ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    March
    28, 1977
    FARMINGTON
    DEVELOPMENT
    CORP.,
    INC.,
    and
    FARMINGTON MANOR,
    INC.,
    )
    Petitioners,
    v.
    )
    PCB 76—284
    ENVIRONMENTAL
    PROTECTION AGENCY,
    Respondent.
    Mr. John Potter, Baudino
    & Potter, Attorney for Petitioners
    I~r. JoseDh Svoboda, Environmental Protection Agency, Attorney
    for Respondent
    OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (by Mr.
    Young):
    This matter comes before
    the
    Board on the petition filed
    by
    Farmington Development Corporation,
    Inc.,
    and Farmington
    Manor,
    Inc.,
    seekinq variance from Rule 962(a) of Chapter
    3:
    Water Pollution, which would permit them to connect a pronosed
    seventy-four bed skilled nursing facility to the Farmington
    sewer system.
    Because Farmington’s existing sewage treatment
    olant
    is currently on restricted status, no sewer extensions
    are permitted.
    Objections
    to the grant of this variance were
    filed by the Farmington Sanitary District, the Agency,
    and almost
    100 Farmington residents;
    a public hearing was held on February
    28,
    1977.
    During the year 1976, and with full knowledge that the
    sewer ban was in effect,
    the petitioning corporations were formed
    for the purpose of constructing and operating
    a nursing and care
    center in
    the Farminqton community.
    It is Petitioners’
    contention
    that an arbitrary or unreasonable hardship will be suffered by
    both themselves and the Farrnington community unless
    the Board
    grants this variance.
    As
    in any variance case,
    it is Petitioners’
    obligation
    to prove that such hardship will be suffered unless
    the variance
    is granted.
    Petitioners’
    evidence in this regard
    is not compelling.
    Although Petitioners have expended an unspecified
    sum of money for land on which to build the proposed facility
    (R.
    15),
    the record fails
    to clearly set forth what sums of money,
    if
    any, will be lost if this variance is denied and the project
    is
    abandoned.
    If the project goes
    forward despite the variance denial,
    25
    207

    —2—
    Gerry Griffith,
    Petitionerst
    architect, testified Petitioners
    would be required to install an on site treatment facility
    estimated to cost $45,000.00.
    Requiring such an expenditure
    would be unreasonable according to Griffith because he exoects
    the new treatment plant to come on line at approximately the
    same time the home
    is
    to be completed
    (R.
    145).
    While the
    Board agrees that it would be unreasonable
    to require this
    expenditure if
    the District’s plant was scheduled
    to be on
    line,
    the Board notes that a firm timetable
    for the District’s
    plant has not yet been established.
    Carroll Baylor, Clerk
    and Trustee of the District, testified that
    a delay of
    14 months
    had already occurred in the olant project
    (R.
    202),
    and feared
    that increases in construction costs due
    to inflation
    may
    require
    the District
    to abandon construction of the new plant.
    This
    question should be resolved in the near future,
    however, but
    prior
    to the time this question is resolved,
    the Board is un-
    willing,
    and unable,
    to determine the reasonableness
    of an
    expenditure by Petitioners for their own treatment plant.
    In relation to the hardship that would
    fall on surrounding
    communities if this variance were denied, James Swanson, Peti-
    tioners’ consultant,
    testified that the Farmington service area
    needs
    148 additional intermediate and skill care beds
    (R.
    111).
    Mr. Michael Coultos,
    the administrator of
    a skilled nursing
    facility located in Canton and only
    10 miles from Farmington,
    testified,
    however, there was an excess of 134 beds in Fulton
    County
    (R.
    70), and that in Knox County,
    also in Petitioners’
    service area, there existed an excess of 146 beds
    (R.
    73).
    In regards
    to the existing treatment facility and the
    environmental effects
    that would result from the grant of this
    variance,
    the Board notes the following.
    By Petitioners’ own
    admission, the conditions in the receiving stream are intolerable
    at the present time
    (A. Pet.
    2)
    .
    It is
    fair to say such con-
    ditions will continue to exist until the new treatment plant is
    operational and that any additional discharge
    to the existing
    facilities can only cause further deterioration of the receiving
    stream.
    Petitioners contend, however,
    that
    the
    conditions
    in
    the receiving stream are of only minor importance in the question
    before the Board because of their hone that
    the
    new plant will
    come on line at approximately the same time as
    the nursing facility
    (A.
    Pet.
    2).
    If
    a
    firm treatment plant completion date was indeed
    in existence,
    the Board could possibly agree with this
    contention.
    But absent the existence of such a date,
    it seems
    the Board would
    be doing nothing other than risking further environmental injury
    by granting this variance.
    Further, although it did not appear
    to be
    a matter of concern at the hearing,
    the fact that Petitioners
    are not presently located within the boundaries
    of the sanitary
    district does present an apparent disability insofar as eventual
    compliance is concerned
    (R.
    16)
    .
    This matter
    should also be
    resolved.
    25
    208

    —3—
    In view of the foregoing,
    the Board is disinclined
    to grant
    the relief requested.
    The Board is unable to find that any
    arbitrary or unreasonable financial hardship will be suffered if
    this variance
    is denied.
    The money Petitioners allege would be
    wasted
    if required to install their own sewage plant can he saved
    simoly by waitinq for the District’s new plant.
    But this
    is
    a
    business decision which only Petitioners can make;
    the risk
    is
    Petitioners’.
    The Board finds no justification
    for
    shifting the
    risk onto
    the environment.
    Further, because the record does not
    establish
    a shortage of nursing beds in the area surrounding
    Farminqton,
    the Board does not believe the denial of this
    variance will place either an arbitrary or unreasonable hardship
    on citizens in the Farmington community.
    While many of the persons
    testifying
    at the hearing expressed hope that a nursing home would
    eventually he built,
    almost all expressed a belief that the sewage
    plant should first be operational.
    In conclusion,
    and in view of the condition of the receiving
    stream,
    the Board does
    not believe Petitioners have established
    sufficient hardship to warrant the grant of
    a variance and that
    such request will
    therefore be denied.
    However, in the event
    that construction at the new treatment plant will take place,
    and once
    a firm completion date is established and annexation
    occurs,
    the Board would be disposed to reconsider this matter
    if
    the
    requested
    connection
    were
    synchronized
    with
    the
    plant’s
    scheduled
    completion
    date.
    This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact and
    conclusions of law in this matter.
    ORDER
    The
    petition for variance filed by the Farminqton Development
    Corooration,
    Inc.,
    and the Farmington Manor,
    Inc.,
    is hereby
    denied.
    IT
    IS SO ORDERED.
    I,
    Christan
    L.
    Moffett,
    Clerk
    of
    the
    Illinois
    Pollution
    Control
    Board,
    hereb~
    certify
    the
    above
    Opinion
    and Order were
    adooted
    on
    the
    ~g
    day
    of
    ___________________,
    1977 by
    a
    vote
    of
    ~.
    1
    QAJ~m
    ~
    Christan
    L.
    Moffett~)/)C1erk
    Illinois Pollution c~ntrolBoard
    25
    209

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