1. of .i~’-C-~

ILLINOIS
POLLUTION
CONTROL
BOARD
IN THE
MATTER
OF
PROPOSED
AMENDMENTS
TO
PROCEDURIL
RULES
401 and
405,
Proposed
Rules.
Second
Notice
OPINION
AND
ORDER
OF
THE
BOARD
(by
D.
Satchell):
On
July
10,
1980
the
Board
Iroosed
amendments
to
Procedural
Rules
401
and
405
(Proposed
Rule,
First
Notice~)
The
proposal
was
published
in
the
Environmental_Register
Number
220
on
July
21,
1980
and
In
Illinois
Recister
on.
August
1,
1980.
The
comment
period
has
elansed
and
the
Board
has
received
oniy
one
comment,
that
of
the
Illinois
Environmental
Protectior:
Agency
(Agency)
The
Board
recently
amended
these
rules
in
R79—9
(Proposed
Order
of
the
Board~
June
22,
1979,
34PcB
ll3~
Opinion
and
Order
of
the
Board,
September
20.
1979,
3~ RIB
433;
Illinois
Reqister,
October 12, l9~9,
-~
~‘
‘a
~ou,
orelroer
29,
19°9,
36 PCE
209;
I:Llii~ois
Rnq:Li~.ter bacember
7,
1979
RI~
111,
128)
Because
a
number
of
mis:interprenations
of
the
adopted
Procedural
Rules
have
arisen,
the
Board
mroposed
no
modify
them
for
the
purpose
of
clarification.
The
June
22,
1979
Order
of:
the
Board
in
R79~-9
promosed
to
amend
only
Rule
405
to
require
that
the
Agency
in
its
recommenda-
tion
provide
an
analysis
of
federal
Law,
In
its
comments
of
August
21,
1979
the
Illinois
Em’±rcnmer~u.alProtection
Agency
requested
that
Rule
401
be
amended
to
olace
the
duty
on
the
peti-
tioner
to
make
the
init:ia:L
~
~f:
federal
law
in
the
variance
petitions
The
Agency’s
duty
under
Rule
405
was to give its views
with respect
to
the
petitioner’s
asserhions
concerning federal
law.
The Agency’s
couanent
was
substantially
adopted in
th.e Board’s
Opinion and Order
of
September
20~. .1979,
In
a
dissenting
Opinion,
Mr.
homer
sma,ted,
:tt
seems somewhat
unfair
to
olace
a
sic
I
—~“~-c
~i
~
h’irccri
cm
those
~nc~
v~dua1s
or
corporate
entlties
who
recuest
he1~
from
the
Board
by
a
van
ance
metition
01
No~rmb,o
U
Lc71
i
m
ioant
Commibtee
on ~
ministrative
Ru:Les
objected
to
the
ruiemakinc,
stating
that,
“The
proposed
amendments
aecuire.
netiSionor
to
prove
con-
sistency
with
apPlicabLe
federal
laws
end
regulations
The
Joint
Committee
fu~i1w
r’
~ho ho
t
ho
Cf
1de
tbe
Board’s
authority,
the
Board,
not
the
metitioner,
was
given
the
responsibility
to
ensure
conformity
with
federal
laws
and
regulations.”
Legislation
was
proposed
placing
the
burden
of
proof
on
the
Agency.

The Agency
filed comments on September 15,
1980.
It supports
the proposed
language in Rule 405(a) (5), which
requires that the
Agency
include
an analysis of federal law in the
recommendation.
However, the
Agency opposes the modification
of Rule 401 because
the burden of
initIally
establishing that the
requested relief
can legally be
granted should rest on the petitioner.
Before
discussing what is meant by “the burden
of proving
consistency
with
•federal laws”
it is necessary to
clarify some
of
the ways in
which federal law acts upon the
Board’s jurisdic-
tion.
One
must
answer at least three questions to determine
whether
the ~Board can grant a variance consistently
with
federal
law:
1.
What is the text of the federal
law?
2.
What does the text mean?
3.
~ffiàtare the operative facts needed to show compliance
with fedetal law or entitlement to a variance or cx—
emstion under federal law?
The
Board does not require that the text of federal law be
proved
as
a fact.
The Board takes official notice of the
text
without
even so stating.
No one objects to this procedure
Ill,
Rev.
Stat.
(1979)
oh.
51,
§10 et seq.~
It is useless
to
assign
a
burden
of proving the text of federal law
The
text
of federal regulations is
sometimes helpful it
determining
the medning..
In addition the Board often considers
interpretations
by TJSEPA, court decisions and the legal arguments
advanced
by
the Agedcy and the variance petitioner.
Parts of
the
petition
and
recommendation sometimes~resemble appellate
briefs
or
memoranda
of law.
The interpretation of the applicable
law
rests
with thd Board,
subject to review by the Appellate Courts
and
in
some
cases
by USEPA~
However, this is not a matter of
evidence.
The
fact
that
the
bumden
of
proof
is
on
the
petitioner
does
not
infer
that
the
Agency’
s
legal
arguments
are
presumably
correct.
There
is no burden of proof as to the meaning of
federal
law.
Usually
the
Board must make findings of fact to determine
the
effect of
federal
law.
For example, the Board must determine
what
effect a
facility’s emissions will have on ambient
air quality or
whether a
treatment technology is reasonably available to
the
petitioner.
The burden of proving these facts
is determined by
federal
law.

