ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
August
13,
1971
HOWARD WEINSTEIN
AND
BARBARA
)
WEINSTEIN,
his wife
)
#PCB71—107
V.
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
ROBERT D. CHARLES
V.
)
#PCB71122
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
)
BARTOLOMEO BIONDI
AND
CAROLINE
)
BIONDI, his wife
)
v.
)
#PCB71—l92
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
)
ALLAN
N, NIEDERMAN, ATTORNEY FOR PETITIONERS HOWARD WEINSTEIN,
ET AL
DELBERT
HASCHEMEYER,
ATTORNEY
FOR
ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION
AGENCY
ROBERT
D.
CHARLES,
PRO
SE
DELBERT
HASCHEMEYER,
ATTORNEY
FOR
ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION
AGENCY
THEODORE
A.
PASQUESI,
ATTORNEYS
FOR
PETITIONERS
BARTOLONEO
BIONDI,
ET AL
OPINION OF THE BOARD
(BY MR.
KISSEL):
The petitioners in the
above—captioned cases have all filed
petitions for variance with the Pollution Control Board asking
that they be permitted to
build a house in the area served by the
North Shore Sanitary District
(the “District”)
and con~nectto the
sewers of the District.
They seek a variance from an order of the
Board entered in the case of the League of Women Voters~,et al v.
North Shore Sanitary District, PCB 70-7,
12, 13 and 14, dated
March 31,
1971, which order provides,inter alia, the following:
“7.
The District shall not permit any additions to present
sewer
connections,
or
new
sewer
connectionsto
its
facilities
until
the
District
can
demonstrate
to
the
Board
that it can
adequately treat the wastes from those new sources
so as not
to violate the Environmental Protection Act or the Rules and
Regulations promulgated thereunder.
2
—
291
Each of the cases considered
in this opinion present similar facts,
and
a short recitation of the facts is
in order here.
In the Weinstein case
(PCB71-l07),
the petitioners bought
a
lot
in
Highland Park on March 30,
1971,
Prior to that they had
had plans and specifications drawn for
a home to be built, and
although they thought it would be on the present lot,
they did not
have title
in hand until the day before the Board~sorder from
which they seek
a variance was
issued.
In their petition, they
stated that they had entered into
a binding contract to sell their
house, but at the hearing,
the purchasers
in that transaction
agreed
that the Weinsteins would not have to sell their house.
There
is also an allegation that Mrs.
Weinstein has
a chronic knee prob—
1cm and they seek to move
into
a ranch-type home, which
the
new one
was supposed to be.
The present home
in which they live has
multi-levels.
In Charles case
(PCB7I-122),
the lot was purchased in Knoll-
wood in
late
1968.
Mr. Charles did nothing between the time he
bought and paid for the
lot until now, except for negotiating
a
construction loan which was done after March
31,
1971.
He
says
that the hardship imposed on him will be
the
loss of the commit-
ment of
the construction loan and the
lack of
a place to live,
since he believes that his present house, being
in an area which
is zoned commercial, will be torn down
in the near future.
In
the Biondi
case
(PCB71-l92),
the
lot
was acquired in April
of 1970,
and according
to the Petition for Variance, nothing was
done toward constructing the building, or even planning it,
except
to get a letter in January,
1971 from the City of Highwood that
committed
the
City of Highwood to allow
the
connection of the
Biondi home, when built.
No other hardship is alleged.
In
deciding~any variance case,
the
Board must determine from
the evidence in the record whether compliance with the law or the
regulations or orders of the Board will impose an “arbitrary or
unreasonable hardship.”
In making this determination, the Board
employs a balancing process that is the harm done to the environ-
ment
if
the variance
is
granted versus the benefit received if the
variance is denied.
Merely proving an inconvenience or a slight
hardship
is
not enough to be granted
a variance by this Board.
In
fact, the hardship must be substantial for it to outweigh the damage
to be caused by its allowance.
In the three cases to be decided
in this opinion, the facts are relatively the same.
A person buys
a lot,
does virtually nothing to begin consttuction, then hears
of the sewer ban and seeks a variance.
These cases are governed
by
the
rule
set forth in
the
______
case which denied a variance
to
an
individual who wanted to
build a home in the District~s
area.
There the Board properly reasoned that the test of whether
variances should be granted
is as follows:
2
—
292
“In cases where
a house has been completely built
before the date of the order
(March 31,
1971)
or
where substantial steps toward completion have
been taken we can clearly judge the hardship of non—
connection
to
be unreasonable.”
In none of these cases,
has there been,
in the opinion of the Board,
“substantial steps taken toward completion”.
Just holding the
lot
is not enough to give
a person the right to build in opposition
to the sewer
ban.
This Board has granted some variances because, notwithstanding
the fact that substantial steps.had not been taken, the petitioner
showed
an individual hardship which substantially outweighed
the
harm to be caused by allowing the sewer connection.
But such
is not the case here.
All of the people here
are required to
delay the construction of their home for a time.
This
is not
hardship enough to allow the degradation of Lake Michigan and the
Skokie River to continue.
One other point should be made,
The Board has scheduled in-
quiry hearings into the entire question of “sewer bans”.
The
petitioners should participate in those hearings to further express
their views,
if they so desire.
It may be that the hearings will
produce regulations which,
in fact,
lift sewer bans,
and
if they
do,
the decision of the Board at this time will not prejudice
the later granting to the petitioners of the right to connect
to
the District~ssewers.
The vaL’iances in the following cases
are hereby d~nied:
1.
Howard Weinstein and Barbara Weinstein,
his wife
v.
Environmental Protection Agency;
#PCB71-l07;
2.
Robert
D.
Charles
v. Environmental Protection Agency;
#PCB71-l22;
3.
Bartolomeo Biondi and Caroline Biondi, his wife,
V.
Environmental Protection Agency;
#PCB71-l92.
This Opinion constitutes
the findings of fact and conclusions
of law of the Board.
I, Regina E.
Ryan, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Contro~Board,
certif
that
t
e Board adopted the above Opinion on the /~day
of
~
1971.
2
—
293