1. Mr. Lawton took no part in these proceedings.
      2. IT IS HEREBY ORDERED THAT:

ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
October
28,
1971
FREEMAN
COAL
COMPANY
#71—78
V.
ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION
AGENCY
MR.
RICHARD
ELLEDGE,
ATTORNEY
FOR
PETITIONER,
FREEMAN
COAL
COMPANY
MR.
JOHN
EcCREERY,
ATTORNEY
FOR
ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION
AGENCY
OPINION
OF
THE
BOARD
(BY
MR.
DUMELLE)
Petitioner, Freeman Coal Company
(“Freeman”)
,
seeks ~ variance
to
continue
operating
a
coal
processing
plant
at
its
Orient
#3
Mine
near
Waltonville,
Illinois,
in
violation
of
Rule
3—3.111
of
the
Rules
and
Reculations
Governino
the
Control
of
Air
Pollution.
This
~ine
r:coduces
3
million
tons
of
low
sulphur
coal
annually
(20
of
the
Illinois
total)
emplcp~s 630
rersons
and
has
an
annual
payroll
in
of
$5,000,000.00.
Each
of
four
air
cleaning
tables
in
the
mine
s
processing
plant
oorts
an
estimated
110
pounds
of
particulate
matter
per
hour
(R,287)
The
allowable
limit
is
46,3
pounds
per
hour
from
each
table.
In
April
of
1971, Freeman
shut
down
three
air
tables
and
a
heat
drier
which
had
beer.
emission
sources
of
an
estimated
420
pounds
of
particulate
per
The processing olant separates
12,000
tons
of
raw
coal
daily
into
~:m~nus
7/16””
(“fine coal”)
and
“plus
7/16””
.
60
of the
coal is~
se~
orated
and
is
cleaned of
impurities
by
using
wet
methods
which
pose
00
emission
~rohlan.
40
of
the coal
(“fine
coal”)
is
separated
and
ciean~d
by
confine
it
across
fluidized air
beds
which
are the subject
at
this variance oroceecing.
Freeman proposes
to
replace thas methon
cicaniric
the “f~aecoal”
witir
a new facility emoioyinp
a
wet
crocess,
which will include flotation
and
heavy
media cyclones,
and
a
new
drier
controlled
by
a
hich
enerov
wet
scrubber
(R.242—246)
,
and which will
briny
the
olant
into
comoliance
with
the Regulations.
Freeman states
that
at:
will
require
18
to
20
months
for
installation
of
this plant.
Tar
the
follc-einc reasons and subject
to several conditions,
we
crane
a
variance
to
operate the
four air cleaning tables for one year.

