ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
July
17,
1975
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
Complainant,
v.
)
PCB 74—102
INTERCONTINENTAL ALLOYS CORPORATION,
an Illinois corporation,
Respondent.
MR. JAMES K.
JENKS,
II, Assistant Attorney General, appeared
for the Comp1ain~int;
MR. BERYL A. BIRNDORF, Attorney,
appeared for the Respondent.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr. Zeitlin):
Intercontinental Alloys Corporation
(Intercontinental)
operates an aluminum alloy manufacturing facility north of
Crest Hill,
in Will County,
Illinois. Intercontinental
operates two gas—fired aluminum melting reverberatory furnaces,
each having
a capacity of 85,000 pounds.
Every 24 hours,
Intercontinental charges each of these ovens with between
40,000 and 60,000 pounds of aluminum scrap;
an additional
30,000 pounds of molten aluminum
(heel)
is customarily
retained in each furnace during each melting cycle.
Respondent Intercontinental uses chlorine to clean the
molten metal
in these furnaces.
That chlorination process
is engaged in for approximately one hour during each day
that the furnaces are in operation.
On March 20,
1974,
the Agency filed a Complaint alleging
multiple violations of both the old Rules and Regulations
Governing the Control of Air Polution,
(enacted by the Air
Pollution Controt. Board, predecessor of this Board), and
Chapter
2: Air Pollution of the Pollution Control Board
Rules and Regulations,
at Intercontinental’s aluminum alloy
facility.
On July 10,
1974,
an Amended Complaint was filed
by the Agency, alleging additional violations of the Environmental
Protection Act
(Act)
and Chapter
2: Air Pollution.
In
summary, the following violations are alleged
in the Amended
Complaint:
18—
118
—2—
AMENDED COMPLAINT:
Count
I.
emissions)
VIOLATION
*
DATES
July
1,
1970 thru
Dec.
31,1973
Count II.
(particulate
emissions)
Regulation 203(a)
Sec.
9(a)
Jan.
1,
1974 thru
filing of the
Complaint.
Count III.
(smoke
emissions No.
2 or
darker on Ringelmann
chart)
Rule 3—3.122
Sept.
24,
1970;
Sept.
28,
1970;
Sept.
30,
1970;
Oct.
1,
1970;
Oct.
6,
1970;
Oct.
15,
1970;
Oct.
19,
1970;
Feb.
18,
1971;
Jan.
20,
1972; May
4,
1972;
Oct.
24,
1972;
Oct.
27, 1972
Count IV.
(visible
emissions greater than
30
and 60
opacity)
Regulation 202(b)
Sec.
9(a)
Nov.
6,
1973
Count V.
unreasonable
interference with
passing motorists)
Sec.
9(a)
April
3,
1974
Count VI.
permit)
(operating
Regulation
103(b) (2)
Sec.
9(b)
Dec.
1,
1972 thru
filing of the
Complaint
Count VII.
(installa-
tion permit, reverber-
atory furnace)
Count VIII.
(installa-
tion permit, reverber-
atory furnace)
Count
IX.
(installa-
tion permit, control
device:
hood)
Rule 3—2.100
Rule 3—2.100
Rule 3—2.100
Sec.
9(b)
1967
1970
1971
*
“Section1’ refers to a section of the Act; Rule refers to a
Rule of the old Rules and Regulations for the Control of Air
Pollution, promulgated by the Air Pollution Control
Board and continued
in effect by Sec.
49(c)
of the Act;
“Regulation” refers to the Regulations in Chapter
2; Air
Pollution,
of the Pollution Control Board Rules and Regulations.
(particulate
Rule 3—3.111
18—119
—3—
A hearing was held in Joliet on September
5,
1974.
The
parties at that time stated their intent to submit a Stipulation
and Proposed Settlement to the Board.
No other evidence or
testimony was taken at that time.
A Stipulation and Proposal for Settlement was received
by the Board on November 14,
1974.
In an Interim Order
adopted January
3,
1975,
the Board noted that the Stipulation
was generally acceptable,
but it ignored certain of the
Counts and alleged violations
in the Amended Complaint.
The
original Stipulation, the Board stated, did not provide
sufficient information on which the Board could adequately
resolve the entire issue.
The Board’s Order required that
the parties submit an Amended Stipulation to cure the defects
which were noted.
On February 11,
1975,
the parties submitted a Stipulated
Motion for Dismissal and Addendum to Stipulation and Proposal
for Settlement
(Amended Stipulation).
This latter submission
adequately resolved the defects noted in the original Stipulation,
by moving dismissal of those alleged violations not addressed
in the original Stipulation.
