ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
February
7,
1991
OLIN CORPORATION
)
(JOLIET PLANT),
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 89—72
(Variance)
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
)
PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
)
Respondent.
MS. BARBARA B. GUIBORD and MR.
MARK
R.
SARGIS of WINSTON
& STRAWN
APPEARED ON BEHALF OF THE PETITIONER.
MR.
JAMES J. O’DONNELL, ASSISTANT COUNSEL, APPEARED ON BEHALF OF
THE RESPONDENT.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by B.
Forcade):
This matter
comes before the Board on a third amended
petition filed by Olin Corporation, Joliet Plant,
(hereinafter
“Olin”) on November
7,
1990.
Olin seeks a variance until March
31,
1993 from the Board’s regulations governing the emission of
particulate matter, found at
35 Ill. Adm. Code 212.321, as this
applies to the emissions from the A and B building scrubbers at
its Joliet facility.
Procedural History
Olin initially filed its petition in this matter on April
21, 1989.
Continuing discussions with the Agency and revisions
in the compliance plan have resulted in Olin’s filing a first
amended petition on June
21,
1989;
a second amended petition on
October
4, 1989, and the present third amended petition on
November
7,
1990.
Three letters of objection were filed with the Board on May
11, May 24,
and June
14 of 1989.
The letter of May 11,
1989
raised concerns about a pond and gypsum mound,
neither of which
is properly considered
in this petition for variance from air
regulations.
The other letters raised concerns about air
quality, which the Board finds relevant to this proceeding.
118—22 1
—2—
A number of hearings were scheduled and cancelled
in this
proceeding, requiring repeated expenditures from this Board’s
limited budget.
Hearing was set for September
6,
1989 and then
cancelled;
rescheduled to October
6,
1989 and cancelled;
rescheduled to January
24, 1990 and cancelled;
rescheduled to
March 14,
1990 and cancelled;
rescheduled to June
25, 1990 and
cancelled;
rescheduled to September
6,
1990 and cancelled;
rescheduled to November
12,
1990 and finally held on that date.
The Board views this conduct
as detrimental to the Board’s
efficient operation and to the fair opportunity of other
petitioners to have their cases heard by the Board.
The Board
cautions all petitioners before the Board that this conduct
cannot be tolerated in the future
in fairness
to all.
Olin filed an application for non—disclosure of certain
information on November
7,
1990,
along with a motion for
expedited decision.
On November
8,
1990 the Board granted the
Motion for expedited decision.
By Order of November
29,
1990,
the Board agreed to proceed in accordance with 35
Ill. Adm. Code
Part 120 Subpart C and Board Resolution 86—2,
in connection with
the revised application
filed by Olin on November
21,
1990.
Olin
may petition the Board for the return of confidential materials
after the time for reconsideration or appeal has passed without
any such filing.
On November
28,
1990,
the Illinois Environmental Protection
Agency
(“Agency”)
filed
its Recommendation
(“Ag. Rec.”)
in favor
of granting a variance with a shorter term than requested by Olin
and with various conditions.
Also on November
28, 1990,
Olin
filed a Waiver of Response to Agency Recommendation.
Background
Olin’s plant
is located at the junction of Patterson and
Laraway Roads in Joliet Township, Will County,
Illinois.
The
plant is a significant employment source, with a work force
in
the range of 300 employees
in 1989 and 230 employees as
of
October
1,
1990.
The 1989 payroll was approximately $10.5
million.
Olin also asserts that “secondary” employment as a
result of the plant’s presence would at least equal the plant’s
payroll.
Capital expenditures have averaged $2
—
3 million
in
recent years.
In addition to producing sodium fluoride for use
in fluoridation of municipal water supplies, the plant
is a major
producer
of industrial sodium phosphates.
These may be further
categorized as follows:
1)
Orthophosphates:
Monosodium,
trisodium,
and
trisodium chlorinated phosphates.
Uses:
cattle and poultry feed supplements, water
treatment,
cleaning agents, and other
uses.
118—2 22
—3—
2)
Condensed phosphates:
sodium tripolyphosphate
(“STPP”), tetrasodium pyro and sodium acid
phosphates and sodium hexametaphosphates.
Uses:
paper manufacturing, laundry and dishwater
detergents, water softening,
and other uses.
