ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    February
    17,
    1972
    MERLE
    K.
    BUERKETT
    v.
    )
    #
    71—303
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    Mr.
    Alfred
    B.
    LaBarre, Attorney,
    for Merle
    K.
    Buerkett
    Messrs.
    Larry
    R.
    Eaton and Wayne Golomb, Assistant Attorneys General,
    for
    the Environmental Protection Agency
    Opinion and Order of the Board
    (by Mr.
    Currie)
    Petitioner Buerkett operates
    a landfill at Springfield.
    He seeks
    a variance
    from the Rules
    and Regulations
    for Refuse
    Disposal Sites and Facilities to allow the dumping of acid sludge
    from
    the recycling
    of used motor oil in
    an open
    pit, without
    complying with the covering requirements
    of the Rules
    and
    without permission of the Environmental Protection Agency, whose
    consent is required both by the Rules
    (Rule
    5.08)
    and by
    an
    earlier order of this Board
    in an enforcement case involving
    this
    same landfill
    (EPA v.
    Clay Products,
    Inc.,
    #71—41, June
    23,
    1971)
    for
    the dumping of liquid or hazardous materials.
    The waste sludge
    is generated by Sorco Oil Refining Co., which
    sought to intervene
    as
    a party petitioner.
    The Agency argued that Mr. Buerkett had no standing to
    seek this van
    nce because the alleged hardship was Sorco’s and
    not his
    (see Recommendation).
    This argument is mooted by Sorco’s
    intervention,
    and is refuted by our decision in North Shore
    Sanitary District v. EPA,
    #
    71-343
    (Jan.
    24,
    1971)
    .
    Hardships
    to persons other than the petitioner,
    such as to employees or
    customers,
    are commonly the basis
    for granting variances.
    The
    Agency further contended that the Board lacked jurisdiction over
    this petition because of the prior order, which stated that the
    Agency was
    to decide whether or not such material could be accepted
    at the
    site
    (R.
    8).
    But the permit procedure prescribed in the
    order has been exhausted
    (R.
    9); we
    did not intend to give
    the Agency unreviewable discretion
    in the matter,
    and we could
    not legally have done
    so since
    the statute expressly allows
    for variances from orders
    of the Board
    (Section 35).
    The record shows that Sorco purchases used motor oil from
    independent contractors who collect it from service stations
    by
    truck
    (R.
    71,
    122, 136—38).
    The used oil
    is
    a waste product to
    the service station operator
    (R.
    13), which he is anxious
    to get
    off his hands both to avoid problems with the
    fire marshal
    (R.
    32),
    3
    659

    and to avoid cluttering up the premises
    with
    useless
    material.
    Generally no fee
    is charged the station operator for
    providing
    the pickup service
    (R.
    139).
    Sorco pays 5~per
    gallon to
    the contractor who collects the
    oil
    (R.
    120),
    and then
    Sorco reprocesses it into
    a saleable
    and entirely satisfactory
    product
    (R.
    104)
    that
    is sold
    in competition with virgin motor
    oil
    (R.
    77—78).
    Sorco sells
    for 21 l/2~per gallon; virgin oil
    sells in the same market for 23 3/4~or more including tax
    (R.
    83-84,
    106,
    111).
    There
    are only two oil reprocessors
    in
    all Illinois
    (R.
    12,
    75),
    and Sorco7s contractors collect oil
    from over much
    of the State
    and
    even beyond
    (R.
    138).
    Reprocessing entails the use
    of an acid, which ends up
    as part of an unusable waste sludge that must be disposed of
    (R.
    79).
    The volume of this sludge
    is much
    less than of the
    initial oil collected from service stations~ only 8
    of that
    collected cannot be reused in one or another form
    CR.
    77).
    The total amount of sludge to be disposed of
    in
    a normal day
    is about
    600 gallons
    (R.
    74).
    In
    the past Sorco deposited
    the sludge in an open pit
    at
    he Buerkett landfill
    site
    (R.
    49,
    79).
    The sludge
    is quite
    difficult
    to handle;
    it will
    eat holes
    in workers’
    clothes
    (R.
    60,
    129,
    153)
    and causes extensive damage to earth-moving
    equipment
    if efforts are made
    to bury
    and cover it,
    (R.
    57,
    153).
    Other materials had
    a way of getting
    into the old pit
    (R.
    151),
    and ultimately filling that pit with trees
    and dirt
    caused problems including equipment damage
    (R.
    57,
    152).
    Because
    of incomplete compaction,
    there
    is
    a question as to the solidity
    of
    the filled pit
    (R.
    152).
    After covering at another site,
    the sludge permeated the surface
    and “sterilized several areas”
    (R.
    158).
    The Agency refused permission for open dumping to
    continue,
    and dumping has stopped pursuant to our earlier order
    (R.
    50).
    The Agency has expended considerable effort in attempting
    to help Sorco
    find
    a more satisfactory solution to its disposal
    problem
    CR.
    155).
    At
    the Agency’s suggestion,
    Mr. Buerkett
    mixed
    an amount of the sludge with powdered limestone, which
    adequately neutralized the acid
    and created
    a material that
    could be handled with ordinary equipment and buried
    in
    a traditional
    landfill
    CR,
    53—55,
    59—60,
    68,
    156,—57).
    The
    cost of
    this procedure,
    Mr.
    Buerkett testified, would be from
    $100 to
    $125 per load of 600 gallons
    CR.
    53-59,
    63).
    At one load per
    day five
    times
    a week
    (ibid),
    this amounts to
    a total disposal
    cost,
    in compliance with the rules~ of $2000
    to $2500 per month
    (R.
    116)
    ,
    as compared with $500 per month for open pit disposal
    (R.
    65).
    Thus the incremental cost of doing
    it right would
    be no more than $24,000
    per year
    (R.
    85)
    for the wastes from
    recycling the oil from all of Illinois outside
    the Chicago
    area.
    No objections were raised
    to this procedure except money
    (R.
    63).
    3
    660

