ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    May
    6,
    1976
    SANITARY DISTRICT OF ROCKFORD,
    Petitioner,
    V.
    )
    PCB 75-32
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
    Respondent.
    Richard Kissel
    and James Russell,
    of the
    firm
    Martin, Craig,
    Chester
    and Sonnenschein, appeared on behalf of Petitioner.
    Roger Zehntner and Ernie Nielsen appeared on behalf of Respondent.
    OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (by Mr. Goodman):
    This matter comes before the Pollution Control Board
    (Board)
    upon the Amended Petition for Variance filed by the Sanitary
    District of Rockford
    (District)
    on July
    29,
    1975.
    On October
    14,
    1975,
    the Environmental Protection Agency
    (Agency)
    submitted
    its
    Amended Recommendation,
    recommending denial of the Variance.
    A
    hearing was held on February
    12,
    1976,
    in Rockford,
    Illinois.
    Peti-
    tioner has filed a waiver of the 90-day rule until April 23,
    1976.
    The District provides sewage disposal
    service for a population
    of approximately 200,000
    in Winnebago County.
    The Petition for
    Variance concerns particulate emissions from three wastewater solids
    incinerators at the District7s sewage disposal plant.
    The District
    requests the Board either to determine that no variance
    is necessary
    because the District need only comply with Rule 203(e) (3) of the
    Air Pollution Regulations
    (Chapter
    2)
    or, alternatively,
    to grant
    the District a Variance from Rules 103(b),
    202(b),
    203(e) (2), and
    502 of Chapter
    2.
    The Variance is sought to allow operation of
    the incinerators until certain incinerator exhaust system modifi-
    cations are completed.
    On January
    2,
    1973,
    the District submitted its original appli-
    cation for an operating permit for its incinerators and an applica-
    tion for a construction permit to make modifications on the incinera-
    tors so as to achieve compliance.
    On April
    2,
    1973,
    both applications
    21
    291

    —2—
    were denied.
    The District subsequently reapplied,
    and both applica-
    tions were again denied on June
    20,
    1973.
    On April
    11,
    1973, the
    Agency received from the District an application for an experimental
    permit to conduct emissions tests on the incinerators.
    On May
    25,
    1973,
    this experimental incinerator permit was granted,
    subject
    to
    certain conditions.
    This permit expired on May 25,
    1974.
    On July
    18,
    1974,
    the District applied for a renewal of this permit, but its appli-
    cation was denied by the Agency on August
    18,
    1974, due
    to a failure
    by the District to conform to the conditions of the prior experimental
    permit.
    The District is currently operating its incinerators without
    a permit.
    Rule 203(e)(3)
    requires any incinerator burning more than 2,000
    pounds of refuse per hour to meet
    a particulate emission standard
    of 0.08 grains per standard cubic feet of effluent gases corrected
    to 12
    CO2.
    Rule 203(e)(3)
    provides a 0.2 grains/scf particulate
    standard for incinerators burning 2,000 pounds or less of
    refuse per
    hour.
    The District incinerates sludge filter cake,
    grit and screen-
    ings,
    produced in its sewage treatment process,
    in the incinerators
    in question.
    Approximately 9500 pounds of sludge cake are incinerated
    per hour
    (R.29).
    In addition,
    9,000
    to 10,000 pounds of grit and
    screenings are incinerated per day
    (R.l03).
    The District’s
    incinerator exhaust systems have been equipped
    with wet impingement scrubbers since their inception.
    Stack tests
    were conducted in August,
    1973
    (Petitioner’s Exhibit
    B)
    and March,
    1974
    (Petitioner’s Exhibit
    A)
    .
    Of the
    14 tests conducted in 1973,
    six indicated particulate levels greater than 0.2 grains/scf
    corrected to 12
    CO2.
    The March,
    1974 test indicated an actual
    measured value of 0.13 grains/scf,
    corrected to 12
    CO2.
    The District regularly conducts moisture tests on the sludge
    cake incinerated
    (R.27).
    Determinations on the moisture content of
    the grit and screenings are a1~operformed,
    but on a more irregular
    basis
    (P.62).
    Testimony presented at the hearing indicated that the
    moisture content of the sludge cake averages on an annual basis to
    80,
    ranging from 75
    as the minimum to 85
    as
    the maximum
    (R.46)
    The moisture content of the grit and screenings,
    tested over
    a several
    day rather than annual basis,
    averages
    to
    51
    (R.5l).
    The average
    combined moisture of all materials incinerated in a one—year period
    is
    79
    (R.52).
    21—292

