ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
September
15,
1976
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
Complainant,
v.
)
PCB 75—353
EDWARD H. WEIDE,
Respondent.
DISSENTING OPINION
(by Mr.
Zeitlin)
In its Order today, denying the Environmental Protection Agency’s
Motion
to Reconsider certain portions of the principal Opinion and
Order
in this case entered June 18,
1976,
I feel that the Board erred
in the following respects:
1.
The Board apparently compounds what it feels
may be
a problem of accuracy with regard
to the Depart-
ment of
Conservation’s
valuation of fish kills.
The
Board states that the Department of Conservation’s
“Standard Method’~was,
(a) not before us and therefore
we were unable to evaluate the reasonableness of the
method,
and
(b)
is not sufficiently reliable
in this
case.
Nonetheless, the Board seems
to arrive at its
own method of valuation for fish kills by statistical
manipulation of just that “unreliable” method.
2.
The Board fails
to acknowledge the value of
and
need
for
the
Department
of
Conservation
in
the
protection of the environment when
it
says
that,
“tjhe
unique expertise of the Department of Conservation ends....”
The Board’s substitution of
its own experLise
for that
of
the
Department
of
Conservation
is
not
warranted by the
facts
in
this
case.
While it
may
indeed
be
that
the Record
in
this
case
fails
to
set forth clearly the basis for the Department of Conservation’s
expertise, the answer
is not to deny its existence.
On the contrary,
the answer is
to admit to the Department of Conservation’s expertise
by remanding this matter for clarification of the manner
in which
that expertise has been applied to the problems of this case.
Substitution of our own “guesstimate” as
to the reasonable number
and
value
of
dead
fish
cannot
substitute
for
further
hearing(s)
to
specifically
consider
the
basis
and
validity of the Department of
Conservation’s
“Standard
Method.”
23—461
—2—
In summary,
I feel that the Board’s imposition of an apparently
arbitrary valuation to the fish killed here is
-
at best
-
no more
accurate than the valuation assigned by the Department of Conservation.
The proper procedure here would be to use the Hearing mechanism to
allow the Board to determine the proper methodology to be used in
arriving at the final remedy in this case.
I respectfully dissent.
Philip
Z
Member o~
rd
I,
Christan L.
Control
submitted on the
day
of
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Opinion was
976.
Illinois
Pollution
ci
I3oard
23
—
462