ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    May 25, 1989
    A.R.F. LANDFILL CORPORATION,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    )
    PCB 89—15
    LAKE COUNTY BOARD,
    )
    Respondent.
    MESSRS.
    RICHARD
    3.
    KISSEL, BRADLEY
    R.
    O’BRIEN; GARDNER, CARTON
    &
    DOUGLAS APPEARED ON BEHALF OF PETITIONER;
    MESSRS.
    FRED
    L. FOREMAN, MITCHELL L.
    HOFFMAN, AND LARRY
    4.
    CLARK;
    LAKE COUNTY STATE’S ATTORNEYS OFFICE,
    APPEARED ON BEHALF OF
    RESPONDENT;
    MESSRS. MICHAEL SCHNEIDERMAN, CHRISTOPHER W. ZIBART,
    TODD R.
    WIENER;
    HOPKINS
    & SUTTER, APPEARED ON BEHALF OF AMICUS CURIAE
    PRAIRIE HOLDINGS CORPORATION AND LOCAL LANDOWNERS.
    OPINION OF THE BOARD
    (by 3D.
    Dumelle):
    This matter comes before
    the Board on the January 26, 1989
    petition
    for appeal filed by A.R.F.
    Landfill
    Inc.
    (“A.R.F.”)
    pursuant
    to Section
    40.1
    of the Environmental Protection Act
    (Ill.
    Rev,.
    Stat.
    ch.
    ill 1/2,
    par.
    1040.1
    (1987))
    (“Act”).
    A.R.F.
    appeals the November
    1,
    1988, decision of the Lake County
    Board
    (“LCB”) denying local siting approval
    to A.RF.
    proposed
    vertical
    expansion
    in Lake County,
    Illinois.
    In its appeal,
    A.R.F.
    contends that
    a
    “biased and
    prejudiced” LCB rendered
    a
    decision denying A.R.F.’s application
    for vertical expansion.
    A.R.F.
    argues that the LCD’s decision
    is
    against the manifest weight
    of the evidence.
    Based
    on the record before
    it, the Illinois Pollution
    Control Board (“Board”) finds
    that the hearing below was
    conducted
    in
    a fundamentally fair manner.
    The Board
    also finds
    that the decision of the LCB
    to deny A.R.F.’s application based
    on failure
    of A.R.F.
    to meet
    its burden
    of proof
    on the
    statutorily—defined
    criteria
    is not against the manifest weight
    of the evidence, except for the LCB’s decision on Criterion No.
    6.
    History
    On
    June
    30,
    1988,
    A.R.F.
    submitted
    its application
    to the
    LCD for approval pursuant
    to Section
    39.2
    of the Act.
    In its
    99—281

    —2—
    application A.R.F. proposed
    to design,
    construct,
    and operate
    a
    vertical expansion of its present Lake County facility.
    A.R.F.
    presently operates an 80 acre non—hazardous, primarily municipal
    waste landfill located on the east side of Route 83,
    approximately one—half mile south
    of Route
    137.
    A.R.F.’s
    facility serves all but the northern portion
    of Lake County and
    a
    small portion of Northern Cook County.
    The Chairman
    of the LCB appointed
    a special hearing panel,
    the Regional Pollution Control Hearing Committee of
    the Lake
    County Board
    (“Committee”), consisting of six County Board
    Members.
    Between October
    17, 1988 and November
    2,
    1988,
    several
    public hearings were held with the Committee receiving testimony
    and evidence as well as oral and written public comment.
    Prior
    to the commencement of hearing,
    Mr. William Alter
    filed an appearance
    in opposition to
    a grant
    of the
    application.
    Also prior
    to hearing,
    A.R.F.
    filed
    a motion
    to
    disqualify County Board Members F.T.
    “Mike” Graham,
    Bruce Hansen,
    and James Bolen on the grounds that they were biased and
    prejudiced against A.R.F.
    The motion was argued on the first day
    of hearing and the three Board Members were questioned during
    the
    first
    and second days of hearing.
    The LCB subsequently
    considered and denied A.R.F.’s motion.
    On December
    12, 1988,
    after the hearings and post—hearing
    comment period was complete,
    the Committee issued
    its findings
    and recommendations
    to the full LCB.
    The Committee found
    that
    A.R.F.
    had failed
    to satisfy each
    of the six criteria set forth
    in Section 39.2 of the Act.
    On December
    28,
    1988,
    the full LCB,
    by
    a vote of
    19—1,
    adopted
    a Resolution denying the request
    of
    A.R.F.
    for vertical expansion.
    Regulatory Framework
    Ruqui remcnts
    for
    tho
    siLi~ij01 now
    region~tl
    pollitJon
    control facilities
    are specified in the Act.
    Section 39(c)
    of
    the Act provides that “no permit for the development
    or
    construction
    of
    a new regional pollution control facility may be
    granted by the
    (Environmental Protection) Agency unless
    the
    applicant submits proof
    to the Agency that the location
    of said
    facility has been approved by the County Board of the county
    if
    in
    an unincorporated area
    ~
    in accord~ncewith Section 39.2
    of
    this Act”.
    The six applicable criteria
    set forth
    in Section
    1
    At the time of the filing of the Application, Section
    39.2(a)
    of the Act dontained eight criteria.
    Since
    the
    propos~l
    is for
    a non—hazardous waste facility,
    and criterion P
    covers
    hazardous waste facilities,
    that criterion
    is not applicable.
    Criterion #8
    is inapplicable because
    it covers requirements
    regarding location within
    a regulated recharge area,
    for which,
    at
    the time of
    filing of
    the Application,
    no such requirements
    (continued)
    99—282

    —3—
    39.2(a)
    are,
    in pertinent part:
    (a)
    The County Board
    ***
    shall approve the site location
    suitability for
    such new regional pollution control
    facility only
    in accordance with
    the following criteria:
    1.
    the facility
    is necessary
    to accommodate
    the waste
    needs of the area it
    is intended
    to serve;
    2.
    the facility
    is so designed,
    located and proposed
    to be operated that the public health,
    safety and
    welfare will be protected;
    3.
    the facility
    is located
    so as
    to
    minimize
    incompatibility with
    the character
    of the
    surrounding area and minimize the effect on the
    value
    of the surrounding property;
    4.
    the facility is located outside the boundary of the
    100 year
    flood plain,
    or
    the site is flood—proofed;
    5.
    the plan
    of operations
    for the facility
    is designed
    to minimize the danger
    to
    the surrounding area from
    fire,
    spills or other
    operational accidents;
    and
    6.
    the traffic patterns
    to or
    from the facility are
    so
    designed
    as
    to minimize the
    impact on existing
    traffic flows.
    Section 40.1 of the Act charges this Board with reviewing
    whether
    the LCB’s decision was contrary
    to the manifest weight of
    the evidence.
    E&E Hauling,
    Inc.
    v.
    Illinois Pollution Control
    Board,
    116 Ill.App.3d
    586, 451 N.E.2d 555
    (2nd Dist.
    1983),
    aff’d
    in part 107 Ill.2d
    33,
    481 N.E.2d 664
    (1985); City of Rockford
    v.
    IPCB,
    125 Ill.App.3d 384,
    386, 465 N.E.2d 996
    (1984);
    Waste
    Management
    of Illinois,
    inc.,
    v.
    IPCB,
    122 Ill.App.3d 639,
    461
    N.E.2d
    542
    (1984).
    The standard
    of manifest weight
    of the
    evidence
    is:
    A verdict
    is
    ...
    against the manifest weight
    of the evidence where
    it
    is palpably
    erroneous, wholly unwarranted,
    clearly the
    result
    of passion or prejudice,
    or appears
    to
    be arbitrary, unreasonable,
    and not based upon
    the evidence.
    A verdict cannot
    be set aside
    merely because the
    jury (County Board)
    could
    have drawn different inferences and
    conclusions from conflicting testimony or
    because
    a
    reviewing court
    (IPCB) would have
    reached
    a different conclusion
    ...
    when
    were yet adopted.
    99—283

