ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
May 17, 1973
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Complainant,
v.
)
PCB 72—470
CHICAGO MAGNESIUM CASTING COMPANY,
Respondent.
James
I. Rubin, Assistant Attorney General, on behalf of
Complainant;
Stephen E. Kitchen and George P. Sullivan on behalf of Respondent.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr.
Seaman):
On May
3,
1973,
Respondent, Chicago Magnesium Casting Company,
located in Blue Island, County of Cook,
filed a Motion to Re-
consider and Vacate.
Respondent’s prayer is that this Board
reconsider and vacate those portions of its Opinion and Order of
April
17, 1973
in which the Board found the Respondent had violated
Section 9(a) of the Environmental Protection Act and imposed a
penalty of
$1,000.
Respondent contends that it was neither economically reason-
able nor technically feasible for the Respondent to bring its
emissions into compliance with the Act or the regulations adopted
pursuant thereto.
In its brief in support of
this motion
(p.
2,
III), Respondent
argues that under the Act and the decisions of the Board unreason-
ableness of compliance is a complete defense.
Respondent1s position
cannot be sustained.
Section
9(a)
of the Illinois Environmental Protection Act
provides as
follows:
SECTION
9.
“No person shall:
(a)
Cause or threaten or allow the discharge or emission
of any contaminant into the environment in any State so as
to cause or tend to cause air pollution in Illinois, either
alone or in combination with contaminants from other sources,
or so as to violate regulations or standards adopted by the
Board under this Act;”
8—23
—2—
Respondent,
by its own admission, has violated this pro-
vision.
Section
33(c)
and
(iv)
of the Illinois Environmental Pro-
tection Act provides as follows:
SECTION
33.
“(c)
In making its orders and determinations,
the Board
shall take into consideration all the facts and circum-
stances bearing upon the reasonableness of the emissions,
discharges, or deposits involved including,
but not
limited to:”
(emphasis added)
“(iv)
the technical practicability and economic
reasonableness of reducing or eliminating the emissions,
discharges
or deposits resulting from such pollution
source.”
The Board is satisfied,
therefore,
that although due
consideration should be given the technical practicability and
economic reasonableness of reducing or eliminating emissions,
this
is only one of the many considerations involved in a decision,
and unreasonableness of compliance
is not per se a complete
defense.
Such
a stance would constitute an abdication of the duty and
discretion conferred upon this Board under the Act to the
People of Illinois.
The public will not be made to suffer due
to the state of technology in a particular field.
Respondent’s
motion is denied.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
I,
Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, certify
that
the
above Opinion and Order was adopted by
the Board on the /i~day of
_____________,
1973,
by
a vote of
~4
to
r~
8—24