JUN-07-00 WED 03:09 PM
IL EPA LEGAL
FAX NO. 2175243339
BEFORE TliE ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROl. BOARD
CITY OF ROCK ISLANU,
Petitioner,
v.
lJ.l.INOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY,
R('-spondcnt.
Dorothy GUlln, Clerk
Illinois PolluLion ConLrol Board
James R. Thompson Center, Suite l1w500
100 West Randolph Street
Chicago, IL 60601
John Knittle
Hearing Officer
Illinois Pollulion Control Board
James R. TIlOmpson Center, Suite 11-500
100 West
Ranllolph
SLrceL
Chicago, IL 60601
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PCB 98-164
(Variante)
NOTICE
Roy M. Harstb
Sheila Deely
Gardner, Carton & Douglas
Suite 3400 Quaker Tower
321 North Clark Street
Chicago, JIlinois 60610-4795
P.
02/08
llicasc take notice that I have today filed with the Officc of the Clerk oftbc lllinois Pollution Control Board
the POST nEARING lIRU:F of the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, a copy of which is served
upon yO\!o
PROT~fION
AGENCY
h,~~O~
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;:r~hard
Associate
:w:i.-n(g';;'
Counsel
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Division of LegaJ Coun!\el
IlIinoi!t TInvironmerstal Protection Agency
1021 North Grand Avenue East
P.O. Box 19276
Springfield. IL
62794~9216
(l:\WlIlTingl(lll\/{{lCk
I~L'nd
VlI1ianq;\pOM hearing brief lIodcc.doc
Jun.
6,00
Dal.C: June 7. 2000
JUN-07-00 WED 03:09 PM
!L
~p~
LEGAL
FAX NO. 2175243339
BEFORE THE
~LI4INOIS
POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
CITY OF ROCK ISLAND,
Petitioner,
v.
ILLINOIS ENVIRONlVJCNTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
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PCB 98-164
(Varhtn~e
.. Wate .. )
POST HEARING BRIEF OF THE ILI,INOIS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
Respondent, the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency ("Illinois EP
A'1 by
one of its
attorneys, Richard C. Warrington Jr., hereby files its Post Hearing Brief.
I.
l~lRODUCTION
1.
This variance petition COllcems the operation of the main sewage treatment plant
P. 03/u8
("Plant") of the City of Roek Island ("City" or "Petitioner")_ The City has requested a variance to
grant such relief 8S may be necessary to allow it the necessary timc to construct modifications to
the Plant to increase the design maximum Jlow
("DMF")
from
12
million gallons per day
("MOD") to ] 6 MOD while remaining in compliance during design and construction period with
the Exception previously approved by the Board to the ndc governing the treatment of overflows
and bypasses" (Amended Petition, p. 2)1 Because the requested variance seek!i relief
from
a 16
MOO, DMF plant capacity requirement that was requested in 1970 and permitte.d as such in
1971, this petition and its relief are untimely.
1
References to the
eso
Exception Order of
May
9, J 986 are to Exception p.x; to the Amended Petition arc
\0 Amended Petition, p_ x; to the Amended Recommendation are to Amended recommendation p. x; to the trnnscl'ipt
orth~
variance hearing arc to Tr.
98~164
p. Xi to tbe trnnscript ofthl: penn it appeal hearing are to Tr. 00-13 p. x; and
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IL EPA LEGAL
FAX NO. 2115243339
P.
04/08
2.
Moreover, the City and its engineers were aware of a DMF capacity problem in drafting
the Combined
Sewer Overflow exception petition from studies in 1982 and 1984 and the City
committed to itnptovements to allow operation of the plant at the 16 MGD, DMF level before the
IIljnois Pollution Control Board ("Illinois PCB"). (Exception p. 4)
3.
The Illinois EPA believes that a fourteen year retroactive variance from the City's
commitment to
treat 16 MOD before bypassing is not justified by the law or this record. The
Illinois EPA incorporates its Amended Recommendation of November 2, 1999, with its Exhibits
and recommendation to DENY the requested vm1ance into this Post Hearing Brief.
n.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
4.