    —4—
    considering whether
    a verdict was contrary
    to
    the manifest weight
    of the evidence,
    a
    reviewing court
    (IPCB) must view the evidence
    in the light most favorable
    to the appellee.
    Steinberg
    v.
    Petra,
    139 Ill.App. 3d
    503,
    508
    (1986).
    Consequently,
    if after reviewing the record,
    this Board
    finds
    that the LCB could have reasonably reached
    its conclusion,
    the LCB’s decision must be affirmed.
    That a different conclusion
    might also be reasonable
    is insufficient; the opposite conclusion
    must be evident
    (see Willowbrook Motel
    v.
    IPCB,
    135
    Ill.App.3d
    343, 481 N.E.2d
    1032
    (1985)).
    Additionally, this Board must evaluate whether the LCB’s
    procedures used in reaching its decision were fundamentally fair,
    pursuant
    to Section 40.1
    of the Act
    (see E&E Hauling).
    Since the
    issue
    of fundamental fairness
    is
    a threshold matter,
    the Board
    will consider
    this matter
    first.
    Fundamental Fairness
    Ill.
    Rev.
    Stat.
    1987
    ch. 111
    1/2 par.
    1040.1
    requires that
    this Board review
    the proceedings before the LCB
    to assure
    fundamental fairness.
    In E&E Hauling,
    the first case construing
    Section 40.1,
    the Appellate Court
    for the Second District
    interpreted
    statutory “fundamental fairness” as
    requiring
    application of standards
    of adjudicative due process
    (116
    Ill.App.3d 586).
    A decisionmaker may be disqualified for bias or
    prejudice if “a disinterested observer
    might conclude that he,
    or
    it,
    had
    in some measure adjudged the facts as well as
    the law of
    the case in advance of hearing it”
    (Id.,
    451 N.E2d
    at
    565).
    It
    is also important to note that in an analysis of
    bias or
    prejudgment elected officials are presumed
    to be
    objective and
    to
    act without bias.
    The Illinois Aopellate Court discussed
    triis
    issue
    in
    Citizens
    for
    a
    ButLer
    Environment
    v.
    Illinois
    Poliut:.io~
    Control
    Board,
    152
    Ill.App.3d
    105,
    504
    N.E.2d
    166
    (1st
    Dist.
    1987:
    In addressing
    this issue, we note that it
    is
    presumed that an administrative official
    is
    objective and
    “capable of judging
    a particular
    controversy fairly on the basis of
    its own
    circumstances.”
    (United States
    v. Morgan
    (1941),
    313 U.S.
    409, 421,
    85L.
    Ed.
    1429,
    1435,
    61
    5. Ct.
    999,
    1004).
    The mere fact
    that the official has taken
    a public position
    or expressdd strong views
    on
    the issues
    involved does not serve to overcome that
    presumption.
    (Hortonville ~3ointSchool
    District No.
    1
    v. Hortonville Educational
    Association (1976),
    426 U.S.
    482, 49
    L.
    Ed.
    2d
    1,
    96
    S. Ct. 2308).
    Nor
    is
    it sufficient
    to
    99—284

    —5—
    show that the official’s alleged
    predisposition resulted from his participation
    in earlier proceedings on the matter
    of
    dispute.
    (Federal Trade Commission
    v.
    Cement
    Institute
    (1948),
    33
    U.S.
    683, 92
    L.
    Ed.
    1010,
    68
    S.
    Ct.
    793).
    504 N.E.2d
    at 171.
    As the Board noted
    in Waste management
    v. Lake County, PCB
    88—190,
    April
    6,
    1989,
    a decision must
    be reversed,
    or vacated
    and remanded,
    where
    “as
    a result
    of improper
    ex parte
    communications,
    the Agency’s decisionmaking process was
    irrevocably tainted
    so
    as
    to make the ultimate judgment
    of the
    Agency unfair,
    either
    to an innocent party
    or
    to the public
    interest that the Agency was obliged
    to protect”
    (E&E Hauling,
    451 N.E.2d at
    571).
    Finally, adjudicatory due process
    requires
    that decisionmakers properly
    “hear” the case and that those who
    do not attend hearings
    in
    a given case base their determinations
    on the evidence contained
    in the transcribed record
    of such
    hearings
    (Id.,
    451 N.E.2d
    at
    569).
    (Also see E&E Hauling.)
    A.RF.
    claims that the LCB decision should be reversed
    because
    it resulted from
    a biased
    and prejudiced County Board.
    However, A.R.F.
    does not offer support for
    this claim.
    Apparently,
    A.R.F.’s claim
    is based upon
    its motion to disqualify
    the three Members
    of the County Board filed October
    13,
    1988.
    During the LOB hearings,
    the three Board Members,
    Graham,
    Hansen,
    and Bolen, were examined at
    to their ability
    to vote objectively
    on 7½.R.F.’s application.
    On December
    28,
    1989,
    the LCB,
    in the
    Resolution adopted on that date,
    denied A.R.F. ‘s motion.
    On
    appeal
    to
    this Board, A.R.F.
    offers no argument
    in opposition
    to
    the LCB denial
    of the motion to disqualify.
    In fact,
    the only
    argument A.R.F.
    offers
    in relation to
    the fundamental fairness
    issue apparently
    is
    to suggest that the LCB presents
    a “moving
    target”.
    .A.R.F.
    Brief
    at
    1.
    A.R.F.
    states:
    No matter what has been offered or performed
    by the applicant,
    Lake County has required
    more.
    If the applicant satisfied Lake
    County’s initial
    “standards”
    in
    a subsequent
    local siting
    request, Lake County demands yet
    more.
    If
    a third
    request was filed which met
    the former demands,
    Lake County would demand
    yet more.
    It
    is
    a never ending cycle
    of
    increased demands
    that cannot
    be met at the
    local
    level.
    This
    is yet another example of
    the Not In My Back Yard or NIMBY syndrome that
    Lake County has exhibited so many times
    in the
    past.
    (Citations omitted).
    This never
    ending
    cycle
    is fed by the unfounded statements
    of
    Lake County’s witnesses that are not based
    upon any recognized standards.
    Throughout the
    99—285

    —6—
    hearings,
    counsel
    for A.R.F.
    asked Lake
    County’s hired witnesses what standards they
    were relying upon
    in reaching their
    “conclusions.”
    None of Lake County’s
    witnesses could definitely point
    to any
    regulations such as the Pollution Control
    Board’s
    (“Board”) regulations
    as guiding
    their
    “conc1usions~ regarding A.R.F. ‘s landfill
    design and
    operation.
    The Board cannot let
    Lake County’s decision stand where the shaky
    foundation of its decision
    is based upon
    nothing but illusory standards and
    imagination.
    A.R.F. Brief,
    pp.
    1—2.
    The Board
    is not persuaded.
    A.R.F.
    has offered no objective
    evidence
    to this Board
    to demonstrate that the LCB decision was
    the
    result of
    a fundamentally unfair process.
    Thus,
    the Board
    finds
    that the proceedings before
    the LCB were conducted
    in
    a
    fundamentally fair manner and will proceed
    to the merits
    of the
    Application.
    Statutory Criteria
    A.R.F.
    claims that
    the LOB’s conclusions
    as
    to each of the
    criteria are against the manifest weight
    of the evidence,
    and
    that the LCB’s decision should be reversed and site location
    approved.
    We
    will review each
    of these criteria
    in
    turn.
    Criterion
    No.1
    Section 39.2(a)(l)
    of the Act requires
    that the applicant
    establish that “the facility
    is necessary
    to accommodate
    the
    waste
    needs
    of
    the
    area
    it
    is
    intended
    to
    serve”.
    Re
    event
    case
    la~
    from
    the
    Second
    Distr
    ict
    Appellate
    Court
    provides
    guidance
    on
    the
    applicable
    analysis
    of
    this
    criterion:
    Although a petitioner need not show absolute
    necessity,
    it must demonstrate
    an urgent need
    for the new facility
    as well
    as the reasonable
    convenience
    of establishing
    a new or expanding
    an existing landfill.
    ...The petition must
    show that the landfill
    is reasonably required
    by the waste needs of the area,
    including
    consideration of its waste production and
    disposal ca~pabilities.
    Waste
    Management
    of
    Illinois,
    Inc.
    v.
    PCB,
    175 Ill. App.3d
    1023,
    530 N.E.2d
    682
    (2nd Dist.
    1988);
    citing Waste Management
    of
    Illinois,
    Inc.
    v.
    Pollution Control
    Board, 123 Ill. App.3d
    1075,
    463 N.E.2d
    969
    (1984).
    99—286

