ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
October
20,
1988
VILLAGE OF LAKE VILLA,
Petitioner,
v..
)
PCB 88—37
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent..
MR..
JOHN
M..
MULLEN APPEARED ON BEHALF OF PETITIONER;
MR.. JOSE
L..
GONZALEZ,
JR..., APPEARED ON BEHALF OF RESPONDENT..
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by
R..
C..
Fleinal):
This matter
comes before the Board upon filings
by the
Village of Lake Villa (“Lake Villa”)
of
a Petition for Variance
on February 19,
1988 and of Amended Petitions
for Variance on
March 15,
1988 and June
30,
l988
Lake Villa
seeks variance from 35
Ill..
Adm..
Code
312..lol to
allow
it
to operate
its wastewater treatment plant
(“WWTP”) with
a Class
3 operator for the time such operator
is engaged
in
upgrading his certification
to the required Class
2;
the
requested term of the variance
is
to February
1,
1990..
For the reasons cited below, the Board denies Lake Villa’s
request..
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (“Agency”)
filed
its Recommendation
in this matter
on May 4,
1988..
The
Agency recommends denial, contending that Lake Villa has failed
to demonstrate arbitrary or unreasonable hardship,
that
financial
considerations are minimal,
and that there are significant
environmental factors
(R..
at
7)..
Hearing was held August 26,
1988
at the Lake Villa Village
Hall..
Lake Villa submitted 14 exhibits
(“Pet..
Exh..”)
and the
Agency submitted
20 exhibits
(“Agency
Exh..”)~..
Members of the
public attended
the hearing..
Subsequent
to hearing the Hearing Officer established
a
schedule providing
for simultaneous filing of briefs on or
before
93—209
—2—
September
15, 1988,
a schedule which was premised
on the belief
that the hearing transcript would be available
to the parties
prior
to that date..
The parties duly filed
their briefs,
not
withstanding
the fact that the transcript was not delivered
to
the Board
until September
19,
1988..
Accordingly,
the
Board on
September 22,
1988 on its own motion granted the parties
leave
to
supplement
or amend
their briefs
by September
30,
1988..
Lake
Villa
filed an amended brief
(“Pet.. Brief”)
on that
date..
BAC
KGROUND
Lake
Villa
is
a Illinois Municipal Corporation located
in
Lake County,
Illinois,
along the shores of Deep Lake and Cedar
Lake..
Its population
is 2,396 according
to
a 1987 special census
(R.
at
40)..
Among
other facilities,
Lake Villa owns and operates
a
WWTP
which uses an activated sludge system and has a design average
flow of
0..3 million gallons per
day..
Discharge
is
to Eagle
Creek..
Eagle Creek flows into
a marsh which at times
is
connected
to Long Lake which drains into Squaw Creek
and thence
Fox Lake
(Agency
Exh..
15 at
2)..
Pursuant
to
35
Ill..
Adm..
Code Part
309,
the
WWTP
is
required
to and does hold
an NPDES permit,
#IL0021342..
All NPDES--perrnitted treatment works
are required to
be under
the direct supervision of
a certified operator, pursuant
to
35
Ill..
Adm..
Code 312..l0l:
No person shall cause
or allow the use
or operation of
any treatment works
for which
a permit
is required by
Part
309 unless the operation of
such treatment works
is under the direct and active
field supervision of
a
person who has been certified by the Agency as being
competent to operate
the particular type
or size of
treatment works being
used or
operated..
Lake Villa’s WWTP
is
classified
as
a Group
2 facility
pursuant
to
35
Ill..
Adm..
Code 38040l(a)(2)..
Group
2 facilities
require
an operator certified
at Class
2
or higher..
Lake Villa’s
current1WWTp operator,
Mr..
Kevin Hinderliter,
is certified
at
Class
3
..
As of time
of hearing,
Mr..
Hinderliter lacked
25
months
of the 72 months
of experience needed
to qualify
for
the
Class
2 examination
(R..
at
199)..
However,
Mr.. Hinderliter has
1
In addition to operation
of the
WWTP,
Mr.. Hinderliter also
is
operator of Lake Villa’s public water supply system,
for which he
possesses proper certification
(R..
at
62,
119)..
93—2 10
—3--
completed accredited courses
at the College of Lake County and
is
enrolled
in others which, when completed, would allow him to sit
for the Class
2 examination as early as December
1989
CR..
at
199)..
Lake Villa believes that the higher—level certification
can thus reasonably be expected
to be achieved by January,
1990..
Prior
to September 1988 Lake Villa achieved compliance wi~h
the certification requirement by contracting
for
the part—time
services and supervision of a certified Class
1 operator,
Mr..
Robert Krause..
However, on August 26, 1988
Mr.. Krause served
notice of termination of the contract effective September
24,
1988
(Pet..
Exh..
11)..
Lake Villa now wishes to be able to
continue solely with the services of
Mr.. Hinderliter..
The
requested term of variance
is for the time period prior
to the
anticipated attainment of Class
2 certification by
Mr..
Hinderl iter..
