ILLINOIS
    POLLUTION
    CONTROL
    BOARD
    June
    8,
    1978
    OSCAR MAYER
    & CO.,
    Petitioner,
    V.
    )
    PCB 78—14
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
    Respondent
    INTERIM
    ORDER
    OF
    THE
    BOARD
    (by
    Mr.
    Young)
    On
    May
    9,
    1978,
    the
    Environmental
    Protection
    Agency
    filed
    a
    Motion
    for
    an
    Interlocutory
    Appeal
    and
    for
    stay
    of
    a
    ruling
    by
    the
    Hearing
    Officer
    in
    a
    matter
    concerning
    the scope
    of
    discovery
    in
    an
    action
    under
    Section
    40
    of
    the Act
    to
    contest Agency denial of
    a permit.
    Petitioner
    filed
    a Response on
    May
    19,
    1978, objecting to the Agency’s
    Motions.
    On May
    25,
    1978,
    the
    Board
    granted
    the
    Agency’s
    Motion for Interlocutory
    Appeal
    together
    with
    a
    stay
    in
    the
    proceedings.
    The
    Environmental
    Protection
    Agency
    appeals
    from
    an
    Order
    of
    the
    Hearing
    Off:icer
    compelling
    answers
    to
    Interroga—
    tories
    which
    the
    Agency
    claims
    are
    beyond
    the
    scone
    of
    dis-
    covery
    in
    this
    type
    of
    proceeding,
    In
    ~ssence,
    the
    Interroga—
    tories
    request
    that
    the
    Agency identify
    all
    personnel
    who
    were
    consulted
    for
    advice,
    gave
    an
    opinic
    or
    participated
    in
    making
    the
    process
    weight rate detero:ation
    for Peti-
    tioner’s 1973 and 1977 permit applicat
    ~.~1&S
    and
    all materials,
    including internal
    Agency
    memoranda, consulted or relied
    upon in making
    those decisions.
    Section
    39
    of
    the
    Environmental
    Pro tee
    t ion
    Act
    provides
    Lhn t.
    the
    Agency
    nhai
    1
    issue
    a
    permit.
    on
    eroof
    by
    the
    eppi
    icant
    that
    the
    permitted
    activity
    will
    not
    cause
    a
    violation
    of
    the
    Act
    or
    of
    regulations
    adopted
    in
    accordance
    with
    the
    Act.
    Section
    40
    of
    the
    Act
    provides
    that
    an
    applicant
    who
    has
    been
    refused
    a
    permit
    by
    the
    Agency
    may
    petition the Board for a
    hearing to contest the decision of the Agency and that the
    burden of proof in
    such
    hearing
    shall
    be
    on the applicant.
    While
    a very few of
    the
    Section 40 petitions
    filed
    with the Board have involved a dispute between
    the
    applicant
    and the Agency over
    the
    validity
    of
    the
    facts
    contained
    in
    30
    397

