ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
August
30,
1990
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY,
Complainant,
v.
)
AC 89—304
(IEPA No.
10085—AC)
G
& M WRECKING CO.,
INC.,
)
(Administrative Citation)
Respondent.
DISSENTING OPINION
(by B.
Forcade):
I
respectfully dissent from today’s decision.
The majority
concludes
that
a burning pile of rubber coated copper wire does
not constitute open dumping and open burning.
Open dumping
is
defined at
Section 3.24
of the Environmental Protection Act as,
“the consolidation of
refuse from one or
more sources
at
a
disposal site that does not fulfill
the requirements of a
sanitary landfill.”
I certainly believe that
a burning pile of
rubber coated copper wire constitutes consolidated
refuse, and
that the burning pile of
refuse does not meet the requirements of
a sanitary landfill.
The definition of
“open dumping” does not
require
that we establish where
the waste came from or
the
identity of who placed the material at
that location.
Will
this
Board reject all future administrative citations or enforcement
actions for open dumping where the source of the waste and the
identity of the
“dumper” are not proven
?
I believe
that
“open dumping” and “open burning” are
statements of observable fact which were proven
in this case.
The only question was whether G
&
M’s
actions
(or inactions) had
caused or allowed such
facts.
After reviewing the record,
I
believe G
& M had caused
or
allowed such facts
to occur.
In my opinion, today’s case represents another example
of
this Board attempting
to improperly entangle the Illinois
Environmental Protection Agency’s
(“Agency”)
administrative
citation process.
There
is
a growing
trend by
the majority
to
find some method of absolving
a respondent
of the administrative
citation penalty where
there
is an allegation at hearing
that the
site has been cleaned up.
I disagree.
No subsecuent cleanuo c~n
obviate
that
fact
that
on day X the site was
in violation.
Additionally,
the Agency must now carry
the burden of
inspectinc~
the property
just before hearing
to adequatey respond
to such
allegations.
I
find
rio
such burden imposed
by the Er.vironme:~:al
Protection Act.
Sections
21(p)
and
(q) are
not
intended
to
give
respondents the choice of EITHER paying the civil penalty
of $500
OR cleaning up
the site.
Second,
this Board seems overly
inclined to find that the Agency field
inspectors
(or
the
associated paperwork) created a bar to prosecution, either by
confusing the respondent
or committing the Agency to a course of
conduct.
I must conclude that the majority simply dislikes the
administrative citation process.
B 1
1
S~ ~F6x~cMd
e
~
-
Board Member
I,
Dorothy M.
Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, her~~tcertify that t~e~~ve
Dissenting Opinion was
filed
on the
~i
-i-
day of
,~c-,~-(a-,-7--e-~ti
,
1990.
Dorothy M.,/Qunn, Clerk
Illinois Po’Ilution Control Board
11 4—
.~.5~