Illini Environmental, Inc. v. The Environmental Protection Agency

2014 IL App (5th) 130244
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 3, 2014
Docket5-13-0244
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2014 IL App (5th) 130244 (Illini Environmental, Inc. v. The Environmental Protection Agency) 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.

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Illini Environmental, Inc. v. The Environmental Protection Agency, 2014 IL App (5th) 130244 (Ill. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Rule 23 order filed 2014 IL App (5th) 130244 August 11, 2014; Motion to publish granted NO. 5-13-0244 October 3, 2014. IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

FIFTH DISTRICT ________________________________________________________________________

ILLINI ENVIRONMENTAL, INC., ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellant, ) St. Clair County. ) v. ) No. 11-MR-178 ) THE ENVIRONMENTAL ) PROTECTION AGENCY, ) Honorable ) Richard A. Aguirre, Defendant-Appellee. ) Judge, presiding. ________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE CHAPMAN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Welch and Justice Cates concurred in the judgment and opinion.

ORDER

¶1 Illini Environmental, Inc. (Illini), appeals from the trial court's May 6, 2013, order

denying its motion for summary judgment. On appeal, Illini argues that dismissal of an

enforcement action filed by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (EPA or

Agency) against Illini was res judicata on certain issues of fact in Illini's declaratory

judgment action. Illini claims that the EPA accepted its proffered "Compliance

Commitment Agreement" and therefore cannot pursue enforcement on one of the two

violation notices. Illini also argues that the trial court erred in finding that Illini was

responsible for determining whether waste was hazardous. Illini further argues that the 1 trial court erred in concluding that Illini violated Illinois law in listing itself as a generator

of waste that it transported from another company to an Illinois landfill. Finally, Illini

argues that the trial court was incorrect in concluding that the Illinois EPA complied with

applicable law when it posted information on its website about Illini's violations. We

affirm.

¶2 FACTS

¶3 Illini is an Illinois corporation based in Caseyville. Illini operates a solid waste

management facility, but does not have EPA permission to receive or treat hazardous

waste.

¶4 2010 Violation–SG Solutions

¶5 In early May 2010, an Illini vehicle went to Indiana to pick up waste from SG

Solutions. SG Solutions previously tested the waste and learned that it

contained hazardous levels of arsenic and chromium. SG Solutions properly labeled the

drums as containing hazardous waste. When the Illini driver arrived, he delivered an

Illini-generated manifest for these drums of waste. The manifest indicated that the waste

Illini was to transport was nonhazardous. The Illini driver changed the identification

labels on the drums to nonhazardous to match the manifest and then obtained the

signature of an SG Solutions agent on Illini's manifest. Illini transported the waste to its

Caseyville facility and then processed the waste by mixing it with other waste to create a

solid. Illini shipped the new solidified waste to an Illinois landfill. The records that went

with the solidified waste to the landfill indicated that the waste was not special or

hazardous. 2 ¶6 Sometime later, SG Solutions reported to the EPA that Illini's documentation

mislabeled the waste it picked up as nonhazardous. SG Solutions reanalyzed the waste

samples and reached the same conclusion it had previously reached that the waste was

hazardous. Thereafter, in September 2010, the EPA issued a notice of violation (Notice

01282) to Illini indicating that Illini violated several Illinois Pollution Control Board

(Board) regulations and a condition of its permit. Additionally, the EPA alleged that

Illini violated several subsections of section 21 of the Environmental Protection Act (Act)

by treating hazardous waste without a permit to do so. 415 ILCS 5/21(d), (e), (f) (West

2008). The EPA asked Illini to cease accepting and treating hazardous waste.

¶7 The EPA issued a separate notice to SG Solutions for its involvement.

¶8 Illini responded and denied that it had violated the Act or the Board regulations,

and denied that the waste was hazardous. Illini requested a meeting to address Notice

01282. The EPA agreed to the meeting, explaining that Illini must provide a written

response following the meeting and propose a "Compliance Commitment Agreement"

(CCA) containing a timeline for achieving compliance. The EPA held the meeting, and

afterwards Illini sent a letter in November 2010 denying all violations. In the letter, Illini

stated that it was going to purchase a computer system for cross-checking customer waste

profiles against shipment manifests in order to mitigate the chance for

miscommunication. The EPA treated Illini's letter as its CCA and sent its response. In

this letter, the EPA mistakenly identified the company that submitted the proposed CCA

as SG Solutions instead of Illini. The EPA rejected the proposed CCA. Acknowledging

3 its mistake, the EPA claims that despite the misnomer, its rejection operated as a rejection

of Illini's November 2010 CCA.

¶9 On March 1, 2011, the EPA sent Illini a notice of its intent to pursue legal action.

¶ 10 2011 Violation–Tri-Rinse

¶ 11 In December 2010, Illini picked up a load of liquid waste from a Missouri facility,

Tri-Rinse, and brought it back into Illinois for disposal in Jackson County. Upon

accepting the load of waste, Illini terminated the manifest offered by Tri-Rinse and

created a substitute one that identified Illini–not Tri-Rinse–as the generator of the waste.

After leaving the liquid waste at the Jackson County, Illinois, facility for solidification

and disposal, an apparent chemical reaction occurred, resulting in the evacuation of

several homes and hospitalization of some of the residents.

¶ 12 The EPA then issued a notice of violation to Illini (Notice 01008) informing Illini

that it violated administration regulations by not identifying the actual generator of the

waste on the manifest. The EPA also made written demand to Illini that it correctly

identify the generator of any waste Illini picks up for disposal. Specifically, the EPA

directed Illini to list itself as the generator only if Illini generated the waste in its

Caseyville facility. The EPA rejected Illini's CCA. Illini refused to meet with the EPA

to discuss this violation. The EPA notified Illini that it intended to pursue legal action.

¶ 13 Court Proceedings

¶ 14 Declaratory Judgment Action

¶ 15 Illini filed its declaratory judgment suit against the EPA in 2011. The court

granted the EPA's motion to dismiss. Illini refiled the petition. The amended petition 4 asked the court for declarations about each of the two notices of violation, and about the

EPA's reporting of each notice on its website. Because the three counts of the complaint

are the foundations of Illini's summary judgment motion, we outline each.

¶ 16 Count I sought a declaration on a general basis that applicable administrative

regulations do not place the responsibility for the correctness of the manifests on the

entity transporting the waste. Specifically, Illini asked the court to declare that because

Illini did not generate the SG Solutions waste it picked up for transport in Indiana, Illini

bore no responsibility to ensure that the manifest was correct, and therefore Illini violated

no regulations in its handling of the waste. Alternatively, Illini asked the court to declare

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