ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
February 6, 1992
D & B REFUSE SERVICE, INC.
)
Petitioner,
V.
)
PCB 92-12
(Variance)
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
)
PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
Resjondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD (by M. Nardulli):
This matter is before the Board on the Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency’s (Agency) January 27, 1992 motion to dismiss
petitioner’s variance petition. On January 21, 1991, petitioner D
& B Refuse Service, Inc. (D & B) filed a petition for variance from
35 Iii. Adm. Code 814.501(b) and 814.104(a) seeking to operate its
landfill for 16 months beyond the two-year deadline set forth in.
the regulations. The Agency asks that the variance petition be
dismissed because the relief sought is not the proper subject of a
variance.
A review of the Board’s landfill regulations is necessary to
understand the instant case. Part 814 addresses what are often
referred to as the transition provisions between the Board’s old
and new landfill regulations. The regulations from which Land and
Lakes seeks variance provide that an existing landfill must close
by September 18, 1992 (i.e. two years after the effective date of
the Board’s new landfill regulations adopted in R88-7) unless it
can demonstrate compliance with the stricter operating, closure and
post-closure care standards of Subpart B, applicable either to
landfills remaining open for more than seven year&, or Subpart D,
applicable to landfills remaining open between two and seven years.
The standards set forth in Subpart D, applicable to Land and Lakes
because it seeks to remain open three years, in large part
reference Part 811, which sets forth the standards applicable to
new landfills. (35 Ill. Adin. Code 814.402.) Only if a landfill
closes within the two—year period may it continue to operate under
its present permit and close under the closure and post—closure
care provisions of Part 807 of the old landfill regulations. (35
Ill. Adm. Code 814.104(a) and 814.502(a) and (b).)
The relief sought in the instant variance petition is
Those landfills seeking to stay open beyond seven years
must demonstrate compliance with the strictest standards
in Part 814. (See e.g., 35 Ill. Adm. Code 814.301 and
814.302.)
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virtually identical to the relief sought by the petitioner in Land
and Lakes Co. v. IEPA, PCB 91—215 (January 23, 1992). By its
variance petition, D & B seeks to continue to operate its landfill
located in rural Moultrie Country for 16 months beyond the two year
closure provisions in Part 814 of the Board’s new landfill
regulations and to be allowed to remain under Part 807 of the
Board’s old landfill regulations. D & B contends that it has
75,000 cubic yards of air space remaining and that it would impose
an arbitrary and unreasonable hardship on it to close by September
18, 1992 because it needs the remaining capacity to finance Part
807 c1os~ireand post—closure. D & B asserts that closure under the
new regulations, which it contends that it cannot comply with,
would also impose an arbitrary and unreasonable hardship because
closure/post-closure costs would exceed $3 million. Additionally,
D & b contends that premature closing of its landfill would require
that waste be transported to other landfills in central Illinois
resulting in increased transportation costs that would impose a
hardship on both petitioner and its customers. Therefore, D & B
seeks an additional 16 months of operation so that it may fill its
landfill to capacity without having to comply with the new landfill
regulations.
D & B’s proposed compliance plan is to achieve compliance with
the Part 807 regulations by January of 1994.
The Agency contends that the variance petition should be
dismissed because D & B has failed to present a plan or timetable
by which it will ultimately achieve compliance with the applicable
Part 811 regulations if it remains in operation until January of
1994. Therefore, the Agency asserts that the relief sought by D &
B is not the relief envisioned by the variance concept. City of
Mendota v. Pollution Control Board, 161 Ill. App. 3d 203, 514
N.E.2d 218 (3d Dist. 1987), the Agency states that D & B seeks
permanent exemption from these regulations, which is not the proper
subject of a variance petition.
D & B asserts that it is not seeking permanent exemption from
Part 811; rather, it seeks an extension of time to close its
facility under part 807. D & B contends that the Agency is
mistaken when it claims that it is seeking a permanent exemption.
