ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
May
3,
1973
)
REYNOLDS
METALS
COMPANY,
)
a corporation
)
v.
j
PCB
72-518
ENVIROM4BNTAL
P~TBcTIONAGENCY
5
)
OPINION OF THE BOARD (by Mr. Dunelle)
This opinion is in support of the Board order entered herein
on April
12, 1973.
This is a petition requesting a variance from
Rules 921(d)
and
1002 of the
1~aterRegulations
until
June
1,
1973
and also from Rule 903(a) until such time as the Agency shall grant
petitioner’s resubmitted operating permit application for its out-
fall.
Hearing was held on March 2, 1973.
Reynolds owns
and operates a large manufacturing facility at
McCook, Illinois for the making and shaping of aluminum alloys.
The plant employs 2,500 people.
They produce annually around
450,000,000 pounds of aluminum alloy in sheet, plate and other
forms from aluminum pig, scrap and various alloying metals.
Waste
materials from the operation include oils,
acids, caustics,
phosphates and various metals and metal oxides, both
as suspended
and dissolved solids.
They operate a wastewater treatment system
consisting of pH adjustment followed by oil skimming, emulsion
breaking, dissolved solid precipitation, flocculation and clarifi-
cation.
They maintain three outfalls, all of which discharge into the
Summit-Lyons Ditch.
The West outfall discharges
from the industrial
wastewater treatment plant, the East outfall discharges oil separator
effluent and the third outfall is for bypassing the industrial waste-
water treatment effluent during heavy rainfall.
The bypass is rarely
used since petitioner maintains three retention ponds to alleviate
the need for bypassing.
Petitioner is currently operating its East outfall pursuant
to an Agency permit.
Their permit application for the West outfall
was denied by the Agency on November 21, 1972 because under Rule
921(d) a permit cannot be issued until a project completion schedule
is filed and approved pursuant to Rule 1002 and none has been filed.
7—Il?
-2-
Within one week
after
receiving the Agency’s letter of denial,
the petitioner’s plant engineer and members
of his staff met with
persons
from the Agency’s permit section to discuss the denial.
As
a
result of that meeting and of the petitioner’s engineering staff’s
subsequent investigation of the West outfall treatment plant petitioner
decided to seek outside expertise to determine and design the modifi-
cations
to its entire wastewater treatment system
as would be necessary
for timely compliance with both federal and state
requirements.
Early in December, 1972
the petitioner contacted
a nationally-
known firm of environmental consulting engineers
to prepare
a project
completion schedule for the Agency.
After review of the plant
and
treatment facilities,
a joint determination was made in mid-December
by the consulting engineers and petitioner’s own engineers that
a
project completion schedule could be prepared and submitted to the
Agency by June
1,
1973.
Prior to the adoption of the Board’s
current Water Pollution
Regulations,
the petitioner had undertaken efforts
to reduce the
fluoride levels through process modifications.
Control
of fluoride
levels was attempted through reduction of the amount
of fluoride
being discharged into the wastewater.
This method was attempted
because low level concentrations of fluorides are very difficult
to treat,
and also since the petitioner’s existing treatment facilities
were designed to treat heavy metals,
oils and suspended solids rather
than fluorides.
Input of fluorides
to
the wastewater was
in fact
reduced by fifty percent by May,
1972 through work with its conversion
coatings suppliers on changing the chemical formulation of various
coatings.
An even further reduction in fluoride input was
achieved
by the same method in September 1972.
As we have done
in other cases recently, we will grant the
variances so that the petitioner may receive its permit for the
facility.
We should note, however, that
this variance in no way
excuses
the petitioner from compliance with any substantive provi-
sions of the Act
or Regulations.
The Agency did recommend
a denial for the reason that
the hard-
ship was self imposed.
We take
the position that
a denial would serve
no useful purpose
at this point.
There are only
a few months involved
and we would rather see permits issued and the job completed.
This opinion constitutes
the Board’s findings
of fact and
conclusions of law.
I,
Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify the above Opinion
was
adopted on the
~
day of May, 1973 by
a vote of ______________________
Illinois Po
rd
Board
7
—
688