ILLIN~IS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
October 1, 1987
A.R.F. LANDFILL, INC.,
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 87—51
LAKE COUNTY,
Respondent.
DISSENTING OPINION (by J. Theodore Meyer):
I dissent from the majority opinion adopted in this matter.
MOTION FOR SANCTIONS
I disagree with the majority’s disposition of Petitioner’s
motion for sanctions. The majority properly states that each and
every member of the County Board clearly violated the Hearing
Officer’s order, and notes the Hearing Officer’s critical role in
proceedings before this Board. However, the majority then moves
to a discussion of whether the interrogatories at issue were
proper. After concluding that many of the questions were
improper, the majority abruptly states that the motion for
sanctions is denied. In my mind, there is little connection
between the properness of the interrogatories and the disposition
of the motion. Rather, the issue is whether the violation of the
Hearing Officer’s order warrants sactions.
35 Ill. Adm. Code 107.101(c) provides that if a party
unreasonably refuses to comply with any order issued pursuant to
the Board’s regulations, the Board may impose such sanctions as
are just. I am very concerned that the majority, in denying
sanctions, has failed to support the Hearing Officer, and has, in
effect, told parties to future proceedings that they may ignore
Hearing Officer orders if they feel that there is any chance that
the subject of the order might be found improper. The Hearing
Officer is a vital participant in Board’s proceedings, and his
authority must be upheld. There has been no finding that the
Hearing Officer’s order itself was improper. I also note that
although the majority states that Petitioner’s motion fails to
allege how it was prejudiced by Respondent’s failure to comply,
Petitioner alleges that the failure to respond hampered its
preparation for the June 24 hearing, and that its decision
whether to depose certain County Board members was dependent upon
information requested in the interrogatories (Emergency Motion
for Sanctions at 1,4). Given Respondent’s blatant and
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—
unexplained violation of the Hearing Officer’s order, I would
grant the motion for sanctions and bar Respondent from filing any
pleading or raising any issue relating to the questions asked in
the interrogatories. 35 Ill. Adm. Code 107.101(c); Environmental
Protection Agency v. Popp, PCB 79—215 (October 30, 1980);
Environmental Protection Agency v. Allaert Rendering, Inc., PCB
76—80 (Se~tember 6, 1979); Environmental Protection Agency v.
City of Oregon, PCB 78—37 (April 27, 1978).
Criterion No. 1
I also disagree with the majority’s decision on criterion
one
—
whether the proposed facility is necessary to accommodate
the waste needs of the area it is intended to serve.
There
was
no evidence presented which rebutted
Mr.
Thorsen’s testimony that
Lake County needs more landfill space: even Mr. Luedtke, called
by the objectors, admitted that additional space is necessary (R.
January 28, 1987, p. 44). The fact that the Lake County Joint
Action Solid Waste Planning Agency (SWAC) feels that the proposed
landfill would hurt its ability to implement a solid waste
management plan is not relevant to the landfill siting process.
(I note that the Illinois General Assembly has recently amended
Section 39.2 to require that a proposed facility be consistent
with any solid waste management plan a county may have adopted.
However, that amendment was recently amendatorily vetoed.
Regardless of whether the General Assembly accepts the veto or
overrides it, that amendment was not effective at the time the
instant case was before the County Board. Additionally, the
amendment requires consistency with any plan which may have been
adopted, and Lake County has not yet actually adopted such a plan
(R. January 28, 1987, pp. 29—30, 34—35).) I also do not consider
the fact that Mr. Thorsen apparently considered only Lake County
landfill facilities in his analysis to be a fatal flaw. Given
the current feeling about new landfills and the increasing
problem of finding sufficient disposal space, I feel that it is
only prudent to plan to dispose of a county’s waste in that
county. It is impossible to know what restrictions will be
placed on “outside” waste at the landfill facilities in the
surrounding area, including Wisconsin, at the time Lake County’s
landfill capacity is exhausted. Therefore, I would reverse the
County Board’s finding on criterion one.
