ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
November 8,
1972
EAST SIDE LEVEE AND SANITARY DISTRICT,
)
ST. CLAIR AND MADISON COUNTIES, ILLINOIS
(LANSDOWNE),
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB72—313
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
EAST SIDE LEVEE AND SANITARY DISTRICT,
ST. CLAIR AND MADISON COUNTIES,
ILLINOIS
(CAHOKIA),
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB72—314
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
No appearances by counsel.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE
BOARD
(by Mr.
Parker):
Petitioner,
the East Side Levee and Sanitary District
of Madison and St. Clair Counties, seeks
a variance from the
fecal coliform limitations of Rule 405 of the Water Pollution
Regulations for each of its Lansdowne and Cahokia sewage
treatment plants.
Because of the close relationship between
the factual and legal issues presented as to the two treatment
plants, the separate variance petitions were consolidated for
public hearing and decision.
The East Side Levee and Sanitary District encompasses
about 96 square miles.
It includes the Lansdowne and Cahokia
plants owned and operated by the Levee District, which are the
subject of the instant Petitions, and several plants owned and
operated by municipalities within the District
(East
St. Louis,
Sauget and Granite City).
The Lansdowne plant is located in.
the north central portion of the District and serves a popula-
tion of about 30,000;
it also handles a substantial amount of
industrial flow
(R. 22-23).
The Cahokia plant serves an area
in the southernmost portion of the District of about 30,000
and has no industrial waste load.
Both plants are located
6— 179
near the Mississippi River.
Effluent from the Lansdowne
plant discharges directly into the River through
a closed
pipe
(R.
26); effluent from the Cahokia plant discharges
into a flood plain area adjacent the River
(R.
25-26)
The evidence introduced
at the public hearing.~held
October
2,
1972,
showed that the Lansdowne and Cahokia
plants at present provide only primary treatment
(R.
27).
Plans have been and are being prepared for the construction
of secondary treatment facilities, including chlorination,
to
be added to the existing primary plants.
The new plant
facilities will cost an estimated $4,200,000 for Lansdowne
and $2,470,000 for Cahokia
(R. 31-32).
The projected
completion dates for the new facilities are July of
1974 for
Lansdowne
(R.
27)
and January of 1974 for Cahokia
(R.
29).
It is contemplated that the effluent from both facilities
will meet the fecal coliform levels of Rule 405 when the new
facilities have been completed and are on stream
(R.
30)
Unfortunately,
the January and July,
1974 completion
dates are not firm
(R.
54) because they must be approved by
the Southwestern Illinois Metropolitan Planning Commission
(SWIMPAC).
SWIMPAC is in the process of holding public hear-
ings directed to regionalizing the waste treatment facilities
in Southwestern
Illinois following which it will submit a
plan for approval by state and federal financing agencies
(R.
52).
Such a plan,
if implemented, will supercede the new
treatment facilities presently planned by the District for its
Cahokia and Lansdowne plants
(R.
53)
.
Stated otherwise,
if
SWIMPAC does not approve the District’s present construction
plans as being consistent with whatever regionalization plan
emerges from the SWIMPAC hearings, then the District will be
unable to obtain federal or state financing and the proposed
new secondary and chlorination treatment facilities will not
be built
(R.
54).
The effluents from the two primary plants at the present
time have fecal coliform levels far above the 400 count per
100 ml. requirement of Rule 405 which became effective July
1,
1972.
In the case of Lansdowne,
fecal coliform levels between
1.1 and 24 million were measured by the Agency during the
period January
4 through June 27, 1972
(Exh.
1).
At Cahokia
the levels were found
to be between 2.5 and 5.2 million over
the period January
4 through July 7,
1972
(Exh.
2).
Much of the public hearing was directed to the practicality
and economic reasonableness of the District’s installing
interim chlorination facilities
to permit the Rule
405 standard
to be met in advance of
the projected completion dates for the
new facilities.
The record shows that interim chlorination
facilities can be installed at each of the Lansdowne and
Cahokia plants at
a capital cost of $21,000
(R.
8,
11).
Operat-
ing costs are expected to be $12,000 per year at Lansdowne
(R.
