ILLINOIS
POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
September
2,
1971
EFFINGHAM EQUITY
V.
)
#
71—150
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
Paul Goldstein,
Pro
Se,
Delbert Haschemeyer,
of Springfield,
for the Environmental Protection Agency
Opinion and Order
of the Board
(by Mr.
Currie):
Effingham Equity manufactures fertilizers at its small plant
in Effingham
(R~ 4)
Par-ticulate matter is emitted, especially
during drying operations
(H.
7)
Pursuant to regulations adopted
by the Air Pollution Control Board
in 1967,
Effingham submitted an
Air Contaminant Emission Reduction Program,
approved February
25,
1970,
that promised the installation of control equipment beyond
the existing cyclones
(R.
8)
by April
30,
1971
(See EPA Recommendation
and Ex.
A thereto).
That date has come and
gone.
Effingham asks
until September
1,
1972 to do what
it promised to do by April of
1971.
It has yet
to purchase
the necessary control equipment, much
less
to install
it,
and it asks
to be allowed to wait until after
the next busy season
(January
to June
1972)
before doing
so, citing
the desirability of running additional emission tests because of
a change
in product formulation.
No satisfactory reason
is given for the failure
to meet the
previous deadline,
The only change
in circumstances alleged
to
justify the delay
is that
the product formulation was changed.
We
cannot agree
that the necessity
for complying with
an agreed control
deadline
is
obviated by
a change
in product formulation, but
in
any event
the change took place
in July
1970
(R,
30), and any
additional tests required by
the change could and should have been
conducted
long ago.
Had they been,
any revision of the program could
have been accomplished with no significant delay,
since the change
occurred immediately after receipt of the initial test results
(R.
30).
The company also suggests that
its work has been post-
poned because of the desire to wait
and see how successful others
are
in controlling similar plants elsewhere
(H.
5).
But this
is
no excuse;
there is no doubt
in the record that scrubbers are
and have been available to do
the
job at
a cost of only $12,000—
$14,000
(H.
11),
and no reanon
is suggested why the “little work”
that must be done to adapt
a scrubber to the plant
(H.
17)
is any-
thing more
than the ordinary debugging process; others have employed
scrubbers already
(H.
20).
Moreover,
by agreeing to control its
emissions
by April of 1971
the company conceded that the technology
2
—
365
was available;
it has shown no technological reverses in the interim
that could justify its refusal to live up to its commitment.
And
the fact that other companies may not have complied is no help;
one cannot excuse default of one’s own obligations by pointing the
finger at others who may have sinned too.
The short of the matter seems to be that the company has sought
to buy additional time because it is seriously considering going
out of the business of fertilizer manufacture, which it finds
unprofitable quite apart from the question of the cost of pollution
controls
(H. 27—28, 36,38,
40,
43).
But the time has passed for
the company to make up its mind.
it has had four years to bring
itself into compliance,
and that is long ~enough.
To deny
the variance will not result
in unreasonable or arbitrary
hardship.
First
if
as the company expects emission tests show the
product change has brought the company into compliance
(H,
30),
no new control equipment -will be required at all.
Moreover,
the-
business is highly seasonal;
there
is very little work to be done
between now and January
(R~ 9)
,
and therefore no significant
loss
of production would occur
if the plant did not operate during that
time.
As for installation time,
the company said it wanted
to begin
the
job in mid-June
and be done by September
1
(H.
10); with reason-
ably prompt delivery the installation might be completed before
much production time
is lost at all.
And the company’s own testimony
is that the manufacture of fertilizer
is so unprofitable that
it
may soon be abandoned voluntarily;
it cannot be
a great hardship
to keep it closed
for
a time
if that becomes necessary.
,
Any
hardship that may be suffered as
a result of the denial was brought
on by the company’s own inexcusable failure to do what
it promised.
The petition
for variance
is denied,
This opinion constitutes
the Board~ findings of fact,
conclusions of
law, and order,
I. Regina
E.
Ryan,
Clerk of
the Pollution Control Board,
certify
that the Board adopted the above Opinion and Order
this
2nd
day of
September
,
1971.
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/
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