ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
December
5,
1985
IN
THE
MATTER OF:
PROPOSED AMENDMENTS TO
)
R85-29
SUBTITLE
C:
WATER POLLUTION,
35
ILL.
ADM. CODE 304.121
DENIAL OF EMERGENCY RULE.
PROPOSAL FOR PERMANENT RULE.
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by J.D.
Dumelle):
This matter comes before the Board upon a November
8,
1985
motion
for Emergency Rulemaking
filed by Bloomington and Normal
Sanitary District
(BNSD)
and
the Illinois Association of Sanitary
Districts
(IASD).
Responses were
filed by Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency, Northern Illinois Planning Commission and
United States Environmental Protection Agency on December
4,
1985.
BNSD and IASD urge
the Board
to adopt
an emergency
amendment to
35
Ill.
Adm. Code 304.121
(bacteria)
to establish
effluent disinfection on
a seasonal basis pursuant
to Section
27(c)
of the Environmental Protection Act
(Act)
and 5.02 of the
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act
(APA).
Such emergency rule
would
be effective
for 150 days.
That motion
is hereby denied.
Summary of Motion
In support of their motion, BNSD and IASD made several
allegations which
are set forth below.
They alleged that the
First District Appellate Court upheld
the Board’s repeal
of the
fecal
coliform water quality standard for secondary contact
waters, thereby holding that disinfection of fecal coliform
bacteria will no longer be required of secondary contact
waters.
The People of the State of Illinois
v. The
Illinois
Pollution Control Board, et al.,
119 Ill. App.3d
561,
75
Ill.
Dec.
88, 456 N.E.2d 909; November
1983.
During
the months of
November through April,
the general use waters
of
the State
are
not used
for primary contact
(e.g., swimming and wading).
Since
the fecal coliform standard was established primarily to protect
human health,
there appears
to be little reason to impose such a
standard during
the winter months when
the potential
for primary
contact
is greatly reduced.
The total annual cost of
disinfecting the final effluents of approximately 1,400
municipal,
industrial
and commercial
treatment plants
is over 4.0
million dollars, placing
an unnecessary financial burden on these
facilities.
Further, BNSD and IASD alleged that the environmental
impacts
of effluent disinfection with chlorine include production
of chlorinated hydrocarbons which have been
found
to be
carcinogenic and may enter drinking water supplies,
air emissions
87-55
—2—
of chloroform which will be listed
by the United States
Environmental Protection Agency as
a hazardous air
pollutant,
adverse effects upon aquatic life due
to
the presence
of residual
chlorine
in effluents and safety hazards
to treatment facility
workers and the surrounding community •if
an accidental
release
of
chlorine gas occurs.
It was also alleged that because of potable
water
treatment plants,
no measurable
risk exists
from bacteria
and viruses
in drinking water as a result of discontinuing
effluent disinfection.
Lastly,
BNSD and IASD alleged that
if
a season
of
non—chlorination were established, then necessary maintenance
and
repair
of existing chlorination systems could
be
scheduled and
completed during such a season.
Moreover,
since secondary
contact standards only apply to Chicago area streams,
a seasonal
non—chlorination period needs to be established
to afford
downstate areas
the opportunity
for relief similar
to that
in
the
Chicago
area.
Procedural History
In 1977,
the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
proposed amendments
to the water pollution regulations which
eliminated
the
fecal coliform water quality standard for general
use and secondary contact waters
(35 Ill.
Adxn.
Code 302.209 and
302.406) and amended
the corresponding effluent standard
(35 Ill.
Adm.
Code 304.121).
The Board docketed the proposed amendments
in R77—l2D, held ten public hearings throughout
the state
and
received extensive public comments.
On October
14,
1982,
the
Board adopted the Agency’s proposed amendments.
In November
1983,
the First District Appellate Court
reversed
the Board’s
repeal
of the fecal coliform water quality
standard
for general
use waters and the amendment of the fecal
coliform effluent standard.
