ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
September 9, 1993
THE KNAPHEIDE MANUF’ACTURING,
COMPANY,
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 93—168
(Provisional Variance)
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
)
PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD (by C. A. Manning):
Pursuant to Section 35(b) of the Environmental Protection
Act (Act) (415 ILCS 5/35(b)), the Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency (Agency), by and through its Director, Mary A.
Gade, seeks to extend the term of a provisional variance granted
the Knapheide Manufacturing Co. (Knapheide), on July 29, 1993,
under docket PCB 93-141, in order to allow it to continue
operating during the Mississippi River flooding of 1993. The
Agency Recommendation was dated September 8, 1993.
Specifically, the Agency recommends that we grant Knapheide
a 45—day provisional variance for its Quincy, Illinois facility
from the construction and operating permit and permit review
requirements and the volatile organic material emissions
limitations, as set forth in 35 Iii. Adm. Code 201.142 through
201.164 and 215.204, beginning September 11, 1993 and ending
October 25, 1993. The prior provisional variance granted in PCB
93-141 commenced on July 28, 1993 and ran through September 10,
1993.
The Agency’s provisional variance recommendation states that
Knapheide operated a metal shaping, forming, welding and
fabrication facility in West Quincy, Missouri. Due to the
flooding along the Mississippi River, however, the petitioner was
forced to suspend those operations because its Missouri site is
now under sixteen feet of water. Knapheide has located an
alternative facility directly across the Mississippi River in
Quincy, Adams County, Illinois at which it could temporarily
resume operations. The Agency recommendation states that the
alternative facility is located about three miles from the
flooded Missouri facility, that the Quincy, Illinois area is
presently in compliance with the National Ambient Air Quality
Standard for ozone, and that the expected environmental impact of
the provisional variance is minimal.
Upon receipt of the request, the Agency issued its
recommendation, notifying the Board that the failure to grant the
2
requested 45—day provisional variance would impose an arbitrary
or unreasonable hardship on Petitioner.
Provisional variances are by their very nature temporary.
The responsibilities of the Agency and the Board in these short-
term provisional variances are different from the
responsibilities in standard variances. ~ 415 ILCS 5/35(b) &
(c) (1992) (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1991, ch. 111½, pars. 1035(b) & (c)).
In provisional variances it is the responsibility of the Agency
to make the technical determinations and finding of arbitrary or
unreasonable hardship. The Board’s responsibility is to adopt a
formal order, to assure the formal maintenance of the record, to
assure the enforceability of the variance, and to provide
notification of the action by a press release.
Having received the Agency recommendation notifying the
Board that a denial of the requested relief would impose an
arbitrary or unreasonable hardship, the Board hereby grants
Petitioner a provisional variance from 35 Ill. Adm. Code 201.142
through 201.164 and 215.204, beginning September 11 and running
through October 25, 1993.
The Agency recommendation did not include the customary
recommendation that the Board grant the provisional variance
subject to conditions, and the Board does not add conditions to
the grant.
The Board notes that Knapheide does not have a compliance
plan, but is in the process of developing one. Also, Knapheide
filed a petition for a “regular” variance on September 8, 1993,
which the Board has docketed as PCB 93—169.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Boa,~, do hereby certify tl3at the above order was adopted on the
i~f’-
day of
~Ji
~
,
1993, by a vote of
-7--,’)
.
.1
/
-
Dorothy M. Gi.inn, Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board