ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
April
10,
1975
CENTRAL
DU PAGE HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION,
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 74—364
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
SUPPLEMENTAL OPINION AND ORDER
OF THE BOARD
(by Mr.
Dumelle)
This
Opinion and Order supplements the pr~viously
issued Order of the Board, dated November 22,
1974, and
Interim Opinion of the Board,
dated January
9,
1975.
The case concerns a Petition for Variance filed on
October
9,
1974 by Central DuPage Hospital Association
(Hospital)
located in the Village of Winfield in DuPage
County.
The relief sought
is from Sections
12 and
39
of the
Environmental Protection Act and Rule 927 of Chapter
3:
Water Pollution Regulations to allow the Hospital to connect
its planned 112-bed hospital addition to the Village of
Winfield Sewage Treatment Plant.
On November 22,
1974 the Board issued its Order granting
the variance to the Hospital but required the following from
the parties:
“2.
Within 60 days of the date of
this order, petitioner
shall provide
a study of the condition of the receiving
stream
(as regards water quality)
below the Winfield Sewage
Treatment Plant and the environmental effects
(especially
those resulting from plant bypassing)
expected from the
grant of this variance.
“3.
The Agency shall comment upon the petitioner’s
response to the Board within 10 days after receipt.
“4.
The Board shall retain jurisdiction in this case
to consider the possible requirement for holding tanks.
The
report and comments shall also be directed toward consideration
as to the necessity and feasibility for holding tanks.”
Responses to the Board’s Order of November
22,
1974
were received from the Petitioner and from the Agency.
The
Agency filed, on December
23,
1974,
an Amendment to Recommenda-
tion which contained results of two stream biological surveys
16
—365
—2—
conducted
on the DuPage River
-
West Branch to assess
the
environmental
impact of
the Winfield Sewage Treatment Plant.
These surveys were conducted on December
4,
1974
and September
4—5,
1973
at
4 locations upstream and downstream
of the
Winfield Sewage Treatment Plant outfall,
and
the environmental
quality of
the river and
the marsh
that, receives
the
sewage
treatment plant effluent was assessed.
The results and
their significance are
as follows:
DATE
LOCATION
STREAM
CLASSIFICATION
BIOLOGICAL SPECIES
SIGNIFICANCE
9/4/7 3
West Branch
-
1.5
miles upstream from
sewage treatment plant
outfall
balanced
Intolerant
organisms
are many in number and
species,
or more
in
number
than other forms
present.
9/4/7 3
Marsh
-
20 yards
“downstream”
from
sewage treatment plant
outfall.
polluted
Intolerant forms are
absent.
Only tolerant
forms
are
present
or
no organisms
present.
9/5/73
Marsh
—
outlet
channel
to West
Branch.
semi—polluted
Intolerant
organisms
are
few
or may not be
present.
Moderate or
facultative organisms
may be present.
9/5/7
3
West Branch
-
100 yards downstream
from Marsh outlet
channel.
balanced
See above.
12/5/74
West Branch
-
1.5 miles upstream
from sewage treatment
plant outfall.
unbalanced
Intolerant organisms are
fewer in number than
other forms combined,
but
combined with moderate
forms, they usually
outnumber tolerant forms.
12/5/74
Marsh
-
20 yards
“downstream”
from
sewage treatment plant
outfall.
polluted
See
above.
12/5/74
Marsh
-
outlet
channel to West
Branch.
semi—polluted.
See above.
12/5/74
West Branch
-
100
yards downstream from
marsh outlet channel.
unbalanced.
See above.
16—366
—3—
Based on this work,
the West Branch at
a
point 100 yards
downstream from the marsh outlet channel has approximately
the same biological quality as it does 1.5 miles upstream of
the Winfield Sewage Treatment Plant.
The Petitioner filed
its study entitled “Anticipated
Water Quality Effects on the West Branch DuPage River Resulting
from a Planned Expansion of the Central DuPage Hospital” on
January
22,
1975.
