ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    June 13,
    1985
    IN
    RE:
    SITE—SPECIFIC
    RULEMAKING FOR THE
    )
    R84—30
    CITY OF EAST PEORIA
    PROPOSED RULE
    FIRST ~13TICE
    OPINION AND ORDER OF THL~
    BOARD
    (by B.
    Forcade):
    On July 16,
    1985,
    the City of East Peoria (“East Peoria”)
    filed
    a petition
    for sit.e~specificrulemaking with the Board.
    East Peoria’s Sewage
    Tre.abnent Plant No.
    1
    (“the facility”)
    presently discharges
    its effluent to the Illinois River.
    As part
    of a facility improvement~. program, East Peoria would like to
    change
    the
    location of their discharge point to a small waterway
    adjacent
    to the Illinois River, known as Ditch
    A.
    Ditch A joins
    another
    small waterway, known as the Main Ditch.
    Existing
    stormwater runoff
    in these waterways
    is pumped over
    a levee
    to
    the Illinois River,
    Effluent limitations applicable
    to
    discharges to Ditch A are more restrictive than
    to discharges
    to
    the Illinois River.
    Therefore, East Peoria would have to
    substantially improve the present quality of their effluent to
    discharge
    to the new location in compliance with Board
    regulations.
    Because East Peoria believes that discharging the
    present quality effluent to Ditch A would improve environmental
    quality
    in the area,
    they are seeking
    a regulatory change
    to
    allow such action.
    Hearing was held
    in
    this
    matter
    on September
    10, 1984.
    The
    Illinois Department of Energy and Natural Resources filed a
    “Negative Declaration”
    of economic impact
    in this matter on
    November 29,
    1984.
    The Economic Technical Advisory Committee
    concurred in that determination on January 23, 1985.
    On April
    9,
    1985,
    the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (‘~Agency”)
    recommended that the Board deny East Peoria’s request due
    to
    inadequate
    factual justification.
    On May 2,
    1985, East Peoria
    filed
    a reply to the Agency recommendation.
    All pending motions
    to file out of time are granted.
    While
    the Board was not able
    to immediately grant East Peoria’s May 2,
    1985, Motion
    for Expedited Ruling,
    it has attempted to be
    responsive to those concerns.
    East Peoria
    is located
    in Tazewell County, adjacent to the
    Illinois River.
    The facility
    is located adjacent to Ditch A,
    which
    is parallel
    to and approximately 1600 feet southeast of
    the
    Illinois River.
    Present1y~East Peoria discharges by underground
    pipe to the Illinois River0
    East Peoria
    is
    in the process of
    upgrading the facility~~2~fter the upgrading
    is completed,
    the
    64-447

    —2—
    design average flow will be 4.22 million gallons per day
    (MGD),
    with peak design flow of 8.44 MGD, consisting primarily of
    treated sanitary sewage from East Peoria.
    East Peoria currently pumps
    their effluent
    to the Illinois
    River using one pump rated at 4500 gallons per minute with an
    appropriate head pressure.
    Because
    the system head conditions
    are low,
    the pump must be
    throttled to operate properly.
    With
    the new facility improvements,
    this pump will be replaced.
    Throughout ~his proceeding,
    it has been clear
    that East
    Peoria
    is capable and willing
    to make the planned facility
    improvements while continuing
    to discharge
    to the Illinois
    River.
    No issue of
    technological infeasibility or economic
    hardship
    is presented.
    However, East Peoria believes
    it
    is
    desirable, environmentally and economically,
    to allow the
    facility
    to discharge the present quality of effluent to Ditch
    A.
    East Peoria seeks relief from the effluent limitation of
    35
    Ill.
    Adm. Code 304.120(c), which
    sets maximum contaminant levels
    at
    10 mg/i
    of BOD and
    12 mg/i of suspended solids
    to waterways
    such as Ditch A, where
    the dilution ratio
    is less than five to
    one.
    East Peoria seeks
    to have
    its discharges
    to Ditch A
    regulated at
    20 mg/l BOD and 25 mg/i
    of suspended solids,
    the
    same limitations that presently apply under Section 304.120(b)
    to
    the facility’s discharges
    to the Illinois River.
    While East
    Peoria would
    be able to discharge
    to Ditch A without regulatory
    relief,
    if the facility were upgraded
    to meet the more stringent
    effluent requirements of 10/12,
    the cost of facility upgrading
    is
    quite high and East Peoria does not wish
    to pursue this option.
    East Peoria has provided economic evaluations
    for the two
    preferred
    alternatives.
    Alternative No.
    1 involves facility
    upgrading with continued discharge
    to the Illinois River.
    This
    option would require no relief from Board regulations.
    Alternative No.
    2 involves facility upgrading and discharge
    to
    Ditch A at effluent limitations
    of 20/25.
    This option would
    require Board regulatory action.
    After
    elimination of the common
    costs
    to both proposals, and stating the remaining costs
    in terms
    of present worth cost and equivalent uniform annual cost the
    differences are most clearly seen.
    Alternative No,
    1 has
    a present worth cost of $357,624 with
    an equivalent annual cost of $36,764.
    Alternative No,
    2 has a
    present worth
    cost of $213,106 with an equivalent uniform annual
    cost of $21,907,
    Thus,
    if East Peoria
    is
    granted the regulatory
    relief
    it seeks, total savings amount
    to $144,518,
    or about
    $15,850 per year
    (Pet,, pp.
    4—5).
    East Peoria has recently
    adjusted
    the
    sewer
    use rate for its customers,
    to reflect the
    $8.1 million treatment plant and sewer upgrading,
    to $1.75 per
    thousand gallons
    That rate will not be affected by whichever
    discharge option is selected,
    However, gross savings
    to the
    system of over $15F000 per year are anticipated
    if discharge
    to
    64-448