Lake Villa’s
WWTP
has experienced and continues
to
experience various problems..
On December
16,
1986 the Agency
placed the Lake Villa
WWTP
on its critical review list because
the facility was approaching design capacity..
On the same day
the Agency placed
a section of
the Lake Villa sanitary sewer
system on restricted status because
it had experienced sewer
backups and bypasses
to Deep Lake..
On July
1,
1987 the
WWTP
itself was placed on restricted status after
the Agency
determined that the waste load exceeded the plant’s design
capacity
(Agency
Exh..
15).
The WWTP remains on restricted status
(R..
at 216)
due to hydraulic overloading
CR.. at 150,
167,
267)
which produces, among other matters, occasional washout of media,
sewer backups,
and overflow of
raw sewage
(R..
at
267—9)..
The
Agency estimates that wet weather flows
to the Lake Villa WWTP
exceed design average flow by
a factor of five or more
(R.. at
269)..
The Agency also notes
that during
a compliance survey
conducted on January
6,
1987, which was prior
to
the employment
of
Mr.. Hinderliter,
it “found numerous operational problems at
the Lake Villa plant involving self—monitoring,
record keeping,
sludge disposal, plant obsolescence, storage lagoons,
excessive
flow and infiltration of water
into the collection system
(Agency
Exhibit No..
18)”
(Agency Brief
at par..
9)..
The Agency again
2 The Agency points out that
it
is not unusual for
a facility to
comply with the Section
312.101 requirements by employing
a part—
time contractual certified operator who supervises a full—time
operator who is not certified
(R..
at
200)..
Section 3l2..lol does
not
in fact require that the properly certified operator be
a
full—time
employee..
The Agency cites 49
facilities ~qhich
currently comply with 312.101 by use of
a contract operator
(R..
at
200; Agency Exh. 6).
93—211
—4—
conducted
a compliance survey on August
2,
1988
(Agency
Exh..
19),
which was during
Mr.. Hinderliter’s
tenure..
While the Agency
agrees
that the second survey showed that operation and
maintenance
of the Lake Villa WWTP had improved and that better
and more consistent process control
testing was being performed
(P~gencyBrief
at
par..
7), problems still exist.
These include:
1)
difficulty with nitrification;
2)
stockpiling of dried sludge
on site, which could
cause a run—off problem;
3)
plant
obsolescence; and 4)
hydraulic overloading
(Agency
Exh..
19)..
While
it
is admitted that many of the problems associated
with the Lake Villa
WWTP
are problems
of the system and are not
related
to the experience of the operator
(R
at 151, 275),
the
Agency contends that an appropriately experienced operator
is
more likely to be able
to respond
to system problems in
a manner
which mitigates their effect
(R
at
167, 169,
268—9)..
PRIOR ACTIONS
Both parties argue precedence of prior proceedings involving
variance
from wastewater treatment plant operator
certification..
While
the Board finds that much of
this argument
is irrelevant
in that each case before the Board involves
individual circumstances and
is judged on the merits of those
circumstances,
there
is nevertheless some value
in reviewing the
instant request
in the context of the implication that the Agency
has shown inconsistency in its dealings with Lake Villa.
Lake Villa contends that the circumstances it now faces are
similar to those it faced when it was granted variance, with
Agency support,
in a prior action before the Board (Village of
Lake Villa v.
IEPA, PCB 83—67,
53 PCB
17)..
In that case the
operator who preceeded Mr. Hinderliter also did not hold Class
2
certification, and the Board granted a variance for
171/2
months,
within which
the Class
2 certification was sought and obtained.
The Agency,
for its part, contends that it has supported
operator certification variances only where one or both of two
conditions occurs: hardship exists because of
a recent change
in
Board rules and/or classification status of a wastewater
treatment works
(i.e.., Village
of Ashton
V.
IEPA, PCB 80—135,
39
PCB 591; Village of Frankline Grove
v..
IEPA,
PCB 80—106,
39 PCB
167; Village of German Valley
v..
IEPA, PCB 82—75,
47 PCB 537)
or
a short
time is needed
for
the current operator
to obtain the
required certification
(i..e., Village of Herrin v.
TEPA, PCB 80—
145, 39 PCB 557; Village of Crossville v.
IEPA, PCB 81—156,
45
PCB 156; Village of Marion v.
IEPA,
PCB 81—169,
45 PCB
153;
Village of German Valley
v..
IEPA,
PCB 84—27,
58 PCB 469).
The
Agency further
contends that it has opposed variance requests
where these conditions have not been met
(i..e.., Village of
Stillman Valley
v
IEPA,
PCB 86—30,
70 PCB
24)..
The
Agency
93—212
—5—
further notes
that Lake Villa’s prior variance, unlike its
instant request, followed on the heels of a change
it-i
rules
(R.
at 205,
215).
The Agency further distinguishes Lake Villa’s
prior variance from its instant request on the basis of differing
financial hardship,
a greater length of on—scene experience of
the prior operator,
and that the Lake Villa WWTP was not on
restricted status at the time of the prior variance
(R.. at 205—
6).
