ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    October
    2,
    1986
    IN THE MATTER OF:
    HAZARDOUS WASTE PROHIBITIONS
    )
    R86—9, Docket A
    DISSENTING OPINION
    (By R.
    C.
    Flemal):
    I dissent
    from the Board’s action today for the reason that
    the facts of the matter do not justify adoption of an Emergency
    Rule.
    THREAT TO THE PUBLIC INTEREST, SAFETY OR WELFARE
    The conditions necessary for
    the Board
    to promulgate
    an
    Emergency Rule are not present
    in the instant matter,
    The Act
    specifically identifies that an Emergency Rule
    is appropriate
    where
    the Board can find “that
    a situation exists which
    reasonably constitutes
    a threat
    to
    the public interest, safety or
    welfare”,,
    I do not see
    that the public
    interest, safety or
    welfare would be threatened
    in the absence of today’s proposed
    Board action,
    Rather,
    Board adoption of
    a Emergency Rule now may
    actually create
    such a threat,
    There might conceivably be
    a threat
    to
    the public interest,
    safety or welfare
    if failure of the Board
    to adopt emergency
    rules left
    a vacuum wherein the directive of 39(h)
    could not be
    carried out,
    However,
    this
    is clearly not the case,
    The Agency
    has given an extensive apprisal of the guidelines
    it intends
    to
    follow in implementing 39(h),
    Thus,
    a clearly defined direction
    already exists,
    A clear threat to
    the public interest, safety or welfare
    might also
    exist
    if the direction that the Agency has taken were
    obviously faulty.
    This
    is also clearly not the case,
    While
    there may remain some uncertainties which will have
    to be worked
    out by the Agency,
    and some facets of the Agency’s direction will
    undoubtedly require adjudication, these are no more numerous nor
    complex than is
    to be reasonably expected when any new
    authorization procedure “comes on line”,
    Moreover,
    it cannot be
    overlooked that
    three of
    the
    four principal groups who offered
    testimony
    in this matter,
    the Agency, CBE,
    and Waste Management,
    unanimously urged that the Agency’s guidelines be given
    a fair
    test;
    this testimony must be given weight against
    a determination
    that
    a threat
    to
    the public
    interest, safety and welfare exists,
    It might be argued,
    in
    fact, that Board adoption of an
    Emergency Rule
    at this time would create
    a threat
    to
    the public
    interest, safety
    and welfare, rather
    than alleviate one,
    By
    inserting itself
    into
    the 39(h)
    authorization process at this
    73.33

    —2—
    time,
    the Board will certainly alter
    and possibly disrupt
    a
    process which
    is already well advanced and which is being carried
    out under
    a very tight
    time limitation.
    Disruption now would
    seem
    to constitute
    a much clearer threat to the public interest
    than could be anticipated by abidance with any of the Agency’s
    guidelines.
    The Board’s desire
    to have regulations
    in place
    for January
    1,
    1987,
    is occasioned by a sincere desire
    to eliminate confusion
    as of this critical date,
    However,
    in
    so doing, the Board
    seemingly fails
    to recognize that the truly critical date
    for
    having the implementation procedures
    for 39(h)
    identified
    is not
    January
    1,
    1987, but a date already past.
    This date was the time
    when applicants were required to draft and submit
    their
    applications
    to the Agency,
    Should these many applications need
    to be redrafted and resubmitted
    as
    a consequence of
    a Board
    action,
    the public
    interest could be severely compromised;
    confusion could not be escaped
    as applicants
    and the Agency faced
    the difficult task of trying to complete the authorization
    process
    in the few weeks remaining before January
    1,
    1987,
    Another source of confusion which would appear
    to be
    a
    consequence of the Board
    adopting
    an Emergency Rule
    at this stage
    arises from the fact that 150 days from enactment of the
    Emergency Rule the rule would
    lapse
    and nothing would be
    in
    place,
    At this time, neither the Board’s regulations nor those
    Agency’s guidelines overruled by the Board’s Emergency Rule would
    be existent,
    How,
    in these circumstances, does the Agency
    continue
    to carry out the authorization process?
    Does the
    Board’s lapsed rule have weight?
    These are fundamental questions
    to
    which
    I don’t see obvious answers, and
    to which
    I am concerned
    that the majority has not given due consideration,
    Seemingly implicit in the Board’s anticipation of adopting
    an Emergency Rule
    is the belief
    that, upon its expiration,
    the
    rule can be altered
    to
    reflect evolution
    in the Board’s
    thinking,
    While technically correct, this
    is a very poor defense
    for the Board acting precipitously when demonstration of threat
    to the public
    interest,
    safety and welfare
    is not present,
    Finally,
    to argue,
    as some have, that failure of the Board
    to adopt rules now would encourage midnight dumping and the like,
    and thereby provide threat to public safety and welfare,
    is not
    very
    realistic,
    There
    is absolutely no reason
    to suppose that
    midnight ~dumpingwould have greater encouragement under
    the
    Agency’s guidelines than under
    the Board’s emergency rule.
    COMM~NTPERIOD ON EMERGENCY RULE
    It has been argued that
    it is appropriate,
    in the instant
    matter,
    for the Board
    to place
    its Proposed Emergency Rule out
    for comment,
    I cannot agree.
    If the concept of an Emergency
    Rule
    is flawed now,
    it will be as
    flawed two
    or three weeks
    from
    73-34

