Havana
    on
    the
    grounds
    that
    the
    proceedings
    were
    fundamentally
    unfair
    as
    well as challenging Havana’s findings on all nine of the
    statutory criteria.
    Specifically, CCBE asserts that
    the
    proceedings were fundamentally unfair because:
    1.
    Several members of the city council engaged
    in improper
    ex
    parte
    contacts
    with
    the
    applicant and prejudged the siting
    controversy
    (Pet. Br
    at 5);
    2.
    The hearing officer at the local siting
    hearing engaged in improper ex parte contacts
    with the applicant
    (Pet. Br. at 10);
    3.
    The local officials were incompetent to judge
    the merits of the application
    (Pet.
    Br. at
    11); and
    4.
    The application was too vague to make the
    public fully aware of the nature of the
    proposal and to permit opponents to respond
    (Pet.
    Br.
    at
    13.).
    CCBE also challenges as fundamentally unfair the failure of
    Mr. John Kirby, president of Southwest, to testify at the hearing
    before the Board.
    However, this challenge is properly one of due
    process before the Board and not of fundamental fairness before
    the decisionmaker.2
    The Board will examine this challenge in
    that light.
    DISCUSSION
    2The Board has previously distinguished between fundamental
    fairness of the siting proceeding and due process before the
    Board.
    (~.gi, Turlek.
    et al v. Village of Summit and West
    Suburban Recycling and Ener~vCenter, PCB 94-19, 94-21 and 94—22
    consl. May 5,
    1994.

    5
    The decision by a local government body as to whether to
    site a regional pollution control facility is an adjudicatory
    proceeding.
    (E & E Haulina, at 566.)
    In a landfill siting
    adjudicatory proceeding, the decisionmaker must resolve disputed
    facts and determine that the nine statutory criteria have been
    met.
    (Id.)
    The decisionmaker must be impartial and decide the
    issues based on the record before it.
    Ex
    parte contacts or other
    action which could unfairly influence the decisionmaker are
    improper in an adjudicatory proceeding.
    This differs from the
    legislative function that the governing body generally undertakes
    where decisions tend to be of a policy-making type.
    Ex Parte Contacts by Council
    The petitioners allege that cx parte contacts between the
    applicant and members of the Havana council have prejudiced the
    petitioners.
    The alleged contacts occurred during a luncheon
    meeting with
    the
    president of Energy Answers and a trip sponsored
    by Southwest to observe an incinerator in Massachusetts operated
    by
    Energy
    Answers.
    Southwest maintains that the contacts were
    incidental and did not affect the outcome of the decision by
    Havana.
    As discussed below, based on the record in this
    proceeding the Board finds that the cx parte contacts tainted the
    process and rendered the proceedings fundamentally unfair.
    The petitioners assert that
    cx
    parte contacts occurred on
    several occasions between the mayor and at least five of the
    councilmen.
    (Pet.
    Br. at 9.)
    The petitioners argue:
    Here a majority of the council members
    all
    those who ultimately voted in favor of the
    incinerator
    -
    accepted gratuities from the
    applicant and engaged in extensive
    cx
    parte
    contacts before the initial public hearing on
    the application.
    The communications almost
    certainly influenced the ultimate decision.
    Petitioners are prejudiced because the
    content of the communications were
    unknown
    to
    them,
    and they therefore had no opportunity
    to respond.
    (Pet.
    Br. at 9.)
    The petitioners presented testimony indicating that a
    luncheon meeting with Patrick Mahoney, president of Energy
    Answers, was attended by five councilmen, the mayor and
    approximately 75 persons on September 16,
    1993.
    (Pr. at 24.)
    The petitioners assert that luncheon was by invitation only and
    that incinerator Opponents and other citizens were—barred from
    the luncheon.
    (Pet.
    Br. at 7; Tr. at 24, 267.)
    The petitioners also presented testimony by the mayor and
    several of the councilmen regarding a trip taken by those
    councilmen and the mayor to visit the Seniass plant in

    6
    Massachusetts.
