ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    August
    30,
    1971
    CITY OF CARROLLTON AND
    CARROLLTON FARMERS ELEVATOR
    COMPANY
    #
    PCB 71~-210
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    Opinion of
    the Board
    (by Mr. Currie):
    This
    is
    a Petition for variance filed jointly on July
    26,
    1971
    by the City of Carroilton and the Carroliton Farmers Elevator
    Company to allow open burning of trees, which must be burned as
    a result of age, disease or storm,
    by the City of Carroilton.
    We dismissed the petition August
    5 and this opinion gives our reasons.
    The Carrollton Farmers Elevator Company wishes
    to burn corn
    cobs, stating that an average of seventy~five truck loads
    of corn
    cobs per year must be disposed
    of.
    The alleged hardship with
    regard to the City of Carrollton
    is that “compliance with the
    provisions from which variance is sought would impose an
    arbitrary or unreasonable hardship because either the trees,
    logs and
    limbs must remain where they fall
    or individual property
    owners must burn them on the site”,
    The alleged hardship with
    regard to the Carroilton Farmers Elevator Company is that
    “compliance with
    the provisions from which variance is sought
    would impose on the elevator
    an unreasonable
    hardship because
    the Company would no longer be
    able to use its corn shelling
    facility as it would have no way to dispose of the corn cobs
    after the process was completed”.
    As we have often pointed out, open burning has been illegal
    in Illinois since
    1965.
    The joint petitioners allege no facts
    that make their case different from that of any other municipality
    or company.
    What the petitioners seek is not
    a variance but
    a repeal of the regulation.
    Moreover, they have offered only
    bare conclusions as to their inability
    to solve their open
    burning problems in accordance with the rules.
    We have held
    on numerous occasions that mere conclusory allegations are
    insufficient
    in
    a petition for variance
    (e.g., City of Jacksonville
    v.
    EPA,
    #
    70~30,January,
    1971).
    There
    is no allegation as to
    what the costs of compliance would be
    and no indication of the
    extent to which
    the community might suffer if the variances
    were granted and,
    therefore, the petitthon is fatally deficient,
    2
    327

    We have dismissed numerous petitions such as this in the
    past involving the burning of trees.
    The only argument here
    is that it costs more not to pollute than it does to burn in
    the open.
    We find this argument totally inadequate to support
    a petition for variance and, accordingly, order the petition
    dismissed without prejudice.
    I,
    Regina E.
    Ryan, Clerk of the Pollution Control Board, certify
    that the Board adopted the above Opinion this
    30 day of
    August
    1971.
    2
    328

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