ILLINOIS
POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
October
9, 1975
DE
SOTO, INCORPORATED,
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 75—277
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE
BOARD
(by Mr. Zeitlin):
Petitioner, De Soto, Inc., (De Soto), seeks a Variance
to permit mercury discharges which exceed the limitation set
in Rule 702 of Chapter 3: Water Pollution, of the Pollution
Control Board Rules and Regulations. PQ Regs., Ch.3, Rule
702. Rule 702 sets a sewer discharge criteria for mercury
of 0.0005 mg/l; Petitioner estimates that its discharges
will not exceed 0.005 mg/l of mercury at any time, (expressed
in
the
Petition as 5 parts per billion,), and will not
exceed a total of 2 lbs. per year. De Soto discharges its
effluent to the Bloom Township Sanitary District.
De Soto’s Petition for Variance was filed with the
Board on July 18, 1975. A Recommendation was received from
the Environmental Protection Agency, (Agency), on August 22,
1975. No hearing was held in this matter.
De Soto operates a paint manufacturing plant in Chicago
Heights, Illinois. Prior to 1973, De Soto used phenyl
mercurial preservatives in its latex paint to prevent the
growth of bacteria and to prevent product spoilage. After
beginning a research and development program aimed at substituting
non-mercurial compounds as preservatives, De Soto was able
to eliminate the use of mercury in its paints after
January 1, 1973. In the past several months, however,
De Soto has encountered problems of bulging paint cans, and
was required by its customers to recall batches of paint
which had been contaminated by bacteria. (It should be
noted here that De
‘5
Petition is not exact regarding
the dates or extent of this problem.) As a result, Dc Soto
recently resumed the use of phenyl mercurial preservatives,
and subsequently reported this fact to the Agency on May 9,
1975.
19—63
—2—
De Soto’s Petition indicates that Dc Soto incurred
expenses in excess of $250,000 in connection with its research
and study of non—mercurial biocides. In addition, Dc Soto
has incurred
“
substantial losses” due to the recall of
spoiled paints. Based on these hardships and its estimate
that the mercury discharges for which a Variance is asked
would not pose any threat to public health or safety, Dc
Soto seeks permission to continue its present mercury discharges
for one year. De Soto claims that the problem of bacterial
growth in latex paints is common to its industry, and that
no completely reliable biocide other than phenyl mercurial
compounds has been found to date. Dc Soto also claims that
there is no known feasible method to effectively remove
mercury from its effluent to meet the 1/2 ppb standard of
Rule 702.
The Agency’ s Recommendation agrees that Dc Soto’ 5
discharges would have a minimal, and virtually indetectable,
impact on the receiving stream. Agency inspections of the
Bloom Township Sanitary District’s effluent to the Thorn
Creek found mercury concentrations of zero. But the Agency
also points out the fact that Dc Soto’s Variance Petition
contains no reference to a viable compliance plan. The
Agency therefore recommends that this Variance be denied.
The Board agrees that this principle
-
the requirement
of a compliance plan
-
must be applied here, and that the
Variance must be denied. The cases cited in the Agency
Recommendation, as well as many others, indicate a firm
committment by the
Board to require such a compliance plan
as a condition for any Variance. Although, as the Agency
points out, we have allowed further research and development
programs as compliance
with this requirement, even this
form
of
compliance plan is lacking in Dc Soto’s Petition. After
citing past costs for research into non—mercurial biocides,
De Soto states only that, “additional expenses for future
studies for replacements of mercurial biocides will be
incurred in presently undetermined
sums.”
This is insufficient
to meet the compliance plan requirement.
The necessity of a compliance plan is of particular
importance when dealing with mercury discharges. The Board
has previously found that mercury
is a virulent poison which
“neither degrades to harmless substances nor ceases to exist”
once introduced into the environment. In the Matter of
Mercury
Standards, R70—5, 1 PCB 411,412(1971).
19—64
—3--
We
shall dismiss this matter without prejudice and
without
ruling on the other matters raised in Dc Soto’s
Petition.
Dc Soto is expressly invited, should it have or
develop an adequate compliance plan, to file a new Variance
Petition regarding this problem.
This
Opinion constitutes the findings of fact and
opinion of law of the Board in this matter.
ORDER
IT
IS
THE
ORDER
OF THE POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD THAT the
Petition for Variance of Dc Soto, Inc. in this matter is
dismissed without prejudice.
I, Christan L,
Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois
Pollution
Control Board, hereby certify the above Opinion and Order
~‘ereadopted on the _____________day of September, 1975
by a vote of
~
14
C~tanThfeerk
Illinois
Pollution ~bntro1
Board
19
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55