ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
June
23,
1971
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
v.
)
PCB
# 71-41
CLAY PRODUCTS CO.
et.
al.
Larry
R.
Eaton
for the E.P.A. Agency
James
T. Moham and Alfred B.
LaBarre for the Respondent
Opinionof
the Board
(by Mr. Currie):
This complaint,
like
that, in EPA v.
Sauget,
# 71-29
(decided
May
26,
1971), charges the respondents with numerous violations
of the regulations and of
the statute with regard to the operation
of
a landfill
for solid waste disposal.
As in Sauget, we
find
the
evidence establishes several of the charges and fails to establish
others.
We order that violations
cease and
a money penalty be paid.
The landfill in question,
located in Springfield,
is admittedly
owned by respondent Clay Products and operated under lease by
respondents Buerkett and Hinds.
In order to assure that the owner
exercises care that improper operations do not occur on his property,
we
think
it appropriate
that
the prospective provisions
of our
order apply to it as well as to its lessees.
Count
3 of the complaint alleges open dumping in violation
both of section 21 of the Environmental Protection Act and of
rule 3.04 of
the Rules and Regulations for Refuse Disposal Sites
and Facilities
(hereafter “Landfill Rules”), adopted by
the
Department of Public Health in 1966 and effective by virtue
of
section
49
(c) of the statute,
Open dumping is
a catchall term
that embraces
a number
of specific infractions alleged elsewhere
in the complaint.
In light of our findings on these more
specific counts we do not find it necessary to decide whether
or not they also constitute open dumping.
Count
4 alleges open burning,
Although deliberate burning
was denied
(R.
371),
respon~1entsconceded that on
two occasions
when EPA inspectors were on the premises
fires were in progress,
started,
it is said, by discarded cigarettes
(R.
371)’.
The
evidence
is that some effort was made tq cover the burning
material
CR.
65,
372) but that in one instance the fire smoldered
for twelve hours
CR.
380)
and that no effort was made to extinguish
it while the inspector was present
(R,
63).
As we held
in EPA
v. Cooling,
# 70-2
(December
9,
1970),
the statute and the
regulations
are not limited to deliberate violations,
Care must
be exercised to prevent fires from occurring and to extinguish
them if they do.
We think by exercising proper care the respondents
here could have prevented the discard of lighted cigarettes
and
2 —33
could have ended the fires more quickly.
Respondents have caused
or allowed open burning.
Count
5 charges
the absence of convenient sanitary facilities
for employees working at the landfill, in violation of Rule
4.03
Cc).
But the evidence
is that adequate facilities are provided at the
company~s office, variously described as
100 yards from the landfill
gate
CR,
373)
and as 1,000 feet from where dumping took place
CR.
88).
As in the Sauget case,
we find these facilities sufficient,
We cannot expect toilets every thirty feet on
a landfill site,
Count
6 alleges that access to the site has been permitted “at
all hours
of the day”,
in violation of Rule 5,02.
But that rule
does not limit hours of operation;
it forbids access when there
is no employee
on the
site,
The allegation is fatally deficient,
Count
7 alleges that refuse has been dumped over a “large
impractical
area”, contrary to Rule
5.03.
The evidence on
this
issue is conflicting and largely subjective,
Respondents testified
the area open at one time was generally kept to
a width of 50
to
100 feet
CR.
382,
399),
that
the area can be and is adequately
handled by their equipment
CR,
399), that anything much
less would
cause delays in unloading
trucks
CR,
320),
An Agency inspector
testified that he had observed
a working area roughly l00~ x 75~
to l00~ CR,
164)
and
that in his opinion this
area should have been
reduced by one third
to one half because
it was
too large
to be
covered in a day by the equipment available
(R.
171, 181-82).
We
recognize the desirability of keeping the working area small,
as
EPA~switness urged,
not only to facilitate cover but also to
reduce blowing material
and to lessen the attraction of pests
(H.
182).
But on the present record we do not find sufficient
evidence that the area worked was overly large,
Count
8 alleges that unsupervised unloading has been allowed,
that no portable fences were
used
to prevent material from blowing,
and that the area was not policed to collect scattered material,
all in violation of Rule 5,04,
The proof
is clear that on one
occasion a truck was unloaded while no employee was on hand
(R,
108).
