ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
September
8,
1988
ALTON PACKAGING CORPORATION,
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 83—55
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
)
PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by
R.
C.
Flemal):
This matter comes before
the Board upon a Motion
in Limine
filed August 31,
1988 by Alton Packaging Corporation
(“Alton”).
Alton requests that the Board
limit
the issues that may be
presented
at hearing,
and that the Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency (“Agency”)
be barred from presenting economic
information.
The Agency filed
its response
in opposition
to
Alton’s motion on September
7,
1988.
Alton claims that the sole issue here
is whether Alton has
adequately demonstrated, according
to the requirements of 35
Ill.
Adm. Code 214.201, that sulfur dioxide emissions from the Alton
Mill under
the proposed adjusted standard will not cause or
contribute
to ambient air quality violations.
Alton requests
that the Agency therefore be barred from presenting any economic
information as irrelevant
to the proceeding.
The Agency argues
that
it
is the Board’s duty to make environmental policy
decisions and that exclusion of economic information would
foreclose consideration of evidence necessary for such
determinations.
Central
to the matter
at hand are two portions of the
Illinois Environmental Protection Act
(“Act”), Sections 28.1 and
27(a)
(Ill.Rev.
Stat.
1987,
ch.
1111/2, par.
1028.1
and 1027(a)).
In pertinent part Section 28.1 reads
(emphasis added):
In adopting
a regulation of general applicability,
the Board may provide for the subsequent
determination of
an adjusted standard for persons who
can justify such an adjustment consistent with
subsection
(a)
of Section 27 of this Act
...
The
rule—making provisions of the Illinois Administrative
Procedure Act and Title VII
of this Act shall not
apply
to such subsequent determinations.
In pertinent part,
Section 27(a)
reads
(emphasis added):
92—03
—2—
In promulgating regulations
under this Act,
the Board
shall take into account
...
the technical feasibility
and economic reasonableness of measuring or reducing
the particular type of pollution.
Taken together,
these two sections mandate that the Board
make adjusted standards determinations consistent with the
economic reasonableness
(among other matters)
of the proposed
adjustment.
Therefore,
the entry of economic information into
the record
of an adjusted standards proceeding
is not only
permissible,
it
is a prerequisite of
a successful petition.
Moreover,
the Board notes
that
it
is the responsibility of the
person who requests
the adjusted standard
to assure that economic
information sufficient
for the Board
to make
its
is determination
is entered
into the record.
For
these reasons,
the Board cannot
generally bar the submission of economic information, and
accordingly Alton’s motion
is denied.
In support of its claim,
Alton emphasizes
that since Section
28.1 states that the rulemaking provisions
of the Illinois
Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”)
and Title VII
(of which both
Sections
27 and
28 are part)
do not apply,
economic information,
particularly regarding economic hardship,
should not be
considered.
The Agency states
and the Board agrees that Section
28.1 by its terms specifically allows adjusted standard
determinations
to be made without utilization of the regular
rulemaking procedures contained
in Title VII
of the Act or those
of the APA.
This
is not only clear
from the juxtaposition of
the
the APA (which deals solely with procedures)
and Title VII
references,
but also from the absurdity which would follow under
the construction that nothing
in Title VII applies
to Section
28
considerations where Section
28
is itself part
of Title VII.
In denying Alton’s motion the Board notes
that it
is not
finding that Section 28.1 authorizes
a reexamination of the
general rulemaking
factors considered by the Board when it
adopted the general sulfur dioxide standards;
•neither does
Section 28.1 provide for
a determination regarding arbitrary or
unreasonable hardship necessary
for variance proceedings.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
I,
Dorothy M.
Gunn,
Clerk
of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certif
that the above Order was adopted on
the
~
day
of
__________________,
1988,
by
a vote of
~
Dorothy M. ~unn, Clerk
Illinois Pq’llution Control Board
92—04