ILLINOIS
POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
August
29,
1972
MARKE.
COOK
v.
)
PCB
72-178
ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION
AGENCY
COMMUNITY
UNIT
SCHOOL
DISTRICT
NO.
60
LAKE
COUNTY,
ILLINOIS
v.
)
PCB
72-223
ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION
AGENCY
DISSENTING
OPINION
(by Mr.
Dumelle)
My reason
for dissenting
in the
4-1
decision
to
deny this
variance
is
the
extreme
hardship
now
inflicted
upon
Mr.
Cook.
He
has
a
$30,
000 house
which
he
cannot
sell
(R. 13);
he
has
debts
of
$13, 550
to
subcontractors (H. 15, 22, 26); he has a wife with malignant cancer
(H. 23);
he
has
had to
sell his own home and move into one of his model homes
(H. 40).
What
the denial of this varianèe may well do is to bankrupt this
small
businessman.
The
variance
procedure
involves
the
weighing
of
costs
to the
public
versus
the
costs
to
the
individual.
I
do
not
think the variance
procedure
contemplates
financial
bankruptcy
except
when absolutely
necessary
in extreme
cases
of
pollutional
hazards.
Since
the
Board
itself
in
similar
cases
of
single
house
discharges
(also
to overloaded
sewers
in Waukegan)
has
granted
them
(PCB
72-223,
PCB
72-202,
cited
in
majority
Board
opinion
of this
case)
it
would
appear
that
‘extreme
pollutional
hazardt
does
not
~xist.
The
Board
has opted
not
to bankrupt
a
congregation
of a rabbi’s
services
nor
to bankrupt
high school youths of a vocational education.
Why then
should
it
bankrupt
a small
businessman?
What we
must
realize
in these
three
related
cases
is
that
the
effect
of
e~
grant
is
the
same.
Because
in
the
Cook
case
the
overflow
is
graphicaUv
—2—
described
(H. 82,
99)
does
not
mean that
similar
or
worse
conditions
do
not
exist
in
the
other
two cases.
We
must
assume
that
an
erloded
sewer’
is
lust
that.
And
since
grants
have
been
made
in two other
cases
with
presumably
the
same
or
worse
consequences
it seems
to
me that
Mr.
Cook
should
have
also
received
a variance.
In
future
cases
involving
Waukegan
sewers
it
is
apparent
that
the
City
of
Waukegan
ought
to
be joined
as
a party.
The
Board
would
then receive
information
regarding
the
speed
at
which these
overloaded
sewers
will
be
corrected
and
could enter
such
orders
as
are
appropriate.
The
present
indirect
way
of
speeding
up
City
of
Waukegan
sewer
correction
work
by occa-
sional
variance
denials
is
most
unsatisfactory
and unfair
to the
individual
concerned.
\
/
-
1/
Jacob
B.
Dumelle
Board
Member
I,
Christan
L.
Moffett,
Clerk
of the
Illinois
Pollution
Control
Board,
hereby
certify
the
above
Dissenting
Opinion
was
submitted
on the~~~day
of
August,
1972.
~
~
:~
Christan
L.
Moffett,
~~C~rk
Illinois
Pollution
Control
Board
5
—
298