Such
a violaticn creates obvious risks of improper disposal,
It is
the duty of the owner and operator to prevent such problems by
providing supervision at all
times,
Moreover,
it is clear that until
recently there were no portable fences for use when conditions
required them to restrain blowing material
CR,
107,
166).
There
was
some suggestion by respondents that this provision applies only
when
there
is
a risk that material will be blown beyond
the property
line
CR.
139),
but the suggestion lacks merit,
The owner and operator
are bound to keep the site itself from becoming unnecessary unsightly,
and the regulation specifically requires fencing to avoid material
blowing from the “unloading site”,
in order
to keep the refuse where
it is dumped.
There was also testimony that blowing litter had not
been collected
CR.
108).
Violations of Rule
5.04 were therefore shown,
2—34
Count
9 charges
a failure to spread and compact refuse
as
required by Rule
5.06.
There was evidence
that refuse on one
occasion was left as deposited without being spread or compacted
(R.
104—05,
109).
The Rule requires that refuse be spread and
compacted “as rapidly as refuse is admitted to the site”,
The
rule is clear; equipment must be operating immediately upon
deposit of refuse.
A violation was shown,
Count
10 alleges failure to cover refuse at the end of each
working day as required by Rule 5.07.
Violations were clearly
shown,
First, there was proof that recognizable refuse items
remained uncovered for two consecutive
days
CR.
40,
67—68,
79,
82—83, 109—110),
as in the Sauget case.
Second,
there was testimony
that some refuse requiring cover
lay exposed,
and that other
lay
inadequately covered,
some
of it in water or
in liquid waste
(H,
32—33,
113—14,
116—17,
168,
189—90,
206,
211),
since before
the dates alleged in the complaint
CR,
95—96,
110,
137).
While
the original failure to cover these old items
as the refuse was
deposited was
not charged in
the complaint,
the duty to cover
is
a
continuing one extending to
“all exposed refuse” at the end of each
day,
Count 11 alleges
the discharge of hazardous
liquids
at the
landfill
site without the approval required by
Rule 5.08
Csee
R,
113,
208,
359).
The respondents demonstrated approval by
the Department of Health for the deposit of oil wastes
in
Impoundment No,
1, where most of the liquid waste was observed
CR.
63—64,
113,
359,
388,
412,
434 and Ex,
H.
3—1),
Two Agency
witnesses testified to oil
in
a second impoundment that the
respondents asserted was not used for this purpose
CR.
167—68,
179—80,
183—84,
208,
359,
388).
Whether using
two pits
for oil
would violate the Health Department~s order to
“contain the dumping
of the hazardous materials received from Sorco Oil and Refining
Company in
a separate pit” we need not decide,
for
the undisputed
evidence by one Agency witness was
that an oily liquid had also been
seen on the ground in the vicinity of Impoundment No.
1
CR,
208-09).
The presence of this waste in April of 1971 gives rise
to the inference
it was
put there sometime since
the preceding October,
Whether or
not the respondents put it there,
they had the obligation,
as in the
case
of open burning,
to prevent others from doing
so,’
The violation
is established,
All
oil deposit has now ceased because the Agency
has refused to renew permission
(R,
412—14).
Count
12 alleges the absence of rodent control under Rule 5,09,
As we held in Sauget, proper cover is
a type of rodent control that
is always required.
But further controls
are necessary only
“as
directed by
the Department”
(now the Agency), and since it was
stipulated there has been
no such direction in the past
CR.
121),
there
is
no proof of violation.
Counts
13 and
14 allege improper salvage operations andscavenging,
in violation of Rules 5.10
and
5.12
(a).
The relation between
2
—
35
salvaging and scavenging
is not altogether clear;
suffice it that
on one occasion the undisputed testimony is that an unidentified man
was seen manually sorting dumped refuse
CR,
122), which is flatly
forbidden.
It is the owner’s and operator’s duty to prevent such
activities.