    The
    trip
    took
    place
    during
    pendency
    of
    the
    application, two weeks before the siting hearing, and was
    allegedly paid for by Mr. Kirby, who also went on the trip.
    (Pet.
    Br. at 8; Pr. at 237—239)
    While on the trip the group
    toured the Semass plant which is the model for the proposed
    incinerator in Havana (C000132—0135, C000143) and visited with
    employees of the facility.
    (Pr. at 76.)
    According to the testimony given by the councilmen,
    the
    trip
    was not paid for by them.
    (Pr. at 100.)
    The councilmen stayed
    at
    a
    motel
    for
    either
    “two
    or
    three”
    nights and did
    not
    pay
    for
    their
    room
    charges.
    (Pr.
    at
    103.)
    The
    trip
    began
    on
    Friday
    night when the group flew to Providence, Rhode Island and were
    shuttled to their motel.
    (Tr. at 103.)
    Dinner was provided
    Friday night.
    (Pr. at 106.)
    Saturday morning was spent taking
    a
    four
    or
    five
    hour
    tour
    of
    the
    Semass
    plant.
    (Pr.
    at
    133.)
    Lunch was served at the plant
    (Pr. at 139.)
    Saturday evening
    dinner
    was
    again
    provided
    for
    the
    councilmen
    with
    Mr.
    Kirby
    and
    several
    employees
    of
    Energy
    Answers present.
    (Pr. at 140.)
    On
    Sunday several of the council
    members
    went site—seeing, including
    a visit to Plymouth Rock (Pr. at 114) and a pet cemetery.
    (Pr.
    at 115.)
    The council
    members
    agreed that the food was excellent
    (Pr. at 106)
    and one councilman said “I had a lot of things to
    eat.
    ...
    I just loaded up.”
    (Pr. at 141.)
    Southwest argues that while contacts did occur on the trip
    the “contacts did not affect or influence the ultimate siting
    decision nor did they cause prejudice to siting opponents”.
    (Res. Br. at 18.)
    Southwest argues that the contacts were
    minimal
    during
    the
    trip and that the trip “was a general
    informational tour for interested Havana residents such as area
    business persons and the local newspaper publisher”.
    (Res. Br.
    at 19.)
    Southwest admits that it sponsored the
    tour
    and provided
    tour
    participants
    with
    “accommodations,
    meals
    and
    transportation”.
    (Res.
    Br. at 18—20.)
    Southwest also argues that the generic information provided
    on the tour of the Semass plant was “much less rigorous and
    technical”
    (Res.
    Br. at 20) than the information provided at
    the
    public hearing on the application.
    Further, Southwest asserts
    that there was no attempt to discuss adjudicative facts or
    influence the councilmen.
    (Id.)
    Southwest points out that each
    of the councilmen testified at hearing that he
    based
    his decision
    on the record of the siting procedure.
    (Pr.
    at 79, 116,
    120,
    150,
    174,
    175.)
    Southwest
    cites
    to
    several
    cases
    in
    support
    of
    the
    proposition
    that
    a
    reviewing
    court
    will
    not
    reverse
    a
    local
    siting decision because of ex parte contacts without a showing of
    prejudice or a showing that the proceeding was “irrevocably
    tainted”.
    (F.A.C.T.
    V.
    PCB,
    555 N.E 2d 1178,
    (3rd Dist.
    (1990);
    DiMaaaio V. Solid Waste Aaencv of Northern Cook County, PCB 89-

    7
    178,
    PCB
    —,
    (January 11,
    1990), Waste
    Management,
    530
    N.E.2d
    697—698;
    E
    &
    E
    Hauling,
    451
    N.E.2d
    555,
    571.)
    The
    Board
    first
    notes
    that
    a
    party
    can,
    by
    inaction
    in
    the
    proceeding
    before
    the
    local
    siting
    board,
    waive
    its right to
    raise the issue on appeal to the Board.
    (Fairview
    Area
    Citizens
    Task Force
    v.
