ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
April 6, 2006
MIDWEST GENERATION EME, LLC,
Petitioner,
v.
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
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PCB 04-185
(Trade Secret Appeal)
ORDER OF THE BOARD (by A.S. Moore):
Midwest Generation EME, LLC (Midwest) has appealed a trade secret determination of
the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA) under the Environmental Protection Act
(Act) (415 ILCS 5 (2004)). In the determination, IEPA denied Midwest’s claim for trade secret
protection of information that Midwest submitted to IEPA. IEPA made the determination after
receiving Sierra Club’s request, under Illinois’ Freedom of Information Act (Illinois FOIA) (415
ILCS 140 (2004)), for a copy of Midwest’s submittal. Midwest maintains that the information it
submitted to IEPA is entitled to trade secret status, exempt from public disclosure requirements.
The information relates to Midwest’s six coal-fired power stations, all of which are in Illinois.
The Board is not addressing the merits of the trade secret appeal today. The case has not
yet been to hearing. What the Board is addressing today is Midwest’s motion to stay this appeal.
Midwest wants the appeal stayed until resolution of a separate federal process that is underway
for determining whether the same information at issue here is exempt from public disclosure
under federal standards. IEPA opposes a stay.
For the reasons below, the Board grants a short-term stay. This proceeding is stayed for
120 days (
i.e.
, until August 4, 2006), unless the Board terminates the stay earlier by order. As a
condition of the stay, Midwest must promptly file with the Board any final confidentiality
determination of the United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) concerning the
information in question.
The Board today, in separate orders, is likewise issuing short-term stays in two other
trade secret appeals involving claimed information that is also the subject of a confidentiality
request pending before USEPA: Commonwealth Edison Company v. IEPA
, PCB 04-215; and
Midwest Generation EME, LLC v. IEPA, PCB 04-216. In this order, the Board first provides a
brief background on public disclosure requirements under the Act. Second, the Board sets forth
the procedural history of this appeal, PCB 04-185. Next, the Board describes the parties’
arguments for and against a stay. The Board then discusses the applicable legal standards and
rules on Midwest’s motion for stay.
2
BACKGROUND
Under Section 7 of the Act (415 ILCS 5/7 (2004)), all files, records, and data of the
Board, IEPA, and the Illinois Department of Natural Resources are open to reasonable public
inspection and copying. However, the Act provides that certain materials may represent “trade
secrets,” “privileged” information, “internal communications of the several agencies,” or “secret
manufacturing processes or confidential data” and, accordingly, be protected from public
disclosure.
See
415 ILCS 5/7(a) (2004); 415 ILCS 5/7.1 (2004) (trade secrets).
Even so, the Act denies protection from public disclosure for: effluent data under the
National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit program; “emission data” to
the extent required by the federal Clean Air Act; and the quantity, identity, and generator of
substances being placed or to be placed in landfills or hazardous waste treatment, storage, or
disposal facilities.
See
415 ILCS 5/7(b)-(d) (2004).
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On April 19, 2004, Midwest filed its appeal of IEPA’s March 10, 2004 trade secret
determination. In a May 6, 2004 order, the Board accepted for hearing Midwest’s petition for
review. On May 20, 2004, IEPA filed the administrative record of its trade secret determination.
On May 27, 2004, Sierra Club filed a motion to intervene in this trade secret appeal. IEPA
supported Sierra Club’s motion, but Midwest opposed intervention. On July 1, 2004, Midwest
filed a motion for the Board to partially reconsider its May 6, 2004 order, asking the Board to
review IEPA’s trade secret denial
de novo
. IEPA opposed Midwest’s motion for partial
reconsideration.
In a November 4, 2004 order, the Board denied Sierra Club’s motion to intervene, but
ruled that Sierra Club could participate in this proceeding through hearing statement, public
comment, and
amicus curiae
briefing. In the same order, the Board denied Midwest’s motion to
partially reconsider, but held that Midwest may present new evidence at the Board hearing in
specified circumstances. Additionally, while retaining jurisdiction, the Board ordered a limited
remand to IEPA, directing IEPA to issue a supplemental decision stating IEPA’s reasons for
denying trade secret protection. The Board required Midwest to file a pleading responsive to
IEPA’s supplemental decision.
On November 30, 2004, the Office of the Attorney General for the State of Illinois, acting
as counsel for IEPA, filed a “Clarification of Trade Secret Determination.” On
December 9, 2004, Midwest filed a “Motion to Strike the Attorney General’s Clarification of
IEPA’s Trade Secret Determination.” On January 11, 2005, IEPA filed its response to
Midwest’s motion to strike with the hearing officer’s leave. On January 19, 2005, Midwest filed
a motion for leave to file a reply to IEPA’s response, attaching the reply. In light of the stay
granted today, the Board reserves ruling on Midwest’s motion to strike and related motion for
leave.
