ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
August
30, 1971
WALTER
R~
SEEGREN
V.
)
PCB
71—106
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
Ellis
E~Fuqua,
attorney
for
Walter
R.
Seegren
Roger
C~ Ganobcik,
attorney
fo-r the Environmental Protection
Agency
Dissenting Opinion
(by Mr~ Aldrich):
I disagree with
the majority of the Board
and support the dissenting
opinion of Mr. KisseL
Petitioner requested avariance
from the Board’s Order of March
31,
1971,
banning further connections
to
the sewer lines
of the North
Shore Sanitary District~
He wishes
to connect two eighteen~unit
apartment buildings
to
the District’s Waukegan
lines.
The buildings
in question were completed prior
to our entry of the
Order prohibiting new sewer connections.
However,
the Environmental
Protection Agency refused to grant petitioner
a sewer construction
permitS
I do not address
this dissent
to the appropriateness
of
the Agency’s action but rather to what the Board’s disposition of
the request should be.
After being denied a permit to attach the buildings
to
the sewer,
Seegren installed
a septic tank to serve both buildings~
Although
this
action
provided
an
inter.ii~
solution
and
permitted
the
buildings
to
be
occupied,
it
is
of
doubtful
long~terrn
acceptability.
The
record of septic systems
in terms
of reliability
is
not
a good
one.
A system of large capacity,
as is recuired here,
is particu~
larly
suspect.
I have consistently held
that anyone who, prior
to the sewer ban,
had made
a substantial commitment beyond bare purchase
of
a lot
should be entitled to use existing sewer lines
(see my dissenting
opinion in Robert
C. Wagnon
V.
EPA,
PCB
71-85),
Certainly Seegren
had made such
a commitment.
He had obtained building permits from
the City of Waukegan
at
a cost of
$l,954~lO
each~
Construction
was completed
in January or February of
this year.
Seegren clearly
expended large sums
of money
in reliance upon his ability to use
the
sewers.
2
—
287
The potential effect on the environment of the wastes from the
apartments
in question
is minimal
in relation to the total load
to the sewer system.
In my judgment
the hardship imposed on
petitioner from denial of his request greatly overrides possible
damage to the environment.
I would grant
the variance.
I, Regina E.
Ryan,
Clerk of the Board,
certify that Dr.
Samuel
R.
Aldrich submitted the above dissenting opinion on this 3~day
of ~
1971.
)
~
2
—
288