Count 15 alleges
that refuse has been disposed of in standing
water in violation of Rule
5.12
Cc).
There is much evidence
that
refuse was
seen in water
CR,
32-33,
206), and this evidence was relied
on above
to show
a violation of the cover requirements,
But Rule
5.12
Cc) requires
a showing that refuse was put into
the water;
here we
cannot infer either that
the water was there before
the refuse
CR.
64)
or that the deposit was chargeable
to these respondents
CR.
72).
This
is not
to say this
type of violation can be proved only by eyewitnesses
to the dumping itself, but we
find the record inconclusive in this
case,
See EPA v. Amigoni,
PCB
# 70—15,
(February
17,
1971),
There was
however, proof that o
one occasion burning refuse was pushed into
water during an effort to put it out
CR.
45,
379).
This seems an
undesirable way to combat
fire,
in light of the regulation; but we
cannot say
it is never
a permissible choice between two evils,
Count
16 alleges that inadequate measures have been taken
to prevent
contamination of ground and surface waters,
in violation of Rule
4,02
Ca)
and of sections 12
(a)
and
Cd)
of the Act, which prohibit water
pollution and water pollution hazards,
There is proof
that,
as
the
result of leaching through refuse
CR,
285), water impounded on the
site
is high in oxygen-demanding materials and total solids,~-
CR,
274-75,
279-82),
so that its discharge
to stream or aquifer might
cause pollution,
and there
is proof that in one impoundment the water
level was
near
to overflowing
CR.
191-92,
367).
But there is
insufficient proof that any water escaping from these ponds would be
likely
to reach either stream or aquifer
CR,
192,
242-43,
278,
297,
312,
327,
361,
367-68),
and consequently we find no violation in this
regard.
We do think respondents would be well advised in order to escape future
complaints
to avoid the mixing of refuse and water on their premises.
Count
17 alleges unsightly and improper operation in purported
violation of section
20 of
the Act,
But that section forbids nothing;
it is
a statement of policy for
use in interpreting
the operative
sections
of the Act,
In sum, we
find violations with respect to open burning, unsuper-
vised unloading,
spreading, compacting,
and covering,
fencing,the deposit
of liquids,
scavenging,
and the collection of scattered materials
The
testimony of a County Health inspector that the~sitewas generally ~well
operated
(R,3l9—65)
does not contradict EPA’S case, but it has wei~htin
mitigation.
We are told by EPA that operation has since improved
in many respects
CR,
130-131),
We shall order that no further
infractions occur,
and
to deter future violations we shall assess
a
penalty of $500.
The sum is smaller than
in Sauget and earlier ‘cases,
for the violations appear less serious,
1.
Respondents sought to exclude several
test re~ultson the ground the
Agency’s witness had not performed the tests herself.
For reasons
given by the hearing officer this motion was properly denied
CR.
264—66),
2 —36
This opinion constitutes
the Board’s finding of fact and
conclusions of
law.
ORDER
1.
Clay Products
Co.,
Merle K.
Buerkett, and Lowe
G.
Hinds shall
cease
and desist from violations
of the Environmental Protection
Act and of the Rules and Regulations
for Reftise Sites
and
Facilities,
as follows:
a)
No open burning shall be allowed.
b)
No unloading shall be permitted without supervision.
c)
Refuse shall
be spread and compacted
as rapidly as
it
is admitted to the site,
d)
Refuse shall be covered daily as required by the Rules.
e)
Any exposed refuse presently on the
site shall be covered
as required by
the Rules.
f)
Portable fences shall be provided whenever weather conditions
require in order
to reduce the scattering of litter, and
scattered litter shall be collected,
g)
The discharge of liquids shall not be allowed except as shall
be authorized by
the Agency in the
future.
h)
Scavenging
shall not be permitted,
2.
Merle
K, Buerkett and Lowe
G.
Hinds are jointly and severally
ordered to pay to the State of Illinois on or before July
1,
1971,
the total sum of $500 as
a penalty for
the violations
described in the Board’s opinion.
I,
Regina
E.
Ryan, Clerk of the Board,
Opinion and Order was entered on the
that the above
1971,
2
—
37