ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
February
6,
1975
VILLAGE OF CARY
)
Petitioner
v.
)
PCB 74—429
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
)
Respondent
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr. Zeitlin):
In a Petition filed November 19,
1974,
the Village of
Cary
(hereinafter “Petitioner”) seeks the following alter-
native forms of relief from the phosphorus discharge limitation
of Rule 407(b)
of Chapter
3, Water Pollution Regulations,
and from Rule 1002(b) (i)
which requires an implementation
plan to be filed prior to July
1,
1972, as follows:
1.
A one-year Variance from Rule 407(b), which sets
an effluent limit for Phosphorus discharges within the Fox
River Basin of 1.0 mg/i by December 31,
1974.
(as amended
by Rule 409 for those eligible for a construction grant
under Section 201(g) of the Federal Water Pollution Control
Act Amendments of 1972.
33 USC 1251 et. seq.);
2.
A one—year Variance from Rule 407, but granted in
such
a way as to allow commencement of construction of the
treatment facilities required to achieve compliance with
that rule,
upon the expiration of such variance;
(this is in
effect
a Variance for one year plus the construction time);
3.
A Variance for one year as to the Implementation
Plan requirements of Rule 1002 (b) (1),
as applicable
(if at
all)
to completion of the required treatment facilities for
compliance with Rule 407(b);
4.
A five-year Variance from Rule 407(b)
should the
Board determine that Petitioner~streatment facility is sub-
ject to the NPDES Permit requirements of Section 39
of the
Illinois Environmental Protection Act,
(the Act),
such five-
year period being permitted under Section 36(b)
of
the
Act;
or,
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—2—
5.
A Variance to the extent that the Board shall
determine that the Village of Cary should not be required to
remove phosphorus from its effluent,
and should be given an
exemption from the compliance standards of Rules 407(b) and
1002(b) (1).
This is,
in effect,
a request for a permanent
Variance.
Petitioner
is an Illinois Municipal Corporation located
in McHenry County, along the Fox River.
The Village has
approximately 1,400 occupied living units, with a population
of about 4,800.
Domestic and industrial sources in the vii-
lage generate an average daily flow df 705,000 gallons of
raw sewage, treated at a modern facility.
(The maximum flow
is approximately 886,000 g.p.d.)
Petitioner’s sewage treat-
ment plant does not currently treat the raw sewage influent
to remove phosphorus, which tests have shown to be as high
as
10 mg/i.
The effluent concentration of phosphorus
is
about 8.0 mg/l.
This is eight times greater than the allow-
able concentration of 1.0 mg/i under Rule 407(b)
for the Fox
River Basin.
Petitioner claims that it would constitute
an arbitrary
and unreasonable hardship to require that it comply with the
limits of Rule 407(b).
The crux of Petitioner’s hardship
argument is that to require compliance would place
a financial
burden upon the small population
of Cary,
and would in
addition be ineffective as a cleanup measure for the Fox
River.
The low bid for a treatment plant addition to eliminate
phosphorus
in Petitioner’s treatment plant effluent is
alleged to be $84,000, with an annual cost of chemicals to
operate the system of $20,000.
Petitionet estimates that
these costs would run to $60.00 per household for capital
costs, and $14.20 per year in operating costs for each
household thereafter.
The agency,
in a Recommendation filed December 23,
1974, contends that these figures do not lead to a finding
of hardship.
The Agency states that such costs are not
excessive, and in addition would not be borne by the current
population exclusively.
The Agency alleges that Cary is”...
an attractive growing community in an area of significant
development.
The fact that the treatment plant has capacity
more than twice present needs, indicates the expectations of
Petitioner.”
The sewerage treatment facility has a design
population equivalent capacity of 10,500 persons, a far-
sighted and commendable growth objective,
considering the
present population of Cary is 4,800 persons.
The Agency then assumes that by using long term financing,
Petitioner could distribute the costs of compliance among
the present and future residents of the area having the most
to gain from improved water quality in the area.
15
—
390
—3--
More importantly, the Agency also notes that Petitioner
has not sought state or federal grant funding to carry out a
compliance plan for phosphorus.
The Agency states that such
grant funding is available for treatment plant construction,
and could significantly reduce the burden of Petitioner’s
residents.
As to effectiveness, Petitioner claims that for it to
comply with the limits of Rule 407(b) would not reduce the
problem of algae in the Fox River Basin.
Petitioner apparently
commenced this Variance action upon learning of the evidence
and testimony presented in hearings before the Board in
Aurora Sanitary District v.
EPA, PCB 72—276,
January 16,
1975.
Testimony in that case to the effect that the treatment
of Illinois sewage treatment effluent to eliminate phosphorus
would have no effect on algae in the Fox River system was
incorporated by reference into the instant Petition.
Although
the incorporation of this testimony by Petitioner was vague
and inexact, the intent of that testimony was correctly
carried over.
