ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
June
14,
1972
DANVILLE SANITARY DISTRICT
4~PCB72—161
v.
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
OPINION OF THE BOARD
(BY RICHARD
3,
KISSEL):
On April 16,
1972,
the Danville Sanitary
District
(“Danvi11e~’)
filed a variance petition with
the Board requesting relief from para-
graphs
I and
2 of the Board order in Environmental Protection Agency v,
Danville Sanitary District, PCB 71-28,
decided May
26, 1971 and amended
August
13,
1971.
Paragraph
1 of the Order required Danville to install
temporary sewage treatment facilities capable of adding sodium hydro-
xide and/or lime in order to continually adjust the pH of the raw wastes
between 9.0 and 9.5.
Danville was to operate these facilities
so as
to reduce effluent concentration of BOD5 to
20 mg/l and of suspended
solids
to
50
mg/I.
Paragraph
2 of the May
26, 1971 Order prohibited
further sewer connections tributary to the Danville treatment facilities
until BOD5 effluent concentration was reduced to
20 mg/i and suspended
solids concentration to
50
mg/i.
On August
23,
1971,
the Board
author-
ized hookups for an additional
1500 population equivalents provided
that the effluent discharged from the plant to
the
Vermilion River
did not exceed 30 mg/i of BOD5 and 25 mg/i of suspended solids.
As regards relief from Paragraph
1,
Danville indicates that
it
will be able to produce a satisfactory effluent by means other than
the
sodium hydroxide or lime additions required by the Board.
The
Agency
has no objection to Paragraph
1
being rescinded so long as Danville’s
effluent meets the applicable state standards.
Since the imposition of the sewer ban, Danville has taken several
significant steps toward alleviating the BOD5 and the suspended solids
problems its plant faced.
Danville sponsored an intensive examination
of its sewage treatment facilities
in order to discover the reasons
its activated sludge process was not performing correctly.
This exam-
ination showed a severe biological imbalance in the activated sludge
process.
A new chlorination system was installed and anhydrous ammonia
was added to
the
waste stream in an attempt to correct the biological
imbalance.
Danville also established industrial waste standards and a
surcharge ordinance in order to control the amount of industrial effluent
and to pay for necessary improvements to provide adequate treatment for
such wastes.
Each affected industrial discharger has a time schedule
4
—
673
for compliance.
In an attempt to combat the large sulfate concen-
ttati’ons coming into
the plant and upsetting the anaerobic digestion
process, Oanville has entered into
a contract whereby the sulfate dis-
charger has provided Danville with an interim method of stimulating
anaerobic digestion in the presence of excessive sulfur concentrations;
by mid-1974, the sulfate discharger is
to have installed its own pre-
treatment facilities.
Most importantly, flanville has signifIcantly
reduced the concentration of BOD5 and suspended solids in its effluent.
For example, March, 1972 data showed monthly average BOD5 at 21 mg/i
and
suspended solids at 24 mg/i; for April, average 13OD~was 20 mg/I
and suspended solids,
22 mg/i; for May, BOD5 averaged 19 mg/i and
suspended solids,
15 mg/i.
This performance is in compliance with
the standard set in the Board order in PCB#71-28.
The plant
is also
within the
SWB-9
standard of
20
mg/i,
BO~5and 25 mg/I suspended solids
for activated sludge plants discharging to
the
Vermilion River.
The
plant is also successfully treating its
suspended solids,
a significant
problem when Danville first appeared before the Board.
Based on data from the treatment plant through February,
1972,
the
Agency recommended that the variance not be granted as
to
Paragraph
2,
the sewer ban,
until Danv~i1lehad shown ~~continuedsatisfactory operation
(of the treatment plant)
for another month.~ With the data presently
received by
the Board and accepted by the Agency as credible, the
operations through
Nay,
1972 have, achieved that “continued satisfactory
operation” which the Agency sought.
We also note that continued im-
provement in operation has been demonstrated.
The conditions imposed
on Danville in Paragraphs
I and 2 in PCB ~71-28 will,
therefore,
be
rescinded.
The grant of their petition, of course, does not release
Danville from its obligation to comply with the applicable state stan-
dard,
Over the past year, this Board and its
staff
have frequently
orally commended Danville for the remarkable progress and innovation
it has shown in the operation of
its sewage treatment plant.
We have
encouraged other Illinois municipalities and sanitary districts to
emulate Danville’s advances.
We add such praise now in writing.
Danville’s positive response and affirmative action to abate its
pollution problems over the last recent months have heartened the Board
that progress can be and is being made.
It is also encouraging to see
local industry working with the sanitary district to solve their mutual
problems,
Danville Sanitary District is hereby released from the conditions
imposed by Paragraphs
1 and
2
in the Board order in PCB 71-28, May 26,
1971 as amended August 13, 1971,
I,
Christan Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control Board,
certify that the aboi~~eOpinion was adopted on
the 14th Day of June,
1972,
by a vote of
4
to
~
4
—
674