ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
August
13,
1992
STEPHEN A.
SMITH, d/b/a ABC
)
SANITARY HAULING, JOHN APPL, d/b/a
)
APPL SANITARY SERVICE, LAWRENCE
)
W. BOLLER II, d/b/a AREA GARBAGE
)
SERVICE, CHARLES
H. MILLER, d/b/a
)
C.H. MILLER SANITARY, CHRIS
)
JOHNSON,
d/b/a CHRIS’S SERVICE CO.,
)
EDDIE L. COOK,
SR.,
d/b/a COOK’S
)
SANITARY HAULING, DON CORY,
d/b/a
)
CORY SANITARY HAULING, RONALD
E.
)
HAYDEN, d/b/a HAYDEN
SANITARY
SERVICE,
)
GORDON FICKLIN,
d/b/a ILLINI SANITARY
)
SERVICE,
CHRIS YAGER, d/b/a KLEAN-WAY
DISPOSAL,. GEORGE McLAUGHLIN,
d/b/a
)
McLAUGHLIN
SANITARY,
CHERYL
MANUEL,
)
d/b/a
ROLLAWAY
WASTE,
RONALD
W.
MANUEL,
)
PCB
92-55
d/b/a
RON
MANUEL
SANITARY,
RUSSELL
)
(Landfill
Siting
SHAFFER, d/b/a SHAFFER SANITARY CO.,
)
Review)
WILLIAM C.
UDEN, d/b/a UDEN
& SONS
SANITARY HAULING,
and WILLIS SANITARY
)
HAULING,
INC.,
)
)
Petitioners,
)
v.
CITY OF CHAMPAIGN,
ILLINOIS
)
INTERGOVERNMENTAL SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL
)
ASSOCIATION, and
)
XL DISPOSAL CORPORATION,
)
)
Respondents.
CONCURRING OPINION
(by B.
Forcade):
I respectfully concur.
I agree with most of the opinion,
but dissent from the portion of the opinion that overturns the
primary holding of Board of Trustees of Casner Township~
Jefferson County Illinois; Citizens Against Woodlawn Area
Landfills;
Cynthia Carpenter; Ernest Carpenter; Hatie Hall; Byron
Kirkland; Patricia Kirkland; Peg O’Daniell;
Ronald O’Daniell;
Dennis Shrover; and Patricia Shroyer v. County of Jefferson and
Southern Illinois Landfill Inc.,
PCB 84—175 and 84—176
(Cons.)
(January 10, 1985 and April
4,
1985; hereinafter “Casner”).
0135-0315
In Casner, the Board held that failure of a local government
body to make a timely site approval decision would constitute
approval which makes the record on the individual criteria under
Section 39.2 of the Act subject to review by this Board under
Section 40.1.
Today the majority overrules Casner, holding that
only the jurisdiction and fundamental fairness of a decision
below may be reviewed in a default situation.
I find this
unacceptable for three reasons.
My initial concern is that the majority creates for the
first time an unreviewable site location decision by the local
government body.
The statute provides for third party review of
site approvals.
Further,
it provides that inaction shall be
deemed approval.
I find the statutory construction that removes
Board review of the criteria to be strained and unacceptable.
The statute precludes approval except where all Section 39.2
criteria have been met.
There is nothing magic about local
government approval language.
This Board has and does review
local government decisions that say nothing more than the site
location is approved as having met all criteria.
If the local
government fails to make that decision in a timely manner,
the
statute makes
it for them.
The decision deadline was placed in
the statute to ensure timely action and timely review,
not to
exclude appellate review.
Several criteria under Section 39.2,
such as #1,
#3,
#6, and #8, play no part in subsequent facility
permitting review by the Agency.
If they are not reviewed here,
they cease to exist.
Second,
I find the majority holding to be legally
insupportable.
If this decision is unreviewab~e, all of
it is
unreviewable.
Section 40.1 of the Act provides that third
parties may appeal to this Board for review where,
“the ~local
government
grants approval under Section 39.2 of this Act...”
The majority seems to be holding that the local government has
granted approval for purposes of our review regarding
jurisdiction and fundamental fairness, but not granted approval
for purposes of reviewing the criteria.
If the local government
did not grant approval, then this Board lacks jurisdiction to
hear any aspect of an appeal.
If it did grant approval, then we
have jurisdiction to review all aspects, including the criteria.
Third,
I find the majority holding to be illogical and
unworkable.
Assume for a moment that some local government
failed to conduct a fundamentally fair proceeding below.
Assume
that they refused to allow cross examination of witnesses,
refused to allow testimony of landfill opponents, that one of the
decision makers had an individual pecuniary interest in the
landfill, or some other significant problem that has been found
to exist in prior proceedings before this Board.
What is the
solution where fundamental fairness does not exist, but,
as is
the case here, the local decision maker refuses to render a
decision within the deadline?
Is this Board expected to remand
the proceeding back to the local government so they can default
0135-0316
in a fundamentally fair manner?
In its most absurd
manifestation, an applicant could produce no evidence at all
pertaining to any of the criteria, but prevail in an unreviewable
manner should the local government default.
I would find the decision below was a statutory approval and
review it in the normal manner: has the petitioner demonstrated
that approval on all Section 39.2 criteria was against the
manifest weight of the evidence in the record below.
Here most
of that decision is easy.
Petitioners devote less than one page
of double spaced text to token arguments regarding criteria 2-9.
I would find their case against approval on those criteria fails
to make a prima facie showing.
On criterion #1, need,
their
arguments are more extensive and persuasive.
It is a very close
argument,
but on balance
I would find that approval on criterion
#1
is not against the manifest weight of the evidence below.
Accordingly,
I would affirm.
Since
I do not support the majority
rationale for affirming,
I concur.
I, Dorothy N.
Gunn,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby_certify tha
the above concurring opinion was filed
on the
~‘/~-~
day of
.
,
1992.
D6rothy M. Gin,
Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board
0135-0317
Bill S. Forca~
Board Member