ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    October 23, 1986
    IN THE MATTER OF:
    )
    HAZARDOUS WASTE PROHIBITIONS
    )
    R 86-9
    DISSENTING OPINION (by B. Forcade):
    I dissent from today’s emergency rule.
    My first area of disagreement with the majority is the lack
    of an emergency to support this rulemaking action. My dissenting
    Opinion of October 2, 1986, articulates my views on this issue
    and will not be repeated here.
    My second area of disagreement is the large number of
    exemptions and exclusions which the majority has adopted. These
    exceptions and exclusions (Section 709.110(b) and Section
    709.202) significantly reduce the scope of the hazardous waste
    land disposal prohibitions of Section 39(h) of the Illinois
    Environmental Protection Act. My objections to this reduction in
    scope were expressed in my dissenting Opinions of June 11, 1986
    (pp. 1—3) and October 2, 1986 (p. 2). Since those dissents were
    written, the majority has further expanded the list of materials
    exempted from the Section 39(h) coverage to include voluntary
    cleanup and spill responses by responsible parties (Section
    709.202(c)). I continue to believe that the scope of Section
    39(h) coverage should be determined by the.character of the waste
    (is it hazardous or not), rather than by the identity or
    intentions of the generator.
    In Section 729.102, the majority has revived the idea that
    wastestreairts “cease to exist.” My objections to this concept
    were articulated in my June 11, dissent at page 3.
    I have a significant problem with the majority’s language in
    Section 709.106, governing deemed—issued permits. This section
    is a blatent attempt to extend the statutory deadline of Section
    39(h) from January 1, 1987, until mid—February, 1987. Under this
    section, an application filed before November 15, 1986, results
    in a “deemed issued” authorization to continue land disposal.
    That “deemed issued” authorization would continue for 90 days or
    until Agency action. Thus, if the Agency takes the full 90 days
    for review, the hazardous waste could be deposited in a waste
    site until mid—February, 1987, without “specific
    authorization.” This, I believe, clearly violates the statutory
    deadline, which prohibits such
    action after January 1, 1987.
    73.462

    —2—
    Member of the Board
    I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby certify that the above Dissenting Opinion was
    submitted on the
    ~
    day of
    j-~_4t~J ,
    1986.
    Dorothy M./Gunn,
    ~.
    Clerk
    4L~i
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    73-463

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