CONCLUSION
The decision before the Board
is whether Lake Villa would
incur an arbitrary or unreasonable hardship in the absence of the
requested relief.
On the matter
of hardship, Lake Villa contends that it has
been unable to comply with the certification requirements of
Section 3l2..lOl due to circumstances beyond
its control
(Pet.
Brief at
11).
Lake Villa notes that when the vacancy
for
its
WWTP
operator arose,
it sought applications from properly
certified operators,
but that no such applications were
received..
Placed
in this position, Lake Villa contends that it
was
logical
to turn to Mr. Hinderliter, who was the most
qualified of
the available candidates
(R..
at
75),
who already
possessed the certification necessary
to operate Lake Villa’s
public water
supply,
and who had the evidenced desire
to obtain
the certification required for operation of the
WWTP
In spite
of the Agency’s implication that Lake Villa did not
conduct this search with sufficient diligence
(R. at 218—23),
the
the Board can find no reason
to conclude that Lake Villa pursued
other than a reasonable course of action
to this point,
given
both the application situation and Lake Villa’s need for
an
operator who could serve both the public water supply system and
the
WWTP,.
However,
this
is not
to conclude that the unavailability of
a full—time and fully certified operator
at the time of
Mr..
Hinderliter hiring constitutes an arbitrary or unreasonable
hardship
as the matter now stands.
Lake Villa has available the
option to comply with Section 312.101 by contracting
for the
services of
a properly certified operator on
a part—time basis,
as indeed
it had done
in its employment of Mr.
Krause..
The issue
of hardship
is therefore whether the continued employment of
a
operator
in this type of
limited capacity
is arbitrary or
unreasonable
-
Lake Villa does not contend that it would be
a hardship for
it
to locate
a replacement
for Mr. Krause.
The Agency,
in fact,
has submitted
a listing of
60 wastewater treatment plant
operators
resident in Lake County who have the certification
93—213
—6--
necessary
to operate the Lake Villa
WWTP
(R.
at
225; Agency Exh.
9
and 10), plus
a list of 337 more resident
in adjacent counties
who are also
so certified
(Agency Exh..
9 and 10).
It
is not
unreasonable to expect that among
these operators there is at
least one who would and could
fill Lake Villa’s needs
on terms
similar
to those under which Mr. Krause functioned.
This not withstanding, Lake Villa most recently contends
that it would cost approximately $22,000 per year to hire a
properly certified operator for its WWTP
(R..
at 153, 166; Pet.
Brief at
7—8)..
However,
this figure is apparently premised on
the hiring of
a full—time Class
2 operator, and
is clearly
in
discord with the costs
that Lake Villa has actually incurred
under
its contract with Mr.
Krause..
In that case,
Mr..
Krause was
paid
at a rate of $20/hour
(R. at 84).
For
the beginning of his
contract through July 31,
1988, he evidently worked a total of
76.5 hours
and accordingly received renumeration in the total
amount of $1,530
(R..
at
85).
Prorated over the period of
a full
year,
this amounts
to approximately $2,800 per year,
or $19,200
less than Lake Villa contends would be
its future
costs..
On the matter of environmental and public health,
the Board
notes
that,
in addition
to assuring smooth day—to—day operation,
a principal purpose of requiring an experienced wastewater
treatment plant operator
is
to provide the maximum likelihood
that the operator will
be able
to fully respond
in the face of an
emergency..
This ability is particularly essential where a
wastewater treatment plant
is beset by physical limitations which
enhance the probability that emergency actions will have to be
undertaken,
and where a wastewater treatment plant
is associated
with a particularly sensitive environment where the consequences
of an emergency action may be most acute.
Both of these elements
occur
in the instant matter.
Here the Lake Villa
WWTP
is
inarguably beset by extraordinary potential for system
overloading and
its attendant problems of both an environmental
and public health nature..
Moreover, there
is an apparent unusual
potential
for pollution of the adjacent sensitive lake
environments..
The Board therefore finds that environmental and
public health protection are necessarily served by the
availability to Lake Villa of
a properly certified wastewater
treatment plant operator.
In summary, while
the Board appreciates Lake Villa’s need
to
constrain unnecessary expenditures
in the face of demands on
limited resources,
the record simply does not support the
contention
that the cost to Lake Villa for
a call—as—needed,
properly—certified operator
is
incommensurate with
the potential
environmental and public health protection which such operator
would provide.
93—214
—7--
ORDER
The Village
of Lake Villa’s request
for variance from
35
Ill..
Adm.. Code 312.101
is hereby denied.
Section
41
of
the
Environmental
Protection
Act,
Ill.
Rev..
Stat..
1987
ch..
1111/2 par..
1041,
provides
for appeal of
final
Orders
of
the
Board
within
35
days..
The Rules
of
the Supreme
Court
of
Illinois
establish
filing
requirements..
IT
IS SO ORDERED.
I,
Dorothy M.
Gunn, Clerk
of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board,
hereby certify that the above Opinion and Order was
adopted
on
the
~
day of
~
,
1988, by
a
vote
of
1-ô
Illino
ution
Control
Board
93—215