ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    July 10,
    1980
    THOMAS
    F. BROGAN,
    JOANNE BROGAN,
    )
    BON
    FT.
    KOO, KAREN
    100,
    JAMES HAYES, HELEN HAYES, and
    ROBERT CHAMBERLIN,
    Complainants,
    v.
    )
    PCB 79—11
    CITY OF PALOS HILLS, et
    al,
    Respondents.
    MRS.
    JOANNE BROGAN APPEARED PRO SE.
    ROBERT EMMETT NOLAN, ESQUIRE
    (NOLAN, O’MALLEY
    & DUNNE) APPEARED ON
    BEHALF OF RESPONDENTS.
    OPINION AND
    ORDER
    OF
    THE BOARD
    (by I.
    Goodman):
    This matter
    is before the Board upon the January 12, 1979
    complaint of Thomas
    E.
    Brogan, Joanne Brogan, Bon H.
    Koo, Karen
    100,
    James
    Hayes, Helen Hayes and Robert Chamberlin
    (Brogan)
    alleging that the City of Palos
    Hills, Illinois
    (City) has
    violated certain provisions of Chapter
    3, the Board’s Water
    Pollution Control Regulations
    (Rules).
    Four hearings have been
    held in this matter.
    At the end of Complainants’ case in chief,
    Respondents moved the Board to dismiss the action.
    The motion
    is
    denied.
    The subject of the complaint herein
    is a lift station owned
    and operated by the City which is located on the northwest corner
    of Brogan’s property on Stratford Lane in a subdivision of the
    City known as Runnynede.
    The lift station
    is a part of the
    City’s sanitary sewer system,
    servicing twenty-three buildings
    through a gravity sewer system and wet well and discharging
    against
    a head of approximately twenty-five
    feet to another
    segment of the City’s sewer system
    (Respondent’s Exhibits
    1 and
    2).
    Brogan alleges that due to poor planning and maintenance the
    lift station has overflowed, causing
    an unsightly and odoriferous
    discharge onto one respondent’s property which poses a health
    hazard to the community and
    in particular to this respondent’s
    children.
    The City responds that
    it has done and continues to do
    everything possible to abate the overflows and denies
    responsibility
    for their occurrence.
    A considerable part of the hearing record consists of the

    —2—
    discussion of such matters as trespass,
    easements,
    fraud and
    deception,
    etc.
    The
    Board has neither the power nor the
    inclination to address these issues as they pertain to this case
    and shall consider only the issue of environmental harm caused by
    violation of the Board’s Rules.
    Brogan alleges that the City has violated Rules
    601(a) and
    (h) and 602(b).
    Rule 601 addresses system reliability
    including
    malfunctions and spills.
    Rule 602 addresses combined sewers and
    treatment plant by-passes; part
    (b) thereof specifically
    addresses infiltration and overflows from sanitary sewers.
    The
    City acknowledges the allegation of a violation of Section 12(a)
    of the Illinois Environmental Protection Act
    (Act).
    At the hearings Mr.
    Koo,
    who lives next door to the lot
    which contains the lift station, testified that the lift station
    overflowed through his backyard to
    a forest preserve which
    contains a small
    lake
    (R.60).
    He testified that the lift station
    had overflowed numerous times between 1972 and 1978 and that he
    had notified the City of the problem.
    Mr.
    1oo’s
    best estimate of
    the number of times the lift station had overflowed was three to
    four times a year
    (R.67).
    The witness described the raw sewage
    as “shooting out of the manhole” atop the lift station wet well
    (R,69).
    The witness indicated that a good portion of his backyard
    and part of a neighbor’s backyard have been covered by the discharge
    at times.
    The witness appeared to be certain concerning the
    overflows up to 1978 but was somewhat unsure concerning overflows
    during 1979,
    Although not stated in direct testimony by Mr. Koo,
    the record generally indicates that he had dug a ditch to
    intercept the overflow and direct
    it
    off of his property some
    time prior to 1978.
    Witness Chamberlin, who lives in the vicinity of the
    lift
    station, stated that he had become involved with the problem
    in
    1977 and had attended four or five different Palos Hills City
    Council meetings at which the problem concerning the lift station
    was discussed
    (R.106).
    Chamberlin also stated that he had noted
    that the lift station had been without a lock for a period of
    three to four months (R.109).
    Witness Thomas Brogan testified regarding an overflow which
    occured in 1978.
    He
    stated that he and a number of other
    neighbors saw the water and other residue flowing out of the
    sewer
    (R.138).
    Witness Joanne Brogan testified that her daughter became
    quite
    ill and that she attributed the
    illness to the sewer
    overflow problem
    (R.386-400).
    The witness testified that Mr.
    Ioo
    had indeed dug
    a ditch to contain the overflow of the sewage but
    that,
    subsequently,
    fill had been placed
    so as to create a
    “cesspool” in her yard
    (R.401),
    During cross—examination the
    witness stated that the last overflow that she had noted occurred
    on October
    29,
    1978
    (R.415).
    This particular overflow was
    documented by photographs contained in Complainants’ Group

