ILLINOIS POLLUTION
CONTROL BOARD
November
21,
1984
ILLINOIS
ENVIRONMENTAL
)
PROTECTION
AGENCY,
)
Complainant,
)
v.
)
PCB
83—22
STANDARD SCRAP METAL CO.,
)
Respondent.
INTERIM
ORDER
OF
THE
BOARD (by J.
Anderson);
This matter comes before the Board upon a complaint filed on
February
23,
1983 by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
(Agency)
against the Respondent, Standard Scrap Metal Co.
(Stan-
dard Scrap).
The Complaint alleges that the Respondent violated
Sections 9(a), 9(b),
and 9(c)
of the Environmental Protection Act
(Ill. Rev.
Stat.
1983,
ch.
111½,
pars.
1009)
(hereinafter
hl~Ac?l~),
and
Rules 103,
105,
202,
203 and 502 of Chapter 2;
Air
Pollution of the Board~sregulations,*
Hearing was held
on
February 29,
1984; no members of the general
public were present.
At the outset,
the parties presented
a Stipulation of Facts and
.~i
Proposal
for Partial Settlement,
The settlement agreement was
conditioned upon the Board~saccepting the terms of
settlement,
of which there are three,
entirely.
According to the Respondent,
the testimony and exhibits offered during the remainder
of the
hearing was for the purpose of mitigating any penalty imposed
based on the “economic reasonableness of compliance and the
financial ability of the company.”
(R.
12).
In the partial
settlement
agreement,
the parties also
reserved “the right to have a full evidentiary hearing on
all
matters not agreed to in this partial
settlement, particularly on
what amount of penalty,
if any,
that the Board should impose
on
Standard Scrap.”
Nowhere
in the Board’s procedural rules
is
it
provided
that the parties may by stipulation
or otherwise, reserve a
prior right to an
“evidentiary hearing” on matters left to Board
determination when one or more parties might disagree with that
determination.
This approach is unacceptable,
in that the power
*Chapter
2 has
been codified since this Complaint was filed.
For convenience the former
numbering
system is used in this Order.
of the Board to determine the finality of its own decisions
is
delegated to the parties.
Of course,
the usual methods of
appeal,
such as motions for reconsideration and appeals to the
appellate court,
are available to both parties.
Additionally, the Board finds that the partial
settlement
is
insufficient and vague
as to what other matters besides the
penalty
‘not agreed to” are left for Board determination.
Given these circumstances, the Board rejects the stipulation
of Facts and a Proposal
for Partial Settlement and orders this
case to hearing within
45 days of the date of this order unless
the parties,
within
15 days of the date of this Order, request
the Board to determine the case based on the merits as contained
in the record presently before it,
Board Member
~3,
Theodore Meyer dissented,
IT
IS SO ORDERED,
I, Dorothy M. Gunn,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify that the above Interim Order was adopted
onthe~~’~4
day of_______________
,
1984 by a
vote
of
(
~7~//
~
Dorothy
M.
c~nn,
Clerk
Illinois
P~lution
Control
Board
~1
~~flA