ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
October
4,
1979
CORPORATE WEST DEVELOPMENT, INC.,
and COUNTY OF DUPAGE,
Petitioners,
v.
)
PCB 79—163
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
OPINION OF THE BOARD
(by Mr.
Dumelle):
Petitioner Corporate West Development,
Inc.
(Corporate
West)
requested a variance from Sections
12 and 39 of the
Act and Rules 951,
952, and 962 of Chapter
3: Water Pollution
to construct and operate a sewer connection from
a proposed
hotel
site
to the DuPage County Department of Public Works
Lisle—Woodridge sewage treatment plant.
This plant has been
placed on restricted status.
The Agency recommended that a
variance be granted to allow construction of the sewer
extension with operation conditioned on a number of factors.
No hearing was held. At an emergency meeting on September
13, 1979 the Board granted a variance to construct and
operate the requested extension subject to conditions.
This
Opinion supports the Board’s Order.
On November 20,
1975 the Agency issued a permit to
Corporate West which authorized the construction and operation
of
a sewer extension to carry 42,000 gallons of wastewater
per day.
By July 28,
1977 Corporate West had obtained
permits from the Village of Lisle for two office buildings
which consumed 6,000 gallons
of the 42,000 gallon allocation.
On October
5,
1978 Corporate West entered into a contract
with Fireside West Development Company
(Fireside)
to sell 15
acres of property to build a hotel and restaurant facility.
The contract included a warranty that adequate sewerage
would be available.
On May
31, 1979 the Agency notified
DuPage County
(the county) that the Lisle—Woodridge plant
was on restricted status and had no additional capacity.
On
July 24,
1979 Corporate West was informed by the Agency that
an additional permit would be required to construct and
operate the connecting
lines for the hotel.
Since the plant
was on restricted status,
this permit could not be issued.
Corporate West and the Agency disagree on whether or
not an additional permit is needed, but this
is not a permit
denial appeal.
Corporate West has requested a variance
because Fireside will not proceed to a closing until the
35—487
—2—
matter
is resolved.
Fireside must execute
a loan commitment
in the near future and the hotel franchisor needs
a demonstration
that all necessary financing has been obtained.
Corporate
West needs a large payment from Fireside
($1.1 million) by
the end of this year to avoid excess interest payments on an
outstanding loan of $6 million.
Corporate West claims that
construction, already underway, must continue so that the
hotel
is under roof before winter makes outdoor work impractical.
Corporate West admits that although the Lisle—Woodridge
plant
“
.
.
.
is not necessarily hydraulically overloaded
the plant’s discharge has recorded violations of its
NPDES permit.
Corporate West claims that all hydraulic and
organic overloadings will be corrected by the construction
of an interim expansion of 1.0 million gallons per day
(MGD)
and a permanent expansion of 04 MGD by the county within
the next year and
a
0.3 MGD interim expansion by the Village
of Lisle.
In addition Corporate West points
to additional
plans by the county to permanently expand the plant and the
fact that an additional 0.032
MGD
from the hotel will have
no measurable impact on the 6.94 MGD plant.
Corporate West’s hardship
in this matter consists of
economic losses
it would suffer
if the project
is placed in
jeopardy.
Corporate West claims that this hardship
is
rendered arbitrary and unreasonable when it is balanced
against reliance on a previously issued permit and the fact
that projected expansions may precede the completion of the
hotel.
In its Recommendation,
the Agency claims that Corporate
West has never obtained connection permits for the two
office buildings.
The Agency first notified the county of
pending restricted status on April
25, 1979 and actual
designation on May 31,
1979 pursuant to Rule 604(a) of
Chapter
3: Water Pollution.
The Agency’s
latest data show
that from July 12 to July 31,
1979 the flow from the plant
averaged 7.16 MGD,
indicating hydraulic overloading.
The
Agency believes that outstanding permits exist which would
authorize an additional 1.7
NIGD.
The Agency cites discharge
monitoring reports which show that both the Lisle and Woodridge
plants have exceeded NPDES standards for BOD, Suspended
Solids,
and Ammonia Nitrogen consistently from August,
1978
through June,
1979.
The Agency
is aware of the county’s
commitment to expand the Woodridge plant with an additional
1.4 MGD by September 15,
1980 but has not been advised of
any plans by Lisle.
The Agency recommends that
a variance be granted which
would allow construction of the sewer
lines but that operation
be conditioned upon:
1)
an order from the Board directing
the county to complete the 1.4
NIGD
expansions and any other
necessary expansions and,
2)
a similar order from the
Circuit Court for the 18th Judicial District
in pending
litigation.
The Agency also asks that this variance be
—3—
limited to the connection from the proposed hotel
arid
that
variance relief from
Rules
951 and 952 be dismissed.
In
a Response, Corporate West claims that the Agency’s
requested conditions are unreasonable on three counts.
First,
it has
no control over the actions of the Circuit
Court.
Second,
any additional variance requests should be
handled by the Board when they arise.
Third,
financing may
be withheld if
a cloud remains over Corporate West’s or
Fireside’s right to operate the hotel
sewer connection.
The Board concludes that denial of
a variance would
constitute arbitrary or unreasonable hardship.
Corporate
West appears
to have proceeded in good faith reliance on a
42,000 gallon per day allocation made in 1975.
Since the
contribution from
the
hotel
is small
in relation to the
total plant flow and since the county is proceeding to
remedy the plant’s shortcomings, the chance for any measurable
environmental damage appears slight.
The Board sees no
reason to tie this matter to any future variance petitions
since they can be evaluated individually at a later date.
The county was named as
a Respondent throughout this proceeding,
but has never been joined formally.
The Board has
named
the
county as
a Petitioner in the Order because its interests
are more closely aligned with Corporate West’s than
with
the
Agency’s. The county has been ordered to perform the necessary
expansions and operation of the sewer connection is contingent
upon a similar order from the circuit court because the
Board was advised at its emergency meeting that the county
had agreed to this action.
In general,
the Board
is
extremely
reluctant to condition its order upon a court action with
which it
is not familiar.
Similarly, Corporate West stated
its agreement with these actions.
The Board felt it would
be inappropriate to require the county to execute a certification
because time was of the essence.
The Board’s Order has not addressed Petitioner’s requests
for relief from Section 12 of the Act since a variance from
Rule
962 renders statutory relief unnecessary.
Relief from
Section 39 and Rules
951 and 952 are similarly not addressed
since there has been no showing that Corporate West should
not be required to comply with those permitting procedures.
This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact
and conclusions of law in this matter.
I,
Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Boa
s1~
hereby certify the a ov
Opinion was adopted
on the
________________
day of
______________,
1979 by a
vote of
______
—____
Christan L.
Moffett, /~k
Illinois Pollution CoT~folBoard