ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    September 4, 1980
    WAGNER
    CASTINGS
    COMPANY,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    )
    PCB 80—93
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
    )
    Respondent.
    OPINION
    AND
    ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (by D. Satchell):
    This matter comes before the Board upon an amended variance
    petition filed June
    11,
    1980 by Wagner Castings Company,
    a corpora-
    tion
    (Wagner).
    Charles Rhodes,
    d/b/a Rhodes Landfill has joined in
    the petition.
    Variances are requested from Rules 301,
    302 and 501
    of Chapter
    9:
    Special Waste Hauling Regulations
    (Rules).
    The En-
    vironmental Protection Agency
    (Agency)
    has recommended that the
    variances be granted with conditions.
    No hearing has been held and
    the Board has received no public comment.
    On June
    15,
    1979 Wagner and Chambers, Bering and Quinlan
    Com-
    pany
    (CBQ)
    filed petitions for variances from the special waste
    manifest requirements
    (PCB 79-124 and PCB 79-125).
    The Board was
    eventually advised that CBQ’s assets had been purchased by Wagner.
    The Agency first recommended denial of the variances but then re-
    commended a grant after a response supplying more information was
    filed.
    On March 20,
    1980 the Board dismissed the petitions as
    inadequate
    (37 PCB 537, 539).
    Wagner thereafter filed a motion for
    modification and an amendment to the petition to provide additional
    information and joinder of the Rhodes
    Landfill.
    The latter was
    deemed an amended petition and given the number of 80-93
    (PCB 79-
    124,
    Order of Nay 1,
    1980).
    On July 10,
    1980 Rhodes’
    Landfill
    was
    granted leave to intervene.
    On July 21,
    1980 the Agency filed a
    recommendation incorporating by reference the previous recommenda-
    tion
    and
    amended recommendation.
    Since the procedural history has become quite complex, it is
    convenient to set forth the pleadings which are now before the
    Board (Amended Pet.
    2).
    Petition in 79—124
    June 15,
    1979
    Response and Exhibit A in 79-124
    September 17,
    1979
    Motion for modification in 79-124
    April 28, 1980
    Amendment to Petition in 79-124
    April 28,
    1980
    Amended Petition in 80-93
    June
    11,
    1980
    Recommendation with Attachments in 80—93
    July 21,
    1980

    —2—
    Throughout this proceeding Wagner has insisted that it is
    not required to provide information on
    its
    manufacturing pro-
    cesses or the nature of its wastes since it is requesting a vari-
    ance only “from paperwork and reporting
    (manifest)
    requirements.”
    Wagner has made no claim that it is unable to provide the informa-
    tion or that it would involve disclosure of proprietary informa-
    tion.
    Wagner has now provided facts minimally sufficient to
    warrant consideration on the merits.
    Procedural Rules 401(a) (2)
    and
    (3)
    require particular informa-
    tion on manufacturing processes.
    Other parts of Rule 401(a) in-
    directly require information on processes and wastes to be answered
    fully in the context of this case
    Procedural
    Rules 401(a) (1),
    (5),
    (6),
    (7),
    (8),
    (9)
    and
    (l0)J~. There is no exception in the Proced-
    ural Rules for variances from reporting requirements.
    The Board
    needs this information in order to be fully advised of Petitioner’s
    circumstances and the potential environmental effect of the waste
    and so that it can determine whether there is arbitrary or unreas-
    onable hardship (Section 36 of the Act).
    It is necessary to limit
    Chapter
    9 variances to definite wastes,
    This variance will be
    limited to those wastestreams which Wagner has identified.
    Compli-
    ance with Chapter
    9 will be necessary for any other special wastes
    generated
    Wagner operates an iron foundry which employs about 1250 per-
    Sons in Decatur, Macon County.
    It produces about 70,000 tons of
    finished product annually.
    In its casting process molten iron
    is
    poured into a mold made from
    sand
    and clay.
    The high temperatures
    involved cause decomposition of the sand.
    At present it is not
    reusable and is landfilled.
    Wagner generates over 100 tons per
    day, resulting in ten truckloads per day or 300 per month.
    This
    is hauled to Rhodes Landfill, Decatur,
    in Wagner’s
    own
    covered
    trucks.
    The petition in PCB 79-125 stated that CBQ operated a grey iron
    foundry employing about 190 persons in Decatur.
    It produced about
    7200 tons of finished product per year and about twenty tons of
    spent sand per day.
    This petition was not listed among the plead-
    ings to be incorporated
    (Amended Pet.
    2).
    However, incorporation
    was requested in some of the pleadings which are incorporated.
    It
    is unclear whether Wagner’s current employment, etc.,
    can
    be de-
    duced from adding the figures given in the two petitions.
    The
    combined operations will result in about 340 loads per month or
    4080 loads per year (Amendment to Pet.
    2).
    The following terms are used in describing Wagner’s waste
    streams:

