ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
September 18,
1975
VILLAGE OF ROCKTON,
)
Pr~titioner,
vs.
)
PCB 75—210
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
Respondent.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr.
Henss):
Village of P~cktonseeks
a variance from Rule 202(b) (1)
(permits) of the Illinois Solid Waste Rules and Regulations.
Relief
is sought in order that the Village might operate its
landfill site
8 hours per week from April through October of
each year “without the necessity of obtaining an operating
permit”, or might obtain a permit”without the necessity of
filling out all the information requested in the application
for an operating permit”.
The municipally owned disposal site is located east of
Rockton
in Winnebago County,
Illinois.
According to records
of the Illinois Sthte Geological Survey,
the site is in an
area of abandoned gravel pits and was apparently a gravel pit
at one time.
Both the glacial drift and the underlying bedroc.’~
in the area consist predominately of permeable materials and
are used as sources of ground water.
Five producing water wells
are located within 1/2 mile of this disposal site.
The Illinois
State Geological Survey states thatground water movement would
be downward
a4ld to the South into the Rock River.
Petitioner submitted an incomplete permit application to
the Agency
in April
1974.
Materials to be disposed of included
about 1,000 lbs. per week of residential cans,
brush, grass,
papers and old furniture and oil cans, belts and paper from gas
stations.
This permit application was denied April
26, 1974.
In
addition to minor omissions, Petitioner was advised that Parts
III
(Site Characteristics),
IV
(Construction Plans and Specifications)
and V
(Operating Plan)
would have to be completed before the
application could be adequately reviewed.
A second permit appli-
cation was submitted in July 1974 with the only substantial change
being the signature cf an engineer.
This application was denied
18—556
—2—
on August 19,
1974.
No additional permit applications have
been submitted.
A-i enforcement case involving this facility
is pending before the Board
(See:
PCB 75-158).
The only reason given for failure
to complete the permit
application
is that Petitioner believes the cost of obtaining
the required informaLion is an “unncessary expense”.
Village
Engineer Richard
iohnson estimates that the cost of obtaining
the permit will ke about $4,000.
Petitioner states
that it
will achieve compliance
“as soon as
a practical method of
completing the permit application can be worked out which would
not cost such an
exorbitant amount”.
According to the Village
of Rockton,
an Agency employee visited the site in December 1973
at which time
he
determined that the site was in general
compliance.
The Engineer noted that there was no permit and
there were no sanitary facilities or emergency communications
for personnel operating the landfill.
Petitioner states that
the landfill will be operated in compliance with other Regu-
lations and that its only problem is failure
to have an
operating permit.
The Agency b2lieves Petitioner’s cost estimate is excessive
considering that Petitioner now seeks
to dispose of landscape
waste only.
Since landscape wastes have a lower potential for
pollution,
a permit application for disposal of such wastes
“does not require as
riluch detailed information and site planning
as that required for the review of a permit for
a site disposing
of general
refuse or hazardous wastes”.
In the past,
the site
has not been limited solely to disposal of landscape waste.
Neither permit application sought to limit acceptance to land-
scape waste.
Pending the outcome of the variance and enforcement cases
Petitioner has ceased using the disposal site.
According to the
Agency this indicates that alternative means for disposal are
available.
Since Petitioner has not shown why landscape waste
could not be collected and disposed of along with other Village
refuse and since Petitioner has never sought a permit limited
to disposal of landsc~.pewaste,
the Agency claims that arbitrary
or unreasonable hardship has not been demonstrated.
The Agency
recommends denial of this variance.
It is obvious
that Petitioner seeks
to operate the disposal
site as
a convenience to the Villagers.
However, the fact that
refuse other than landscape wastes has been deposited at
a site
underlaid by permeable materials could jeopardize the health,
welfare and physical property of persons near this site.
The Board finds that the suitability of this site has not
been established.
Also,
the record does not contain any sub—
stantiatjon of the cost estimate for completing the permit
application.
In addition, Petitioner has not shown why these
18—557
—3—
wastes could not be properly disposed of at the site now
accepting other Village refuse or at other nearby Agency
approved sites.
Our review of the two permit applications confirms
the
Agency claim that Petitioner has never submitted
a permit
application limited solely to the disposal of landscape waste.
It
is entirely possible that a meeting between Village officials
and the Agency could simplify or reduce the amount of detailed
information requirc~dfor issuance of an operating permit.
Petitioner has apparently not made such an effort since the
last permit application was denied.
The overwhelming concern, however,
is the potential for
contamination of ground water supplies
in this area.
Permit
requirements for detailed information about this potential
cannot be disposed of simply because the site is
a convenience
to the people of Rockton or because of an unproven cost
estimate.
Petitioner’s plan to wait until it doesntt cost so
much is not an acceptable compliance plan.
Accordingly,
this
Petition for Variance must be denied without prejudice.
This Opinion constitutes the findings of fact and
conclusions of law of the Illinois Pollution Control Board.
ORDER
It
is the Order of the Pollution Control Board that the
Variance Petition submitted by Village of Rockton be dismissed
without prejudice.
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, her~bycertify the aba e 0 inion and Order was ado~ted
the
j~ç”~\
day of
_________
1975 by a vote of
~1—p
18— 558