    —7—
    The LCB
    found that A.R.F.
    failed
    to establish that its
    proposed facility
    is necessary to accommodate the waste needs
    of
    the area
    it
    is intended
    to serve with any credible evidence,
    stating that
    the analysis of Mr. Andrews,
    A.R.F.
    ‘5
    expert witness
    on the criterion, was not credible for the following reasons:
    A)
    He failed
    to do
    a complete analysis
    of
    the remaining capacity of
    the landfills
    in and
    around
    the Lake County area.
    Specifically, Mr. Andrews failed
    to
    include several
    active landfills
    to wit;
    active landfills being used by Lake
    County.
    He did not consider
    the
    expansion
    of the Techny landfill near
    Northfield,
    the East Troy landfill
    in
    nearby Wisconsin,
    the Zion,
    Lake Bluff,
    Land
    of Lakes,
    or the Lake County Grading
    landfills,
    all which accept waste from
    the A.R.F. ‘s service area.
    B)
    He failed
    to take into consideration the
    Lake County Joint Action Solid Waste
    Planning Agency plan for recycling,
    composting and other
    technologies
    designed
    to minimize the need for
    landfill capacity.
    C)
    He failed
    to consider proposed
    facilities,
    whether
    in or
    out of
    the
    County,
    if such facilities would be
    capable
    of handling
    a portion of
    the
    waste disposal needs
    of the County and
    will
    be capable
    of doing so prior
    to the
    projected expiration
    of the current
    disposal
    capabilities within the County,
    such that the needs of
    the County will
    continue
    to be
    served.
    Specifically, Mr.
    Andrews failed
    to take into consideration
    the Bartlett Baleful
    and, further,
    failed
    to adequately determine the
    Pheasant Run landfill and the Mallard
    Lake landfills
    in DuPage County,
    Illinois.
    D)
    Independent
    reports included
    in the
    A.R.F.
    application do not support the
    need
    for
    a new disposal site.
    The
    records provided indicate that from the
    SWPA and the IEPA that there
    is adequate
    existing landfill capacity until between
    1994
    and 1997.
    99—287

    —8—
    (Res.
    at 3.)
    It
    is well established that the burden
    is upon A.R.F.
    to
    demonstrate that the LCB’s
    decision is contrary to the manifest
    weight
    of the evidence.
    In support of its application, A.R.F. presented testimony at
    the LCB hearing
    of Mr.
    Douglas Andrews,
    a registered professional
    engineer.
    Mr. Andrews testified
    that he prepared
    a written
    report contained in the Application which addresses the issue
    of
    need.
    This report,
    which
    is contained
    in Volume II
    of the
    Application,
    at pages
    529
    to
    556,
    identifies current waste
    disposal facilities serving the Lake County area and provides
    projections
    on future disposal capacities.
    In his report, Mr. Andrews identified
    three municipal waste
    disposal facilities
    (Mallard Lake, BFI,
    and Pheasant Run)
    other
    than A.R.F.’s which may
    be available
    to
    accept municipal waste
    from Lake County.
    The Report indicates that if use
    of available
    capacity
    is projected from mid—1987 and
    a
    5 percent annual
    increase
    is assumed,
    the entire present disposal capacity of the
    region would be exhausted by the end of
    1993.
    The Report notes,
    however,
    that the Pheasant Run capacity cannot be relied upon
    with certainty because
    (1)
    it
    is
    located outside
    of the area
    which A.R.F.’s facility is intended
    to serve, and
    (2)
    the
    facility
    is beyond
    the jurisdiction and control of the State
    of
    Illinois.
    (Appi.
    540—541).
    Similarly the Report notes
    that the
    Mallard Lake landfill capacity cannot be relied upon because
    it
    is located
    in DuPage County and the owners have
    in recent years
    attempted
    to
    limit
    the
    amount
    of
    out—of—county
    refuse
    accepted
    at
    the facility.
    (App.
    541).
    The Report then offers
    a second
    evaluation which excludes the Pheasant Run and Mallard Lake
    landfills
    from the above projection and estimates capacity
    exhaustion
    in mid—1991.
    (App.
    542).
    r4r.
    Andrews testified
    that
    in mid—1987 there was
    approximately 55,600,000 cubic yards
    of capacity available and
    that the rate of use was on an annual basis approximately 7.5
    million cubic yards.
    (R.
    10/17 at 84).
    Mr.
    Andrews testified
    that he arrived at the 1993 exhaustion date by adding five
    percent
    to the rate of use and subtracting
    the number
    from the
    amount
    of available capacity until
    the available capacity was
    exhausted.
    (Id.).
    Mr. Andrews stated that he determined
    the
    available capacity by reference to
    a 1987 Illinois EPA
    publication entitled “Available Disposal Capacity For
    Solid Waste
    in Illinois”, Attachment No.
    1
    to the Andrews’
    Report.
    (Id.
    at
    83).
    Also attached
    to the Andrews’ Report
    are the following:
    Attachment
    No.
    3
    “Needs
    Assessment
    Under
    the
    Lake
    County
    Solid
    Waste Management
    Plan”,
    dated February,
    1988;
    Attachment No.
    4
    “Regional Solid Waste Management Policy Plan
    for Northeastern
    Illinois” published
    by the Northeastern Illinois Planning
    Commission;
    and Attachment No.
    5
    “Lake County Solid Waste
    Management Plan Feasibility Study”.
    Mr. Andrews stated that he
    99—288

    —9—
    relied,
    in part,
    upon these documents
    in the preparation of his
    report.
    (Id.
    at 79).
    On cross—examination,
    Mr. Andrews testified that he decided
    to add
    a five percent increase
    in his analysis
    to waste received
    at the four facilities identified
    in the application because,
    in
    part,
    DuPage County
    is developing rapidly and apparently will be
    increasing
    its demand
    for landfill space.
    (Id.
    at 121).
    When
    questioned
    as
    to whether the increased demand would affect only
    the Mallard Lake landfill
    in DuPage County
    or would affect the
    Lake County landfills also,
    Mr. Andrews
    responded:
    Well,
    there might be some increase also in
    Lake County.
    I
    simply said that
    I thought
    if
    you take DuPage County into account, you have
    to allow
    for some increase.
    Maybe five
    percent
    is not the right percent.
    Maybe
    it
    should be
    I-iigher than that.
    Maybe
    it should
    be
    a little
    lower than that but that’s the
    number
    I
    used.
    (Id.
    at 122).
    In
    its brief on appeal,
    A.R.F.
    argues that the
    uncontroverted evidence shows
    an immediate need for
    A.R.F.
    ‘S
    vertical expansion.
    A.R.F. argues that Lake County’s failure
    to
    offer “any evidence
    to rebut this inescapable conclusion
    is an
    admission that this need exists...”
    (A.R.F. Brief
    at 3—4).
    In
    response to the decision
    of the LCB,
    A.R.F. maintains that the
    Andrews Report incorporated each of the facilities enumerated
    in
    (A)
    above
    in
    its need analysis and determined
    that there
    is
    a
    need
    for A.R.F.’s facility.
    Further,
    A.R.F.
    argues that it
    considered
    the potential
    of alternatives
    to landfilling, such
    as
    recycling,
    and found that they would not reduce the need for
    A.R.F.’s expansion.
    Finally,
    A.R.F. argues that independent
    reports, such as the Lake County SWPA study
    and the IEPA study,
    support A.R.F.’s position that available capacity will
    be
    exhausted
    by mid—1993.
    Lake County argues that A.R.F.
    failed
    to carry
    its burden
    of
    establishing need for its proposed expansion.
    In support
    of its
    position, Lake County states that
    Mr.
    Andrews did not consider
    the recent three year expansion
    of the Techny landfill
    in
    Northfield
    (R.
    10/17 at
    16).
    Nor did he consider the East Troy,
    Zion,
    Lake Bluff,
    Land of Lakes or Lake County Grading landfills
    (app.
    Ex.
    7,
    p.
    546),
    “all able
    to accept waste from within
    A.R.F.’s service area”.
    (Lake County Brief at
    5).
    Further,
    Lake
    County states that Mr. Andrews did not consider
    the potential
    effect that
    an intensive recycling and composting program would
    have on the rate of disposal
    and
    the amount of remaining capacity
    for landfills in and around the proposed A.R.F.
    service area.
    (Lake County Brief
    at 6.)
    Lake County also requests that the
    Board consider the October
    1988 update
    of the IEPA Available
    99—2~9

