ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
April
8,
1976
HYON WASTE MANAGEMENT SERVICES, INC.,
)
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 75—457
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
Mr. George BullWinkel, Attorney, appeared for the Petitioner;
Mr. John Bernbom, Attorney, appeared for the Respondent.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr.
Zeitlin):
This matter is before the Board on a Permit Appeal filed by
Petitioner Hyon Waste Management Services,
Inc.
(Hyon)
on
December 1,
1975.
The Agency’s Response and Permit Record were
filed on January
6,
1976.
Hearings were held in the matter on
January
26 and 27,
1976,
in Chicago.
An Interim Order of the Board entered December 11,
1976,
specifically denied Hyon’s Motion to Consolidate this matter with
PCB 75-413, another case concerning denial of permit applications
for Hyon facilities by the Environmental Protection Agency
(Agency).
PCB 75-413, decided separately today,
concerns the denial of permits
by the Agency concerning air emissions from Hyon’s Chicago facility;
this case concerns the denial of permits under Ch.
3: Water Pollution.
Nonetheless,
the hearings held on January 26 and 27 considered both
cases jointly.
This case,
like PCB 75-413,
is decided on that combined
Record.
Hyon characterizes its Chicago facility as an “integrated
treatment facility for industrial wastes,”
(R..6).
In addition to
the incinerator described in PCB 75-413, which is used primarily
to burn liquid wastes,
the facility contains several other processes
for the treatment of liquid wastes.
These include biobeds, which
serve
to biodegrade some materials,
an activated sludge system with
an attendant clarifier, oxidation ponds,
settling ponds, acid treating
beds and other treatment equipment.
Attendant facilities include
a receiving station,
a tank farm,
a drum handling station,
storage
for neutralized sludge,
an acid receiving basin,
a laboratory and
various other storage areas and related equipment,
(R.
20-21).
The facility itself
is adjacent to Lake Calumet on Chicago’s
south side.
A large part of its area is composed of two long
earth-fill peninsulas
jutting into the lake.
It
is located in a
largely industrial area, and is surrounded by various heavy industrial
plants, bulk terminals and the
like,
(id.~).
21
—85
—2—
Hyon’s facility treated
a total of approximately
19 million
gallons of waste
in 1975.
Although evaporation accounts for a
considerable water loss,
and some liquids are incinerated,
a large
amount of water nevertheless remains,
and is discharged after treat-
ment to sewers of the Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater
Chicago
(MSD),
(R,35-36),
Discharges to the MSD began in January,
1975,
(R.56), and amount to approximately 40,000 gallons per day,
(R.57).
The permit application in question in this case was received
by the Agency on September
2, 1975,
(EPA Ex.
12).
The application
was rejected by the Agency on November 24,
1975,
for the following
reasons,
(Hyon Ex,
12):
“1.
Samples taken
.
.
.
on May 27,
1975 and
October 16,
1975 of your discharge tributary to
the Metropolitan Sanitary District
.
.
.
revealed
concentrations of cyanide at 8.5 mg/i and 5.5 mg/l,
respectively.
The concentration of cyanide in the
discharge to a public sewer system must comply with
Rule 703 of the Illinois Pollution Control Board
Rules and Regulations, Chapter
3
setting
a standard
of 0.025 mg/lI.
2.
Test results from the monitoring wells have
not been reported to this Agency as required by
SPECIAL CONDITION as specified in the last
2 years
operating permits for all
facilities except the
Receiving Station, Activated Sludge System and Force
Main and Lift Station.”
As was the case with PCB 75—413, Hyon bases its permit denial
on two grounds:
1.
The Agency’s permit denial for the above
reasons was improper; and,
2.
Hyon’s facility needs no permit under
Rule 953 of Chapter
3: Water Pollution.
We shall dispose of the latter of these contentions first.
Hyon bases
its argument that no permit is needed for its water-
related facilities
on the grounds that it is not operating so as
to constitute a “treatment works,” “wastewater source” or “pretreat-
ment works.”
Hyon further argues,
however, that even if it is operating
a
pretreatment works,
it should still
be exempt from the permit require-
ment by reason of the exemption in Rule 953(d).
Hyon claims that
it meets all three of the requirements of that Rule,
and is therefore
eligible for the exemption.
21—86
—3—
Most of Hyon~sarguments
in this regard need not be examined
closely, since we find that Hyon is not entitled to an exemption
under Rule 953(d).
Part
(1)
of Ru1e~3(d) bars from the exemption
any pretreatment works which will,
(1)
Discharge toxic pollutants,
as defined in
Section 502(13)
of the FWPCA
Federal
Water
Pollution Control Act as amended by Public
Law 92—500,
86 Stat.
816, on October 18,
19723,
or pollutants which may interfere with the
treatment process into the receiving treatment
works.
Hyon’s argument in this regard is only that it will not discharge
toxic pollutants “in toxic amounts”
(Hyon Brief,
p.
19, citing
R.
