A hearing may be postponed or continued for due cause by the Hearing Officer upon his or her own motion or upon the motion of a party to the hearing. A motion filed by a party to the hearing shall set forth facts justifying the request and attesting that the request for continuance is not for the purpose of delay. Except in the case of an emergency, motions requesting postponement or continuance shall be made in writing and shall be received by all parties to the hearing at least 2 business days prior to the scheduled hearing date. The Hearing Officer shall grant a motion requesting postponement or continuance only upon the most substantial of grounds and the public hearing is to be rescheduled as quickly as possible, taking into consideration that the Department shall have no more than 60 days from the date it receives the permit application to approve or reject the permit application.
If any party, after making a proper request for public hearing, fails to appear at the hearing, absent an emergency situation beyond the party's control, that party's request for public hearing shall be dismissed. If other proper requests for public hearing remain, the public hearing will proceed with any remaining parties. If the party failing to appear is the applicant, the hearing may proceed, at the election of the requestors, for the testimony, evidence or statements that persons present wish to adduce, but absent an emergency situation beyond the applicant's control, the Department will reject the permit application. If the applicant fails to appear but sends a satisfactory written explanation to the Hearing Officer explaining why emergency circumstances out of the applicant's control existed, and the applicant waives the 60 day deadline set forth in Section 245.230(e), the Hearing Officer shall reschedule the public hearing. In such an event, the applicant shall be responsible for payment of all the costs associated with the first hearing.
The Hearing Officer shall first determine and rule on whether each request for hearing satisfies the requirements of subsection (a)(5), giving due consideration to the sophistication of the petitioner and whether the petitioner is represented by counsel. If there are also petitions to participate, the Hearing Officer shall determine whether each petition to participate satisfies the requirements of subsection (a)(5). Noticeprovided to any person, government agency, or county pursuant to 245.240 or Section 245.250shall not constitute standing for purposes of requesting a public hearing (Section 1-40(e) of the Act). The Hearing Officer shall base this ruling on the standards set forth in subsection (a)(5). Any Hearing Officer decision denying participation to any party under this subsection (g)(7) shall be a final administrative decision by the Department and subject to judicial review under the Administrative Review Law and rules promulgated under that Law.
After ruling on participation, the following shall be addressed prior to receiving evidence at the discretion of the Hearing Officer:
The Illinois Rules of Evidence shall generally apply to these proceedings. However, evidence not admissible under those rules of evidence may be admitted, except when precluded by statute, if it is of a type commonly relied upon by reasonable, prudent persons in the conduct of their affairs. The Hearing Officer shall rule on the admissibility of evidence.
Official notice may be taken of any material fact not appearing in evidence in the record if the circuit courts of this State could take judicial notice of that fact. In addition, notice may be taken of generally recognized technical or scientific facts within the Department's specialized knowledge.
The parties requesting the public hearing shall present their case first. If there are parties that petitioned to participate in the hearing, they will then present their case. The Hearing Officer will determine whether the Department or the applicant presents additional evidence and in what order. The Hearing Officer will determine whether to allow rebuttal evidence. All witnesses are subject to cross-examination. The Hearing Officer may allow opening statements and closing arguments.
The Hearing Officer may require or allow parties to submit written briefs to the Hearing Officer within such time as the Hearing Officer shall determine, taking into consideration that the Department shall have no more than 60 days from the date it receives the permit application to approve or reject the permit application.
A complete record of the public hearings and all testimony shall be made by the Department and recorded stenographically or electronically (Section 1-50(c) of the Act). Any person testifying shall be required to do so under oath.
Ill. Admin. Code tit. 62, § 245.270