The standard of review for the Illinois PCB to consider in variahce petitions was given
by
the legislature as "compliance with
any
rule Or regulation, requirement or order of tlte Board
would impose
an arbitrary or unreasonable hardship". 415 JLCS S/35(a) (1998) This standard
was incorporated by the Illinois PCB in their own regulations at 35 lll. Adm. Code 104.160(0
(1985). Compliance has not been shown by this record to
be
arbitrary or a hardship to the City or
disproportionate to the environmental benefits sought by the regulations.
5.
Treatment of the full 16 MOD. DMF before bypassing the CSO flow is not an arbitrary
requirement. The City specifically stated that the
DMF of the plant to be constructed in the early
1970's was
to be 16 MOD. (Line
C~34,
E"hibit 0 to the Amended Variance Recommendation.
Tr. 98-164 p. 89) Mr. McSwiggin, caned as an adverse witness by the City. testified tbnt there
was a reasonable possibility that the treatment plant improvements constructed in the early
1910's would have been capable of meeting secondary treatment limits at a maximum design
flow rate of 16 MOD. (Tr. 98-164 p. 68) Moreover, although the City has argued that the
to the permit appeal record Record p. xx.)
JUN-07-00 WED 03:10 PM
IL EPA LEGAL
FAX NO. 2175243339
P.
05/08
maximum practicable flow for this plant is under the DMF, Mr. McSwiggin testified that the
maximum practicable
flow could be above the DMF. (Tr. 98-164 p. 88)
6.
Furthennore, the City argucs that Mr. McSwiggin's testimony at Tr. 98-164 p. 69
confirms the ability
ofthe City to downrate the plant to 12 MGD, DMF. In actuality, Mr.
McSwiggin recognized that the ability of the City to now change the rating of the plant has been
constrained
by the Order of the Illinois PCB in the CSO Exception, PCB 85-214. and by the
National
rOnulant Discharge Elimination System
("NPDES~')
permit. (Tr.
98~164
p. 69, lines 17
and 18)
III.
HARDSHIP
7.
The City makes no serious claim that compliance with the eso Exception is a hardship.
Compliance with the Illinois
PCB general standard for Combined Sewer Overflows was slated at
$55 million in 1985 as part of the CSO Exception proceeding. (Tr. 98-164 p. 36) and simply
extrapolated
to
$100 million in year 2000 dollars. (fr. 88-164 p. 36) However, the issue in this
variance is the cost to comply with the CSO Exception of only
bypas~ing
after
16
MOD. DMF is
given full treatment. The cost
of the 1985 improvements was only a little over $ 100 thousand
dollars (Petition
At.tachment 2) Obviously, the 1985 improvements were not sufficient to
eliminate
bypassing below the specified DMF and the City did not notice that bypa.c;sing still
occurred. Thc currcnt construction, also represented to be sufficient to treat
16
MOD, DMF is
projected to cost approximately $ 3 million dot(U"s in current dollars. It can be assumed that if
this collstruction was undertaken and cOlllpleterl when it was necessary to treat 16 MGD, DMF in
1985. the cost would have been less. The City has made no proof that these costs would be a
financial
hardship to tho City, indeed the City has made no proof of allY financial burden.
•
JUN-07-00 WED 03:10 PM
IL EPA LEGAL
FAX NO. 2175243339
8.
Ttl addition to this delay, the Illinois PCB should not grant a variance retroactively
because the City itself contributed to the problem by failure to adequately assess the plant
performance
either before the CSO Petition or afterward.
9.
Mr.
Ilawes. originally the City Engineer and now the Director of Public Works, testified
P.
06/08
that he participated in the drnfting ofthc eso Exception Petition. (Tr. 98-164 p. 18) However, he
docs not remember details concenuog information used by the City's consulling finn to support
the conclusions contained in the eso Exception Petition. (fr. 98.164 p. 51) The Illinois RPA
would e"pect that a City Engineer should be familiar
with
the performance of a plant, including
the flow rate
at which it
!.1P~ses
untreated sewage. Likewise, after the 1985 improvements, the
City should have been
aware bcfore 1991 whcn it hired Mr. Huff that there was still a bonleneck
at the plant. (Tr. 98-164 p. 102) The Illinois EPA maintains that any burden has been caused by
the delay
of the City.
