ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
May 16,
1996
MR.
& MRS.
DON WILLIAMS, MR. &
)
MRS.
THOMAS MORRIS & MR. & MRS.
)
PETER BIZIOS,
)
)
PCB 96-186
Complainants,
)
(Enforcement
-
Noise)
)
v.
)
)
SCHAUMBURG PARK
DISTRICT,
)
)
Respondent.
)
CONCURRING
OPINION (by C.A.
Manning,
M. McFawn and J.Theodore Meyer):
This
matter is before the Board on a citizen noise complaint filed on March
5,
1996
by
Mr.
& Mrs.
Don Williams,
Mr. & Mrs.
Thomas Morris and Mr.
& Mrs.
Peter Bizios against
the Schaumburg Park District.
Complainants state that noise
caused by
basketball playing
at
Odium Park in Schaumburg, Illinois
has resulted in
an unreasonable
interference with the use
and
enjoyment of complainants’ properties,
endangered the physical and emotional health and
well-being of complainants, and caused depreciation to the value of complainants’ properties.
Complainants additionally
allege that respondent has violated the Board’s numerical standards
set forth at
35
Iii.
Adm.
Code Part 900.102,
901.104,
and Sections 23
and 24
of the
Environmental Protection Act
(Act)
(415 ILCS
5/23,
5/24
(1994).)
Complainants allege that noise caused by
the dribbling of the basketball
and yelling of
the participants coupled with the close proximity of complainants’ property
instigated the
filing
of this
matter.
In the complaint,
complainants state that since June 1994,
“noise
is present
twelve months
out of the year
.
.
.
the noise
has occured (sic)
as early as
5:30
a.m. and as late
as 1:30 a.m.”
Though different for each complainant,
complainants generally state that the
basketball court ranges in varying proximity of approximately
35
feet to 50 feet from
complainants’ residences.
Section 31(b) of the Act
states that
“unless the Board determines that, such complaint
is
duplicitous or frivolous,
it shall schedule a hearing and serve written notice thereof upon the
person or persons named therein,
in accord with subsection (a) of this
Section.”
An action
before the Board is
frivolous if it fails to state a cause of action upon
which relief can be
granted.
(Citizens for a Better Environment v.
Reynolds Metals
Co.
(May 17,
1973), PCB
73-173,
8
PCB 46.)
In determining whether a case is
“frivolous” the Board
ascertains if the
relief requested may be granted.
Presently the Board utilizes the frivolous standard as one of
jurisdiction and nothing more.
2
We believe the legislature intended to
give the Board wide discretion in determining
whether a claim is
frivolous.
As stated in the dissenting opinion in Rodney B.
Nelson v.
Kane
County Forest Preserve et al (October 6,
1994), PCB 94-247 (by C.A. Manning
and
J
.
Theodore Meyer), the Board has the authority to determine whether a citizen enforcement
action is frivolous.
We believe that
the legislature intended that the Board monitor citizen
enforcement actions by dismissing those
actions which are frivolous in order
to prevent undue
harassment and expense on the part of the respondent and the
State.
We also believe the
legislature gave the Board such authority
in order to provide a mechanism for limiting the
number of “nuisance”
filings.
Comparatively,
in enforcement cases filed by the State,
the
Board has not been given such broad authority.
The Board may cause investigation of a
complaint as allowed by
Section 30 of the Act by requesting the Agency to investigate the
environmental harm in a specific case.
Overall, we believe that the discretion granted the
Board by
the legislature concerning
“frivolous”
actions allows
the Board to concentrate
on
matters where actual environmental harm is
present.
While we agree it is
appropriate that the complaint should be dismissed,
we find that
this matter should have been dismissed due to
the frivolous nature of the case.
In determining
the frivolous nature of a case and prior to proceeding with a case, the Board
should look to
determine if the complaint
is
factually or legally sufficient in stating a cause of action upon
which relief may be
granted.
In this
case, the complaint remains factually and legally
insufficient; therefore, we find the complaint without merit.
Complainants argue, among other things,
that the yelling and shouting from a
basketball court throughout the entire year causes excessive noise interfering with the quality
of the environment and the enjoyment of life.
Complainants also argue that basketball playing
occurs early in the morning
and late
at night without a park ranger to
enforce the park
district’s hours.
A park ranger need not be on duty to enforce the park district hours since the
City of Schaumburg may be
called upon to enforce park district
hours.
(See Respondent’s
Brief, Ex.
1A.)
Complainants also seek from the Board a cease and desist order which
permanently eliminates the noise produced at the basketball court.
If the Board begins
issuing
cease and desist
orders for noise emanating from daily
exercise activity occurring on park
district
grounds,
the Board would be significantly limiting
the benefits afforded by park
systems to
the enjoyment of life and the environment.
Overall, complainants’ allegations
remain too general
and lack specificity to
sustain the proper burden of proof necessary for a
nuisance case.
We find these allegations lack the appropriate sufficiency to prove
actual environmental
harm and, therefore,
a
nuisance violation under the Act.
The undersigned also believe that the
Board’s present standard of frivolous
is
too narrow and does not reflect the legislature’s intent
to
allow the Board
greater discretion in determining the frivolous
nature of a case.
As
a
result, we therefore would have dismissed
this complaint
as frivolous.
Because the Board
must first make a threshold determination of frivolous or duplicitous
in the filing of a citizen enforcement case and because we would have found this
matter
frivolous,
we need not
discuss whether the complained of activity
is
an
“organized amateur or
3
professional sporting activity”
as a restriction of the Board’s ability to hear noise
violations
according to Section
25
of the Act.
Therefore,
for the above-stated reasons, we concur.
~
____
Claire
A. Manning
Marili McFawn
J\*heodore Meyer
I, Dorothy M.
Guim, Clerk of the Illinois
Pollution Control Board,
hereby certify
that
the above concurrence was filed on the
//~-‘
day of
____________,
1996.
Dorothy M. G
,Clerk
Illinois Pollu
n Control Board