ILLINOIS
POLLUTION
CO~TROL
BOARD
April
19, 1971
clip
CoR~’oa;’zION
)
)
v.
)
IPCB
71-~11
)
ENvIRON:~LNTALPROTECTION
AGENCY
)
)
Suppl emtmtal
statement
by
Samuel
It.
Aldrich,
Board
Member
Though
I
do
not
disagree
with
the
order,
I
am
disturbed
over
the
genera
toac
or
this
opinion.
It
is
more
harsh
than
is
justified
by
the
rc’cord.
Example!;:
“incredibly
di letory”
(Agency
language
supported
by
the
PCB
opin5on)
“fez:: ~,r
excunô
is
Lechie”
“exc•tls:
is
...
wholly
circular”
“go
cn
du..~ng ~ctst:es
indefinitely”
“incredib.~’
w:~3
nta~
ni:”
“gc’t
ofT
3
1’;
corpontte
backside”
“~Uti
1
sen ton::~.’s: wou3.d
appear
highly
appro~’riate”
“This
would
rcsut
in
lost
profits,
with
which
on
the
record
we
have
no
concern
t•’Iwtscover”
GM’
recited
a
list
of
22
dates
on
which
tentative
plans
were
filed,
changes
were
made
from
ono
engineering
consulting
firm
to
another,
delays
resulted
fron
lack
of
approval
for
lanc~usa
fro~i
the
1~c:tropolitan Sanitary
District,
&nd
finally
a
statement
w~tt;
received
from
thc
trmy
Corps
of
Engineers
March
22,
1971,
suggec.t—
Ing
that
GAP
should
wait
for
certain
federal
EPA
guicie)incs
that
would
he
available
“within
a
few
w~cJ:s”after
a
Wa&~ir.gton, 9.
C.
,
conference
scheclue1
for
SprIng
1971.
The
Board
opinic:a
lumps
nearly
all
of
thoce
activities
in
the
gencral
catcgory
oQ
dilatory
tactic~:.
I
do
not
doubt
th&v
Lad
CM’
ôcci~ed in
1967
precisely
what
course
it
would
pun4uc
it
could
have
accomplishod
bat)1
pri-
mary
and
seconria’~ytnatmctnt
by
this
date.
But
the
climate
wIth
respect
to
pollution
abatement
was,
unfortu-
nately,
totally
different
in
1967
than
it
is
now.
There
was
no
Environvrntal
Protect
3
on
Act.
Some
rules
and
regulations
were
only
guidelines
tckthcj
the
stcitu5:
of
1at~.
Agencies
administerinc;
the
applicable
regulations
at
that
tiute
had
a
different
.attituCe
as
evidenced
by
the
statement
of
C.
W.
Klr’ssen
Jtpril
10,
19/0.
in
which
the
Sanltnry
Uater
Poard
stated
that
GAP
“had
sho~•’ndili-
gence”.
The
Mayo?
of
Nattonn
(Jt)t
7~—B) stc.t~?dthe
prevailing
situation
quite
accurately
as
follows:
1 —495
PCI)
April 19, 1971
“There has been a change of policy in this state in my
opinion.
....I’m not criticizing the change of policy,
but I think now the State is saying you have to do this
when not too long ago they were much
more
willing to go
along with you on an extension of time and of the dead-
lines.”
The present high level of concern on the part of citizens, poli-
ticians, city officials, and industry simply did not exist in
1967.
Then was
no
established record of an aggressive Pollution
Control Board to alert GAP and other industries and municipalities
to
the
impending
impact
of
strict
enforccmont
under
new
agencies
and
enabling
legislation.
Furthermore, industries had little or no experience in many
pol l.ution
abatement
techno1~gies.
I
am
fully
aware
of
the
reality
of
a
law
even
though
it
is
custo—
mary
not to enforce it very diligently.
But understanding the
mood
of
the
times
is
helpful
in
placing
in
perspective
the
acti—
vitic!s
of
industries
and
municipalities
prior
to
July
1,
1970,
which
the
Board
now
repeatedly
describes
as
dilatory.
It
can
bce
arçjuncl
tin:
I.
the
use
of
abrasive
language
will
earn
more
headlines
in
the
:ncdh~, thus
alerting
industries,
municipalities
and
mdlvi—
ciu~s
to
the
ric;k
of
prosecution
and
perhaps
speeding
up
complLance
with
r~
lutton
laws.
In fly api
iii
on
there
is
a
high
cost
to
be
paid
for
that
course
of
action
for
a
small
gain
in
time
of
compliance.
It
gives
the
iwpres~ion of
a
vendetta
whereas
environmental
protection
and
iirprovcaicnt
can
and
should
be
more
in
the
nature
of
a
crusade.
It ma
igin; the integrity of corporate
executives
and
city
admini-
strators.
It discredits the free enterprise, capitalistic system
which
is r~omore guilty of indiscriminate pollution than systems
in other rarts of the world but is far more productive of human
wants.
Opinion language that unnecessarily antagonizes industries will,
if anything, make the work of
the
Board nore difficult
in
the
futuxe especially during the hearing process.
A specific area of the opinion with which
I disagree is paragraph
2, page 8.
It states that employees should, through the exercise
of bargaining power by their labor unions, bccome an aggressive
force to end pollutien by inc~ustrylest the factory be closed and
they be put out of work.
I believe that it is the responsibility
of corporate management,
not: labor, to manage the company.
In
the
reverse, labor would not
E~
rece~tiveof suggestions
from
manage-
mont
03)
how to ôonciuct affairs of
the
workers
though
the
corporation
will undoubtedly be affected by their activities.
1-s
PCB
7\pal
19,
197
Ohe
can
hardly
logical
I y
cirqu~
Lhat
L1~c in Lerec
c
of
the
wcr:crc;
and
of
manocemunt
arc
ciii fcc not.
wa
Ui
~cc~ect
to
pnntltc
~:i
~ii
ci
no:
sible
closure
of
the
factory.
I
also
disagree
wi
ti
a
fo11ow~rig
sucjoes Lion
in
Lhu
sac.c
p:
ieraUi
that
an
employee
who
loses
1
c
job
boc~ucc
of
p1 cut
c
cnu~ci
have
legal
remedies
cuinst
h: s
cop
opo:
.
rfl~
u
I
c~rici
civ
daub
e
or
triplc
jeopardy
to
the
oicc
oycr:
)
cocci
hi
a
1:o:i
-y
n
1
2)
loss
of
profits,
and
3)
legal
rc~icU
05
by
iii
ci
epL~
o~co
If,
as~the
opi ni
on
ci
Lotus
,
the
uni on
I
ci
no
L
e
itog
ino
I
icc cnnt”
then
in
the
interact
of
fairness
Liie
0):
in
en
5-iou
:1
cia
cc
po
that
the
mdi viduol
ci ~yloyee
ni ght
us:
I c:ja
rc
cc”
:~
his
union
leaders,
I
don
t
find
tlia
L
suggest
on
in
t1ie
a;
nion.
~1
/\
,.,
-
/
;/
//.
/
i
n
p
(
~
//
/
Samuel
P.
~l
O1~C~il,
Pco
‘Ta
~locn’i
~
1/
~‘,
/~
//
Date
I,
Fog
no
F.
Ityun,
C
erk
of
the
11
1110
o
Pa
I
I a
Cm
P
cc
certify
that
Dr.
Scuiual
F.
Piclrich
sub~Utt~c
~
oPec
1;’ciUU
~
P
staLomunt
on
day
of
197..
Reglini
P.
Clerk,
IlIiei
Poulicr
ConLichi
bc
I
—
497