    —2—
    an application, most Section 40 petitions arise from
    a
    difference
    in
    interpretation
    of
    a regulatory definition.
    Since there
    is no provision
    in the Act under which
    the
    Board might provide
    an advisory oninion
    in such
    a contro-
    versy,
    the
    Section
    40 petition affords
    the only avenue
    to secure a Board interpretation of
    its regulations or
    a
    finding of
    fact,
    shor:: of an enforcement action.
    From the beginniag
    the Board experienced some diffi-
    1
    culty
    in structuring the hearing on a Section
    40 oetition.
    One of the continuind reasons therefore has no doubt been
    the early styling of the proceeding in Board practice as
    a
    “permit denial appeal.”
    It
    is obviously not an appellate
    review of an administrative decision, nor could
    it seem to be
    so when there has
    beer. no recorded hearing and written
    finding of fact at the permit issuance level.
    More importantly,
    the Act does not confer jurisdiction on the Board to sit in
    appellate review of Acency decisions.
    Neither is
    a Section 40
    hearing available for a rehearing or contest of the adoption
    of Board regulations or
    as
    a review of Agency policy and pro-
    cedure in the exercise of its permit authority under Sections
    4
    and
    39 of the Act.
    Under the statute, all
    the
    Board has
    authority
    to do in a hearing and determination on a Section
    40
    petition is
    to decide after
    a hearing
    in accordance with
    Sections 32 and 33(a)
    whether or not, based upon the facts of
    the application, the applicant has urovided proof that the
    activity in cuestion will not cause a violation of the Act or
    of the regulations.
    In
    a hearing on
    a Section
    40 petition,
    the applicant must
    verify
    the
    facts of his application as submitted
    to the Agency,
    and,
    having
    done
    so,
    must
    nersuade
    the
    Board
    that
    the
    activity
    will
    comply
    with
    the
    Act
    and
    regulations.
    At
    hearinq,
    the
    Agency
    may
    attemot
    to
    controvert
    the
    applicant’s
    facts
    by
    cross
    examination
    or
    direct
    testimony;
    may submit argument on
    the applicable law
    and
    regulations
    and
    may
    urge
    conclusions
    therefrom;
    or,
    it
    may
    choose
    to
    do
    nitliar;
    or, it may choose
    tr~
    present
    not
    ii
    no.
    rho wri
    tt:en
    f\qeticy
    si
    ~il
    en~’iit
    I
    ~
    I
    lie
    op1
    1—
    (‘~U)
    t
    0!
    the
    speci
    Ii
    C
    ,
    (te
    tail
    ed
    rcisons
    ii
    a
    I
    t he
    p urn
    I
    t
    appi
    ica—
    Lion
    was
    denied
    is not
    evidence
    of
    the
    Leo Lhi
    of
    the
    mu Lerial
    therein nor do any Agency interpretations
    of the Act and regu-
    lations therein enjoy any presumption before the Board.
    After
    hearing,
    the Board may direct
    the
    Agency
    to issue
    the permit,
    or
    order
    the
    petition dismissed,
    depending on the Board’s
    finding that the applicant has or has not proven to the Board
    that his activity will not cause
    a violation of
    the Act or
    regulations.
    (1)
    Currie, David P.,
    “Enforcement Under the Illinois
    Pollution Law,”
    70 N.W,
    Univ.
    L.Rev.
    389,
    475—479
    (1975).
    30
    398

    —3—
    The Board opinion most frequently cited on the question
    of the scooe of a hearing on a Section 40 petition
    is Soil
    Enrichment Materials
    Corporation
    v.
    EPA,
    5 PCB 715
    (1972).
    Much therein is still applicable; however,
    it must be kept
    in
    mind that Section 39 of the Act was amended subsequent to
    that decision
    by
    Public Act 78-862, approved September 14,
    1973.
    P.A.
    78—862 established, in Section 39(a), definitive
    criteria for a detailed Agency statement to the applicant
    of the specific reason for the denial of a permit application.
    At
    5 PCB 715,
    the Board
    said:
    “Clearly the issue is whether the Agency
    erred in denying the permit,
    not whether
    new material that was not before the
    Agency
    persuades
    the
    Board
    that
    a
    permit
    should be granted.”
    A cursory reading of that sentence might indicate to some that
    the burden of the applicant in a Section 40 proceeding
    is
    to
    prove that the Agency made an error
    in law,
    a misinterpretation
    of fact or
    a failure in procedure
    in arriving at the Agency
    decision to deny the permit.
    To do so ignores
    the
    requirement
    of Section
    39 that a permit issues only on proof by the appli-
    cant that the activity in question does not cause
    a violation
    of
    the Act or regulations.
    The Agency errs
    in denying a permit
    only when the material,
    as submitted
    to the Agency by the
    applicant,
    proves
    to the Board that no violation of the Act
    or regulations will occur if the permit
    is granted.
    The require-
    ments
    of a Section
    40 petition
    as set forth
    in the Board’s
    Procedural Rule 502(a) (2)
    further indicate the Board’s con-
    clusion
    as to the dictates of the statute.
    Procedural
    Rule 502(a) (4)
    requires that in a Section
    40
    proceeding the Agency must file within
    14 days
    of notice, the
    entire record of the permit application,
    including the applica-
    tion,
    correspondence, and the denial.
    The application
    is
    necessary
    to estab1~sh
    the
    facts which were before the Aqency
    for
    consideration,
    The
    correspondence
    file,
    i
    I
    any,
    supplements
    the application insofar as
    it provides
    additional
    facts.
    The
    denial statement
    is necessary
    to verify that the requirement
    of Section
    39(a)
    of
    the Act has been fulfilled.
    This material,
    in the opinion of the Board, should be sufficient
    to frame
    the issue of fact or law in controversy
    in any hearing on a
    Section 40 petition.
    In a recent attempt to clarify the scope of discovery in
    a Section
    40 matter,
    the Board made the following statements
    in Owens-Illinois,
    Inc.
    v.
    EPA,
    PCB 77-288, February
    2,
    1978:
    “The scope of discovery permissible
    in
    an
    action to contest Agency denial of a permit
    under Section 40 of the Act is controlled
    30
    399

