ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    November
    6,
    1975
    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,
    )
    Complainant,
    v.
    NORTH SHORE SANITARY DISTRICT,
    )
    )
    Respondent.
    CITY OF HIGHLAND PARK,
    )
    PCB 74-223
    PCB 74—229
    Complainant,
    )
    (Consolidated)
    v.
    NORTH SHORE SANITARY DISTRICT,
    Respondent.
    CONCURRING OPINION
    (by Mr. Dumelle) ~
    I concur in the findings of the Board Opinion that the
    North Shore Sanitary District has violated Section 9(a)
    of
    the Act.
    I would have assessed a penalty of at least a
    $1,000 for these violations for as the Board Opinion states
    Respondent has presented no evidence
    to show that it could not have prevented
    the odors testified to in this case.
    Indeed,
    based on the log sheets submitted
    as Exhibits by Respondent,
    it is difficult
    to find that Respondent has been seriously
    attempting to deal with the odor problem
    (p. 16).
    It seems
    to me that a penalty ought to have been assessed
    to show both the District and other sewage treatment plant
    authorities that a heavy responsibility is concomitant with
    19— 213

    —2—
    the legal authority to operate a waste treatment plant.
    The
    record is quite clear that residents lives were unreasonably
    interfered with by these odors.
    Secondly, the Opinion in some instances
    (April 20,
    1974;
    June 16,
    1974;
    June
    18,
    1974; June
    21,
    1974; June 23,
    1974; and
    July
    4,
    1974) does not make a finding of odors being caused by
    the Clavey Road plant.
    In most cases, this seems
    to be because
    of the lack of corroboration by police reports.
    My own feeling
    is that the witness himself is enough.
    Many of the Board cases
    of the past have had witnesses testify in odor cases without
    corroboration.
    Thus,
    to the extent that these dates were not
    found as violations because of the lack of corroboration
    I would
    feel that this injects
    a new standard of proof into Board pro-
    ceedings.
    And police reports,
    I may add,
    are not always the most
    reliable, especially in non—criminal events.
    In conclusion,
    the Board Opinion makes the distinction between
    short term odors and long term solutions
    (p.
    18).
    I would point
    out that the
    “short term odors” by whatever name they are called
    did unreasonably disrupt peoples lives and sleep and the use of
    their property and could have been avoided or mitigated with better
    care.
    I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, herebX certify the above Concurring Opinion was submitted
    on the
    ~
    day of November,
    1975.
    Illinois Pollution C
    ol Board
    19— 214

    Back to top