ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    February 28,
    1991
    CITY OF BATAVIA,
    )
    Petitioner,
    v.
    )
    PCB 89—183
    (Variance)
    ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
    )
    PROTECTION AGENCY,
    )
    Respondent.
    DISSENTING OPINION
    (by R.C. Flemal):
    I respectively dissent from today’s Order in which the
    majority denies the City of Batavia’s
    (“Batavia”) Motion to Amend
    Board Order.
    I find the arguments of Batavia and the supporting arguments
    of the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency to have merit,
    and accordingly believe that the relief requested by Batavia
    should be granted.
    Moreover,
    I am troubled by the very matter of variance from
    Restricted Status related to radium in drinking water.
    Indeed,
    this matter remains one of the most persistently vexing problems
    faced by the Board.
    In part the problem has stemmed from
    uncertainty as to what the appropriate standard for radium in
    drinking water ought to be, compounded by major part by the long-
    standing failure of the United States Environmental Protection
    Agency
    (“tJSEPA”)
    to address the adequacy of the current radium
    standard.
    This has caused the various responsible agencies,
    including the USEPA itself, to regularly revise and amend their
    strategies for managing radium cases.
    Moreover, the rapid change
    in strategies has often caused the different agencies, including
    the USEPA,
    IEPA, and Board, to be at odds and to pursue different
    paths.
    In the last few short years alone we have seen USEPA
    revocation of variances from the radium standard, group
    variances,
    elimination of Restricted Status associated with
    radium, “enhanced enforcement”, protection via compliance orders,
    disappearance of enforcement,
    etc.,
    etc.
    So many themes have
    entered the fray in such short time that it is a wonder anyone is
    able to adjust to them all.
    As regards the instant matter,
    I think that the majority
    fails to recognize that again much has changed since the issuance
    of the original Opinion and Order in this matter,
    in August of
    last year.
    In particular,
    it is now on record. that the Deputy
    Administrator of the U.S. EPA himself recommends that the radium
    standard be 20 pCi/i
    for each of the two radium isotopes
    (see
    Motion Exhibit B).
    Batavia’s concentration is thus less than
    one-third the level advocated by the highest authorities within
    119—13

    —2—
    the USEPA.
    The Illinois General Assembly has also declared that
    the standard determined by the USEPA shall be the standard
    applicable in Illinois
    (see Section 17.6 of the Illinois
    Environmental Protection Act).
    Thus,
    at both the federal and
    State levels, the highest authorities are now on record as urging
    an substantial upward revision of the radium standard.
    Moreover,
    Batavia would apparently be in compliance with any such revised
    standard.
    Why,
    in the face of these circumstances, force Batavia to
    comply now with a standard that will be changed shortly,
    according to the overwhelming sense?
    Why is it not prudent to
    let the standard revision procedure proceed before demanding that
    Batavia incur what may well be unwarranted compliance costs?
    Why does the majority feel that Batavia’s feet need to be so held
    to the fire?
    I simply cannot find a reasonable answer to any of
    these questions.
    The situation would be different if Batavia’s circumstance
    constituted any remotely significant health risk.
    But it does
    not;
    I know of no responsible authority who believes that the
    concentrations encountered in Batavia’s water, over the short
    time involved in this variance request, constitute a significant
    health risk.
    I am also troubled by what has become of Illinois’
    Restricted Status provision in the context of the radium
    situation.
    I fear that Restricted Status’ purpose has been
    distorted.
    Moreover,
    I fear that in the process the Board has
    assumed for itself the uncomfortable role of enforcer, which role
    is of questionable legitimacy and compatibility with the Board’s
    primary adjudicatory charge.
    The origins of Restricted Status predate any Board
    regulation authorizing or requiring it
    (see R8l-6, September 2,
    1982,
    48 PCB 132).
    The Agency had initially adopted Restricted
    Status as an internal policy.
    The Board subsequently “saw that
    it was good” and adopted it as a Board policy over the objection
    of the Agency.
    The Board position was that,
    if the Agency was to
    employ a Restricted Status program,
    it had to have authorization
    of the Board so as to provide a legal basis for the program.
    What is interesting is that in none of the Opinions in R8l-
    6 is there any apparent specification of the purposes to which
    Restricted Status is now being applied1.
    Rather, the reason
    given is “to forewarn supplies of their deficiencies”
    (48 PCB
    I.e.:
    (a) limiting the expansion of systems where such
    expansion would reasonably lead to unacceptable performance of
    part or all of the system,
    (b)
    limiting the duration of exposure
    or number of people exposed to a contaminant where the
    contaminant is injurious to health,
    (c) providing incentive to
    correct a problem beyond the incentive provided by the threat of
    enforcement.
    119—14

