Concerned Adjoining Owners v. Polution Control Board

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 2, 1997
Docket5-96-0244
StatusPublished

This text of Concerned Adjoining Owners v. Polution Control Board (Concerned Adjoining Owners v. Polution Control Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Concerned Adjoining Owners v. Polution Control Board, (Ill. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

Rule 23 Order filed

April 18, 1997;

Motion to publish granted

June 2, 1997.   NO. 5-96-0244

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

FIFTH DISTRICT

_________________________________________________________________

CONCERNED ADJOINING OWNERS,       )  Appeal from the   

a Concerned Citizen's Group,      )  Pollution Control Board.

and THOSE OPPOSED TO AREA         )

LANDFILLS (T.O.T.A.L.),           )

a Concerned Citizen's Group,      )

                                 )

    Petitioners-Appellants,      )

v.                                )  PCB Nos. 96-79 & 96-82

THE POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD,      )  

THE CITY OF SALEM, ROGER KINNEY,  )

City Manager of the City of Salem,)

and ROGER FRIEDRICKS,             )

    Respondents-Appellees.       )  

_________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE HOPKINS delivered the opinion of the court:   Petitioners, Concerned Adjoining Owners (CAO) and Those Opposed to Area Landfills (TOTAL) (referred to collectively as the objectors), appeal from a final order of the Pollution Control Board (Board), entered on March 7, 1996.  The Board affirmed a decision of the City of Salem granting site approval for an extension of an existing landfill (landfill No. 2) and for a new landfill (landfill No. 3), both of which are to be regional pollution-control facilities.  

On appeal, both CAO and TOTAL argue that this court should reverse the decision granting site approval because the hearing before the Salem city council and mayor (hereinafter referred to collectively as the council) was fundamentally unfair.  The objectors also contend that the council's grant of site approval is against the manifest weight of the evidence in that the applicant for the site permit, Roger Kinney, the Salem city manager, did not meet his burden of proof in that hearing.  Additionally, TOTAL argues that the council did not have jurisdiction to rule on the site application, and CAO argues that the Board improperly refused to consider its position.  For reasons we will more fully explain, we affirm.

I. FACTS

In July 1995, four days of hearings were held on Kinney's application for site approval for the regional pollution-control facilities.  Prior to the hearing, in 1994, Salem purchased 40 acres outside of the city limits for the proposed landfill No. 3.  After purchasing the land, the City annexed the 40 acres into the city limits.  Once the land was within the city limits, Salem was responsible for making the decision regarding site-approval.  415 ILCS 5/39.2(a) (West 1992).  If the property had not been annexed into Salem, the Marion County Board would have been responsible for hearing the site-approval application.  The application requested that both facilities be allowed to accept solid, nonhazardous waste from the surrounding, 16-county area.  At the time of the hearings, the existing landfills accepted waste only from Salem.

At the beginning of the hearings on the application for site approval, attorneys for the objectors argued that the council was biased, in that it had already expended large sums of tax money in contemplation of the new regional pollution-control facility, and the council was thereby prejudiced in favor of granting site approval.  The objectors argued that the hearing would be fundamentally unfair if the site-approval decision was to be made by the same body that had already purchased 40 acres of land for $120,000 for that very purpose.  The hearing officer, Christine Zeman, did not rule on the unfairness issue but stated that the objectors had preserved their fundamental fairness objection for the record, so that the Board could take it up if the site approval was granted.

The applicant, Kinney, presented evidence concerning the criteria for site approval, listed in section 39.2 of the Environmental Protection Act (the Act) (415 ILCS 5/39.2(a)(i)-(ix) (West 1992)).  To summarize the voluminous record, the applicant presented testimony in support of all of the relevant section 39.2 criteria:

"(i) the facility is necessary to accommodate the waste needs of the area it is intended to serve;

(ii) the facility is so designed, located and proposed to be operated that the public health, safety and welfare will be protected;

(iii) the facility is located so as to minimize incompatibility with the character of the surrounding area and to minimize the effect on the value of the surrounding property;

***

(v) the plan of operations for the facility is designed to minimize the danger to the surrounding area from fire, spills, or other operational accidents;

(vi) the traffic patterns to or from the facility are so designed as to minimize the impact on existing traffic flows;

(viii) if the facility is to be located in a county where the county board has adopted a solid waste management plan ***, the facility is consistent with that plan."  415 ILCS 5/39.2 (West 1992).

The objectors did not refute criteria four, that the facility will be located outside the 100-year flood plain.

The procedure followed in the hearing was adopted by the city council prior to the hearing.  The applicant presented his evidence and witnesses, the objectors were allowed to cross-examine each witness, then the city council was allowed to ask questions.  If the applicant wanted to ask additional questions, his attorney was allowed to do so in redirect examination after the city council members finished their questions.  After redirect, the objectors were again allowed to cross-examine the witness, but only upon the questions asked in redirect, not the questions asked by the council members.  

The objectors argued that the procedure was unfair, that they should have been allowed to cross-examine each witness based upon not only the questions asked by the applicant but also the questions asked by the council.  The hearing officer overruled their objection.

TOTAL presented nine witnesses in opposition to the site application.  Gary Hall, a certified real estate appraiser, testified that the opinions given by the applicant's experts concerning the potential effect on the surrounding land values were unreliable and incomplete.  Hall admitted that he was not hired to give an opinion on whether the facility will be compatible with the surrounding area.  John Wright, a licensed real estate appraiser, testified that he agreed with Hall's testimony.  Jeff Dunahee, the owner of a realty company but not a certified real estate appraiser, testified that it was his opinion, based upon common sense, that the property surrounding the proposed landfills would decrease in value if the site proposal were granted.

Charles Norris, a hydrogeologist, testified that leachate was almost certainly leaving the landfill No. 2 area and discharging into a nearby creek or the surrounding drinking water wells.  Norris urged the council to investigate the possible leachate problem before granting site approval.

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