58,
108).
Neither Rule 953(d) (1)
nor the FWPCA, however,
limit
the term “toxic pollutant,”
as does Hyon,
with the qualification,
uin toxic amounts.”
It is clear from the record that Hyon treats
toxic industrial wastes and is
indeed capable of discharging toxic
pollutants to MSI) sewers,
(e.g.,
R.
62-72,
200, EPA Ex.
6,
7).
Hyon does not seriously dispute the fact that cyanide,
a toxic
pollutant, has been found in its effluent to the MSD.
Nor are we convinced that Hyon’s arguments that
“in toxic
amounts”
is
a defensible addition to our Regulation by reason of
MSD sewer discharge limitations or historic “de minimus” effects
of Hyon’s discharges,
(e.g.,
R,
87, 109-110).
The permit system
is designed to assure just such de minimus effects, and MSD’s
limitations have no relevance to the issue.
Having decided that Hyon’s pretreatment facilities are indeed
subject to a permit requirement, we next decide whether its appli-
cation for such permit was properly denied by the Agency.
Testimony by the Agency witness who actually reviewed and denied
Hyon’s permit application,
CR. 398,
399), indicated that his actions
were,
at least in part,
based on misinformation and improper reasoning
as regards what does or does not constitute
a sufficient lack of
information on which
to base a permit denial.
In particular,
that
witness made an erroneous interpretation of the Act in stating that
a failure to comply with conditions in previous Agency-issued permits
constitutes sufficient grounds for a permit denial.
Section 12(a)
of the Act does not,
as he stated, empower the Agency to so act,
unless such failure to comply with permit conditions does itself
lead to a lack of information or an indication of violation of
substantive provisions of the Act or our Regulations.
21—87
—4—
As regards Hyonts failure to supply test well data,
testimony
indicated that the wells actually had been drilled by Hyon
-—
twice.
In an effort to comply with prior permit conditions,
Hyon first
drilled wells in 1974,
(H. 183).
However,
those wells proved
unsatisfactory, and Hyon constructed new wells in 1975, the first
reports from which were submitted to the Agency on November 12,
1975,
the same date as the Agericy~spermit denial
in this case.
(The Agency
chose
to characterize that data as
a new permit application, which
it also rejected.)
The record indicates that Hyon took all reasonable
steps to build and sample the required wells
in a manner acceptable
to the Agency and the Illinois State Geological Survey, which helped
to plan the wells,
CR. 184-190).
The Agency’s judgement on data
which was submitted was questionable:
One Agency witness, who denied
the permit application, was unable to state,
or even discuss,
the
meaning of dry wells where those wells were constructed to monitor
leachate migration,
(H.
414),
However, despite these errors, which would normally require
reversal of the permit denial,
the Agency must nonetheless be upheld
in this case.
Despite the Agency’s failure to timely inform Hyon of
the cyanide sampling results, and the Agency’s apparent lack of concern
over those samples
(H.
392-393), and considerable testimony to the
effect that those cyanide concentrations are probably not harmful,
(e.g.,
394,
110,
53,
76,
409—410,
423), those samples do indicate a
violation
of
our Regulations.
Letters from Hyon to th~Agencyindicate
that Hyon was aware of its cyanide discharges,
(Hyon Ex.
13,
14), and
also indicate that
I-lyon felt that it was not subject to the 0.025
mg/l limitation for cyanide sewer discharges in Rule 703.
Hyon felt
instead that
it
was subject only to the limitation of 10.0 mg/i set
by the MSD.
To this extent, Hyon was wrong and the Agency’s permit
denial was correct.
Hyon~sBrief correctly points out that the limitation in Rule
703
is currently under review by the Board.
R 74-15,
-16, “CYANIDE”
(pending).
That fact, however, cannot be construed as sufficient
cause for the Agency to ignore the existing Regulation.
Where Agency
sampling indicated that the cyanide limit was being exceeded,
it was
required, barring
a Variance,
to reject Hyon’s permit.
This matter
would m6re properly be raised by Hyon in a Variance proceeding.
Hyoni also attempted to use the testimony of an MSD witness to
show that the Agency was not rejecting permit applications by others
for violation of the cyanide standard.
We find that this
is irrele-
vant to the present case.
The Agency is not empowered to make such
allowances for any discharger.
In light of our decision on cyanide
discharges,
above, we need give further consideration to neither
this nor any other of Hyon’s contentions.
21
—88
—5—
This Opinion constitutes the findings of fact and conclusions
of law of the Board
in this matter.
ORDER
IT IS THE ORDER OF THE POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD that the matter
in PCB 75-457 be dismissed.
Mr. Jacob Dumelle and Mr.
James Young abstained.
I, Christan L. Moffett,
Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, he~ebycertify the above Opinion and Order were
adopted on the ~
‘
day of
_______
,
1976, by a vote of
3-o
Christan L. Mo~fet,/Merk
Illinois Pollution ~6Mrol
Board
21—89