    —10—
    Disposal Capacity Report, which was not available at the hearings
    but was disseminated publicly thereafter
    and amends many figures
    in the earlier
    1987 report relied upon by Mr. Andrews.
    Lake
    County argues that although the Hearing Officer denied its
    addmission into the record,
    the Board may take judicial notice
    of
    the contents of the report pursuant
    to 35
    Ill.
    Adm. Code 103.206.
    Amicus Curiae Prairie Holdings Corporation and local
    landowners
    (“Prairie Holdings” collectively) also argues that
    A.R.F.
    did not demonstrate that its proposed expansion is
    necessary to accommodate
    the waste needs of the area
    it
    is
    intended
    to serve.
    Basically, Prairie Holding’s arguments
    paralleled
    those
    of Lake County,
    i.e.,
    that Mr. Andrews
    (1)
    excluded date about available disposal capacity,
    (2)
    disregarded
    recycling and composting,
    and
    (3)
    relied on reports
    which refute
    his conclusions.
    The Amicus,
    Prairie Holdings,
    argues that need
    in Lake
    County has not been demonstrated because less
    than half the waste
    disposed
    in lake County
    is generated within the County
    (Amicus
    Brief,
    p.
    11).
    The Board does not
    today address whether such
    a
    consideration can be
    a viable part of
    a decision on the need
    criterion.
    In its reply brief, A.R.F.
    responded
    to many of
    the
    statements made
    by Lake County and Prairie Holdings.
    As
    a preliminary matter,
    the Board upholds the Hearing
    Officer’s ruling on
    the admissability of the October
    1988 IEPA
    report;
    it
    is not a part of the record on appeal.
    Section
    40,1
    of the Act clearly
    states that the hearing (before the Board)
    shall
    be based exclusively on the record before the county
    board.
    As this report was not before the Lake County board when
    it rendered
    its decision,
    it
    is properly not before
    this Board.
    Also,
    the
    Board
    notes
    that
    on April
    6,
    1989,
    the
    Board
    rendered
    a decision upholding the LOB’s
    denial
    of
    local siting
    approval
    to Waste Management of Illinois,
    Inc.
    Waste Management
    of Illinois,
    Inc.
    v.
    Lake county Board, PCB 88—190.
    The
    nat~~
    of this criterion
    is such that the analysis by the Lake County
    Board
    in this case
    is strikingly similar
    to
    that in Waste
    Management
    much
    of the same information was relied
    upon,
    and
    similar
    reasons for denial
    of approval were given.
    The Board’s
    findings on this criterion are consistent with
    the Board’s
    decision in Waste Management.
    The Board
    finds
    that its evaluation of
    the LCB’s
    decision on
    Criterion No.1
    is
    a difficult call,
    especially
    in
    light o~the
    fact that there were
    no witnesses presented
    to rebut
    the
    testimony offered by A.R.F..
    However,
    the
    Board
    also believes
    that
    it
    is necessary for its analysis
    in
    this instance
    to place
    the decision of
    the LOB
    in the context
    in which
    it was made.
    As
    this Board observes from its examination of the
    record
    in this
    99—290

    —11--
    proceeding
    the
    issue
    of
    waste
    disposal
    programs
    and
    capacities
    in
    Lake
    County
    is
    hardly
    a
    matter
    of
    first
    impression
    of
    the
    LCB.
    The
    LCB
    has
    reviewed
    many
    applications for landfill siting within
    recent
    years.
    These
    prior
    reviews
    included
    extensive
    analyses
    of
    waste
    disposal
    capacity
    with
    substantial
    portions of the records
    directed
    to
    the
    issue
    of
    the
    need
    for
    a
    landfill.
    These
    prior
    reviews,
    in
    most
    cases,
    were
    further
    appealed
    to
    this
    Board
    and
    the
    Second
    District Appellate Court.
    Moreover, during the time
    that
    the
    LCB
    has
    handled
    these
    reviews
    there
    has
    been
    minimal
    change
    in
    the
    composition
    of
    the
    siting
    committees
    and
    the
    board
    itself.
    Additionally,
    Lake
    County
    has
    itself
    been
    actively
    engaged
    in
    waste
    disposal
    planning
    through
    it
    agency,
    the
    Lake
    County
    Joint
    Action
    Solid
    Waste
    Planning
    Agency
    (“SWPA”).
    Although
    SWPA
    did
    not
    testify
    before
    the
    LCB
    in
    the
    instant
    record
    (as
    it
    had
    in
    prior
    LOB
    siting
    proceedings),
    it
    did
    submit
    a
    public
    comment
    fully
    reiterating
    its
    position,
    and
    concluding
    that
    the
    A.R.F.
    proposed
    landfill
    is
    not
    a
    necessary
    facility.
    Taken
    together,
    these
    observations
    demonstrate
    that
    the
    LCB
    is
    a
    body
    well—versed
    on
    the
    issue
    of
    need
    for
    waste
    disposal
    capacity
    in
    Lake
    County.
    The
    LCB
    asked
    pointed
    questions,
    which
    indicated
    that
    the
    witness
    failed
    to
    consider
    matters
    among
    those
    noted
    in
    the
    LCB’s
    conclusions.
    The
    LCB
    demonstrated
    acute
    knowledge
    of
    Criterion
    No.1
    issues,
    and
    was
    clearly
    not
    satisfied
    with
    the
    answers
    received,
    specifically
    regarding the
    availability
    of
    disposal
    options
    at
    other
    facilities.
    As
    noted
    above,
    the
    LOB
    found
    that
    A.R.F.
    failed
    to
    establish
    that
    the
    proposed
    facility
    is
    necessary
    to
    accommodate
    the
    waste
    needs
    of
    the
    area
    it
    is
    intended
    to
    serve,
    finding
    A.R.F.’s
    witness’
    testimony
    incredible.
    At
    first
    blush,
    the
    deficiencies
    noted
    by
    the
    LOB
    may
    seem
    less
    weighty
    than
    the
    evidence
    presented.
    It
    may
    even
    be
    said
    that
    upon
    review
    of
    the
    same
    evidence
    this
    Board
    or
    another
    reviewing
    court
    may
    have
    reached
    a
    different
    conclusion.
    However,
    under
    the
    manifest
    weight
    standard
    and
    given
    the
    understanding
    of Criterion No.
    1
    issues
    exhibited
    by
    the
    LCB
    as
    noted
    above,
    as
    well
    as
    the
    fact
    that
    the
    LCB
    was
    in
    the
    best
    position
    to
    judge
    the
    credibility
    of
    the
    evidence
    presented,
    the
    Board
    finds
    that
    the
    LCB’s
    findings
    on
    Criterion
    No.1
    ate
    not
    contrary
    to
    the
    manifest
    weight
    of
    the
    evidence.
    Criterion
    No.
    2
    Section
    39.2(a)(2)
    of
    the
    Act
    requires
    that
    the
    applicant
    establish
    that
    “the
    facility
    is
    so
    designed,
    located
    and
    proposed
    to
    be
    operated
    that
    the
    public
    health,
    safety
    and
    welfare
    will
    be
    protected.”
    Matters
    pertaining
    to
    Criterion
    No.
    2
    encompass
    approximately
    half
    of
    the
    Application,
    and
    a
    large
    amount
    of
    the
    99—291