    by the
    general
    iss~e
    ~ic~ent
    ,
    obviously
    inquiry
    into
    matte:
    o~ts:dc
    ~f the
    general
    issue will not pt~duce elevant
    evidence
    and should ~n
    be allowed.
    It is proper to inqri~e
    nd discovery
    should be allowed
    to
    ~.
    ~ra
    ~at
    the
    record filed by the lcur~p’ i:
    cot plete
    and contains all o
    the uc~~~lcon~
    cerning
    the
    permit
    a~pi~
    :
    d
    ~ 0
    that was
    before
    the
    Agency
    wier
    hi?
    al state-
    ment
    was
    issued
    If
    the
    Agency
    knows ~
    the
    pendency
    of
    a
    ps~
    that either the th’:~a
    sented
    by
    the appldQ
    1
    incomplete,
    the A e
    v
    information
    in wr~ir
    permit
    review per~o
    written
    statement
    ~
    re~uired
    by
    Secthon
    ~9
    Agency may not at ae-
    on any
    material
    in
    and disclosed
    to the
    described abo~re, as
    denial of
    the
    peitur
    ary
    i
    applicant may in~.
    support
    of
    the
    app
    i
    before
    the
    Agency
    so
    ;
    during
    LIon,
    ~ Ions pre—
    aLsourate or
    ~i3se
    such
    he
    statutory
    r
    r,
    dthaLled
    denial
    ~
    The
    so
    :
    reliance
    ti-so record,
    t
    the manner
    a
    Agency
    than the
    1
    in
    noc
    The ultimate questiat
    I-
    matter is whether or not eric~n
    ~,
    the permit was denied eAceed me
    of Chapter II of the Board~ ~e
    resolution of the questiua i~-
    S
    of the actual weight of tht ma
    Li
    process per hour,
    as ~Ietireb P
    a
    the Board’s
    regul
    ac~5~e
    only the weight of csoh
    i~t~
    determine which of
    tilO
    u
    ~.
    Board regulation,
    LL~
    be
    ~
    i
    the actual weight in~eu
    ~
    -is
    or why the Agency arrlied a: a
    ii-~ti.~
    facts is simply not
    tet~i
    I
    ~
    the
    Board in this
    process
    for
    whict~
    ars of Rule 203(b)
    ~eiitral to the
    usor~
    by
    the
    Board
    j,:r
    soared
    into
    the
    so
    rapter
    II
    of
    ~~COS
    to
    know
    so
    Board
    can thea
    :
    intended,
    by
    ~
    ~a~culation
    of
    ~soss
    per
    hour,
    Hoc~
    )IIOUS±Ofl
    on the
    sat
    i
    see
    mination.
    For the ices
    d
    ~
    e~ving
    soJene3
    the Order of t~so
    tharir5
    fat
    at
    -
    :~
    i~.y
    3~ 1978,
    sastth
    the Order of
    the Hearing JrL~cer
    a r~.
    ~
    soiLerrogatories
    7 and 8 of
    Petitioner~s
    Jth-:
    sthLo
    Os
    ~a~pondent
    uatect

    —5--.
    March 14,
    1978.
    The Order of the Hearing Officer is sustained
    as to Interroqatories
    1(a)
    and 2(a);
    the Order of the Hearing
    Officer
    is reversed as
    to Interrogatory 1(b) through
    1(g);
    Interrogatory
    2(b)
    through
    2(y),
    and Interrogatories
    3,
    4,
    5,
    6,
    9 and 10.
    The matter
    is remanded
    to
    the
    Hearing Officer
    for revision
    of his Order of May
    8,
    1978,
    consistent with the foregoing.
    IT
    IS SO ORDERED.
    Mr. Werner dissented.
    I, Christan
    L. Moffett,
    Clerk
    of
    the
    Illinois Pollution
    Control Board,
    hereby certify
    the
    above
    Interim
    Order was
    adopted on the
    ~
    day of
    ~
    1978 by a
    vote of
    4-i
    .
    6
    Chr~stnn L.
    Moffe~~~lerk
    Illinois
    Pollution
    Control Board
    30
    401

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