    Sorco contends
    that this cost might put
    it out of business.
    Its normal profit,
    it testified,
    is about 2~per gallon
    (R.
    84-85,
    R.
    121—22).
    It fears
    that
    if it raises
    its price the anticipated
    l~per gallon to cover the increased cost1 it might
    lose some
    of
    its customers
    (R.
    118)
    ,
    although
    its price would still
    be below
    that
    o
    its competitors
    (R.
    110).
    It bases
    this prediction
    -—an admitted guess
    CR.
    132)—-on evidence that
    the last
    time it
    raised
    its price l~it
    lOSt
    a number of customers
    (R.
    87) account-
    ing for
    20
    of
    tis market
    (R.
    106).
    The argument
    is
    that we
    should not do anything to risk the
    loss of Sorco because
    it
    performs
    a useful service
    in recycling what would otherwise be
    a
    much larger waste disposal problem.
    It
    is always unfortunate if pollution expenditures
    force
    anyone providing useful services out of business,
    and we
    recognize the value of recycling.
    But it is not the law that
    those who recycle are exempt from the pollution laws;
    the
    statute makes clear that avoiding undue pollution
    is
    a cost of
    everyone’s doing busi~iess(Section
    2(b)).
    On this record we
    are
    not convinced that the cost of proper sludge disposal would be
    too much for Sorco.
    The evidence that
    a price rise
    in the past
    resulted
    in
    a market reduction does
    not prove
    that
    a rise under
    different circumstances2 would have the
    same result,
    Under-
    selling
    a competitor by 10
    is
    a fairly attractive position.
    And we think insufficient consideration has been given
    to
    the possibility of passing
    the increased cost back to
    the service
    station owner rather than forward to the consumer.
    The station
    owner has
    a waste problem;
    the collector renders him~a useful
    service for which he should be willing
    to pay
    a small fee.3
    The cost of waste disposal
    is
    a fair cost of his doing business
    too.
    There
    is nothing unusual about charging people
    for disposing
    of their wastes.
    The possibility that
    a charge might induce
    a station owner
    to dump his oil down the sewer
    (R.
    20)
    we do
    not think
    is
    sufficient justification
    for avoiding the
    charge.
    1.
    Sorco first estimated 2~per gallon
    (R.
    85).
    But cross-
    examination on the basis of Sorco’s own volume and cost
    figures reduced this estimate to
    1 1/2~ CR.
    113)
    ,
    and
    subtraction
    of the open-pit cost of about l/2~admittedly
    reduced the incremental
    cost per gallon to l~ CR.
    117—18).
    2.
    Among other things,
    the testimony
    is that
    the lost customers
    were geographically situated so as to reduce
    Sorco’s
    normal
    transportation cost advantage
    (R.
    107),
    3.
    It was estimated
    that
    a station operator would take
    5-6
    months to fill
    a 500—gallon tank
    CR.
    142)..
    At l~a gallon
    such
    an
    operator
    would
    pay
    a pickup
    fee
    of
    ten
    to
    twelve
    dollars per year.

    There are substantial penalties provided for
    such illegal
    activities,
    and we would
    not expect people to risk such penalties,
    even
    if
    they were inclined to violate the
    law, to avoid paying
    a charge as small as that which would be necessary
    to cover the
    nominal
    cost in this case.
    In summary, we find that the dangers, unsightliness, and
    possibility
    of permanent land damage
    (R.
    158)
    of open pit disposal
    of the acid sludge in this case can be avoided by the expenditure
    of
    an extra $20,000 per year,
    that the cost is quite small
    and well worth it,
    and that there is no reason it should be
    an unreasonable burden on Sorco.
    We
    do
    not
    by
    this decision rule out lagooning of other
    liquid wastes, where appropriate, any more than the Agency by
    refusing
    this permit indicated it
    would never issue any.
    In
    each case the decision turns on the facts.
    What we hold today
    is that open dumping of the waste
    in this case
    can be avoided
    at reasonable cost.
    The variance
    is denied.
    Mr. Dumelle dissents.
    I, Christan Moffett,
    Clerk of the Pollution Control Board, certify
    that the Board adopted the above Opinion and Order of the Board
    this
    17th
    day of February,
    1972 by
    a vote of
    4-1
    3
    662

    Back to top