ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
July
17,
1975
IN THE MATTER OF
THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO RULE 409
)
R74-17
of the WATER POLLUTION REGULATIONS
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr. Dumelle):
The Pollution Control Board
(Board)
authorized a proposed
amendment
to Rule 409 of the Water Pollution Regulations
(Water Regulations)
for public hearing on December
19,
1974.
The proposal, together with a Statement of Need, was published
in Newsletter #96 on January
10,
1975.
Two days of public
hearing were held in Chicago and in Springfield.
Following
a thirty day public comment period the Board proposed for
final public cornin~nta revised amendment to Rule 409 on May
15,
1975.
This
final proposal was published
in Environmental
Register #102
(formerly the Newsletter).
Public comments
were invited until June
15,
1975.
The proposed amendment to Rule 409 of the Water Regulations
would extend the compliance date for certain of the effluent
limitations found in Part IV of
the Water Regulations.
Rule
409 was originally proposed by the Environmental Protection
Agency
(Agency)
on March
7, 1973 and was enacted by the
Board on July
19,
1973
(R73-4).
The effect of the adoption
of Rule 409 was to extend the compliance dates for all
effluent standards which were required to be met on December
31,
1973 to December
31,
1974 for any discharger, who
is or
will be eligible for a construction grant under Section
201(g)
of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments
of 1972
(FWPCA).
This extension was a recognition of the
delay in attaining compliance by the impoundment of federal
construction grant monies.
The extension of the compliance date from December
31,
1974 to the proposed July
1,
1977 date was proposed because
of the delays in federal funding of
sewage treatment plants,
impoundment of
$9 billion in grant funds by the President,
and the publication of new regulations and guidelines necessary
to establish project eligibility.
In addition,
the Board,
on August
29 and September
5,
1974, enacted the National
Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
(NPDES)
regulations
which give the Agency the power to vary the December 31,
1974 compliance date up to and including July
1,
1977.
The
NPDES permit program has not been accepted by the federal
government and consequently the power to vary the compliance
date does not now repose
in the Agency.
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—2—
The extensiJn of the deadlines by which municipalities
and sanitary districts must comply with the effluent requirements
found
in Part IV of the Water Regulations eliminates the
need for the filing of individual variances by those municipalities
and sanitary districts who are awaiting construction grant
awards or are in the actual construction phase after having
received such an award.
During the two days of public hearings,
representatives
from the Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago,
the Agency and t~LeIllinois Municipal League appeared in
support of the proposal.
Public comments were received from
Olin Brass Company, City of Batavia, and the Galesburg
Sanitary District in support of the proposed amendment.
No
opposition was raised concerning the basic proposal.
Mr.
Michael
J.
Hayes, manager of the grant administration and
tax certification section of the Division of Water Pollution
Control of the Agency testified concerning delays which have
occurred in the awarding of construction grant funds.
Significant delays in contract awards have occurred because
of the delay by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(U.S.
EPA)
in adopting final regulations and guidelines
for
the awarding of construction grants,
the Presidential impoundment
of construction g2ant funds and new grant requirements such
as
sewer system evaluation
(R.
7).
On February
11,
1975
final
U.S. EPA regulations on construction grants for treatment
works were proposed which require facilities planning prior
to the granting of construction grants
(40 CFR 35.
917(b)).
Mr.
Hayes
testified that this facilities planning requirement,
when coupled with thE requirement of prior approval for
each step in the construction grant phase, delayed almost
all sewage treatment plant construction projects in Illinois
(R.
9)
The federal construction grant program provides grants
through three steps.
Step one involves planning,
step two
is the preparation of design,
and step three is a construction
phase
of the grant program.
Both federal and state funds
can be available for each step
(R.
7).
The Agency ha3
prepared a construction grant project list which contains
some 967 individual projects which await funding
(R.
32).
Approximately 650 individual communities or sanitary districts
have submitted the 979 applications for individual projects
which make up the project list
(R.
32).
