ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
March 11, 1976
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Complainant,
v.
)
PCB 74—208
PETER COOPER CORPORATION,
DIAMOND GLUE DIVISION,
a Delaware corporation,
Respondent.
Ms.
Kathryn
Sheehan Nesburg,
Attorney,
appeared for the Complainant;
Mr.
Henry
W.
Sledz, Jr.,
Attorney, appeared for the Respondent.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr.
Zeitlin):
This matter
is before the Board on
a Complaint filed by the
Environmental Protection Agency
(Agency) on June
5,
1974,
alleging
that Respondent Peter Cooper Corporation
(Cooper) had operated an
inedible rendering process
so as to create odor emissions in violation
of Section 9(a)
of the Environmental Protection Act
(Act)
and Rule
802(b)
of Chapter
2:
Air Pollution, of the Pollution Control Board
(Board)
Rules and Regulations.
The facility alleged to be in violation
is
Cooper’s Diamond Glue Division plant, located at 2930 South Robinson
Avenue
in Chicago,
in a heavy industrial area of the city.
The first two hearings in this matter were held in Chicago on
October 15,
1974, and May 16,
1975.
On June 19,
1975,
the parties
entered a Joint Stipulation and Proposal for Settlement
(Stipulation
No.
1), which was the subject of an Interim Order of the Board on
July 24,
1975.
The Board’s July
24, 1975 Interim Order rejected Stipulation
No.
1 for the following reasons:
We reject the Stipulation entered into between
the parties.
In exchange for the payment of only
$1,000 Respondent
is
in effect given a shield for
possible violations extending over
a five—year
period.
The record does not indicate the magnitude
of the interference experienced by residents and
others who found it necessary to be near Respondent’s
plant.
The compliance program is not specified
in
sufficient detail to insure that the public is
adequately protected.
We don’t know the extent of
Respondent’s knowledge of its possible pollution
source.
No economic data are supplied on Peter
Cooper’s financial situation.
The cost of the newly
constructed brick building is not known nor have
possible costs of compliance been included in the
record.
In light of the record, we find the Stipulation
unacceptable.
20—195
—2—
The
Board’s
July 24,
1975 Interim Order also details the
procedural history of this case through that date, the specific
operations carried on at the Diamond Glue plant, and various efforts
made by Peter
Cooper
to abate the odor problems which were the subject
of the Agency’s Complaint.
Those matters need not be repeated here.
A third hearing was held in Chicago on
Jan.
19, 1976.
The
parties then entered a new Stipulation and Proposal for Settlement
(Stipulation No. 2), which was submitted to the Board in signed form
on February 17, 1976.
At the January 19,
1976 hearing the parties
detailed those changes in Stipulation No. 2 which were made in an
attempt to correct the deficiencies which the Board found in Stipulation
No.
1.
Inasmuch as the Board’s July 24, 1975 Interim Order rejecting
Stipulation No.
1 adequately sn~n~narizes
that
first stipulation, we
shall follow the parties’ lead
and
discuss here only those differences,
as they relate to the acceptability of stipulation No.
2.
1.
The Board’s first objection was that, for a penalty of
$1,000, Respondent would have been given a shield from enforcement
for a possible violation extending over a five-year period.
In
Stipulation No.
2, the penalty provision is increased to $1,500, and
the Agency has dropped all allegation of violation during the period
July
1,
1970 until January 8, 1973, the latter date being the
time
of
the Agency’s first inspection of Respondent’s plant.
2.
To answer the Board’s second objection, the record’s failure
to indicate the magnitude of interference experienced by residents and
others as a result of odors from Respondent’s plant, Stipulation No. 2
now
includes several complaint forms filled out by citizens regarding
the effects of the odors upon them.
Those complaint forms
(Ex. A-L),
indicate that the degree of interference was indeed significant.
3.
The Board’s third objection to Stipulation No. 1 was a
lack of specificity in the compliance progrcm, needed to insure that
the public would be adequate?y protected in the stipulated settlement.
The
parties have added new material (paragraphs 14 through 19 of
Stipulation No.
2) describing in detail the compliance program.
In essence,
the compliance program in this enforcement case is
entirely contingent.
Cooper has already constructed
(as noted in
our
earlier Interim Opinion) a brick building to enclose the ~tankage,N
which had previously been stored outdoors, and which
both
parties
agree was the source of the odors in question.
Although Cooper
apparently believes that use of this building will be sufficient to
abate the odor problem, the iqency will nonetheless conduct a 3-month
investigation, after which the
Agency may
require that Cooper install
either an afterburner or a
wet
scrubber to control any odors which
still escape.