    IPCB,
    (3rd Dist. 1990)
    144 Ill. Dec. 659,
    555
    N.E.2d 1178.)
    However,
    in this proceeding, the petitioners did
    tile a motion to disqualify Mayor McNeil, Ed Ray, Bill Schmidt
    and Leonard Thomas with the hearing officer at the siting
    hearing.
    (C001086 and C000109.)
    Thus, the petitioners have
    preserved their right to raise this issue on appeal.
    The
    Board finds that the trip to the
    Semass
    plant sponsored
    by the applicant was improper in this case.
    Southwest
    consistently referred to the Semass plant as the
    model
    for the
    Havana proposed incinerator.
    (C000129, C000132.)
    Southwest
    presented extensive testimony at the public hearing on the siting
    regarding the operation of the Semass plant to bolster the
    application.
    (C000134-0l43.)
    Further, Southwest presented into
    evidence several drawings depicting the Semass operations
    (C001132-1135) and letters from Massachusetts officials
    commending the operation of Semass.
    (C001138-1150.)
    Thus,
    it is
    clear that the applicant relied extensively on the Semass
    operations as a
    model
    for the Havana site.
    Although the testimony before the Board indicates that the
    entire council was invited to tour the Semass plant
    (Pr.
    at 75,
    175 and 236),
    there is no indication that the general public was
    invited on the tour.
    Therefore, the Board finds that the
    applicants’ sponsorship of and payment for a tour of a facility
    used as the model for the proposed facility which included the
    council but not the public generally led to a fundamentally
    unfair proceeding.
    The petitioners were prejudiced.
    Petitioners
    were without benefit of seeing the model site and thus were
    unable to appropriately address all the impressions formed by the
    councilmen who toured Semass to view the
    model
    site used as a
    reference in these proceedings.
    preludament by Council
    The petitioners next assert that the councilmen and the
    mayor showed a predisposition to the incinerator by their actions
    in regard to the referendum and the annexation.
    (Pet. Br. at 6—
    7.)
    Specifically, petitioners point to a letter from the Mayor
    on city stationary which was mailed to the citizens of Havana
    urging
    support
    of
    the incinerator in the referendum.
    (Pet.
    Br.
    at 6; Pet. Exh.
    6.)
    The petitioners assert that the letters were
    sent in envelopes belonging to Southwest.
    (Id.)
    The petitioners
    also allege that some of the councilmen placed yard signs in
    support of the incinerator in their yards prior to the
    referendum.
    (Pet.
    Br.
    at 6;
    Tr. at 144.)
    The petitioners also

    8
    presented testimony indicating that Councilman Schmidt confronted
    an opponent to the landfill during the annexation hearing and
    became
    verbally and physically abusive.
    (Pet.
    Br. at 7; Pr. at
    208-210.)
    Testimony was also presented that the mayor had become
    verbally abusive to some of the opponents of the incinerator.
    (Id.)
    The petitioners argue that the mayor’s actions at the
    council meeting where the siting vote was taken also
    showed bias.
    (Pet. Br
    at 8.)
    Petitioners assert that
    the
    proponents were
    allowed to
    make
    excessive noise
    and
    show approval or disapproval
    of council action.
    However, opponents were “yelled at” by the
    mayor for quietly talking among themselves.
    (Pet. Br. at 8-9;
    Pr. at 247—249.)
    Southwest points out that local officials are presumed to be
    objective and the presumption is not overcome by the mere fact
    that an official has taken a public position or expressed a
    strong view on a siting proposal.
    (Res.
    Br. at 15 citing E & E
    Haulina v.
    PCB,
    481 N.E.2d 664, 668 (Ill 1985); Waste Manaaement
    of Illinois v.
    PCB,
    530
    N.E.2d 682,695—696
    (2nd Diet 1988);
    Citizens for a Better Environment v.
    PCB, 504 N.E.2d 166, 171
    (let Diet. 1987).
    Southwest further cites to Section 39.2(d) of
    the Act which specifically allows participation in the decision
    by
    a
    member
    of
    the
    county board even if
    that
    member has expressed
    an opinion publicly.
