ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
August 18,
1977
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Complainant,
v.
)
PCB 76—57
DEAN PENN and WALTER DEEMIE,
Respondents.
Mr. John Vafi Vranken, Assistant Attorney General, Attorney
for Complainant
Mr. Dean Penn and Mr. Walter Deemie, appeared pro se
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr. Young):
This matter comes before the Board on the Complaint filed
on March
1, 1976,
by the Environmental Protection Agency
charqing Dean Penn and Walter Deemie with various violations
of the Act and regulations in the operation of a refuse disposal
site located in Peoria County.
Specifically, Dean Penn is
charged with owning and Walter Deemie with operating a refuse
disposal site from July
27,
1974, until May
10, 1976, without
the requisite operating permit in violation of Rule 202(b) (1)
and Section 21(e)
of the Act.
Respondents are charged with
failing to place cover on all exposed refuse at the end of the
day’s operation on seventeen different occasions
in violation
of Rule 305(a)
and Section 21(b)
of the Act.
Finally, Respondents
are charged with causing or allowing open burning at the site on
January
8,
1976,
in violation of Rule
311 and Section
21(b)
of
the Act.
The Board notes that Respondents
are not unfamiliar with
proceedings before this Board.
They have been involved in one
prior enforcement proceeding
(PCB 72-189,
5 PCB 159)
and one
variance proceeding
(PCB 72-432,
6 PCB 669), both of which involved
this same landfill site.
The final order in the enforcement pro-
ceeding, based upon a Settlement Stipulation, directed Respondents
to permanently close the site no later than December
31, 1972,unless
an operating permit was obtained from the Agency.
When permit dis-
cussions thereafter broke down with the Agency,
evidently over the
question whether a clay liner should be installed
to prevent
leaching conditions,
the Respondents filed the aforementioned
variance petition which basically souqht permission
to continue
~
~2&-317
(~
)
,~
operation of the site witriout a ~orc~it from the Agency and in
the same manner as the operation had been conducted in the past.
This variance request was denied
because
of the fears expressed
regarding a continued leachate condition
(6
PCB
66~
670)
At
the
hearing
held
in
the
instant
matter,
Complainant
attempted to establish several relevant facts through operation
of Rule
314 of our Procedural
Rules
which
requires, among other
things,
that
the
answers
to
request for admissions be sworn.
ComDlainant
had
filed
a
request
in::
admission,
and
although
both
Respondents
filed
answers
thereto,
neither
was
sworn
as
required
by
our
rule.
Because
of
this
defect~
Complainant
argued
the
answers
should
be
deemed
as
not
havina
been
filed,
thus
resulting
in
the
admission
of
the
requested
f&~cts~
The
Board
feels
other-
wise.
Although the answers were clearly defective, absent the
filing
of
a
Motion
to
Strike
which
would
have
provided
the
answering
party
a
chance
to
remedy
the
defect,
the
Board
is
reluctant
to,
and
shall not~role that the
answers
be
deemed
as
not having been filed.
in regards
to
the
operatinq
nermit
charge,
the
record reveals
that Walter Deemie
admitted.
that
h~
n;~ned (R.
31)
,
and operated
the site in question without
the requisite operating permit
(R.
32).
These admissions are sufficient to support a finding of
violation.
Insofar as Dean Penn
is concerned,
the record
establishes that he no longer owns
the
site
in
auestion
~R. 21),
nor was he the owner durinq the time frame of the Complaint
(Ag.
Exh.
#27).
In addition to
this,
there was no evidence
to support
a finding that he was an operator of the site.
In view of the
foregoing,
the Board must dismiss the entire Complaint as
to
this Respondent.
The evidence
in regards
to the seventeen daily cover charges
is insufficient
to support a finding of violations with two ex-
ceptions.
In order to prove
a violation of the daily cover re-
quirement,
it
is necessary to establish that such cover was not
applied at the end of the working day.
This fact can be established
by either
vi
si t inq the s~te
~i
t
thc’
‘nd
oI
the
(~Z1~S
operation and
findinq
that. the requisite cover was nob applied, or by visiting
the site on two d~itcrentdays and findinq
the same refuse uncovered.
EPA v.
Waukegan, PCB 71-298,
3
PCB 301,
305
(1971).
With the ex-
ception of the March
9,
1976,
and the April
15,
1976,
charges,
neither the testimony nor exhibits establish that this procedure
was followed.
