ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
November 19, 1981
REYNOLDS METALS COMPANY,
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB
79~81
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY,
)
Respondent.
ORDER OF TEE BOARD (by JLD, Dumelle):
On August 21, 1981 the Board adopted an Opinion and Order
dismissing Reynolds Metals Company’s petition for variance
fron Rules 303, 305(a) and ~05(b) of Chapter 7: Solid Waste.
On September 25, 1981 Reynolds filed a petition for rehearing
to which the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (Agency)
responded on October 15, 1981. That motion is hereby denied.
However,
the Board will reconsider that Opinion and Order
and delete the first two paragraphs of page 4 of the Opinion.
The record is insufficient with respect to Reynolds’ rights
and obligations under its lease agreement to clearly establish
the lack of an ongoing, extended responsibility for the subject
site. Secondly, these paragraphs were unnecessary to the
dcc
L3
ion.
The Board further offers the following observations
in
a~firmance of its August 20, 1981 Order.
First,
in
addition to the cases cited which limited the
Section 21(d) exemption which Reynolds argues applies to its
site,
in
People
V.
Commonwealth_Edison, PCB 75~368, 24 PCB
2)0 (November 10, 1976) the Board
has
previously held that
a ‘uarry landfill
“is a proper subject for a permit evaluation
by the Agency charged with the duty to prevent the pollution
and misuse of land,” The site was, as here, found not to be
one
where only minor amounts of refuse were being disposed
o1~
without environmental harm.
Second, Chapter
7
operating conditions arguably do
not
apply to the site
in the absence of a permit requirement. If
that is the case, the State would he left with no mechanism
for preventive maintenance
of
such sites other
than
enforcement
actions alleging threatened pollution. Such a course of action
runs counter to the overall thrust of
the
Act which is to attempt
44—55
—2—
to insure through the permitting system that landfills are
properly designed, constructed, maintained and operated so as to
avoid potential pollution problems.
Third, the Board reiterates that a permit is needed for
a facility such as Reynolds where, without conditions for at
least final cover, good maintenance, and post closure oversight,
the potential for environmental harm is great. Because of
unknown past practices, the possiblity that the site contains
hazardous wastes, the high permeability of the site which
is above the area aquifer, and the great amounts of material
that have been disposed of there without cover, a permit is
necessary. Though the materials presently being deposited
at the site are not particularly worrisome, the fact remains
that Reynolds should have had a permit. If it had, the Board,
as well as Reynolds and the Agency, would now be in a much
better position to assess the potential dangers of the site
and would be better able to determine what degree oE care should
he taken to prevent those dangers. By requiring a permit now,
these problems should at least be kept from becoming any worse.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Board
Member 0. Anderson dissented,
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, hereby cert.ify that the above Opinion and Order
was a,dopted on the
/~
day of
______
1981 by a vote
of
~i~L•
~
__
Christan L. Moff t/Clerk
Illinois Pol1uti~n~ontrolBoard
44—56