ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    January 6, 1972
    FOREST PRESERVE DISTRICT
    OF COOK COUNTY
    v..
    )
    PCB 71—304
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    Mr. Arthur L. Janura and Mr. James H. Tyndall for Forest Preserve
    District of Cook County
    Mr. Nicholas G. Dozoryst II, for the Enivronmental Protection Agency
    Opinion of the Board Aby Mr. Currie):
    The Forest Preserve District asks a variance to permit
    open burning of trees near Wheeling until July 1, 1972. We
    grant the variance subject to several conditions, for reasons
    given below.
    Open burning was forbidden by the Air Pollution Control
    Board in regulations adopted in 1965, but the burning of
    diseased trees was exempted, presumably because of the absence
    of satisfactory alternative means of preventing the spread of
    plant diseases such as Dutch elm. The Environmental Protection
    Act, in 1970, forbade all open burning of refuse except such as
    might be authorized by Board regulations (section 9 (c)). The
    relationship between the statutory ban and the old regulations
    being less than clear, we held hearings on revised regulations,
    which were finally adopted September 2, 1971. In the meantime
    we entertained numerous petitions for variances from the strict
    statutory ban, and our practice was to allow the burning of
    diseased trees, on appropriately remote sites under appropriate
    conditions, because of the need to stop the spread df disease.
    E.g., City of Winchester v. EPA,
    #
    70—37 (Feb. 8, 1971).
    The new regulations (PCB Regs.., Ch. 3, Part IV) recognize
    both the necessity for burning diseased trees (for reasons more
    fully stated in the Board’s opinion, Open Burning Regulations,
    #R 70-11, Sept. 2, 1971) and the impracticality of distinguishing
    at the burning site between those that are and those that are
    not infected with disease. For these reasons, and because of
    the demonstrated lack of satisfactory alternatives for the
    disposal of non—diseased wood, the regulation allows permits for
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    the burning of landscape wastes under certain conditions. The
    Forest Preserve District has obtained such a permit for its
    Palos Hills burning site, whi~~his not at issue in the present
    case.
    The regulations impose three conditions on the grant of
    permits to burn landscape wastes. One is that by July 1, 1972
    all such burning shall be conducted with the aid of an air-
    curtain destructor or comparable device, which will virtually
    eliminate smoke. The others are that the burning shall not take
    place within 1000 feet of populated areas and that air—curtain
    destructors are required at once within one mile of any
    municipality of over 1000 persons, or within any municipality.
    Rules 401(g), 404(a)(4). In short, the principle is that
    burning cannot entirely be avoided; that air-curtain destructors
    are to be used to minimize pollution; that in more remote areas
    a grace period is allowed to permit orderly acquisition of such
    devices; but that burning should be moved away from populated
    areas until destructors can be obtained.
    The propriety of the restriction on burning in populated
    areas is affirmed by the evidence in the ~present case. The
    District has been burning trees within one mile of Wheeling,
    with homes not far away to both east and west. Despite attempts
    to burn only when the wind is toward the north or northeast,
    the neighbors have suffered:
    The smoke that comes from the burning area, with open
    burning, is intolerable,
    . . .
    The smoke, the debris that
    comes down from the air that covers my yard, my automobile,
    covers my home, becomes an intolerable situation.
    CR. 121—22.)
    The District ~iasunable to get a permit for continued
    open burning at Wheeling because the site is within one mile of
    the municipality. It has obtained a permit forand installed an air-
    curtain destructor, which at the hearing December
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    was expected
    to be in operation before the end of December, and thus presumably
    is in use today. The District’s petition aske.d two things:
    permission to burn in the open until the destructor was in operation,
    and
    permission to burn amounts in excess of the destructor’s
    capacity thereafter. For the destructor’s capacity is estimated
    at 80 tons per day, and this is less than one fifth of the peak
    loads received at the Wheeling location.
    The request to burn until installation of the destructor
    should by now be moot, unless a complaint is later filed
    challenging the District’s actions during that time; we see no
    need to resolve now what may never be
    .&
    controversy, and thus
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    dismiss thatportion of the request as moot. Cf. National
    Gypsum Co. v. EPA, # 71-99 (August 2, 1971). The important
    issue is what to do about the trees the destructor cannot handle
    from now to July.
    The District is committed to terminating all non—destructor
    burning by July 1. It asks to be given two months in which to
    evaluate the performance of its first destructo~before in-
    vesting additional money (at $50,000 for each installation, since
    these are large and permanent destructors) to thay others. It
    also wishes to pursue the possibility’ of installing a sawmill
    so that the larger logs, which take a long time to burn, can
    be cut into useful lumber after removal of the infested outer
    portions and then sold. Attempts are now being made to secure
    a market for the product, which is said to be mostly elm wood
    of relatively low value. The District testified that it has
    been unable to find an alternative site for the burning outside
    the restricted areas.
