ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    October 24, 1972
    NORTH SHORE SANITARY DISTRICT
    #72—367
    V.
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (BY SAMUEL T.
    LAWTON,
    JR.)
    On April
    17,
    1972 and May 22,
    1972,
    the North Shore Sanitary
    District wrote to
    the
    Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
    preliminary to application for permits with respect to its Clavey
    Road, Waukegan and Gurnee sewage treatment plants,
    inquiring whether
    the so-called “Pfeffer exception” applicable to biochemical oxygen
    demand (BOD5)
    and suspended solids
    (SS)
    limits would be available
    to the District as to effluent discharges of the foregoing plants.
    In simple terms,
    the Pfeffer exception found in Rule 404(f) (ii)
    of the Water Regulations
    (Illinois Pollution Control Board Rules
    and Regulations,
    Chapter
    3, Water Pollution)
    permits the stated
    effluent limits of 4 MG/L of BOD5 and 5 MG/L of SS, where applica-
    ble,
    to be eased to 10 and 12, respectively, when the required
    showing has been made to the Agency that such effluent will meet
    the standards provided in Rule 404 (f) (ii) with particular respect
    to not causing a violation of applicable Water Quality Standards
    and not creating an unfavorable dissolved oxygen condition.
    Because of the provisions of our March
    31, 1971 Opinion ~nd Order
    in case entitled League of Women Voters,
    et al
    v.. North Shore Sanitary
    District,
    #70-7, directing
    4 and
    5 limits for BOD and SS,
    respectively,
    at the Clavey Road plant, the Environmental Protection Agency respond-
    ed to the District’s
    inquiry on July 31, 1972
    that our March
    31,
    1971
    Order was controlling and that the Pfeffer exception would not be
    available to the Clavey Road plant, although it would be to the
    Waukegan and Gurnee plants.
    The
    North Shore Sanitary District filed
    a proceeding with us
    which we docketed as an appeal pursuant to Section 40 of the Environ-
    mental Protection Act, on the basis that the Environmental Protection
    Agency’s response to the District’s inquiry was tantamount
    to
    a
    statement that a permit application as
    to the Clavey Road plant seek-
    ing the 10-12 limits would be denied, even if the requisite showing
    could be made.
    We decide the case accordingly.
    6
    57

    While a hearing was held on the District’s petition,
    the issue
    presented is solely one of law.
    We sustain the North Shore Sanitary
    District’s
    appeal, reversing the ruling of the Environmental Protec-
    tion Agency and hold that the Pfeffer exception is available to the
    North Shore Sanitary District in the operation of
    its Clavey Road
    plant.
    In doing so, we do not hold by this decision that the Clavey
    Road plant
    .is permitted to discharge up to 10 BOD5 and 12
    SS limits,
    but only that the District is not foreclosed by our March
    31,
    1971
    Opinion from seeking the benefits of the Pfeffer exception upon
    a
    proper showing to the Environmental Protection Agency that will
    justify the relaxed limits.
    It will be up to the Environmental Pro-
    tection Agency to determine whether the District has satisfied the
    Regulations as provided in our Rules,
    (supra),
    to entitle it to the
    10-12 exception.
    The adoption of the Pfeffer exception,
    in effect modified our
    March
    31,
    1971 Order
    to the extent applicable.
    Indeed, one of the
    motivations for the exception was the inordinate cost to which the
    horth Shore Sanitary District might be subjected to meet tertiary
    treatment requirements without any notable corresponding improvement
    in the dissolved oxygen content in the receiving stream,
    See Opinion
    of March
    7,
    1972 in matter of Effluent Criteria and Water Quality
    Standards Revisions,
    #R70-8,
    R71—l4,
    3 PCB 755,
    768.
    Our variance
    Order of January 31,
    1972,
    North Shore Sanitary District v, Environ-
    mental Protection Agency,
    #71—343,
    3 PCB 541, permitting an effluent
    of
    20 BOD5 and 25 SS from the Clavey Road plant was a variance allow-
    ance available to the District during the period of construction and
    will expire on January
    31,
    1973.
    While this variance may be extended
    upon a proper showing,
    it does not alter the ultimate requirement of
    4 BOD and 5 SS modified by the Pfeffer exception of
    10 and 12, respec-
    tively,
    if applicable, which limits we require
    as the ultimate stan-
    dard for the Clavey Road effluent when the plant is completed.
    To qualify for
    the
    Pfeffer exception,
    Rule 404 (f) (ii) (D)
    requires
    the submission of a project completion schedule prior to September 1,
    1972.
    Since the District’s inquiry to the Agency pre-dated the
    September
    1,
    1972 date, we hold that the District may pursue the
    Pfeffer exception notwithstanding the passage of the September
    1,
    1972 date if,
    in fact,
    it has not already submitted a completion
    schedule, providing
    a schedule is submitted within 35 days from this da
    This opinion constitutes the findings
    of fact and conclusions of
    law of the Board,
    —2—
    £
    58

    IT IS THE ORDER of the Pollution Control Board that the
    decision of the Environmental Protection Agency dated July
    31,
    1972 denying the North Shore Sanitary District the application
    of Rule 404(f) (ii)
    of the Illinois Pollution Control Board Rules
    and Regulations,
    Chapter
    3
    (Water Pollution)
    as to the Clavey
    Road plant,be reversed, and that the North Shore Sanitary District
    be entitled to the benefits of said Rule as
    to the Clavey Road
    plant upon a requisite showing of entitlement being made to the
    Environmental Protection Agency,
    in accordance with this order.
    I,
    Christan Moffett, Clerk
    of
    the
    Illinois Pollution Control
    Boa93,
    certify
    that
    the
    above
    Opinion
    and
    Order
    was
    adopted
    on
    the
    ~
    day
    of
    October,
    A.
    D.
    1972, by
    a vote of
    ~‘
    to
    C
    ~
    —3—
    6
    59

    Back to top