ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
January
8, 1976
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Complainant,
V.
)
PCB 75—252
VILLAGE OF
HARMON,
an Illinois
municipal corporation,
RespQndent.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr. Dumelle):
This matter comes before the Pollution Control Board
(Board)
on a Complaint filed by the Environmental Protection Agency
(Agency)
on June
25,
1975 against Respondent Village of Harmon
(Village),
located in Lee County,~Illinois. On September 12,
1975 the Village
filed an “Admission of Facts” which admits all of the facts alleged
in the Complaint which are necessary to support a finding of viola-
tion by the Board.
A hearing was held on September
23,. 1975 at which
no testimony or other evidence was given on the issue of whether the
Village had violated Section .~l9of the EnvirOnmenta1~Protection Act
(Act),
Section 501 of An Act to Regulate th~Operating of a Public
Water Supply
(Public Water Supply Act)
and.~Rules
302,
309,
and
310 of the Board’s Public Water Supply Regulations,
as alleged in
the three count complaint.
The only evidence introduced at the
hearing concerned factors of mitigation.
In the “Admission of Facts” the Village has admitted to the
following:
A.
Ownership and operation of a public water supply
system including one deep weel,
an elevated tank,
and a distribution system.
B.
Failure to comply with Agency requests to submit
water samples and operating reports.
C.
Failure to employ
a certified operator.
The Board therefore finds the Village to have violated
Section
19 of the Act, Section 501 of the Public Water Supply
Act, and Rules
302,
309, and 310 of the Public Water Supply
Regulations.
The only remaining question concerns the remedy.
At the hearing
it was shown that the Village, with a population
of approximately 250 persons has been under severe financial
and man—power restraints.
As the Agency stated regarding
the Village’s efforts to correct its violations,
“In this particular
case,
the Village has taken just about every step they probably can
take to come into compliance...”
(R.
17).
However,
these violations
19— 581
—2—
have created a very real risk to the health of the residents of
the Village of Harmon.
The Acts and Regulations violated were
established to insure
the maintenance of safe and adequate public
water supplies.
By
its neglect, the Village has violated these
standards and jeopardized the health and welfare of its.citizens.
Even given a present good faith attempt to comply,
a penalty
in this, case will demonstrate to Harmon and other similar communities
that Illinois law and the Board’s Regulations must be complied with
every day, and not merely after the commencement of an enforcement
action.
The minimum penalty set for a violation of the Public Water
Supply Act,
Ill.
Rev. Stat., Ch.
111—1/2,
§523
(1973)
,
is $100.
Due to the present good faith effort to comply and the limited
financial resources of the Village, the Board
Ii~dsthe minimum
penalty to be appropriate for the violations
as alleged in the
Complaint.
This opinion constitutes the findings of fact and conclusions
of law.
pRDER
It
is the Order of the Pollution Control Board that:
1.
Respondent Village of Harmon
is found to have violated
Section 19 of the Environmental Protection Acts Section 501 of the
Public Water Supply Act, and Rules 302, 309,and 310 of the Board’s
Public Water Supply Regulations.
2.
Respondent shall pay, as
a penalty for these violations
a penalty of $100,
payment to be made by certified check or money
order, within
35 days of the date of this Order to:
State of Illinois
Environmental Protection Agency
Fiscal Services Division
2200 Churchill Road
Springfield, Illinois
62706
3.
Respondent shall cease and desist from the above stated
violations.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
I, Chriatan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify the above Opinion and Order were adopted on the
g4~.
day of January,
1976 by a vote of
~V-~
—*
Illinois Pollution
rol Board
19—582