ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    October
    28,
    1971
    CITY OF OLNEY
    #PCB 71—223
    v.
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    MR. PAUL A. CROEGAERT
    (BRAZITIS
    & CROEGAERT)
    appeared on behalf
    of the Petitioner;
    MR.
    DELBERT D. HASCHEMEYER,
    appeared on behalf of
    the Agency
    OPINION OF THE BOARD
    (BY MR. DUMELLE):
    The City of Olney,
    a town of 9,153
    (R.14)
    in Richiand County
    in Central Illinois, operates
    a two—year—old secondary treatment
    plant designed to serve
    a population equivalent of 40,000 people
    (R.15)
    .
    The plant discharges into
    an unnamed tributary of the
    Fox
    River
    (R,90,
    EPA Ex.
    2)
    On July
    30, 1971, Olney petitioned the Board
    for a variance
    from the deadline date requirements
    in Sanitary Water Board Rules
    and
    Regulations
    SWB-14
    (hereafter SWB-l4)
    Instead of the series
    of dates
    in the rules which conclude with completion of construction
    of improved facilities by July,
    1972,
    Olney sought to be allowed to
    conform to the following deadline
    dates:
    Submit plans and specifications
    January 1972
    Begin construction
    April 1972
    Complete construction
    January 1973
    The plant improvements which need to be made
    are provision for ter-
    tiary treatment,
    storm runoff retention, provision for sludge handling
    and effluent chlorination.
    Regulation SWB-l4 was enacted by the Sanitary Water Board,
    one of this Board~s predecessors,
    in 1967, with
    the implementation
    plan section of the regulation being enacted in March,
    1968,
    The
    tertiary
    treatment
    requirement
    has
    thus
    been
    on
    the
    books
    for
    more
    than
    three
    years.
    SWB—14
    is
    a
    comprehensive
    water
    pollution
    abate-
    ment
    regulation applicable to all intrastate waters
    in Illinois not
    covered by other specific stream standards.
    The City is not only
    obliged to
    meet the effluent
    criteria
    specified in SWB-l4 by July
    of
    1972 but
    it is required to meet
    the
    timetable
    requirements in
    2
    727

    Modern Foundry for violations which occurred later than eighteen
    months
    ago.
    As
    a result of the admission the Agency did not present
    any primary case,
    and the first evidence in the record is that
    of,
    Modern Foundry offered in mitigation of
    any possible penalty to be
    imposed by
    the Board.
    Modern Foundry submitted
    a Letter of Intent to the Air Pollu-
    tion Control Board in July of 1967.
    Based upon the process weight
    of the cupola and the calculated emissions
    gotten from the Letter
    of Intent,
    Modern Foundry was violating the regulations
    then passed
    by the Board.
    The Board required that Modern Foundry submit an Air
    Contaminant Emission Reduction Program
    (ACERP)
    and so advised
    Modern Foundry on many occasions,
    The initial date
    the ACERP was
    due was April
    15,
    1968, but such
    a program was not submitted until
    September
    4,
    1969.
    (Comp.
    Ex.
    7)
    The program was
    that Modern
    Foundry would have
    a wet scrubber installed by the National Dust
    Collector Corporation, which scrubber would guarantee
    a collection
    efficiency of 99.6.
    The scrubber was
    to be installed during
    Modern Foundry~stwo-week shutdown
    in July of 1970 and by September
    of
    1970 Modern Foundry ,would have made the necessary adjustments
    to
    have the equipment properly operating.
    The ACERP was approved by
    the Air Pollution Control Board on September
    23,
    1969.
    In
    a
    September
    30, 1969 letter to Modern Foundry advising it that the
    ACERB had been approved,
    Mr. Klassen,
    the Technical Secretary to
    the Air Board,
    also advised Modern Foundry that under the Board
    regulations
    “periodic reports” would be necessary.
    (Comp. Ex.
    8)
    Only two “reports” were sent by Modern Foundry.
    One was
    a letter
    dated February
    13,
    1970,
    in which Modern Foundry advised the Tech-
    nical Secretary that the originally proposed control device would
    not work and that
    a new one was being installed.
    (Comp.
    Ex,
    10)
    The Technical Secretary responded
    in
    a letter dated March
    19,
    1970
    and said that “from your progress reports”
    it appeared that Modern
    Foundry would not meet its compliance date.
    If this were true,
    the letter went on, Modern Foundry was requested to file
    a revised
    ACERP,
    It
    did not,
    and it wasn~tuntil August
    19,
    1970,
    that
    Modern Foundry again communicated with
    the State
    --
    this time with
    the then—new Environmental Protection Agency,
    Modern Foundry
    advised the Agency that the emission control equipment had been
    delivered,
    and that it expected a December
    31,
    1970 completion date,
    In addition,
    the Agency was advised of
    the problems faced by Modern
    Foundry in obtaining water from the City of Mascoutah for use in the
    wet scrubber.
    The Agency advised Modern Foundry in
    a letter dated
    September
    21,
    1971 that in order to have any extension of the ACERP
    approved, Modern Foundry must file
    for
    a variance under the Environ-
    mental Protection Act.
    This was never done,

