ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
December
5,
1972
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
v.
)
#72—186
MAL
LANDFILL CORPORATION
Thomas J.
Immel, Assistant Attorney General,
for Environmental
Protection Agency
Hillary
H.
Hallett, for
MAL
Landfill Corporation
Dick
H. Mudge,
Jr.,
for Chouteau Island Citizens Association
and Coalition for the Environment,
St. Louis Region
Opinion and Order of the Board
(by Mr. Lawton):
By complaint filed on May 1,
1972
(as amended on August
11,
1972)
,
the Environmental Protection Agency
(“Aqency”)
charged
MAL
Landfill Corporation
(“MAL”)
,
owner and operator
of a Madison County refuse disposal site, with numerous
violations of the Environmental Protection Act
(“Act”)
Ill.
Rev.
Stat.,
1971,
ch. 111
1/2, and the Rules and Re-
gulations For Refuse Disposal Sites and Facilities
(“Rules”)
on many separate dates.
In total,
MAL
was charged with
nearly one-hundred violations, including the open dumping of
garbage and refuse,
the deposition of contaminants on land
causing
a water pollution hazard, failure to confine dumping
to the smallest practicable area, allowing blowing litter,
failure to provide daily cover, operating the site without
a permit and depositing liquids and hazardous materials on
the site without a permit, improperly conducting salvaging
operations and inadequately providing vector control, and
depositing refuse in standing water.
By Stipulation submitted to the Board on October
26,
1972, more than one-half the allegations were dropped and the
parties agreed that if the Agency’s witnesses were to testify,
they would state that they had observed certain conditions
on certain dates, including at least
12 separate instances
of blowing litter,
at least
14 separate instances of failure
to provide daily cover,
and several other infractions relating
to vector control and the deposition of liquids and hazardous
materials on the site.
The Stipulation also vitiated the
need for oral testimony on the numerous photographs taken
by Agency personnel
to substantiate their charges, and
constituted the Agency’s entire case.
Since there was no
oral testimony offered by complainant,
there was also no
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387
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cross-examination; and while Respondent did not specifically
admit any of the charges,
it did generally admit that such
violations had occurred, stressing, however, that the vio-
lations were of a “housekeeping” nature
(R.
52, 130—145,
218—219,
332,
337).
Evidence and the Supplemental Statement submitted by
the Agency indicated that
MAL’s
operation is one of the
largest of
its kind in the State of Illinois.
The present
owners apparently acquired the 75-acre site in 1969
(R.
173),
and presently operate seven ~ays
per
week and twenty—four
hours per day, handling an estimated 1,000,000 cubic yards
of garbage each year
(R.
47).
The area they service in-
cludes the Cities of Venice, Madison, Glen Carbon and Granite
City;
area park, school and township highway districts;
the
western portion of Madison County; and Southern Illinois
University at Edwardsville
(R.
37).
They employ fifteen
major pieces of machinery and equipment in their operations,
which they maintain is the most used at any site in the
State
(R.
50), and they receive some 400 truckloads
of
materials each day.
MAL appears
to have received a permit to operate the
old site on September 18, 1972 and is in the process of
expanding onto an adjacent 246-acre site.
As the Agency
points out in its Supplemental Statement,
the permit is
conditioned upon the posting of
a $250,000 performance bond
to guarantee compliance in the future with the terms of
the permit.
In addition, the Agency agrees that the remaining
violations alleged constitute “housekeeping” violations;
that the operators have sufficient equipment and adequate
cover material to properly operate the site if utilized
correctly; and that the operators of the fill have corrected
the violations found by the Agency’s inspectors upon being
advised of the inspector’s conclusions.
The record indicates that this is a massive operation,
basically well-run, but responsible for certain infractions
of the Act and Rules of a housekeeping nature, either due
to the very size of the operation itself, or to occasional
sloppiness
in: its conduct.
MAL’s own witness frequently
stated that the problems referred to .in the complaint “should
be kept on top of,”
(R. 130, 132—145), but a Madison County
Sanitation POllution Official testified that every time the
operators had been informed of
a possible offense, they
had corrected the situation by the next day
(R.
191).
The case generated a considerable amount of local in-
terest, and several citizens testified at the hearing.
There was testimony offered indicating that the blowing
litter problem
is a great deal more severe than the parties
said it was
(R.
222, 235—237,
265);
that the area is
a
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388
—3—
natural flood-plain, with a sandy subsoil, and that the
continuous rise and fall of the water table threatens to
draw contamination from the fill back into the soil en-
dangering
the
local water
supply
(R. 229—230, 235—236,
264,
320-323).
As the Agency correctly pointed out,
the substance
of the citizen testimony pertained to whether or not the
permit should have been issued in the first place, and not
to the individual violations enumerated
in the complaint
which allegedly occurred at the site
(R.
249).
The limited
intervention of the Chouteau Island Citizens Association and
the
Coalition for the Environment raised similar questions.
We are here concerned with certain very specific allega-
tions of violations
at the site, and not with the question of
whether from a land—use planning, or any other point of view,
the site would be better situated elsewhere.
It would appear
that the primary concern of the Intervenors relates to the
new,
larger site which they fear might have a significant
detrimental effect on the Island’s ecology, and not to
the
principal issues raised in the complaint.
We are unclear
as to whether all appropriate permits for the operation
of the new site have been issued.
If so, the Intervenors
and any other concerned individual or group are free to
file a new proceeding against MAL,
if there is evidence of
pollution violations
at the new site,
or that reasons exist
calling for a revocation of the permit.
Similarly, the
Intervenors are free to prosecute
a new case against HAL
for other violations
at the old site not considered
in
this proceeding.
The burden of proof which must be borne
in such a case is the same burden which must be borne in
all enforcement actions: specific charges must be filed,
supported by convincing evidence at a public hearing.
Vague misgivings about the propriety of the facility near
a residential area will not suffice.
In summary, we find that the undisputed evidence indi-
cates several housekeeping violations
of the Act and Rules
at the site.
We will order Respondents to pay a nominal
penalty to
the State of Illinois for such violations, and
remind them that we may not be so lenient
if
such violations
persist in the future.
All reasonable and practicable
steps must be taken to ensure that such violations do not
recur, and since the existence of the violations may have
an effect on the public’s health and welfare, an even great-
er effort must be made by the operators of the site to see
that they are corrected.
This opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact
and conclusions of
law.
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IT IS THE ORDER of the Pollution Control Board:
1.
Respondent shall pay to the State of Illinois within
thirty—five
(35) days from the receipt of this Order,
the sum of $1,000 as a penalty for the violations
found
in this proceeding as set forth in the stipulation.
Payment shall be made by certified check or money order
payable to the State of Illinois, and shall be sent to
Fiscal Services Division,
Illinois Environmental Protec-
tion Agency,
2200 Churchill Drive,
Springfield, Illinois
62706.
2.
Respondent shall not conduct any refuse disposal or
landfill operations until appropriate permits there-
for have first been obtained from the Agency;
and shall
take
all necessary steps to correct the violations found
to have occurred herein, and to assure that they will not
recur in the future:
specifically, Respondent shall
immediately cease and desist the improper operation of the
site and shall immediately take steps
to assure daily
cover, the prevention of blowing litter, and vector
control;
shall not deposit liquids or hazardous materials
at its landfill sites without first having obtained a
permit from the Agency to do so; and shall forthwith
cease improper salvaging operations at the sites.
I, Christan Moffett, Clerk of the ILlinois Pollution Control Board,
certify that t e Board adopted
the above Opinion and Order this
4~4~dayof
__________________,
1972, by a vote of
~/
to
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390