    —3—
    Core sand--A mixture of sand and clay which has been used
    to form the inside of a mold.
    Molding sand--A mixture of sand and clay which has been
    used to form the outside of a mold,
    Foundry sand-—A mixture consisting of roughly one percent
    core sand and ninety—nine percent molding sand.
    Sludge from wet dust collectors—-A pollution control waste
    ~ihichis essentially a mixture of foundry sand and water.
    Core sand is specifically included in the definition of indus-
    trial process waste
    (Rule
    103).
    Spent core sand typically contains
    a number of contaminants, notably cyanide.
    Molding sand typically
    has lower levels of such contaminants.
    Wagner mixes the core and
    molding sand so that the waste
    to be landfilled is foundry sand.
    Since it contains core sand it is a special waste regardless of
    whether the molding sand is an industrial process waste.
    A gener-
    ator cannot avoid the requirements of Chapter
    9 by mixing special
    waste with other waste.
    Wagner has provided no detailed description of the process
    which produces the sludge from wet dust collectors.
    Wagner de-
    scribes it as
    a pollution control waste.
    Therefore it is
    a
    special waste.
    It is hauled in trucks separate from those which
    haul dry waste.
    Wagner states that “approximately 15-20
    of the
    tonage
    sic
    hauled by the petitioner to Rhodes Landfill as
    described in the petition is ‘sludge from wet dust collectors’”
    (Amended Pet.
    3).
    Wagner apparently then generates around sixty-
    eight loads of wet and 272 loads of dry waste each month, although
    other parts of the pleadings may indicate that the wet waste
    is
    eighty-five loads in excess of 340 dry for a total of 425 loads
    per month.
    In its Order of Nay 1,
    1980 the Board specifically inquired
    as to whether a variance was requested for the sludge from wet dust
    collectors.
    In response Wagner stated, “petitioner is not request-
    ing a variance for
    ‘sludge from wet dust collectors’”
    (Amendment to
    Pet.
    1).
    However, Wagner went on to provide additional information
    concerning the sludge.
    Since this would be irrelevant if the vari-
    ance were not requested,
    the Board will assume that the “not” in
    the quoted statement was
    a typographical error and deem the plead-
    ings amended.
    Wagner has provided no analysis of the sludge but states that
    it is essentially foundry sand and water.
    An analysis of the foundry
    sand was provided
    (Response,
    Ex.
    A).
    This showed traces of cyanide,

    —4—
    cadmium,
    chromium, nickel,
    lead, tin, copper, palladium and zinc.
    These are apparently expressed as parts per million of the foundry
    sand and do not represent an analysis of the core sand or a pH
    5
    leachate test as requested by the Agency
    (Rec,
    3).
    No analysis
    of the liquid phase of the sludge is provided.
    Wagner estimated its cost of compliance at $10,410 per year
    for manifests with each load.
    It is assumed that this includes
    CBQ’s
    costs
    (Response,
    2,
    4).
    As an alternative Wagner has proposed
    to periodically report to the Agency a summary of its waste dis-
    posal.
    Monthly reports would cost $150, quarterly reports $82 and
    semiannual reports $73 per year
    (Response,
    3).
    The Agency will be
    authorized to specify the form and frequency of monitoring by way
    of permit condition.
    Since only one percent of the foundry sand is core sand Wagner
    is actually generating only three or four loads
    of it per month.
    Assuming the molding sand is not a special waste, the excessive
    number of loads, manifests and hence costs may be a self—imposed
    hardship resulting from the commingling.
    However, Wagner states
    that the molding and core sands “are by the very nature of the
    casting process shaken off of or out of the finished casting at the
    same time and thereby end up mixed together”
    (Amended Pet.
    4).
    The
    Board does not at this time find self-imposed hardship~ The vari-
    ance will be conditioned on Wagner providing a detailed study of
    the feasibility of separation and separate disposal, including cost
    estimates.
    There are manufacturers who sell devices which they say will
    reclaim seventy to eighty percent of the sand normally thrown away.
    There are questions as to the quality of the reclaimed sand and the
    amount of such sand which could be introduced into the system.
    Wagner is investigating this alternative but states that at this
    time it is not technically or economically feasible for Wagner’s
    operation.
    it is not clear whether this discussion is referring
    to core, molding or foundry sand (Response,
    4).
    Since the decompos-
    ition problems seem to center on the core sand,
    the Board will re-
    quire separate studies of the feasibility of reclaiming each.
    Based upon the above considerations the Board finds that
    Wagner would suffer arbitrary or unreasonable hardship if not
    granted a temporary variance from the special waste manifest re-
    quirements of Chapter
    9.
    This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact and
    conclusions
    of law in this matter.

