ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
June 26, 1975
IN THE MATTER OF:
The Proposed Amendments to Air
)
R74-12
Pollution Regulations to Regulate
Smoking in Public Places
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD (by Mr. Henss):
A group called The Environmental Lawyers Clinic filed a
petition
with
the Illinois Pollution Control Board requesting
that the smoking of tobacco in public places be restricted.
Petitioner proposed that:
“No person shall smoke any tobacco product in
any public elevator, indoor theater, library, art
museum, concert hall, store, shop, restaurant, or
in
any means of mass transportation which is used
by or open to the public, or in any public portions
of any room, ward, or area of any hospital,
medical or dental clinic, or in any portion of
any room,
chamber,
place of meeting or public
assembly in
which the public business is trans-
acted; except that, the owner, manager or officer
in charge of
any
such location may designate, by
prominently displayed public sign or notice, certain
portions of such locations as “smoking” and “non-
smoking” areas, and may permit smoking only in
those
areas designated “smoking” areas notwithstanding the
provisions hereof, provided, however, that such
“smoking~ areas are located or designed so as to
proteqt the health and safety of persons outside of
such areas.”
Petitioner also found it necessary
to propose that the
current definitions of
“ambient
air” and “emission source” be
amended, We are asked to define “ambient air” as the “in-
ternal or external atmosphere surrounding emission sources.”
At the present time, ambient air is defined in our Regulation
as the atmosphere external to buildings.. The proposal would
have us redefine “emission source” to include “any article”
capable of emitting specified air contai1~inants “in such amounts
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as to endanger the health and safety of the public”. At the
present time an “emission source” is any equipment or facility
of a type capable of emitting specified air contaminants “to
the atmosphere’. Under the proposal, it would no longer be a
requirement that the emission be “to the atmosphere”.
The Pollution Control Board requested Petitioner and a
number of other organizations to file briefs regarding the
BoarcPs jurisdiction to adopt the proposed regulation. Legal
briefs were filed by The Environmental Lawyers Clinic, the
Chicago Heart Association and the Illinois Association of
Tobacco and Candy Distributors. A number of other organizations
submitted statements which did not address the jurisdictional
issue.
Section 28 of the Environmental Protection Act provides:
“Any person may present written proposals for the
adoption, amendment or repeal of the Board’s regulations,
and the Board may make such proposals on its own motion.
If the Board finds that any such proposal is supported
by an adequate statement of reasons, is accompanied by
a petition signed by at least 200 persons, is not plainly
devoid of merit and does not deal with a subject on which
a hearing has been held within the preceding six months,
the Board shall schedule a public hearing for consideration
of the proposal... The Board may also in its discretion
schedule a public hearing upon any proposal without regard
to the above conditions”.
In Gromes Supermarket vs. Pollution Control Board, 6 Ill. App. 3rd
1036 (1972) it was held that parties who are interested in
challenging the Board’s jurisdiction are not entitled to judicial
relief until after the hearings have been conducted. As a
practical matter this means that we can schedule hearings on a
proposed regulation even if we do not have the jurisdiction to
ultimately adopt that regulation. We do not accept the view,
however, that no more is required, to get a hearing before the
Illinois Pollution Control Board, than an idea (one not plainly
devoid of merit) and 200 signatures. Such a philosophy would
place our time, our efforts and our environmental program at the
mercy of any number of well—intentioned individuals who have
ideas, of one kind or another, and the ability to collect 200
signatures. We do not believe that we are mandated to hold
hearings on regulations which we have no jurisdiction to adopt.
We do not choose to hold hearings in this matter unless we have
jurisdiction to actually adopt the proposal.
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After careful consideration of the rather sparse material
available to us we find that we’do not have jurisdiction to
adopt the proposal. Therefore, we will not schedule hearings.
The petition will be dismissed. If the reviewing Court finds
that we do have jurisdiction to adopt the proposed regulation
then we wish to make it known that we will schedule hearings
upon receipt of the mandate of the Court.
As an administrative agency created by statute we exercise
only those powers conferred upon us by the enabling statute.
