ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
February 5, 1987
IN THE MATTER OF:
APPLICATION FOR
LAKE
MICHIGAN
)
PCB 86—139
PERMIT NO.. 204LM FOR THE
U..S.. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS,
CHICAGO DISTRICT
ORDER OF THE BOARD (by J..D.. Dumelle):
The Board Order of December 5, 1986, approved the applica-
tion of the Illinois Department of Transportation (“IDOT”) for
U..S.. Army Corps of Engineers (“Army”) Lake Michigan permit No..
204LM, to dredge the navigation channel to Waukegan Harbor,
provided certain sampling and analysis conditions were met. The
Chairman was authorized to countersign the permit.. On December
30, 1986, the Army filed a motion for reconsideration raising
questions on the wisdom and efficacy of the sampling and analysis
conditions. On January 14, 1987, IDOT also moved for
reconsideration based on objection to the sampling and analysis
program.. On January 21, 1987, the Attorney General filed
comments on the motion for reconsideration, opposing changes in
the sampling and analysis program. The motion for
reconsideration is granted..
Procedural Objections
The Army and IDOT have objected to the imposition of
conditions for testing by the Board.. Both argue that the 401
certification procedure by the Illinois Environmental Protection
Agency (“Agency”) is the appropriate vehicle for conditions to
ensure compliance..
The exact role of the Agency’s 401 certification in state
review of Lake Michigan fill projects has never been fully
explained to the Board.. Under Section 401 of the Federal Water
Pollution Control Act (42 U..S..C.. Section 1251, et seq..), such a
certification is required prior to issuance of a federal permit
by the Secretary of the Army (under Section 404 of that Act) for
discharge of fill material.. Under state law, IDOT may issue Lake
Michigan fill permits only where they determine “that the deposit
or deposition of dredge material will not cause water pollution
as defined in the Environmental Protection Act” (IRS, ch.. 19,
par.. 65).. IDOT may require a 401 certification letter as part of
their procedures.. Whatever legal role the 401 certification
letter plays in the state permitting process, there is nothing in
this record to indicate what facts were before the Agency at the
time it made its decision to issue the letter, nor is there
information on the criteria and procedures by which the Agency
determines whether or not water quality will be violated. The
401 certification letter (dated August 5, 1986) contains an
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introductory paragraph briefly describing this project.. The
remainder of the certification is a standard form letter seen by
the Board in many other cases; it states that the proposed
project can be completed without causing water pollution so long
as the applicant does not (condition la) cause violation of water
quality standards, or (condition lb) cause water pollution..
Consequently, the Board cannot legally or factually rely on this
letter as a reasoned judgment, based on sound criteria and
adequate facts, that water pollution will not occur under the
proposed project..
As expressed in the December 5, 1986, Order, the Board
construes its statutory mandate from paragraph 65 of the
Waterways Regulation Act, as a command “to determine whether the
information in the record demonstrates that the proposed activity
will not cause a violation of the Act or Board regulations or
adverse environmental impact..” This command requires the Board
to make decisions.. The fact that other agencies of government
may have contemporaneous authority to issue decisions and impose
conditions does not obviate the Board’s statutory mandate..
Practical Objections
The Army has raised several practical objections to the
sampling program:
......The Corps has sampled and tested the
sediments in accordance with state 401
certification procedures..
This analysis
shows, as did the analysis done in 1981 and
1984, that the materials to be dredged are
clean lake sand..
That assertion is rebutted by the facts in the record.. For
nearly all the materials for which the Board has commanded
analysis, the most recent testing from the nearest location shows
heavily polluted or moderately polluted sedirnents*. On cross—
examination, the Army agreed these samples showed heavy pollution
(R.. 71) and that they represented the closest and most recent
testing (R.. 23, 26). Semantic arguments by the Army, regarding
“clean sand,” will not change the numerical analyses values
recorded in 1981 and 1984..
The second objection is that the acquired monitoring data
will be insufficient for a meaningful research program.. The
Board agrees that a comprehensive understanding of the dynamic
processes involved would require more extensive testing and
analysis than required in the December 5, 1986, Order, and the
*
Arsenic, chromium, copper, cyanide, lead, and zinc are above
heavily polluted criteria; Kjeldahl nitrogen, ammonia nitrogen,
barium and manganese are above the moderately polluted criteria
(December 5, 1986, Order, p.. 2).