Ill.
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT
10.
Although the lllinois EPA joined with the City in 1985 in stating that there would be
minimal
environmental impacts as a result of the eso Exception, there is still the present
problem of
om~ll~ive
conditions below the eso outfall. The Illinois EPA documented these
offensive conditions in a
public arca through the photographs taken on August 5, 1998, October
22, 1998, November 2,
1998 and August 24,1999. (fr.
98~164,
Respondent's Exhibits 1 through
5)
11.
These observations are corroborated by the City's Exhibit 14 to the Varia.l1ce Hearing.
This Exhibit provides a graphical representation ofthe debris collected occasionally by the City
from areas upstream and downstream ofthe eso outfall. (fr. 98-164 p, 59) The Exhibit shows
concentnlliolls of sanitary debris downstream of the eso outfall to be much higher than that
JUN-07-00 WED 03:11 PM
IL EPA LEGAL
FAX NO. 2175243339
P.
07/08
found upstream.
(/d)
IV.
CONCLUSION
12.
The record in this proceeding shows that the reJiefrequested by the City or Rock Island is
untimely, beyond the statutory duration limits
fot
variance relief, without any justification for
being granted retroactively, caused by the City-s own delay and inattention, and not justified by
the'
ongoing violations of the most basic water qunlity standard ofbavillg the state's waters free
from floating debris. As stated in the Illinois EPA Amended Recommendation, a mistake does
not provide
a
defense from compliiancc; with
an
Order of the lllinois PCB. A mistake only
acknowledged on
the eve of federal entorcemellt calls into question the diligence of the City. To
absolve the City of penalty liability without consideration ofthc factors set forth in Section 33(c)
of tho Environmental Protection Act, 415 ILCS 5/33(c) (1998) is an affront to the environmental
control system enacted
by the Illinois legislature. lbcrcfore, the Illinois EPA continues to
recommend that this variance petition
be
DENIED.
Respectfully submitted,
ENVIRON
AI.. PROTecTION AGENCY ,
OF
T~!E-Sf~~Of'
Z,aNcr:7
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By: ...
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Riehar
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". Warrington Jr.
--
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Associate Counsel
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Division of Legal Counsel
Illinois Environmental Protection
Agcney
1021 North Grand Avenue East
}l.O.
Box 19276
Springfield. IL 62794-9276
G:\warringlon\Rtll:k Island Vltiancc\post bearill& brier.doo
.I"n.1.oo
Date; June 7. 2000
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JUN-07-00 WED 03:11 PH
IL EPA'LEGAL
STATE OF ILLINOIS'
COUNTY Oli' SANGAMON )
)
)
ss
FAX NO. 2175243339
PROOF
OF SERVICE
I, the undersigncd, on oath state that I have seIVed thc attached POST HEARING
BRIEF upon the persons to whom
it
is directed, by placing a copy in an envelope addressed
to:
Ms.lJorothyM. Gunn, Clerk
Jl1inoi" Pollution Control Board
James R. Thompson Centcr '
100 West Randolph St. Suite Il
J
500
Chicago, JJtinois 6060 I
Roy M. Harsch
Sheila H. Deely
Gardner, Carton
&
Douglas
Suite 3400 Quaker Tower
321 North Clark Street
Chicago, llIinois 60610-4795
P. 08/08
(By
Fa~rlimile
as Ordered by tbe Hearing
Officer on JUne! 6, 1000)
(By Facsimile as Ordered by tbe HeiriDI:
John Knittle,
H~aring
Officer
Illinois
Pollution Control. Board
James R. Thompson Center
100 West Randolph Street, Suite 11-500
Chicago, TT. 60601
(8y
Faesimile as Ordered
by
the Hearing
Officer on June 6, 1000)
Officer
On June 6, 2000)
and i.clefaxing it from Springfield, Illinois On June 1, 2000 before the hour of 5:00 p. m ..
Gf!tl/MAI
00
09) dTod-
SUBSCRIBED AND SWORN TO BEFORE ME
G:\wnrringtan\R<lCK
Isla~
616100