ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
October 14,
1976
COMMITTEE TO SAVE
OUfl ENVIRONMENT, et al.,
)
Complainants,
V.
HARRY A. CARLSON and DONALD F. KREGER, d/b/a
SOUTH SUBURBAN LAND DEVELOPMENT CO.,
and
the ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondents;
)
PCB 75-443
PCB 76-8
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,
)
(CONSOLIDATED)
Intervenors,
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Complainant,
V.
HARRY A. CARLSON and DONALD F. KREGER,
d/b/a
)
SOUTH SUBURBAN LAND DEVELOPMENT CO.,
)
Respondents.
INTERIM OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr. Zeitlin):
This matter
is presently before the Board on a Motion for
Dismissal,
filed with the Board on September 20,
1976,
by Respondents
Harry A. Carison and Donald
F. Kreger, d/b/a South Suburban Land
Development Co.
hereinafter,
“Southern.
A response in opposition
to that Motion was received from the original Complainants
in
PCB 75-443
hereinafter,
collectively,
t1Committee”.
No response
to Southern’s Motion has been received from Intervenors People of
The State of Illinois
hereinafter,
I!Peop1e~~, or the Environmental
Protection Agency
Agencyl,
Respondents
in PCB 75-443 and Complainant
in PCB 76-8.
This matter was originally commenced by a Complaint filed
November
12, 1975,
by Complainant Committee,
et al., alleging in
essence
that:
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1.
A Permit issued by the Agency on May 29,
1975
to Southern,
for the development of
a solid waste manage—
ment site in Orland Township,
Cook County, constituted a
violation of the Act and our Regulations,
in that the
Agency gave no consideration to land use and zoning classi-
fications,
or to other similar issues, as required by the
Illinois Supreme Court’s decision in Carison v. Village
of Worth, decided September 26,
1975.
(Subsequent to the
initiation of PCB 75-443,
the Supreme Court issued a
Supplemental Opinion on Denial of Rehearing,
dated
February
5,
1976.)
343 N.E,2d 493
(1975,
1976).
2.
The development and operation
by Southern of
the solid waste management site has caused and will
continue to cause environmental damage
in violation of
the Act.
The Board has dealt with this case
on
several occasions,
principally in an Interim Opinion and Order entered January 22,
1976.
Also,
on January 22 the Board proposed a Regulation
to provide
single—site consideration under Carlson v. Village of Worth,
supra,
for the solid waste management site in issue here,
The Board’s
Statement of Need in connection with
R76--’2 included the following:
Pending the promulgation of qenerally
applicable Regulations
to guide the Agency
in
its permit—issuing capacity, we see no reason
to hold in abeyance the consideration of the
suitability of this site.
In this mariner the
“unified statewide”
system of
regu1~ition
envisioned in Carlson,
~
cr~: U:; effectu-
ated immediately.
It is hoped that all of those who have
expressed an interest
in this site,
in PCL 75-443
and PCB 76-8, will participate fully in this
Regulatory matter.
In an Order entered April
8,
1976,
the Board further stayed
PCB 75—443 and PCB 76-8 for
75 days,
on a Motion by Intervenor
People.
Thoughout the pendency of these causes,
the Circuit Court of
Cook County has had before
it,
in a separate proceeding,
a similar
case.
Carlson
v. EPA and County of Cook,
No.
75 L 12530
(Cir.
Ct.
Co. Cty.,
Ill.,
Aug.
9,
1976).
Although the entire history of that
proceeding need not be given here, we do note
that the Circuit
Court’s dismissal order of August
9,
1976 was on Stipulation of
Southern and the Agency.
That Stipulation,
filed with Southern’s
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Motion to Dismiss herein,
indicates that the Agency,
on May
21,
1976,
issued
to Southern a “Supplemental Permit’
for the site
in
question;
that “Supplemental Permit” being based on Agency consideration of
various land use and zoning data,
as well
as other information deemed
relevant by the Agency.
That information was submitted to the Agency
by Southern and other parties pursuant to the Circuit Court’s Interim
Remand Order of March 22,
1976.