    —5—
    ORDER
    1.
    Petitioner Wagner Castings Company is granted a variance from
    Rules 301 and 501 of Chapter
    9:
    Special Waste Hauling Regu-
    lations, subject to the conditions
    3 through
    8 below.
    2.
    Petitioner-intervenor Charles Rhodes d/b/a Rhodes Landfill
    is granted a variance from Rules 302 and 501 of Chapter 9:
    Special Waste Hauling Regulations, subject to conditions
    3
    through 6
    and
    9.
    3.
    This variance will expire on September 4,
    1985.
    4.
    This variance shall apply only to foundry sand and sludge
    from wet dust collectors generated by Wagner Castings Company’s
    Decatur foundry operations hauled in trucks belonging to Wagner
    Castings Company.
    5.
    Petitioners shall comply fully with the requirements of
    Chapter 9 for any other special waste generated, transported,
    stored, treated or disposed of.
    6.
    Within thirty days of the date of this Order Petitioners shall
    apply to the Environmental Protection Agency for any and all
    neOessary permits or permit modifications.
    Petitioners shall
    diligently pursue any such application processes until a permit
    is issued or finally denied.
    This variance shall not be con-
    strued as a variance from any permit requirement.
    7.
    On or before February
    1, 1985 Wagner Casting Company shall
    submit to the Agency a detailed study,
    including cost estimates,
    of the feasibility of separation and separate disposal of the
    core and molding sand.
    It
    shall also submit a study,
    including
    costs, of the technical and economic feasibility of reclaiming
    the core sand and the molding sand.
    8.
    Within forty-five days of the date of this Order, Petitioner
    Wagner Castings Company shall execute and forward to the
    Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, Variance Section,
    2200 Churchill Road, Springfield, Illinois 62706,
    a Certificate
    of Acceptance and Agreement to be bound to all terms and condi-
    tions of this variance.
    This forty-five day period shall be
    held in abeyance for any period this matter is being appealed.
    The form of the Certificate shall be
    as follows:

    —6—
    CERTIFI
    CATI
    ON
    I,
    (We), _______________________________, having read
    and fully understanding the Order in PCB 80-93, hereby accept
    that Order and agree to be bound by all of its terms
    and
    con-
    ditions.
    SIGNED
    ___________________________
    TITLE
    ___________________________
    DATE
    ______________________________
    9.
    Within forty-five days of the date of this Order, Petitioner
    Charles Rhodes, d/b/a Rhodes Landfill, shall execute and for-
    ward to the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, Variance
    Section, 2200 Churchill Road, Springfield, Illinois 62706,
    a
    Certificate of Acceptance and Agreement to be bound to all
    terms and conditions of this variance.
    This forty-five day
    period shall be held in abeyance for any period this matter is
    being appealed.
    The
    form
    of the Certificate shall be as
    follows:
    CERTIFICATION
    I,
    (We), _______________________________, having read
    and fully understanding the Order in PCB 80-93,
    hereby accept
    that Order and agree to be bound by all of its terms and con-
    ditions.
    SIGNED ___________________________
    TITLE
    ____________________________
    DATE
    _______________________________
    10.
    The Environmental Protection Agency shall by permit condition
    specify alternative reporting and other requirements in lieu
    of those presently required by Rule 501.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.

    —7—
    I, Christan L.
    Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, he
    e4~k7certify that th
    above Opinion and Order were adopted
    on the
    4
    day of
    ~p~&~wJP..L.J,
    1980 by a vote of
    ~
    Illinois Polluti
    trol Board

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