ILLINOIS
    POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    February 17,
    1977
    EAST ST. LOUIS AND INTERURBAN WATER
    COMPANY,
    Petitioners,
    v.
    )
    PCB 76—297
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
    Respondent.
    and
    -
    ALTON WATER COMPANY,
    )
    Pet
    loner,
    v.
    )
    PCB 76—298
    (Consolidated)
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
    Res~ndent,
    Mr.
    Eugene Bernstein of Isham, Lincoln
    & Beale, appeared on behalf
    of Petitioners;
    Ms. Barbara Sidler and Mr.
    Stephen W.
    Gunning, appeared on behalf
    of Respondent.
    OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (by Mr. Goodman):
    On November 12,
    1976,
    Petitioners East St. Louis and Interurban
    Water Company
    (Interurban)
    and Alton Water Company
    (Alton)
    each
    filed before the Pollution Control Board a Petition for Review of
    Denial of an Operating Permit.
    Interurban’s petition appealed the
    Environmental Protection Agency’s
    (Agency) denial of an operating
    permit for discharges
    to the Mississippi River from its water puri-
    fication plant in East
    St. Louis,
    St. Clair County,
    Illinois.
    Alton
    24
    801

    —2—
    appealed the Agency~s
    denial of an operating pc~rri~t
    r
    wate~ater
    discharges to the
    Mississippi
    Rivei
    frori
    its
    JaLc~r
    i101
    ion plant
    in Alton,
    Madison
    County,
    Illinois.
    The cas~
    ere
    c ~~niiatec. by
    the Board,
    and
    hearings were held in thesa mat
    rs o
    ~anuary
    4 and
    5,
    1977,
    in Alton
    and East St~Louis
    re$~cct
    imly~
    At the hearing,
    the parties
    subrri ~ted ar
    C
    t. ar~ tipuletior
    and several stipulation
    exhibits
    The s~io~
    ~a
    i
    r
    c3
    ca~es hat
    Alton is a public
    utility providing ptab~ew
    Le~
    t
    ~6,7OO cr~stomer~
    in Alton and Godfrey,
    Illinois.
    At its water
    ~
    iai plant which
    is the subject of this
    proceeding, Alto
    ~it1
    ~
    er f~ ~t~e
    Mississippi River,
    purifies the raw rive
    watsr
    f
    bli~c
    a
    mption
    and pumps the water
    to and through the Comna y
    a ~
    ft disrribu~
    ting water to the homes
    and businesses of Its cu’~ton~rs
    iton
    s plant
    houses a two-fold
    treatment
    systeir wh~
    ‘i
    both
    i
    a
    ard softens
    the water.
    Interurban provides a
    similar sEa ice
    0
    64
    ~-trca.
    in
    t
    e
    East St.
    Louis
    area,
    The
    Interurban piart
    nyc. ed
    Eifl
    performs
    essentially the same function
    as the ~lt
    r plarL
    ~
    ~.
    t tiat it
    clarifies but does not
    soften the water
    On April l~,
    1974,
    both
    Petitioner~
    r g a
    b~u.
    ~.
    appli-
    cations for an operating
    permit
    tc
    cove
    i,
    a
    to
    t
    e
    M1t~s~3~1P1
    River.
    Subsequent
    to several resuai~trln, t
    a
    i.
    ~tior
    crc
    finally denied by
    the
    Agency on March
    19
    19~ be
    a
    the ~o~certra
    tions of total suspended
    solids
    (TSS)
    diac ~atg
    Ct
    art
    exceeded the limits
    of Rule 408 of the Board~s
    W~t~ri
    La
    lutia
    R’~gu~
    lations
    (Chapter
    3 of
    the Board~sRules
    arc REaulatioi~.
    The uncontroverted
    eiidence indica es tia~
    t1~
    co~centrat1oL of
    TSS in Petitioners~
    effluent does
    excoed. tIe
    R
    o
    40
    lim~tations~
    However,
    the evidence also
    indicates
    that the amourt,
    rather than
    concentration, of TSS that
    Petitioners discharge Ts significantly
    less than the amount of TSS
    in the water they ~rithdrawfrom the
    Mississippi River.
    Therefore, Petitioners contend tlat the Rule
    401(b)
    exception
    to the
    numerical effluent stirdards for concentra-
    tions caused by influent
    contamination should apply
    to them.
    Rule
    401(b)
    of Chapter
    3 reads:
    (b)
    Background
    Concentrations.
    Because the effluent
    standards in this Part are based
    upon concentrations
    achievable with convertiona
    ~reat-
    ment technology that
    is largely unaffectod by or~inary
    levels of contaminants
    in intake water,
    they are
    abso-
    lute standards that
    must be met vittout subtracting
    24
    802