Olin’s STPP production,
which accounts for approximately 15
of the total US. production of STPP, causes the particulate
emissions for which Olin seeks
a variance.
The emissions
in
question are created by the high temperature
kilns at Buildings A
and B at the Joliet plant.
Pet.
at pp.
2—3.
Olin summarized the process of producing sodium phosphates
as involving the reaction of phosphoric acid with sodium
hydroxide or soda ash.
The combined chemicals are filtered,
evaporated, and processed.
Traditionally, only standard grade
(green) phosphoric acid was used.
In
1990, however,
technical
grade
(purified) acid was introduced,
the use of which reportedly
will reduce plant—wide particulate emissions.
STPP is produced by the thermal condensation of
a sodium
orthophosphate mixture.
It
is created by two different processes
at the Joliet facility.
At each of Buildings A and B,
two high
temperature kilns produce STPP in one step,
from liquors
to final
product.
At Building
C,
STPP
is produced by a two step process,
first spray drying and then, condensation.
Pet.
at p.3.
The mixing,
storage, heating, and evaporation processes
described by Olin proceed to the point where furnace exit gases
and fine solids pass through separation equipment and then to
a
separate scrubber for each of the
4 kiln systems.
Each system
may be operated independently of one another.
Pet. at p.4.
The
C kiln, which began operations
in 1970, does not create
excessive emissions.
The A and B kilns, which date back
to 1948
to 1955, and which had pollution control equipment installed on
them in 1979, do result in excessive particulate emissions.
Pet.
at p.5.
Operating permits for
the A and B Buildings were issued in
July and August of
1987, and will expire on July 20,
1992.
Pet.,
Exhibit A; Ag. Rec. at p.2.
118—2 23
—4—
The Agency provided the following table for 1985
—
1988,
showing consistent non—compliance with Section 212.321:
Tripoly A Building
Tripoly B Building
Actual
Allowable
Actual
Allowable
Emissions
Emissions
Emissions
Emissions
Year
(T/Y)
(T/Y)
(T/Y)
(T/Y)
1985
30.11
24.23
39.71
23.50
1986
58.45
19.53
47.48
24.15
1987
32.46
22.75
57.60
27.25
1988
30.69
23.21
58.52
29.40
Ag.
Rec.
at p.2
See also Pet., Exhibit C.
The Agency noted that the A—North kiln has achieved marginal
compliance as
a result of engineering modifications.
The Agency
also stated that for the entire plant particulate emissions were
reduced from 961 tons
in 1985
to 512 tons
in 1988, with the most
notable decrease occurring in 1986, as a result of the
elimination of certain production lines.
Ag. Rec.
at p.2.
See
also Pet.,
Exhibit B.
Overall emissions reductions were also
brought to the Board’s attention by Olin.
Pet. at
p.
6 and
Pet.,
Exhibit B.
Each source,
of course, must achieve compliance
individually to satisfy the regulatory requirements.
At the Board’s hearing held on November
12,
1990, the Agency
and Olin appeared
to be
in substantial agreement as to the facts
in this case.
The Agency conditionally recommended that the
Board grant a variance to Olin.
Three objectors also testified at hearing.
The first,
representing the Will County Environmental Network, expressed
concern about residue allegedly being dumped near a pond on the
site.
The second objected to the lengthy delay between the
initial filing and the hearing date and the proposed final date
for compliance,
and requested that compliance
be achieved
expeditiously.
The third objected to the grant of
the variance,
in general, arguing that individuals are made to suffer from air
pollution on an ongoing basis from Olin’s emissions from other
equipment for which Olin may already have obtained variance.
Statutory and Case Law Framework
The Board’s statutory authority for granting temporary
relief
in the form of
a variance is found in Section 35
of the
Act. Section 35(a)
provides,
in pertinent part:
The Board may grant individual variances beyond the
limitations prescribed
in this act, whenever
it
is
found,
upon presentation of adequate proof,
that
compliance with any rule or regulation,
requirement
118—224
—5—
or order
of the Board would impose an arbitrary or
unreasonable hardship.
However,
the Board is not
required to find that an arbitrary or unreasonable
hardship exists exclusively because the regulatory
standard
is under review and the costs of
compliance are substantial and certain.
Section 35(a)
of
the Act (emphasis added).