The testimony of Dr. Clarence Sawyer at the
June 10,
1974 hearing in the Aurora matter was to the effect
that other sources of phosphorus, particularly from the
Chain of Lakes upstream from Cary and various impoundments
of the Fox River between Aurora and Cary,
and from phosphorus
contamination originating in Wisconsin,
are of such magnitude
that control of Illinois sewage treatment plant effluent
phosphorus concentrations
(as it relates to the Fox River)
would have no signficant effect on the algae problem.
PCB
72-276,
R-64,
75—77.
(We may properly assume that since
Petitioner has incorporated the testimony in Aurora into its
Petition,
it will not object to the incorporation of the
entire record of that proceeding.) Aurora’s ban on phosphate
detergents has resulted in their phosphorus discharge to be
4.7 mg/l whereas Cary’s discharge is 8.0 mg/i.
The Agency contends in its Recommendation that the
testimony received in Aurora
in inapplicable
to the problem
faced in this matter.
While Petitioner
in this case is,
like the Aurora Sanitary District, discharging its effluent
into the Fox River System, the two municipalities are se-
parated by more than thirty miles; that interval is highly
developed,
and contains such municipalities as Elgin, Carpenters—
yule,
and St. Charles.
The Agency further feels that the
problems of eutrophication are more serious between Cary and
Aurora than those downstream of Aurora. The Agency states
that the interval contains six dams and impoundment areas,
exacerbating the build-up of algae.
The problem of eutrophication has been before the Board
many times.
The Board recognized the need for phosphorus
limitations to control algae as early as January
6,
1971,
when
it
reduced by one-third the prior standards as to
15—391
—4—
phosphorus
in Lake Michigan.
Phosphorus Regulations, PCB
R70-6, January
6,
1971,
1 PCB 163,
169.
The implication of
phosphorus control and algae in eutrophication is more fully
discussed in the Board’s opinion on the matter.
In Re Phosphorus
Water Standards, PCB R70-6, April
28,
1971,
1 PCB 515,
517.
That Opinion fully explores the relationships between various
forms of phosphorus contamination and the resultant algae
blooms, and discusses the proper levels of control to prevent
the premature ageing of Illinois waters.
Id.
at
520—21,
527; See
G. Fitzgerald, Nutrient Sources For Algae and Their Control,
63, U.S. EPA Project #16010 EHR, August,
1971;
in the matter
of proposed Regulation Banning Phosphates
in Detergents, PCB
R7l-lO, Mar 14,
1972,
4 PCB 71,83; but see, Phosphate Water Standards,
PCB R70-6, April
14,
1971,
1 PCB 475
(Supplemental Opinion
of Mr. Aldrich).
The application of that reasoning to the Fox River
Basin is specifically explored by the Board in its later
Opinion adopting Rule 407 itself.
The Board in that case
stated that “tjhe
River and its tributary lakes are clogged
with nuisance blooms of algae, and it is time to activate
the requirements of SWB-ll.”
Effluent Criteria,
etc.,
PCB
R70—B,
71—14,
71—20, January
6,
1972,
3 PCB 401,
407.
Further, the need for phosphorus control in the Fox River
Basin was the subject of a special Board meeting in November,
1970.
Id.
In that Opinion, the Board also noted that there
was “no doubt of its
treatment
technology’sJ practicability
today” for phosphorus removal.
Id.
The testimony in Aurora, referred to by Petitioner in
this case,
does not indicate that the problem in the Fox
River has become less severe.
If anything, that testimony
states that the problem may be worse,
and is practically
uncontrollable.
The Agency in its Recommendation argued against the
grant of this Variance,
as was also the case in Aurora.
The
Agency states, correctly,
that a currently degraded condi-
tion in the environment cannot justify further degradation.
Illinois Power Co. v.
EPA, PCB 72-190,
Oct.
24, 1972,
6 PCB
17,
27.
That case in not controlling here,
however.
In the
Illinois Power Co. decision, the Board specifically pointed
out that controls “would on the evidence in this case have a
highly significant favorable impact on the undesirable air
quality in the area.”
Id.
at
29.
That is not the true of
the problem now before us.
Since the filings in this matter the Board has decided
the Aurora case.
PCB 72-276, January
9,
1975.
The Board
found that the expenditures required for Aurora to meet the
phosphorus effluent limits would not be matched by equivalent
15—392
—5—
water quality improvements in the Fox River.
Based on the
evidence in that case, the Board found that it would be an
arbitrary and unreasonable hardship on the Petitioner
in
that case
to require phosphorus removal until other problems
had been solved.
The Board found that even if the phosphorus dis-
charge limits were met by Aurora, sufficient phosphorus
would be present to nourish the algae,
and to cause noxious
algae blooms.
See also, Village of Grayslake v.
EPA, PCB
74-409, January
23,
1975, Opinion at p.
2
(Algae problems
in
Third Lake, tributary to Des Plaines River;
the Agency
recommended that the Variance be granted.)
