ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
October 2, 1997
SIERRA CLUB AND JIM BENSMAN,
Petitioner,
v.
CITY OF WOOD RIVER AND NORTON
ENVIRONMENTAL,
Respondent.
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PCB 98-43
(Pollution Control Facility Siting
Appeal)
DISSENTING OPINION (by J. Theodore Meyer and G.T. Girard):
We dissent from the majority opinion because we believe the Board’s procedural rules
allow entities to appear before the Board in pollution control facility siting appeals without
being represented by an attorney. Section 101.107(a)(2) states that any person entitled to
participate in Board proceedings shall appear as follows:
A corporation, when a respondent in an enforcement case pursuant to 35 Ill.
Adm. Code 103, by an attorney at law licensed and registered to practice in the
State of Illinois. In all other proceedings, a corporation may appear through
any officer, employee, or representative, or by an attorney at law licensed and
registered to practice in the State of Illinois, or both. 35 Ill. Adm. Code
101.107(a)(2).
Section 103 of the Board’s procedural rules govern enforcement proceedings. The Board has
no procedural rules specific to pollution control facility siting appeals at this time. Thus, the
Board’s procedural rules are silent as to representation by an attorney in pollution control
facility siting appeals. The Illinois Environmental Protection Act (Act) is also silent regarding
non-attorney representation for corporations in pollution control facility siting appeals. The
Board has no authority to infer that a pollution control facility siting appeal is an enforcement
case and thus subject to the requirements in 35 Ill. Adm. Code 101.107(a). Therefore, Jim
Bensman should be allowed to represent the Sierra Club before the Board in this appeal.
To rule otherwise is against Board rules, past Board practice, and good public policy
which encourages administrative agencies to be less adversarial than court proceedings, and more
“user-friendly” in terms of a non-attorney’s ability to appear before the Board. As Member
Meyer stated in his dissent in Petition of Recycle Technologies, Inc. for an Adjusted Standard
from 35 Ill. Adm. Code
720.131(c), (July 10, 1997) AS 97-9 (herein after RTI):
As
a member of the House of Representatives of the Illinois General Assembly
when the Act was passed, as a co-sponsor of the bill and as a member of the
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Executive Committee that approved the bill, I know that the legislative intent of
the Act was to encourage citizen participation in environmental matters.
With regard to the Board’s role in facilitating environmental cases in Illinois, the Act
clearly intended the Board to be easily available to Illinois citizens. The Act provided a new,
more accessible way of governing where direct public participation was encouraged in
environmental governance. The majority opinion in this matter turns back the clock to a time
when environmental decisions were made in government proceedings accessible only to specially
educated lawyers. A review of Section 39.2 and 40.1(b) of the Act (415 ILCS 5/39.2 and
5/40.1(b) (1996)) indicates that the Illinois legislature crafted a pollution control facility siting
process which requires local governing bodies and encourages local citizens to participate in the
initial siting procedure. Today’s decision by the majority that the Sierra Club must be represented
by an attorney unfairly restricts the participation of citizen groups in the pollution control facility
siting process.
While we do not agree with the majority order in this case, we do understand that they feel
constrained by the language in the Attorney Act (705 ILCS 205/1
et seq
. (1996)), the
Corporation Practice of Law Prohibition Act (705 ILCS 220/1
et seq
. (1996)), and subsequent
case law involving other state agencies (see RTI decision). Perhaps the majority would agree
with us that the best way to clarify this situation would be to pursue specific legislative language
excluding the Board from the legal representation requirements in the Attorney Act. We note that
there is specific language in the Attorney Act that allows non-attorney representation before
certain Illinois Boards and Commissions, such as the Illinois State Labor Relations Board and
State Civil Service Commission (705 ILCS 205/1) (1996)).
For these reasons, we respectfully dissent.
J. Theodore Meyer
G. Tanner Girard
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I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control Board, hereby certify that
the above dissenting opinion was submitted on the 6th day of October 1997.
Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board