During the 3-month investigation period, Cooper will
20—las
—3—
prepare construction permits
for submission to the Agency should a
construction program for the afterburner or wet scrubber be necessary,
and will,
if additional time for the construction program is indeed
necessary,
apply
to the Board for a Variance during such construction.
Cooper will submit
a
$5,000 performance bond to cover the eventuality
that such construction will be required.
4.
To answer the Board’s fourth question, concerning the actual
source of the odors from Cooper’s facility, both parties have agreed
that the handling of tankage
is
(or was)
the source.
5.
The Board’s objection concerning
a lack of knowledge of
cooper’s financial siutation
is answered by stipulation to the fact
that Cooper could and can afford any control technology likely to be
necessary.
6.
The Board’s statement that the cost of the brick building
constructed by Cooper was not shown in Stipulation No.
1
is now
corrected in Stipulation No.
2,
to show a cost of $19,500.
The cost
of any future controls is given at $10,000,
(R.6,
January 19,
1976
hearing).
In light of the additional information submitted by the parties,
the Board finds that the settlement now before it is adequate.
While
the penalty remains low, Stipulation No.
2 indicates that the settle-
ment approved here will serve to abate the problems which have existed,
if they
have not
in fact aireddy been abated.
In addition,
the parties
have shown in mitigation that Cooper has expended considerable sums
over the last several years
in an attempt to abate the problem.
Only two
issues remain:
The parties did not,
in Stipulation No.
2,
agree whether,
(1) Cooper’s Diamond Glue facility
is
in
fact an inedible
rendering plant, or
(2) whether there was
in fact sufficient odor from
Cooper’s plant to constitute violations of the Act and our Regulations.
First,
there can be no c2oubt that the process described in both
Stipulation Nos.
1 and
2,
at Cooper’s Chicago facility,
is in fact an
inedible rendering process.
Cooper’s process fits squarely within the
definition given in Rule 801.
Second,
the parties did not agree
in Stipulation No.
2 as to
the presence or absence of violation,
(e.g., paragraphs
9,
13).
In
light of the matters submitted in Stipulation No.
2 on the issues of
interference with individuals, economic and technical reasonableness
of eliminating odors, and the duration of the problem
(see,
e.g.,
Ex.
A-L),
we have no difficuJty finding a violation of Section
9(a)
of the Act.
Based on our finding that Cooper’s facility
is an inedible
rendering process, we also find a violation of Rule 802(b).
This Opinion constitutes the findings of fact and conclusions of
law of the Board
in this matter.
20—197
—4—
ORDER
IT
IS
THE
ORDER
OF
THE
POLLUTION
CONTROL
BOARD
Lhat:
1.
Respondent
Peter
Cooper
Corporation,
I)iamond
Glue
Division,
a
Delaware
corporation,
is
found
to
have
operated
an
inedible
rendering
process
in
Chicago,
Illinois,
in
violation
of
Section
9(a)
of
the
Environ-
mental
Protection
Act
and
Rule
802(b)
of
Chapter
2:
Air
Pollution
of
the
Pollution
Control
Board’s
Rules
and
Regulations.
2.
Respondent
shall
pay
as
a
penalty
for
the
aforesaid
violations
the
sum
of
Fifteen
Hundred Dollars
($1,500.00), payment to be made within thirty
(30)
days
of
the
date
of
this
Order
by
certified
check
or
money
order
to:
Environmental
Protection
Agency
Fiscal
Services
Division
2200
Churchill
Road
Springfield,
Illinois
62706
3.
Complainant
Environmental Protection Agency
and Respondent Peter Cooper Corporation shall comply
with all provisions of the
“terms of
settlements’ of
the Stipulation and Proposal for Settlement
in this
matter filed on February 17,
1976.
4.
To assure any further construction which
may be required under such terms
of settlement,
Respondent shall post
a performance bond
in the
amount of Five Thousand Dollars
($5,000.00),
in a
form acceptable to the Environmental Protection
Agency,
such bond to be submitted to:
Environmental Protection Agency
Control Program Coordinator
Division of Air Pollution Control
2200 Churchill Road
Springfield,
Illinois
62706
Mr.
Dumnelle concurred.
I,
Christan L.
Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, hereby certify the
bove Opinion and Order were
adopted on the
~
day of
-
,
1976,
by
a vote of
4/p
Illinois Pollution
~trol Board
~n—198