    —12—
    testimony presented at hearing.
    The principal
    A.R.F. witnesses
    addressing Criterion No.
    2 were Dr. Rauf Piskin
    (R.
    10/18 at
    3 et
    seq.)
    and Mr. Michael
    D. Andrews
    (R.
    10/19 at
    87
    et.
    seq.).
    County witnesses addressing this Criterion were Dr. Nolan
    Augherbaugh
    (R.
    10/27
    at
    4
    et.
    seq.)
    and Mr. George Noble
    (R.
    10/31 at
    4
    et.
    seq.).
    Criterion No.
    2
    encompasses,
    by its nature,
    a wide variety
    of location,
    design,
    and
    operational
    issues,
    of
    varying
    non-
    technical
    and technical nature.
    Locational
    issues
    include
    whether the landfill
    is proposed
    to be expanded
    at
    a physically
    suitable
    site,
    in
    consideration
    of
    at
    least
    local
    geology
    and
    hydrogeology.
    Design elements include the protective features
    of
    the
    landfill
    design,
    such
    as
    a
    landfill
    liner,
    leachate
    collection system,
    gas control system,
    groundwater monitoring
    system,
    and surface water control system.
    Also encompassed
    in
    Criterion
    No.
    2
    are
    a
    variety
    of
    proposed
    operational
    elements,
    including
    type
    arid
    frequency
    of
    monitoring
    of
    air,
    land,
    and
    water,
    daily
    operational
    plans,
    and
    closure
    and
    post—closure
    maintenance.
    Apparently
    not
    all
    of
    the
    many
    potential
    issues
    related
    to
    Criterion
    No.
    2
    were
    found
    by
    the
    LCB
    to
    enter
    into
    its
    decision.
    Rather,
    the
    LOB
    cites
    only
    a
    limited
    number
    of
    issues
    which
    it contends contributed
    to A.R.F.’s failure
    to carry
    its
    burden
    of
    proof
    with
    respect
    to
    Criterion
    No.
    2.
    After
    noting
    that
    A.R.F.’s
    proposal
    was
    to
    “place
    a
    synthetic
    membrane
    liner
    and
    a
    leachate
    collection
    system
    directly
    on
    top
    of
    an
    existing
    landfill
    and
    create
    a
    new
    landfill
    on
    top
    of
    the
    existing
    landfill”
    (County
    Res.
    at
    4),
    the
    County
    found
    certain
    inadequacies
    in
    A.R.F.
    ‘s
    proposed
    design
    and
    operation.
    A
    brief
    summary
    of
    the
    County’s
    reasoning
    is
    as
    follows:
    Refuse
    deposited
    in
    a
    landfill
    decomposes
    at
    different
    rates.
    This
    is
    known
    as
    “differential
    settlement.”
    Placing
    a
    new
    landtiil
    with
    its
    attendant
    liner
    and
    leachate
    system,
    directly
    on
    top
    of
    the
    existing
    landfill
    could
    threaten
    the
    integrity
    of
    both
    the
    liner
    and
    the
    leachate
    system.
    The
    constant
    shifting
    of
    the
    surface
    beneath
    the
    new
    landfill
    would
    eventually
    cause
    the
    membrane
    liner
    to
    rupture
    and
    tear
    and
    cause
    the
    leachate
    collection pipes
    to become clogged and possibly
    break.
    Also,
    the
    County
    found
    that
    the
    hydrogeology
    of
    the
    area
    was
    not
    examined
    thoroughly.
    The
    County
    heard
    testimony
    by
    Dr.
    Augherbaugh
    and
    by
    Dr.
    Piskin
    that
    there
    are
    sand
    lenses,
    which
    are
    pockets
    or
    columns
    of
    sand,
    which
    create
    rivers
    or
    streams
    to
    allow
    different
    iiqu~ids
    to
    escape.
    Although
    borings
    t~n
    e~:
    the
    proposed
    site
    revealed
    mostly
    clay
    characteristics,
    sand
    sear~is
    were
    present
    running
    through
    the
    clay.
    A.R.F.’s
    witness
    testified
    that
    these
    sand
    lenses
    were
    discontinuous.
    Lake
    County’s
    witness
    testified
    that
    there
    are
    two
    ways
    to
    prove
    that
    sand
    lenses
    are
    discontinuous;
    either
    complete
    excavation
    or
    a
    9 9—292

    —13—
    prolonged permeability test.
    The County found that A.R.F.
    had
    done neither
    and,
    therefore,
    it could not be assumed that the
    seams were discontinuous.
    (County Res.
    at
    5.)
    Further,
    the
    County found that several seams were not the only avenues by
    which the leachate could
    travel
    through the A.R.F.
    landfill.
    There had been 40 borings performed for A.R.F.
    which were back
    filled
    with
    auger
    spoils
    rather
    than
    being
    sealed
    with
    bentonite
    grout.
    The
    County
    stated
    that
    A.R.F.
    had
    experienced
    leachate
    leaks
    from
    the
    existing
    landfill
    which
    are
    indicative
    of
    a
    saturated
    condition.
    However,
    the
    County
    found
    A.R.F.
    failed
    to
    place
    any
    monitoring wells
    into
    the aquifer
    layer
    to determine
    whether
    the
    aquifer
    has
    been
    contaminated
    by
    leachate.
    A.R.F.
    argues
    that
    the
    LCB’s
    finding
    on
    differential
    settlement
    is
    wrong.
    A.R.F.
    maintains
    that
    it
    is
    operating
    its
    current
    landfill
    and
    has
    designed
    its
    vertical
    elevation
    “to
    either minimize differential settlement or take
    it
    into
    account.”
    (A.R.F. Brief
    at
    27.)
    A.R.F.
    states that differential
    settlement
    is not
    a concern because A.R.F.
    is proposing
    (1)
    a
    multiple
    liner
    system,
    (2)
    an 80 mil.
    geomembrane,
    (3)
    compaction,
    (4)
    a
    uniform
    surface
    on
    the
    existing
    landfill,
    and
    (5)
    a
    leachate
    collection
    system
    that
    includes
    two
    back—up
    systems.
    (Id..)
    A.R.F.
    also
    asks
    the
    Board
    to
    take
    into
    account
    the superior credentials of A.R.F.
    ‘s
    witnesses
    (Andrews
    and
    Piskin)
    versus
    the
    “unqualified
    Lake
    County’s
    witnesses”
    (Noble
    and
    Aughenbaugh).
    (A.R.F.
    Brief
    at
    16.)
    Lake
    County
    argues
    that
    all
    of
    the
    witnesses
    agreed
    that
    differential
    settlement
    occurs
    commonly
    in
    landfills
    and
    can
    be
    extensive.
    Lake
    County
    states
    that
    its
    witness,
    Dr.
    Aughenbaugh,
    had
    several
    major
    criticisms
    of
    the
    structural
    soundness
    of
    A.R.F.
    ‘s
    proposed
    expansion.
    Dr.
    Aughenbaugh stated that
    A.R.F.’s
    plan
    to
    reduce
    differential
    settlement
    by
    running
    a
    compactor over the trash would
    be ineffective because once the
    compactor
    has been run over trash
    8—10 times, no further
    compaction can be achieved.
    (R.
    10/27 at
    39—40.)
    Dr.
    Aughenbaugh also stated that
    it
    was unrealistic to put
    a leachate
    collection system and synthetic liner on top of
    an old landfill
    because, with the inevitability of differential settlement,
    the
    synthetic
    liner
    would
    eventually
    stretch
    and
    rip,
    causing
    the
    leachate collection pipes to
    settle, crack,
    break,
    and shear
    off.
    (Id.
    at
    43.)
    Lake County also points
    to Dr. Andrew’s
    statement
    that
    he
    knew
    of
    “no
    reliable
    way
    to
    predict
    the
    amount
    of differential settlement which would occur”
    (R.
    10/19 at 108),
    to support the LCB’s decision.
    Amicus
    Prairie
    Holdings’
    arguments
    are
    similar
    to
    Lake
    County’s.
    Prairie Holdings argues that the evidence shows that
    landfills can experience significant differential settlement.
    Prairie
    Holdings
    pointed
    to
    two studies discussed by Mr.
    Noble,
    one
    of
    a
    vertical expansion
    in Pontiac Michigan and the other
    of
    a
    landfill
    at
    Mission
    Canyon,
    California.
    (R.
    10/31
    at
    28—29.)
    Prairie
    Holdings
    argued
    that
    A.R.F.’s
    proposed
    “densification”
    99—2 93

