ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
March 28, 1977
NORTH SHORE SANITARY
DISTRICT,
)
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 76—244
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY, )
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD (by Mr. Dumelle):
This matter comes before the Board on an Amended Petition
For Reconsideration filed by Petitioner North Shore Sanitary
District (NSSD) on January 11, 1977. The original Petition for
Variance concerning the subject matter of this case was designated
PCB 76-194, was filed on July 19, 1976, and dismissed as inadequate
on July 22, 1976. NSSD refiled its Petition for Variance on
September 3, 1976 as PCB 76—226. This Petition also was dismissed
as inadequate on September 16, 1976. NSSD once again refiled a
Petition for Variance on September 30, 1976. This Petition was
designated PCB 76-244 and was disthissed on October 14, 1976 as
inadequate. NSSD filed a Petition to reconsider this latest
dismissal on October 25, 1976. After the Board denied reconsidera-
tion on December 2, 1976 NSSD filed the instant Amended Petition
For Reconsideration.
After 3 dismissals and 1 denial of reconsideration the
Board decided to disregard the demonstrated inability of NSSD
to file a Petition for Variance which complies with the require-
ments of the Act and the Board’s Procedural Rules. In the hopes
that the Agency’s Recommendation in this matter would remedy
some of the inadequacies of the NSSD Petitions, the Board rein-
stated NSSD’s Amended Petition for Reconsideration. The burden,
of course, rests with NSSD. The Agency filed its Recommendation
on March 16, 1977. Even given the Agency’s willingness to
recommend a grant of the requested Variance, the Board could
not grant a variance on the basis of the record in this case
without being arbitrary and capricious. There still remains
two issues regarding which the Petitions (all five of them)
are woefully inadequate. NSSD has simply failed to provide
sufficient allegation of facts or conclusions to support a
finding that a denial of the requested variance would force it,
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or anyone else, to bear an arbitrary or unreasonable hardship.
NSSD seeks a variance to allow the connection of somewhere
between 25 and 100 homes onto its overloaded sewage system.
No facts or conclusions are alleged on the issue of hardship
other than that someone, somewhere, may not be fully enjoying
their property rights. NSSD has not identified those parties
upon whom the alleged hardship will fall. Neither has NSSD
given any evidence on the extent of this alleged hardship.
Have these 25-100 homes been built? If so, when were they
built? Are they all currently on septic systems? Are they
purchased and occupied? These very basic issues have not
been addressed.
The Act and the Procedural Rules give ample direction
to potential applicants for variances. The Board’s Order of
December 2, 1976 detailed its reasons for dismissal and, for
the fourth time, directed NSSD to follow Procedural Rule 401.
The Board directly asked “...how many, if any, of the houses
to be connected were constructed after the sewer ban went into
effect. Information should also be provided how these houses
are presently disposing of their wastes”. NSSD did not respond
to this request. NSSD chose to rest with a Petition which is
clearly inadequate on its face.
Inasmuch as the NSSD has repeatedly failed to supply
crucial information and the Agency’s Recommendation failed to
adduce that information, the Board must dismiss the instant
Petition for Variance.
The record in the instant case was disjointed and poorly
organized. If NSSD again chooses to file a new Petition for Variance
such Petition shall represent a consolidation of all pertinent
information and argument. No incorporation by reference to
documents in past proceedings in this matter will be permitted.
There is no reason for the Board to waste its resources screening
and analyzing repeated, patently inadequate Petitions, especially
from attorneys who have appeared before the Board before. The
Board has made use of substantial effort and substantial restraint
in dealing with the present case. Yet the apparent unwillingness
of NSSD to submit even a colorably adequate Petition for Variance
is unreasonable. The instant Petition for Variance is hereby
dismissed as inadequate. The dismissal, this time, is without
prejudice to the filinq of a new case in accordance with the
instructions above.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, hereby certify the above Order was adopted on the
ce”
day of March, 1977 by a vote of ~
~stanL.Moffcl~~~
Illinois Pollution Control Board
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