    —3—
    The District argues that,
    although
    it incinerates
    9,500 pounds
    of sludge cake per hour,
    it
    incinerates under 2,000 pounds of
    material per hour and should, therefore,
    be held to the lower
    standard of Rule
    203(e)(3).
    We reject this argument.
    Section 3(K)
    of the Act,
    prior to September,
    1975, defined “refuse”
    as “any
    garbage or other discarded solid materials.”
    In September,
    1975,
    a
    legislative amendment deleting the word “solid”
    became effective
    (I-hR.
    2101,
    signed into law September
    4,
    1975)
    .
    The total sludge
    cake incinerated by the District,
    rather than merely its dry portion,
    is clearly within the Act’s definition of “refuse”,
    both prior and
    subsequent
    to the legislative amendment.
    The testimony indicates
    that the sludge cake,
    in its physical characteristics,
    is
    a
    solid,
    thereby meeting even the prior definition of refuse.
    It
    is coherent
    and is transported by a conveyor belt
    (R.lOl).
    Photographs of the
    sludge cake submitted by the Agency further support the conclusion
    that the sludge cake
    is indeed solid in nature.
    Furthermore,
    the
    sludge cake clearly
    fits the amended definition of refuse
    as “other
    discarded material,” regardless of
    its solid or nonsolid nature.
    Therefore,
    the District’s incinerators are subject
    to Rule
    203(e) (2)
    in that they burn over 2,000 pounds of refuse per hour.
    It should be noted that the Board rejects the District’s argu-
    ment that Subpart 0 of the Federal New Source Standards
    (40C.F.R.60.
    150)
    should be the guideline
    in this case.
    Although the Board
    in
    R71—23,
    adopting Rule 203(e) (2),
    stated that Rule 203(e) (2)
    “tracks
    the Federal New Source Standards”, Subpart 0 was not in effect un-
    til March
    8,
    1974,
    and could not,
    therefore, have been within the
    Board’s contemplation at the time of adoption of Rule 203(e) (2)
    Furthermore, although the Subpart 0 standard applies
    to dry sludge,
    it
    is
    a stricter standard than Rule
    203(e) (2) and makes
    no distinc-
    tion between incinerators burning more and burning less than 2,000
    pounds of sludge.
    In the alternative,
    the District seeks variance from Rules
    103(b),
    202 (b)
    ,
    203(e) (2)
    and 502 of Chapter
    2.
    As to Rules
    202
    (b) and 502,
    no showing
    is made by the District
    as to why variance
    from these rules
    is necessary or the degree to which noncompliance
    exists.
    As to the request for variance from Rules
    103(b)
    and 203
    (e) (2),
    the District has proposed
    a compliance plan for meeting
    these rules.
    That plan consists of modification of the existing wet
    impingement scrubbers
    to provide venturi—type
    scrubbers with
    a calcu-
    lated overall particulate collection efficiency of 96.61 percent,
    which will provide an overall system calculated collection efficiency
    of 98.15 percent.
    The modifications will result in an exhaust con-
    taining not more than
    0.020 grains/scf at average load conditions
    and 0.073 grains/scf of particulate matter at maximum load condi-
    tions, corrected to 12
    CO2
    (Amended Variance Petition,
    p.7)
    .
    The
    District on May 28,
    1975,
    obtained a permit to construct these modi-
    fications,
    and
    it intends
    to obtain an operating permit upon comple-
    tion.
    The Board notes,
    however, that although the District has out-
    lined
    a method of compliance,
    it has not committed itself to
    a timely
    21—293

    —4—
    schedule for achieving compliance with Rule 203(e) (2)
    .
    The District
    has been on notice since its stack tests
    in August,
    1973, and again
    in March,
    1974,
    that its incinerators were not in compliance with Rule
    203(e) (2).
    The District has had two applications for an operating
    permit denied,
    and, although it was granted an experimental permit
    until May 25,
    1974,
    it operated its incinerators without any permit
    since that date.
    The Board agrees with the Agency’s position stated
    in its Amended Recommendation that the District has been dilatory
    in
    bringing its incinerators into compliance and that,
    therefore,
    the
    District’s hardship
    is self-imposed.
    The request for variance from
    Rules 103(b)
    and 203(e) (2),
    as well
    as from 202(b)
    and 502,
    is hereby
    denied.
    The Board notes that denial of the variance does not amount
    to
    a shut down order.
    ABC Great States,
    Inc.
    v.
    EPA,
    4 PCB 471.
    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
    Petition for Variance from Rules 103(b),
    202(b),
    203(e) (2), and
    502 of Chapter
    2,
    submitted by The Sanitary District of Rockford,
    be
    and is hereby denied.
    I, Christan
    L.
    Noffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
    Control Board,
    hereby certify the above Opinion and Order were
    adop ed on the
    (~t’~~day
    of
    ,
    1976 by a vote
    of
    .~
    Chrtstan
    L. Moffett,
    k
    Illinois Pollution Co
    ci Board
    21—294

    Back to top