On or about December 13, 2004, Midwest petitioned the Third District Appellate Court
to review portions of the Board’s November 4, 2004 order. In a January 20, 2005 order, the
3
Board stayed the trade secret proceeding before the Board until the Third District Appellate
Court disposed of Midwest’s appeal or the Board ordered otherwise. On March 4, 2005, the
court dismissed Midwest’s appeal, granting the Board’s motion to dismiss the appeal for lack of
jurisdiction.
On September 27, 2005, Midwest filed a motion to stay this proceeding, which the Board
rules on today. Attached to Midwest’s motion are a supporting memorandum and a status report.
On October 6, 2005, IEPA filed a response, opposing Midwest’s motion for stay. On
October 21, 2005, Midwest filed a motion for leave to file a reply, attaching the reply. IEPA did
not oppose Midwest’s motion for leave to file a reply, which the Board now grants.
1
Sierra Club
made no filings in response to Midwest’s motion for stay.
On January 12, 2006, Midwest waived to October 6, 2006, the Board’s deadline for
deciding this appeal. The Board meeting before that deadline is currently scheduled for
October 5, 2006. On March 21, 2006, Midwest filed a status report pursuant to hearing officer
directive.
2
The case has not been to hearing nor has discovery begun.
DISCUSSION
Midwest’s Motion for Stay
Midwest states that it originally submitted the claimed business and financial information
to USEPA on November 6, 2003, in response to USEPA’s information request under Section 114
of the federal Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. § 7414). Mot. at 1, Memo at 1-2. At the time of
submittal, Midwest explains, certain information in the response was marked by Midwest as
“confidential business information” (CBI) exempt from disclosure under the federal Freedom of
Information Act (federal FOIA) (5 U.S.C. § 552) and 40 C.F.R. Part 2, Subpart B. Mot. at 1,
Memo at 2. According to Midwest, at USEPA’s suggestion, Midwest sent a copy of this
submittal to IEPA. Mot. at 1, Memo at 2.
Sierra Club submitted an Illinois FOIA request to IEPA requesting a copy of Midwest’s
information. Mot. at 2. Midwest states that after IEPA received Sierra Club’s FOIA request,
IEPA asked Midwest, by letter of January 5, 2004, to provide IEPA with a “Statement of
Justification” for Midwest’s confidentiality claims. Memo at 3. Midwest submitted a
“Statement of Justification” to IEPA on January 23, 2004; IEPA issued a denial of Midwest’s
trade secret claim on March 10, 2004; and on April 19, 2004, Midwest timely filed with the
Board this appeal of IEPA’s trade secret denial.
Id
. at 3-4.
According to Midwest, Sierra Club also submitted a federal FOIA request to USEPA for
the same claimed information on April 2, 2004. On June 30, 2005, USEPA informed Midwest of
this FOIA request and provided Midwest an opportunity to submit information supporting its
1
The Board cites Midwest’s motion for stay as “Mot. at _” and the memorandum as “Memo at
_.” The Board cites IEPA’s response as “Resp. at _” and Midwest’s reply as “Reply at _.”
2
The Board cites Midwest’s March 21, 2006 status report as “Status at _.”
4
confidentiality claim. Mot. at 2, Memo at 4. Midwest states that it submitted its supporting
information to USEPA on July 28, 2005, and “USEPA is now in the process of determining
whether to exempt the materials claimed to be [CBI] from release under [federal] FOIA.” Mot.
at 2, Memo at 4. Midwest maintains therefore that the Board and USEPA “are currently
addressing the same fundamental question: Are the Confidential Articles exempt from
disclosure?” Mot. at 2, Memo at 4-5. Midwest asks the Board to stay PCB 04-185 “until
resolution of the federal process for determining if Confidential Articles are exempt from
disclosure.” Mot. at 2-3, Memo at 4-5.
Midwest argues that granting a stay would:
(1) avoid the costly and inefficient allocation of resources that is necessarily
resulting from duplicative proceedings, (2) avoid practical difficulties that might
arise from contrary determinations by state and federal agencies, and (3) allow the
Board to be informed by a closely related federal determination. Memo at 5.
Midwest asserts that the Illinois courts have recognized that “multiplicity of litigation”
leads to the inefficient expenditure of resources (both for the forums and the parties involved)
and is a valid consideration in granting motions to stay. Memo at 5. Midwest cites to the Board
procedural rules’ definition of “duplicative” and maintains that a “substantially similar
proceeding involving Midwest Generation’s confidentiality claims is currently under way at the
federal level.”
