ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
June 13,1975
ARNOLD COHN,
)
Petitioner,
V.
)
PCI3 75—102
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr. Zeitlin):
The Board initially received the Petition for Variance
in this matter on February 28,
1975.
On March
6,
1975,
the
Board entered an Interim Order, requiring that Petitioner
submit further information to support the original petition.
The further information requested was received on March
26,
1975. A Recommendation from the Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency,
(Agency), recommending that the variance
be denied, was received on May 21,
1975.
No hearing was
held in this matter.
Petitioner here seeks
a Variance from the sewer ban in Part
7 of the Board~sOrder in League of Women Voters of Illinois
v. North Shore Sanitary District, PCB 70-7,
12-14,
1 PCB
369,
396
(1971).
That Order was modified by the Board on
January
31, 1972 in the case of North Shore Sanitary District
v. Environmental Protection Agency,
PCB 71-343,
3 PCB 541.
The
Board there granted the North Shore Sanitary District
(District)
a variance, allowing the addition of a total of 1,000 living
units,
or 4,000 population equivalents
(P.E.)
to the sewers
tributary to the Clavey Road and Waukegan Sewage Treatment
Plants.
As
a part of that variance grant, however,
in
paragraph
6,
the Board stated that:
C.
no connections shall be allowed if any part of
the down—stream sewer system is incapable of adequately
transporting the additional or new waste to the District’s
treatment works;
3 PCB at 558.
The original Petition received in this matter indicates
that Mr. Cohn seeks permission
to build
a small retirement
home for his mother on a vacant lot in Waukegan, Illinois.
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—321
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Although Mr.
Cohn does not state when he purchased the lot
in question, which is located on Theresa Avenue on the north
side of the City of Waukegan,
he does state that he purchased
the lot in a fully improved condition,
and that all improvements
including sewer hook-up have been installed on Theresa Avenue
for 12 years.
In support of his variance request, Mr. Cohn
states simply that
a failure to obtain the variance would
result in,
“quite
a hardship on my motherssic)
retirement
plans both financially, and emotionally.”
In its Recommendation the Agency points out that
Petitioner’s proposed dwelling would,
if connected to the
Waukegan sewers, be tributary to the Judge Avenue sewer.
The Agency classifies the Judge Avenue sewer as hydraulically
overloaded;
the Board has also noted such conditions
in the Judge
Avenue sewer.
Ben Cooper v. EPA, PCB 74-228
(January 23,
1975).
Further, the Agency Recommendationin states
a belief
that
the problem with the Judge Avenue sewer will exist for
a considerable period of time.
Although Mr. Cohn quotes the
Waukegan City Engineer as stating a completion date for
projects to correct the Judge Avenue sewer problem as being
“no longer than 18
to 24 months” away,
the Agency states
that its investigation has revealed that construction
on
sewer improvements will not commence until Spring,
1976,
and
may take as long as two years thereafter to reach completion.
The Agency further assumes that during this period of construction
the sewer backup problems in the area will continue to
exist.
Since the imposition of the sewer ban in League of Women Voters,
this Board has dealt with many individual variance requests
relating to that Order.
These cases have ranged from requests
to install additional bathrooms onto an existing dwelling
without an increased P.E.
loading,
to requests that we
allow sewerage hook-ups for large projects.
See,
~
Haight v. EPA, PCB 7193,
2 PCB—63
(1971);
Patricia Development
Corp.
v.
EPA, PCB 71—161,
2 PCB 469,
471
(1971) ;Cooper,
supra.
The key factor to remember in the analysis of these
cases is that the Petitioner bears the burden of proof when
seeking a variance from a sewer ban, exactly as
is the case
with all variances.
Lake County School Dist.
No.
64,
et.
~
PCB 71—313,314,
~
Order of the Board).
The Board has in fact granted a considerable
number of variances with respect to the North Shore Sanitary
District Sewer ban.
But in each of these cases, the Petitioner
has shown that a denial of the variance would work a severe
hardship.
Eg., Dupre v.
EPA, PCB 71-94,
2 PCB 200,
201
(1971) (“construction.. .substantially complete”);
~iancio v.
EPA,
17
—322
—3—
PCB 71—100,
2 PCB 211,
213
(1971) (Petitioner living in inadequate
quarters-7 people in 4 rooms; septic field impossible;
detrimental reliance on preexisting permits); American
National Bank and Trust Co., Trust No. 28512 v.
