ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    March 17, 1977
    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,
    )
    cx rel.
    WILLIAM
    J.
    SCOTT, ATTORNEY
    GENERAL OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS,
    )
    Complainant,
    )
    v.
    )
    PCB 76—100
    BRIGHTON BUILDING AND MAINTENANCE
    )
    COMPANY,
    a Delaware corporation,
    )
    WESTERN ASPHALT PAVING COMPANY,
    an
    Illinois corporation, WESTERN ASPHALT
    MANUFACTURING COMPANY, an Illinois
    )
    corporation, LANGHORNE BOND,
    as
    )
    Secretary of the Illinois Department
    )
    of Transportation,
    Respondents.
    ~)
    Mr. Marvin Medintz, Assistant Attorney General, appeared for the
    Complainant;
    Messrs. Clifford L. Weaver and Christopher J. Duerksen, Attorneys,
    appeared for Respondent Illinois Department of Transportation;
    Mr. Warren Fuller, Attorney, appeared for Respondents Brighton
    Building and Maintenance Company, Western Asphalt Paving
    Company, and Western Asphalt Manufacturing Company.
    OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (by Mr.
    Zeitlin):
    This matter is before the Board on an Enforcement Complaint
    filed by the Attorney General
    on April
    13,
    1976, alleqinq violation
    by
    the
    variou~
    Respondents
    of
    §9(a)
    of the
    EnviroiimenLal
    Protection
    Act
    (Act)
    and
    RuJe
    102 of Chapter
    2:
    Air
    Pollution,
    of
    this Board’s
    Rules and Rejulations.
    Ill.
    Rev. Stat.,
    Ch.
    111—1/2,
    §1009(a)
    (1975);
    Ill. PCB Regs.,
    Ch.
    2,
    §102(1976).
    Those violations were alleged
    to have arisen as a result of activities undertaken
    in connection
    with the resurfacing of Interstate Route 55
    (Stevenson Expressway)
    near its junction with Halsted Street,
    in Chicago,
    and to have
    involved the emission of “vast quantities of black smoke containing
    enormous quantities and concentrations of particulate matter.
    .
    .
    At
    a hearing held
    in Chicago on December
    10,
    1976,
    no testimony
    or evidence was introduced, but the parties submitted a Stipulation
    and Proposal for Settlement
    (Stipulation), which forms the basis
    for this Opinion and Order.
    No comments were received from the
    public.
    25
    91

    —2—
    The Stipulation indicates that the alleged emissions occurred
    as the result
    oLc
    bridge deck resurfacing
    on the Stevenson Expressway
    near Haisted Street.
    Under a cont~actawarded by the Illinois
    Department of Transportation, the corporate Respondents in this
    matter were using
    a “heater—planer’t technique
    to soften and remove
    the top asphalt layer and the middle coal-tar layer from the existing
    roadway,
    so that new layers of material could be substituted.
    A
    heater—planer
    (gas or oil—fired)
    consists of a heating chamber with
    burners underneath through which heat and flame are transmitted to
    the roadway,
    softening the asphalt and coal-tar.
    On or about April
    12, 1976,
    overheating in the heater—planer
    operation caused incomplete combustion of the underlying materials.
    Although the Stipulation contains no admission of violation,
    it is
    stated that this overheating did cause black smoke and particulate
    matter
    to be emitted,
    (Stip,,
    ¶8).
    Although Complainant contends
    that
    a causal relationship exists, the parties did not agree in the
    Stipulation that there was any connection between those emissions
    and high ambient air quality readings for particulate matter between
    April
    12, 1976 and April 15,
    1976,
    (Stip.,
    ¶9).
    On April 14,
    1976,
    however, the Department of Transportation did notify the private,
    corporate Respondents in this matter to use an alternate method for
    repairs on the Stevenson Expressway.
    Although the parties agreed that no method was known
    to the
    Department of Transportation prior to that time,
    an alternate metho~1
    (“the autograder”), costing $68,250.00, was obtained by the corporate
    Respondents.
    The alternate method involved no combustion, with no
    resulting emissions.
    In settlement of the matter,
    the parties uniformly agree that
    the public interest would not be served by further litigation.
    AlthougJ
    no violation is admitted, the corporate Respondents have agreed that
    in order to prevent any possible violation in the future,
    the following
    actions will be taken:
    I
    .
    IIc’a L ~r—fdaners wi I
    E
    be
    used
    I
    or
    br id;~
    (I(’Ck
    ‘pair
    ()H
    ly
    wht~ii
    a
    I
    ~tn~it
    IV(’
    c~qtnj)Iu(’nI
    i~
    n1
    aV~1i
    1ihlv.
    2.
    Heater-planers which are used shall be designed
    and operated so as to minimize emissions.
    3.
    All heater—planer operators will be instructed
    in operation methods, and will also be instructed to cease
    the use of heater—planers whenever smoke or particulate
    matter exceeds
    30 per cent opacity for more than one
    minute, or for more than four minutes
    in the aggregate
    in any 60-minute period.
    25
    92

