ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
November
1,
1973
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Complainant,
v.
)
PCB 71—385
LADD CONSTRUCTION COMPANY,
INC.
Respondent.
George Wolff, Assistant Attorney General for the EPA
Louis
J.
Perona, Attorney for Respondent
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr~.Henss)
Respondent Ladd Construction Company is engaged in the
manufacture and sale of asphalt paving near Dixon,
Illinois.
The
Environmental Protection Agency alleges that from July
1,
1970
to the date of the filing of the Complaint on December 17,
1971,
Ladd operated its batch asDhalt plant in such manner as to cause
air pollution in violation of Section
9(a)
of the Environmental
Protection Act.
The Comnlaint also charges that Respondent failed
to submit a Letter of Intent in violation of Rules 2-2.22 and 2-2.23
of the Rules and Regulations Governing the Control of Air Pollution
and failed to file an Air Contaminant Emission Reduction Program
(ACERP)
in violation of Rule 2-2.31(f)
and 2—2.4 of the Air Rules,
and that Respondent caused excessive emissions of particulates
in
violation of Rule 3-3.111 of
the Air Rules.
On the date scheduled for public hearing,
the parties submitted
a Stipulation of Facts in lieu of testimony.
Respondent admitted
that it had owned and operated the batch asphalt plant since it was
constructed in 1962;
that neither
a Letter of Intent nor an ACERP
had been submitted as required by the Air Rules;
that from July
1,
1970
to November
1,
1971 the plant was operated in such manner as
to allow excessive emissions of particulates,
i.e.
approximately
650 lbs./hr.;
that the allowable emissions under Table
1 of Chapter
III
of the Air Rules were
53 lbs./hr.
It was further stipulated that on June
9,
1971 an Agency
investigator inspected the asphalt plant and notified the plant
manager that operation of the asphalt plant without control equip-
ment was
a violation of the Statute.
Ladd Construction was formally
notified of the apparent violation by an Agency leJ-.ter dated
9—
679
—2—
October
5,
1971.
Less than one month later on November
1,
1971
Ladd closed the asphalt plant for the season and did not resume
operations until it had completed the installation of
a multi-
cyclone and Venturi scrubber with a combined estimated efficiency
of 99.8.
Respondent applied for and was granted permits for the
control equipment.
Using the control equipment Respondent’s
emissions would be 15 lbs./hr., well under the 35.8 lbs/hr.
allowed by Rule 203(a)
of the Air Pollution Control Regulations.
Finally,
the Stipulation stated that no towns or subdivisions
were located east of the plant
‘within a sufficient proximity to
be significantly affected by emissions from the plant”.
Prevailing
winds
in the area are from the west.
Some isolated farm houses are
east of the plant, hut the nearest
is over 2500 ft.
away.
Photo-~
graphs taken by the Lee County Health Department in November l~‘~i
and
by
the Agency
in
June 1971 show dense gray emissions coming
from the short stack which serves the rotary kiln drier.
These
emissions darkened the sky for a considerable distance from the
point of emission.
Since the plant was located in a sparsely populated area and
there was no evidence of the effect of these emissions on people
we must find that the Section 9(a)
violation was not proved.
No
evidc:.ice was submitted that the emissions caused a nuisance.
Therefore,
that part of the Complaint which charges
a violation of
Section
9(a)
of the Environmental Protection Act is dismissed.
All
other violations which have been charged by the Agency have
been
admitted
by
Ladd Construction Company and we find Respondent guilty
on the remaining charges.
Since Respondent has installed control
equipment capable
of
assuring operations within the law,
it will not
now he necessary
to submit a Letter of Intent and an ACERP.
Only
the issue of penalty remains.
The Stipulation made no reference
to monetary penalty but in view of the heaviness of the emissions
for a period in excess of one year we believe one should be imposed.
There
is
no evidence that the emissions did or did not cause actual
damage in the surrounding area and for
that
reason a routine penalty
in the amount of $1,000 will he assessed.
ORDER
It
is the order of the Board that Ladd Construction Company,
Inc. pay a penalty of $1,000 by December
15,
1973 for violations
found in this proceeding.
Penalty payment by certified check or
money order payable to the State of Illinois shall be made to:
Fiscal Services Division,
Illinois EPA,
2200 Churchill Road,
Springfield,
Illinois 62706.
I,
Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Boa~d,
hereby certify
the above Opinion
and
Order was adopted
this
4,
~
day of ~
1973 by
a
vote of
~~to_~