ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
March
3, 1994
DOUGLAS
FURNITURE
)
CORPORATION,
)
)
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB
94—79
)
(Provisional Variance)
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
)
PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by C. A. Manning):
Pursuant to Section 35(b) of the Environmental Protection
Act
(Act)
(415 ILCS 5/35(b)), Douglas Furniture Corporation has
requested that the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
(Agency) recommend that the Board grant a provisional variance to
allow Douglas Furniture Corporation to continue operating
although it will operate its afterburner at a lower temperature
than required in Special Condition 1 of its operating Permit
Number 77—10-0075.
Such request for a provisional variance and
the Notification of Recommendation was filed with the Board by
the Agency on Tuesday, March
1,
1994..
Pursuant to Section 35(b)
of the Act, the Board must issue the variance within two
(2) days
of this filing.
Specifically, the Agency recommends that we grant Douglas
Furniture Corporation a forty—five (45)—day provisional variance
for its Cook County facility from the requirements that it
operate its pollution control equipment within the limits of its
permit, as set forth in 35 Iii.
Adiu. Code 201.141 and 201.149,
for the period beginning January 18,
1994 and continuing until
Douglas Furniture Corporation has repaired its afterburner or
until forty—five (45)—days have elapsed, whichever comes first.
The Agency’s provisional recommendation states that Douglas
Furniture Corporation operates a Type 0 waste incinerator/waste
boiler
(“incinerator system”) at 5020 West 73rd Street, Bedford
Park,
Cook County,
Illinois.
Douglas Furniture Corporation
asserts that it must operate its afterburner at a lower
temperature than specified by its permit until it can repair the
afterburner and install a second afterburner.
Upon receipt of the request, the Agency issued its
recommendation,
notifying the Board that due to unforeseen,
temporary and uncontrollable circumstances, failure to grant the
requested forty-five (45)—day provisional variance would impose
an arbitrary or unreasonable hardship on the petitioner.
2
Provisional variances are by their very nature temporary.
The responsibilities of the Agency and the Board in these short-
term provisional variances are different from the responsibil-
ities
in standard variances.
(~g~
415 ILCS 5/35(b)
& 36(c)).
In
provisional variances it is the responsibility of the Agency to
make the technical determinations and finding of arbitrary or
unreasonable hardship.
The Board’s responsibility is to adopt a
formal order, to assure the formal maintenance of the record,
to
assure the enforceability of the variance,
and to provide notifi—
cation of the action by a press release.
Having received the Agency recommendation notifying the
Board that a denial of the requested relief would impose an
arbitrary or unreasonable hardship, the Board hereby grants the
petitioner a provisional variance from 35 Ill.
Adm. Code 201.141
and 201.149 beginning January 18,
1994,
subject to the following
conditions:
1.
The term of this provisional variance shall commence
when the petitioner, Douglas Furniture Corporation,
initiates repairs to its plant, by replacing warped and worn
out parts and installing
a new afterburner unit, and it
shall expire on the date the petitioner completes the
required maintenance work, or after forty—five
(45) days
have elapsed, whichever comes first;
2.
The petitioner shall notify the Agency upon completion
of all repairs.
This notification shall be sent to:
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
Division of Air Pollution Control
Permit Section
2200 Churchill Road
P.O. Box 19276
Springfield, Illinois
62794—9276
Attention:
Donald E. Sutton
3.
The petitioner shall perform the necessary maintenance
and modification work as expeditiously as possible and
operate its plant during the term of this provisional
variance in a manner that assures the afterburner combustion
chamber is preheated to at least 66 degrees
F, before any
waste is loaded into the incinerator.
After reaching
preheat temperature, the temperature in the afterburner
combustion chamber shall be slowly raised by gradually
loading paper, cardboard,
or light wood until the
temperature is over 1000 degrees
F.
The average temperature
in the afterburner combustion chamber shall be maintained at
1000 degrees F but not less than 800 degrees F during
incineration, except during off—hour burn—down cycle period.
3
IT
IS
SO
ORDERED.
I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Bo~,rd,0dohereby certif
that the above order was adopted on the
~
day of __________________________,
1994,
by a vote of
-0
.
Dorothy
14.
Gi~1~,
Clerk
Illinois Poliytion Control Board