Id
. Midwest states that USEPA is analyzing the confidentiality of the identical
information that is before the Board, and USEPA’s review was triggered by a Sierra Club FOIA
request substantively identical to the one sent to IEPA.
Id
.
Midwest further argues that besides the shared “factual commonality” of the State and
federal proceedings, the “applicable legal standards governing both confidentiality
determinations are also substantially similar.” Memo at 5-6. In support, Midwest cites to Illinois
court and Board decisions on Illinois FOIA and trade secrets that reference federal case law
interpreting the corresponding federal FOIA standards.
Id
. at 6. Moreover, Midwest argues,
“federal regulation is controlling” as to what constitutes “emission data” under the federal Clean
Air Act, which the Act excludes from trade secret protection.
Id
. at 6-7. Midwest asserts that
USEPA has the “primary duty” to interpret the federal Clean Air Act and USEPA regulations,
and the Board accordingly:
at the least, owes deference to those interpretations. [citation omitted] In fact, the
Board may be bound by USEPA’s interpretations but, even if not bound,
principles of comity encourage the Board to consider that determination.
Id
. at 7.
A stay, Midwest continues, will facilitate “consistent construction” between trade secret
determinations at the State and federal levels by allowing the Board to be “informed by the
federal confidentiality determination during its own analysis.” Memo at 7. Midwest adds that if
the claimed information is released to Sierra Club at the end of the federal process, “the Board
proceedings will be largely moot.”
Id
. at 7-8.
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IEPA’s Response Opposing a Stay
IEPA urges the Board to deny Midwest’s motion for stay. IEPA asserts that there is no
“proceeding” underway before USEPA concerning the information at issue. Resp. at 1. Instead,
IEPA continues, “USEPA is in the preliminary stages of making its initial administrative
decision” and once that is finalized, Midwest or Sierra Club may “commence a federal court
challenge to that decision.”
Id
. Now, however, a stay of PCB 04-185 would be “woefully
premature,” according to IEPA.
Id
.
Specifically, IEPA maintains that because there is no “ongoing, duplicative” proceeding
before USEPA, there is no “multiplicity of
litigation
” to be avoided by staying the Board
proceeding. Resp. at 2-4 (emphasis in original). According to IEPA, a case before the Board
can be rendered “duplicative,” as defined in the Board’s procedural rules, only by a “pending
adjudicatory proceeding,” not by an “agency’s internal decisionmaking process.”
Id
. at 3. IEPA
further argues that there is no basis for concluding now that an adjudicatory proceeding will
eventually arise out of the USEPA process in the form of a federal court challenge.
Id
. at 4.
Besides the lack of “duplicativeness,” IEPA states that other factors militate against a
stay. Resp. at 4. IEPA notes that USEPA may decide the matter “solely on general rules
governing confidentiality,” without addressing whether the documents constitute “emission data”
under the federal Clean Air Act: “No principle of comity renders USEPA a more appropriate
forum for interpreting those rules than the Board.”
Id
. at 4-5. USEPA also may not afford
“complete relief,” IEPA asserts, by choosing to release some documents but not others. IEPA
adds that a USEPA decision, while “persuasive authority,” would have no
res judicata
effect on
the Board.
Id
. at 5.
IEPA also argues that a stay would be extremely prejudicial to IEPA because:
IEPA has a strong interest in ensuring that the public receives promptly the
information regarding environmental compliance to which it is entitled—
particularly where, as here, the information concerns compliance with Clean Air
Act provisions essential to protecting public health. Resp. at 1, 5.
IEPA notes that Sierra Club sought Midwest’s responses to USEPA’s Section 114 information
requests. Those USEPA requests, according to IEPA, were directed toward determining whether
the facilities were “emitting pollutants in violation of the Clean Air Act New Source Review
standards, which require older coal-fired plants that perform major modifications resulting in
increased emissions to upgrade their pollution control equipment.”
Id
. at 5, n.2.
IEPA maintains that USEPA’s “track record in this matter thus far does not suggest an
inclination to decide it expeditiously.” Resp. at 5. IEPA argues that its interest in prompt public
disclosure would be “grossly and unjustifiably” interfered with by staying the Board proceeding
“until USEPA gets around to making a decision, and possibly until a federal court rules on a
challenge to that decision.”
Id
.
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Midwest’s Reply & Status Report
Midwest states that IEPA is “wrong” to assert that no “proceeding” is underway before
USEPA. Reply at 1. On the contrary, maintains Midwest, “USEPA’s legal office is in the midst
of making a final confidentiality determination in accordance with the administrative process set
forth in 40 CFR Part 2.”