The study discusses the Winfield Sewage
Treatment Plant, estimates the additional wastewater load to
be generated by the hospital ac~c3ition, assesses the present
water quality of the West Bran~hupstream and downstream of
the Winfield Sewage Treatment Plant input, and estimates the
impact on the stream of the hospital addition.
The study
also discusses the benefits and costs of a wastewater holding
tank at the hospital.
The Winfield Sewage Treatment Plant consists of a
contact stabilization plant of 0.5 MGD design capacity
followed by
a two polishing ponds in series having a total
volume of
3.2 million gallons.
The raw sewage pumping
capacity is 4.04 MCD.
Influent flows to the plant in excess
of the 0.5 MGD contact stabilization capacity are bypassed
to the polishing ponds.
At present the plant is hydraulically
overloaded
in that the 1974 average flow was 1.34 MGD.
By-
passing of the contact stabilization unit occurred on
67
days in 1974.
Average influent concentrations
in 1974 were
56 mg/l
(626 lb/day)
of BOD and 83 mg/l
(928 lb/day) of SS.
The sewage treatment plant effluent contained an average of
5.9 mg/l of BOD and 51 mg/l of SS in 1974,
the average BOD
and SS removal efficiencies being 89
and 39,
respectively.
Petitioner
now estimates that wastewater will be
generated by the 112-bed hospital addition at a rate of
22,400 gal/day
(0.022 MGD)
and will contain 24.6 lbs/day of
BOD and 29.1 lbs/day of
SS.
This additional flow represents
a 1.6
increase in flow,
a 3.9
increase in BOD, and a
3.1
increase in SS to the Winfield Sewage Treatment Plant.
The DuPage River
-
West Branch near Winfield has a 7-
day once-in--lU-year low flow of
3.9 MCD.
Water quality
surveys
taken by the Agency and by Petitioner’s engineers
show little effect of the Winfield Sewage Treatment Plant on
water quality.
The additional
flow of 0.022 MCD generated
by the hospital addition represents
a 0.6
increase in
stream flow during dry weather.
During wet weather, when
bypassing of the contact stabilization unit occurs,
the
stream flow
is higher so that more dilution is available.
The Petitioner sized
a wastewater holding tank at
16—367
—4—
22,400 gallons,
sufficient
to hold one day’s generated
waste.
The tank would include an air system to prevent
septic conditions and solids settling and a
lift station to
control the discharge to the sewer system.
The capital
cost,
including engineering,
contingencies,
overhead,
and
profit
is estimated
to be $35,000.
Based
on
its
study
the Petitioner
concludes
that the
additional wastewater
from
the hospital addition will
“not
cause any adverse water quality changes
in
the West Branch
DuPage River”.
Furthermore,
it concludes
that
a holding
tank
is not recommended because “adverse factors such as
possible odor problems,
septic sewage,
operation and maintenance
problems
and costs,
outweigh
the unlikely possibility
of
improving water
quality
of
the effluent
at the Winfield
Sewage Treatment Plant’.
On February
19,
1975
the Agency submitted
its comments
entitled
“Response of the Environmental
Protection Agency.
The Agency agrees with
the Petitioner’s study and conclusions.
The Board concludes
from
the above information
that
a
holding tank
is not necessary
in this instance.
Although
sewage does bypass the contact stabilization unit,
it still
undergoes some treatment in the polishing ponds, and in fact
the BOD was reduced to 5.9 mg/l
in
the effluent in 1974.
The retention time in the ponds
is at least
25 hours and
ranges up to 136 hours based on 1974 monthly average flows.
This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of
fact
and conclusions of law.
ORDER
Petitioner, Central DuPage Hospital Association,
is not
required to install sewage holding
tanks.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, hereby certify the above Opinion and Order were
ad pted on the
/~t’~
day of April, 1975 by a vote of
-D
___
C ristan L. Mo
e
er
Illinois Pollution
ntrol Board
16—368