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Board would much prefer having such information before it..
However, in balancing the navigational needs against the
likelihood of pollution, the Board concludes that only a very
basic testing program is appropriate at this time to evaluate the
general consequences of the dredge and fill project on the water
column and possible consequences to the Lake Michigan
environment.. Navigation channel dredging appears to be an annual
or biennial event.. This monitoring data will provide the Board
with a rough evaluation of the consequences, which can then be
used to more carefully evaluate any future requests.. Should more
comprehensive testing appear needed, the Board can require such
testing as a condition precedent to any future dredge and fill
activity of a similar nature..
Technical Objections
The Army argues the requirement to sample “upcurrent” of the
disposal location will be difficult to implement, as will the 5
dry weight criterion for further sampling as set forth in the
Board’s December 5, 1986 Order.. While the Board does not agree
that those provisions are as difficult to implement as the Army
indicates, upon review of the comments and the monitoring program
set forth in the earlier order, the Board has modified that
program to eliminate those requirements.. The Board has made
further modifications which are directed toward increasing the
utility of the program.. These revisions require more sampling of
sediments at the dredging location and the disposal site prior to
the dredging and disposal activities and reduce water column
Sampling. This should allow for a more accurate determination of
changes caused,by the dredging activity and focus more on the
water quality which is of greater concern than the short—term
disruption caused by the disposal operation..
The Board hereby vacates conditions (a)—(k) of the December
5, 1986 Order in this matter, replacing them with the following
conditions:
a) Prior to dredging, a minimum of three sediment borings
shall be taken from the area to be dredged. The borings
shall be in approximately the northeast corner, center,
and southwest corner of the area to be dredged.. At each
locati n, a sediment sample shall be taken from the
first six inches, and at subsequent two—foot intervals
until a sample at least two feet below the proposed
project depth is obtained..
b) Prior to disposal, a minimum of two sediment samples
shall be obtained from the top six inches of sediment at
the proposed disposal site.. The samples shall be taken
along the north—south axis of the disposal area such
that one is taken at this point approximately 1/3 the
length of the axis and the other at this point
approximately 2/3 the length of the axis, as measured
from the northern boundary..
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c) Two to three weeks after disposal, two additional
samples shall be taken of the top six inches of sediment
at the disposal site in approximately the same locations
as the samples in (b) above..
d) Six water samples shall be taken at the disposal site,
two feet above the lake bottom, two of which shall be
taken prior to disposal, two of which shall be taken
during disposal and the other two which shall be taken
two to three weeks after disposal at approximately the
locations specified in (b) above..
e) All water samples shall be analyzed for the following
parameters
——
total suspended solids (TSS), total
dissolved solids (TDS), turbidity, arsenic, barium,
chromium, copper, lead, manganese, mercury, zinc,
cyanide and ammonia nitrogen..
f) All sediment samples shall be analyzed for the same
parameters identified above in item Ce), above, for
water samples except TSS, TDS and turbidity. In
addition, all sediment samples shall be analyzed for
particle size distribution.. Specific attention shall be
given to determination of the percent passing through a
standard 62 micron sieve (#230 U.S..)..
g) All water and sediment samples shall be analyzed for
phosphorus (as P) and total PCBs..
h) All analytical testing shall be consistent with 35 Ill.
Adm.. Code 301.104..
i) A report precisely describing the monitoring program
developed and sampling results to comply with these
requirements shall be submitted to the Attorney
General’s office, the Agency and the Board within 60
days of the completion of disposal. This report shall
include analytical data for all samples taken and an
analysis of the impact of sediment disposal on Lake
Michigan water quality during this project.
Additionally, it shall include a description of the
quality control and quality assurance programs operative
during this monitoring program and the results of
quality assurance checks..
IT IS SO ORDERED..
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I, Dorothy M.. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify that the above Order was adopted on
the
~
day of
_____________,
1987, by a vote of
____________
~t~1~-~4; ~
Dorothy M.. /Gunn, Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board
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