    —3—
    nov.
    Perhaps
    it will be even more flawed due
    to greater
    intrusion into the short time remaining
    for
    the permit process
    to
    be carried out,
    An
    Emergency Rule therefore should
    not be
    adapted
    at the end of the comment period,
    and the public should
    not be given
    the impression that it might be adopted.
    This situation
    is significantly different from the
    circumstance where
    the Board puts out
    a proposed non—emergency
    rule for public comment,
    as
    in fact the Board did
    in its June 11,
    1986,
    action
    in this matter,
    There the Board’s intent
    is clearly
    to begin a long dialogue process, which involves ample
    opç~ortunityfor interested
    individuals and groups
    to act and
    react,
    propose and counter—propose,
    These elements are absent
    in
    the
    instant matter.
    REFLECTIONS RELATIVE TO THE NORMAL RULEMAKING PROCESS
    The Board’s regular
    rulemaking process
    is occasionally
    critized for
    its lack of speed.
    However,
    lack of speed
    is not
    the deficiency of the process, but rather
    its crowning
    strength.
    The rulemaking process is intentionally slow, because
    in being slow
    it
    is guaranteed
    to be deliberate,
    in the best
    meaning of this word,
    An Emergency Rule
    in the
    instant matter would contravene
    this intentionally deliberate strength of the Board’s rulemaking
    process,
    Except
    for
    the quite limited opportunity
    to submit
    written comments, interested
    individuals and groups would have
    none of the opportunities for participation
    in rulemaking
    to
    which they are entitled,
    There
    is
    no good
    in attempting
    to
    counter this argument by citing
    the fact that the Board has
    already held four hearings under R86—8, because what the Board
    has proposed
    today
    is such
    a significant departure from that
    which was before the Board
    at the time of the hearings.
    Moreover,
    the
    four hearings were but
    a fraction of the
    opportunity to participate
    to which the public and the State are
    entitled,
    CONTENT QF THE EMERGENCY RULE
    Because
    I am of the belief that the Board cannot adopt an
    Emergency Rule
    in this matter,
    I do not intend
    to present my
    perspective on the content of the Proposed Emergency Rule, other
    than to make a few general observations,
    For one,
    I believe that
    the Proposed Emergency Rule constitutes
    a substantial improvement
    over the rule as originally proposed on June 11,
    It should be
    noted that the improvement has arisen,
    in major measure, because
    the regular
    rulemaking procedure has provided
    the Board with the
    information necessary to make the improvements, and
    is therefore
    futher
    testimony
    to the strength of this procedure,
    At the
    same time,
    I do not think the Proposed Emergency Rule
    is fully acceptable,
    Significant problems yet need
    to be
    73,35

    —4
    -~
    resolved with respect to such aspects as
    the range of the
    disposal facilities covered by the rule and the criteria which
    the Agency must consider
    in reviewing permit applications.
    There
    are also aspects of a fully developed rule which are not
    addressed
    in the Proposed Emergency Rule;
    these will
    need
    resolution,
    The only way
    to reach a final determination on these
    matters is via the same route used
    to achieve the
    improvement
    witnessed by the Proposed Emergency Rule.
    That is, the regular
    rulemaking process must be employed.
    I
    ant aware that it
    is impossible for
    the Board, given the
    statutory conditions
    for adoption of rules,
    to complete
    the R86—9
    rulemaking
    for some significant time,
    I am also aware that the
    Board may have to address some of the unresolved matters in
    permit appeals prior
    to its ability to promulgate a full rule,
    While
    this may not constitute
    the most ideal
    of all possible
    worlds,
    it is,
    at
    the worst and given
    the fatalities of Emergency
    Rule promulgation and
    the necessity of following regular
    rulemaking procedures,
    the least of possible evils,
    SUMMARY
    None of
    the foregoing should be construed
    to suggest that
    it
    is my belief that there is
    no place
    for emergency rulemaking
    in
    Board actions,
    There most clearly
    is such
    a place, but the
    instant matter
    is not an example.
    For this reason
    I dissent,
    ~oñal
    C,
    Flemal
    Board Member
    I,
    Dorothy
    M, Gunn,
    Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby certify that the
    ab9.ye Dissenting Opinion was
    submitted on the
    ~
    day of
    ~
    ,
    1986.
    orothy M,
    unn, Clerk
    Illinois
    Pollution
    Control
    Board
    73-36

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