Rule 401 is a
rule concerning pleading.
The
burden of proof
is fixed by the
substantive
federal
law.
Usually the burden of
pleading an issue
lies with the party
having
the burden of proof,
however, there are
notable
exceptions.
For example,
in a negligence
action based on state law,
but
brought
in
federal
court through di-
versity of citizenship,
the defendant is
required to raise the issue
of contributory negligence by
way
of pleading it
in an answer.
How-
ever,
the burden of proving
Clack
of)
contributory negligence lies
with the plaintiff
whd~e
the applicable
state
law so provides,
reV-
gard.,ess
of the procedural
rule on
pleading
EPalmer v.
Hoffman,
318
U.S.
109
(1943).
The procedural
rules
in
question
are
similar to those
in Palmer
v. Hoffman, although
the federal/state
roles
are reversed.
There
a
federal court was
applying
its procedural
rules and state substan-
tive law.
The Board is
a
state agency
applying its
procedural rules
to a case governed by
federal substantive
law.
In either situation
the ~oruinmust
provide
procedural rules to
ensure orderly presenta-
tion of the case, hut
may not alter the
substantive
law.
As
a second example, a
party seeking
to enforce a contract has
the burden of
proving
that
all the
conditions
on his part have been
satisfied.
However,
in Illinois the
plaintiff
need not set forth
in the complaint the
detail of performance
of conditions:
“It is
sufficient to allege
gen~erailythat the
party
performed all of the
conditions on his
part;
if the allegation
be denied, the facts
must be alleged in connection
with the
denial
showing wherein there
was
a failure to
perform.”
TSupreme Court
Rule
133(c);
Ill. Rev.
Stat.
ch.
llOA,
Section 133(c).
In
a contract there may be hun-
dreds of conditions,
only
one
of
which
is
in
dispute.
The plead--
ings are shortened
greatly if the defendant is
obliged to point
out which condition
is
in dispute, as opposed to
the alternative
where the plaintiff
is required to plead the
lengthy affirmative
proposition.
Placement of
the burden of pleading
on
the defendant
does not shift the burden
of proof from
the
party seeking to enforce
the contract.
Similar
considerations
prevail
with respect to olead.-
ing consistency of
variances
with federal law.
Rules 401(d),
401(e)
and 401(f)
have
been modified to
require
petitioners to
“indicate
whether”
the Board
can grant the requested
relief consistently
with federal
law.
Where
a detailed analysis
is
unnecessary or
unavailable,
the petitioner
may elect to present
only a legal
conclusion as to whether the relief
is
consistent or
not consistent
with
federal law.
Rule 401(g)
has
been
added:
“The
petition
may include an
analysis of applicable
federal law and legal
arguments
and facts
which may be necessary
to show compliance
with federal
law.
If
it does not and
petitioner
subsequently
files
a pleading containing
40—105

—4—
such,
it will be deemed an amended petition.”
Under Rule 405(a)
(5)
the Agency is
required to produce
an analysis.
The petitioner
may include the
detailed analysis in the
petition or may await the
recommendation.
If
it
elects
the latter and
then decides to pre~—
sent the Board with its own analysis,
the
Board will deem the
pleading an amended
petition.
The decision
period will be moved
up, giving the Agency the opportunity to
file
an amended recom-
mendation.
The petitioner may respond to
the
Agency analysis under Rule
406 without restarting the decision period.
Whether the analysis
is
a response or amendment depends on the extent to which it intro~
duces new material.
In
this context new material may include,
among other things,
new facts, reference to
rules not mentioned in
the recommendation and
legal arguments
which are not merely the
negation of the Agency’s arguments.
This will be
decided on a
case—by—case basis under the
principles
applicable to responses
in general.
The
amendments
which
the
Board
previously
adopted
were not
jntended to increase the
burden
on
variance
petitioners.
A
prin--
cipal purpose was to notify
petitioners
of
the
existence of these
federal requirements
at
the
time
they
first
begin
to
prepare
the
petition.
Under the older practice some petitioners apparently
first learned of federal requirements upon receipt of the recom-
mendation.
It was then necessary to request a continuance in
order to prepare
an
analysis
of
federal
law,
The
proposed
pro--
cedures will further this purpose of advance notice.
A petition
may proceed
by one of three routes:
1.
Petitioner may include
a complete analysis in the
petition;
or
2.
Petitioner may rely on the Agency analysis;
or
3.
Petitioner may force the Agency to perform the analysis
first,
hut must extend the
decision
time if it seeks
thereafter to fIle its own analysis.
ORDER
The Board proposes to adopt the language of the July
10,
1980
proposed
rule,
first notice Order without change.
The Clerk is
directed
to file a second notice with the Joint Committee
on
Ad-
ministrative Rules.
IT
IS
SO
ORDERED.
40—106

—5—
I, Christan L.
Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, hereby ~rtify
that
~4ieabove
Opinion and Order
were adopted on the
~/1~
day ofdL1~yL6-~,
,
1980 by a vote
of
.i~’-C-~
~t~JLA~~ffl
~
an
L.
Mo
ff
.e,
Cle
rk
Illinois Pollutidri’-’Control Board
40—107

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