Id
. Midwest points out that USEPA made a preliminary determination
on confidentiality, finding that the documents may be entitled to confidential treatment.
According to Midwest, USEPA then allowed it to submit supporting comments, and now
USEPA is in the process of making a final determination, which will constitute “final agency
action.”
Id
. Midwest concludes that IEPA’s claim that USEPA is merely in the process of
evaluating a FOIA request before making an initial determination is “simply inaccurate.”
Id
. at
1-2.
In its March 21, 2006 status report, Midwest states that as of March 20, 2006, USEPA (1)
advised the company that USEPA’s confidentiality determination was still pending; and (2)
“informally estimated that the determination would be finalized in three months.” Status at 1.
Board Analysis and Ruling
Section 101.514(a) of the Board’s procedural rules addresses motions for stays:
Motions to stay a proceeding must be directed to the Board and must be
accompanied by sufficient information detailing why a stay is needed, and in
decision deadline proceedings, by a waiver of any decision deadline. A status
report detailing the progress of the proceeding must be included in the motion.
(See also Section 101.308 of this Part.) 35 Ill. Adm. Code 101.514(a).
The decision to grant or deny a motion for stay is “vested in the sound discretion of the
Board.”
See
People v. State Oil Co.
, PCB 97-103 (May 15, 2003),
aff’d sub nom
State Oil Co. v.
PCB, 822 N.E.2d 876 (2d Dist. 2004). When exercising its discretion to determine whether an
arguably related matter pending elsewhere warrants staying a Board proceeding, the Board may
consider the following factors: (1) comity; (2) prevention of multiplicity, vexation, and
harassment; (3) likelihood of obtaining complete relief in the foreign jurisdiction; and (4) the
res
judicata
effect of a foreign judgment in the local forum,
i.e.
, in the Board proceeding.
See
A. E.
Staley Mfg. Co. v. Swift & Co., 84 Ill. 2d 245, 254, 419 N.E.2d 23, 27-28 (1980);
see also
Environmental Site Developers v. White & Brewer Trucking, Inc.; People v. White & Brewer
Trucking, Inc., PCB 96-180, PCB 97-11 (July 10, 1997) (applying the Illinois Supreme Court’s
A.E. Staley factors). The Board may also weigh the prejudice to the nonmovant from staying the
proceeding against the policy of avoiding duplicative litigation.
See
Village of Mapleton v.
Cathy’s Tap, Inc., 313 Ill. App. 3d 264, 267, 729 N.E.2d 854, 857 (3d Dist. 2000).
Comity is the principle under which courts will give effect to the decisions of a court of
another jurisdiction, not as a matter of obligation but as a matter of deference and respect.
See
Environmental Site Developers, PCB 96-180, PCB 97-11 (citing
Black’s Law Dictionary
, 6th
Ed. (1990)). USEPA may determine whether Midwest’s claimed information includes “emission
data” under the federal Clean Air Act and USEPA regulations. The Act requires that such
7
“emission data” be made publicly available, regardless of whether the information constitutes a
trade secret.
See
415 ILCS 5/7(c) (2004);
see also
Classic Finishing Co., Inc. v. IEPA, PCB 84-
174 (Feb. 7, 1985). A stay diminishes the opportunity for potentially conflicting determinations.
There has been no allegation of vexation or harassment in this case, but Midwest does
contend that staying this appeal may avoid a wasteful multiplicity of litigation. Both parties rely
on the Board’s procedural rule definition of “duplicative.” Section 101.202 of the procedural
rules defines “duplicative” as follows: “the matter is identical or substantially similar to one
brought before the Board or another forum.” 35 Ill. Adm. Code 101.202.
3
USEPA has made a
preliminary determination on confidentiality under 40 C.F.R. § 2.204(d). In turn, USEPA has
given Midwest the opportunity to submit supporting documentation under 40 C.F.R. § 2.204(e).
USEPA is presently making a final confidentiality determination under 40 C.F.R. § 2.205. Final
determinations are made by the “EPA legal office,” meaning the Office of General Counsel or
the Office of Regional Counsel.
See
40 C.F.R. §§ 2.201(n), 2.205(a). A final determination
denying a business confidentiality claim may be subject to judicial review under the federal
Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 7, Title 5, United States Code).
See
40 C.F.R. §
2.205(f)(2).
The information claimed by Midwest at the federal and State levels to be protected from
disclosure is identical. The potentially applicable legal standards for each proceeding are also
similar if not the same.
