ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL
BOARD
February 11,
1976
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
Complainant,
v.
)
PCB 75—258
RICHARD C. McCORMICK,
)
Respondent.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr.
Zeitlin):
This case comes before the Board on a Complaint filed by the
Environmental Protection Agency on June
30,
1975.
The Complaint
alleges violations of Section 21(e)
of the Environmental Protection
Act
(Act) and Rules
201 and/or Rule 202(a)
of the Board’s Solid
Waste Regulations.
A hearing was held on September
4,
1975 at which
a Stipulation of Facts
(Stipulation)
including eight exhibits were
admitted into evidence.
Mr. McCormick appeared without counsel.
Additional Exhibits A and B were submitted on October 21, 1975
pursuant to agreement of the parties
(B. 5).
In paragraph
4 of the Stipulation, Mr. McCormick admits that
he did not possess, between January 14,
1975 and June
30,
1975,
a
permit for the operation of his solid waste management
site.
In
paragraph
1, Mr. McCormick admits to ownership of the site in
question.
In paragraphs
12,
14 and 15 Mr. McCormick admits that
the site was
in operation on January
14,
1975, April
9,
1975, and
June
10,
1975,
respectively.
These admissions establish all of the
facts necessary to find a violation of Section
21(e)
of the Act.
Exhibit A is
a letter from the Agency acknowledging receipt of
Mr. McCormick’s application for a development permit dated June 21,
1974.
This letter set out 15 inadequacies
in the application and
denied issuance pending receipt of complete information.
Additional
Exhibit A is another letter from the Agency dated September
19,
1975.
In this letter the Agency, having received the
information
submitted,
denied the permit request.
It is clear from this record that a
development permit was necessary prior to the operation of Mr.
McCormick’s site.
Violation of Rules
201 and 202(a)
of the Board’s
Solid Waste Regulations have
been shown.
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—2—
It can be argued that Mr. McCormick’s previous attempt to
apply for and obtain a permit should be considered in mitigation
of these violations.
However, as
is shown in Exhibit A,
F, and G,
Mr. McCormick failed to supply information essential to the completion
and final analysis of his development plans,
in spite of numerous
warnings from Agency personnel concerning the potential violation
of Board regulations
(Exhibits A and F; Stipulation paragraphs
6,
13,
14,
15, and 16).
Without the information necessary
to enable
the Agency to determine the viability of a proposed site,
a permit
“application” is meaningless.
The submission of such information
is much more than a costly formality.
It is not a matter of “bureau-
cratic red tape”.
This fact is excellently illustrated in the present
case.
Additional Exhibit A is a letter from the Agency’s Permit
Section discussing complications inherent in Mr. McCormick’s
plan for above grade
(area)
filling:
“Area fills have a propensity to leach along the base.
Your plans treat this problem with a complicated collec-
tion and treatment and/or recirculation system involving
what certainly must be high installation and maintenance
costs”.
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
“However,
if your site were trenched,
the need for leachate
collection would be entirely eliminated.
Added benefits
include an increased site life and reduced development
costs.
Furthermore,
spot samples from our files indicate
that overall conformance with the Rules and Regulations is
best achieved by trenching
(as opposed to area filling).”
It
is thus shown that Mr. McCormick’s development plan was
not acceptable from an environmental point of view.
It is also
shown that the plan may not have been acceptable from a purely
economic point of view if he had looked into the matter adequately.
The integrity of the permit program is essential
to the Act’s
program for the protection of the Illinois environment.
Solid
waste management
sites have
a substantial social and economic value.
However,
that value is diminished
to the extent that the site is not
developed properly to prevent the pollution of land and contamination
of water supplies.
This is especially true because the cost of
obtaining the necessary permit
is not prohibitive.
As
such,
the costs
involved in obtaining the development and operating permits represent
not only
a cost of doing business in the State of Illinois, but also
the exercise of sound business judgment.
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—3—
A penalty of $2,500
is especially necessary in this case, to
protect the integrity of the permit system;
to demonstrate to Mr.
McCormick that he will not profit by opting to violate Board regulations.
As stated
in the Act,
Ill. Rev.
Stat.
Ch. 111—1/2 §1002(b) as
amended,
“It is the purpose of this Act.
.
.to assure that adverse
effects upon the environment are fully considered and borne by
those who cause them”.
Mr. McCormick, by operating without a
permit has explicitly failed to consider the adverse environmental
effects caused by his site and has thus violated both the form
and the very substance of the permit requirement.
A cease and desist order is also warranted in this case.
Mr.
McCormick will be ordered to cease and desist from the operation
of his site until such time as it has been issued necessary
development and operating permits.
This is necessary because at
issue here
is not merely operation without a permit.
The basis
of the permit denial is the inadequacy of Mr. McCormick’s plan
for the development of the site.
The operation of this site,
therefore, poses a threat to the environment.
This
is all of no
surprise to Mr. McCormick
(see Agency warnings in Exhibits A
and F, and Stipulation paragraphs
6,
13,
14,
15 and 16,
and Addi-
tional Exhibits A and
B)
who has been apprised of the need for
a permit and of potential adverse effects on the environment.
The record bears no facts which would indicate that the
cessation of operations
at the McCormick site would result in
any substantial hardship to the communities served.
The only
pertinent fact is that the nearest site is in East Peoria, and
is operated by Tazewell County Waste Management,
Inc.
CR.
4).
Paragraph
2 of the Stipulation states that Respondent’s McCormick
Disposal Service serves approximately 30 communities
in the
central
Illinois area,
and dispose these collected wastes at
the site in question.
The Board has been presented with no
facts which would indicate that any extreme hardship would fall
upon either Mr. McCormick or his customers because of an order
to cease and desist from operating without a permit.
In this
case,
the violation of the Act and the Board’s regulations,
coupled with the potential for land pollution and subsequent
water contamination far outweigh any mitigating factors.
This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact and
conclusions of law.
ORDER
1.
Respondent Richard C. McCormick is hereby found to have
violated Section 21(e)
of the Environmental Protection Act and
Rules
201 and 202(a)
of the Board’s Solid Waste Regulations.
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2.
Respondent Richard C. McCormick shall pay as a
penalty for such violations the sum of $2,500 payment
to be made by certified check or money order within
35 days of the date of this Order to:
State of Illinois
Fiscal Services Division
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
2200 Churchill Road
Springfield, Illinois
62706
3.
Respondent Richard C. McCormick shall cease and desist
from the aforesaid violations within ninety
(90) days from the
date of this Order, unless all appropriate permits have been
obtained from the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
I,
Christan
L.
Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify the above Opinion and Or~erwere adopted on the
~jl
~\
day of February, 1976, by a vote of
~
Illinois Pollution
‘1 Board
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