Under the present state of the pleading,
(i.e.
Amended
Stipulation),
Intercontinental admits
to several violations,
and the Agency has agreed to the dismissal of several of the
violations alleged in the Amended Complaint:
(a)
Intercontinental admits to excessive
particulate emissions,
in violation of
Rule 3-3.111 of the old Rules,
from July
1,
1970 to December 31,
1973.
(b)
Intercontinental admits to excessive
particulate emissions in violation of
Regulation 203(a),
from January
1,
1974
to March 20,
1974.
(c)
Intercontinental admits to the emission
of smoke which was Number
2 or darker on the
Ringelmann Chart,
in violation of old Rule 3-3.122,
on October
1,
1970,
January
20,
1972, May
4,
1972,
October 24,
1972, and October 27,
1972.
(d)
Intercontinental admits to having caused
and allowed visible emissions in excess of
30
opacity for a period of greater than eight
minutes, as well as an emission in excess of
60
opacity,
in violation of Regulation 202(b),
on November
6,
1973.
(e)
Interc3ntinental admits to having operated
its metal processing facility from December
1,
1972 until the present, without an operating
permit from the Agency,
in violation of
Regulation 103(b) (2) and Section
9(b) of the Act.
18
—
120
—4—
The parties jointly moved for the dismissal of the
Ringelmann violation
(old Rule 3-3.122)
alleged in Count III
of the Amended Complaint,
for the following dates: September
24,
1970, September 28,
1970,
September 30,
1970,
October
6,
1970, October 15,
1970,
October 19,
1970,
and February
8,
1971.
The parties have also stipulated to dismissal of the
alleged violation of Section
9(a)
of the Act on April
3,
1974, as contain2d in Count V of the Amended Complaint.
The parties have also agreed that Counts VII, VIII, and
IX of the Amended Complaint should be dismissed alleging
violation of old Rule 3—2.100 in connection with Intercontinental’s
failure to obtain an installation permit as required under
the old Rules for the construction of the two reverberatory
furnaces
(in 1967 and 1970),
and a hood to control emission
(in 1971);
in addition, Count IX also alleged a violation
of Section 9(b)
of the Act.
Intercontinental also agreed to several other actions
under the Amended Stipulation.
It will immediately obtain
the installation and operating permits needed from the
Agency for the facilities in issue here,
as well as for all
the devices, alterations, modifications, and procedures
which will be required under the proposed settlement.
Intercontinental will install hooding,
ducts,
and
blowers on one of its reverberatory furnaces by February 28,
1975,
and direct the emissions from that furnace to either
the furnace itself, or a combustion chamber, for incineration.
That furnace is to be tested and “de-bugged” by June
1,
1975.
The second reverberatory furnace
is to be backfitted
for control purposes in the same manner as the first, but by
a date no later than September 1, 1975.
(However,
if refractory
materials are not available by that date,
the conversion is
to take place no later than January
1,
1976.)
During the interim, while the two reverberatory furnaces
are being backfitted as described above, Intercontinental
will attempt to purchase and use only scrap material which
will result in the l.~astpossible emissions during charging
operations.
Further, Intercontinental has agreed to convert its two
furnaces to use what is known as the “Derham process.” That
process is intended to reduce particulate emissions from
the furnaces during chlorination. Intercontinental is bound
by a non-disclosure agreement as regards the Derham process,
which is
a secret process under a Canadian Patent.
The
Agency has agreed that any information it receives regarding
that process will be treated as
tvconfidential information”,
18
—
121
—5—
aId ~ ~l
t be released;
information regard~
i~J1be used
y the Agency only to deterrn~
~ t~ ~
~
or coa~o1iancewith app~ioa~
~d t~ei~u
cc of the necessary perrrits
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—6—
a.
Those portions of Count
III of the Amended
Complaint alleging violation of old Rule
3-3.122 of the Rules and Regulations
Governing the Control of Air Pollution,
on the following dates:
September 24,
1970;
September 28,
1970;
September 30,
1970;
October
6,
1970;
October 15,
1970;
October 19,
1970; February
8,
1971;
b.
Counts V, VII, VIII, and
IX,
in their
entirety.
4.
Respondent Intercontinental Alloys shall comply
with all other provisions of the Stipulated Proposal for
Settlement submitted by the parties to this action on November
14,
1974, as more fully set out in the accompanying Opinion.
I, Christan L. Noffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board,
hereby certify the above Opinion and Order
we e adopted on the 10th day of July,
1975 by a vote of
stan L.
Mo.
Illinois Pollution
ol Board
18—
123