ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
October 14, 1976
ARCH
DEVELOPMENT,
INC.,
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 76—168
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
Preston K. Johnson,
Sr., Attorney, appeared for the Petitioner;
Donald
S.
Means, Technical Advisor, appeared for the Respondent.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr.
Zeitlin):
The Petition in this matter was filed on June
1,
1976,
by
Arch Development,
Inc.
(Arch),
seeking relief from the development
permit requirement for solid waste management sites.
In an addendum
to
that
Petition,
filed on June
7,
1976,
Petitioner more clearly
specified
the
requested relief as being from Section 21(e)
of the
Environmental Protection Act
(Act)
and Rule 201 of Chapter
7: Solid
Waste, of this Boardts Rules and Regulations.
Ill.
Rev.
Stat.,
Ch,
111—1/2, §1021(e) (1975);
Ill. PCB Regs.,
Ch.
7,
Rule
201.
The
Environmental
Protection Agency
(Agency)
filed its Recommendation
on
July
22,
1976.
Pursuant to authorization by the Board
granted
June
3,
1976,
a hearing was held in Belleville,
St. Clair County,
Illinois, on August
19,
1976.
The subject of this Variance is a solid waste management site
in Centreville Township, Cahokia,
St. Clair County,
Illinois,
(R.
4).
The site, originally a borrow pit utilized in the construction of
a
levee, was purchased by Petitioner from the Alton
& Southern
1~L~iirodd or
~
(H.
4,’~)
.
Arch
pJ~iii~
Lo
III
in
(ho
11—dora
saucer—shaped
borrow
plt;
with
demolition
was
Las
rain
ha
razin~jat
lou
i ~
Pruitt
1
(jOO
~uhli
C
lloiis
iIl(j
Pro
JOCL
arid
s~Vora 1
1 a
hotels in
the
St. Louis metropolitan area;
after filliny,
the
area
is to be covered with dirt and used for farming purposes,
(R. 4-10)
Because the site is located
in the flood plain of the Mississippi
River,
the Agency has refused to issue development or operating
permits,
Under those circumstances, Petitioner
is requesting a
Variance from the permit requirements
to allow development,
operational filling,
and final closing of the site
(all within
approximately one year)
without the required permits.
The site in question has been before the Board previously,
in
EPA
v.
Arch
Development,
Inc.,
PCB 75—474,
—~
PCB
—
(May 20,
1976).
In
that
case,
Arch
admitted
to operation on the site without the
required permits
in violation of Rules 201 and 202(a)
of the Solid
Waste Rules, and agreed to an $850 penalty and the discontinuance
of all refuse disposal activities by February 19,
1976.
24
—
67
—2—
Petitioner claims in support of the requested Variance that
it will suffer an irreparable harm if development and completion
of the site
is not allowed, and
that: the property on which the site
is located
will
have essentially no value in its present state,
entailing
a
loss of the $11,500 purchase price,
(R.
16)
.
Petitioner
has also invested approximately $51,000 for a Caterpillar tractor,
(R.
10)
,
and approximately $10,000
in other operational improvements,
many of which were required to comply with the previous Agency
inspections,
(R.
10).
Since operations
on the site ceased in
accordance with the Order in PCB 75—474,
contributions by individual
shareholders have been necessary for Arches survival,
(R.
13)
Petitioner also alleges that no environmental harm would result
from the operation of this site without the required permit.
To
avoid water pollution from a site subject to flooding,
Petitioner
proposes
to accept only demolition of a
‘~c1eant’ nature.
Much of
the Record
in this matter is concerned with Petitioner’s attempt
to
show that because of the “clean” nature of the fill
to be deposited
at the site,
the Board need not worry about various
water
pollution
problems raised by the Agency.
These include the use of rubble
from buildings with concrete
(rather than wooden)
floors,
and the
removal of all metal by Petitioner from those wastes,
(e.g.,
R.
15,
18—20).
In addition, Petitioner characterized the soil
undorlyinc~
the
site as “gumbo,” which Petitioner claims will
be impervious,
(R.
18)
.
Petitioner has also changed an original plan
to cover the
site
with
foundry
sand,
and
will
use
dirt
for that purpose instead,
(P.
8).
The Agency’s opposition to Arch’s development and operation
on this site stems largely from the fact that the site,
located
a
few hundred yards east of the Mississippi River
(P.
30),
is not
protected by levees from flooding of the Mis~:issippi.
In
a recent
Technical Policy Statement,
the Agency’s Division of Land/Noise
Pollution Control has essentially stated that no permits will be
issued
--
regardless of the type of refuse
to be deposited
--
for
any
site
any
portion
of
which
“would
lie
below
the
level
of
the
100—year
flood.
.
.
“
(Agency
Fx.
12)
.
Wo
nood
not
,
howovnr
,
(1
~h
va
I
i d
i
y
of
I
ha
1)0
I
cy
.
TIn
‘r~
~‘
r
I
(1
y
of
n
A
in’y
tin
i
I
den ia1~
i s not proper fy before
t he board
i n
a Var i anea matt~era I
LIlis
type.
Petitioner’s
burden
here
is
to
show
that
a
Variance
is
required
because
arbitrary
and
unreasonable
hardship
will
be
suffered
in
its
absence,
and
that
such
hardship substantially outweighs
the
likeli-~
hood
of
environmental
damage
resulting
from
operation
under
the
Variance.
This
Petitioner
has
failed
to
do,
24
—
68
—3-.-
With
regard
to
environmental
damage,
Petitioner’s
meager
testimony
concerning
the
soil
underlying
the
site
is
insufficient
to
show
that
leachate
from
this
s~to
will
not
percolate
into
the
groiridwater
sys~em,
and
possibly
flow
into
the
Mississippi
River.
Petitioner
has
not
shown
the
likelihood
of
flooding
with
any
data
as
to
frequency
or
severity,
although
it
admits
that
the
site
is
subject
to
flooding.
Petitioner’s
testimony
as
to
the
soil
is
vacue,
and
is
more
than
offset
by
Agency
testimony
that
an
adjacent
site
contains
highly
permeable
soil,
(P.
36)
.
Petitioner
stated
that
its
employees would
remove
the
metals
accompanying
the
demolition
wastes
to
be
landfilled,
(R.
21),
but
also
admitted
that,
“fwJell,
there
are
going
to
be
pieces
of
metal
that
are
going
to
go
in
too,”
(P.
20)
It
is
apparent
that
most
of
the
expenditures
relied
on
by
Petitioner
in
terms
of
hardship
occurred
during
operations
without
the
necessary
permit.
Such
hardship
is
unquestionably self-imposed.
S~1f-imnosedhardship may not form the basis for a Variance.
Petitioner has simply failed to provide this Board with facts
sufficient
to justify the grant of a Variance.
Although the Agency
failed
to present strong justification for the denial of the requested
Variance,
such is not the Agency’s burden in the absence of an
adequate showing by Petitioner justifying
a Variance grant.
This Opinion constitutes the findings of fact and conclusions
of law of the Board in this matter.
ORDER
IT IS THE ORDER OF THE POLLUTION CONTROL that the Petition
for Variance of Arch Development,
Inc.,
in this matter be denied.
Mr. Jacob
D.
Dumelle concurred separately.
Mr. James Young
d.i
ssented.
I, Christen
L.
Moffett, Clerk of
the
Illinois
Pollution
Control Board,
her~,ebycertify t e above Opinion and Order we~e
adopted on the
____
day of
1976,
by
a vote of
44_I.
~
Christan L. Moffet /~lerk
Illinois Pollution’-e~titrolBoard
24
—
69