Section 37(a)
places the burden of proof on the
petitioner.
The petitioner must show that the alleged hardship
outweighs the public interest
in attaining compliance with
regulations designed to preserve the environment and protect the
public.
Willowbrook
Motel Partnership
v. Pollution Control
Board,
135 Ill. App.
3d 343,
481 N.E.2d 1032, 1037
(1st Dist.
1985)
Since a variance
is
a temporary reprieve from compliance
with the Act and the Board’s regulations, compliance
is to be
sought regardless of the hardship imposed on a individual
polluter.
Monsanto Co.
v.
IPCB,
67
Ill.
2d 276,
376 N.E.2d 684
(1977).
This generally means
that the petitioner must commit to
a plan reasonably calculated to achieve compliance within the
term of the variance.
The Board’s regulations specify that a
detailed compliance plan must be submitted pursuant to
35
Ill.
Adm.
Code. 104.121(f).
Olin’s compliance plan
is found at Exhibit
I of the petition.
The time required to construct facilities and achieve
compliance does not in itself create arbitrary or unreasonable
hardship associated with immediate compliance.
The mere
existence of violations,
which cannot be cured immediately, does
not prove the hardship of immediate compliance for which a
variance should be granted.
This principle was stated early
in
the Board’s history,
as follows:
The District alleges that the proposed time
schedule
is “reasonable”.
If the regulation had
been adopted in 1971, we would agree;
two years is
an acceptable timetable for design and construction
of tertiary facilities of this size.
But the
regulation was adopted in 1967, and no reasons are
given for the District’s inaction for nearly four
years.
One cannot qualify for
a variance simply by
ignoring the timetable and starting late.
While
compliance within the remaining time may be
impossible,
and hardship suffered as a
result
is,
so far as
is alleged, due to the District’s own
inaction.
To allow a variance on the basis of the
present allegation would establish the preposterous
proposition that the very existence of
a violation
is a ground
for excusing
it.
118—225
—6—
Decatur Sanitary District
v.
IEPA,
1 PCB 359,
360
(1971).
(emphasis added.)
Similarly,
in other decisions it has been articulated that
the petitioner’s hardship must not be self-imposed by the
petitioner’s inactivity or own decisionmaking.
EPA v. Lindgren
Foundry Co.,
1 PCB 11
(1970);
Ekco Glaco Corporation
v.
IEPA and
IPCB,
542 N.E.
2d 147
(1st Dist.
1989); Willowbrook Motel,
481
N.E.2d at
1036.
In PCB 87—41,
Ekco Glaco
v.
IEPA,
the Board
found that
“Ekco Glaco’s problems arise from the delay caused by
decisions it has made in attempting to secure compliance and its
failure to commit to a particular compliance option.
The Board
cannot find that those problems constitute an arbitrary or
unreasonable hardship.”
Ekco Glaco, PCB 87—41
at
4, aff’d in
Ekco Glaco Corp.
v.
IEPA and IPCB,
542 N.E.
2d 147
(1st Dist.
1989).
Thus, the issue before the Board is whether
or not Olin has
demonstrated that immediate compliance imposes an arbitrary or
unreasonable hardship, which
is not self-imposed, and which
outweighs the related adverse environmental
impact.
Here,
the
relevant environmental impact and “immediacy”
of compliance must
be measured from the date at which compliance was required until
the date of expected compliance.
The effective date
of
35
Ill.
Adm. Code 212.321 was September
28, 1979; Olin’s equipment became
operational in
1980;
and Olin proposes to achieve compliance by
March 31, 1993.
Compliance Efforts and Plan
Olin notes that it has met with three different consultants
and met regularly with the Agency to address its emissions
problem.
Pet, at p.5, see also engineering report at Pet.,
Exhibit G.
Through engineering work, A Building emissions have
been reduced and the A—North kiln is
in marginal compliance.
Pet, at pp.
6,
7 and Ag. Rec.
at p.
2.
Plant—wide emissions have
been reduced since 1980 due to equipment,
process, and raw
material modifications and the elimination of certain production
lines
in 1986.
Pet.
at p.6, Ag. Rec. at p.2.
The A and B Building wet scrubbers and other control
technology and a water treatment facility were installed at a
cost of
$22
million.
Pet.
at p7.
