ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL
BOARD
April
3,
1980
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION
AGENC’,
C~mpiai
narit:,
v.
)
PCB 78—135
VILLAGE
OF PALOS
PARK,
a municipal corporation,
Respondent.
MR.
THOMAS
R.
CHIOLA, ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL, APPEARED ON
BEHALF
OF THE COMPLAINANT.
McCARTHY,
SCHEURICH,
flUFFY,
NIEDHART
AND
SNAKARD,
ATTORNEYS
AT
LAW
(MR.
THOMAS
J.
MONTGOMERY,
OF
COUNSEL),
APPEARED
ON
BEHALF
OF
THE
RESPONDENT.
0
P
t N
E ON
AN I)
OR D E R
01’,
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ii
This
matter
comes before
the
Board
on
the
May
10,
1978
Complaint
brought
by
the
Illinois
Environmental
Protection
Agency
(“Agency”).
Count
I of the Complaint alleged that the Village of Palos Park
(“Village”) did not submit the requisite progress report by
December
31,
1977 pertaining to the submission of a formal appli-
cation to the State
of Illinois for a Step
1 grant as required by
its NPDES Permit,
thereby violating its NPDES Permit; Rule 901 of
Chapter
3:
Water Pollution Control Regulations
(“Chapter 3”);
and Sections 12(a),
12(b), and 12(f)
of the Illinois Environmental
Protection Act (“Act”).
Count
II alleged that the Village did not
enact an ordinance which would prohibit the connection of
non-complying industrial or domestic wastes into the existing storm
or existing field tile sewer system within the municipality’s
boundary and did not submit
a copy
of
such
an ordinance to the
Agency
by the October
31, 1977 due date established
in the NPDES
Permit,
thereby violating its NPDES Permit; Rule 901 of Chapter 3;
and Sections 12(a),
12(b), and 12(f)
of the Act,
On December 20,
1978,
the parties filed
a Joint Motion for
Stay.
On January
4,
1979,
the Board granted the parties’ Motion
to
Stay
the
proceedings
for
60
days
while
settlement
negotiations
were
in progress.
On January
10,
1980,
the Board entered an Order
mandating that a hearing be held within 60 days.
On February
8,
1980,
a hearing was held and the parties filed their Stipulation
and Proposal for Settlement.
—2—
The Village of Palos Park is a small community which includes
about 1,000 homes.
Because the Village has no municipal sewage
treatment facility,
some of the homes
are connected to the
Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago’s system,
while
other residences discharge
their sewage into
“Cavitettes” or septic
tanks and ultimately into an unnamed ditch
tributary to the Calumet
Sag Channel.
The Respondent’s NPDES Permit No. 0039012 treats all the
individual discharges
from the “Cavitettes”
as one discharge point.
(See:
Exhibit A).
Agency review of the situation indicated that
the Village
failed to comply with the conditions imposed upon it,
(See:
Exhibit
B;
Stip.
3—4).
Although the Respondent neither admits
or denies the allegations specified in the Complaint, the Village
does state
it is currently in compliance.
(Stip.
5).
The proposed settlement agreement provides that the Respondent
agrees
to:
(1) cease and desist from all further violations;
(2) submit all future reports
as required in
its NPDES Permit in a
timely fashion;
(3) take
6 random water samples per month, have
the samples analyzed, and send the sample results and analyses to
the Agency;
and
(4) pay a stipulated penalty of $200.00*.
(Stip.
5—7).
Tn eva
mat:
i nq
ti~
is
en
forcement action and the proposed settle-
ment agreement,
the Board has taken
into consideration all
the facts
and circumstances in light of
the
specific criteria delineated in
Section 33(c)
of the
Act.
The Board
finds the stipulated agreement
acceptable under Procedural Rule 331 and Section 33(c)
of the Act,
The Board
finds that the Respondent has violated Rule
901 of
Chapter
3:
Water Pollution Control Regulations and Sections 12(a),
12(b),
and 12(f)
of the Act.
The stipulated penalty of $200.00 is
assessed against the Village of Palos Park,
*The ambiguous wording of paragraph 14 of the Stipulation seems
to
suggest that $1,800.00 of a prospective penalty has been suspended
by the parties.
As the Board has repeatedly noted, the imposition of
contingent or suspended penalties is unacceptable.
(See:
EPA
V.
Village of ~
PCB 79—3;
EPA v. Village of Millstadt,
PCB 78—132;
EPA v.
Sundale Sewer Corporation,
PCB 78—88 and PCB 78-225 Consoli-
dated;
EPA
V.
International Harvester Company,
PCB 75-12;
EPA
V.
Granite~Tty Steel, PCB 78—233).
Since the determination of the
appropriate penalty is, by statute, solely within the Board’s
purview, the Board interprets paragraph
14 to imply that only a
penalty of $200.00 has been agreed to by both parties and the
mention of the $1,800.00 figure is merely dicta.
—3—
This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact and
conclusions of law in this matter,
ORDER
It is the Order of the Illinois Pollution Control Board that:
1.
The Respondent, the Village of Palos Park, has violated
Rule 901 of Chapter
3:
Water Pollution Control Regulations and
Sections
12 (a),
12 (b), and 12 (f)
of the Illinois Environmental
Protection Act.
2.
Within 35 days of the date of this Order, the Respondent
shall, by certified check or money order payable to the State of
Illinois, pay the stipulated penalty of $200.00 which
is to be
sent
to:
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
Fiscal Services Division
2200 Churchill Road
Springfield,
Illinois
62706
3.
The Respondent shall comply with all the terms and conditions
of the Stipulation and Proposal for Settlement filed February
8,
1980,
which is incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein,
Chairman Dumelle and Mr. Goodman concur.
I,
Christan L.
Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, he~ebycertify that the above Opinion and Order were adopted
on the ~~day
of
~,
1980 by a vote of
,.?‘~0
Illinois Pollution
Board