    —3—
    Ditch A is approved
    (R.
    36—38).
    In view of the minimal cost
    differential of
    the two options,
    both well within East Peoria’s
    financial capability, and ~he fact that
    hoth are clearly
    :ochnically feasih~o,the ~3oardmust focus
    on the environmental
    ~:~cts
    on the smoUc~rwnter’~iay
    of the two alternatives.
    The T-shaped
    waterway
    into ‘ñich 3ast Peoria seeks
    to
    rlthcharge consists of )itch A (~‘hich is ~everal thousand feet
    lon’j, approximately fo~’:yfeet wide, and approximately 2—3 feet
    dee~)narallol
    to the Illinois River
    and
    the Main Ditch (which
    is
    1,250 foot from the
    C
    fluence
    with Ditch
    .~
    to
    its
    termination
    ndjaoent
    to the Illinois River,
    approximately
    forty feet wide and
    2—3 feet deep).
    ~oth are part of
    a man—made
    n:i~!~
    of drainage
    ditches to co~*~ctsurface ‘iater
    runoff from appro~imately
    1,050
    acres
    and
    convs~~
    it
    to a
    ~roing
    station
    which
    pumps
    the
    stormwnter
    into the
    Illinoth
    Th7et.
    The
    l~d
    adjacent
    to
    ~)ttth
    A
    and
    and
    Main
    Ditch
    in
    the
    area
    of
    concern
    is
    o’i~e-1hy
    the
    Otherpiliar
    Tractor
    Company
    and
    is
    zoned
    for
    manufa~turiaq.
    Mush
    of
    the
    land
    is
    a
    low
    marshy—type
    area
    with
    large areas of
    ~ondsd
    ~iater,
    There
    are
    currently
    rio
    existing
    or
    pro~osed develo~ments
    for
    the
    area.
    There
    is
    one
    residence
    in
    the
    area,
    maintained
    by
    the
    Levee
    District
    for
    the
    Levee
    Pump
    operator.
    If
    the
    discharge
    point
    is
    changed,
    this
    residence
    would
    be
    abolisho~
    and
    other
    arrangements
    for
    pump
    maintenance
    would
    he
    made
    (Pet.,
    p.
    2;
    ~x.
    2).
    East
    Peoria
    urges
    that
    switching
    the discharge to Ditch A
    will
    have
    several
    beneficial
    envirohmental
    impacts:
    1.
    It
    will
    reduce
    the
    potential
    for
    freezing
    in
    winter
    and
    reduce
    the
    omount
    oe
    aquatic
    die—off.
    2.
    Plant
    effluent
    will
    reduce
    the
    high
    sus-ended
    sol~s
    concentrations
    in the ditch.
    3.
    Plant
    effluent
    will
    increase
    the
    dissol7e3
    oxygen
    concentration
    in the ditch.
    4.
    Plant effluent wii~’. incre~.se the
    flows in
    the
    ditch
    which will
    imorove
    scouring,
    reduce
    stagnation
    and
    reduce algal growth.
    To support
    these contentions, East Peoria has provided
    certain
    chemical analyses of
    plant effluent, Ditch A and Main
    Ditch
    ambient water
    cjualtty
    and
    a biological evaluation of the
    ditches.
    The Board notes that while information
    on existing effluent
    quality
    is hel~fuito the Board,
    it
    is of limited utility
    in this
    ~
    t Po.~
    ~
    ~ai~
    to substantially expand and
    improve
    its
    sewage collection and treatment facility.
    Consequently~
    it
    has
    not
    represented
    to
    the
    Board
    that
    the
    character
    of the future effluent to Ditch A
    would be identical
    to
    existing effluent to the Illinois River.
    ~4,449~,

