ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    August
    5, 1971
    JOHN CIANCIO AND MARGARET CIANCIO
    v.
    )
    #
    71—100
    ENVIRONMENTAL
    PROTECTION AGENCY
    Dissenting Opinion
    (by Mr~Currie):
    My reasons for dissenting from a series of variance grants
    involving the North Shore
    sewer ban are given in my separate
    opinion in Wachta v~EPA,
    #71-77
    (July 12,
    1971),
    In this case,
    however, there
    are additional considerations as well.
    First, we denied a variance
    in very similar circumstances
    in Wagnon v. EPA
    #
    71-85
    (July 26,
    1971),
    In neither case had
    construction of the house begun at the time of the sewer ban;
    in both cases money had been invested in plans,
    In Monyek we
    said this was insufficient, partly because the money spent is
    not lost;
    the plans will be there when the ban is lifted,
    Today~s
    action,
    I think, does not overrule Monyek,
    since the deciding vote
    is based upon
    a distinction of
    that case,
    not
    its repudiation.
    The distinctions mentioned are that living conditions are crowded
    for the Ciancios and
    that they will proceed
    to construct
    a septic
    tank and to move into the new house
    if the variance
    is denied,
    at the cost of several oaks that must be cut down
    to permit
    construction of
    the tank,
    These hardships are indeed unfortunate,
    but it seems to ±nethey are less than those
    in Monyek;
    for the
    Ciancios will have their new house
    and Monyek will not~
    In both
    cases
    I think that while
    the hardships are unfortunate the over-
    riding need is to prevent
    a worsening of the pollution of air
    and water that is now occurring
    in the District,
    as further
    spelled out in my Wachta dissent,
    But there
    is another aspect that leads me to
    find today~s
    decision irreconcilable with precedent,
    It was not our March
    31 order that suddenly interfered without warning with the connection
    of the new house
    to the
    sewer,
    This case involves
    the extehsion
    of the sewer itself,
    an act requiring
    a permit from the Environmental
    Protection Agency,
    In fact
    such
    a permit was soughtand was
    denied by the Agency in February 1971,
    before our order was entered,
    The Board today apparently reverses
    the Agency~sdenial, although
    the issue is not discussed in either opinion supporting the grant,
    thus setting aside not only our own order but also the Agency~s
    long—standing policy
    of refusing permits for extensions serving

    overloaded plants,
    It seems to me that
    it
    is only prudent
    for
    people to investigate whether
    a sewer connection will
    be permitted
    before making substantial expenditures
    on
    the
    expectation of such~
    a permit,
    An inquiry here would have
    revealed--indeed it did
    when the permit was denied——that
    a sewer ban was already
    in effect
    in February,
    Moreover,
    the denial
    of that permit should not have
    come as an unfair surprise because this way by no means
    the first
    time
    the Agency had denied
    a permit on the basis
    of
    a plant over-
    load,
    I think people can reasonably be expected
    to make them-
    selves aware of important government policies
    and precedents
    governing the issuance of
    a permit before undertaking expenditures
    in reliance
    on the absence of
    any restriction.
    There was no
    showing here that the Agency~sdenialcame
    as an unfair
    surprise,
    and therefore
    I think even on
    the majority~s test this petition
    should have been denied,
    Finally, with respect to the issue of surprise generally,
    it seems to
    me
    that it
    was
    quite clear before our March
    31 order
    that the addition of new waste sources to
    an already overloaded
    plant will cause
    a violation of the relevant effluent standards
    and of the statutory prohibition of water pollution,
    I think we
    said as much
    in our March
    31 opinion
    (League of Women Voters v.
    North Shore Sanitary District,
    #
    70-7).
    I
    do not think
    it
    is
    unconstitutionally
    surprising,
    as suggested
    in
    one
    opinion
    in the
    Wachta case
    (#
    71-77, July
    12,
    1971),
    to find oneself prohibited
    from causing
    a violation of the regulations and of the statute,
    Our sewer ban order,
    in my opinion, merely made clear what the
    law
    already forbade,
    This point becomes clearer if one asks whether
    it would have been unconstitutional for this Board
    to’ find,
    in
    an enforcement proceeding
    against
    a
    person about to attach a new
    source
    to an overloaded facility, that the connection must be
    prohibited since
    it would cause water pollution,
    I think the
    answer is that it would not be uncOnstitutional,
    any more than is
    the application of existing law to any new waste
    source.
    And
    I
    think that is the effect of the Board~s decision,
    Apart from the constitutional issue, perhaps
    it
    is time to
    expect
    people
    to
    inquire before committing themselves
    to substantial expenditures whether or not their sewage will be
    adequately treated.
    It is time
    we
    collectively recoghized
    that
    the problem
    of
    sewage disposal
    is not solved just because we
    put
    the waste into
    a pipe that carries it away from the house,
    In this connection it should help
    for us to put
    our rule
    as to
    sewer bans into
    the regulations,
    as we have proposed
    (# R
    71-14)
    so as to make
    it better known,
    In fact the ban did come
    as
    a
    surprise
    to many people,
    and
    therefore has created considerable hardship,
    The Board has responded
    by relaxing the ban in part,
    and we have also scheduled inquiry
    hearings that may result in an entirely revised rule.
    But
    whatever
    comes
    of
    this particular ban
    as
    a result of the surprise with which
    it
    was imposed,
    I
    think
    it clear
    that our rule
    and policy,
    at
    least prospectively, must be
    that people
    are
    not to build new
    2
    208

    waste
    sources where there are inadequate treatment facilities.
    Anything else
    and this Board, which was created to reduce
    pollution, will allow pollution
    to get worse
    stead of better.
    I, Regina E.
    Ryan, Clerk of the Pollution Control Board, certify
    that the above opinion was filed on th~~Augu~,
    2
    209

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