ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
June
15,
1971
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
V.
)
PCB 70-49
KOPPERS COMPANY
Dissenting opinion
(by Mr. Dumelle)
I disagree with the 4-1 majority opinion in this case and feel that
a substantial fine,
as much
as $5,600.,
should have been levied upon
the Koppers
Company.
On the record the Koppers Company would have known of
its high dis—
charges of phenol at the latest after the December
9, 1969 sampling
of 3,900 parts
per billion
(ppb)
which
is 19.5 times the
permit level
of 200 ppb.
Yet on Janpary
19,
1970 a discharge of
210 ppm
(1050
times
the permit
:Level) was recorded followed by an 11,000 ppb dis-
charge
(55 times the permit
level)
on February
2,
1970
and 8,000 ppb
(40 times the permit level)
on February
9,
1970,
The majority
in
this case relies upon the last sentence in its opinion,
~The Agency cannot rely upon the respondent to prove its case~and
has proceeded to verbally spank
the
Agency for a weak prosecution of
the case.
There is an obligation in this case which rests upon Koppers which
was not met and which deserves a fine to be assessed.
Koppers had an
obligation which the majority states “...to sample its effluent and
to take action as soon as it discovered that its existing facilities
were inadequate.~
I find it significant that Koppers
did. not introduce
any effluent data
into
the record.
Perhaps the Agency should
have
requested these effluent records if only to show their evident absence.
An ~experimental faci1ity~must by definition be monitored.
How else
is one to know if the “experimentt’
is
working?
This Koppers did not
do.
The usual argument of lack of technical competence
cannot be used
here as
a defense by Koppers.
Koppers is a great national corporation;
the Nay
1971
issue of FORTUNE lists
it
as the 209th largest
in
the
United States with annual sales of $532,841,000 and
with
15,490
employes.
it certainly had the
technical
competence to monitor
its
Hexperimentalu permit..
And it had an obligation,
as a major partici-
pant
in
the free enterprise system,
not
to
inflict
its wastes upon
the environment through deliverate overloading the waste treatment
facilities, which the majority concedes was done.
If we may paraphrase
a late President of
the
United States,
“The business of America is not
business
-
it
is
the protection of the
public
interest.”
I
—
583
One last argument can be made that we ought not to find Koppers
guilty on its own testimony.
But Koppers did testify and those
are the hazards of testimony under oath.
One can choose to remain
silent.
In the case of EPA v. C.E. Koons, PCB 71—30,
(June 9,
1971)
this Board by a 3-0 vote assessed a $100 fine upon a 77—year—old
man operating a sanitary landfill and the fine was based in part
upon the concession as to the violations
by the respondent.
In this case, a multi—million dollar corporation has not. monitored
when under obligation to do
so; has discharged phenols,
a toxic
chemical, at concentrations up to 1,050 times its permit level;
and has admitted overloading its waste treatment facility by 500
(60,000 gallons per day compared to a design rate of 10,000 gallons
per day).
These transgressions should have been punished with a
$5,000.
fine for violating the Act and $200 for each of the three
excessive effluents recorded after the December 9,
1969 incident,
for a total of $5,600.
3accb D. Dumelle
1-5$4