ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
October
14, 1971
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
V.
)
#
71—69
INCINERATOR,
INC.
Opinion of the Board
on Motion to Stay
(by Mr. Currie):
On September
30 we entered an order finding Incinerator
in violation
of the law and regulations with respect to air pollution,
particulate emissions,
and failure
to file
a compliance program.
We imposed
a penalty of $25,000
and ordered the plant closed until
the following conditions
were met:
1)
the gross interference
with
the neighbors was reduced substantially:
2)
a firm program
for compliance with
the particulate regulations
was submitted and
a bond posted to secure
its completion;
and
3)
thermocouples
indicating operating temperatures were made operable.
Our order
specifically provided that upon receipt of
a variance petition
committing the company to such
a program
a further hearing would
be held and
the Board would enter
“such further order
as
it deems
necessary under the circumstances.”
On October
6 we received
a motion asking us to stay the
order.
The Agency filed
a motion to strike,
and the parties
appeared before us October
12.
We denied the motion to strike
and granted the stay motion in part,
for reasons given
in this
opinion,
I.
Stay Pending Review
In part the motion seeks that enforcement of the order--
and most importantly the plant shutdown--be delayed pending the out’~
come of judicial review proceedings concurrently filed
in which
the validity of our initial order
is challenged.
As in other
cases decided today, we think
it appropriate,
upon the filing of
a suitable bond,
to suspend payment of the money penalty pending
appeal.
But to suspend the cease
and desist portions of the
order would allow the very harm
the order meant
to prevent,
and delay
would be injurious to the public interest,
Therefore we would
not be inclined to stay the shutdown order simply on the ground
that judicial review has been sought.
See Spartan Printing Co.
v,
EPA,
#
7l~l9 (Oct.
14,
1971);
Citizens Utilities
Co.
v.
EPA,
#
71—125
(Oct.
14,
1971);
Pyramid Mobile Estates,
#
71—154
(Oct.
12,
1971).
II.
Rehearing
The motion also contains allegations respecting the hard-~
ship that
a shutdown would impose on the company and arguments
that the Board lacks power to order
a shutdown.
But
the Act
is
clear that the sanctions we may impose include not only money
penalties but also the familiar order to stop violating the
law
(Environmental Protection Act, section 33
(b)).
There is no right
to pay and pollute.
Money penalties,
like money damages
in private
nuisance cases, are often inadequate,
and
they have the further
disadvantage of conferring no direct relief upon the victims of
the emissions.
In a case such ~s
this,, where there
is essentially
no control equipment at present,
there is no chance that the in-
cinerator can be operated without violating the regulations,
and
an order requiring shutdown is the equivalent of an order for-
bidding violation of the law.
That such an order
is contemplated
by
the statute
is emphasized by the provisions requiring the Board,
as it did in this
case,
to take
into account the social and economic
value of the pollution source in determining what order is appropriate
(section 33
(cfl;
for t1~evalue of the source is far more relevant
in determining whether
or not
to forbid continued operation than
in determining the amount of
a money penalty.
The special provision
for
a shutdown order
in section
43
in no way detracts from this con-
clusion;
that
is an emergency provision allowing ex parte shtitdowns
in crisis situations without the usual requirements
of notice
and
hearing.
We therefore reaffirm our authority to order
a shutdown
where operation would in itself violate the
law or regulations,
and we decline to reconsider the merits
of our original order, since
the place to argue about the hardships of
a shutdown--and there
was testimony on that issue by
the respondent--was
in the initial
hearing.
We cannot be forever rehashing what we have already
decided.
III.
Compliance with Order
But in our view the significant part of the motion
is that
the company has—already,
only
a
few days after entry of our
order,
come up with
the control program that we required.
We construe
the motion as the variance request contemplated by that order;
the procedural objections suggested by the Agency are of little
weight compared with the important business of getting this incinerator
operating with adequate controls
as soon as possible.
So construed,
the motion alleges that Incinerator
is
prepared
to purchase immediately
a scrubber of
a type believed
adequate
to meet the regulations—-not the questionable wet baffles
discussed.in the initial hearings--to have it in operation within
five months;
and to post security
for its completion.
In the
meantime,
Incinerator promises to operate only one
of its two units,
thus reducing emissions by half
to begin with;
to avoid any over-
loading;
to restrict the types of refuse accepted
so as
to minimize
unnecessary emissions;
and
to repair or replace and operate the
thermocouples.
It further alleges that it has made improvements
2— 608
that have “substantially increased” the efficiency of its existing
sprays.
Upon completion
of the scrubber installation on the one
unit,
the other will be closed down until
it too
is equipped with
a scrubber.
On the basis
of this program Incinerator asked that
we allow operation under the proposed conditions.
It is Incinerator’s contention that operation of
its
facility under the proposed conditions will substantially reduce
the nuisance.
If
so,
the company will have satisfied the essential
purpose of paragraph
I of our original order, which required such
a reduction before operation of the incinerator would be allowed.
It is immaterial that the improvement is
to be achieved by means
other than the installation of
a control device; what counts
is
the effect on the neighbors.
And of course it
is not fatal that
the improvements will not enable
the incinerator
to comply with
the
numerical emission standards;
the initial order expressly comtemplated
that operation would be allowed prior to ultimate compliance
as
soon as the more serious neighborhood effects could be cured.
Moreover,
the company’s plan for ultimate compliance looks ex-
tremely promising.
In short,
Incinerator
is telling us that it
has already done what our order required as
a condition of
reopening the plant
(which was shut down October
10)
and there-
fore asks that we allow operation on the ground that it has complied
with the
order.
A hearing,
as stated in the first order, will be necessary
to determine whether or not the program
is adequate for ultimate
compliance
and, most importantly, whether or not the nuisance has
been sufficiently reduced
to make operation tolerable during the
five months while
the scrubber
is being constructed.
The difficult
question
is what
to do in the meantime.
It is clear that the shut-
down does cause considerable hardship,
and we do not know the
effects on the neighborhood
of operation under
the new conditions
except
that
mathematically
we can expect at least a
50
reduction
in emissions.
The only way to find
out whether
the plant will
still be
a nuisance
is to allow limited operation
for the next few weeks
until our decision after the hearing.
While
this procedure exposes the
neighbors
to an additional risk
of nuisance
for a short period,
it also
assures the company of the opportunity to prove
the adequacy of its interim
program.
The burden will be
on the company to show that the
nuisance has been reduced
to
a tolerable level;
if it fails
to do
so the shutdown order will remain in effect,
For now, however,
the shutdown order has been stayed pending our decision after
the
hearing.
We stress that
the new hearing
is not to be
a rehashing
of the
old, but only an inquiry into the adequacy of the interim
and ultimate compliance measures described ~in the motion.
The issue
is whether the company has complied with
the terms of our ord~r
that impose conditions upon reopening the plant.
As for the ultimate
scrubbers,
we urge that no time be
lost
in getting them ordered
and installed,
Probably the quickest assurance
of their adequacy
would be
to obtain
a permit from the Agency,
if possible in advance
of
the hearing;
for
if the Agency certifies that the scrubbers
2— 609
will meet the particulate standard there
is
no doubt that the
Board will approve the five-month schedule.
The company’s swift action in the
face of the shutdown
order
in no way affects
the. penalty provision of the initial order,
which was based upon the failure to pursue
a plan comparable
to
its present one some time
ago.
Mr.
Dumelle dissented from the grant of the stay
and will
file
a separate opinion.
I, Regina E.
Ryan,
Clerk of the Pollution Control Board, certify
that
the Board adopted the above Opi
thi.s
14
day
of
October
,
1971.
2
—
610