    (Res.
    Br. at 15.)
    Southwest argues that, given this legal framework,
    the
    allegations made by CCBE are not sufficient to overturn Havana’s
    siting decision.
    (Res.
    Br. at 16.)
    According to Southwest, the
    mayor did not vote on the siting issue
    (Res.
    Br. at 16; C000078-
    0081) and the expressions of support by two council members eight
    months prior to voting on the projects “do not demonstrate the
    kind of bias or predisposition necessary to nullify a siting
    determination”.
    (Res.
    Br. at 16—17; Pr. at 144—145.)
    Southwest has properly cited some of the extensive case law
    regarding alleged predisposition of the decisionmaker.
    (Res.
    Br.
    at 15.)
    Although the record indicates that members of the
    council made statements indicating a bias such statements are not
    sufficient to disqualify a decisionmaker.
    All of the councilmen
    testified that their decision was based on the record developed
    at hearing and on the application.
    Therefore, the Board finds
    that the councilmen were properly allowed to participate in
    the
    siting process and any predisposition did not result in a
    fundamentally unfair proceeding.
    The Board is, however, dismayed at the actions of the Mayor.
    When presiding over the actual council meeting where the siting
    vote occurred, the mayor clearly showed bias.
    Further, the
    drafting of a letter by the mayor supporting the incinerator on
    Havana stationary mailed by Southwest is a disturbing indication

    9
    of bias.
    In the event of a tie vote by the council, the mayor
    would
    be required to vote.
    However, the Board need not rule
    on
    the
    mayor’s
    actions
    as
    he
    did
    not
    vote
    on
    this
    siting
    application; however, such actions are not condoned.
    Alleged Errors at Hearing
    Lastly, the petitioners point to two specific alleged errors
    which
    occurred
    at
    the
    actual
    siting
    hearing.
    (Pet.
    Br.
    at
    8.)
    The
    petitioners
    allege
    that
    on
    the
    morning
    of
    the
    hearing,
    the
    applicant,
    the
    hearing
    officer
    and
    the
    city
    council
    were
    allowed
    to enter the building early.
    (Id.)
    The petitioners were
    allegedly
    not
    allowed
    in
    until five minutes before the hearing
    began.
    (Id.)
    Further, the petitioners presented testimony that
    the “majority of the city council slept, read the newspaper, went
    out
    for
    coffee
    and
    doughnuts,
    or
    went
    out
    for
    a
    smoke.
    It
    did
    not
    appear
    to
    me
    that
    they
    needed
    any
    information
    to
    make
    a
    decision.
    It appeared to me they had made a decision.”
    (Pr.
    at
    263—264.)
    The
    Board finds that the failure to admit
    the
    general
    public
    into the hearing room until five minutes before the hearing is
    not
    fundamentally
    unfair.
    The record gives no indication
    that
    the failure to open
    the
    doors earlier prejudiced
    the
    petitioners.
    Further, at the public bearing, the applicant’s attorney
    explained that the applicant had entered early to set up
    equipment which would be available for anyone to use.
    (C000lll.)
    The case law is well settled that council
    members
    need not
    attend the hearings.
    The appellate courts have affirmed the
    Board in finding that it is acceptable for the decisionmaker to
    rely
    on
    transcripts of the public hearing in rendering its
    decision.
    (City of Rockford v. County of Winnebago,
    542 N.E.2d
    423
    (Ill App. 2d Diet.
    1989);
    Waste Management of Illinois v.
    Pollution Control Board
    (1984) 123 Ill. App.3d 1075, 79 Ill.Dec.
    415,
    463 N.E.2d 969
    (“As long as the entire record was available
    for review by the full county board all members heard the case
    irrespective of their attendance.”)
    We therefore find that the
    failure of Havana council members to attend the entire hearing
    did not render the proceedings fundamentally unfair.
    Relationship Between the Hearing Officer, the City. and the
    ADD1icant
    The petitioners assert that Hearing Officer Zeman indicated
    a level of bias in favor of the applicant which should disqualify
    her.