DISCUSSION
Section 104.121(f) requires a petition for variance to
include:
A detailed description of the existing and proposed
method of control to be undertaken to achieve full
compliance with the Act and regulations, including a time
schedule for the implementation of all phases of the
control program from initiation of design to program
completion and the estimated costs involved for each
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3
phase and the total cost to achieve compliance
.
The requirement that a variance petition include a compliance plan
is consistent with the purpose of a variance which is to provide
temporary relief while encouraging future compliance. (Monsanto
Co.
V.
PCB, 67 Ill. 2d 276, 367 N.E.2d 684 (1977).) “T)he
variance procedure is not intended as a mechanism for seeking a
permanent exemption from the Act.” (City of Mendota v. PCB, 161
Ill. App. 3d 203, 514 N.E.2d 752 (3d Dist. 1987).)
Hera, the only regulations from whiOh D & B seeks variance are
those that require a landfill to either: (1) demonstrate compliance
with the new landfill regulations such that the landfill may stay
open between two and seven years or; (2) close within two years and
remain under the old regulations. The 16—month extension of time
sought by D & B precludes compliance with the regulations which are
the subject of this variance. It is impossible for D & B to
receive the requested relief of operating under the old regulations
for three years and four months from the effective date of the
Board’s new landfill regulations and achieve future compliance with
regulations which require that operations cease within two years.
D & B mistakenly equates a request for an extension of a regulatory
deadline with a variance petition. As noted above, while a
variance allows one time to achieve compliance, it also
contemplates ultimate compliance. Such compliance cannot be
achieved by variance in the instant case.
Rather than seeking temporary relief from the two-year
deadline, D & B actually seeks permanent relief from ever having to
demonstrate compliance with the stricter new regulations seeking,
instead, to simply substitute the regulations in Part 807. Given
that D & B is requesting to initiate closure between two and seven
years, the following “between two and seven year” provisions of
Part 814 automatically apply (35 Ill. Adm. Code 814.401(a)):
(a) The standards in this Subpart are applicable to all
existing units of landfills, including those exempt
from permit requirements in accordance with Section
21(d) of the Act, that have accepted or accept
chemical and putrescible wastes. Based upon an
evaluation of the information submitted pursqant to
Subpart A and any Agency site inspection, units
that meet the requirements of this Subpart shall
initiate closure between two and seven years after
the effective date of this Part.
(b) Based upon an evaluation of the information
submitted pursuant to Subpart A and any Agency site
inspection, units which are unable to comply with
the requirements of this Section are subject to the
requirements of Subpart E the two—year closure’
requirement.
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Consequently, if a landfill seeks to continue accepting waste
beyond the two-year deadline but will initiate closure within seven
years, it must demonstrate compliance with. the applicable standards
set forth in Part 814 which refer to Part 811. Landfills which
cannot demonstrate compliance with the stricter standards must
close within two years in accordance with the old regulations. D
& B cannot amend these regulatory provisions by way of a variance.
In conclusion, D & B seeks to exercise the option of staying
open bey’ond two years, but wants to avoid ever complying with the
stricter standards. D & B has not requested relief from immediate
compliance with the “between two and seven year” provisions of Part
814, nor has it presented a compliance plan or time schedule for
achieving ultimate compliance with the standards applicable to
landfills seeking to operate beyond the two-year deadline.
Consequently, D & B is seeking permanent relief from Part 814 and
Part 811 by attempting to “extend” the two—year deadline allowing
a landfill to close under the old landfill regulations. D & B’s
petition is, in essence, an attempt to amend the Board’s new
landfill regulations by way of variance and improperly seeks
permanent relief.
For the foregoing reasons, the Board grants the Agency’s
motion to dismiss D & B’s petition for variance.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Section 41 of the Environmental Protection Act (Ill. Rev.
Stat. 1989, ch. 111 1/2, par. 1041) provides for the appeal of
final Board orders. The Rules of the Supreme Court of Illinois
establish filing requirements.
I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
B,o~rd,
hereby certt~ that the above Order was adopted
or~,the
~
day of
_____________________,
1992 by a vote of ~
~
~borothy N.,4ünn,
J7
Clef~k
7~
Illinois Pollution Control Board
130—88