The same underlying rationale applies here.
Were the
Board to require Petitioner in this case to undergo the
expense of treating its effluent for phosphorus in compliance
with Rule
407(b), the algae problem in the Fox River would
remain unabated. However, though we may temper the imple-
mentation of
a long—range environmental objective because of
a number of unknowns, we should not lose sight of the fact
that Petitioner
in treating its phosphorus effluent, by
whatever means are feasible and economical, would not then
add to the severity of the algae problem as it exists.
While we do not repudiate or revoke the language of the
Board which accompanied the adoption of Rule 407 (b), we find
that it would be unreasonable to require immediate compliance
of this Petitioner.
We note that the Illinois Institute for
for Environmental Quality is currently conducting
a compre-
hensive study of the Fox River
-
Chain of Lakes system,
the
initial phase is of which is expected to be completed by
June 1975.
As the Board stated in the Aurora opinion, the
Institute is encouraged
to complete its study as soon as
possible, PCB 72-276, Opinion at p.
3.
Insofar as that study remains incomplete, and as the
record in this case is far from complete even with the
adoption of the Aurora record, there are insufficient facts
before the Board to allow serious consideration of Petitioner’s
alternative request for a five—year variance period.
For
that reason, we will not approach the question of the applicabil-
ity of Sections
36(b)
and 39 of the Act to this Petition.
This reasoning applies similarly to Petitioner’s indefinite
request for a Variance of one year plus the time required
for construction.
Should extension of these Variances be necessary,
Petitioner will undoubtedly be prepared after a period of
one year to better address the troublesome issues presented
here.
15—
393
6—
Such actions would be of assistance
to Petitioner in
showing good faith;
it is difficult to determine such good
faith in the instant case, based on so scanty a record.
It
can be assumed that were it not for the Aurora case, Petitioner
would have taken the first step to comply with the implementation
plan requirements of Rule 1002 (b) (1), from which it also
seeks a Variance.
Petitioner had applied for a construction
permit from the Agency for phosphorus treatment modification
to its present plant, which permit
(No. 1974—AB-1684)
igas
allegedly issued on October 31,
1974.
The Village Engineer
for Petitioner had also allegedly prepared plans and specific—
atloas for an Alum and Polymer feed system for phosphorus
removal,
and had received bids for
the
construction of
such
a system. But strict compliance has not been shown as to the
requirements of Rule 1002 (b) (i), which compliance will be
expected in keeping with the other portions of this Opinion.
The timetables required under that Rule shall remain in
keeping with the period of this variance.
This should not
constitute any hardship for Petitioner, insofar as it has
already made plans for compliance with Rule 407(b).
No discussion will be given to Petitioner’s request for
a permanent Variance,
or a Board finding that Rule 407(b)
should not be applied as against
it.
The grant of this variance similarly does not relieve
petitioner from attempting to alleviate the hardship found
in this case.
Petitioner shall
inquire into the avail--
ability of federal and state grant funding for phosphorus
control, and shall apply if eligible.
The Board has pending before it R74-l7 which would
extend the deadline date presently existing to meet effluent
standards,
from December 31, 1974 to July
1,
1977;
this
regulation proceeding would affect Petitioner
if adopted by
the Board.
No hearing was held in this matter.
This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact
and conclusions of law.
ORDER
IT IS THE ORDER of the Pollution Control Board that:
1,
Petitioner
is granted a variance from the phosphorus
effluent discharge limits of Rule
407(b)
of Chapter
3, Water
Pollution Regulations,
from January
1,
1975 until December
31,
1975, subject to the conditions
stated below.
15
—394
—7—
2,
Petitioner is granted a variance from the Implementation
Plan requirements of Rule 1002(b) (i)
of Chapter
3, Water
Pollution Regulations,
to the extent consistent with this
Opinion and Order, from July
1,
1972 until September
1,
1975, pursuant to Section 35 of the Environmental Protection
Act.
The above Variances are subject to the following:
a.
Petitioner’s discharge of phosphorus into the Fox
River shall not exceed concentrations of
8 mg/l.
b.
Petitioner shall explore alternate means of treatment
to reach discharge concentration levels in compliance with
the limitations of Rule
407(b), and report on the same to
the Agency on
a bimonthly basis, such reports to be submitted
on the 15th of the month and commencing in April,
1975.
c.
Petitioner shall apply for all applicable state or
federal grant funding available to Petitioner for the removal
of phosphorus from its treatment plant effluent and shall
submit by September 1,
1975
a report to the Agency as to
availability of funding.
3.
Petitioner shall file with the Agency a project
completion schedule by September 1,
1975, pursuant to Rule
409 of Chapter
3 of the Water Pollution Regulations.
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, hereby certify the above Opinion and Order
were adopted on the
~
day of February,
1975 by a vote
of
S~
-
anL.~?2~Ek
Illinois Pollution Control Board
15
—395