ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
January
T30,
1973
ARMAX
COMPANY
v.
)
#72—414
72—415
(Consolidated)
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
Steven C.
Bonaguidi, Assistant Attorney General,
on behalf of
Environmental Protection Agency
Leo Wykell and Lawrence Gunnels of Kirkland
& Ellis
on behalf
of Respondent
Opinion and Order of the Board
(by Mr. Lawton):
On October 19,
1972,
the Board received two petitions for
variance from Petitioner relating to the dates by which operating
permit applications were to be filed and approved permits received
for itts McCook and Carpentersville facilities.
Specifically, Chapter
2, Rule 103
(b) (2) (A) of the Rules
and Regulations of the Illinois Pollution Control Board provided
that chemical and allied products industries were required to
obtain approved operating permits by December
1,
1972, which date
was later amended
to January
1,
1973.
Chapter
2,
Rule 103(b) (2) (B)
provided that all requests for such operating permits were to have
been filed with the
Environmental Protection Agency
(“Agency”)
at least ninety days prior thereto, October
1,
1972.
Petitioner
manufactures fatty acids and derivatives at both its McCook and
Carpentersville facilities and requested extensions of the dates
by which applications for operating permits were to have been
submitted:
from October
1,
1972 to April
1,
1973 for McCook;
and from October
1,
1972 to February 1,
1973 for Carpentersvilre.
The variance request presumably also incorporates
a similar request
for extension of the date by which said permits were to have been
obtained as well.
With reference to the McCook site, Petitioner avers that
in order to provide the necessary technical and performance data
required in the permit application, complex efficiency tests on
existing emission control devices would have to be run, and
that a contract had already been granted for that purpose.
This
procedure would not, according to Petitioner, be completed until
at least February,
1973,
and since process flowsheets and other
materials would then have to be updated, permission to submit
permit application forms by April
1,
1973 was requested.
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661
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With reference to the Carpentersville site,
Petitioner point-
ed out that as a result of an ambient air odor study conducted
there by the Illinois Institute of Technology Research Institute,
an engineering firm had been retained to study Armak’s portion of
the problem in the area and to recommend solutions.
And similar
problems relating to updating process flow sheets and the like
at Carpentersville,
as at McCook, according to Petitioner, led to
their request to be allowed until February 1,
1973 to submit their
operating permit application.
The Agency recommended on 1)ecember 13, 1972 that the two
requests be denied because Petitioner is not devoting adequate
time or manpower to the completion
of permit applications and that
Petitioner unreasonably delayed the time for commencing permit
application preparation at its facilities.
The general facts re-
lating to the requests were set out by Stipulation of Fact sub-
mitted to the Board on December 21,
1972 and the stipulation
indicated that the necessary operating permit application forms
and
instruction
sheets
•were
not
received
by
Petitioner
until
August
12,
1972.
A
hearing
on
the
requests
was
held
in
Chicago
on December 16,
1972,
after the stipulation had been entered into
but before it had been received by the Board, and Petitioner’s
Manager
df
Environmental Control in its manufacturing division
reiterated the fact that Petitioner had not received the necessary
forms and instructional material until August 12
(R,
9-10).
Petitioner maintained that it had assigned 2 1/2 men working
full-time to collect the necessary data
(R,
8)
that assignment of
other qualified personnel in the company to work on the project
might have delayed the opening of its new Morris plant
(R.
9),
and that while it might have been possible to hire new people to
help accumulate the necessary data,
it would not have substantially
accelerated the program since the new people would have had to
become acclimatized to and familiar with company policies and
procedures before becoming truly effective workers
(R.
10,
17,
29).
Petitioner employs about 350 people at McCook and about
30 at Carpentersville
(R. 16-17).
Furthermore,
Petitioner’s
representative insisted that they were engaged in programs designed
to abate emissions from its facilities and that,
“we didn’t feel,
and don’t feel,
that the submission of these operating permit
applications will have any effect on that program, which is already
ictive.
So
we
felt
that there would be no harmful effect on the
public
“(IL
12).
Such
simplistic
reasoning
totally
disregards
the fundamental design underlying adoption of the statewide air
permit program, ai~dwere we to accept this argument, we would be,
in effect, repealing the deadline dates established in the re-
gulations for submission
of applications and for possession of
approved permits~. Those dates were included in the permit provisions
only after careful consideration and for a very definite purpose;
we are not inclined to alter them except where extraordinary or
exceptional conditions of hardship exist.
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662
We find it difficult to understand how Petitioner’s abatement
programs would be seriously disrupted were several of the approximately
380 people employed at the two facilities
reassigned to work on the
permit project, especially
in view of the fact that the State has
indicated that
it considers the permit program to be an important ele-
ment of an overall program to combat pollution in Illinois,
and not
just a technical exercise.
Furthermore, we are not persuaded that a
good deal of time would not be saved by hiring additional help to work
on this project, since much of the work would appear to be of a clerical
and administrative nature.
And lastly, we are not convinced that the
time allowed is insufficient, even in the complete absence of any
new or reassigned personnel to assist in preparing the permit applica—
tion, provided that the proper priority is afforded to this project.
The permit requirements are an absolutely essential part of the
State’s air pollution control program; viewing them as loose or
avoidable technicalities can lead to a breakdown in the entire program
and it is therefore our opinion that the dates for submission of permit
applications and for
the
possession
of
approved
permits
should
not be
extended
or relaxed except in the most unusual or extraordinary cir-
cumstances.
And where such extensions
are not granted,
and compliance
with the requirements by the deadline dates cannot be had, further
action in the nature of an enforcement proceeding brought for a vio—
lation of the Board’s regulations,
is a distinct possibility since deniaa
of a variance (or refusal to relax the deadline dates)
in cases of this
sort is also a denial to the Petitioner of
a shield from prosecution;
the Agency, or anyone else, may pursue this matter as they see fit.
All contentions made by petitioner
to justify
a variance could be
asserted by way of defense in such a proceeding.
In vie~of the above consider~fions, the variances requested
herein are hereby denied.
Mr. Henss votes in favor of tne Order but disagrees with the
Opinion and will file a separate concurring Opinion.
I, Christan Moffett, Clerk of the Pollution Control Board, ,pertify
that the Board adopted the above Opinion and Order this Qb
“day
of
________________,
1973, by a vote of
,a
to
c
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663