    —3—
    132) and to notify “the supplies and persons serviced of the
    potential inadequacies and violations of the supplies”
    (48 PCB
    133).
    Even now the Agency’s Restricted Status list begins with
    the statement:
    The Restricted Status List was developed ~
    give
    additional notification to officials of public water
    supplies which are in violation of 35 Ill. Adm.
    Code,
    Subtitle F:
    Public Water Supplies, Chapter
    I or the
    Illinois Environmental Protection Act.
    The original purpose of Restricted Status thus seemingly was
    to provide a notification mechanism; there
    is no indication that
    it was intended to serve as a punitive mechanism or even as a
    mechanism to limit public injury.
    Again,
    interestingly,
    it would
    appear that, as originally conceived,
    Restricted Status was not
    even considered to have economic consequences:
    DENR issued a
    Declaration of Negative Impact
    (48 PCB 129)!
    As applied to Batavia, however,
    it is certainly the
    enforcement aspect of Restricted Status which is at the
    forefront.
    There has been no evidenced desire on the part of the
    USEPA,
    the IEPA, or anyone to enforce against violations of the
    current radium standard, be it against Batavia or any other
    community.
    In this vacuum, the Board has become the sole
    “enforcer” of the radium standard, and then only via the indirect
    route of Restricted Status.
    In essence, the Board is telling
    Batavia that unless
    it makes a binding commitment to come into
    compliance with the radium standard we refuse to lift Restricted
    Status
    (i.e., we extract the penalty of putting them on economic
    hold).
    This is an uncomfortable role for me as a Board Member,
    and
    I would hope also for my fellow Board Members;
    the Board is
    not an enforcement agency.
    Moreover,
    I would question that our application of
    Restricted Status,
    as a penalty,
    is directed toward the right
    person.
    Is it not the new homeowner, business person, developer,
    etc.,
    who finds that public services are denied, who is being
    penalized?
    It must be small consolation to such individuals to
    learn that to receive services they need only get the local
    utility or public works department to “shape up”.
    In the
    particularly context of radium Restricted Status,
    it is,
    of
    course, questionable whether any “shaping up”
    is necessary or
    even desirable.
    If it were for me to decide,
    I would adopt the following
    course of action as regards Batavia:
    (1) give Batavia full
    variance from radium/Restricted Status;
    (2) condition the
    variance to terminate at a given time following USEPA
    promulgation of the new radium standards, with such time being
    sufficient to allow coming into compliance with the post-
    promulgation standards,
    if that in fact remains necessary;
    (3)
    in
    the time between grant of variance and USEPA promulgation require
    Batavia to take steps such that it will be in a position to
    effectuate compliance shortly after USEPA promulgation.
    119—15

    —4—
    I believe that this is the justifiable course of action.
    Moreover,
    it has the satisfying aspect of giving honest
    recognition to the service needs of the citizens of Batavia, to
    the need of the authorities of Batavia to responsibly serve their
    citizens, to our best understanding of the health risks
    associated with Batavia’s water supply, and to current dynamics
    affecting the underlying radium
    rd.
    ~.
    I~ônald’C.Flemal
    Board Member
    I, Dorothy M.
    Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board,
    hereby certif~,,~atthe above Di senting Opinion was
    submitted on the
    ~‘J~~
    day of
    ___________________,
    1991.
    Dorothy M.~unn,Clerk
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    119—16

    Back to top