I Lii NO.1
    S
    POLLUTI ON CONTROL BOARfl
    September 23, 1993
    LAPS V
    SLATLS
    ,
    Lo1:N1 E SEYMOUS
    1 LAB52
    ,
    BAY B MOTT
    ,
    and
    HOOPESTON cc:Sul:i2Y
    rO:5oRJ
    AL
    Petitioners.
    POE 93—106
    (Landfill Siting Review)
    ILLINOIS LANDFILLS, INC,
    .
    and
    HOOPESTON CITY COUNCIL, on
    behalf of the CITY OF HOOPESTON,
    Respondent.
    DISSENTING OPINION (by P.C. Flemal):
    The majority relies on Metropolitan Waste Systems, Inc. (3rd
    Dist. 1990, 201 Ill..App.3d 51, 568 N.E.2d 785, 787) for the
    proposition that the landfill applicant defines the intended
    service area, and from this one point finds disposition of this
    entire matter. However, I believe that the circumstances faced
    by the court in Metropolitan Waste Systems were so different that
    it is error to extend that decision to the circumstances found
    here.
    In Metropolitan Waste Systems the court found that it was
    wrong for the local decisionmaker to redefine the area of need
    with the purpose of creating a basis for denial of a landfill
    application. I believe that the court ruled as it did to protect
    against such arbitrary and manipulative action by a
    decisionmaker.
    The instant matter is distinguishable from Metropolitan
    Waste Systems in that here the local decisionmaker found that the
    landfill was locally needed. Here the local decisionmaker did
    not construct an arbitrary standard designed to force a
    particular outcome. There is rio reason, therefore, to apply a
    principle intended to protect against arbitrariness
    ——
    particularly so where application of that principle leads to a
    consequence that is contrary to the intent of the statute itself.
    The intent of the landfill siting statute is to give local
    citizens, through their elected officials, a say ih the siting of
    a landfill. The decision includes a determination of whether
    there is a supported need for the landfill. The city council has
    here made that determination. Today’s majority decision,
    however, voids that right of local decision. I cannot find
    anything
    in the
    act ion of the
    city
    council so flagrant as to
    warrant that r
    iih~ Leirkq vc’jded.

    ‘Ihe city counci d~d
    answer affir~t:vely that there
    is
    a
    need
    t cr a I and
    I
    i ii to so
    rye Hoopeston and
    Vermi 1 i on
    County
    what t hc cit v counc i
    did not: do is anscer the quest ion whether
    thcie is also a nee2 for landfill capac~tv for a whole list of
    add it i ona i count en.
    Dc ~e therefore
    tel i Hoopeston that “you
    may
    not.
    have the landfill
    that you bel ie~.’e you need, and which
    you find to satisfy all
    cl
    the other statutory criteria,
    because
    you have not deternined a need for a landfill
    to serve Lake and
    Cook: Counties?
    or some other subset of remote counties?” I find
    this absurd and so contrary to statutory
    intent of local
    decisionmakinq
    as to be unacceptable.
    There is further problem. If we accept arguendo that the
    majority correctly applies Metropolitan Waste Systems, I cannot
    accept that reversal is either called for or just.
    Reversal is a very substantial consequence. The entire
    effort to date is lost, and pursuant to Section 39.2(m) may not
    even be able to be reinstituted for a two-year period. This is
    an enormous penalty to impose upon the city council for its error
    (if in fact that is what it was), yet alone upon’the applicant.
    Reversal would be the correct outcome if the city council
    had rei~deredits decision contrary to the manifest weight of the
    evidence; justice would be served by the voiding a of decision
    that was contrary to the evidence.
    But the city council’s decision was not contrary to the
    evidence. The council’s error (if in fact that is what it was)
    was one of failure to render a complete decision
    -—
    not one of
    rendering a patently false decision. At the worst their action
    would seem to constitute a failure to completely exercise their
    statutory authority. The Act does indeed provide that failure of
    the local decisionmaker to make a timely decision results in a
    default decision (see Act at 39.2(e)). But the default is for
    the applicant, riot against it. In any event, it should not be
    the applicant that is prejudiced by the error (if •in fact that is
    what it was) of the city council.
    My own preference would have been, still assuming arguendo
    that, Metropolitan Waste Syster~ is indeed binding, to remand the
    matter to the city council for a complete decision. If it is
    found that the applicant did not properly establish need (with
    all appropriate appeals satisfied)
    ,
    the application justly falls
    on its merits. If it is found that the applicant did properly
    establish need (with all appropriate appeals satisfied)
    ,
    the
    application justly prevails. This course would have preserved
    the right of local decisionmaking, conserved society’s investment
    in the consideration of this matter, and served the right of all
    interested
    persons to a complete adadication.

    —3—
    For
    these reasons, I dissent.
    ,
    Ronald~C. Flemal
    Board Member
    I, Dorothy M. Gum, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby certify tI~atthe above dissenting opinion was
    submitted on the
    2I~
    ~-
    day of
    .~: •;~.‘ ~
    ,
    1993.
    //‘
    ,/
    //
    .-.(
    ~
    Dorothy M. qunn, Clerk
    Illinois Pollution Control Board

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