    We think the District has made its case. While the Wheeling
    site is clearly a bad place for open burning, we see no way in
    which continued burning there can be avoided before the summer
    of 1972 without creating a serious problem of trees that cannot
    be disposed of. We cannot find that the District was wrong in
    experimenting with a single destructor for a short period before
    investing several hundred thousands of dollars to buy, half a
    dozen of them. We cannot say it should have abandoned efforts
    to find a solution far preferable to burning up the
    wood in a destructor, namely, translating the refuse into a
    useful product. Cf. Decker Sawmill, Inc. v. EPA,
    #
    71-73 (July
    8, 1971). Nor can we really say that all these actions should
    have been taken years ago, we cannot buy the District’s conception
    that “diseased” trees includes all dead trees because they are
    obviously not in good health, but the truly diseased trees that
    form a substantial part of the District’s problem were exempt
    from the burning ban until 1970 and their status uncertain for
    another year. Nor can we on the special facts of this case insist
    that the District do what the regulation expects people to do
    who have been burning inside restricted areas and who need time
    to provide destructors: move the operation to a more remote
    location. The District’s burning operation is an enormous one,
    which not only takes care of the trees generated by the District
    itself but also furnished a disposal service to many municipalities
    and private contractors within the entire Cook. County area.
    The entire metropolitan area is highly congested, and it has
    proved difficult to find any preferable site for interim use.
    Long transportation of trees beyond the metropolitan area
    would not only be quite costly but would enlarge the risk of spread-
    ing disease along the way. As we know from another case decided
    today, City of Rockford v. EPA, # 71-311 (Jan. 6, 1972), the
    process of obtaining permission to utilize a large new site for
    any sort of refuse disposal can be extremely time—consuming,
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    and we have no assurance that it could be accomplished in the present
    case before the requested termination date of July 1. In short
    this is an unusually large burning operation in an unusually
    crowded area, and the possibilities of moving it are far less
    than in the ordinary case.
    One very attractive suggestion for an alternative to open
    burning at Wheeling was made by a citizen witness: transporting
    the trees the destructor cannot handle to the District’s own Palos
    Hills site, which is mOre remote, where interim burning could
    proceed with less adverse results. The District did not respond
    to this suggestion. We shall require that the Palos Hills site
    be used in preference to Wheeling to the extent practicable and
    shall require that reports indicate the extent to which this
    practice can avoid burning at Wheeling.
    We cannot tell from the record whether or not the use of the
    present destructor is limited to certain hours or days by the permit.
    I.f so, we hereby grant a variance from such time conditions; the
    destru.ctor should be utilized to the fullest practicable extent
    to minimize the need for open burning.
    In granting this variance we are entirely aware that open
    burning at Wheeling is highly undesirable and must be brought
    to an end as soon as practicable. The District has promised to
    end it by July 1, 1972, and we expect to hold the District to
    that promise.
    ORDER
    The Forest Preserve District of Cook County is hereby
    granted a variance from the open burning regulations to permit
    open burning of landscape wastes at its Wheeling site until
    July 1, 1972, on the following conditions:
    1. No waste shall he burned in the open except that which
    is in excess of the capacity of the air curtain
    destructor; and
    2. To the extent practicable, waste beyond the capacity
    of the destructor shall be burned at Palos Hills in
    preference to Wheeling; and
    3. No new fires may be ignited nor additions made to existing
    fires except between 9 a.m. Monday and noon on Wednesday,
    and all fires shall be completely extinguished by 6 p.m.
    Friday of each week; and
    4. The District shall continue its practice of limiting
    open burning, to the extent practicable, to times when
    wind conditions are such as to minimize the effect of
    emissions on nearby populations; and
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    5. The residue from open burning shall be cooled with
    water and deposited in an approved sanitary landfill
    at least once a week; and
    6. The District shall diligently pursue alternative methods
    of disposing of landscape waste without open burning,
    such as chipping, sawmilling, and additional air-curtain
    destructors; shall inform the Agency and the Board no
    later than March 1, 1972 of its decision as to which
    method is to be employed; and shall cease open burning
    without the aid of an approved device for reducing
    emissions no later than July 1, 1972; and
    7. The District shall submit monthly reports to the
    Agency, beginning February 1, 1972, detailing the following:
    a. The per hour operating capacity of the air
    curtain destructor;
    b. The amount of waste actually disposed of by
    the air curtain destructor and the number of
    hours it was operated each day;
    c. The total daily amount of waste disposed of
    by all of the burning;
    d. The amounts of waste burned daily at the
    Palos Hills site and the extent to which this
    site is used and can be used to alleviate the
    burning burden at Wheeling;
    e. The progress toward achieving an alternative to
    open burning.
    I,
    Christan Moffett,
    Clerk of the Pollution Control Board,
    certify that the Board adapted the above Opinion this 6th
    day of January,
    1972
    by a vote
    of 4-0.
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