Olin has also maintained the
scrubbers since 1987 pursuant to an optimization and maintenance
schedule approved by the Agency.
Other efforts include
investigating a pilot Venturi scrubber testing program;
converting approximately two—thirds of its acid process to
purified acid,
conducting an engineering study
on the A Building
scrubbers involving numerous stack and inlet gas tests and other
individual tests.
Pet. at pp.
7—10.
See also Pet., Exhibits
E
and F.
118—226
—7—
Olin also commits to install new scrubber equipment on B—
South at a cost of approximately $500,000.
Pet. at p.12.
Olin
expects that modifications to B—North and installation of an
additional scrubber and a mist eliminator on B—South will be
completed and tested by the first half of 1991.
Olin proposes to
then return to work at A—Building.
Olin’s Compliance Plan,
at Exhibit
I of the Petition,
specified the following continuing efforts:
1.
Olin will continue the scrubber modifications,
optimizations and maintenance schedule during the
requested variance period as outlined in Exhibit
D.
This extensive schedule will be implemented
for the
Tripoly process scrubbers at both “A” and
“B” buildings
to prevent further
loss of efficiency of the scrubbers.
2.
.,.on the A—North scrubber...
a.
September
1
—
November 15,
1990
Conduct
engineering matrix tests while manufacturing STPP.
b. November
15,
1990
—
February 1991
Evaluate
engineering modifications,
if necessary.
3.
...at B—North scrubber...
a. November
1
—
December
31, 1990
Implement
engineering modifications to scrubber based on
results of matrix
testing at A—North unit.
b.
January
1
—
April
1, 1991
Perform
engineering matrix tests
for all products.
c. April
1
-
July 1991
Evaluate engineering
modifications,
if necessary.
4.
Additional scrubber (BECO Smoke Ring Contactor and Mist
Master)
...
at B—South by December
31,
1990...
a. November
1
—
December
31,
1990
Install BECO
scrubber system.
b. January
1
—
June
30,
1991
Conduct matrix
tests and optimize unit performance.
c.
July
1
—
September 1991
Evaluate any further
engineering modifications, if necessary.
5.
A—South modifications...
118—22 7
—8—
a.
September
1,
1991
—
December
1,
1991
Evaluate the impact of engineering modifications at
A-North and B North as well as performance of
additional scrubber at B-South.
b. January
1, 1992
—
July
1,
.1992
Implement the
option that yields best performance.
c. July
1,
1992
—
September
1, 1992
Conduct
matrix tests and optimize unit performance.
d. September
1,
1992
—
December
31, 1992
Evaluate any further engineering modifications
if
necessary.
6.
Assuming significant modifications are required...
a.
January
1,
1992
—
April
1,
1992
Engineering design
and purchasing quotations will be performed.
b. April
1
-
July
31, 1992
Necessary equipment and
controls will be procured and delivered.
c. August
1
—
November
30,
1992
Construction and
installation will be performed.
d.
December, 1992
—
January 31,
1993
System start—up
and testing will be accomplished.
e.
February
1,
1993
—
March 31,
1993
Operational
testing and minor modifications,
if required will be
conducted.
7.
Procurement and delivery of equipment
is anticipated to
take at last
4 months.
8.
Installation required to take at least
4 months.
9.
Time:
Based on Chemicals group Engineering experience.
Pet., Exhibit
I
Agency Recommendation
Based on the results of air modeling performed by Olin at
the Agency’s request,
the Agency concluded that the variance
should not cause or contribute to a violation of the NAAQS.
The
Agency states that the variance will require a revision to the
Illinois State Implementation Plan
(“SIP”), pursuant to Section
110(a) of the Clean Air Act and
40 CFR Part 51, and that relief
may be granted consistent with federal
law.
The Agency
recommends that the Board grant the requested relief with some
118—228
—9—
modifications and with a significantly shorter term.
Specifically, the Agency suggested that paragraphs
5 and
6 of
the
compliance plan proposed by Olin should be modified to substitute
the following:
Paragraph
5
a.April
1,
1991
—
July 1,
1991...
b.July 1,
1991
—
January
1, 1992...
c.January 1,
1992
—
March
1,
1992...
d.Deleted
Paragraph 6a—3
——
deleted
*
The Agency’s Recommendation presents this position with respect
to appropriate performance deadlines in the following paragraphs:
29.