9)
—2—
6— 180
and $3,700 per year at Cahokia
(R.
11).
There would be no
salvage value for either plant insofar as later use of the
temporary equipment in the permanent facilities is concerned
(R.
35).
Such interim facilities if installed w~il1permit
the Rule 405 fecal coliform standard to be met
(R.
9,
36).
They can be installed by January of 1973
(R. 64).
Petitioner argues that it would be unreasonable to
require it to spend these amounts because only limited funds
are available and for the reason that continued discharge
of the Lansdowne and Cahokia effluents
(4 and 1.6 million gallons
per day, respectively) will have no measurable adverse effect
upon the Mississippi River which has a flow of 1,000 million
gallons per day.
No data was presented on this latter point
(R.
39)
.
Petitioner also points out that the nearby City of
St. Louis presently discharges over 200 million gallons per
day of unchlorinated municipal wastes into the River
(R.
39),
and Petitioner mentions the fact that there are regulatory
proceedings presently pending before this Board, upon which
public hearings have not been completed as yet, involving an
amendment proposed by the Agency which would,
if adopted,.
extend the Rule 405 compliance date for discharges to the
Mississippi River from July 1,
1972 to December 31,
1973.
We believe both variance petitions must be denied.
Firstly, the construction of the permanent facilities, being
dependent upon what SWIMPAC does,
is so indefinite both as to
whether they will be built at all and as to completion times,
that there is no assurance in this record thatRule 405 will
ever be met.
Second, the cost of interim chlorination facili-
ties is so low that we do not believe it will impose any sub-
stantial hardship on the District or its users.
The $42,000
combined capital costs of interim chlorination amounts to less
than one percent of the total capital expenditure of $6,670,000
for the proposed permanent facilities.
If the cost of interim
chlorination were distributed to the users of the facilities
it would amount to only about two cents per month per user in
the Lansdowne area
(R.
51),
and a comparable small amount for
Cahokia.
Thirdly, petitioner has not proven on this record
that there will be no harmful effect on the Mississippi River
of continued discharges
of high fecal coliform count effluents
into the River.
While the record shows that there is no sub-
stantial recreational use of the Mississippi River at the point
of entry of effluents from the Lansdowne and Cahokia plants
(R.
84),
the record suggests
at least with respect to Cahokia
that health dangers may well exist from effluent back-up into
the flood plain
(R. 84-85).
The fact that the City of St.
Louis may be on a different time schedule for cleaning up its
effluent discharges to the Mississippi River than the State of
Illinois is not,
in our
view, justification for holding in
abeyance the operation of our own standards.
—3—
6
—
181
As for the District’s contention that the Board may
amend
Rule 405 to extend the compliance date to December 31,
1973,
we point out that until the present public hearings
in
these regulatory proceedings have been completed,
and the
Board has had a chance to review the record,
there will be
no Board decision.
Needless to say,
it is impossible to
predict what the Board’s decision will be.
Moreover, the
projected earliest completion dates advanced by Petitioner
for its permanent facilities, January and July of 1974, both
extend beyond the December 31, 1973 date,
so that in any
event it would still be necessary later to provide interim
chlorination, or to make a showing of hardship in doing so,
for the period after December 31,
1973.
Insofar as the District’s contention that
funds are not
available for interim chlorination is concerned, we find the
record evidence inadequate to support our drawing any such
conclusion.
There is testimony that there are reserves or
excess funds of $5,000 to $8,000 per year
(R.
78).
Also, in
response to
a request made during the public hearing
(R. 65),
the District forwarded a letter to the Hearing Officer and
Board dated October
4,
1972 which lists $389.97 and $3,587.33,
respectively,
as balances in the Cahokia and Lansdowne opera-
tion and maintenance funds.
No other evidence has been pre-
sented as to the financial condition of the District and its
sources of funds, and we cannot, based on this incomplete
information, find that there are inadequate funds available
to pay for interim chlorination.
Both petitions are denied.
This opinion constitutes the
findings of fact and conclusions of law of the Board.
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Pollution Control Board,
certify that the above Opinion and Order was adopted on the
~‘‘
day of
___________________,
1972, by a vote of
.$~
to
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____
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—4—
6— 182