ILLINOIS
POLLUTION
CONTROL
BOARD
May
1,
1980
C AT
~ I’
L LA R
‘F RACT OR
Ci)
Pet
1
L
i
onut,
v.
)
PCB 80—3
tLLINO
IS
ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION
AGENCY,
Respondent.
ORDCR
OF THE BOARD
(by
Mr.
Goodman):
Petitioner’s March
24,
1980 Supplemental Motion to Stay
Permit Conditions,
filed pursuant to the Board’s Order of
February
7,
1980,
enables decision on its January
23, 1980 motion
for
stay
of certain permit conditions pending appeal of those
COnd
i tions.
Put: i
t:
ioner
i
rg
nus
t:hi
t:
the
~o~~rd
must:
qrrmnt:
stay
of
cur tam
cont:ested NPFM~3 permi L conditions
t:o avoid
deprlving
it of pro-
cedural
due
process of
law.
It
states that the USEPA
is presently
required
to grant
stays when an NPDES permit
is contested.
However,
the State of Illinois has at least as much interest in waters of
this
state as does
the
federal
government; potential harm to
waters
of
this state must be considered before granting stays
of contested provisions
of any permit.
Petitioner
further states that there would he no environ-
mental harm occasioned by granting these stays because the
Agency had never imposed these exact conditions on any other
permittee.
However,
this
argument
is not controlling on the
issue of actual environmental harm,
for conditions are presumed
imposed by the Agency under the circumstances relating specifi-
cally to a permittee’s situation and as they are deemed necessary
under the Illinois Environmental Protection Act.
The Agency’s February
4,
1980 Objection to Petitioner’s
motion for stay does not precisely address the facts relevant
to its decision to impose the contested provisions.
The Board,
therefore,
will stay only those provisions which are both newly
imposed on the permittee and imposed by the exercise of the
Agency ‘s discretion.
—2--
Attachment
J3
(Mass Effluent Limitations).
Petitioner argues
that these conditions are new because, although contained
in an
October,
1977 USEPA NPDES permit,
Petitioner’s appeal
to USEPA
for a hearing regarding them negates considering them to be
included in that permit at this time.
Even if such argument were
acceptable,
it is true that Petitioner has been on notice since
1977 that
it may be required to meet pollutant limitations
e~pressed
in terms of concentrations or other types of
levels
than mass levels.
Nevertheless, all the mass limitations imposed
are new ones, with the exception of the 30—day oils,
fats and
greases averages
of 225
lbs./day, because the numerical
limitations are not the same ones found in the prior permit.
Stay of
the 30—day oils,
fats and greases averages
is denied.
(Petitioner’s argument that the other averages were calculated
without reference to hydraulic capacity of
2.62 MGD or to
concentration limits specified in Chapter
3 does not indicate by
itself
that the resulting numerical
limitations were new ones).
Petitioner pleads that imposition of the remaining
limitations was discretionary with the Agency.
For purposes of
motions
to stay NPDES permit conditions pending appeal,
the term,
“discretionary” means the allowance of pollution
in excess of
the
regulations
if,
in the Agency’s view,
such allowance is required
to accomplish the purposes of the Act.
(See Act,
§39(b)).
The
limitations on chromium (tn)
and iron
(total)
are exactly those
found
in Rule
408;
therefore,
no discretion appears
to have been
exercised by the Agency
(no matter what hydraulic capacity figure
it may have referred to).
For this reason,
no compelling reason
exists
to allow stay of these two limitations.
Stay,
therefore,
is denied.
The chromium
(hex),
T3OD
,
and TSS limitations, however,
are
not set out
in Rule 404 and ãan therefore be deemed
discretionary.
Stay of
these three
limitations
is granted pending
appeal of
the permit.
Attachment
B,
Paragraph
6.
This paragraph concerns
procedural requirements on reapplication for the permit presently
on appeal.
Stay
of these requirements
is denied as unripe.
Noninclusion
of Portions
of
Part
II.A.1.
of Prior Permit.
This condition would have made new, different and increased
discharges due to daily or seasonal variations
in production or
scheduling
a violation of the permit if unauthorized.
Noninclusiori is arguably
new.
The noninclusion was an exercise
of the Agency’s discretion
inasmuch as no regulation requires the
noninclusion.
The objected—to provision of Paragraph
1 of
Attachment H
is therefore stayed pending appeal
of
the permit.
Attachment
H,
Paragraph 13.
This paragraph imposes require-
ments of Petitioner not provided for under the prior permit.
In
addition
to being new permit conditions,
they are discretionary
—3—
condi
tions
inasmuch
as
no
regulation
requires
them.
The
conditions
imposed
in
this
paragraph
are,
therefore,
stayed
pending
appeal
of the permit..
Noninclusion
of Part III.C.2. of Prior Permit.
These
conditions would have allowed discharge of pollutants not
specified
in the permit at issue
in concentrations of up to those
specified in Board regulations and up
to those specified in
USEPA—promulgated
33 U.S.C.
§1251,
et
~
(Clean Water Act,
§307)
toxics regulations.
Noninclusion
is arguably new.
However,
Paragraph
11 of Attachment H to the permit covers §307
discharges.
As
to discharges
of unspecified pollutants in
concentrations not to exceed Board regulations,
a question of the
interpretation of §12(f)
of the Act by the Agency is involved.
A
stay will be issued allowing permittee,
pending appeal,
to
discharge unspecified pollutants now unregulated under §307 in
concentrations
up
to those
in applicable Board regulations.
ORDER
The following provisions
of Petitioner’s NPDES
Permit No.
IL
0001732 are stayed pending
this permit appeal:
1.
Chromium
(hex),
BOD5,
and TSS limitations
of Attach-
ment B;
2.
The provisions
of Paragraph
1 of Attachment H which
exclude portions of Part II.A.1.
of Petitioner’s
prior permit;
3.
The provisions
of Paragraph
13 of
Attachment H which
were not included in Petitioner’s prior permit;
and
4.
Limitations regarding pollutants now unregulated
under
§307 of the Clean Water
Act,
33 U.S.C.
§1251,
et
~
and not regulated pursuant
to Paragraph 11
of Attachment H.
IT
IS
SO
ORDERED.
I,
Christan L.
Moffett,
Clerk
of
the Illinois Pollution
Control Board,
hereby certify that the above Order was adopted on
the
day of
~
1980 by a vote
of
cAstan4~io’~á~e
rk
Illinois
Pollution
Control
Board