    —3—
    background concentrations.
    However,
    it is not the in-
    tent of these
    regulations to require
    users
    to clean up
    contamination caused esse~.iallyby
    upstream sources or
    to require treatment
    whcr.i
    only traces of contaminants
    are added
    to the
    background.
    Compliance with the numerical
    effluent standards is therefore not
    required when effluent
    concentrations
    in excess of the
    standards result entirely
    from influent contamination,
    evaporation, and/or
    the
    incidental addition of
    traces of materials not utilized
    or produced in the activity that
    is the source of the
    waste.
    The
    Board,
    however,
    finds
    no merit
    to Petitioners~contention.
    Rule 401(b)
    clearly exempts
    effluent concentrations which are
    a
    result
    of influent
    contamination.
    In the present
    case, Petitioners deliber-
    ately
    concentrate the suspended
    solids
    in their effluent by removing
    the water.
    For example,
    in Exhibit
    3 of Joint Exhibit A Alton reports
    an
    ~Teraga
    of 68 mg/l of
    suspended
    solids
    in its influent for March
    ~
    1974,
    and. an average
    concentration in its discharge of 11,060
    mg/l.
    The
    Board
    finds
    that
    the
    concentration of suspended solids in
    Peitioners’
    effluent
    is not a result of either
    influent contamination,
    evaporatior:: or
    the
    addit~nnof
    trace amounts
    of materials and that
    Rule
    401(b) did~notinte~
    to exempt effluents in which contaminants
    were deliberately concent~
    ed.
    Therefore,
    Rule 401(b)
    does not apply.
    Furthermore,
    the Board notes that
    401(b)
    refers to “users” of
    water.
    However,
    in the
    pres~nt
    case Petitioners do not “use” waters,
    as, for example,
    would. a fac~1ity
    which uses water for cooling
    purposes and then discharges
    it.
    Petitioners’
    herein are consumers
    of the water; the water itsef
    is the commodity which they market.
    The Board finds that the e~ception
    granted in Rule 401(b) was not
    in-
    tended to apply in this t1pe of
    situation.
    At the hearing, Petitioners
    focused on questions of economic
    reasonableness and technical feasibility of complying with the Rule
    408 limitation.
    Such questions are relevant to a variance petition
    or to
    a regulatory proposal, but are not relevant to a permit appeal.
    Having found that the
    Rule 401(b) exception to the effluent
    limitations does not
    apply to Petitioners’
    discharges, the Board
    finds that the Agency properly denied Petitioners’ applications
    for operating permits.
    Petitioners’ permit appeals are, therefore,
    dismissed.
    This Opinion constitutes the finding of facts and conclusions
    of
    law of
    the Board in this
    matter.
    24
    803

    7:
    ..
    ~L~a
    o~ oncral Board that the
    ~iffli
    ‘~
    ~
    ~
    and. Alton on November 12
    ~)76,
    ~ni a:e
    .
    I
    ~...hiis
    b1cr~c~.fthe Illinois
    Pollution Control
    Board, beaeby
    .a~ :~
    ~
    ..
    i.
    dpinion and Order were
    adopted on the
    a:
    1977
    by a vote
    of~/..-C
    ~stanL.Moffe,~lerk
    Illinois
    Pollution
    Control Board

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