The project list
compiled by the Agency is based upon a number of
factors
including the severity of the pollution impact of the discharge
and are subject
to public hearings conducted by the Agency
(R.
33).
18
—
157
—3—
Presently, out of the entire project
list, projects
numbered
1 through 125 are eligible for step three construction
grant funding from U.S. EPA, projects 126 through 175 are
eligible for step three state construction funding,
and
projects numbered 17G through 400 are eligible for step one
and step two grants
1~roin the U.S. EPA
(R.
11).
Therefore,
projects 401 thru the remainder of the list are currently
not funded by either the U.S. EPA or the State.
The Agency testified that the total federal construction
grant monies available for award
in Illinois and the Illinois
construction grants will provide funding for projects
1 thru
400
(R.
46).
It is estimated that most of these projects
will begin construction by July
1,
1977
(R.
45).
However,
Mr. Michael Mauzey,
Manager of Environmental Programs for
the Agency,
testified that it would be “extremely doubtful”
that the proposed deadline of July
1,
1977 could be met
CR.
57)
Given
the delay
in the awarding of construction grant
funds and the act’ial construction time once the funds have
been awarded,
thE. Board has decided to extend the compliance
date for effluent limitations found in Part IV of the Water
Regulations as published in Environmental Register #102 on
May 19,
1975.
The extension until July
1,
1977 in Rule 409
would affect the
following Rules or portions of Rules found
in Part IV:
Rule
404(a) (i) and
(ii)
Rule 404(b) (i)
and
(ii)
Rule 404(c)
(except
(C)(ii))
Rule 404(d)
Rule 404(f)
Rule 404(g)
Rule 405
(only for discharges to Mississippi
& Ohio River)
Rule 406
Rule 407(b)
Rule 408(c) (ii) (B)
It was suggested that the requirement imposed by Rule 402
to comply with applicable water quality standards also be extended.
The Board has decided that
a discharger whose effluent,
either alone or in ccmbination with other sources causes a
violation of an applicable water quality standard,
should
apply for appropriate variances
from the applicable regulations.
The case-by—case approach seems warranted rather than adoption
of a blanket rollback in such cases.
Rule 409(b) enables
18
—
158
—4—
the Board
to require the abatement of water pollution by
dischargers who, because of Rule 409(a), do not have to
comply with the rules found in Part IV until July
1,
1977.
However,
the effluent of these dischargers could because of
low flow or other reasons cause water pollution.
The Board
would be free to enter such an order pursuant to an enforcement
case initiated under Sections
30 through 34 of the Act where
it was found that a discharger was indeed violating Section
12(a)
of the Act or an applicable water quality standard
found in Part
II of the Water Regulations.
This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact
and conclusions of
law.
ORDER
The following amendment to Rule
409 Delays
In Upgrading
of the Water Pollution Regulations
is hereby enacted:
(a)
All effluent standards
required to be met on
December
3J,
1973 or December 31, 1974 are extended
to July
1,
1977 for any discharger to the waters
of the State who
is or will be eligible for a
construction grant under Section
201(g)
of the
Federai Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of
1972
(33 U.S.C.
1951 et seq.)
and has filed an
application for such grant on or before December
31,
1975.
(b)
The above provision shall not limit the power of
the power of the Board to enter an order directing
immediate construction of facilities necessary to
abate pollution of the waters of the State, when
the Board has found, as the result of an enforcement
case initiated under Sections 30-34 of the Act,
that the discharger
is causing or threatening
to
cause water pollution.
(C)
Whenever a discharger
subject to the provisions
of this Rule files or has filed the Project Completion
Schedule required by Rule 1002 and receives a time
extension through the application of this Rule,
said Project Completion Schedule will be automatically
adjusted to reflect the time extension.
IT
IS SO ORDERED.
18
—
159
—5—
I, Christan
L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify the above Opinion and Order were adopted on the
/711
day of July,
1975 by a vote of
_____________________
QJL~
C9I~&
Christan L. Moffe~-,
lerk
Illinois Pollution
ntrol Board
18— 160