    —14—
    process
    to minimize the effects of differential settlement
    is not
    supported by the Record.
    A principal element
    in this Board’s review of
    the LOB
    decision
    is whether,
    in light
    of
    the manifest weight
    of the
    evidence standard,
    the decision of the LOB was “palpably
    erroneous, wholly unwarranted, clearly the result
    of passion
    or
    prejudice,
    or appears
    to be arbitrary, unreasonable, and
    not
    based
    upon
    the
    evidence”
    (Steinberg
    v.
    Petra,
    supra)
    given
    the
    nature
    of
    the
    testimony.
    Despite
    attempts
    to
    call
    into
    question
    the
    expertise
    of both
    Mr.
    Noble
    and
    Dr.
    Aughenbaugh,
    this
    Board
    in
    its
    own
    technical
    review
    of
    the
    materials presented
    in the record,
    cannot find
    fundamental
    fault
    with
    the
    pertinent
    conclusions
    drawn by these
    witnesses.
    Where conflicting testimony exists,
    it
    is
    in
    controlling part disagreement among apparently qualified and
    competent
    individuals.
    Moreover,
    given
    this
    conflicting
    testimony,
    it
    is not against the manifest weight
    of the evidence
    that
    a
    majority
    of
    the
    LCB found
    that A.R.F. had not carried its
    burden of proof with respect
    to geologic and hydrologic aspects
    of
    Criterion
    No.
    2.
    Accordingly,
    this
    Board
    must
    affirm
    the
    LOB’s
    decision
    on
    Criterion No.
    2.
    The
    analysis
    of
    the
    differential
    settlement
    aspect
    of
    Criterion
    No.
    2
    is
    dispositive
    of this matter.
    However,
    for
    the
    record,
    this
    Board
    notes
    that
    the
    LCB
    included
    additional
    factors
    in
    its
    decision
    on
    Criterion
    No.
    2.
    These
    include
    considerations
    of
    leachate
    management
    hydrogeology, post—closure care,
    and
    litter
    control.
    (Resolution
    at
    5—6.)
    This
    Board
    does
    riot
    find
    that
    the
    LCB’s
    decision
    on
    these
    additional
    factors,
    in
    their
    aggregate,
    is against
    the manifest weight
    of the evidence.
    Criterion No.3
    Section
    39.2(a)(3)
    of
    the
    Act
    requires
    that the applicant;
    establish
    that
    the
    proposed
    facility
    is
    located
    so
    as
    to
    minimize
    incompatibility
    with
    the
    surrounding
    area
    and
    to
    minimize
    the
    effect
    on
    the
    value
    of
    the
    surrounding
    property.
    On
    this
    issue,
    A.R.F.
    presented
    Jay
    N.
    Heap
    (R.
    10/20
    at
    4
    et.
    seq.).
    The
    County’s
    witnesses
    included
    Herbert
    Harriso:i
    (R.
    11/2
    a.m.
    at
    6
    et.
    seq.)
    and
    Robert
    Mosteller
    CR.
    10/31
    p.m.
    36
    et.
    seq.).
    Prafrie
    Holdings
    witnesses
    included
    Anthoney
    Tives
    (R.
    10/27
    a.m.
    at
    5
    et.
    seq.
    )
    and
    Lane
    I(endig
    (R.
    10/27
    a.m.
    at
    24
    et.
    seq.).
    Jay
    Heap,
    a
    rea’l
    estate
    appraiser,
    determined
    that A.~t’.‘s
    proposed
    facility
    will
    minimize
    incompatibility
    with
    the
    character
    of
    the
    surrounding
    area
    and
    will
    minimize
    the
    eCL.t
    on
    the
    value
    of
    surrounding property.
    Included
    within
    his
    an~~’sis,
    Mr.
    Ueap
    conducted
    a
    visual
    impact
    study
    using
    a
    helium
    fill:d,
    optic
    orange,
    36
    inch
    balloon.
    Mr.
    Heap
    placed
    the
    balloon
    99—294

    —15—
    approximately
    where
    the
    highest
    point
    of
    the
    proposed
    site
    would
    reach
    and
    attempted
    to
    view
    the
    balloon
    from
    various
    positions
    in
    a
    one
    mile
    square
    area
    around
    the
    site.
    Mr.
    Heap
    testified
    that
    most
    of
    the
    areas
    where
    the
    landfill
    was
    visible
    were
    predominantly agricultural
    areas
    rather than residential
    areas.
    (R.
    10/20
    a.m.
    at
    25..)
    Also included
    in Mr. Heap’s analyses are
    (1) A.R.F.’s plans for construction and operation,
    (2)
    the zoning
    land
    usage
    and
    principal
    characteristics
    of
    the
    site,
    and
    (3)
    an
    analyses
    of
    the
    residential
    sales,
    vacant
    land
    sales,
    and
    building
    permit
    issuance.
    Lake
    County’s
    witness,
    Mr.
    Herbert
    Harrison,
    testified
    that,
    in
    his
    opinion,
    Mr.
    Heap’s
    conclusion
    was
    not
    supported
    by
    the
    report.
    Harrison
    testified
    that
    Heap’s
    analysis
    failed
    to
    include
    a
    “before
    and
    after”
    analysis
    by
    studying
    property
    values
    before
    and
    after
    the
    construction
    of
    the landfill and/or
    a
    comparative
    study
    of
    property
    values
    by
    studying
    properties
    remote
    from
    the
    site
    and
    then
    comparing
    them
    to
    closer
    properties.
    (R.
    11/2
    a.m.
    at
    19—20,
    29—30.)
    Harrison
    also
    testified
    that
    studies
    have
    shown
    a
    general
    tendency
    towards
    an
    increase
    in
    property
    values
    in
    areas
    surrounding
    landfills
    or
    gravel
    pits
    as
    the
    date
    of
    closure
    of
    the
    facility
    nears.
    Lake
    County
    argues
    that
    no
    such
    study
    was
    done
    by
    Mr.
    Heap
    in
    this
    case.
    Prairie
    Holdings
    argues
    that
    the
    visible
    impact
    (balloon)
    study
    was
    inconclusive
    because,
    inter
    alia,
    it
    failed
    to
    take
    into
    account
    increased
    visibility
    during
    winter
    when
    the
    trees
    are
    bare
    (Amicus
    Brief
    at
    28).
    Prairie
    Holdings
    also
    argues
    that
    proposed
    expansion
    does
    not
    minimize
    the
    incompatibility
    with
    nearby
    wetland
    resources,
    although the LCB
    did not rely on this
    in
    its
    denial
    on
    Criterion
    No.
    3.
    Criterion
    No.
    3
    calls
    for
    the
    facility
    to
    be
    located
    so
    as
    to
    “minimize”
    incompatibility
    ——
    but
    does
    not
    allow
    for
    rejection
    simply because there might be some reduction
    in value.
    A.R.F.
    Landfill,
    Inc.
    v.
    Lake County,
    PCB 87—51,
    Slip Op. 10/1/87
    at
    24;
    citing Watts Trucking Service, Inc.,
    v.
    City
    of Rock
    Island
    (PCB
    83—167).
    More
    is required
    of an applicant than
    a
    de minimus
    effort
    at minimizing the facility’s impact.
    An applicant must
    demonstrate that
    it has done or will do what
    is reasonably
    feasible to minimize incompatibility.
    Waste Management
    of
    Illinois,
    Inc.
    v.
    IPCB,
    123
    Ill. App.3d 1075,
    1090
    (2nd Dist.
    1984).
    The
    Board
    finds
    that
    the
    LCB’s
    findings
    on Criterion No.
    3
    are
    not
    against
    the
    manifest
    weight
    of
    the
    evidence.
    The
    Board
    cannot
    find
    fundamental
    fault
    with
    the
    conclusions
    drawn
    by
    the
    witnesses
    who
    testified
    on
    behalf
    of
    A.R.F.
    and
    the
    County.
    In
    the
    briefs,
    both
    the
    LOB
    and
    A.R.F.
    debate
    the
    propriety
    of
    examination
    of property values
    before
    and after the introduction
    of
    a landfill
    into the area.
    The Board finds that the witnesses
    held differing but viable views on this aspect,
    as
    is also
    99—295