We do not believe that the Illinois Legislature has granted us
authority to re~ulate the quality of the indoor air. Section
10 of the Environmental Protection Act gives this Board the
authority to adopt “ambient air quality standards”, The
Legislature did not specify what definition should be given to
the term “ambient air”. However, the commonly accepted def in—
ition is that it means the outside air. The term is defined by
the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency:
“Ambient air means that portion of the atmosphere,
external to buildings, to which the general public has
access”. [40 CFR Section 50.1(e)]
The United States Supreme Court in a very recent decision stated:
“The Clean Air Act Amendme:its directed the Environmental
Protection Agency to publish regulations describing
national quality standards for the ‘ambient air’, which
is the Statute’s term for the outdoor air used by the
p~1ic.” (Emphasis supplied) Train vs. Natural
Resources Defense Council, 43 USLW 4467 (U. S. No. 73—1742,
April 15, 1975)
The definition of ambient air is sufficiently well settled
that we should not attempt to redefin~it without some expression
from the Legislature accepting a new definition and thereby
broadening our authority.
The Legislature has specifically given this Board the
authority to prescribe emission standards specifying maximum
concentrations of various contaminants that may be discharged
“into the atmosphere”. (Environmental Protection Act, Section 10)
The word “atmosphere” is used in several places in the Illinois
Statute. SectionS 8 states that it is the purpose of the Act to
assure that no air contaminants are discharged “into the atmos-
here” without the treatment or control necessary to prevent
pollution. Section 9(a) is a prohibition against the emission
of contaminants so as to cause “air pollution”. “Air pollution”
is defined as the presence “iii the atmosphere” of contaminants
17 -~-459
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of such quantity, characteristics and duration as to be
injurious to health, etc. [Environmental Protection Act,
Section 3(b))
The word “atmosphere” is not defined in the Statute.
Webster defines it as:
“1. A gaseous mass enveloping a heavenly body (as
a planet).
2. The whole mass of air surrounding the earth.
3. The air of a locality.
4. A surrounding influence or environment.
5. A unit of pressure equal to the pressure
of the air at sea level or approximately
14.7 lbs. to the square inch.”
The Board in the past has not established standards for
indoor air. Even in the adoption of the asbestos regulation
the Board noted that the indoor impact of the regulation was
“merely incidental” to the attempt to regulate asbestos in
the outside air. The Board’s Opinion by Mr. Lawton states:
“The regulation we adopt today does not control the
level of asbestos inside of a plant, largely an occu-
pational hazard beyond our jurisdiction. (Emphasis
supplied) Insofar as this Board’s regulation affects
what transpires inside a plant or on a construction
site, the impact is merely incidental to the relation-
ship between certain ‘in-plant’ activity and a sig-
nificant hazard of air pollution beyond the site of
such activity.” (R71—l6, January 6, 1972)
The Board was constrained to make this statement even though the
Legislature had recognized asbestos as a serious health hazard
~receiving special attention in Section 9(e) of the Environmental
Protection Act. That Section gave the Board especially broad
powers to regulate with regard to asbestos.
We find from a reading of the entire Statute that it was
designed for the regulation of the outside air. We draw this
inference from the absence of certain things from the Statute
as well as from the words which are actually there. For instance,
in Section
2
of
the Act there is no finding by the Legislature
that unhealthy conditions exist in work, commercial and
recreational indoor environments. There are no definitions in
Section 3 for such terms as designated smoking areas, tobacco
products, smoking, health hazard area. Section 5 fails to
state that Pollution Control Board authority does not supplant
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the express authority of the Illinois Department of Labor to
enforce occupational safety and health standards under the
Illinois
Health and Safety Act, Illinois Revised Statutes,
Chapter 48.
If we were to have authority over the indoor air,
Section 10(g) would probably have stated that “the Board may
adopt standards for the designation of health hazard areas
in any public facility
and requirements for public notice of
such health hazard areas”. The third sentence of Section 27
could have said:
“In promulgating regulations under this
Act, the Board shall take into account the e~istingphysical
conditions, the character of the area or public fecility
involved...”
When the Statute was adopted, the General Assembly mandated
the Environmental Protection Agency to operate and arrange for
the operation of devices for the monitoring of environmental
quality [Section 4(b)]. The Legislature provided only such
funds as were necessa~’yfor the monitoring of the external air.
We believe that thc’re was no intention to include inside air as
a part of the environment subject to such control.
For all of these reasons we conclude that the Board has no
jurisdiction
to adopt the proposed regulation.
Therefore,
we
find that the petition is plainly devoid of merit and we de-
cline to schedule hearings on it.
This Opinion constitutes
the findings of fact and con-
clusions of law of the Illinois Pollution Control Board.
ORDER
It is the Order of the Pollution Control Board that the
Petition for Regulation filed by The Environmental Lawyers
Clinic on October 22, 1974 be and it is hereby dismissed.
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify the above Opinion and Order was pdopted
the
~
day of
\,~
,
1975 by a vote of ~‘.-C~
Christan L. Moffej~t~/C1erk
Pollution Control Bbard
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