ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    April
    19,
    1971
    UNIVERSAL LAND RECLAMATION AND
    DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION,
    an
    Illinois corporation
    #PCB71—71
    v.
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
    AGENCY
    OPINION OF THE BOARD
    (BY MR. LAWTON):
    Universal Land Reclamation and Development Corporation,
    an
    Illinois corporation, Petitioner,
    filed a document captioned
    “Variance Petition” asserting that by virtue of
    a lease entered
    into between it and the Department of Public Works and Buildings
    of the State of Illinois, on October
    22,
    1969,
    for
    a two-year term
    beginning November 1,
    1969, Petitioner had leased a portion of the
    Illinois and Michigan Canal
    1 mile
    in length and
    270 feet wide,
    which
    lease permits Petitioner to
    “use and occupy said premises
    for industrial
    land fill operation” subject to various terms and
    conditions.
    The use of the premises
    for the burning of refuse, junkyard,
    deposition of garbage or sewage
    or from any other unsanitary,
    unsavory, unhealthful purposes of any kind or nature,
    j~expressly
    prohibited.
    Provision is made requiring transfer of drainage from
    the
    I.
    &
    M. Canal
    to the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal prior to
    the placing of any fill in the
    I.
    &
    N.
    Canal.
    The petition sets
    out Rule
    5.11 of the Rules and R~gulationsof the State of Illinois
    relative to refuse disposal sites and facilities which provide that
    cer~inmaterials may be deposited in a sanitary landfill by open
    dumping, subject to provision for leveling, spread and cover.
    Petitioner further states that it will deposit upon the property
    only non-combustible, non-putrescible materials resulting from
    demolition operations and that no garbage or sewage or other “un-
    sanitary, unsavory or putrescible material will be deposited on
    the leased premises”.
    Petitioner, in
    a letter to the Environmental Protection Agency
    dated December
    9, 1970,
    asked the Agency to certify that “water
    quality standards will not be violated if the discharge contemplated
    is permitted”
    as a consequence of the transfer of drainage from the
    1
    499

    I.
    &,
    N. Canal to the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal pursuant to
    plans submitted,
    to which the Environmental Protection Agency
    responded “discharge of the above—described flows
    to the canal
    would not
    be in violation of current water quality standards,” and
    that if Petitioner was to use the site for an “industrial landfill
    operation”
    a permit for such operation must be procured from the
    Agency.
    Petitioner next states that it will not use the site as a
    “landfill operation”, that only demolition materials will be dumped
    on the site and that Petitioner ha~adopted a procedure for pumping
    water from the dump site thereby assuring that the dumping will be
    in a dry hole and water seepage wil~ not pollute. surrounding
    areas,
    Petitioner concludes that its operation will not contaminate
    the land,
    air or waters of the State and that compliance with the
    Environmental Protection Act and Rules and Regulations of the State
    for landfill operation should not be required
    “in view of Rule 5,11
    of said Rules and Regulations”.
    Petitioner prays that the Environ-
    mental Protection Agency investigate the petition and make a recornmenda-
    tion to the Pollution Control Board that the variance should be
    granted.
    We dismiss the petition for variance, principally because it is
    not clear from the petition precisely what Petitioner is seeking.
    A reading of the petition suggests that Petitioner may be seeking
    a landfill permit or, alternatively,
    a declaratory ruling that it
    does not need a landfill permit.
    If Petitioner is seeking a variance,
    it is not clear what provisions
    of the landfill regulations it
    is
    incapable of meeting, and why such provisions cannot be met,
    Denial
    of this petition is without prejudice to the Petitioner’s right to
    file a new petition,
    setting forth precisely what it seeks, what pro-
    visions of the regulations it proposed to be relieved from and the
    reasons why such variance is needed.
    If,
    in fact, Petitioner
    is seeking the issuance of a permit,
    the granting of a permit is within the jurisdiction of the Environ-
    mental Protection Agency and petitioner’s efforts should be addressed
    to the Agency in the first instance.
    IT
    IS THE ORDER of the Board that the variancepetition be
    dismissed.
    This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of
    fact, conclu-
    sions of law and Order,
    I, Regina E.
    Ryan, Clerk of the Pollution Control Board, certify
    that the Board adopted the abov~-
    on and Or9~r~Eis 19th day
    of April, 1971.
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