ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
January
14
,
1976
SANDWICH IRON FOUNDRY,
INC.,
an Illinois corporation,
Petitioner,
)
v.
•)
PCB 75—213
)
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
Respondent.
Mr.
Scott Courtin, Reid, Ochsenschlager,
Murphy
&
Hupp, appeared
on behalf of Petitioner
Mr.
Peter Orlinsky appeared on behalf of Respondent
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr.
Young):
On May 22,
1975,
Petitioner filed
a petition for variance
seeking relief from Rule 203(d) (7) (C) (1) of the Board’s Air
Pollution Regulations.
On May 29,
1975,
the petition.was found
to be inadequate by the Board because it did not include infor-
znation concerning the effect upon nearby residences if the variance
were granted, and because it failed to include information pertaining
to the criteria required by Train
V.
NRDC,
Inc.,
43 USLW 4467,
~Supreme Court No.
73-1742, April
16,
1975).
On July
3, 1975, Petitioner refiled its petition of May
22,
1975, with some additional data, and on September
4, 1975, Peti-
tioner filed a second amended petition for variance seeking relief
therein from Rule 203(a)
of the Air Pollution Regulations and
supplied supplemental information required by the Board Order of
May 29,
1975.
A hearing was held on November 18,
1975 at which
time a Stipulation was entered into between the parties.
Sandwich manufactures grey iron castings at its Piano plant
and presently operates
a
2
1/2 ton cupola which is the subject
of this petition.
The Agency has estimated that particulate
emissions from this cupola are 20.4 lbs./hour,
far exceeding the
limit set by Rule 203(a)
of 3.15 lbs./hour.
On June 25,
1975,
Petitioner entered into a contract for the
installation of a Venturi scrubber at a cost of $89,000 and expects
the equipment to be installed and operable by July of 1976.
Peti-
tioner submits the reason it has been dilatory in its pollution
19—665
—2—
control efforts is that prior
to January, 1974,
the controlling
shareholder had thwarted any such effort.
A change in the control
of the corporation occurred
in
1974 and the present controlling
shareholder has taken an active interest in bringing the cupola
into compliance.
The nearest residence to the foundry
is estimated to be 150
feet away and Petitioner alleges that it has not received any
complaints from the neighboring citizens with regard
to the opera-
tion of the cupola.
Petitioner thereby concludes that it would
appear that the operation of the cupola, in violation of Rule 203
(a) would have little effect,
if any, on the citizens who live
in the vicinity.
In data supplied by Petitioner,
however,
the 1974
annual geometric mean particulateconcentration was found to be
92
micrograms per cubic meter at the Agency’s Plano monitoring station,
exceeding our standard of
75 micrograms per cubic meter.
Petitioner alleges that a denial of this variance petition
would force
a complete shutdown of the foundry, causing the dis-
missal of its
23 employees,
and placing Petitioner’s customers in
a difficult,
if not impossible position of attempting to replace
Petitioner with another supplier.
The Agency, on page
3 of its Recommendation,
is of the opinion
that Petitioner’s compliance program should bring the facility into
compliance with Rule 203(a), and that Petitioner’s project completior
schedule is reasonable,
considering the magnitude of the project.
The Agency does not oppose the grant of
a variance.
The Board, however,
does not feel the Petitioner has met the
burden on those seeking
a variance.
With the data supplied by
Petitioner,
it has not been established to the satisfaction of the
Board that particulate emissions from the cupola will not contribute
to an air quality violation in the surrounding area.
Petitioner concluded that the operation of the cupola in vio-
lation of Rule 203(a) would have little effect on the citizens who
live in the plant vicinity because no complaints had been received
from the neighboring citizens.
We reject this conclusion.
Peti-
tioner cannot be authorized to operate its cupola
in violation of
Rule 203(a)
just because it is located in a neighborhood with non-
complaining citizens.
Although Petitioner alleges that
a denial of this variance
petition would force a shutdown of the plant, the allegation is
unfounded.
The Board has consistently held that a denial of a
variance petition does not constitute
a shutdown order.
The Peti-
tioner can still operate although subjecting itself
to possible
enforcement action
(ABC Great States
v.
EPA, PCB 73—39; Unarco v.
EPA, PCB 75—289).
19—666
—3—
While Petitioner alleges that it has recently pursued a
solution to its oroblem and regrets the inaction of
the earlier
controlling interest, the corporation
is, nonetheless, bound by
the earlier officer’s inaction even thouqh it has now embarked
on a satisfactory program to bring the plant into compliance.
While proof of such circumstances might carry some weight when
presented in mitigation in an enforcement. action, the allegations
do not establish a hardship on which a variance can be granted.
It follows from this finding that to deny this variance request
would not irfl~os? a
hardship
on Petitioner which could be considered
unreasonable
01
arbitrary.
Any hardship that results from a
refusal to take necessary steps toward compliance is self—imposed,
and that the hardship imposed by denying a variance is not un-
reasonable or arbitrary if it was earlier within the power of
the
Petitioner
to comply
(City of Danville v~EPA, PCB 72—335).
For the forecoing reasons the Board denies Sandwich Iron
Foundry’s petition for variance.
This Opinion constitutes the findings of fact and conclusions
of law of the Board in this matter.
ORDER
It is the Order of the Board that the petition of Sandwich
Iron Foundry, Inc.
be and is hereby dismissed.
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, hereby certify the above Opinion and Order were
adopted on the
J4~”
day of
_________________________,
1976
by
a vote of
_________
Christan L. Moffett4
lerk
Illinois Pollution
trol Board
19—667