ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL
    BOARD
    December 20, 1973
    MIDWEST FREIGHT CAR COMPANY,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    )
    PCB
    73—415
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
    Respondent.
    OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (by
    Mr.
    Henss)
    Petitioner operates
    a railroad freight car repair and
    remodeling business in Clinton,
    Illinois and contracted
    to
    modify 320 refrigerator cars into boxcars for Missouri—
    Pacific Railway Company.
    In
    the
    modification program a signifi-
    cant amount of material was removed from the refrigerator cars.
    Some of this was waste and has already been disposed of, but
    the Company still has on hand 800 doors,
    4400 meat rails and 25
    car sets of insulation.
    Petitioner states that the insulation
    will be disposed of as refuse, but that the doors and meat rails
    contain recyclable material which can be salvaged.
    Petitioner proposes to salvage the steel by open burning
    the wood from the doors
    and meat rails.
    For this purpose Midwest
    requests a variance to allow open burning on its premises for a
    maximum of
    90 days.
    Although the Petition did not specify from
    which Rule or Regulation relief was
    sought,
    we shall interpret
    the language to be
    a request for variance from Section 9(c)
    of
    the Environmental Protection Act and Rule 502 of the Open Burning
    Regulations.
    Each of the 800 doors contains an estimated 30
    lbs.
    of wood
    and 170 lbs.
    of steel.
    Each meat rail consists of a piece of
    wood about
    2” x
    3” x 20’ which is secured to a 100
    lb. piece of
    steel by steel brackets.
    Petitioner estimated total salvageable
    steel in the doors and meat rails to be about
    5 carloads.
    The
    wood allegedly is free of any oil or petroleum by-products.
    Petitioner stated that an extreme hardship will be forced
    on the Company if it
    is required to bury the doors and meat rails
    10—453

    —2—
    since there are no approved landfill sites within 20 miles
    of Clinton.
    Petitioner felt the open burning would not “work
    a hardship” on the Clinton community since the burning could
    be completed within 90 days and it would be a “one—time type
    of thing”.
    Midwest indicated that additional work of this
    nature is not scheduled and that it does not know of any possi-
    bility of doing such work in the foreseeable future.
    An Agency representative visited the proposed burning site
    on October
    1,
    1973.
    Based on information obtained during the
    visit, the Agency estimated that 95.5 tons of waste material
    would be burned.
    The Agency calculated emissions from open
    burning or burning aided by an air curtain destructor
    as follows:
    Emission
    Open Burning
    Air Curtain Destructor
    Particulates
    1,623.5 lbs.
    440 lbs.
    NOx
    191.0 lbs.
    382.
    lbs.
    CO
    4,775.0 lbs.
    Not available
    Hydrocarbons
    382.0
    lbs.
    23 lbs.
    The Agency also claimed that galvanized metal would be included
    in the open burning and that this could release other contaminants
    into the atmosphere such
    as lead or cadmium.
    Galvanized steel
    is
    steel that has been coated with
    a layer of zinc.
    In the Illinois
    Institute for Environmental Quality document Health Effects and
    Recommendations
    for Atmospheric Lead,
    Cadmium, Mercury and Asbestos,
    it was reported that air pollution from cadmium emissions is mostly
    in the area around zinc refineries and smelters
    (P.
    25).
    Cadmium
    is contained in water discharged by the electroplating industry.
    In salt water areas, there is cadmium dissolution from zinc gal-
    vanized pipes which are contaminated with cadmium in concentrations
    of
    1
    or more
    (P.
    26).
    Apparently cadmium is contained in galvan-
    ized steel
    as an impurity in the zinc coating.
    The report was less specific on the relationship of lead to
    galvanized metal.
    The Agency did not elaborate on the possible release of lead
    or cadmium during the proposed open burning.
    Petitioner failed
    to even mention the possibility.
    While the Agency could have pro-
    vided more information to sustain its statement,
    it was absolutely
    incumbent on Petitioner to provide
    a concise statement of any
    adverse effects the public might suffer because of the variance.
    The information contained in the IIEQ document certainly poses the
    possibility that cadmium could be released during open burning of
    10—454

    —3—
    material which contains galvanized metal.
    We cannot accept the
    statement by Petitioner that the public would not suffer any
    adverse effects from the burning merely because the burning
    would be a one—time occurrence spread out over
    90 days.
    The Agency estimated that about 256 tons of steel could be
    realized from the salvage operation.
    We concur fully with
    Petitioner’s belief that it would be a terrible waste of national
    resources to bury this much recyclable steel.
    One of Petitioner’s
    employees informed the Agency that it would cost Petitioner $5500
    to dispose of the material at an approved landfill site.
    The
    value of the scrap steel was placed at $11,545.
    One obvious alternative to placing the material in a landfill
    or open burning as is, would be to separate the wood from the
    metal.
    The steel could be salvaged and,
    if a hardship is shown,
    the wood could be burned.
    Petitioner did not state whether this
    method had been considered.
    Also, we were not told whether an
    air curtain destructor is available.
    Midwest is in the business of repairing and remodeling various
    kinds of freight cars and should be fully aware that the expense
    of proper disposal of waste materials must be borne as part of the
    cost of doing business.
    Environmental protection laws must be
    obeyed unless such laws are shown to create an unreasonable and
    arbitrary hardship.
    Petitioner has failed to fully consider the
    environmental impact of open burning in this case and has failed
    to prove that compliance with the law would create an unreasonable
    hardship.
    Therefore,
    the Petition for Variance is denied without
    prejudice.
    IT
    IS SO ORDERED.
    I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby certify the above Opinion and Order was adopted
    this
    Qo”
    day of
    ___________,
    1973 by a vote of
    4
    to ~
    10—455

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