EPA, PCB 71-
132,
2 PCB 229, 230
(1971) (discussion of hardship on which a
variance can be granted; Mr. Currie dissented); McAdams v.
EPA, PCB 71-113,
2 PCB 297(1971)
(poverty);
Patricia Development,
supra
(poverty,
detrimental reliance).
But See, Lawler v.
EPA,
PCB 71—209,
2 PCB 557
(1971)
(Variance denied,
family of
6 in 2—
bedroom apartment).
It should be noted that in each of the above cited cases
the Board was presented with a substantial allegation of
hardship, and on that ground granted the variance.
The
Board has noted that, ‘Vmerely proving an inconvenience or a slight
hardship is not enough to be granted
a variance by this
Board.”
Weinstein,
et.
al.,
v. EPA,
PCB 71—107,
122,
192,
2
PCB291,
292,
(1971).
The Board in that case also stated
that
the
hardship alleged “must be substantial for it to
outweigh the damage to be caused”, and that
“just holding
the
Lot
is not enough to give a person the right to build in
opposition
to the sewer ban.”
2
PCB at
292,
293.
The Board
has plainly held that “the hardship of complying with the
hauls
insufficient when,
as here,
the only significant
step taken before the ban was the purchase of a
lot.
h’(uL~~lcsw~~nc.
v.
EPA,
PCB 71-1l2,
2 PCB 295
(1971)
The
Board
realizes
that
this sewer
ban,
and others,
does work
an
undeniable
hardship
on
those
wishing
to
occupy
new
quarters.
Such
hardship,
the
Board
has
held,
is
“inherent
in
the
aewer ban.”
Andracki
v.
EPA,
PCB 71—149,
2
PCB
363
(1971)
The i3oardis
constrained
to
deny
the
variance
in
this
matter.
Petitioner
Cohn
has
failed
to
meet
the
burden
set
in
the
cases
c:Lted
above;
his
allegations
of
hardship
are
insufficient.
While
the
Board
may
hypothesize
on
the
possible
hardship in this case,
the simple allegation
of “financial”
and “emotional” hardship is not enough to allow the relief
requested.
In the McAdams case,
supra, and in the others
cited above,
the hardship demonstrated was real and immediate.
That has not been shown here.
Nor is the Board moved by the fact that a sewer connection
has already been installed at the vacant lot in question.
The Board has previously stated that its cases have “made
clear that in the absence of other compelling circumstances
it is insufficient
that such improvements as sewer and
water lines and streets have been constructed..
.
since the
improvements will still be there when... the ban is lifted.”
17
—
323
—4—
Mars Development Co.
v.
EPA, PCE 71-218-219,
2 PCB 689
(1971).
Even the expenditure of money for preliminary
expenses connected to the building of
a house will not
suffice to evoke the doctrine of estoppel, and entitle the
applicant to the issuance of
a permit.
Wagner v.
EPA,
PCB 71—85,
2 PCB 131
(1971)
Our decision here is not a permanent denial of
Mr.
Cohn’s
right to build on his vacant property.
It is simply
a dismissal
without prejudice on the facts before. us. But in the absence of
proof that the sewer ban works an unreasonable hardship on Mr.
Cohn, we cannot do otherwise.
We shall dismiss this petition without prejudice, giving
Petitioner leave to file
a new petition alleging facts that
will qualify him for the extraordinary relief sought.
See,
e.g. Niles Terrace
Inc. v~EPA, PCB 71-280,
2 PCB 499
(1971).
We also suggest to Petitioner that verification
of the Petition
would facilitate our future action.
Waukegan Park District v.
EPA, PCB 71—266,
267,
2 PCB 489
(1971).
This Opinion constitutes the finding of fact and conclusions
of law of the Board in this matter.
ORDER
IT
IS THE ORDER OF THE POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD that
the Petition for Variance in this matter be denied without
prejudice.
I,
Christan L. Noffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board hereb~certify that the above Opinion and Order were adopted
on the
3
‘
day of
_______________________,
1975 by a vote of
___to
(~
.
Christan L. Moffe
lerk
ILLINOIS POLLUTIO
NTROL BOARD
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324