Based upon the modifications to be performed
on B-North and the installation of an
additional scrubber
for B—South, Olin should
be in compliance by December
31,
1990 for B-
North and B-South.
30.
Waiting until January
1,
1992 to start work on
A—South
is unnecessary.
Olin should be able
to evaluate the modifications to the A—North
and B—South scrubbers and the additional
scrubber for the B—South kiln by July
1,
1991.
31.
Implementation of all modifications and/or an
additional scrubber
for the B—South kiln
should then be completed by December
31,
1991.
32.
Olin should then be able to conduct matrix
tests and optimize unit performance by March
1,
1992.
Ag. Rec. at p.6, para.
29—32.
*The Board reads
“6a—3”
as
“6a—e”,
assuming that this is
a
typographical error,
since there
is no item
3 in paragraph 6, and
the dates
in 6b
—
6e are after March
1,
1992.
118—229
—10—
Hardship
The hardship which Olin seeks
to avoid
is principally the
major expenditures associated with new replacement scrubber
equipment for all sources
—
$8
—
$10 million.
An alternative of
converting coal—fired boilers to natural gas feed would cost
approximately $5 million and Olin asserts that this is
unreasonable given Olin’s financial condition.
Olin also
believes that the added costs of raising stack heights
is an
environmentally less desirable alternative than pursuing the
emissions reductions which could be achieved under Olin’s
proposed compliance plan.
However, Olin considers raising stack
heights as a possible plan of last resort.
Pet.
at pp.
16—18.
Olin argues that the “Joliet plant currently is
unprofitable.”
Pet.
at p.19.
Olin also submitted an economic
report
(which,
in part,
was characterized by Olin as confidential
and maintained accordingly by the Board)
in support of its
economic arguments.
As the
information deemed confidential by
Olin is not critical to the Board’s decision today that limited
material may be returned to Olin,
at Olin’s request, after
the
time for reconsideration or appeal has passed without any such
filing.
Olin points out that the market for STPP has declined
and is projected to decline further.
The combined effect
is that
Olin has a limited financial ability to achieve immediate
compliance.
Olin does not state that the facility will close.
However, Olin does state that “(i)n light of the importance of
the plant to its employees,
the surrounding area,
and to Olin and
its customers, denial of the variance would impose a severe
hardship on Olin as well as to the community”.
Pet. at p.20.
The financial burden, which Olin does agree
to undertake
promptly, involves improvements to the B—South kiln of
approximately $500,000.
The Agency also acknowledged that
“(b)etween 1986 and the present, Olin has spent approximately
$2,900,000 in total costs to address emissions problems at the
tripoly stacks,
including optimization and maintenance, internal
costs, stack testing, and outside consultant and legal
fees.
Ag.
Rec. at p.4.
When considered in this light,
the Board finds that
additional major expenses
in the $8
—
10 million range
to achieve
immediate compliance appear to represent an unreasonable hardship
in this limited factual setting.
Environmental Impact
The Joliet plant
is located in Will County, Illinois, which
has been designated as a Group
II PM1fl
area,
on the basis of one
possible but unconfirmed exceedance of the ambient air quality
standard.
Air quality standards appear to be met at the nearest
monitoring locations.
Pet.
at pp.
14—16.
Based on air modeling,
performed by Olin at the Agency’s request, granting the variance
should not cause or contribute
to
a violation of the NAAQS.
Pet.
at pp. 14—16.
118~230
—11—
The modeling showed that the current operations
do not have
a significant
impact on air quality at Olin’s property line,
and
the single area of significant impact was
to the northwest,
over
the Des Plaines River, not near homes
or other populated areas.
Pet.
at p.16,
Ag.
Rec. at p.3.
Olin asserts that “the granting of this variance will not
have an adverse impact on the environment.
Pet. at p.14.
The
Agency addresses the issue by stating that Olin’s emissions may
produce in one area a “significant”
impact.
Ag. Rec.
at p.3.
Both Olin and the Agency,
however, provide support for the
position that the environmental impact should be considered
minimal.
Consistency with Federal Law
Both the Agency and Olin have stated that relief can be
granted consistent with federal
law.
