ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
August
6,
1971
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
V.
)
PCB 71~-86
STATE LINE FOUNDRIES,
INC.
Dissenting Opinion by N~.Dumelle
The amount
of the money penalty is my point of departure with
the majority in this case.
I believe that sound policy and past
Board actions indicate that a fine in the range of $3,000~5,000
would have been
more reasonable than the $7,500 penalty voted for
by the majority.
In ~
v.SouthernIllinos.sha1~Co.,Inc.
(PCB 7l~3l) the
Board dealt with
an
asphaltic concrete batching plant which was
a
gross neighborhood nuisance.
The company was not
a new enterprise,
it had been
in business
for a number of years.
Inexplicably the
company had
no
permit from the EPA or its predecessors.
Faced with
such
a flagrantly violative situation the Board imposed
a money
penalty of $5,000.
In Roesch Enamel
v.
EPA, (PCB 7l~62) the Board considered the
particulate emissions from
a ferro~enamelingoperation.
The
company,
partly through inattention,
failed to complete the procedures required
in the rules
for filing and having approved an air contaminant emission
reduction program.
The Board in that case imposed a fine of $5,000.
In both of the cases cited above the enterprise was clearly
a “bigger business” than in the instant case and probably more
readily able
to
absorb the financial shock of a multi~thousand
dollar penalty.
Equally as evident in the
two cited cases was
the
intentional nature of each company~sfailure to comply with permit
and abatement
program
procedures.
In the instant case the foundry was a new business, having been
incorporated
in
1967 and commencing
operations in 1968.
The foundry
employed
17 persons and probably had
annual sales
on
the
order
of
$300,000.
Figuring at 6
profit on sales
would
result
in
an
estimated
annual profit of $18,000.
The fine of $7,500
is thus almost 50
of
a year~sprofits.
2
—
196
The company~s failure to obtain a permit appeared to be
inadvertent.
The operations of the foundry were conducted in a
remote area with only three residences within a half-mile radius.
Of the
three,
two had no complaint to make while
the third
could
not be contacted by the EPA.
The
desired results in each case before this Board is compliance
with the applicable standard at the earliest possible time.
This
objective is not fully served,
however, by an individual petitioner
or respondent promising under oath that he will do such and such by
so and so
date,
Incentives by way of bonds and/or money penalties
are in order not only to insure that
the individual litigant will
comply but to inform others similarly situated that non-compliance
is
a serious social breach which may result in substantial money
outlays
by individual polluters.
In
this field of social activity
as in every other, industry and other ‘polluters must know what
the
cost of doing business
is.
Obviously each case of penalty imposi-
tion is mitigated or aggravated on its own peculiar facts but it
is no part of this Board~sbusiness to force a legitimate enterprise
out
of
business.
Pollution hurts
the public;
the polluter must
therefore be hurt
a sufficient amount to
force him (and others)
to
abate.
The amount of hurt in each case must be below that threshold
of financial pain leading to business abandonment
so long as compli-
ance is achieved.
In this case,
then, we have a small and new company which has
admitted guilt and thrown itself at the Board~smercy.
The’considerable
cost of prosecution has been saved to the State.
Yet the majority
has levied
a fine 50
larger than that in the contested Southern
Illinois Asphalt Co. and the Roesch Enamel Co. case cited earlier.
The Board ought
to encourage pleas
of guilty.
The fine in this
case
is much
too harsh in the circumstances
cited and may kill or
seriously injure
a
small business.
1
~
/7
~L/
I, Regina E.
Ryan, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, certify that the above Dissenting Opinion was submitted on
the ~day
of August, 1971.
1 Board
2
—
197