ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
August
18,
1977
MICHAEL STEVEN PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER,
)
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 77-40
ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent
JOHN McGUIRE OF WALKER,
GENDE, HAKDER, BERZ
& GRAMMACO,
SPRINGFIELD,
represented Petitioner,
JOSEPH SVOBODA, OF
THE AGENCY, represented Respondent.
OPINION OF THE BOARD
(by Mr. Dumelle):
This Opinion is in support
of an Order entered
by
the
Bqard
on
August ~4,1977.
On February
2,
1977
Petitioner
filed
for
a Variance requesting
relief to allow the Michael
Steven Plaza
(Plaza)
to remain connected
to the City of Carlinvill&s
presently
restricted sewer system.
An
amended Petition was
filed on May
5,
1977
seeking a Variance from
Rule 962(a)
of Chapter
3:
Water
Pollution of
the
Board~sRules
&
Regulations.
The Agency~sRecommendation to deny
the
variance was
filed on March 28,
1977.
The Agency re-submitted its
Recommendation
with some modification on June 9,
1977,
in
response to the Amended
Petition.
A hearing was held on June 19,
1977
at
the Methodist Church
Hall
in Carlinvilie; no
members of the general public
testified.
John Schien owns a 32 acre tract
in
northeast Carlinville
and
constructs buildings
as
the need
arises~
(R.
6).
In 1974 he
constructed an eight inch sewer connecting the
Plaza
Truck Service
on the northeast part of his tract
to the
City~ssewer
system,
(R.
7)
which is currently on restricted status until completion of its
proposed facility scheduled
for September,
1978.
Since the sewer
line was installed, Mr. Schien has constructed
a shopping center and
has
connected
the individual
stores to his
sewer.
(R.
15)
All of these
connections and
installations were
performed without Agency
permits because Mr. Schien
believed he didn’t
need to apply for them,
This variance request arises because
~7~~?3
/
once
the corncc’~.
er
~
Schien
had be~
3
-
required Agency
pero
:~
-,
restricted statu~ t~? g~
oo
permits
to al)~owthase
r
~
Board,
This ~variunce
and 1egal~ze t1ac ~
Section
35 of
tire
~
unless the Petitiorer da c~ct
Rules
and Regulations w
6.
c
hardship.
In th~s as~.
of $18,600.00,
‘R
16
construct indivicua~ ~ew
-
icc
~
center to the city
~ c~c
~a
line.
These individ
~i
-ir~
permits.
This hardsci~
therefore insufficienc
~x
ju~.
:~t
how this unfortunate
s~t.a
r
-
.-~
6~scoveredthat Mr.
necions
and
installation
a city sewer system
was
on
-~vebeen able to issue
o
a variance from the
uc en for his past mistake
r~nces cannot be granted
--‘~r’iancewith the Board~s
-iary
or unreasonable
n would be the
expense
•
-a
~o be spent to
hailding in the
shopping
o his own eight inch
sewer
at require
Agency
-~e self-imposed and
~anae without
analyzing
In January t9~4Mr
-
w~sadvised by the
Agency that no permit va~
Lea~c
~f~ht inch
sewer
if it
was designed to serve o~
o e
‘
-r wauld
eventually
transport sewage of
15
a pic ~
~t. Ex.
1)
Armed with this
information Mr. S~hier
-
~ould go
ahead and
install
the sewer
line because
o.it
~.
~a
be
connected
only ~o his
service station,
Mr
5~oien~
a
a sewer
in such
a
way that
future connections to
it
ou
p
~ce.
The line
was routed
around
his property to prcuidc
~a
cc -~or~r~ent.When the
shopping
center
was built, Mr.
~cs en
~
-
isef that individual
connections that ~erven ~o
J
andled no more than 1500
gallons
of wastewater e~cha
~‘
~L’~
~eqrire
Agency
permits.
(Pet.
Ex,
2,4,6,7)
Since e~cla
t
co ~a~ara
~o the eight
inch
line
fit this speciticatio3
~6.c
a atfons w~rtecompleted.
The Agency had
apparently been ind~co
~.
-t
~-
~
-s correspondence that
Mr.
Schien~sconclusions w~r
t
e.
cc.
ar~e
Agency
was
finally
apprised
of
the complete si~ia~
cof
ui
rat
c~
t.~atan eight
inch
line
with a nunber of comxaerc~ corecti~s was being
connected
without any perrrits
to Carlini
e
a r~vcr~oadedsewer system,
it
stated
quite plaicly
~ut
th
oonccti~onshad
in
fact been
illegal.
(Pet
tx
t(~
The Agency co~en6ea ~
~
~
a
cr6.
in its recommendation
that Mr. Schior~ieichc
ar.
--
~
oaf beer~intended all
along
for future connec ion~arc
t
a
y harcsi.ip suffered in this
case
was the Petiticre~ a
w.
-IL
ur
Schien admitted
that
he
had intended futcre de~loaa~c
a
tar ha installed
the sewer.
His argument was tI~ata~each a~p ~f
~re way,
he believed that
he was justified in proceediTIc
ancrr
a cermit.
~R,
18)
The size of
the sewer was ~xp1ainei
~tsnecEm-~rvb-muse
of the
slope
involved,
(R,
8)
The Agency correspoaderi~e
nt its misinformed
conclusions
/1/
formed the
basis for
Mr.
Schien~s
decision to connect the
individual
stores.
The Board finds
that construction of additional individual
sewer
lines that would
parallel the present eight inch line would
impose
an arbitrary or
unreasonable
hardship on the Petitioner.
The
confusing correspondence in
the record adequately explains
Petitioner’s errors
in judgment.
:~tshould be noted
that
neither
granting nor
denying this variance would result in any significant
adverse environmental
impact on the
city~s sewer system.
The
same volume of sewage
will flow whether it goes
through new
individual
lines or the existing
eight inch line,
No further connections,
other than those
for existing
buildings,
may be made.
This Opini~i
constitutes
the Board~sfindings of fact
and
conclusions of law in
this matter.
I, Christan L.
Moffett, Clerk
of the Illinois Pollution
CoI)troi
Board,
certify
the above Opinion was adopt~ on theJ~~
day of
1977 by a vote of
~
~p~333
Illinois Pol1ution~
Board