ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
August
30, 1990
REED-CUSTER COMMUNITY UNIT
SCHOOL DISTRICT NO.
255-U,
Petitioner,
PCB 87—209
(Tax Certification)
COMMONWEALTH EDISON COMPANY
and THE ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
DISSENTING OPINION
(by
B.
Forcade):
I respectfully dissent
from the majority.
I agree with the majority that the sole question on review
is whether
the application submitted by Commonwealth Edison
Company
(“CornEd”)
contained fraudulent
or misrepresentative
statements.
I have found no basis in the record to conclude that
CornEd or Reed-Custer Community Unit School District
No.
255-U
(“Reed—Custer”)
have been attempting
to malevolently misrepresent
the character of the cooling pond.
This case represents
an
honest disagreement over the legal interpretation of
the
statutory phrase,
“for the primary purpose.”
If Reed—Custer’s
position on the legal meaning
of the phrase
is correct,
then
CornEd’s application contains misrepresentations
(albeit innocent
misrepresentations).
If CornEd’s legal interpretation
is correct,
then the application
is accurate.
The question then
is what did
the General Assembly really intend.
I believe
that
the General
Assembly’s
intention was
to not include
this type of facility
as
a pollution control facility,
but that decision seems
to me a
very close call.
I am more convinced that the intention was
to
exclude
a part of the piping, which has been
included in this
application.
The definitional
issues involved in
the question of whether
a piece of equipment
is “designed, constructed,
installed,
or
operated
for
the primary purpose of eliminating,
preventing,
or
reducing..
~14
pollution
is
a real property tax law question
that
has never been answered before by this Board.
While not
intending
to oversimplify
the matter,
I believe
that
the primary
purpose definition
is met when the facility could continue
to
operate without
the piece of pollution control equipment.
Probably
it would pollute
the envircnment more,
possibly
it would
run less efficiently;
but,
it could continue
to operate.
Here,
there
is no question
that
a nuclear power
plant cannot
continue
to operate without some form of heat dissipation
114—743
technology.
This limitation
is not imposed
for the protection of
fish and other wildlife, but for
the protection of internal plant
components
from damage due to heat buildup.
In that context,
I
find
it difficult
to conclude that the cooling technology
generally has a primary purpose of pollution control.
Here,
that
issue is even more clear.
For several months per year the
Kankakee River
flow is inadequate to supply the station cooling
needs.
During those times
the plant simply could not operate
without the cooling
pond, even
if unlimited thermal pollution of
the Rankakee River was acceptable.
I find the majority reasoning unpersuasive.
They conclude
that
the cooling pond
is primarily
for pollution control because
it is subject
to regulation under
the Environmental Protection
Act
(“Act”).
Under
the Act,
the Board also regulates gasoline,
automobiles,
trucks hauling special wastes, qualifications
of
individuals
to operate landfills,
etc.
These are not all
pollution control facilities.
Several cases cited by CornEd support
their position,
but are
not directly on point
to the argument raised here.
After
reviewing all the arguments,
I continue
to believe
that this
is a
close call on the meaning of
the statutory phrase as
it would
apply to all cooling technology generally or
to this specific
cooling pond,
but
I believe that balance
tips
in favor
of Reed—
Custer.
I also
find persuasive
the arguments of Reed—Custer
regarding the four—foot diameter pipe which conveys water from
the Kankakee River
to the cooling pond.
Without
a pipe
to convey
water
into the cooling pond,
it would seem unworkable
to have
a
pipe that only conveyed water from the cooling pond.
CornEd’s
inclusion of onepipe
in the tax certification application while
excluding the other seems to imply that only one pipe
is
involved.
While
it may be true that
the water
in the second pipe
is hotter than water
in the first pipe, both would seem to be
necessary
to
‘remove_and disperse heat.”
I,
Dorothy
M. Gunn,
Clerk of
the Illinois Pollution Control
Board,
hereby certify
that
,the above Dissenting Opinion was filed
on the
/~
day of
~
,
1990.
Dorothy M.
Gunn,
Clerk
—
Illinois Pollution Control Board
Board Member
ii 4—744