    —3—
    While the Department of Transportation similarly does not agree
    that a violation actually occurred,
    it has agreed
    to the following
    actions
    to prevent any possible f~itur~violations:
    1.
    A specific provision requiring contractor
    compliance with the Act and the rules adopted thereunder
    will be included in its next revision of Standard Speci-
    fications for Road and Bridge Construction.
    2.
    A similar provision will require that all
    equipment utilized in the removal of roadway surfaces or
    waterproofing membranes meet, and be operated
    so as not
    to exceed,
    a visual limitation of
    30 per cent opacity
    (or Ringelmann I),
    as described above.
    Finally, the parties ask that the Board dismiss this case upon
    acceptance
    of
    the
    Stipulation.
    The Board has consistently held that it has a special interest
    in cases brought before it, and that
    it must pass upon any settle-
    ment among parties to such action.
    See, ~e.g., GAF Corp.
    v. EPA,
    PCB 71—li,
    5 PCB 525
    (1972).
    However,
    “we have consistently afforded
    considerable latitude to the adversary parties in achieving
    a consent
    order that resolves the controversy and provides for adequate future
    control
    of pollution without further expensive litigation, provided
    that the settlement
    is not such
    as to encourage disregard
    for the
    law by grossly underpenalizIng past defaults.”
    EPA v. City of
    Silvis,
    PCB 71-157,
    5 PCB 205
    (1972).
    Although there is no penalty provided
    by
    the settlement
    in this case, nor even a finding of violation,
    we
    find
    that
    the requirements for settlement adequacy have been met.
    It
    is clear that the changes of procedure,
    by both the private,
    corporate Respondents and the State Department of Transportation,
    should serve to alleviate any such problems
    in the future.
    Accept-
    ance of the Stipulation, besides preventing future problems with these
    Respondents, will encourage compliance by other,
    similarly situated,
    respondents.
    The Department of Transportation’s inclusion
    in its
    Standard Specifiu~t.ioxisfor Road
    and
    flr:idtjt? CoiwLiuci ion oL
    provisions
    requirinq compliance will be of considerable
    help
    in the enforcement
    of
    the
    Act, and in obtaining
    its goals.
    We accept the Stipulation and Proposal for Settlement, and our
    Order shall read accordingly.
    This Opinion constitutes the findings of fact and conclusions
    of law of the Board in this matter.
    25
    93

    —4—
    ORDEP
    IT
    IS THE ORDER OF THE POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD that the Stipu-
    lation and Proposal for Settlement submitted by the parties to this
    matter be accepted; accordingly,
    the instant matter
    is dismissed,
    conditioned upon compliance by all parties to this matter with all
    terms and conditions
    thereto.
    ~1r.Jacob Dumelle dissents.
    1, Christan
    L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
    Control Board, hereby certify the above Opinion and Order were
    adopted on the
    L~’
    day of
    _________
    1977,
    by a vote of
    ~_/
    Christan
    Clerk
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    25
    94

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