ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
March
26, 1975
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
)
Complainant,
)
)
)
PCB 74—473
)
E & E HAULING,
INC., an Illinois
)
corporation
)
)
Respondent
)
Mr. Stephen
Z. Weiss, Assistant Attorney General, appeared for
the Complainant.
Mr. Henry N.
Schaffer, Attorney, appeared for the Respondent.
OPINION
& ORDER of the Board
(by Mr. Zeitlin)
The Complaint in this matter,
filed by the Attorney General for the
Environmental Protection Agency
(Agency)
on December
17,
1974,
alleges
violations of Rule 202(b)(l)
of Chapter
7:
Solid Waste Rules and Regulations
of
the Pollution Control Board
(Board) and of Section 21(b)
of the
Illinois Environmental Protection Act
(Act).
We must note at
the start of our discussion of this matter that the
Agency’s Complaint is partially invalid.
The Agency alleged and directed
its proof at hearing to the fact that E & E operated a landfill site
without a permit.
Section 21(b)
of the Act,
however, prohibits open
dumping in violation of Board regulations.
There has been no allegation,
either in pleadings or testimony,
that any of Respondent’s activities
constituted open dumping,
as defined
in Section 3(h)
of
the Act. The
Board cannot find any violation of Section 21(b),
in that no proof
regarding any violation
of that Section was offered,
nor does any language
in the pleadings concern the question of open dumping.
We therefore
conclude that those portions of
the Complaint concerning
a violation of
Section 21(b)
of the Act must be dismissed.
The Board,
in determining violations
of the Act or of
its own
Regulations,
cannot amend a complaint
to conform with the intentions of
the
parties.
For
that reason, we cannot reach a finding of violation as
to Section 21(e)
of
the Act, which does concern the permit requirement.
“To be found in violation,
a party must be properly charged and given
notice of what he must defend against.”
E.P.A.
v. Village
of Winnetka,
PCB 73—404,
Nov.
22,
1974,
opinion at
3;
see also, Fry Roofing
Co.
v.
Pollution Control Board,
20 Ill.
App.
3d 301,
314 N.E.
2d 350,
354
(1974).
16
—215
—2—
The presentation of facts constituting a violation of Section 21(e)
of
the Act cannot cure this basic due process defect.~Nor,
it should be
noted, did the Agency avail itself of the benefits of Board Procedural
Rule 328, which here would have allowed a conformance of the pleadings
to
the proof offered at hearing.
Turning then to the remaining charge,
regarding violation of Rule
202(b) (1), Respondent E
& E Hauling,
Inc.
(E&E),
is alleged to have
operated
a solid waste management
site in DuPage County without the
required operating permit from the Agency during the period from July
27,
1974 until December 17,
1974,
on which date the Complaint
in this
matter was filed.
At a hearing held in
the matter
on February
7,
1975
the parties entered
a Stipulation
of Facts which forms much of
the basis
of
this Opinion.
Although no witnesses were heard at
that hearing,
statements were entered by the Attorneys for E &
E and the Agency regarding
the circumstances surrounding
the facts which had been stipulated to.
By
the nature of these facts,
the statements and circumstances must be
seen
as arguments regarding factors
of mitigation or aggravation in
this
matter.
The parties have stipulated that Respondent has operated the subject
solid waste management ~sitein DuPage County since June,
1970.
The site
is currently operating and will continue
to do so until about March
15,
1975.
In an amendment to the stipulation
received by the Board on March
10,
1975 the parties have stipulated that E
& E will cease accepting
refuse at the site by March
15,
1975, although final cover and seeding
may not
be completed until July 31,
1975.
E
& E has been accepting
approximately 8,000 yards
of domestic’refuse and building material daily
on a five—day work—week basis,
as a part of its operations on
the site.
Commencing on October 15,
1973, and continuing through September 5,
1974,
B
&
E received a series of nine letters from the Agency indicating
that a permit would be required for the site in question subsequent
to
July
27,
1974.
E
& B responded to
two of the letters in October, 1973
and Nay,
1974,
indicating its intent to cease operation on
the site
before July 27,
1974.
In response
to the E
&
E letters, the Agency
confirmed B & E’s understanding of
the date after which a permit would
be required. All of the communications were attached as exhibits
to the
Stipulation,
and indicate clearly that the parties understood the requirement
that E
& B have an operating permit after July 27,
1974.
On July 26,
1974, E & E submitted an application for an operating
permit
to the Agency.
That application was denied on August
22, 1974
for lack of adequate information.
After replacing its consulting engineers,
E
& E on December
11 and 19,
1974 filed with the Agency additional inforamtion regarding its permit
application.
E & E’s re—application for an operating permit has not yet
been acted upon by the Agency.