    —16—
    conflicting evidence on the issue of minimization of
    the impact
    upon the character
    of the surrounding area and whether
    the
    minimization efforts
    as proposed are sufficient.
    Because there
    is viable testimony on both sides of the Criterion No.
    3 issue,
    the Board finds that determination of
    the LOB on Criterion No.
    3
    is not against the manifest weight
    of the evidence.
    Criterion No.
    4
    Section 39.2
    (a)(4)
    of
    the Act requires that the applicant
    establish that “the
    facility
    is located outside the boundary
    of
    the
    100
    year
    flood
    plain
    or
    the
    site
    is
    flood—proofed”.
    The
    LOB
    found
    that A.R.F.
    failed
    to meet its burden of proof on this
    criterion.
    The principal A.R.F. witness addressing
    this
    criterion
    was
    Mr.
    Michael
    D.
    Andrews,
    P.E.
    A.R.F.
    argues
    that
    because
    it
    is
    proposing
    a
    vertical
    elevation
    of
    its
    current
    facility,
    the
    proposed
    facility
    will
    be
    well
    above
    the
    100
    year
    flood
    plain.
    (A.R.F.
    Brief
    at
    42.)
    Further,
    notwithstanding
    that
    the
    proposed
    site
    is
    not
    in
    a
    flood
    plain,
    A.R.F.
    argues
    that
    it
    would
    provide
    flood
    protection
    for
    the
    landfill
    for
    a
    25—year
    storm
    and
    the
    surrounding area for
    a
    10—year
    storm.
    (Id.
    at
    42.)
    The
    LOB
    found
    that
    A.R.F.
    had
    failed
    “to
    present
    any
    evidence
    establishing
    either
    that
    the
    proposed
    expansion
    is
    totally
    outside
    of
    a
    flood
    plain
    or
    that
    the
    site
    is
    adequately
    flood—proofed.
    (Res.
    at
    7.)
    Specifically,
    the
    LOB
    noted
    that
    A.R.F.’s expansion would
    include areas
    near
    the entrance gate and
    ticket house presently located
    at the facility.
    The LCB found
    no
    evidence
    to
    determine
    whether
    or
    not
    these
    areas
    are
    in
    a
    flood
    plain.
    Further,
    the
    LCB
    found
    that
    “the
    retention
    pond
    tnat
    is
    clearly
    in
    the
    flood
    plain
    was
    not
    built
    to
    accommodate
    a
    25—year
    storm”.
    (Res.
    at
    8.)
    When
    asked
    whether
    there
    are
    any
    flood
    plains involved, Mr.
    Andrews,
    A.R.F.’s
    witness,
    testified
    that
    the
    elevation
    of
    ~i~:ec
    in
    the
    100—year
    flood
    plain
    is
    approximately
    799
    feet.
    (R.
    10/19
    a.m.
    at
    133.)
    Mr.
    Andrews
    stated
    that
    the
    landfill
    offict~
    :~id
    shown
    as
    the
    equipment
    building
    on
    Applicant’s
    Exhibit
    21
    p~je
    138
    ...
    are
    built
    at
    elevation
    800
    at
    floor
    level.
    So
    Some
    of
    the
    area
    around
    these
    buildings
    is
    within
    the
    100
    year
    flood
    plain.
    (Id.)
    Also,
    Mr.
    Andrews
    stated
    that
    a
    “consideranle
    amount
    of
    the
    area
    in
    the
    28.6
    acres
    north
    of
    the
    landfill
    is
    below
    the
    800
    foot elevation.
    The purpose of this
    28.6
    acres
    is
    to
    “create
    a
    place
    where
    detention
    of
    drainage
    and
    sedimentation
    can
    occur”.
    (Id.
    at
    127—128.)
    Thus,
    Mr.
    Andrews
    concluded
    “some
    of
    that
    area
    is
    flood
    plain
    or
    within
    the
    boundary
    of
    the h~i~1~~d
    year
    flood
    elevation”.
    (Id.
    at
    133.)
    However,
    when
    Mr.
    ~‘~inkews
    was
    asked
    whether
    the
    site
    has
    been
    properly
    flood—proof~d,
    ~e
    responded
    “this
    site
    involves
    placement
    of
    waste
    only
    ahov~
    the
    840
    elevation.
    So
    any
    waste
    placement
    ...
    is
    well
    above
    the
    hundred
    year
    flood
    plain”
    (Id.
    at
    134).
    99—29 6

    17—
    Based
    on
    this
    Board’s
    review
    of
    the
    record,
    and
    particularly
    that
    portion
    discussed
    above,
    this
    Board
    believes that the LCB’s
    decision
    is
    not
    against
    the
    manifest
    weight
    of
    the
    evidence.
    A.R.F.’s
    own
    witness
    testified
    on
    direct
    examination that some
    of
    the
    area
    is
    within
    the
    boundary
    of
    the
    100—year
    flood
    plain.
    Thus,
    this
    Board
    believes
    that
    the
    LOB
    could
    have
    reasonably
    found
    that
    A.R.F.
    failed
    to
    demonstrate
    that
    the
    facility
    is
    located
    outside
    of
    the
    100—year
    flood
    plain.
    The
    Board
    notes,
    in
    passing,
    that
    the
    LOB’s
    Resolution
    is
    somewhat
    inarticulate on
    this
    point.
    The
    Resolution
    states
    “there
    has
    been
    no
    evidence
    as
    to
    whether
    or
    not
    A.R.F.
    ‘s
    area
    is
    located
    in
    a
    flood
    plain”.
    (Res.
    at
    8.)
    This
    Board
    believes
    that
    there
    is
    evidence
    on
    this
    issue;
    however,
    the
    evidence
    is
    contradictory and does
    not
    lend
    itself
    to
    clear
    interpretation.
    Nonetheless,
    the
    LCB’s
    decision
    on
    this
    criterion
    is
    not
    against
    the
    manifest
    weight
    of
    the
    evidence.
    Criterion No.
    5
    Section
    39.2(a)(5)
    requires
    the
    Applicant
    to
    demonstrate
    that
    “the
    plan
    of
    operations
    for the facility
    is designed
    to
    minimize
    the
    danger
    to
    the surrounding area from fire,
    spills,
    or
    other
    occupational
    accidents.”
    The
    LOB
    found
    that
    A.R.F.
    failed
    to
    make
    this
    demonstration.
    In
    support
    of
    its
    finding,
    the
    LOB
    stated
    in
    part:
    “The
    applicant
    has
    truly
    not
    presented
    any
    contingency
    plan
    to
    deal
    with
    the
    leachate
    or
    hazardous
    gas
    condensate.
    There
    was
    no
    clear
    plan
    for
    dealing
    with
    spills
    of
    any
    hazardous
    materials
    which
    may
    occur
    ...
    the
    application
    contained
    no
    provision
    for checking the
    leachate
    control
    system
    before
    putting
    waste
    into
    the
    landfill.
    (Res.
    at
    8.)
    A.R.F.
    argues
    that
    it has extensive safeguards
    in place
    to
    minimize
    the
    danger
    to
    the
    surrounding
    area
    from
    fire,
    spills
    and
    operational
    accidents.
    These
    safeguards
    are
    apparently
    embodied
    in
    written
    site
    safety
    policies
    as
    well
    as
    in
    the
    day—to—day
    operations
    of
    the
    facility.
    (See
    Appl.
    at
    101—109.)
    In
    its
    Brief,
    A.R.F.
    argues
    that
    it
    has
    presented
    a
    comprehensive
    contingency
    plan
    for
    “hazardous”
    gas
    condensate.
    (A.R.F.
    Brief
    at
    46.)
    A.R.F.
    also
    describes
    its
    “plan
    to
    deal
    with
    leachate”
    by
    reference
    to
    its
    operating
    plan
    in
    the
    Application
    (Appl.
    at
    22—148).
    In
    its
    Brief,
    Lake
    County
    argues,
    in
    part,
    as
    follows:
    Leachate
    removal
    was
    also
    not
    adequately
    provided
    for.
    The
    application
    contained
    no
    provision
    for
    checking the leachate control
    99—297

    —18—
    system before putting waste
    into the landfill
    (Transcript of 10—19—88 at page 176).
    There
    was no pre—set
    level
    to dictate removal of
    leachate from the manholes (Id.
    at page 180)
    and no five day storage capacity for leachate
    (Id.
    at 184).
    Leachate would
    be pumped out of the manholes
    overland;
    in some cases up
    to 225
    feet from
    the manholes into tanker trucks
    (Transcript of
    10—20—88 at page
    58).
    According
    to A.R.F.’s
    own estimates,
    they will require
    444 semi
    trucks
    a year
    just to remove leachate from the
    new landfill
    (Id.
    at
    48).
    This
    is
    approximately 2,000,000 gallons
    of
    leachate
    a
    year, which even Mr. Andrews admitted was a
    “significant”
    amount
    (Id.
    at
    67).
    (Lake
    County
    Brief
    at
    20.)
    Based
    on
    its
    review
    of
    the
    record,
    this
    Board
    finds
    that
    the
    decision
    of
    the
    LCB
    is
    not
    against
    the
    manifest
    weight
    of
    the
    evidence.
    Although
    the Board stated
    in Waste Management of
    Illinois,
    Inc.
    v.
    Lake County, PCB 88—190 that
    “the Act
    only
    requires that the applicant propose
    a plan which
    is designed
    to
    minimize the danger
    to the surrounding area from fire,
    spiils,
    or
    other operational accidents,
    the Board
    is precluded from
    reweighing
    the
    evidence
    anew.
    The
    LOB
    apparently
    determined
    that
    the
    above
    quoted
    deficiencies
    covered
    matters
    necessary to
    “minimize”
    the
    danger
    to
    the
    surrounding
    area;
    that
    is
    not
    unreasonable.
    A.R.F.’s witness, Mr.
    Andrews,
    admitted that those
    issues were not addressed
    in A.R.F. ‘s
    application
    (R.
    10/19
    at
    176—184).
    Thus,
    the
    LCB’s
    decision
    is
    not
    against
    the
    manifest
    weight
    of
    the
    evidence.
    Criterion
    No.
    6
    Section
    39.l(a)(6)
    requires
    the
    Applicant
    to
    demonstrate
    that
    “the
    traffic
    patterns
    to
    or
    from
    the
    facility
    are
    Sc)
    designed
    as
    to
    minimize
    the
    impact
    on
    existing
    traffic
    tlo~s’.
    The
    LOB
    found
    that
    A.R.F.
    failed
    to
    sustain
    its
    burden
    of
    puo~f
    On
    this
    criterion.
    Specifically, the LOB states,
    in part:
    The
    traffic
    section
    of
    the
    application
    was
    prepared
    by
    Gerald
    Salzman
    who
    testified
    at
    the
    hearing
    as
    to
    the
    basis
    of
    his
    conclusions
    that
    the
    traffic
    design
    would
    minimize
    impact
    on
    traffic
    flows.
    Mr.
    Salzman
    did
    not
    take
    into
    account
    the
    proposed
    uses
    in
    the
    area
    for
    residential
    sites
    to
    the
    west
    and
    south
    of
    the
    Site
    on
    his
    impact
    of
    traffic
    flow.
    He
    also
    did
    not
    take
    into
    account
    leachate
    collection
    trucks
    entering
    to
    and
    from
    the
    facility.
    99—298

