ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
June
13,
1974
WILLIAM McKINLEY, JR.,
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 74-47
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Dr.
Odell)
The Petitioner, William McKinley,
Jr., filed a petition for a
sewer variance, which was received by the Illinois Pollution Control
Board
(Board)
on January 28,
1974.
The Board~sOrder of January 31,
1974, stated that the petition “is inadequate in that the location of
the lot for which
a sewer connection
is desired is not given.
Petitioner
also should state whether his connection,
if granted, would be to an
overloaded sewer.
Petitioner
is asked to review the Board~srecent
order in PCB 73-134,
North Shore Sanitary District v, EPA to determine
whether he can now secure a permit for connection after July 1,
1974.”
Additional information from the Petitioner was received by the
Board on March
5, 1974.
The Petitioner, his wife,
and three teenage
girls and one boy live in
a two-bedroom house at 2201 Argonne Drive,
North Chicago,
Illinois.
Petitioner alleges that this house is too small
for his family and “has created an undue
and mbst unbearable hardship~~”
To relieve this condition, Petitioner purchased a nearby 1~tat the
corner of Argonne and Sherman Drive in North Chicago,
Illinois, and plans
to build on it a larger home for his family. Petitioner seeks relief
from Order #7 of League of Women Voters v, North Shore Sanitary District,
PCB 70-7,
12,
13, and 14, to allow
a sewer connection for his proposed
new single-family home.
The sewer for this lot is not overloaded, but
the proposed connection is tributary to the North Chicago sewage treat~
ment plant of the North Shore Sanitary District
(NSSD).
A Recommendation was received from the Environmental Protection
Agency (Agency)
on March
6,
1974. Data submitted for 1973 by NSSD indicate
that the effluent biological oxygen demand and suspended solids concentra~
tion at the North Chicago treatment plant often fail to meet requirements
under Rule 404(b)
of Chapter
3, Water Pollution Regulations.
However,
the NSSD expects
to complete a retention pond at
the North Chicago treat-~
ment plant in the near future which will help prevent bypassing
of
sewage
flows during wet periods.
“All flow from the North Chicago plant
will be diverted to the improved Gurnee plant when scheduled improvements
are completed there.. .in May of 1975.”
On the basis of information
12—5G9
—2—
available on March
6, the Agency recommended denial of this request
for a variance.
Petitioner had not adequately established a case
for unreasonable hardship
nor explored other alternatives.
An Amended Petition for Variance was received from Mr. William
McKinley,
Jr.
on March 18,
1974.
The Amended Petition alleges additional
circumstances by which Petitioner attempts to show an arbitrary and
unreasonable
hardship.
Mrs. McKinley recently suffered a nervous break-
down forcing her to be hospitalized for several weeks and requiring her
to quit her
job,
Mr. McKinley was hospitalized for five months in 1963
for a heart condition and recently he had to remain
home from
work
for one month as a result of extreme heart palpitation.
Petitioner~s
doctor referred to the stresses of the family~scurrent living conditions
as contributing to his condition,
In addition
to
health problems,
Petitioner alleged facts pertaining to his present situation that prevent
him from seeking a home elsewhere and make it extremely difficult for
him to find acceptable alternatives,
Petitioner
is presently serving
as an elected member of the North Chicago School Board, thus he has an
interest in maintaining a North Chicago residence.
Petitioner~spresent
home is
so situated that it is impossible for him to construct an addition.
Petitioner claims that the real estate market in North Chicago is extremely
limited.
Mortgage companies are reluctant to write mortages for older
homes for more than seventeen or eighteen years, thus placing the pay-
ments beyond Petitioner~smeans,
The fact that Petitioner owns a lot
that may not presently be developed compounds his problems.
The capi.tal
investment ties up funds he might apply to purchasing other property
and the sewer ban in the area makes a sale of the property difficult if
not impossible.
Septic tanks are not permitted in North Chicago and
holding tanks provide an expensive temporary alternative that probably
cannot be justified in Petitioner~ssituation,
On April
30, 1974, the Agency filed an Amended Recommendation in
which they pointed out that the Amended Petition for Variance presented
much more evidence of unreasonable hardship experienced by the McKinley
family and that alternative solutions
to their housing problem had been
explored and rejected.
On the basis of fuller information supplied
by Petitioner, the Agency~sAmended Recommendation suggested that the
variance petition for William B. McKinley,
Jr. be granted.
The Board
concurs.
This opinion constitutes the Boardvs findings
of
fact
and
conclusions
of law.
ORDER
It is the Order of the Pollution Control Board
that a Variance
is
hereby granted from Or~der#7 of League of Women Voters
v.
North Shore
Sanitary District, PCB 7O~7,12,
13, and 14,
so that Mr. William McKinley,
12
510
—3—
may obtain a sewer connection permit for a proposed single—family
home on his
lot at Argonne and Sherman Drive in North Chicago,
Illinois.
I, Christan
L. Moffett,
Clerk
of the Illinois
Pollution Control Board,
herçby certify that
the above Opinion and Order was adopted on
the
J~3~”day
of
1974,
by a vote of ~
to
c~j~
~J~_~&
~
~stanL.Moff
clerk