ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
September 15,
1976
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
Complainant,
)
v.
)
PCB 75—353
EDWARD H. WEIDE,
)
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr. Goodman):
This matter comes before the Board upon the August
9,
1976
Motion by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
(Agency)
for Modification or Alternatively Clarification of the June
18,
1976 Opinion and Order of the Board herein.
In Section
II of its Motion,
the Agency complains that the
Board in one paragraph of the Opinion uses the word penalty instead
of the more proper word assessment.
The Board will, therefore,
amend the first sentence of the second full paragraph of page
3
of the Order of June
18,
1976 to read as follows:
Complainant
asks
that an
assessment
be levied on
the basis of the reasonable value of the fish
killed.
Section
I of the 1\gency’s Motion
is the more significant
section.
The Agency contends that the sole evidence available
in
the record as
to the value of the fish destroyed by the actions
of
Mr. Weide was the testimony and evaluation of Michael Conlin, who
was at the time of the fish kill employed as a District Fishery
Biologist with the Department of Conservation.
Although the Agency
contends that Mr.
Conlin’s evaluation procedure was in accordance
with “Standard Methods” described by the Department of Conservation,
23—457
—2—
no presentation of this “Standard Method” was made at the hearing.
The only evidence of it was
the apparent application of the “Stan-
dard Method”
to the facts
in this case.
Not having this “Standard
Method” before us,
the Board is unable to evaluate the reasonable-
ness of the method.
The Agency further claims that “Compliance with the Standard
Method of determining the number and value of fish killed establishes
a prima fade case for assessment of a penalty
in the amount deter-
mined by use of the Standard Method”
(Agency Memo, page
4).
The
Board agrees that it should utilize the expertise of the Department
of Conservation concerning the number of fish counted in each test
area,
the identification of the fish,
their weights,
their individual
value,
etc.
However, Section
42(b)
of the Environmental Protection
Act places upon the Board the duty to assess the reasonable value
of the fish or aquatic life destroyed as a result of any violation
of the Act.
Along with that duty goes the right to determine the
reasonable value of the fish or aquatic life destroyed.
The unique
expertise of the Department of Conservation ends with the completion
of its investigation.
Statistical evaluation of the Department of
Conservation’s investigative results
is not beyond the expertise of
the Board.
The Board accepted the data presented by the Department of
Conservation concerning the fish kill and, upon application of funda-
mental statistical analysis, found the level of confidence to be un-
reasonably low for the final dollar evaluation proposed by the
Department of Conservation.
The Board determined what it considered
to be a reasonable level of confidence and adjusted the values indi-
cated by the Department of Conservation to reflect this level of
confidence.
The figure of $2600.00 was the result of this determi-
nation
(rounded to the nearest hundred dollars), and that is the
Board’s estimation of the reasonable value of the fish killed based
upon the investigative data supplied by the Department of Conserva-
tion.
Part
I of the Agency’s Motion of August
9,
1976
is,
therefore,
denied.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
23
—
458
—3—
Mr. Zeitlin dissented.
Mr. Young abstained.
I, Christan
L.
Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution~Control
tify the above
Order was adopted on the__________
Board,
h
_________
day
~
1976
by a vote of
.3/
Christan
L. Mof
Illinois Pollution ~o1
Board
23—459