    —3—
    Exhibit
    9.
    Witness Gizewski of the Cook County Department of Public
    Health testified that that Department had been contacted
    concerning the overflows,
    had made an investigation, and had
    notified the City.
    Witness Shlensky,
    Health Officer for the
    City,
    testified that he had no knowledge of the problem of the
    lift station, had never been informed of the problem of the lift
    station, and had never talked to anyone concerning the problem
    with the
    lift station
    (R.457).
    Cross—examination of this witness
    indicated that the City apparently has two Health Officers who
    maintain separate records.
    Other witnesses called by Brogan testified generally to the
    lift station overflow problem and that the City had indeed been
    on notice concerning the overflow problem touching the various
    properties.
    Several witnesses raised issues outside the scope of
    this action;
    such testimony
    is not considered.
    The general conclusions from the testimony and the report
    which
    is Complainants’
    Exhibit
    3 herein are that the
    lift station
    type is outdated,
    has deterioration of its concrete components,
    and is in need of a system to warn the City when it was out of
    service.
    The report, produced for the City of Palos Hills
    subsequent
    to the filing of this complaint,
    specifically
    concludes that:
    1.
    the existing control
    system should have an upgraded
    maintenance schedule or should be replaced with a more modern and
    more reliable type of control;
    2.
    a high water alarm installation consisting of a
    battery—operated alarm
    light,
    to be operated in conjunction with
    an existing telephone alarm, should be installed;
    and
    3.
    a new wet well for the existing lift station should be
    constructed approximately 35 feet north of the existing wet well
    location.
    It was estimated that instituting these recommendations
    would cost in the vicinity of $12,000.
    Other options specified
    by the report include moving the entire existing lift station to
    any other location and in the alternative installing a new type
    of lift station
    in
    a remote location (the cheapest of which
    options appears to cost $2,800).
    Another option is a permanently
    mounted generator set with an automatic transfer switch to
    provide power
    for the lift station in the event of interruption
    of the normal power supply
    (estimated to cost between $15,000 and
    $18,000).
    The report notes that the City of Palos
    Hills is
    adequately protected by portable stand-by units and does not
    suggest installation of the emergency generator set.
    Advantages ascribed to the recommended changes were
    replacement of the deteriorating wet well, access to the well
    location for additional connection, the relocation of an apparent

