ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    May 12, 1971
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    )
    )
    v.
    )
    #
    70~149
    )
    )
    KOPPERS
    CO.
    )
    Frederick Hopper, Special Assistant Attorney General, for the
    Environmental Protection Agency
    Norman
    J.
    Barry, Chicago, for Koppers
    Co.
    Opinion of the Board (by Mr.
    Currie):
    Koppers treats croesties and utility poles with creosote
    at its Carbondale plant to preserve them
    (F.
    124).
    Pursuant to
    a permit granted in l96~by the Sanitary Water Board, the
    effluent from the plant
    is taken to settling lagoons and is
    then applied to the land for irrigation
    (F. 119—21).
    The permit
    limits discharges of runoff water from these facilities
    to the
    “waters of the State”
    to 200 parts per billion phenol and 20
    parts per million biochemical oxygen demand (SOD) and specifies
    that ~‘iCthe effluent quality
    is
    consIstently in violation of
    the above
    limitation, additional treatment shall be
    provided.tt
    Phenols in very low stream concentrations (above
    1 ppb)
    can cause
    taste and odor problems in both water supplies and fish; SOD
    can deplete the oxygen reserves of a stream.
    (EPA Ex.
    35).
    The EPA’s complaint charged that discharges fr~4~opper~.
    since December
    9,
    1969 violated not only the conditions
    of the
    permit but also sections
    10 and 11 of the Sanitary Water Board
    Act, sections 12(a),
    (b), and (c) of the Environmental Protection
    Act, and Rules 1.03 and 1.08
    of Rules and Regulations SWB—14,
    Except for Rule 1.08, which imposes
    a
    30 ppm standard for SOD,
    the essence of these additional charges
    is causing pollution
    of the receiving stream.
    Moreover, Koppers was charged with
    depositing wastes on the
    land
    so
    as to create
    a water pollution
    hazard inwiolation of section 12(d) of the Environmental
    Protection Act.
    The record
    is
    singularly Gninformative.
    Were
    it not for
    the relatively lucid testimony of the company, we would know
    nothing whatever of the Koppers operation or of its present or
    proposed treatment facilities, for the Agencyts entire case
    579

    consisted of
    sampling
    results
    and
    a few visual
    and
    olfactory
    observations, together with a painfully prolonged effort to
    pinpoint where each sample was taken
    CR.
    7—1k).
    We think it
    imperative that those who prosecute cases before the Board
    recognize it is incumbent upon them to provide the Board with
    ~evidenceon which it
    can
    base an
    informed
    decision.
    On the
    present record,
    for
    reasons that will appear below, most of the
    Agency’s evidence is useless even on the simple issue of violation.
    And
    of course we need evidence on the question of
    remedy as
    well, of which the Agency presented none whatsoever, nor even
    any
    arguments
    as to what we should order Koppers to do.
    Despite the lengthy testimony identifying
    sampling
    points,
    there is a total absence of proof as to whether or not most of
    the
    samples
    measured
    discharges
    to
    “waters
    of
    the
    State”
    within
    the
    meaning
    of
    any
    of
    the
    relevant
    provisions.
    Most
    were
    taken
    at the point
    where
    water
    drains
    from
    the
    irrigation
    field
    into
    a
    stream
    or
    ditch
    that
    crosses
    Koppers’
    land
    from
    west
    to
    east.
    Whether this is a stream or not was never proved.
    The fact that
    it is bordered on both sides b~the respondent’s property does
    not excuse its pollution, since the statutes apply to waters
    “public or private.”
    But if the discharge is to a ditch that is
    essentially a
    part
    of the treatment or discharge facilities,.
    it
    may
    be unprotected; the law does not say sewage cannot be
    dumped into sewers.
    For lack of proof on this issue, therefore,
    we
    must
    ignore
    the
    numerous
    samples
    taken
    at
    this
    point
    or
    farther
    up
    the
    ditch.
    Discharges
    grossly
    in
    excess
    of
    the
    permit limits, however,
    are
    clearly
    shown
    by
    a
    number
    of
    samples,
    taken
    on
    various
    days,
    at
    points where the ditch itself passes under a road just prior
    to its discharge into Glade Creek, which rather plainly is a
    water of the State protected by the law.
    On December
    9,
    1969,
    phenols at this point were 3,900 ppb (EPA Ex.
    3);
    on
    January
    19,
    1970, SOD was 210
    ppm
    (EPA Ex.
    6); phenols were 11,000 ppb on
    February 2, 1970 (EPA Ex. 19) and 8000 ppb on February
    9,
    1970
    (EPA Ex.
    22).
    The reason for these excessive discharges was made
    clear by the company’s
    own testimony
    that the lagoons
    Sand
    irrigation
    field were seriously overloaded:
    Designed to cope with 10,000
    gpd of waste
    CE. 140), they were subjected to as much as 60,000
    CR. 128).
    Repeated discharges in excess of pórmit conditions were
    conceded CR. 140).
    The permit itself, therefore, required the
    company to install additional equipment.
    There was some testimony
    as
    to degraded stream conditions
    in Glade Creek itself (R. 30, 32), but the Agency
    made
    no serious
    effort to prove these conditions were attributable to Koppers,.
    and
    we cazinot find pollution of the stream itself, as contrasted
    with the discharge limits of
    the
    permit,
    on
    the
    present
    record.