    (Pet.
    Br. at 11.)
    They base their arguments on several
    aspects of the relationship between John Kirby and Ms.
    Zeman
    throughout the application and bearing process.
    Southwest argues
    that the contacts between Ms.
    Zeman and John Kirby were

    10
    procedural in nature and that petitioner could produce no
    evidence of bias in Ms. Zeman’s actions.
    The Board has previously addressed the issue of hearing
    officer bias in a landfill siting appeal case.
    In Citizens
    Against Regional Landfill v. Whiteside County and Waste
    Management of Illinois
    (CARL), 139 PCB 523, PCB 92-156,
    (February
    25,
    1993), the Board held that the same standard of determining
    bias can be applied to a hearing officer as applies to the
    decisjoruriaker.
    (139 PCB 535.)
    Using the standard as enunciated
    in
    E~&E Hauling, the Board determined that the hearing officer
    may be disqualified for bias or prejudice if a “disinterested
    observer might conclude that he had in some measure adjudged the
    facts as well as the law of the case in advance of hearing”.
    (Id.; E
    & E Hauling at 451 N.E.2d 565—566.)
    The Third District
    Appellate Court,
    in its analysis of the issue of hearing officer
    bias and conflict of interest noted that the hearing officer in
    the CARL case was “ultimately under the control and direction of
    the State’s Attorney who is an elected official responsible to
    the community and subject to public disapproval
    .
    .“.
    (Carl,
    slip op. at 7.)
    Moreover, the court also found that, since the
    hearing officer was not
    the decisionmaker, the same standard of
    fundamental fairness does not apply to the hearing officer.
    (Id.)
    Petitioners assert that several aspects of the relationship
    between Hearing Officer Zeman and Mr. Kirby should lead to a
    finding of fundamental unfairness.
    (Pet.
    Br. at 11.)
    The
    petitioners maintain that Mr. Kirby had the power to approve or
    disapprove the hiring of the hearing officer, exercised editorial
    control over documents prepared for Havana City Council’s
    consideration, and may have been the client.
    (Id.)
    The
    petitioners support this assertion by pointing to the fee
    agreement signed by Havana, Mr. Kirby and Ms.
    Zeman, which
    allegedly gives Mr. Kirby the right to terminate the hearing
    officer.
    (Pet.
    Exh.
    1 at 3; Pr. at 39.)
    A copy of the agreement
    was sent to Mr. Kirby and obligated Mr. Kirby to pay Ms. Zeman
    directly for bills submitted directly to him by Ms.
    Zeman.
    (Pr.
    at 45-46)
    Further, the hearing officer forwarded a copy of the
    draft ordinance prepared for this siting procedure to Mr. Kirby
    and accepted changes from him.
    (Pet.
    Br. at 10; Pet. Exh.
    3 and
    5 at 1-2; Tr.
    at 46.)
    Southwest argues that the contacts between the hearing
    officer and Mr. Kirby were procedural in nature and that the
    hearing officer testified that the limited contact with Southwest
    and the Havana City Council did not “influence how she conducted
    the hearing or prepared her post—hearing recommendations to the
    city”.
    (Res.
    Br.
    at 13.)
    Southwest also argues that the record
    demonstrates that the hearing officer conducted the proceeding in
    “an unquestionably even-handed manner that enabled all parties to
    participate effectively”.
    (Res.
    Br. at 14.)

    11
    Hearing Officer Zeman testified that the fee agreement was
    arranged between her
    firm
    and Mr. Kirby and a clause was
    specifically
    added
    at
    Mr. Kirby’s request “so that if the
    ——
    I
    was going to be terminated either at my will or the city’s or his
    (Mr.
    Kirby,
    that
    enough
    time
    be
    given
    so
    that
    the
    transition
    in
    the
    hearing process would be a smooth one instead of an
    abrupt
    one”.
    (Pr. at 39.)
    When asked directly if Mr. Kirby retained
    for himself the right to terminate her, Ms.