    —4—
    illegal connection into the wet well, and removal of the overflow
    situation from the area of the residential property to an
    adjacent area.
    The engineer for the City of Palos Hills testified that he
    had started working for the city in October, 1978 and had found
    neither internal nor external defects in the lift station system
    when he inspected it one week before the hearing
    (R.736).
    In
    addition, the city engineer testified that a telephone alarm
    system had been installed since he had become city engineer and
    that the city had purchased a portable power generator.
    It was
    the engineer’s opinion that the system as
    it now exists
    is
    adequate; he would not recommend that it he moved.
    An electrical engineer for the city testified that he had
    installed the alarm system.
    The electrical
    engineer’s testimony
    was somewhat confused; however, he did state that overflow
    resulting from
    a power outage would not be recorded
    “...
    because
    it wouldn’t be our fault”
    (R.800).
    Upon review of the record in this case there appears to be
    a
    gross
    lack of communication between departments of the City of
    Palos Hills.
    It appears that everyone responsible had
    independent knowledge of the overflows at the lift station with
    the exception of one of the Health Officers.
    The maintenance
    department failed even to record the overflows because someone
    decided that it was not their fault.
    Most certainly,
    some
    agent
    or employee of the City of Palos Hills
    is responsible for
    investigating and resolving this situation.
    Whether or not an
    overflow should be recorded based upon a determination of fault
    does not constitute good faith compliance with the Act or the
    Board’s regulations.
    If,
    as the City of Palos
    Hills contends,
    the overflows are caused by power outages, then the problem has
    long since graduated from one of an isolated occurrence to one of
    an engineering problem which demands the attention of the City of
    Palos Hills.
    There is sufficient evidence
    in the record to find that
    overflows occurred at the subject lift station and that the City
    was on notice of the problem.
    The evidence also supports
    a
    finding that the City did not respond
    in a reasonable manner
    after it had been made aware of the problem.
    The Board,
    therefore,
    finds the City in violation of Rules
    601(a) and
    (b)
    and 602(b) of the Rules.
    The City will he ordered to cease and
    desist from further violations of the
    Rules and any violations of
    the Act.
    The Board finds that the recommendations in Complainants’
    Exhibit
    3 make good sense.
    Although the City may well want to
    construct a new wet well
    for the lift station for its own
    purposes, the Board feels that that action is not necessary to
    achieve compliance with the Rules.
    Lift stations such as the one
    here,
    if
    designed, constructed,
    and maintained correctly, are
    capable of operating without causing overflows.
    The Board will,

    —5--
    therefore,
    order
    the City to install the mercury switch activated
    control system and the battery—operated alarm system proposed in
    the exhibit and to establish and execute
    a suitable maintenance
    program for the lift station, including the keeping of records.
    The Board finds that this violation demands a penalty as an
    aid to enforcement of the Act.
    The City of Palos Hills will pay
    the sum of $1,000 for its violations found herein.
    All counts of the complaint are dismissed as to all of the
    individual respondents herein.
    This Opinion constitutes the findings of fact and
    conclusions of law of the Board in this matter.
    ORDER
    1.
    The City of Palos Hills
    is found to be in violation of
    Rules 601(a),
    601(h),
    and 602(b) of Chapter
    3 of the Board’s
    Water Pollution Control Rules and Regulations.
    2.
    The City of Palos Hills
    shall cease and desist further
    violations of these rules and regulations.
    3.
    The City of Palos Hills shall install
    a mercury switch
    activated type control system and
    a battery—operated alarm system
    on the Runnymede lift station pursuant to the recommendations
    in
    Complainants’ Exhibit
    3 herein.
    4.
    The City of Palos Hills shall establish and execute
    a
    suitable maintenance program for the Runnymede lift station,
    including the maintenance of suitable records reasonably designed
    to apprise the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency of
    progress toward compliance.
    5.
    The City of Palos Hills shall pay a penalty in the amount of
    $1,000 for the violations found herein, payment to be made by
    certified check or money order within
    45 days to:
    Fiscal Services Department
    Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
    2200 Churchill Road
    springfield, Illinois
    62706
    6.
    The individual Respondents herein are dismissed.
    I, Christan
    L.
    Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby cert~fythat the a ove Opinion and Order was
    opted on the
    ~
    day of
    ______________,
    1980 by a vote of
    Illinois Pollution
    ntrol Board

    Back to top