The
Environmental
Protection
Agency
(Agency
Recommendation
asks
that
we
deny
the
variance,
or,
in
the
alternative,
that
we grant
it with
the requirement that Freeman pay
a penalty and begin immediate
installation of facilities and equipment necessary for compliance~
The Agency further attempted
to show that Freeman could feasibly cur-
sue several interim steps designed to reduce the emissions from the
processing plant pending completion of the new facility.
With
the exception of the penalty, we
find no merit in the
Recommendation.
The Agency failed to establish that construction of
the new facility could be done more quickly than 18 to
20 months.
Petitioner satisfactorily rejected each of several suggestions
for
interim control measures.
Free~iancannot sell
the
minus
7/16” coal
in
an
uncleaned
state;
the
raw
coal
has
too
high
an ash content and
no market for it exists
(R.9,
15 and
17)
.
The company cannot stock-
pile 40
of
its production to be cleaned when
the new facility
has been
completed
because
space
is unavailable and
because
stock-
piling
in any event poses
a fire hazard
(R.32-35,
73)
.
Nor
can
Freeman ship coal from Orient
#3 Mine to
a recently completed pro-
cessing plant at Orient
#6 Mine,
several miles
away,
in order for
such coal to be cleaned there pending completion
of the new plant at
Orient
#3
Mine.
Facilities
do not exist
for shipping coal
in such
amounts or
for receiving
and processing
it at Orient
#6
(P.90-91)
Finally,
the Agency has failed to lend substance to its Recommen-
dation that we
deny
the variance petition.
Freeman has established
on
the
one
hand
that
it
will
need
considerable
time
for
construction
of
the
new
plant
and
that
to
deny
the
variance
would
pose
a
severe
economic hardship for63O e:aployees who would have
to be
laid
off
for
eighteen
to
twenty
months,
and
would
deprive
Freembn
customers
of
much needed low sulphur coal.
On
the
other
hand,
Freeman
has
demonstrated
that
there
is
only
a
slight
public
nuisance
from
the
plant~s
emissions
at
present
(oer~
haps reduced by as
much
as
54
by
the
recent
shut-down
of
three
air tables
(P.193,
194,
232,
235)
.
Air cjualitv data compiled
by
Freeman shows air
in
the vicinity of the niant
to be in concliance
with
National
Primary
and
Secondary
Ambient
Air
Quality
Staniards
(P.334)
.
The
Agency
failed
to
produce
any
local
complainant,
and
no
public
testimony
in
protest
of
granting
the
variance
was
heard
(the
possibility
that,
as
one
witness
testified,
the
emissions
from
the
plant
may
be
inadvertently
recirculated
by
draft
fans
into
the
mine,
thus
affecting
mine
air
quality,is
a
consideration
of
industria
hygiene
beyond
our
jurisdiction
absent
a
shnwing
that
“in-~c1ant”
air
contaminates
the
amth ant
air)
In
light
of
the
company~s
voluntary
54
reduction
in
processing
operations,
the
absence
of
any
significant
showing
of public
harm
and the economic burden
imposed upon many workers by
a
plant
lay—oil
are adequate reasons
for
granting
this
variance.

But Freeman failed
to submit
an Air Contaminant Emission
Reduction Program
(Acerp)
as required by law in 1968.
The timely
submission
of an Acerp could have
led to closer scrutiny of Free—
manes efforts
to control
its emission problem, would have put
Freeman
under
a specific compliance deadline
(which not unreason-
ably could have been considerably sooner)
,
and conceivably
could
nave resulted in an outright denial of
a request for more time
(as
what
the company wants
to do today was technically and economically
feasible
in
1968.)
(R,44,
109) ,Freeman contends
that there were
significant technical reasons requiring Orient
#6 processing plant
to be built before the Orient
#3 olant
(R.45)
;
that
the company
wanted to avoid spending
funds
simultaneously
on
the
two
plants
(R,7l)
;
and that an adequate supply
of mining engineers was un-
available
to supervise simultaneous construction
(R,268)
.
No
sionificant
technical
reason
is
shown requiring Orient #6
plant
to
be
built
orior to Orient
#3
plant.
The plants are basically
similar and while
some problems have been encountered in the opera-
tion of Orient
#6
plant,
this plant
is not
a prototype
to the
mining
industry
(R,l2,
45)
.
In
addition,
Freeman~s parent
corpora-
tion,
General
Dynamics, made
a profit of $57,000,000.00
in
1967
and $38,000,000.00
in 1968
(R.l09)
.
While
the supply of mining
engineers may have been inadequate to permit simultaneous construc-
tion of the
two plants,
it is just such questions
as these and
other considerations
raised
by scrutinizing
a
concrete control
program
which
the Acerp hearing was designed to answer.
In
its
Letter
of Intent submitted
in
1967, Petitioner stated
that
it would, unan completion
of
a new processing plant at Orient
#6
Mine,
close
down Orient
#3 Mine while rebuilding its processing
olant,
Freeman
s
need
aooarently
was
to
permit
Orient
#6
Mine
to
be
finished
in
ardor
to
use
it
for
meeting
buyer
demands
for
low
ash
coal
from
Orient
#3
Mine.
Now
Freeman
states
that
it
wishes
to
continue
oceratino
Orient
#3
Mine.
even
though
Orient
#6
Mine
is
prepared
to
omerate,
endan
the
cociriction
of
the
new
processing
plant
at
Orient
#3
Mine,
(Variance
Petition
and
.R,292)
.
Thus,
it
appears
that
while
the
carrot
of
lower
cnliut~on
levels
was
offered
in
a
statement
of
good
intentions,
ahe
comPany’s
vague
plan
has
changed,
resulting
in
more
emissions
than
would
have
otherwise
been
the
case.
This
has
occurred
without
an
initial
opportunity
for
pollution
contrdl
author-
i-ties
to
analyze,
to
aacroae,
or
to
disapprove
a
concrete
abatement
crooosat.
In
any
event,
the
Regulations
are
designed
to
produce
a
clean
environment
as
roicke
ac
possible
in
accordance
with
technological
reasabil~ty
ana
economic
reasonabaeness.
If
tney
are
to
have
meaning,
they
must
be
enforced.
The
fact
that
the
Company’s
pollution
impact(as
duced)
may
be
nal
nrnimal,
is
merely
a
mitigating
consideration,
To
carry
not
the
roroose
of
compliance
with
the
Regulations,
we
imrrse
a
token
eena~t
of
$5,000.00,
Malibu
Village
Land
Trust
v.
Environmental
Pratectaon
Agency,
#PCE7O-45.
2
711