    Zeman stated:
    “That
    was in the
    standard
    contract,
    and
    I
    believe
    it
    was
    in the
    ultimate one that was sent to him.”
    (Id.)
    In fact the executed
    fee agreement was signed by Mr. Kirby, the Mayor and the
    bearing
    officer.
    The fee agreement refers to Havana as
    the client and
    Southwest as the applicant.
    (Pet.
    Exh.
    1.)
    When asked about the
    contact between the hearing officer, Havana and Mr. Kirby, Ms.
    Zeman stated that the contacts were mainly in writing.
    (Pr.at
    37)
    The
    contacts
    did
    include
    sending
    the
    draft ordinance to Mr.
    Kirby and receiving it back with Mr. Kirby’s comments.
    (Pr. at
    45,
    46.)
    The
    contact
    did
    not
    include
    providing
    Mr.
    Kirby
    with
    a
    draft of the findings the hearing officer prepared for Havana.
    (Pr.
    at
    42.)
    Finally, Ms.
    Zeman read into the record a letter
    from
    Ms.
    Zeman
    to
    Mr. Kirby; that letter was also admitted as an
    exhibit.
    (Pr.
    at
    48;
    Pet.
    Exh.
    4)
    In pertinent
    part,
    the
    letter
    states:
    “Mayor
    McNeil has indicated you were satisfied with my
    services and certainly Southwest is the primary beneficiary
    of
    the services I rendered.”
    (Pet. Exh.
    4.)
    The Board first notes that the petitioners have not
    specifically listed areas of alleged bias.
    After examining the
    record in this case, the Board finds that the hearing officer did
    not exhibit bias.
    However
    the Board does not believe that the
    decisive issue in this case is whether or not the hearing officer
    was biased.
    Accordingly the test as enunciated in CARL and E & E
    Haulina does not apply in this case.
    Rather, the issue is
    whether the extensive contacts and the relationship between the
    hearing officer and the applicant contributed to fundamentally
    unfair procedures.
    Although the petitioners have not
    specifically listed areas of alleged bias,
    the Board does find
    that under the circumstances of this case, the relationship
    between the hearing officer, the city and the applicant created
    inherent bias.
    The Board can find no statutory basis for the fee agreement
    between Mr. Kirby and Hearing Officer Zeman.
    Section 39.2(k) of
    the act states:
    A county board or governing
    body of a municipality may
    charge applicants for review under this section a
    reasonable fee to cover the reasonable and necessary
    costs incurred by such county or municipality in the
    siting review process.

    12
    The plain language of this section, when applied to the instant
    case, specifies that the Havana City Council could charge
    Southwest a reasonable fee to cover expenses
    generated
    by the
    application approval process.
    As Hearing Officer,
    Ms.
    Zeman
    should have been contracted by the City Council to perform her
    duties, and should have been paid by Havana.
    Adhering to the
    express language of Section 39.2(k) would remove the bias
    inherent in a situation where the applicant participates in
    hiring, remunerating, or possibly, terminating the Hearing
    Officer.
    The law is well settled that the siting process is governed
    by the standards of adjudicatory due process and fundamental
    fairness.
    (E
    & E Hauling, at 566.)
    Even
    though bias was not
    shown, the Board believes that the relationship between the
    hearing officer and the applicant which was fostered by. the city
    has contributed to the fundamental unfairness of the process.
    The
    hearing
    officer
    was
    interviewed
    for
    the position by a
    representative
    of
    the
    city
    and
    the
    applicant.
    The
    hearing
    officer testified that the initial meeting to discuss her
    employment was attended by the Mayor
    and
    John Kirby.
    (Pr.
    at
    34.)
    PIs. Zeman further testified that the luncheon “was
    primarily to see whether I had familiarity with 39.2
    and
    with the
    process in general” and both the Mayor and Mr. Kirby participated
    in the discussion.
    (Pr. at 35.)
    The fee agreement executed was
    signed by Ms.
    Zeman, Mayor McNeil and Mr. Kirby.
