ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    December 19,
    1991
    PAUL ROSMAN,
    )
    Petitioner,
    PCB 91—80
    v.
    )
    (UST Reimbursement
    Determination)
    )
    ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
    PROTECTION AGEItCY,
    )
    Respondent.
    CONCURRING OPINION
    (by B.
    Forcade):
    I respectfully concur with today’s action.
    I agree with the
    outcome and with all of the reasons, with one minor exception.
    believe the decision made in this case regarding statutory
    definitions of corrective action must be more clearly linked with
    statutory decisions regarding reimbursement or eligibility.
    Specifically, the Act envisions the following two-step
    review process:
    1)
    first,
    a review of the application to
    determine whether the applicant is eligible to access the Fund
    and what the appropriate deductible is pursuant to Section
    22.18(b) (a)
    of the Act, and
    2)
    a review of the costs pursuant to
    Section 22.18(b) (d) (4)
    of the Act.
    These two decision making
    processes are the only two contemplated under Section 22.l8b of
    the Act,
    each decision is a final Agency action appealable to
    this Board and each decision has its own time line and burden of
    proof.
    If an Agency decision regarding statutory provisions is
    going to be reviewed by this Board,
    it must be specifically
    squeezed into one of those two decision making processes.
    The provisions regarding eligibility (the first Agency
    decision) are found at Section 22.18b(a)
    of the Act, and those
    regarding reimbursement (the second Agency decision) are found at
    Section 22.18b(d)(4)(D).
    If the Agency fails to make the
    eligibility decision properly,
    it cannot revisit that decision
    when it determines reimbursement.
    See Pulitzer v.
    IEPA,
    PCB 90-
    142
    (December 20,
    1990).
    The two decisions are totally separate.
    Notwithstanding these two decision making processes,
    the Act
    includes many prohibitions or limitations that affect the amount
    of money that a person may retrieve from the state regarding
    clean up.
    For example, the requested costs may not £it the
    statutory definition of corrective action in Section
    22.18(e) (1) (C),
    as it the case here.
    Additional examples include
    that the requested corrective action costs may exceed statutory
    maximums stated in Sections 22.18b(b) or 22.18c(a).
    These
    “other” statutory limitations are not specifically connected in
    128—26 1

    2
    the Act to either the eligibility decision or to the decision
    regarding reimbursement.
    If this Board is to connect those
    “other” factors with the two statutory decision making processes,
    it must use some theory.
    Hopefully,
    that theory would guide the
    Agency and future petitioners before this Board in the proper
    implementation of the law.
    The only theory articulated by the majority for connecting
    the definition of “corrective action” with the reimbursement
    decision under Section 22.18b(d) (4) (D)
    is found on page
    6 of that
    Opinion,
    “We find that a sufficient nexus exists between
    reasonable costs as articulated in Section 22.lSb(d) (4) (C)
    and
    costs associated with corrective action.”
    The majority does not
    explain what factors influence the sufficient nexus theory, nor
    do they explain how those factors favor connecting the definition
    of corrective action to the reimbursement determination rather
    than the determination on eligibility.
    I believe the theory connecting these other statutory
    factors to either reimbursement decisions or eligibility
    decisions is the critical element of this case.
    Since
    I find the
    “sufficient nexus” theory inadequate to guide future developments
    in the law,
    I concur.
    Bill
    S. Fo cade
    Board Member
    I, Dorothy N. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby certify th~,tthe above Concurring Opinion was filed
    on the
    ~
    day of
    __________________,
    1991.
    7~
    ~
    7:~.
    Dorothy M.,~unn,Clerk
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    128—262

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