ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
October 22,
1981
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
Complainant,
v.
)
PCB 79—256
ESL, INC., AND
WASTE MANAGEMENT OF ILLINOIS,
INC.,
)
Respondents.
INTERIM ORDER OF THE BOARD (by J.
Anderson):
This matter comes before the Board on the complaint filed
November 19,
1979 by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
(Agency) against Environmental Sanitary Landfill, Inc. (Environ-
mental)
and Waste Management of Illinois (Waste Management).
Pursuant to leave of the Board, an amended complaint was filed
December
6,
1979,
substituting ESL,
Inc.
(ESL)
for Environmental
as the proper co—respondent.
The six—count complaint alleges
violations of the Environmental Protection Act
(Act) and of Chapter
7:
Solid Waste arising from the operation of a solid waste
management site located at Laraway Road in Joliet, Will County.
Hearing was held on August 18,
1980 at which time a
Stipulation and Proposal
for Settlement was entered into the
hearing record (Joint Ex.
1).
Several members of the public
there present objected to the stipulation’s proposed $7000 penalty,
raised questions concerning possible drinking water contamination,
and testified concerning adverse health effects resulting from
severe odor problems.
On September 18, 1980, the Board rejected
the stipulation, and remanded the case for further development of
the record in the above mentioned areas.
A second hearing was held May 18,
1981.
No amendment to the
original stipulation was proposed, although further information
in the form of an Exhibit F to the stipulation was introduced.
Citizen hearing participants again asked questions and criticized
the proposed penalty.
Exhibit F (containing an analysis of soil borings and
monitoring wells
for the site,
as well as nearby private wells),
strongly indicates that the pollution of the upgradient private
wells probably is not caused by the ESL site,
and that the drinking
water problems testified to by various citizens appear to be
attributable to other sources.
The severe odor problems which
plagued the area surrounding the ESL site appears to have been
43—507
2
abated by the summer of 1980,
after the cleaning out of the
lagoons.
However,
the bulk of the citizen testimony presented
at both hearings, but particularly that of August,
1980, disputes
the appropriateness and effectiveness of the proposed remedial
action and the penalty of “only”
$7,000.
Three of the six counts in this action allege long term
(1975—1979)
violations involving either failure to obtain permits,
or substantial operational deviations
from the conditions of those
permits which had been received.
The odor pollution and water
pollution hazard alleged in two of the remaining counts flow from
these deviations.
The permit system is the “first line” of defense against the
various environmental and social problems which may flow from land
burial of waste.
The Board intends to give close and strict
scrutiny to any cases alleging permitting violations,
in order to
insure that the nature and extent of the actual violation,
if any,
is
fully delineated, and that an appropriate relief order is
framed and penalty imposed,
if necessary.
The Board believes
that such action on its part is essential as an aid both to the
enforcement of the Act and the permit regulations,
and to
generation of public confidence in the integrity and efficacy
of the enforcement process itself.
In this case, based on the unsworn citizen testimony
contained in the admittedly abbreviated record before the Board,
lack of compliance with permitting requirements and conditions
would seem to have been the cause of a major public health
threatening
event in Joliet.
However, the stipulation in this
case does not contain a full stipulation of all material
facts
pertaining to the nature,
extent, and causes of the alleged
violation.
The stipulation contains,
in the main,
only repre-
sentations of what each party would anticipate proving at hearing.
The representations, being neither admitted facts or proven facts,
are insufficient to allow the Board to properly adjudicate the
allegations of violations, or to intelligently assess a fine
(if
necessary) r~asonablyrelated to the extent of environmental or
other harm involved.
The Board believes that this action is one which cannot be
properly resolved by stipulation.
Hearing shall be scheduled
within 60 and held within 90 days of the date of this Order.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Board members Dumelle and Werner dissented.
I, Christan L.
Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, hereby certify th t the above Interim Order was
adopted on the
~
day of
,
,
1981 by
a vote of~-a
Christan
L. Mofféy’~/Clerk
Illinois Pollutithi~ontro1 Board
43—508