    The fee
    agreement specified that Ms. Zeman would submit bills directly to
    the applicant and be paid directly by the applicant.
    The hearing
    officer viewed Southwest as
    the
    primary beneficiary of her
    services.
    The applicant was allowed to review and comment on the
    ordinance prior to the ordinance being made public.
    Finally, the
    hearing officer drafted the finding of facts and conclusions of
    law ultimately adopted by the Havana council.
    The
    contacts between Mr. Kirby and Ms.
    Zeman show a
    continued disregard on the part of the applicant and the City of
    Havana for adjudicatory due process.
    The mayor brought Mr. Kirby
    to the initial discussions regarding Ms. Zeman’s employment and
    allowed Mr. Kirby to participate in determining us. Zeman’s
    qualifications.
    The mayor signed an agreement which required Mr.
    Kirby to directly pay Ms. Zeman and granted Mr. Kirby the right
    to terminate Ms. Zeman.
    Havana allowed Mr. Kirby to review the
    siting ordinance, which set forth the procedures to be followed
    throughout the process.
    Thus, Havana allowed Mr. Kirby control
    over the hearing officer and the actions of the hearing officer
    which were clearly outside of adjudicatory due process.
    This
    contributed to the fundamental unfairness of the proceedings.
    Technical Expertise of Public Officials
    The
    petitioners
    assert
    that
    the
    city council lacked the
    technical expertise to review the siting application and thus,

    13
    rendered the proceedings fundamentally unfair.
    (Pet.
    Br. at 11.)
    The petitioners cite to testimony by the council members which
    indicated a lack of technical qualifications.
    (Id.)
    The
    petitioners also argues that the alleged reliance the council
    members placed on the operation of the Semass plant was misplaced
    as
    they
    did
    not
    discuss
    compliance
    history
    or
    the
    operating
    history
    of
    the
    facility.
    (Pet.
    Br.
    at
    11-12.)
    The Board finds this argument without merit.
    The Act
    specifically requires local siting decisions to be made by the
    governing
    body
    of the municipality.
    The Act does not require
    that the governing body have technical expertise.
    Rather, the
    Act
    requires
    the
    decision
    to
    be
    based on the application and the
    record developed during the process.
    Therefore,
    the lack of
    technical expertise does not render this proceeding fundamentally
    unfair.
    Application as Filed
    The petitioners assert that the application as filed fails
    to give enough detail to put the public on notice as to the
    “precise nature of the facility and operation”.
    (Pet. Br. at
    13.)
    The petitioners argue that the application “presents no
    site plan or design, promising instead that these ‘technical
    details’ will be made available to the permitting agency”.
    (Id.)
    The petitioners charge that an application which is “so
    completely devoid of details regarding location, design and
    operation
    is
    insufficient
    as
    a
    matter
    of
    law”.
    (Id.)
    The
    petitioners further asserts that the deficiencies were not cured
    at bearing.
    (Pet.
    Br. at 14.)
    Southwest argues that the application describes the nature
    of the proposed facility and the general operations and
    safeguards,
    thus,
    clearly
    communicating
    the
    substance
    of
    Southwest’s
    proposal.
    (Res.
    Br.
    at
    12.)
    Southwest
    also
    argues
    that its application was sufficient when considering the “overall
    process of gaining local siting approval”, which includes a
    public hearing and post-hearing comment period.
    (Id.)
    Southwest
    asserts that the Board “confirms that an application need not
    contain all material
    necessary for a local governing
    body to make
    a siting determinations”.
    (Id.)
    Southwest cites to Tate
    y.
    Macon County Board
    (188 Ill.App.3d 994, 544 N.E.2d 1176 (PCB 88—
    126))
    in
    support
    of
    this
    position.
    (Id.)
    Southwest is correct that the Board has held that the
    application need not contain all material necessary for the local
    governing board to make its decision.
    In Tate, the Board
    specifically stated that:
    “an abbreviated siting application
    (one without technical supporting documents)
    is acceptable where,
    as here, such materials were available prior to the close of the
    hearing
    process”.
