ILLINOIS
    POLLUTION
    CONTROL
    BOARD
    May
    4,
    1971
    HARDWICK BROS.
    CO.
    )
    )
    )
    v.
    )
    #
    71—17
    ENVIRONMENTAL
    PROTECTION
    AGENCY
    )
    Dissenting Opinion
    (by Mr.
    Currie):
    This
    is
    a
    difficult
    case,
    and
    the
    Board’s
    opinion
    states
    the competing considerations fairly and completely.
    I agree
    with
    the Board that Hardwick’s proof as to the high cost of
    chipping and hauling away
    the brush that is proposed to be burned
    is thorough and impressive,
    but
    I also agree
    that other alternatives
    to burning need further exploration.
    I am pleased that the Board
    insists upon an investigation
    of the
    use of the so—called air—
    curtain incinerator, which apparently holds much promise for
    eliminating most of the
    smoke from wood burning,
    and upon
    an effort
    to obtain more land on which to bury the material.
    But
    I think
    the absence of proof
    that these alternatives
    are impracticable
    means the company has not sustained its burden of proof.
    It seems
    to me we
    are being asked to bail
    Hardwi.ck out
    of
    a bad bargain.
    Open burning has been illegal since
    1965;
    a
    bidder on a contract such as this should know
    it cannot rely
    on
    our granting
    a variance
    and should insist on appropriate contract
    provisions assuring adequate means of disposing of waste wood or
    full
    compensation
    for
    disposal
    costs.
    To me it
    is highly significant
    that both the Corps
    and the contractor fully expected that the
    wood would be buried
    along
    the cleared bank.
    It
    is
    thus admitted
    that
    there
    is
    an
    alternative
    method
    of
    disposal,
    and
    indeed
    a
    preferable
    one.
    The
    only
    reason
    it
    is
    not
    to be employed
    is that
    someone——
    the
    Corps
    or the Conservancy District, which obtained
    the
    land
    for the project—— underestimated the amount of land that
    would be needed for the purpose,
    and Hardwick
    did.
    not
    have time
    to discover
    the mistake before making its bid.
    To grant
    a variance
    seems
    to me to transform this prior miscalculation into an excuse
    for
    allowing
    the project to slough off some
    of its
    costs onto
    the
    innocent
    public.
    For
    it
    should
    be
    a
    part
    of’
    the
    cost
    of
    any
    such
    project
    as
    this
    that
    it
    dispose
    of
    its
    wastes
    in
    such
    a
    way
    as
    to
    1
    566

    minimize
    pollution.
    The
    Corps
    should
    bear
    this
    cost,
    and
    if
    Hardwick has made
    a careless commitment
    to the
    Corps
    I do not
    think we
    should allow it
    to pollute
    as
    a result.
    Poverty
    is
    no
    excuse
    for pollution,
    and neither is carelessness.
    In this
    day and age there must be ways
    to dispose of waste
    without
    causing large
    smoke emissions, even out
    in the country.
    And
    I think the record establishes that burying the waste on
    site
    is
    a feasible alternative, with no adequate explanation
    of the failure
    to provide adequate
    land.
    Burning the brush from
    six miles
    of river over
    a one—year period strikes me as significant
    pollution,
    and it ought to be avoided.
    I therefore would deny
    the petition for variance.
    /
    ~
    7~avid P.
    Connie
    1
    567

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