ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
May 30, 1972
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
v.
)
PCB
71-86
STATE LINE FOUNDRIES,
INC.
ALVIN LIEBLING, Assistant Attorney General, appeared
for Environ-
mental Protection Agency
EUGENE BRASSFIELD appeared for State Line
Foundries,
Inc.
OPINION OF THE BOARD
(by Mr.
Kissel):
On March
13,
1972,
State Line Foundries,
Inc.
(~StateLine~)
flied a Motion with
the Board to modify its previous Order of August
5,
1971
with
regard
to
the
penalty.
That
Order provided in
part
as follows:
EState
Line
shall
pay
a
penalty in the amount
of
$7,500
for
violation
of
the
Act
and
the
Rules
and
Regu-
lations
promulgated
thereunder,
as
described
in
the
document
hereinbefore
referred
to,
and
in
this
ooinion.’~
State
Lin&s
Motion
contends
that
the
$7,500
penalty
will
impose
a
severe
and
extreme
hardship
upon
it,
State
Line
indicates
that
it
has
completed
the
installation
of
the
electric
induction
furnace
pro-
vided
for
under
the
variance.
The
president
of
State
Line
has
sub-
mitted an affidavit showing that
the
Company
expended
$113,000
to
in-
stall the induction furnace
and
the
accompanying
facilities.
To
meet
its current obligations
and pay
for the pollution abatement instal-
lation,
State
Line
is
presently
attempting
to
induce
its
stockholders
to
personally
guarantee
the
COmpany~s notes.
An
audit
completed
prior
to
the
installation
of
the
new
furnace
showed
that the liabili-
ties of State Line exceeded its assets by over $25,000.
Net profits
for 1971 were approximately
$7,900.
State Line also directs the
Board~s attention to the generally poor current economic situation
of most foundries.
State Line asks that the Board suspend the penalty,
reduce it
to 10 to 20
of State Line’s 1971 net profits,
or assess
State Line an amount commensurate with
State Line’s ability
to pay.
4
—
531
The Board’s opinion of August
1971 indicated that the monetary
penalty was being imposed due to State Line’s
“inaction
.
.
.
in
failing to follow the basic fundamentals of State
law on air pollution.”
State Line had never sought
a permit from the Agency;
and, since
May,
1968, its operations had emitted substantially more particulates
than allowed under State regulation.
In regard to the amount of the
penalty, the Board expressly stated,
“the penalty would be much
greater
in
amount
if
State
Line
were
not
so
heavily
committed
finan-
cially
now.”
Despite
the
passage
of
time
and
State
Line’s
good
faith
efforts to comply with
its
variance
and
with
the
existing
Illinois
regulations,
the reasons
for the imposition of
the $7,500 penalty
still
remain.
Further,
the
original
opinion
in
this case
was
filed
in
August,
1971;
this
Motion
was
not
made
until
March
1972.
After
this seven—month hiatus,
we
are
not
inclined
to
re-open
the
case
for
a reconsideration of the amount of the penalty imposed.
If State
Line had sought to mitigate
the amount of the penalty,
it should have
applied within
a reasonable amount of time after the entry of the
original order, not seven months later.
We commend State Line
for
the completion of its pollution abatement program but do not find
cause
at this late
date to re-open the case
for any further dis-
cussion of the penalty.
The Motion
is hereby denied,
Mr.
Dumeile
dissents.
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the
Pollution Control Board,
certify that the above Opinion and Order
was adopted on this
~3&”7
day of
~
1972, by a vote of
~“.../
4
—
632