Criterion No. 2
My dissent from the majority opinion on criterion two
—
whether the proposed facility is so designed, located, and
proposed to be operated as to protect the public health, safety,
and welfare
—
arises from the belief that Section 39.2 does not
empower the county to consider technical aspects of landfill
design.
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—
Section 2(b) of the Environmental Protection Act (Act)
specifically states that the Act’s purpose is “to establish a
unified, state—wide program, supplemented by private remedies to
restore, protect, and enhance the quality of the environment
.“
(emphasis added.) (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1985, ch. 1111/2, par.
1002(b)). It is impossible to achieve such a unified, state—wide
plan if each unit of local government is allowed to consider
whatever technical factors it chooses. Technical aspects are
beyond local government’s expertise, and are the province of the
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (Agency) and the
Board. I recognize that the courts have held that local
governments may consider technical aspects of landfill design
(see, eg., Waste Management of Illinois, Inc. v. Illinois
Pollution Control Board, No. 87—0029 (2d Dist., September 11,
1987); Mcflenry County Landfill v. Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency, 154 Ill. App. 3d 89, 506 N.E. 2d 372 (2d Dist.
1987)), but I must respectfully disagree.
We must recognize the many political problems associated
with voting “yes” for a proposed facility. One of government’s
functions is to provide for waste disposal, and there can be no
question that this an essential function. However, the waste
disposal issue is a victim of the “not in my backyard”
syndrome. It has been said that everybody wants their garbage
picked up, but nobody wants it put down. A recent Agency report
states that the average life of remaining landfill space in
Illinois is only 5.3 years. This figure illustrates the
necessity of dealing with the waste disposal issue immediately.
It is apparent that localities are not going to solve the
problem. I must point out that Rockford, the city which was
involved in the first court case over landfill siting, is once
again struggling to provide for waste disposal, and has an appeal
of a siting denial pending before the Board. See O’Connor v.
City
of
Rockford, 52 Ill. 2d 360, 288 N.E.2d 432 (1972); City of
Rockford v. Winnebago County Board, PCB 87—92. I also note that
the instant case involves an expansion of an existing landfill
which apparently has not been the subject of any formal
complaints about design, location, or operation. If a new
landfill cannot be sited next to an existing landfill, where can
it be located? Given the political realities of the local
landfill siting approval process, it is imperative that the
Agency retain its authority over technical aspects of landfill
design if we are to deal with the waste disposal issue. As
things stand now, the localities and the Board are siting (or not
siting) regional pollution control facilities. The Agency should
be involved, as the legislature intended, by participating in the
permitting process. Ill. Rev. Stat. 1985, ch. llll/2, par. 1039.
Because I believe that local governments are not authorized
to consider technical details of landfill design, I feel that
Petitioner presented sufficient evidence that the proposed
facility would protect the public health, safety, and welfare.
82—83
—4—
The concerns over potential sand lenses, gas vents, liner, etc.,
are best addressed by the Agency in its permitting process and by
Board regulations. I would reverse the County Board’s decision
on criterion two.
Criterion No. 6
Finally, I disagree with the majority’s disposition of
criteria six
—
whether the traffic patterns to and from the
facility are so designed as to minimize the impact on existing
traffic flows. Petitioner’s witness, Mr. Salzman, is associated
with Barton—Aschman Associates, Inc., one of the premier traffic
engineering firms in the country, and his credentials far
outweigh those of the objectors’ witness. Mr. Salzman testified
that this is generally a state—of-the art proposal. (R. January
26, 1987, p. 109.) Objectors’ witness admitted that driver error
was a major portion of his concern (R. February 4, 1987, p. 184),
a factor which is beyond Petitioner’s control. I again point out
that the proposed landfill is an expansion of an existing
landfill which has not been the subject of formal complaints
about traffic problems. I would reverse the County Board’s
decision on criterion six.
Concl us ion
For those reasons, I must dissent from the majority
opinion. I would reverse the County Board’s denial of landfill
siting approval.
~
~-~--~---~
J.~iI’heodore Meyer
Board Member
I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify that the above Dissenting Opinion was filed
on the
~‘~day of
_________________,
1987.
Illino Pollution Control Board
82—84