ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
January 17,
1972
In The Matter of
R71—21
ADMISSIONS AND TRANSCRIPTS
Supplemental Opinion by Jacob
D. Dumelle
On March
14
I
asked the Board to reconsider its vote of
January
17,
1972
in the matter of placing the cost burden of trans-
cripts on the petitioner and applicant in variance
and permit cases.
The
motion
for reconsideration lost for want of
a second but its
purpose
was to place me on record as now reversing my
“yes” vote
of January
17.
On March 15
I filed
a dissent in the related proceeding R72—l,
decided March
2,
1972 which required parties to an enforcement action
to pay the cost of a transcript of proceedings.
For similar reasons,
which
I sketch out below,
I am now dissenting in this earlier matter.
I believe that the Board in passing on
the transcript costs in
variance and permit proceedings
has changed the intent of the
Environmental Protection Act and has acted beyond its powers.
The Act,
in the wisdom of
the General Assembly,
and as proposed and approved by
the Governor, provided
for
a
free pollution forum.
The Board
has no
warrant in the Act to impose transcript costs which may run up
to
$1,000 per day on the parties.
Thus
a desirable
publi’c policy has
been suspended and
an action for which there
is no legal basis
taken by the January
17 vote.
The usual argument for passing variance costs to the petitioner
is that he
is asking for a “license
to pollut&’
and ought to pay.
That
I feel
is
a loaded phrase and
a wrong conclusion.
When regulations
are enacted no one can forsee all the myriad ramifications
and that
is why variance proceedings
are provided for by the statute.
A
petitioner may need more time
to develop
a better pollution control
system which may benefit an entire industry or he may need more time
because his consulting engineering
is ill
or he may conceivably
need more time because the life of his plant
is of
a marginal nature
and strict compliance with regulations would shut him down
and elimi-
nate the
jobs associated with the operation.
The Board must balance
and weigh the effects on the environment and
the public and the
petitioner and it is in the best interests of the whole State
of
Illinois that this be
done.
A small industry or
a potential home
owner desiring relief from a sewer ban can ill afford heavy transcript
costs on top of attorney’s fees
on top of consulting engineer’s
fees
on top of loss of time from work,
etc.
3—
489
For permit proceedings one cannot say
that the large utilities
cannot afford these costs as they seek
a nuclear plant permit.
But
the Act does
not impose these costs upon permit applicants
and
I do
not
feel that the Board
can or should do so.
As
I stated in my dissent on R72—l
the Board could have pursued
other alternatives.
It could have sought an opinion from the Attorney~-
General on the legality of not stopping its hearings and
thus incurring
a deficit and it could have tried to precisely gauge the area of
agreement on
a deficiency appropriation among the legislative leaders.
It
has
not done this.
And even if pursuit of these alternatives
proved fruitless it does not then follow that the state~s pollution
control program would close down.
Cases could continue
to be
filed,
discovery could proceed and necessary document exchanging and de-
positions
could be completed in the few months until May when
additional
funds may be made available.
If the 90-day variance
period was ending and no waiver was forthcoming
from a petitioner
the Board could simply act without hearing using
the Agency recornmen-
dation as
a guide or dismiss without prejudice on the grounds that
it could not
incur
a deficit to hold
a hearing.
Crisis situations cry for immediate action.
Often govern-
ment has cause to regret its response to such emergencies since
the luxury of contemplation and hindsight show that
the action was
unnecessary or wrong.
The internment of the Nisei
in 1942 was
such
a crisis response.
The Board’s action of January 17 and my ori-
ginal
“yes” vote were
in error.
Jacob D. Dumelle
I, Christan
L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify the above Supplementary Opinion was filed on
the 20th day of March,
1972.
Illinois
Pollution
3—490