ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
June 3,
1993
SANGANON COUNTY,
)
Complainant,
)
V.
)
AC 92—37
)
Docket B
GERALD B. MILLER,
)
(Administrative Citation)
(SCDPH 92—AC-12)
Respondent.
CONCURRING OPINION
(by 3. Anderson):
I have no argument at all per se with the notion that,
if
a violator must pay the State for the hearing costs incurred by
the Board and the Agency, then Sangamon County ought to be
refunded for its administrative citation hearing costs when it
acts in the Agency’s stead.
My problem is that, given that there
is no specific mention of local government hearing costs anywhere
in the highly-detailed administrative citation provisions of the
Environmental Protection Act (Act), the Board’s statutory
authority to order the payment and deposit of such costs is at
best implied.
I would be far more comfortable if the statute were amended
to be specific regarding payment of local government hearing
costs.
Extra support seems especially prudent when dealing with
monies.
I have difficulty interpreting the Agency’s statutory
authority,
contained in Section 4(r)
of the Act, to delegate its
functions to a local government as necessarily implying that a
local government so delegated is then on the same footing as the
Agency with regard to hearing costs.
I recognize that
“stretching” an interpretation of the statute to reach a desired,
indeed coinmor~sense,
outcome,
as we have in this case,
is not
without merit.
However, use of the delegation agreement as our
authority is particularly awkward in the administrative citation
statutory setting; in contrast to the Board’s almost unfettered
statutory discretion in making determinations in a “regular”
enforcement action, the administrative citation provisions in the
Act circumscribe the Board’s discretion throughout, and does so
with great specificity.
Unfortunately, one exception concerns
the question of local government hearing costs.
Section 42(b) (4) of the Act is the only section where
administrative citation hearing costs are addressed.
That
section states:
In an administrative citation action under Section 31.1
of this Act, any person found to have violated any
provision of subsection
(p) or
(q)
(sic; should be
(0)
0
~3-OO9I
2
or
(p)
of section 21 of this Act shall pay a civil
penalty of $500 for each violation of each such
provision, plus any hearing costs incurred bY the Board
and the Agency.
Such penalties shall be made payable
to the Environmental Protection Trust Fund,
....;
except that if a unit of local government issued the
administrative citation, 50
of the civil p~naltyshall
be payable to the unit of local government.
(Emphasis
added.)
As is evident from the above, Board and Agency penalties,
but not costs,
are specified for deposit into the Environmental
Protection Trust Fund.
The Board is thus required to deposit
hearing costs into the State’s general revenue fund, pursuant to
the State Finance Act.
The State Finance Act defines the general
revenue fund as:
“All money, belonging to or for the use of the
State, paid into the treasury thereof, not belonging to any
special fund in the State treasury,
shall constitute the general
revenue fund”.
(30 ILCS 105/4.)
The first obvious question is whether the statute allows
the Board to order the violator to pay local government hearing
costs,
as well as those of the Board and the Agency.
Even if one
answers “yes” to this question,
it raises another question:
whether the repayment of hearing costs incurred by a local
government
—
whose authority to conduct its administrative
citation activities
is derived from the Act rather than local
ordinance
—
would belong to or be for the use of the State, and
thus should be deposited in the general revenue fund.
Even if
one answers “no” to the this question, then another question
arises: where does the statute authorize the Board to order the
deposit of such costs into a local fund designated by unit of
local government.
Unfortunately, there is
n~
specific language
in the Act that answers either question.
Further viewing this issue from a statutory construction
perspective, it is difficult to find much implied “wiggle-room”
when looking at Section 42(b) (4) where:
a)
there is no mention of local government
hearing costs
when there j~.specific
authorization to impose Agency and Board
hearing costs;
b)
there is no designation as to where such
local government costs are to go when the
Agency’s and Board’s costs ~
to be
deposited into the general revenue fund
pursuant to the State Finance Act; and
C)
there is specific mention of units of local
government regarding penalties in Section
0
I L~3-O092
3
42(b) (4)
where in the same section there is
silence regarding local government costs.
In my view, adding the phrase “or a unit of local
government” to the language in Section 42(b) (4) and specifying
where the monies are to be deposited would cure the problem.
It is for these reasons that I respectfully concur.
I, Dorothy M.
Gunn,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certi~ythat the
abo’cçe concurring opinion was
submitted on the
C/~~
day of
__________,
1993.
~‘
~-~•
~
~
Dorothy
M.17~unn, Clerk
Illinois ~llution
Control Board
Board Member
01 t43-0093