    —19—
    Further,
    his
    data
    was
    based
    on
    1983
    daily
    traffic reports from
    the Illinois Department
    of
    Transportation
    as
    his
    basis
    for
    analysis.
    Mr.
    Salzman
    further
    lacked
    information
    as
    to
    whether
    or
    not
    the
    local
    roads
    could
    safely
    accommodate
    the
    truck
    traffic
    from
    the
    vertical
    expansion
    since
    many
    of
    the
    roads
    in
    the
    area
    were
    minor
    roads
    and
    there
    were
    no
    assurances
    that
    trucks
    would
    be
    permitted
    to
    use
    those
    types
    of
    roads.
    Mr.
    Salzman’s
    credibility
    was
    damaged
    in
    that
    he
    testified
    that
    the
    accident
    rate
    along
    Route
    83
    in
    front
    of
    the
    A.R.F.
    site
    was
    relatively
    low.
    However,
    Cliff
    Scherer
    of Illinois Department
    of Transportation testified
    to the contrary.
    According
    to Mr.
    Scherer,
    the lOOT
    records
    show
    that
    in
    1986,
    the
    accident
    rate
    along
    Route
    83
    in front
    of the A.R.F.
    site was
    4
    times
    the
    statewide
    average
    for
    a
    similar
    type
    of
    road.
    In
    1987,
    it was
    1.1
    times
    the state
    average.
    In 1988,
    the accident rate was 2.5
    times
    the
    statewide
    average.
    Many
    of
    the
    residents
    further
    testified
    that
    there
    was
    mud
    and
    debris
    on
    the
    roadway
    and
    that
    upon
    rain
    it
    became
    slick
    and
    dangerous
    upon
    passing
    nearing the A.R.F.
    site.
    (Res.
    at
    9—10.)
    A.R.F.
    argues
    that
    it
    was
    the
    only
    party
    that
    introduced
    an
    expert
    witness
    to
    discuss
    this
    criterion.
    A.R.F.’s
    witness,
    Mr.
    Gerald
    Salzman,
    testified
    that
    not
    only
    will
    A.R.F.’s
    facility
    minimize
    its
    impact
    upon
    surrounding traffic flow,
    but
    it
    will
    safely
    provide
    for
    an
    increase in surrounding traffic.
    (R.
    10/24
    p.m.
    at
    15.)
    A.R.F.
    argues
    that
    its
    proposal
    minimizes
    impact
    on
    existing
    traffic
    flow
    in
    part
    because,
    A.R.F. will install right—
    and
    left—hand
    turn
    lanes
    at
    the
    site
    enterance.
    A.R.F.
    has
    received
    preliminary
    approval
    from
    the
    Illinois
    Department
    of
    Transporation
    for
    the
    proposed
    improvements.
    In
    addition,
    A.RF.
    will
    increase
    the
    curb
    return
    radius
    to
    a
    minimum
    of
    40
    feet
    at
    the
    intersection
    of
    Routes
    137
    and
    183
    to
    provided
    a
    wider
    turning
    radius
    for
    trucks
    to
    travel
    through
    the
    intersection.
    These improvements will insure that there will be not adverse
    impact
    upon the surrour~dingroadways
    (R.
    10/24 at 14—16)
    (App.
    1000—1005)
    As a preliminary matter,
    the Board believes that many of the
    reasons given by the LCB for denial on this criterion are not
    related
    to
    a consideration of whether
    the traffic patterns are
    designed so
    as
    to minimize the impact on existing traffic
    flows.
    For
    example,
    that
    Mr.
    Salznian
    did
    not
    consider
    proposed
    residential
    uses
    is
    not
    relevant
    to
    an
    evaluation
    of
    impact on
    existing
    uses.
    That
    is
    a
    future
    occurrence.
    Moreover,
    the
    LOB’s
    99—299

    —20—
    consideration of past accident rates also are not relevant
    to an
    evaluation on this criterion.
    The past accident rate may be used
    to describe existing traffic flows,
    but this Board does not see
    the relevance of the past accident rate,
    in and of itself,
    with
    respect to the impact of the proposed facility on existing
    traffic flows.
    Thus,
    the LCB’s decision cannot be
    supported on
    these grounds.
    The Board believes that the only relevant basis for the
    LCB’s denial
    is that
    “Mr.
    Salzman did not take into account
    leachate trucks entering
    to and from the facility”.
    (Res.
    at
    9.)
    A.R.F.
    argues that Mr. Salzman did
    take the leachate trucks
    into consideration.
    A.R.F. points
    to Salzman’s testimony that
    estimated one or
    two additional leachate trucks per day and that
    that was included
    in A.R.F.’s sensitivity analysis, which
    indicated that with improvements, the Route
    83
    intersection will
    be able to accommodate
    that
    50 percent growth
    in traffic.
    (IL
    10/24 p.m.
    at 31—32.)
    Lake county offers not argument
    in
    opposition.
    The Board finds that the record reflects that Mr. Salzman
    did consider the impact of
    the leachate trucks entering and
    exiting
    the facility.
    Thus,
    the LCB’s decision cannot stand
    on
    that basis.
    From further examination of the record,
    the Board
    finds that A.R.F.
    adequately addressed the matter
    which appear
    to
    be
    of concern
    to the LCB,
    but which were not specifically
    articulated
    in the Resolution.
    Because the Act only requires
    that the traffic patterns
    to and from the facility
    be
    so designed
    as
    to minimize the impact on existing traffic flows,
    and because
    the Board has determined
    that the LCB’s decision
    is not supported
    by the relevant record,
    the Board finds
    that
    the decision of the
    LOB on Criterion No.
    6 was against
    the manifest weight of the
    evidence.
    Having found
    that the LOB’s decision on
    Criteria Numbers
    1
    through
    5 are not against
    the manifest weight
    of
    the evidence,
    the Board affirms the LOB’s decision to deny A.R.F.
    ‘S
    application.
    The Board notes that ARF filed, on May
    5,
    1989,
    a Motion For
    Admission
    of Lake County’s Study.
    ARF advanced
    several arguments
    in support
    of
    its motion and also waived the decision deadline
    to
    June 23,
    1989.
    As the Board upheld the Hearing Officer’s ruling
    on the admission of
    the October
    1988 IEPA Report,
    the Board
    similarly denies the admission
    of the Lake County Study from the
    record
    in this case.
    Section
    40.1
    of the Act clearly states that
    the hearing shall be based exclusively on the record before the
    county board.
    As th~is report was not before the Lake County
    Board
    in the record on A.R.F.’s Application,
    it
    is not before
    this Board on review.
    This Opinion constitutes
    the Board’s findings
    of fact and
    conclusions of
    law.
    99—300

    —21—
    IT IS
    SO ORDERED.
    Board Members
    3.
    Anderson,
    3. Marlin
    &
    3.
    Theodore Meyer
    concurred.
    I,
    Dorothy M.
    Gunn, Clerk
    of the Illinois
    Pollution Control
    Board, hereby certify that the above Opinion was adopted
    on
    the
    ~~-‘-
    day of
    ~
    .‘—.~z
    ,
    1989 by
    a vote
    of
    7—c
    .
    /
    ~
    ~)
    Dorothy M.~unn, Clerk
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    99—301

    Back to top