ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
January 8, 1987
ILLINOIS POWER COMPANY
)
(Vermilion Power Plant),
)
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 86—12
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
)
PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
)
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD (by R. C. Flemal):
This matter comes again before the Board upon a December 10,
1986, Motion for Reconsideration filed on behalf of the Illinois
Power Company (“IPC”), to which the Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency (“Agency”) responded on December 22, 1986. IPC
requests that the Board reconsider its final Opinion and Order in
this cause as issued on November 6, 1986. The Agency opposes
reconsideration.
In its original petition, as filed on January 21, 1986, IPC
contested fifteen conditions of a reissued NPDES permit. IPC
contended that there were both procedural and ~factualM flaws
associated with reissuance of the permit. For this reason, IPC
requested, among other matters, that the permit be remanded to
the Agency. IPC specifically noted at hearing:
These procedural errors alone as affirmed by the
Board’s recent decision in a parallel casç
——
that is
the Illinois Power Company versus I.E.P.A’ for its
Hennepin power plant
——
are sufficient for each
contested condition to be set aside and remanded to
the Agency with instruction that it comply with the
applicable State and Federal Permitting
requirements. (PCB 86—12 Board Hearing Transcript,
p. 5—6)
1 The Board notes that the referenced appeal is Illinois Power
Company v. Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, PCB 85—119,
decidea March 27, 1986. This appeal dealt with IPC’s Hennepin
Power Plant. It is generally referred to within later pleadings,
and is so referred to herein, as Hennepin II to distinguish it
from an earlier appeal also dealing with IPC’s Hennepin facility.
74-379
—‘.—
In the same hearing the Agency admitted to procedural
errors, and on this basis likewise requested remand. The Agency
stipulated:
Specifically Illinois Power has raised three
procedural errors regarding this particular permit.
The first one is that E.P.A. failed to issue written
responses with the final permit. This is true. We
did not. The second procedural error that Illinois
Power raises is that the fact sheets that accompany
the draft permits did not contain explanations of
exceptional circumstances which would allow E.P.A. to
monitor or to require monitoring of internal
wastestreams. We have just stipulated that 001(b)
could be interpreted as an internal wastestrearn, and
it is true that the fact sheet did not contain an
explanation of the exceptional circumstances. And
the third procedural error that Illinois Power raised
was that there was a limitation or a condition
included in the final permit that had not appeared in
the previous draft permits, and that this was not
explained pursuant to 40 CFR 124.17, which is also
true. (Hearing Transcript, p. 14).
In consideration of the common desire of Petitioner and
Respondent that this matter be remanded back to the Agency, the
Board so ordered on November 6, 1986.
In addition to simply requesting remand of this matter,
however, IPC also requested that the Board rule on certain
“factual” issues contested by IPC. Among others, IPC desired
that the Board rule on the question of whether certain of the
Vermilion plant’s wastestreams are actually “internal” in
character. The Board declined to do so, noting in its November
6, 1986, Opinion and Order “that rectification of the procedural
errors is a necessary prelude in this instance to consideration
of any of the other matters of possible dispute”. IPC now claims
that in so doing the Board expressed “a total abdication...of its
statutory responsibilities and a complete failure..to adjudicate
the dispute before it”, and contends that failure of the Board to
make findings on these factual questions will cause Petitioner to
incur unnecessary costs. Additionally, IPC contends that the
Board’s decision is contrary to the goal of achieving
administrative efficiency.
The Agency counters that “the Board has not foresworn its
duties and responsibilities by so ruling”, and cites case
precedent in support of the consistency of the position adopted
by the Board. Furthermore, the Agency repeats its contention as
originally raised in this cause that questions of factual
characterization of a complainant’s facility or process are not
ripe for decision until after a permit has been remanded, and
74-380
—3—
then reissued with the Agency’s justifications for the inclusion
of any special conditions (e.g., those relating to the monitoring
of alleged ~interna1” wastestreams).
The Board continues to find merit in the Agency’s
position. In Uennepin II the Board found, in IPC’s favor, that
the Agency was~inerror in not responding in writing to comments
submitted on a draft permit by IPC. The clear purpose of such
written communication is to assure that a permit applicant has
full opportunity to address its concerns with the permitting
Agency prior to issuance of the permit. Administrative
efficiency is obviously served when the potential permittee and
the permitter have available and avail themselves of the
opportunity to completely communicate and potentially resolve any
differences.
This is also precisely the situation which exists in the
instant cause, where the Agency has admitted to failure to
communicate in a procedurally proper manner with IPC and has
subsequently requested the opportunity to do so. There is some
indication in this record that future communication between IPC
and the Agency may bear fruit by helping to resolve their
differences. The Agency, for example, stipulated at hearing in
this matter that IPC’s outfall 001(b) could be interpreted as an
“internal” wastestream (Hearing Transcript, p. 13—14). This
action by the Agency indicates that on remand there may be some
modification of its views concerning the substantive issues which
IPC has contested in this proceeding. Should this scenario
materialize, IPC may not find it necessary to appeal the reissued
permit, or may undertake an appeal based on a lesser number of
substantive issues. In either of those events, the Board would
not in the future have to reach findings on some or all of the
issues which IPC now seeks the Board to adjudicate. The Board
will, therefore, today refrain from reaching findings on these
factual issues, believing such judicial parsimony to be prudent
at this time. The Board’s reluctance to use its adjudicative
power to decide issues that it eventually might not otherwise
ha~ to :lecide h~spreviously been upheld. See County of La
~11e ex rel. Peterlin v. Illinois Pollution Control Board, 146
Ill. App. 3d 603 (1986).
IPC’s assertion that it will incur unnecessary costs if the
substantive issues are not now addressed is of dubious merit.
IPC is, in effect, again arguing that these issues are ripe for
decision. For the reasons already stated, the Board rejects this
argument.
At least some of IPC’s reluctance to rely on negotiation
opportunities available to it at the Agency level appears to stem
from its speculation that it will not achieve its desired outcome
at that level. This is an irrelevant issue to the cause as it
now stands. This Board has already done everything asked of it
74-381
—4—
by IPC via the Hennepin II Opinion and Order to assure that IPC
and all like applicants have the opportunity for full interaction
at the Agency level.
The Board has noted for the benefit of both IPC and the
Agency its hope that “the parties will take appropriate actions
to minimize the administrative inefficiencies” (Hennepin II, p.
5) caused by remand to the Agency. Though IPC has clearly chosen
to do otherwise in this matter, •the Board nevertheless continues
to hope that such actions will occur in this and other parallel
cases pending.
For the reasons given above, the motion for reconsideration
is denied.
As a final matter, in the last sentence of its Motion for
Reconsideration, IPC additionally “requests oral arguement” to
“further support and articulate for the Board the relief
requested herein”. Although not so characterized in the Notice
of Filing or within the body of the Motion for Reconsideration,
the Board construes this sentence to constitute an additional
Motion for Oral Argument. Counsel for IPC is well aware that the
Board, as a matter of practicability, is unable to allow oral
argument in all but the most extraordinary situation. IPC has
not demonstrated that the instant matter is such a situation.
Moreover, IPC has had abundant opportunity to present its
position, as the voluminous filings of Petitioner attest. The
motion for oral argument is denied.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
I, Dorothy M.
Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby
certify that the above Opinion a,x~d Order was
adopted on the ______________________ day of
-~--d~-~~
,
1987,
by a vote of
~,—O
~.
/
O6~4
Dorothy M. G’unn,
~
Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board
74.382