    Two other aspects of the City’s planned program were not made
    entirely clear at the hearing and need to be dealt with.
    There
    must be improvement from the present method of handling sludge
    to eliminate the undesirable seepage from the drying beds.
    Addi-
    tionally,
    the City must move with all dispatch to provide chlorina-
    tion facilities
    to treat the plant effluent.
    We will not relax this
    requirement.
    The City of Olney must proceed to provide for chlorina-
    tion in accord with the deadline date
    in
    SWB—14,
    July
    1,
    1972.
    The picture which emerges here is of
    a municipality which
    is doing something
    to resolve the problem at its overloaded treat-
    ment plant.
    With pretreatment from industrial dischargers the
    influent flow will be at the plant’s design capacity and improvements
    including tertiary treatment,
    chlorination,
    sludge handling and
    storm retention can be effected ~forapproximately
    $725,000
    (R.42).
    Handling the volume and strength without pretreatment will
    require improvements estimated to cost $1,725,000
    (R.42).
    The ques-
    tion posed to the Board is whether compliance with the present
    schedule of completion of improvements by July,
    1972 will consti-
    tute an arbitrary or unreasonable hardship inasmuch as the City
    maintains that it needs an additional
    six months to evaluate
    the
    efficacy of the operation of its industrial waste ordinance.
    An-
    cillary to that question, is whether the City
    is moving aggressive-
    ly enough to encourage, cajole and force
    its industrial users
    to
    pretreat their wastes to eliminate any undue burden on the muni-
    cipal plant.
    It is clear that Olney’s move has been in the right
    direction with
    the enactment of the industrial waste ordinance
    and it
    is equally clear that the City’s use of the ordinance has
    been effective although different judgments may be made as
    to the
    aggressiveness which
    the City has applied to instituting criminal
    enforcement actions under
    the ordinance.
    We grant the request for
    more time
    in this case as it would be unreasonable to force
    the
    City to spend $1,725,000 to improve their plant when they can do
    so
    for less than half that amount if their waste control ordinance
    is
    fully efficacious.
    We grant the requested variance in accordance with the dates
    proposed by
    the City,
    as
    a six month extension of existing deadlines,
    subject to several conditions.
    The Environmental Protection Act
    states that any variance granted under the Act is limited to one year
    and then may be extended only if satisfactory progress has been
    shown,
    If the petitioner will need
    a further exemption from pro-
    secution beyond that time it should take the precaution of filing
    a further petition some 60 days before
    the present variance expires.
    The first condition of this grant is that the City proceed immediately
    to provide for chlorination of its plant effluent.
    Secondly, we
    shall require the City to submit monthly progress
    reports.
    Periodic
    progress reports are necessary as
    a means of checking compliance
    with program schedules.
    We do not wish
    to be
    in the position,
    a year
    from now, of discovering for the first time that there have been
    further delays.
    The reports should detail progress
    to date and

    fully document and explain significant deviations from the program
    as originally planned.
    The first report shall cover
    the period
    from the present through November
    30,
    1971.
    Counsel for
    the City of Olney requested that the Board
    authorize the City to issue bonds for treatment plant improvements
    without referendum in accordance with Section
    46 of the Environmental
    Protection Act.
    After an order of the Board to abate the pollution
    problem the municipality can proceed to raise
    a Sanitary Fund
    for the purpose of carrying out the order of the Board,
    Section 46
    states
    that
    “No
    election
    or
    referendum
    shall be necessary for the
    issuance of bonds..,
    We
    shall specifically order the City to
    proceed
    with
    its
    improvement
    plans
    and
    thereby
    actuate
    the
    mechanism
    by which the
    City
    can
    raise
    the
    needed
    funds.
    This Opinion constitutes
    the Board’s findings of fact and
    conclusions
    of
    law.
    ORDER
    The Board, having considered the transcript and exhibits
    in
    this proceeding, hereby orders as follows:
    1.
    Variance from
    adherence
    to the deadline dates specified in
    SWB-
    14
    for submission of plans and specifications and for commence-
    ment of construction of improvements
    (except for chlorination
    facilities)
    is hereby granted for one calendar year
    from date
    with the following dates made applicable
    in lieu of those
    originally specified:
    Submit Plans and Specifications
    January
    1,
    1972
    Begin Construction
    April
    1,
    1972
    2.
    The City of Olney shall proceed with all possible
    speed to provide for chlorination of
    the treatment
    plant’s final effluent by July,
    1972
    in accordance with
    the timetable
    in SWB-l4.
    3.
    The City of Olney shall abate
    its discharge of inadequately
    treated sewage in violation of
    the Environmental Protec-
    tion Act and regulations thereunder
    in accordancg with
    the revised timetable outlined in paragraph one of
    this
    Order.
    4.
    The City of Olney shall submit to the Environmental Protec-
    tion Agency and the Board, monthly reports on the pro-
    gress of its program including its plan for effluent
    chlorination and sludge handling.
    The first report
    “1
    7’~fl

    shall cover the period from the present through
    November
    30,
    1971.
    The reports shall be submitted
    in
    a reasonable time not
    to exceed two weeks after
    the
    last date reported on.
    5.
    Failure to adhere to any of the conditions of this
    variance shall
    be grounds for revocation of
    the variance.
    I, Regina,
    E.
    Ryan, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby certify that the Board adopted the above Opinion and
    Order on the
    28
    day of
    ~
    1971.
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    2
    731

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