Upon inspecting Agency Exhibits
24,
25, and 26,
there can be no doubt that the requisite daily cover was not applied
to the refuse shown therein, and that
such
refuse remained uncovered
for nearly two months.
In regards
to the single open burning charge,
the
board finds
the
Agency’s
evidence
insufficient
to
support
the
finding
of
violation.
While
Agency
testimony
establishes
that
there
was
a
2631~~
~ 7
-~~
/~
—3—
fire at the site
(R.
52), the Board does not believe that a
witness’s mere positive response
to counsel’s question whether
there was
a fire on the site is sufficient to support a finding
of violation.
EPA v.
C.
M.
Ford, PCB 72-230,
6 PCB 165,
167
(1972).
Considerable amplification
is necessary.
Even if this testimony
were to be considered sufficient to support a finding of violation,
it would still be insufficient to support the imposition of any
penalty for such violation.
This charge will therefore be dis-
missed.
In consideration of Section 31(c)
of the Act, the Board
finds that Respondent failed to prove that compliance with the
Board’s regulations would have imposed an arbitrary or unreasonable
hardship.
in dete~rminationof the appropriate remedy for the violations
set forth herein, the Board,
after consideration of the factors
included in Section
33 of the Act,
and the facts
of this case,
concludes that the technical practicability and economic reasonable-
ness of complying with the regulations as well
as the economic
value
of
the
pollution source,
and the priority of location, werq
never
raised
as
issues
in
this case.
While the Board recognizes
the desirability of filling up an abandoned
sand
pit that is lo-
cated in a residential area,
that fact alone does not excuse the
continued,
longstanding
violations of
our
regulations
and
of
the
Act
as
exist
in this case.
Lastly,
the Board notes that although no serious environmental
harm has been proven,
the Board believes
that a penalty
is nonethe-
less required.
If the Board were
to impose substantial penalties
only if serious harm has been proven,
the independent significance
of the permit system and our regulations
is lost, and a return to the
common law nuisance conceots may as well occur.
The Board has con-
sistently
stated that the permit
system
is
the
cornerstone
of
the
Act
and
that
whenever
necessary,
the
Board
should
use
its
penalty
power
as
an
economic
incentive for compliance with the
permit
re-
quirements.
In view of this belief, and the longstanding violation
found herein,
the Board will assess
a penalty of $3,000.00
for the
violation
of
Rule
202(h)
(1)
and
Section
21(e)
of
the
Act,
and
a
penalty
of
$500.flfl
For
the violation of
Rule
305(a)
and
Section
21(b)
of
the
Act.
The
Board will further
require
Respondent
to
properly
close
the
site
or obtain a permit from the Agency.
This
Opinion
constitutes
the
Board’s
findings
of
fact
and
conclusions of law in this matter.
ORDER
1.
Respondent,
Walter
Deemie,
is
found
to
have
operated
a
solid
waste
management
site
from
July
27,
1974,
until
May
10,
1976,
26319
in violation of Rule 202 (b) (I) of our Solid Waste Rules and
Section 21(e)
of the Act and shall pay a
penalty of $3,000.00
for such violations;
further he is found
to have violated
Rule
305(a)
of our Solid Waste
Rules
and Section
21(b)
of the
Act
on March
9,
1976,
and April
15,
1976, and shall pay
a penalty
of
$500.00 for these violatiocs.
Penalty payment by certified
check
or money order payable
to the State of Illinois shall
be
made within
35 days of the date of this Order to:
Fiscal
Services Division,
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency,
2200
Churchill Road,
Springfield,
Illinois,
62706.
2.
Those portions of the Complaint involving the single
open burning charge as well
as the remainder of the daily cover
charges
for which violations were not found
to exist are hereby
dismissed.
3.
The Complaint,
as
it concerns Respondent Dean Penn,
is
hereby dismissed.
4.
Respondent shall apply
final cover within 90 days of
the adoption of this Order unless he has obtained the requisite
operating permit frem the Agency~
IT
IS SO ORDERED
Mr.
Jacob Dumelle dissents
I,
Christan
L, Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois
Pollution Con-
trol Board,~herebycertify the
a ove Opinion and Order were ado ted
on the
J~
day of
~
1977
by a vote of
Illinois Pollution
Board