IL IS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
January 29, 1976
VILLAGE OF WALTONVILLE
)
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 75—347
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
Respondent.
OPINION OF THE BOARD (by Mr. Dumelle):
This Opinion is in support of an Order granting the variance
entered on November 26, 1975.
Petition for Variance was filed on September 4, 1975 from
Rules 203(c), 402 and 404(f) of Chapter 3, Water Pollution Regula-
tions, which pertain to the discharge of phosphorus from a proposed
sewage treatment plant.
The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency filed its
recommendation asking for a grant of the’variance on October 7,
1975. No public hearing was held.
Waltonville is a village of 385 located in Jefferson County.
The Village of Waltonville proposes to build a sewer system and a
contact stabilization waste treatment plant. Contracts for
construction of the sewage plant are expected to be awarded on
February 15, 1976 with operation scheduled for December 1, 1976.
The plant will discharge into an unnamed creek which discharges
in turn to Buck Creek and to the Big Muddy River which flows into
Rend Lake.
Rule 203(c) limits phosphorus to 0.05 mg/i in any reservoir
or lake or any stream at the point where it enters any reservoir
or lake.
The variance petition gives the following costs for variance
alternates or combinations of alternates:
19— 767
—2—
Total Present
Annual Equivalent
Worth
Cost
Contact Stabilization
Plant
$
246,160
$23,236
Land Irrigation (following
treatment)
395,572
37,340
Diversion to another
watershed
421,297
39,768
Thus utilizing either land irrigation or watershed diversion would
more than double the costs for the project.
The Petitioner states that Rend Lake is presently at 0.08 mg/i
phosphorus content (60 over the standard of Rule 203(c). Treatment
of Waltonville’s effluent to 1.0 mg/i phosphorus content would
reduce daily discharge of phosphorus from 2.3 lbs. per day to
0.4 lbs per day. Treatment to the water quality standard of
0.05 mg/i (deemed unfeasible) would drop the discharge to 0.02
lbs. per day.
The Village asks that either no treatment for phosphorus
be required or that an effluent limit of 1.0 mg/I be set.
The Agency recommendation points out that land disposal is
complex for a small village to operate and that the soils are not
suitable for this type of disposal. The contribution of Waltonville’s
phosphorus to Rend Lake is placed at about 0.5.
Rend Lake is said to be eutrophic and phosphorus-limited
but without algal blooms. The Agency states that more research
is needed. Taste and odor problems possibly caused by algae are
experienced at the Rend Lake Water District.
We have thus a situation in which a very small village cannot
afford to remove phosphorus below 1.0 mg/i. On the other hand, Rend
Lake is characterized by the Army Corps of Engineers in a December 1974
report as receiving a ~‘dangerous”rate of phosphorus input. The
Corps also states
Because the lake is phosphorus limited,
all phosphorus inputs should be minimized
to the greatest practicable extent to slow
the eutrophication of Rend Lake.
(Appendix 3 to Recommendation, p. 2)
Therefore, we grant the variance so that Waitonville may
proceed to get its long awaited. sewage plant and sewer system. But
we shall require that provision be made for phosphorus removal
19—768
—3--
facilities (to 1.0 mg/i) should water research show this to be
needed to save Rend Lake. The variance is granted until July 1,
1977.
This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact and
conci~SiOnS of law.
Mr. Young and Dr. Satchell abstained.
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify the above was adopted on the
~
1..
day of
January, 1976 by a vote of
~3....p
Illinois Pollution
Board
19
—
769