Inasmuch as Complainants Committee,
et al.
do not dispute
Southern’s allegations as to the Agency’s consideration with regard
to its “Supplemental Permit,” and inasmuch as the Agency has not
responded to Southern’s Motion to Dismiss, the Board finds that
PCB 76-8
(originally brought by the Agency against Southern)
should
properly be dismissed.
With regard to PCB 75-443,
Southern argues that because the
Agency has now made a “site suitability determination” with respect
to Southern’s
site, and has issued its “Supplemental Permit” there-
upon,
this cause should be dismissed as moot.
In response, Complainant
Coniniittee, et al. argues that:
1.
They,
not being parties to the Circuit Court
suit, are not bound by its dismissal.
2.
The Agency’s issuance of that “Supplemental
Permit” does not resolve the basic issues herein.
3.
The propriety of the Agency’s issuance of
a
permit during the pendency of R76-2
is questionable.
4.
They have relied on the pendency of R76-2 to
provide
a forum concerning the suitabiH~y of Carison’s
site.
In deciding whether to grant Southern’s Motion to Dismiss
PC13 75-443, we note that Complainant Committee,
et al., alleged as
the essence of their Complaint that the Agency gave no consideration
to land use,
zoning or any other quoslion regarding
he
suitability
of Southern’s site.
(Complaint,
¶15).
Such consideration has now
apparently been given.
The remaining allegation
in the Complaint,
supra,
that development and operation under the permit issued by
the Agency to Southern will cause
“environmental damage”
(as well
as other damage described in language taken directly from Section 20
of the Act)
is not sufficiently specific
to state a cause of action
independent of the allegation that the Agency gave no consideration
to land use,
etc.
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However, Complainants’ statement that they relied on the
pendency of P76-2
to provide a “forum”
for their arguments and
position
concerning
the
suitability
of
Southern’s
site
leads
us
to
the
conclusion
that
immediate
dismissal
is improper at this time.
While the original cause of action herein has indeed been mooted by
the Agency’s issuance of the “Supplemental Permit,” Complainants’
response
in opposition
to Southern’s Motion for Dismissal
indicates
that the central issue in this case
——
the suitability of landfill
operations to Southern’s site
——
remains
in issue.
The original Complaint in PCB 75-443 (~13,
17)
also indicates
generally that Complainants dispute the site’s suitability for
landfill operations.
To allow Complainants a “forum”
to provide
proof of that contention, and to prevent duplication of effort, we
shall grant leave for appropriate amendment of the Complaint now
before us.
Assuming,
as we must,
the propriety of the Agency’s decision
in granting Southern’s “Supplemental Permit,” and avoiding as we
properly may,
a decision on the propriety of the Aqency’s
“Supple--
mental Permit” issuance during the pendency of P76-2, which is not
before us here,
we shall also dismiss R76~2 in a separate Order today.
By dismissing P76-2,
and allowing Complainants
an opportunity
to
meet their strict burden of proof in the face of the Agency’s
presumably correct permit decision, we shall avoid duplication of
effort while nonetheless allowing all parties
a full and fair
opportunity within the adjudicatory framework provided by the Act.
Complainant shall be granted leave to amend its Complaint within
30 days of the date of this Order in conforni±’;ywith the foregoing,
or as may otherwise be proper herein.
Re~or ~ent Southern’s Motion
for Dismissal may be renewed if no such f~
is forthcoming.
The
Agency’s Enforcement case against Southern, PCB 76—8,
shall
be
dismissed for failure to prosecute the action, and as a result of
the Agency’s failure to respond to Southern’s Motion for Dismissal.
IT IS THE INTE1~IMORDER
OF’ Tilt POLLUTTON CONTROL BOARD
that
1.
PCB 76-8 be, and hereby
is, dismissed.
2.
Action on Respondent’s Motion for Order of
Dismissal shall be deferred for thirty
(30)
days
in
conformity with the foregoing Interim Opinion.
Mr.
James Young abstained.
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I, Christan
L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, hereby c~rtifythe abo e
nterim Opinion and Order
we~eadopted on the
~
day of
1976,
by
a vote of
Christan
L. Moffett, Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board
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