ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
November 2, 1995
SPECTRULITE CONSORTIUM, INC.,
)
)
Petitioner,
)
)
PCB 96-6
v.
)
(Variance - Air)
)
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
)
PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
)
Respondent.
)
CONCURRING OPINION (by M. McFawn):
I concur. While Petitioner demonstrated that variance from
Section 212.458(b)(25) may be granted without significant impact
to health or the environment, Petitioner has offered no
compliance plan and the majority has failed to require any type
of compliance plan. The majority grants the variance absent a
compliance plan on the grounds that the Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency (Agency) will be the proponent of a rulemaking
wherein Section 212.458 will be amended to allow Petitioner to
operate two lines, as opposed to the single line to which it is
currently restricted by rule. The majority finds that the
speculative nature of this change in law "should not be an
impediment to a finding of arbitrary or unreasonable hardship".
While I agree that the lack of a compliance plan would not be an
impediment to such a finding, I fail to understand why the
majority addressed the lack of a compliance plan in the context
of arbitrary and unreasonable hardship. Adequate proof of
arbitrary or unreasonable hardship is statutorily required to
obtain a variance, whereas once such a finding has been made
petitioners are required to commit to a plan that is reasonably
calculated to achieve compliance due to the nature of variances,
which is a temporary reprieve from compliance with Board
regulation. (Monsanto Co. v. IPCB (1977), 67 Ill.2d 276, 367
N.E.2d 684; City of Mendota v. IPCB (3rd Dist. 1987), 161 Ill.
App.3d 203, 514 N.E.2d 218.)
Unlike the majority, I find that Petitioner has demonstrated
arbitrary and unreasonable hardship because the most recent air
modeling performed by the Agency, which was based upon recent
revisions to the air emission source inventory, including
significant revisions provided by Petitioner, demonstrates that
Petitioner can be allowed to operate two magnesium pot furnace
lines without significantly impacting air quality. Given the
limited nature of the variance and this fact, Petitioner has
demonstrated arbitrary and unreasonable hardship in the absence
of the variance.
2
As for the majority's apparent suspension of the requirement
for a variance petitioner to have a compliance plan, I disagree.
Heretofore, the Board has only granted variance where
exceptional circumstances are found to exist. The Board has
found that exceptional circumstances exist in those rare
instances where a petitioner has proven that compliance
technology does not yet exist, and additional time is needed to
research the same. Alternatively, the Board has found exceptional
circumstances to exist where more time is needed to seek a
regulatory change, and the grant of variance is conditioned upon
the establishment of an alternative compliance plan within a
short timeframe if regulatory relief is not forthcoming. Given
the speculative nature of rulemaking, the Board has refused to
prejudge the outcome of the same even when the site-specific
rulemaking is pending before the Board at the time the variance
relief is granted. (Illinois Power Company v. IEPA, (June 22,
1989), PCB 88-97, 100 PCB 177, 180, 181; General Motors Corp. v.
IEPA, (June 4, 1992), PCB 88-193, 134 PCB-001, 003-004; Borden
Chemicals and Plastics Operating Limited Partnership v. IEPA,
(October 25, 1990), PCB 90-130, 115 PCB 453, 456-457.)
Neither the majority nor Petitioner has provided basis to
depart from precedent on this issue. I would require a
compliance plan of Petitioner, and allow it to include a
"speculative change in law" because the variance requested is for
a limited duration, the environmental impact is minimal, and
Petitioner has been and is continuing to investigate
technological methods to achieve compliance, or at a minimum,
achieve further reductions in its PM-10 emissions.
Accordingly, Petitioner should be required to continue its
investigation into the alternative control technology described
in its petition and adhere to the schedule likewise contained
therein. Based upon it, Petitioner would complete installation
of the newly developed pot covers on or about the expiration of
this variance if the technology proves feasible. (See Petition
of July 12, 1995 at pp. 4-5.) Furthermore, Petitioner should be
required to propose its own site-specific rulemaking in
sufficient time for the Board to consider the merits of the same
prior to the expiration of this variance should the Agency fail
to propose a rule amending Section 212.458(b)(25) sufficiently in
advance of expiration.
For these reasons, I respectfully concur.
Marili McFawn
Board Member
3
I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, do hereby certify that the above concurring opinion was
filed on the day of , 1995.
Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board