16—216
—3—
The parties
also stipulated to testimony which would have been
offered by a Mr. Kenneth Bechely,
an Agency Surveillance Associate
assigned to inspect E
& B’s site.
Mr. Bechely’s stipulated testimony
covered three points:
1.
Mr.
Bechely inspected B
& B’s site on four occasions subsequent
to July 27,
1974, and noted on
each occasion that refuse was being
accepted at
the
site.
(One
of the dates, however was subsequent to the
filing of
the Complaint
in this matter and is not germane
to the resolution
of whether B
& E was
:in
fact operating without a Permit.)
2.
The operational permit system employed by the Agency is necessary
to determine whether solid waste disposal sites are environmentally
sound.
The information contained
in
a complete permit application
discloses what,
if any,
effect
the operation of a site may have on
ground
or surface waters.
Such information is necessary
to assure that
a site, and operations on
it,
are environmentally sound.
3.
The information accompaning B
& B’s July 26,
1974 application
was insufficient
to allow the Agency to determine whether
or not that
site was environmentally sound.
Regardless of whether a site may be
operated
fri general compliance with the Board’s Solid Waste Regulations,
such operation is not determinative of whether there are conditions
present which
could yield actual water pollution.
Mr.
Bechely also took photographs of
the E
& B site
on September
6,
1974, and said photographs were attached to
the Stipulation as an exhibit.
It is clear from the facts stipulated
to
that Respondent B
& B did
operate
a solid waste management
site during the period
alleged
,
and
that
it did so without an operating permit from the Agency.
Further,
B
& B has not seriously contended that
it was justified in such operation
without a permit.
E
& B has stated that it felt, until July,
1974, that
it would be able to close the
site in question prior to the period for
which violations are alleged here.
The Board agrees with the Agency
that Respondent’s misconception as
to the time of cessation of
its own
activities
is insufficient
to justify non—compliance with the Act and
the Regulations. While E
& E may have relied on a consulting engineer in
preparing its first application, which engineer E
& B later discharged,
such reliance does not constitute sufficient grounds to excuse compliance
with the applicable regulations. All the factors leading to E & B’s
operation without the required permit were within the control of E
&
B.
A finding of violation is mandatory.
In mitigation,
it does not appear that B
&
B’s
eleventh—hour permit
application,
submitted one day before an operating permit was required,
was a deliberate attempt to avoid an obligation under Rule 202(b)(l).
Further,
the Agency inspection reports,
appended as exhibits
to the
Stipulation, indicate that the E
& B site was operated largely
in accord
with other applicable Board Regulations.
For that reason,
it is the
finding of the Board that
a penalty of $2,000 will act as
a sufficient
deterrent in similar matters.
16—217
—4—
Implicit in our finding here is
a reaffirmation of
the Board’s
commitment
to the permit process which
it
instituted as
a part of
the
Solid Waste Regulations.
The Board agrees with the Agency that to
protect the environment,
a viable,
enforced permit system is necessary
for the orderly regulation of solid waste management sites.
Where the
necessary permit has not been acquired as a result of factors wholly
within the control of the individual required
to have such permit,
a
finding of violation and the imposition of a penalty are both appro-
priate.
It is fully reasonable and practical for the Board
to require
such permits to protect the public interest against the possibility of
environmental harm.
Weighing these and the other factors set Out in
Section 33(c)
of the Act, we find Respondent’s operation without the
required permit unjustified under the circumstances.
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:
1.
Respondent E
& E Hauling,
Inc.,
is found to have operated a
solid waste management site in DuPage County, without the required
operating permit from the Agency,
in violation of Rule 202(b) (1)
of
Chapter
7:
Solid Waste Rules and Regulations, during the period July
27,
1974,
to December 17,
1974.
2.
Respondent B
& B Hauling,
Inc., shall pay
as a penalty
the sum
of
$2,000, payment to be made within 35 days of the date of
this Order,
by certified check or money order
to:
State of Illinois
Fiscal Services Division
Environmental Protection Agency
2200 Churchill Road
Springfield,
Illinois
62706
3.
Respot~dentE & B Hauling,
Inc., shall cease and desist all
refuse disposal activities,
and shall promptly initiate efforts
to
properly close and apply final cover to the site
in accordance with
applicable Board Regulations, unless the proper operating permit shall
have been received within
60 days of the date of
this Order.
4.
That portion
of the Complaint
in this matter alleging violation
of Section 21(b)
of the Environmental Protection Act is dismissed.
I,
Christan
L. Noffett,
Clerk of
the Illinois Pollution Control
Board hereby certify tha
the above Opinion
& Order were adopted on the
~4~~1*
day of
_________________,
1975 by a vote of _____to
0
~4anL.Nofftt,erk)
Illinois Pollution Control Board
16—218