The court, however, affirmed
the
Board’s order
repealing the
fecal coliform water
quality standard
for
secondary contact waters.
The Illinois Supreme Court
upheld
this action
in October
1984.
Subsequently,
the Board on
August
1,
1985,
by peremptory rulemaking
readopted the
fecal
coliform water quality and effluent standard but did
not file the
rules with the Secretary of State, since
it became aware that the
proposed amendments exceeded what was required under
the courts’
orders.
On November 21,
1985,
the Board
by peremptory rulemaking
revised
the fecal coliform effluent standard
to exclude its
applicability to secondary contact waters
and readopted the fecal
coliform water quality standard
for general
use waters.
The Board believes that BNSD and IASD have failed
to
demonstrate that an emergency exists.
While they have made
various unverified allegations which,
if proven, could perhaps
support
the adoption of a permanent rule,
those allegations
cannot simply be accepted
as true
in order
to support
a finding
that an emergency exists.
67-56
—3-
The Board does, however, believe that the question of
seasonal disinfection deserves to be considered further and
will
open docket R85-29 which will include a seasonal chlorination
proposal consistent with the BNSD and IASD proposal.
However, it
goes beyond that proposal
in that language has been added to
mitigate possible damage to aquatic life from recommencement of
chlorination in the spring.
The Board realizes that seasonal chlorination could result
in fish kills when chlorination is resumed in May.
With
year-round chlorination most fish will avoid
the chlorinated
stream reach.
However, with seasonal chlorination the fish will
not avoid those stream reaches during the winter months and could
be
subject to
sudden lethal slugs of chlorine.
Therefore,
the
Board
is including a directive in the rule which requires that
when facilities recommence disinfection, they shall do
so
in such
a way so as to minimize any potential adverse effect on aquatic
life.
This provision
is included to assure that the Agency has
the ability to include permit conditions to effectuate that goal.
Furthermore,
while
the BNSD and IASD have requested only
that
35 Iii. Adm. Code 304.121
be amended (General Effluent
Standards:
Bacteria),
the Board believes
that complete relief can
only be given if
35 Ill. Adm. Code 302.209
(General Use Water
Quality Standards:
Feca.
Coliform) is similarly amended to be
effective only during the summer months1
Therefore,
the Board
proposes amendments to both sections.
The Board
notes that BNSD and IASD have indicated a desire
for regulatory change which would go beyond
the implementation of
seasonal disinfection and establish some mechanism (such as an
“exception procedure”
similar to procedures presently in place
regarding combined sewer overflows) which would allow for
year-round relief, where appropriate.
The Board
invites BNSD,
IASD,
or any other interested person or group to file proposals
alternative
to or in addition to the proposed language
that is
set forth in this Order.
The Board hereby proposes the following amendments:
TITLE 35:
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
SUBTITLE
C:
WATER POLLUTION
CHAPTER 1:
POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
PART 302
WATER QUALITY STANDARDS
SUBPART B:
GENERAL USE WATER QUALITY STANDARDS
Section 302.209
Fecal Coliform
During the months of May through October, bBased on
a. minimum of
five samples taken over not more than a 3OThay period, fecal
coliforms (STORET number 31616)
shall not exceed
a geometric mean
67-57
-4-
of 200 per 100 ml,
nor shall more than 10
of the samples during
any
30 day period exceed 400 per 100 ml.
PART 304
EFFLUENT STANDARDS
SUBPART
A:
GENERAL EFFLUENT STANDARDS
Section 304.121
Bacteria
During the months of May through October,
no effluent governed by
this Part which discharges to general use waters
shall exceed 400
fecal coliform per 100 ml.
Any facility which ceases
disinfection during November through April
shall recommence
disinfection in such
a manner
so as to minimize any potential
adverse effect on aquatic life.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
I,
Dorothy
M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify that the above Emergency Order was adopted
on the
e5t~
day of
~4~-4~-
,
1985 by
a vote of 7—~
~h.
/L-~/
Dorothy N. Gunn, Clerk
—
Illinois Pollution Control Board
67-58