ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    August
    13,
    1971
    WALTER R.
    SEEGREN
    v.
    )
    #
    PCB 71—106
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    Mr. Ellis
    E. Fuqua, Waukegan,
    for Walter R,
    Seegren
    Mr. Roger
    C.
    Ganobcik, for the Environmental Protection Agency
    Opinion of the Board
    (by Mr. Currie):
    The
    petitioner seeks
    a variance to allow the extension
    of
    a sewer and
    the connection
    of
    two eighteen—unit apartment
    buildings to Waukegan sewers tributary to the overloaded Waukegan
    sewage treatment plant of the North Shore Sanitary District.
    Such connections were forbidden by our order
    in League of Women
    Voters v. North Shore Sanitary District,
    # 70-7
    (March 31,
    1971)
    After hearing, we denied the present petition August
    5,
    1971,
    This opinion gives
    our reasons.
    The buildings in question were completed
    in January or
    February of this
    year, but the Environmental Protection Agency
    denied
    a sewer construction permit before the entry of our order
    on the basis
    of Agency policy
    (R.
    43, 57-58~petition,
    pp.
    3-4).
    Our March
    31 opinion called attention to the possible use of
    package plants or septic tanks to avoid the necessity for adding
    to the existing overload.
    After filing the petition,
    the petitioner
    proceeded
    to install
    a septic tank serving both buildings,
    at
    a cost of $5000,
    and the buildings are now almost 90
    occupied
    (R.
    68,
    69,
    89)
    In short,
    the sewer ban is not interfering with
    the
    petitioner~s ability to make
    the intended use of his
    land.
    It is true that additional expenditures have been incurred--to
    the extent of about six weeks~ rental
    (R.
    79-80)--, and that
    some money was lost because of the lost weeks while installing
    the septic tank.
    But these losses
    seem small compared with the
    benefits of keeping the additional flow out
    of Lake Michigan,
    and
    in anyyevent they have already been incurred,
    To grant the
    variance now would do nothing for the petitioner,
    and it would
    ~harm the Lake.
    We think
    the petitioner has commendably done
    what our March 31 order contemplated:
    He has found
    a way of
    utilizing his property
    for the intended use without causing
    harm to the Lake,
    and
    at
    a cost we deem entirely reasonable.
    2
    285

    As for the question of what will happen to the
    septic tank after
    the sewer ban
    is lifted,
    that is
    a question we can deal with by
    regulations governing the use of septic tanks, which
    are now
    under consideration,
    Granting this variance today would not
    require petitioner to connect to the
    sewer;
    to do so would cause
    him extra expense,
    and there is no showing
    that the septic
    tank we asked him
    to employ is illegal.
    The testimony indicated that two additional buildings
    are
    under construction,
    and clearly the petitioner would
    like per-
    mission
    to connect them to the
    sewer.
    The petition, however,
    makes no such request.
    In any case,
    a permit from the Agency
    would be required to the extent that a sewer extension
    is at
    issue;
    the proper route
    is to apply
    for an EPA permit and,
    if
    desired,
    to seek Board review in the event of
    a denial.
    Moreover,
    as we have said
    above, we believe the septic tank is
    an acceptable alternative
    at reasonable
    cost, assuming,
    as the
    testimony suggests, that soil
    and other conditions are suitable
    CR.
    92,
    104).
    That to deny permission to connect these buildings
    to the sewer would deprive the residents of
    a swimming pool
    until
    the ban
    is lifted hardly seems compelling,
    To do without
    such luxuries
    for
    a time is not the kind of hardship that would
    justify further pollution of the Lake Michigan beaches.
    This opinion constitutes the Board~s findings of fact
    and
    conclusions of
    law.
    I, Regina E.
    Ryan, Clerk of the Pollution Control Board,
    certify
    that the Board adopted the above Opinion this
    /3~
    day of
    2
    286

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