    The Agency made no attempt to prove its charge that Koppers
    had created a pollution hazard by depositing contaminants on the
    ground, and indeed it withdrew this allegation at the close of
    its case
    (R.
    110—11),
    Koppers testified that it is working to reduce the volume
    of its effluent to an acceptable 10,000 gpd or less and to
    employ some chemical flocculation, both by June
    1 of 197?
    (R.
    129);
    that
    it plans to replace topsoil and plants washed from the
    irrigation field (estimated to take two months,
    fi.
    141) and
    remove sludge from the lagoons
    as soon as it can
    (H.
    137—38,
    141); and that
    it is negobiating for a grant
    to install
    an
    experimental activated sludge plant as well
    (H.
    134).
    We think
    the company should be ordered to adhere to its June dates and to
    supply the Board and the Agency, by June
    1, with a firm schedule
    for completing its field and lagoon improvements by no later than
    July
    1,
    1971.
    So far as we can determine from the record,
    these
    steps should bring Koppers into compliance
    (H.
    138);
    in any case
    compliance will be requi~redby July lof this year, and a
    $10,000 bond or other security required to assure performance.
    The final question is whether
    a money penalty should be
    assessed.
    The statute provided in 1969 and 1970 for penalties
    of $5000 plus $200 for each additional day for violation
    of either
    the
    statute or a “determination or order of the Board~” Smith—Hurd
    Ill.
    Ann.
    Stat.
    ch.
    19, ~ 145.13
    (Supp,
    1970), and the permit
    was an order of the Sanitary Water Board
    (id.,
    § l45~ll), Discharges
    in excess of the permit limits, however, were not in themselves
    a violation of the permit; the process was described in the
    permit as “experimental,” and the permit provided for the
    construction of additional facilities
    if
    consistently high discharges
    occurred.
    This implies that the company?s obligation was to
    sample its effluent and to take action as soon as
    it discovered
    that its existing facilities were inadequate.
    The facilities were
    built in 1967
    (H.
    121); high discharges were found by the Agency
    in late 1969 and early
    1970.
    Whether these were the first such
    discharges we do not know; we cannot therefore say the company
    should have taken corrective action in advance of those dates.
    It is clear, however, that the company knew or should have known
    no later than December, 1969 that additional facilities were
    required.
    But there was nothing in the Agency~scase to show
    that the company failed to take the necessary action with due
    dispatch.
    The burden was on the Agency
    to show this violation,
    and it introduced no evidence on the issue.
    The motion to dismiss
    the penalty request
    at the end of the complainant~scase is
    hereby granted.
    This
    we hold despite the fact that the respondent’s
    1
    581

    case showed the high discharges occurred not because of the failure
    of the experithent but because
    of
    a severe overload of the treat-
    ment facilities, which could not have been accidental.
    The
    Agency cannot rely on the respondent
    to prove its case.
    This opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact and
    conclusions of law,
    ORDER
    1.
    Koppers
    Co.
    shall reduce the effluent from its Carbondale
    plant to 10,000 gpd, and shall provide chemical flocculation
    as described in the record, all by June
    1,
    1971.
    2.
    Koppers
    Co.
    shall submit to the Board and to the Agency,
    by June 1, 1971,
    a report showing that the requirements of
    paragraph 1 of this order have been met and a firm schedule
    for replacing topsoil, replanting the irrigation field, and
    removing sludge from the lagoons at its Carbondale plant,
    all of which shall be accomplished
    by July
    1,
    1971.
    A final
    report shall be filed July
    1,
    1971.
    3.
    Koppers
    Co.
    shall bring
    its effluent into compliance with the
    Sanitary Water Board permit no later than July
    1, 1971.
    4.
    Koppers
    Co.
    shall post with the Agency,
    on or before June
    1,
    1971,
    a bond or other security in the amount of $10,000,
    which shall
    be
    forfeited
    to the State of IllinoIs
    in
    the
    event
    the conditions of
    this
    order are not met.
    I,
    Regina S.
    Ryan, Clerk of the
    Illinois
    Pollution
    Control
    Board,
    certify that the Board adopted the above opinion this
    12
    of May,
    1971.
    ~4.
    Mr. Dumelle will file a dissenting opinion.
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