    —4—
    Chemical analyses
    of Ditch A and Main Ditch
    (Ex.
    2,
    p.
    4—5)
    for several samplings in August of
    1984,
    show average
    concentration.s
    for dissolved oxygen of below 5.0 mg/i,
    for
    ammonia nitrogen
    of 0.95 mg/i,
    for
    pH
    of
    7.0,
    for
    BOD
    of
    17.9
    mg/l,
    and for suspended solids
    of
    30.9
    mg/i.
    The
    biological
    evaluation observed
    carp, sunfish, turtles and muskrat,
    as well
    as
    floating algal masses.
    The biologist concluded that the ditch
    is too shallow
    to support aquatic fauna other than those adapted
    to low oxygen,
    that stagnant or near stagnant conditions
    are
    common throughout the summer,
    and the ditch
    is likely to freeze
    from top to bottom
    in most areas during
    the winter discouraging
    establishment
    of:fish
    populations
    requiring
    high
    levels
    of
    dissolved oxygen.
    The biologist did not list any adverse effects
    ôn.aquatic organisms expected from effluent discharges
    (Ex.
    2,
    App. B).
    The
    Agency
    filed
    comments
    recommending
    that
    the
    Board
    deny
    the
    request for site—specific rule citing inadequate information
    to establish lack of environmental harm and establish that water
    quality standards will not be violated.
    The Board agrees with
    the Agency that the record on water quality and environmental
    conditions
    in the proposed discharge area
    is exceedingly thin.
    Not only are
    few data presented, but their
    collection over
    a
    short period and
    at the height of the summer season raises
    serious question. regarding
    their representativeness.
    Only in the
    truly exceptional case could the Board give weight
    to data which
    do not more
    fully characterize long—term ambient conditions
    in
    the receiving waterway.
    Despite the paucity of the record,
    the Board must focus on
    what facts do exist here,
    in light
    of what relief
    is being
    requested.
    First,
    the Board
    notes that East Peoria
    is not
    requesting relief from any water quality standards applicable
    to
    the requested discharge area,
    The
    record before
    the Board would
    not support such relief.
    East Peoria appears
    to be willing
    to
    presume
    it will not violate water quality standards and to bear
    the consequences
    should that presumption prove wrong.
    Likewise, East Peoria has failed
    to demonstrate that there
    will be no adverse environmental impact from granting the
    requested relief.
    However, East Peoria has demonstrated that
    some aspects of the change will be environmentally beneficial,
    namely the reduced stagnation and
    reduced liklihood of complete
    freezing
    in winter.
    The record
    shows present water quality violations
    in the
    requested receiving waters,
    those waters are unique in that they
    are composed exclusively
    of stormwater runoff and groundwater
    seepage having
    no physical connection
    to the Illinois River.
    The
    waterway freezes
    in winter and stagnates
    in summer, and East
    Peoria
    has
    r~l-~ato~
    ttht c~r~o;~ ‘t~e ~d.
    L:~lit~ons
    will
    be minimized or eliminated
    by
    discharging effluent
    to the
    waterway.
    64-450

    —5—
    This proceeding presents the Board with an unusual physical
    setting and set of circumstances,
    The Petitioner has requested
    limited relief from effluent standards.
    The receiving waters are
    better characterized as a long, narrow man—made pond or lagoon
    than a stream,
    They have
    no
    connection to the Illinois River
    by
    which
    fish
    and
    other
    aquatic
    organisms
    may
    float
    or
    swim
    in
    either direction, without going through the pumps.
    inflow
    is
    from stormwater runoff from less than two square miles of largely
    commercial
    land and groundwater seepage.
    The waters even lack
    the often overlooked ecological value of
    intermittent streams.
    The ditch has no known existing
    or potential recreational value
    and
    its utility to fish and wildlife
    is extremely limited at
    best.
    As stated above,
    the environmental information and water
    quality data supplied by the City is sketchy and would be
    considered insufficient to support the granting
    of relief
    in most
    situations involving such requests.
    However, given the facts
    in
    the instant proceeding,
    the Board does not believe that any
    significant benefit to
    the
    environment or public interest would
    be served by denying
    the
    requested relief.
    In granting this
    relief,
    the Board recognizes that water quality standards will
    continue
    to be applicable to Ditch A.
    ORDER
    The Board hereby adopts
    the following rule for First Notice
    and instructs
    the Clerk of the Board
    to file this rule with the
    Secretary of State:
    TITLE
    35:
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
    SUBTITLE
    C:
    WATER
    POLLUTION
    CHAPTER I:
    POLLUTION
    CONTROL
    BOARD
    PART
    304
    SITE—SPECIFIC RULES AND EXCEPTIONS
    NOT OF
    GENERAL APPLICABILITY
    Section 304,211 ç~Ea~~eoria
    Discharges
    a)
    This Section applies onjy to effluent discharges from
    the City of
    East
    Peori&s Sewage Treatment Plant No.
    1
    into Ditch A
    in Tazeweil
    County,
    Illinois.
    b)
    The provisions of Section 304.120(c)
    shall
    not
    apply
    to
    said discharges,
    provided
    that said discharges shall not
    exceed
    20
    mg/i of
    fiv~j~y
    biochemical oxygen demand
    ~
    total
    ~~ded
    solids
    ±~T2~ET
    number
    00530
    IT IS SO ORDERED
    64-451

    —6--
    I,
    Dorothy M. Gunn,
    Clerk of
    the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby certify that the above Proposed Rule/First Notice
    Opinion and Order
    was
    adopted
    on
    the
    /~~day
    of
    ______
    ________________,
    1985, by a vote
    of
    7~
    //
    Dorothy
    t4. G~ónn, Clerk
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    64-452

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