ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    August
    9,
    1990
    CITY OF BATAVIA,
    )
    Petitioner,
    v.
    )
    PCB 89—183
    (Variance)
    ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
    PROTECTION AGENCY,
    Respondent.
    DISSENTING OPINION
    (by J.
    D.
    Dumelle):
    This case deals with radium-laden drinking water.
    If, as
    most scientists believe, a carcinogen has no threshold, then at
    the Batavia levels of radium some cancer will be induced.
    Will
    it be head cancer?
    Will
    it be bone cancer?
    Will
    it be
    leukemia?
    Anyone drinking Batavia water
    is at
    risk.
    The
    risk to the residents drinking the water from Wells Nos.
    2 and
    3 at
    21 pCi/i is about l—in—3,400 over a lifetime.
    This
    is
    294 times the usual accepted risk of
    l—in—1,000,000 over
    a
    lifetime for most other carcinogens.
    Had the Board not overruled IEPA and had it denied instead
    of granted the variance then additional persons would not be
    placed at
    risk.
    In addition
    to these health concerns,
    the holding
    in this
    proceeding
    is procedurally defective.
    If
    ever a case existed
    which screams self—imposed hardship,
    it
    is the one at
    bar.
    Further, for
    the Board
    to find that Batavia has satisfied Section
    36(b) of the Act
    in that it has progressed satisfactorily towards
    compliance
    is
    in direct contravention of the evidence,
    irrespective of how the language was couched as an “extremely
    close call”.
    Since Batavia procured its original variance more than give
    years ago (April
    4,
    1985),
    the municipality has done little,
    to
    bring
    itself
    into timely compliance.
    In accordance
    with its
    original
    variance, Batavia was supposed to drill several
    new
    wells,
    construct new treatment, storage and distribution
    facilities,
    secure professional assistance
    in regards
    to
    preparation of plans and improvements, advertise for
    bids and
    complete construction by January
    1,
    1990.
    The majority opinion
    found that “Batavia has not complied with any of
    these
    conditions”
    (Opinion and Order,
    pg.
    3).
    114—33

    —2—
    Batavia’s sole reason
    for disregarding
    these interim
    deadlines remains
    that
    it has been
    “unable
    to obtain the property
    necessary
    for
    the new wells and treatment
    facilities”.
    This
    proposition
    is
    so lame that
    it should be dismissed on its face.
    Batavia
    is
    a municipality and,
    as
    such,
    possesses the power
    Lo
    condemn property via eminent domain.
    Batavia
    has provided
    no
    proof
    to
    this Board
    that
    it
    initiated condemnation proceedings in
    1985—1988,
    yet
    the Board has now found
    that
    the municipality has
    “progressed satisfactorily”.
    Indeed,
    the evidence indicates that
    Batavia did not initiate condemnation proceedings until July of
    1989.
    The
    real reason that Batavia has not complied with ~
    of
    its responsibilities
    in
    a timely fashion
    is because
    it has been
    stalling.
    As evidenced by
    its Amended Petition,
    Batavia does not
    want nor does
    it understand why it has
    to allocate funds
    to
    reduce cancer-causing radioactive elements
    from its water supply
    in that the federal standards ~y
    be
    relaxed in 1992.
    Not only
    is the City relying upon speculation,
    but
    it disregarded this
    Board’s
    1985 variance order
    based upon
    that speculation.
    For the
    Board to turn around and ratify this transparent strategy
    is
    disappointing.
    Is
    a Board variance order
    a mere “paper
    tiger”?
    Equally disturbing
    is
    the fact
    that the Board found
    that
    Batavia complied with Section
    36(b)
    of the Act because
    the
    necessary property
    “has
    finally been obtained’.
    Not only did
    it
    take the City five and half years
    to do so, but any property
    obtained by Batavia can be
    just
    as easily sold
    in the future.
    This
    is merely
    a
    last—ditch effort
    to appease
    the Board while
    delaying compliance.
    For the Board
    to be
    “particularly
    persuaded’
    by this reluctant
    and late action
    is
    to ignore the
    vast array of other, more profound evidence
    to the contrary.
    Finally,
    in
    the “Hardship” section of
    the Opinion and Order,
    the Board discusses Batavia’s plight as well as
    the Agency’s
    recommendation
    to deny
    the City’s application, but makes no
    finding
    there.
    Pursuant
    to Section
    36(a)
    of
    the Act,
    Batavia
    must prove and the Board must find
    that
    the City will suffer an
    unreasonable
    or arbitrary hardship should
    its variance petition
    be denied.
    In support thereof, Batavia lists several residential
    and commercial developments which have already
    been approved by
    the city
    as well
    as several other ~rojects,
    includina
    a new
    junior high school.
    There
    is
    no auestion
    that Batavia knew of
    these projects and their
    impact
    to the community.
    The question
    then becomes:
    why did the City blow its deadlines and ignore the
    conditions imposed upon them?
    Furtner, why did
    it not
    inform the
    Board of
    the alleged impediments preventing compliance?
    The answer
    is simple
    in
    that the City was hopinc
    that
    the
    federal standards would be
    relaxed.
    There were no uncontrollable
    circumstances
    or
    other
    locistical proolems which stood between
    Batavia
    and
    compliance.
    There
    is
    therefore,
    nothing
    unreasonabLe

    —3—
    or arbitrary about denying Batavia another variance
    (See Village
    of Braidwood v.
    IEPA,
    PCB 89-212, June
    21,
    1990).
    Batavia knew
    what
    it had to do but chose not
    to.
    For
    the Board to ratify this
    behavior
    is not only bad policy, but legally incorrect.
    Moreover,
    the precedent is extremely shaky.
    Will the Board,
    in
    further proceedings, grant variances from public health, cancer—
    preventing regulations because a municipality merely alleges
    that
    within the course of more than five full years,
    it was unable to
    obtain the necessary property?
    I sincerely hope not.
    And as
    such,
    I would urge the majority to re-evaluate its reasoning
    should a motion
    to reconsider
    be filed by IEPA.
    For the reasons contained herein,
    I would have denied
    Batavia’s petition for
    a variance extension on the basis
    that its
    actions extended a cancer hazard and constitute
    a self—imposed
    hardship.
    In the alternative,
    I would hold that Batavia did not
    fulfill
    the requirements of Section 36(b).
    Accordingly,
    I
    dissent.
    ~
    acob D.
    Dumelle
    oard Member
    I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby certify that the above Dissenting Opinion was
    submitted on the
    ~~~day
    of
    ~
    ,
    1990.
    ~.
    Dorothy M. G~n,
    Clerk
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    114—35

    Back to top