ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
November
23,
1971
RICHARD P.
GLOVKA
v.
)
#
71—269
NORTH SHORE SANITARY DISTRICT
etal.
Opinion and Order
of the Board on Motions
to Dismiss
(by Mr.
Currie):
This citizen complaint alleges violations of
the Environmental
Protection Act and of our order
in
#
70-7,
League of Women Voters
v.
North Shore Sanitary District
(March
31,
1971)
,
with respect
to new connections to sewers tributary
to overloaded treatment
plants.
A flood of motions to dismiss has resulted from parties
other than
the District
itself.
Various legal and constitutional arguments are raised
that
are without merit.
Those relating to the Board1s authority to
act as
a tribunal or to impose money penalties have been disposed
of by earlier decisions.
See EPA v.
Modern Plating Corp.,
# 71-38
(April
28,
1971).
The suggestion that federal law
forbids us
to concern ourselves with navigable waters such as
Lake Michigan
is flatly contrary to the federal statutes, which
expressly direct us to do so.
The standing of the complainant
is
clear;
the Act allows any citizen
to file
a complaint.
It
is
also suggested that our original March
31 order was invalid,
but we disagree
for the reasons there stated.
Any respondent
is
free
to raise in defense
the existence of an arbitrary or
unreasonable hardship,
cf.
Wachta
v.
EPA,
# 71-77
(July 12,
1971)
but this must be affirmatively proved at the hearing,
and,
in
the case of two of the present respondents,
has been considered
before.
See Bederman v.
EPA,
# 71-173
(August
5,
1971)
,
and
Kaeding v.
EPA,
# 71-133
(August
5,
1971).
The notion
that
because not every violator can be prosecuted all must
go free,
also suggested, needs
no response.
It
is contended that our order did not preclude
new
connections
to existing sewers or by persons who had earlier
been granted permits by the Sanitary Water Board.
If this
3
—
163
were true,
it would not be grounds
for dismissal,
since it would
remain
a question of fact whether
or not each respondent was
within an exempted category.
But the contention is incorrect.
The order
is absolute:
“The District shall not permit
any
addition
to present sewer connections,
or new sewer connection,
to its facilities
.
.
.
“
The age of the sewer
is immaterial;
new connections are not to be made.
And,
contrary
to the argumn~
here made,
a permit
is
not
a license
to violate the
law;
only
a variance duly granted by this Board
can authorize doing what
the law forbids.
There
is nothing vague
about this
order,
as
is suggested.
It flatly and absolutely
forbids new connections.
Against the District, therefore,
a cause of action
is den::.
stated.
The District was specifically ordered not to allow
new connections;
it has authority under
Ill,
Rev,
Stat.
ch.
42,
sec.
283.2 to deny connections
to any tributary
sewers opera~
by others;
yet,
if the allegations
are proved,
in several ±nstan:~n
rather than prevent such connections,
the District gave
them
its official blessing.
A hearing is
in order to determine the
truth of these allegations.
It
is further argued
that,
since only the District was
a party
to the earlier proceeding and only the District was
directed by the earlier order not to allow connections,
only
the
District can be guilty of violating the order.
But we need
not delve
into the question whether and in what circbmstances
a person not named in
an order
can be held responsible for
inducing or abetting in its violation,
for the complaint quite
clearly charges that each of the respondents has violated the
statute itself.
There is no doubt that the statute aeplies
to
all of the respondents;
it
applies
to
everybody.
It oroscribes
water pollution,
either actual or threatened,
and we found in
the League of Women Voters case,
above,
that new connections
would worsen the existing pollution.
It is open
to persons not
bound by the order
in that case
to show that this
is not so,
but the allegation that new connections threaten or cause water
pollution
is sufficient to justify
a hearing to determine
the
truth of the allegation.
Exactly what
acts constitute
a threat of water pollution
is
a question on which the illumination cast by concrete
facts
would be helpful.
It
is argued that all that one respondent
did was
to ask whether or not
a connection was allowed.
We
agree that,
if this is proved,
it would demonstrate that no
violation occurred.
But the complaint
alleges that each of the
individual respondents’
requests was approved by the Sanitary
District,,
and that the net effect was
at least
a threat of water
pollution.
Since
a logical consequence of receiving approval
to make
a connection is to proceed to make
it, we think the
complainant should be given the opportunity to prove that
a connection either has been or
is about to be made.
The severity
as well
as the inadequacy of ordering
a disconnection of
illegally attached sources demonstrates
that we cannot insist
on waiting until after pollution has been caused before issuing
a preventive order.
That
is what the statutory word “threaten”
is
all about,
And plainly it is no defense that one may have
relied upon the approval of the Sanitary District;
it is every
citizen’s obligation to obey the
law.
The allegations with regard to the Village of Lake Bluff
appear chiefly
to be based upon
a number
of communications in
which
the Village
is
said to have forwarded individual requests
for connections
to the District,
This alone cannot constitute
a
violation;
everyone has
a right to ask for
advice.
If, however,
the complainant can show that the Village allowed or threatened
to allow
the illegal connections here alleged, which
it had the
authority and duty to prevent if they threatened or caused
water pollution”-and this again
is
a logical inference from the
allegations
of Village request and District approval—”,
then
a case will have been made,
Again we think
a hearing
is the
place to determine just what did occur.
Several factual defenses, relating
to such rnatte~sas the
ownership
of property
and. the duties of the Village Administrator,
can be determined only
after the hearing.
The motion to dismiss with regard to the respondent Raymond
Anderson,
tragically killed in
an aircraft accident,
is granted.
In all other respects
the motions to dismiss are denied.
There was
also
a motion to disqualify the hearing officer
on the ground that he had once been
a litigant before this
Board.
This motion was properly denied.
The matter in which
he appeared was entirely unrelated
to the present case;
there is
no suggestion he has demonstrated anything but the utmost fair”
ness
in dealing with
this case.
We cannot be expected
to dis-
qualify as hearing officers everybody with enough concern over
pollution generally ever
to have appeared before the Board.
In any event,
the decision will be made by this Board and not
by the hearing officer.
3— 165
We note that argument on some of the present motions
has been set
for December
6.
The parties are free to renew
their motions with further amplification then or later, but
it
is the Board’s order that the hearing scheduled for
December
14 proceed without delay for the reasons given
in
this
opinion.
The Environmental Protection Agency’s request to intervene
is granted.
The participation of the Agency is important,
as indeed at least one of the respondents
suggested.
This
intervention shall not be permitted to delay the proceedings.
The motion to divide this case
into several is denied.
The
issues are
simple, and delay is not called
for.
The motion
for trial by jury
is also denied.
Mr.
Kissel took no part
in the consideration or decision
of this case.
I, Christan Moffett, Acting Clerk of the Pollution Control
Board, certify that the Board adopted the above Opinion and
Order on Motions to Dismiss this
,.-~J
day of//~/~.~
1971.
~L
3
—
166