ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    December 18
    ,
    1975
    ELECTRIC WHEEL COMPANY,
    )
    Petitioner,
    v.
    )
    PCB 75—335
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
    Respondent.
    OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD (by Mr. Young):
    Electric Wheel Company (Petitioner) filed a variance petition
    on August 27, 1975, seeking relief from Rule 203(g) (1) (B) of the
    Board’s Air Pollution Control Regulations, Chapter 2, until Septem-
    ber 1, 1976.
    On August 28, 1975, the Board found the petition to be in-
    adequate in that it failed to include information pertaining to
    the criteria required by Train v. NRDC, Inc., 43 USLW 4467 (Su-
    preme Court No. 73—1742, April 16, 1975).
    An amended petition for variance was subsequently filed on
    October 21, 1975, containing supplemental information.
    Electric Wheel Company is a major domestic producer of
    agricultural and industrial rims and wheels. The plant is lo-
    cated at 1120 North 28th Street, Quincy, Illinois and includes
    a plant power house equipped with four boilers which produce
    steam for its manufacturing processes and also for space heating.
    Petitioner states that natural gas has been the primary fuel
    source, but shortages in recent years have forced dependency upon
    alternate fuels for the majority of the time. At present, boiler
    #1 is being fired with natural gas, boiler #2 is being fired with
    fuel oil, boiler #3 is out of service, and boiler #4 is being
    fired with coal. It is boiler #4 which is the subject of this
    petition. A stack test performed during April and May of 1974
    showed compliance with regulations in effect at that time.
    However, the average particulate emission was 0.644 pound per
    million Btu of heat input, a particulate emission which exceeds
    the limitation which became effective May 30, 1975. Present
    control equipment on boiler #4 is a Research—Cottrel Multiclone
    which has an estimated collection efficiency of 85 (Rec. p. 2).
    Petitioner states that variou~ equipment manufacturers are pre-
    paring quotations on supplemental air control equipment and that
    delivery of such equipment could require as much as one year.
    19
    -
    494

    —2—
    Petitioner alleges that a denial of this variance petition
    would force a major curtailment in production at the Quincy
    plant and would jeopardize the employment of nearly 1200
    employees. Petitioner further alleges that the resulting loss
    in production would drastically affect both the agricultural
    and construction industries, as these industries could not find
    other suppliers to replace this loss in production.
    Petitioner also alleges that the grant of the variance will
    not prevent attainment of the national ambient air quality stan-
    dards for particulates. In data supplied by Petitioner, the
    particulate standards were not exceeded at the nearest Quincy
    monitoring station. However, in data supplied by the Agency, a
    second monitoring station located three miles to the southwest
    had an Annual Geometric Mean of 81 micrograms per cubic meter
    in 1974, exceeding the standard of 75 micrograms per cubic
    meter (Rec. p. 7).
    Petitioner has not met the burden imposed on those seeking
    a variance. Firstly, Petitioner has not established to the
    satisfaction of the Board that particulate emissions from boiler
    #4 will not contribute to an air quality violation in the sur-
    rounding area. Secondly, although Petitioner alleges a denial
    of this variance petition would force a major curtailment in
    production jeopardizing the employment of 1200 persons, the
    allegation is unfounded. The Board has consistently held that
    a denial of a variance does not constitute a shutdown order.
    The Petitioner can still operate although subjecting itself to
    possible enforcement action (ABC Great States v EPA, PCB 72-39;
    Commonwealth Edison v. EPA, PCB 72-91, 72-150; Unarco v. EPA,
    PCB 75-289). Thirdly, Petitioner’s variance petition does not
    satisfy Rule 40l(viii) of the Procedural Rules of the Illinois
    Pollution Control Board which requires that the petition for
    variance must include a detailed description of the program to
    be undertaken to achieve compliance. Petitioner alleges that it
    is considering various equipment and that equipment manufacturers
    are preparing quotations on this control equipment. Rule 401 (viii)
    requires the compliance program to have progressed much beyond
    the management consideration stage. The Board will not grant a
    variance based on such a speculative compliance program as is
    presently proposed by Petitioner. Finally, Petitioner alleges
    that it has acted in good faith in attempting to bring boiler
    #4 into compliance and to deny the variance would impose an
    unreasonable and arbitrary hardship. Stack tests performed in
    April and May of 1974 revealed boiler #4 could not be coal fired
    in compliance with particulate limitations which were to be
    effective May 30, 1975. Yet, Petitioner has not taken positive
    action to resolve the problem. Indeed, as of November 17, 1975,
    Petitioner was still in the reviewing stage and had not yet
    instituted a positive plan. The Board has consistently stated
    that any hardship that results from a refusal to take the necessary
    steps toward compliance is self-imposed, and that the hardship
    19
    -
    495

    —3—
    imposed by denying a variance is not unreasonable or arbitrary
    if it was earlier within the power of Petitioner to remedy.
    (City of Danville v. EPA, PCB 72-335; Unarco v. EPA, PCB 75-289).
    For the foregoing reasons the Board denies Electric Wheel’s
    petition for variance.
    This Opinion constitutes the findings of fact and conclusions
    of law of the Board in this matter.
    ORDER
    1. It is the Order of the Board that petition of Electric
    Wheel Company be and is hereby dismissed.
    I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
    Control Board, hereby certify the above Opinion and Order
    were adopted on the
    ~
    day of 1O~4t4~W1J~j
    ,
    1975
    byavoteof4..p
    Christan L. Mof t, ~er
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    19
    -
    496

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