Finally, pursuant to Pollution Control Board Rule No. 107,
Petitioner has moved for non—disclosure of pages
50 through 61
of the transcript.
In support of this motion, Petitioner states
that disclosure of the price of the new processing plant, which
is discussed in these pages, would harm the company’s relation-
ship with contractors and would impair Freeman’s competitive
position in the coal industry because part of the cost basis
for
coal sold from Orient #3 Nine would thereby be revealed to other
mining companies.
Neither argument is impressive.
Reason may exist for non-
disclosure of a bid prior to its acceptance by a company, but
Freeman, subsequent to the hearing, awarded a contract to one
of
the
several bidders.
Nor has petititioner submitted evidence
that public knowledge of the cost of its new processing plant
would injure Freeman’s competitive position.
Such an inference
is not obvious
and we will not block public access to our records
on the basis of a mere assertion of the need for secrecy.
Mr. Lawton took no part in these proceedings.
This Opinion constitutes
the
findings of fact and conclusions
of law of the Board.
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED THAT:
1,
Variance is granted Petitioner until October 27,
1972 to operate the four air cleaning
tables
which are
the subject of this hearing, in violation of Section
3-3.111 of the Rules and Regulations Governing the
Control of Air Pollution,
subject to the following
conditions:
2.
Petitioner shall, within 90 days of receipt of this
Order,
submit to the Agency
a schedule outlining
the interim stages
of construction and installation
of
the new processing plant at Orient #3 Nine,
and
specifying the date by which it is anticipated each
stage will be completed.
3.
Petitioner shall petition this Board 90 days
in
advance of said expiration date for an extension of
this variance, demonstrating that
it has diligently
pursued the goal of total installation by April
30,
1973 of its new coal preparation plant and that it
has complied with the interim stages of said installa-
tion as required in Paragraph
2 of this Order.
-

4.
Petitioner shall, within 35 days of receipt of this
Order, post with
the Agency
a bond or other security
in the amount of $125,000.00 in
a form satisfactory
to the Agency which
sum
shall be forfeited
to the
State
of
Illinois
in
the
event
that
the
conditions
of this Order are not met or the air tables in question
are operated in violation of the Rules and Regulations
Governing the Control of Air Pollution after October
27,
1972 without
a variance.
5.
Petitioner shall pay
a money penalty in the amount
of $5,000.00 for failing to submit an Air Contaminant
Emission Reduction Program as required by Section
2-2.41 of the Rules
and Regulations Governing the
Control of Air Pollution.
6.
Petitioner’s motion for non-disclosure of paaes
50
to 61 of the transcript herein is denied.
I, Regina E.
Ryan, Clerk of
the Illinois Pollution Control Board,
certify
that
the
above
Opinion
and
Order
was
adopted
by
the
Board
on the
28
day of October,
1971.
2
713

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