ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    January 6, 1972
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    v.
    )
    PCB 71—329
    AMERICAN GENERATOR
    AND
    ARMATURE CO.
    James I. Rubin, Assistant Attorney General, for the Environmental
    Protection Agency
    Raymond I. Suekoff,f or the American Generator and Armature Co.
    Opinion and Order of the Board (by Mr. Currie):
    American Generator and Armature Co. was charged with
    causing air pollution from an incinerator at its Chicago factory
    and with installing an afterburner on the Incinerator without
    a permit from the Agency. The company denied that it was causing
    air pollution but conceded that it had installed the after-
    burner without a state permit, believing that only a city permit
    was required.
    The Agency presented one witness, a neighbor wh~ testified
    to considerable smoke and odor problems in past years, to an
    improvement sometime in 1971, and to the apparent cessation
    of the problem since September. The company’s witnesses testified
    that the incinerator problem had been brought to its attention
    by the city, that it had promptly purchased and installed the
    afterburner in February 1971 to cure the problem, and that
    a city
    permit was obtained, both the company and its contractor
    believing no state permit necessary. Upon receipt of the present
    complaint in October, the company immediately shut down and
    locked the incinerator, and it has not been used since. At
    the
    same
    time the company applied for a state
    permit, which
    has been issued and was introduced at the hearing.
    That there was air pollution before the afterburner was
    installed is clear under the doctrine of Moody v. Flintkote
    Co.,
    #
    70-36 (Sept. 2, 1971), for the incinerator emissions
    interfered with at least one neighbor’s enjoyment of life, and
    reasonable control measures, namely the afterburner, were
    available. That a state permit was not obtained before installation
    is admitted. That one was required is clear from
    an
    examination
    of the applicable law.
    3
    373

    Section 9(h) of the Environmental Protection Act, effective
    ~3uly 1, 1970, forbids the installation of any equipment designed
    to prevent air pollution, of any type designated by Board
    regulations, without a permit from the state Environmental
    Protection Agency. The Rules and Regulations Governing the
    Control of Air Pollution, adopted in 1967 and preserved as Board
    regulations by section 49(c) of the Act, provide in Rule
    3-2.110 that a permit •is required for installation or construction
    of “any new equipment intended for eliminating, reducing or
    controlling emission of air contaminants,” with exceptions not
    here material.
    Nothing in the above regulations themselves limited their
    geographical scope; on their face they applied to all facilities
    in the State. The old Air Pollution Control Act, under which
    the regulations were adopted, contained a provision authorizing
    the old Board to exempt from the Act and regulations those
    municipalities or other local governments with control programs
    of their own meeting certain stated conditions. Pursuant to
    that authorization, the old Board adopted regulations providing
    for such exemptions, and the City of Chicago, among others, was
    granted a certificate of exemption. At that time, prior to the
    adoption of the Environmental Protection Act, facilities in the
    City did not require state permits.
    All this was changed by the new statute in July 1970.
    Section 2 of the Act plainly states, in contrast to the earlier
    law, the legislative intention to create a state-wide program:
    (a) The General Assembly finds;
    (ii) that because environmental damage does not
    respect political boundaries, it is necessary
    to establish a unified state-wide program for
    environmental protection
    (b) It is the purpose of this Act
    . . -
    to establish a
    unified, state—wide program
    . .
    Conspicuous is the omission of any provision for exemption of
    municipalities or counties with their own control programs, for
    such would have been wholly inconsistent with the express statutory
    finding and policy quoted above. The Governor’s message to
    the General Assembly explaining the bill that became the
    Environmental Protection Act stressed that the bill would do away
    with all local exemptions. Indeed the emphasis on a state—wide
    program was increased during the bill’s journey through the
    General Assembly by omission of the original provision that
    would have allowed the state to grant “primary jurisdiction”
    to qualified local agencies. In short, it was one of the major
    purposes of the Environmental Protection Act, clearly and publicly
    expressed all during the bill’s progress, to abolish local exemptions.
    3 — 374

    Since the exemption regulations were inconsistent with the
    new statute, they were not preserved by section 49(c) but expired
    immediately upon the effective date of the statute. To remove
    any doubt, and to alert affected persons once again to the
    necessity for complying with state law in formerly exempted
    communities, we adopted a regulation (#R 70-1, Oct. 8, 1970),
    explicitly
    repealing the old exemption regulations.
    See the
    Board’s opinion in that proceeding Oct. 8, 1970.
    Outstanding
    exemption certificates were voided by expiration of the regulations
    and statute that were their sole authorization.
    Since the only geographic limit on the applicability of the
    permit regulations was the existence of the exemption regulation,
    the repeal of the latter made the permit rules applicable to
    formerly exempted areas such as Chicago. Cf. EPA v. Bath, Inc.,
    #71-52 (Sept. 16, 1971)
    ,
    reaching the same conclusion with re-
    gard to the scope of the solid waste regulations.
    State permits have thus been required for new Chicago
    facilities since July 1, 1970. The installation of the after-
    burner in this case without such a permit was a violation of the
    state law and regulations.
    Because of the company’s professed ignorance that a state
    permit had become necessary and because of its prompt cooperation
    in
    closing
    the source and applying for a permit when the violation
    became known,the Agency dropped its request for money penalties.
    The issuance of the state permit on the day of the hearing removes
    the necessity for any order against operation without a permit.
    And, since the installation of the afterburner is expected by
    both the City and the State to cure the pollution problem (else
    no permit should have been issued)
    ,
    we have no reason to believe
    there is a continuing danger of future pollution and no reason
    to enter a
    cease—and—desist order against further violations.
    In sum the Board’s finding is that air pollution was caused
    in the past and that the permit provisions were violated; our
    order is that the proceedings are hereby closed with no remedial
    or penalty provisions. This opinion should serve as a final
    notice that state
    permits are required for new installations in
    formerly exempted areas such as Chicago, and that we shall not
    take kindly to pleas of ignorance in the future.
    Mr. Dumelle would impose a penalty of $500.
    I, Christan Moffett,
    Clerk of the Pollution Control Board,
    certify that the Board adopted
    the above Opinion and Order this
    4
    ~
    day of January, 1972 by a vote of 4-0,
    3
    375

    Back to top