ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
September 16,
1971
Gages
Lake
Sanitary District
)
v.
)
PCB 71—104
Environmental Protection Agency
Mr. John F.
Williams, Attorney for
Gages
Lake Sanitary District
Opinion of
the Board
(by Mr. Kissel):
On May
11,
1971,
the
Gages Lake Sanitary District
(the “District”)
filed a Petition
for Variance with
the Board asking
for relief from
the deadline date of July
1,
1972,
for meeting improved effluent cri-
teria at the District~streatment facilities,
Basically,
the reason
the District seeks the delay
is that it has signed
a cont~actwith
Lake County whereby the County has agreed to take over the Districtt s
plant and other plants
in the vicinity,
and eventually replace these
plants with
a regional sewage treatment plant.
The Districtts posi-
tion is that it should not unnecessarily spend money n~wto update
its treatment plant when the plant will be replaced in the near future
by a larger regional plant owned and operated by the County.
The
Petition pointed out that
the regional plan would not be put in effect
unless the Village of Grayslake was also
a signatory to any agreement
between the County and the District.
On May
12,
1971,
the Board
ordered that the Village of Grayslake and Lake County be made parties
to this proceeding because their participation was considered “indis-
pensable to
a complete resolution of
the
controversy”.
See the opin-
ion in this case dated May
12,
1971.
Both added parties were ordered
to file
pleadings, but neither party complied, although both added
parties did appear and testify at the hearing which was held in
Waukegan on August 11,
1971.
The Agency, however,
did not appear at
the hearing.
The Board received a letter from the Agency dated
September
1,
1971 asking for a supplementary hearing because the
attorney assigned to the case
by
the Agency was out
of town when the
hearing was held.
The recent past history of the District shows that in February
of
1969
the District’s consulting engineers recommended to the Dis-
trict that its plant should be expanded and tertiary treament installed.
2
—
443
In September,
1969, the engineers were authorized by the District
to go ahead with the plans
for the
$1.1
million addition to the
plan.
But the District was not to go ahead with the program, and
this lack of progress caused them to lose
a federal grant which had
been approved.
It was money which prohibited the District from go-
ing ahead
—
that is,
the District officials did not believe that the
District could finance such an expansive program without substan-
tial assistance from other governmental units,
The District began discussions with Lake County in 1968 about
the
possibility of the County taking over the
Districtts plant.
The
people living in the District were,
according to a witness, ~incensedt’
about the idea,
But the Districtts
trustees apparently realized that
the District could not
finace any needed expansion,so
they continued
to press the ‘take-over by the County even though citizen pressure
would have dictated otherwise.
On December
3,
1970,
a public meet-
ing was held on the County take-over proposal, and 75
people showed
up.
About half favored the take-over.
After the public hearing,
the District trustees voted to sign an agreement with the County.
The agreement provided that immediately the County would provide
a certified operator
for the Districtts
plant and build
a larger
treatment plant
Can area—wide
one) on
the DesPlaines River.
The agree~
ment, however,
was conditioned on
the signing of the agreement by
all
of the other affected communities.
That condition has not been met
because the Village of Grayslake has not signed the agreement.
This
area—wide,
or regional, plan
is one which was conceived and fostered
by the Northeast Illinois Planning Commission.
The Village of Grayslake, through its mayor,
testified that it
would be
a “couple
of more weeks” before the Village would know
whether it will sign the agreement.
Without the Villag&s
signature,
the agreement reached by
the County
and the District is worthless.
We thing that based upon the evidence
in the record and
the
fact
that this Board
favors
the regional approach in sewage treatment,
that agreement should not fail
for the want of the signature of the
Village of Grayslake, unless in
a further hearing the Village,
or
anyone else who wishes
to participate,
can demonstrate that there
is good cause why the regional concept should not be accepthd here.
We therefore shall require further hearing on this entire
matter at which
time the following shall occur:
1.
The County shall present ~vidence
to the Board
on
how the regional plan shall be implemented,
including specifics on
costs,
and time schedules;
2— 444
2.
All parties and members of the public who de-
sire to do so, may present evidence at the
hearing to demonstrate that there
is good
cause why the regional plan proposed by the
Northeastern Illinois Planning Commission
and the County of Lake should not be ordered
to be implemented by the Board;
3.
The Agency shall participate in the hearing
as
a party and shall offer such necessary
recommendations regarding the plan
as it
shall see fit;
and
4,
The Board shall make such an order as it deems
appropriate after
the hearing or hearings
have
been completed.
I, Regina B.
Ryan,~’Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, certify that the Board adopted the above Opinion on the
16
day of September,
1971,
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44D