See
40 C.F.R. § 2.201(e) (reasons of business confidentiality include
trade secrecy), 2.301 (emission data), 2.208 (criteria for confidentiality determination); 35 Ill.
Adm. Code 101.202 (trade secret), 130.110 (emission data), 130.208 (standards for trade secret
determination). In these respects, the Board finds that the pending federal process is
“substantially similar” to PCB 04-185. A stay of the latter may avoid multiplicity and the
potential for unnecessarily expending the resources of the Board and those before it.
Res judicata
is the legal doctrine providing that “once a cause of action has been
adjudicated by a court of competent jurisdiction, it cannot be retried again between the same
parties or their privies in a new proceeding.” Burke v. Village of Glenview
,
257 Ill. App.3d 63,
69, 628 N.E.2d 465, 469 (1st Dist. 1993). Midwest does not assert that USEPA’s final
confidentiality determination will necessarily have
res judicata
effect in this Board proceeding,
but both parties agree that USEPA’s determination would constitute persuasive authority.
Resolution of the federal matter may or may not address
all
of the like grounds at issue in PCB
04-185 (
e.g.
, emission data). IEPA does not dispute, however, that public release by USEPA of
the documents at issue may render this appeal before the Board moot.
See
People v. Saint-
Gobain Containers, Inc., PCB 03-22 (Dec. 15, 2005) (granting People’s motion to stay
enforcement action due to federal initiative, the resolution of which, according to the People, “in
3
The term “duplicative” is not used in the Act’s provisions concerning trade secrets. Rather, the
Act employs the term, for example, in the context of citizen enforcement complaints and third-
party NPDES permit petitions for review. Specifically, in deciding whether to accept for hearing
such complaints and petitions, the Board determines whether they are, among other things,
“duplicative.”
See
415 ILCS 5/31(d)(1), 40(e)(3) (2004). Though technically not applicable
here, the Board’s definition of “duplicative” is nevertheless useful in evaluating Midwest’s
motion for stay.
8
all probability . . . will also resolve and render technical and legal issues in the instant case
moot.”).
The Board is mindful of the strong policy interest, evidenced in the Act, favoring public
disclosure of environmental compliance information, particularly emission data.
See
415 ILCS
5/7(b)-(d) (2004). The risk of prejudice to IEPA from a stay of PCB 04-185 would be greatly
diminished, however, by limiting the duration of the stay to a date-certain in the near future,
rather than simply granting a stay “until resolution of the federal process” as Midwest requests.
The USEPA process under 40 C.F.R. Part 2, Subpart B does not, on it face, include a hearing.
USEPA may produce “final agency action” at a faster pace than PCB 04-185, which has not yet
begun discovery. Based on Midwest’s most recent status report, a USEPA final determination
on confidentiality is anticipated in three months. Under these circumstances, and considering all
of the relevant factors, the Board finds a stay of 120 days is appropriate, unless the Board by
order ends the stay sooner. To that extent, the Board grants Midwest’s motion for stay.
During the stay, if USEPA issues a final confidentiality determination, Midwest must
promptly file a copy of USEPA’s determination with the Board. The basis for USEPA’s
determination may then be known and inform the Board’s own deliberations on analogous
issues.
See
Duo Fast Corporation Trade Secret Determination, PCB 87-4 (Mar. 5, 1987)
(looking to federal case law on and USEPA definition of “emission data”); Outboard Marine
Corp. v. IEPA, PCB 84-26 (June 20, 1984) (looking to federal FOIA). This would be so even if
judicial review of USEPA’s determination is sought. If USEPA’s final determination is not
forthcoming during the four-month stay, any request by Midwest to extend the stay must be
accompanied by a report on the status of the USEPA process.
CONCLUSION
The Board grants Midwest’s motion to stay this trade secret appeal in part. Specifically,
PCB 04-185 is stayed for 120 days (
i.e.
, until August 4, 2006), unless the Board issues an order
terminating the stay earlier. To ensure compliance with the Board’s deadline for deciding this
appeal, the Board will terminate the stay as needed to allow time for hearing and a final decision.
If, during the stay, USEPA issues a final confidentiality determination concerning Midwest’s
claimed information, Midwest must promptly file with the Board a copy of USEPA’s
determination. As necessary, Midwest may make the filing consistent with the procedures of 35
Ill. Adm. Code 130 for protecting information from disclosure. Any request by Midwest to
extend the stay must be directed to the Board and include a status report and, as appropriate, a
waiver of the Board’s decision deadline.
See
35 Ill. Adm. Code 101.514.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
9
I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control Board, certify that the Board
adopted the above order on April 6, 2006, by a vote of 4-0.
Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board