ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
September 20, 1985
VILLAGE
OF MINOOKA,
)
)
Petitioner,
)
)
v.
)
PCB 85-100
)
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
)
PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
)
Respondent.
DISSENTING OPINION (by J.D.
Dumelle):
The Board majority, by a 4-3 vote, has granted a
13-~month
variance beyond January 12, 1986.
The health consequences of this variance grant are that
additional bone cancers or leukemias may be induced, The Board
instead should have dismissed the instant variance as moot in
light of the enactment of R85-14 on August
15,
1985.
There are two major problems with granting this variance.
First, there may be no hardship existing after January
12,
1986. The single potential developer may well have been granted
all of its needed permits by that date.
What then is the
hardship after that date until March 20, 1987? It is
simply
speculative.
Second, the Board majority here relies on the Aurora
testimony of July
11
and completely neglects the later filings
and testimony
in
R85-14,
The August 2, 1985 issue
of
the
Journal
of the American Medical Association carried
a
major articl~
t~t1.ed “Association of Leukemia With Radium Groundwater
Contamination”.
(See Dissenting Opinion in R85—14 by J.D.
lT)un~ile which discusses its import.)
This Board can
consider
material in its own
rulemakings. Yet here the Board majority has
cyiosen to put on blinders and not look
at
a record developed
before it on the identical
subject.
Since the August 15, 1985
enactment of R85-14, :idditional
important
exhibits
have gone into that proceeding.
One exhibit
~rom Dr. Edward
J.
Calabrese’s
book shows absorption approaching
100
in infants which directly contradicts
Dr. Toohey’s use of a
20 absorption factor.
Another exhibit is a Canadian study of
~‘ater consumption which refutes Dr. Toohey’s use of
one liter per
day and indicates that the conventional two liter per day figure
is
the more accurate and better figure to use.
These two later exhibits were
not in the instant
variance
65-535
-2-
record, The Board majority should have denied the instant
variance as moot, called attention to these new and important
exhibits and asked that any new filings consider and discuss
their import.
Finally, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is
expected to issue its re~evaluationof the radium standard this
month. The “dismissal as moot” order, if enacted, would have
bought time to receive and consider the latest scientific opinion
from that agency.
I would urge the public officials of Minooka to examine the
scientific articles discussed above, In view of the far higher
absorption rates for infants (400) and thus the possible danger
of inducing leukemia
or cancer in children I would urge that only
low-radium
water (bottled or softened
water) be given to children
or to pregnant women, Finally I would urge
Minooka to obtain a
low-radium water supply as soon as possible.
I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Cl~ of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify that the above Dissenting Opinion was filed
on the
/ ~U-
day of
~
Illinois Pollution Control Board
LI,
airman
65~536