    (Tate
    at
    94
    PCB
    79.)
    In
    Town
    of
    St.
    Charl~
    v.
    Kane
    County
    Board
    and
    Elgjn
    Sanitary
    District
    (PCB
    83—228,

    14
    229,
    230, 57 PCB 203
    (March 21,
    1984), vacated on other
    grounds
    sub. nom. Kane County Defenders v.
    PCB
    ~t p1., 129 Ill. App. 3d
    121,
    472 N.E.2d 150
    (3rd Dist. 1984)), the Board upheld a
    •jting
    application which was only two pages in length when filed.
    In each of the above cited
    cases,
    additional data was filed
    either at hearing, or prior to hearing, which supported the
    initial application.
    Southwest presented testimony at the siting
    hearing
    and
    additional
    documentation
    in
    support
    of
    the
    application.
    Therefore, the Board finds that the application as
    filed and later supplemented at the siting hearing was sufficient
    and did not render the proceeding fundamentally unfair.
    Due
    Process
    Before
    the
    Board
    Petitioners argue that their inability to question Mr. Kirby
    the at the Board hearing deprived
    them
    of due process.
    Petitioners maintain that the record needs
    more
    details with
    regards to Mr. Kirby’s corporate interests as well as the
    contacts Mr. Kirby had with the decisionmaker in this process.
    The Board believes that the record is clear
    as
    to Mr.
    Kirby’s
    varied
    business
    interests.
    (for example
    see
    Pr.
    at 45—
    46.)
    Further,
    in response
    to
    a motion to continue filed by
    petitioners,
    Southwest filed summaries of testimony by Mr. Kirby
    in another proceeding before the Board.
    Southwest
    also indicated
    that it did not object to petitioners making use of that
    testimony.
    Thus,
    the
    information
    filed
    by
    Southwest
    and
    the
    testimony of the council members is sufficient to
    allow
    the
    Board
    to render a decision on the issues of fundamental fairness.
    Therefore,
    the
    Board
    finds
    that
    petitioners
    were
    afforded
    due
    process before the Board.
    CONCLUSION
    These proceedings were tainted by extensive improper contact
    between the applicant and the decisionmaker.
    The applicant was
    allowed an opportunity to review the ordinance governing
    the
    siting proceeding prior to the ordinance being
    made
    public.
    The
    applicant interviewed and maintained a right to terminate the
    hearing officer who presided over the siting bearing.
    The
    applicant sponsored a trip to a facility in Massachusetts by the
    Havana City Council.
    At least one luncheon was held where
    the
    applicant and the decisionmaker attended and the general public
    was not allowed.
    The combination of these factors lead the Board
    to find that the proceedings before the City of Havana did not
    comport with the standards for an adjudicatory proceeding and
    hence were fundamentally unfair.
    ORDER

    15
    For the reasons expressed in the above opinion, the City of
    Havana’s
    December
    21,
    1993,
    decision
    on
    the
    application of
    Southwest Energy Corporation is hereby
    reversed as
    being
    fundamentally
    unfair.
    This
    docket
    is
    hereby
    closed.
    IT IS SO
    ORDERED.
    Board
    Member
    3.
    Theodore
    Meyer
    concurs.
    Chairman Claire A. Manning abstains.
    Section 41 of the Environmental Protection Act (415 ILCS
    5/40.1) provides for the appeal of final Board orders within 35
    days
    of
    service
    of
    this decision.
    The Rules of the supreme Court
    of
    Illinois
    establish
    filing
    requirements.
    (But
    see
    also,
    35
    Ill.
    Adin.
    Code 101.246,
    Motions
    for
    Reconsideration.)
    I, Dorothy H. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby certify that the above opinion and order was
    adopted
    on
    the
    /9~
    day of
    __________________,
    1994,
    by
    a
    vote
    of
    ‘~~—O
    Dorothy M.
    G)4~&n, Clerk
    Illinois Po~1J.ztionControl Board

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