The variance will require a
revision
in the Illinois
SIP, pursuant
to Section 110(a) of the
Clean Air Act and 40 CFR Part 51,
but the relief will not cause
violations of the Clean Air Act or federal regulations.
Conclusion
The Board finds that Olin has presented adequate proof that
some level of relief
in the form of
a variance should be
granted.
The hardship of immediate compliance appears arbitrary
or unreasonable when compared to the level of environmental
impact from the particulate emissions.
However,
the Board also
finds that,
to a degree, Olin’s hardship in achieving compliance
is self-imposed.
The history of non—compliance and the lengthy
study and decisionmaking process engaged in by Olin on equipment
operating since 1980 does not support the grant of relief until
1993.
The Board
finds that the Agency has put forth a timetable
and conditions which find more support
in the record.
The Board
also agrees with the Agency’s calling for a progress
report
indicating
if compliance
is expected by March
1, 1992.
The Board
finds that an earlier report,
due October
1,
1991,
will be
preferable to waiting until December
1,
1991
to inform the Agency
of the progress and to reformulate a plan,
if necessary,
to
achieve compliance by March
1,
1992.
The delays
in obtaining and
installing equipment suggest that Olin must draw a conclusion as
to the effectiveness
of its efforts earlier
than December
1,
1991.
Olin should diligently pursue installation of all
equipment necessary to achieve compliance.
Olin’s petition and
the Agency’s recommendation clearly show that significant
steps
were already to have been taken by Olin by December
31,
1990.
The variance will expire on March
1, 1992,
after which time Olin
will not be protected from an enforcement action.
This date
should also further
the efficiency of the permitting process
since Olin’s permits expire on July 20,
1992.
This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact and
conclusions of law
in this matter.
118—23 1
—12—
ORDER
The Board hereby grants to Olin Corporation,
Joliet Plant,
a
variance from 35
Ill. Adm. Code 212.321 as applied to the
scrubbers in A and B Buildings, Joliet Plant, Joliet,
Illinois,
subject to the following terms and conditions:
1.
The variance period shall extend from January
24,
1991 until March
1,
1992.
2.
Olin shall complete all testing and minor
modifications on the A—North scrubber as
follows:
A) Not later than February 28,
1991,
Olin
shall complete all engineering matrix tests
and the evaluation of any modifications,
if
necessary.
3.
Olin shall complete modifications similar to
the A—North scrubber modifications at the B—
North scrubber, as follows:
A) Not later than April
1, 1991, Olin shall
complete modifications
to the B—North
scrubber, based on the results of matrix
testing at A—North unit, and Perform
engineering matrix tests
for all products.
B) Not later
than July 31,
1991, Olin shall
complete the evaluation of any engineering
modifications,
if necessary.
4.
Olin shall install an additional scrubber
(BECO Smoke Ring Contactor and Mist Master)
at
B—South and implement the optimization
schedule as follows:
A) Not later than January 31,
1991, Olin shall
install the BECO scrubber system.
B)
Not later than June
30, 1991, Olin shall
complete matrix tests and optimize unit
performance.
C) Not later than September 1991, Olin shall
evaluate any further engineering
modifications,
if necessary.
5.
Olin shall complete modifications
to the A—
South scrubber, as follows:
A) Not later than July
1,
1991, Olin shall
complete its evaluation of the impact of
engineering modifications at A—North and B—
North, as well as the performance of the
118—232
—13—
additional scrubber at B—South.
B) Not later than January
1,
1992, Olin shall
complete engineering modifications to the
A—South scrubber, based on the evaluations
made pursuant
to paragraph E(l)
herein.
C) Not later than March
1,
1992 Olin shall
complete matrix tests and optimize unit
performance and complete any further
engineering modifications,
if necessary.
6.
Monthly progress reports are
to be made to the
Agency.
The reports should be submitted to:
Regional Manager
Division of Air Pollution Control
Illinois Environmental Protection
Agency
1701 First Avenue
Maywood,
Illinois
60153
7.
Olin shall evaluate its progress and submit a
report by October
1, 1991 indicating whether
compliance is anticipated by the end of the
variance period.
If compliance is not
anticipated, the report shall include a
proposal
for an alternative method to achieve
compliance with a time schedule for its
implementation so that compliance
is achieved
by March
1,
1992.
8.
Olin shall maintain the scrubbers consistent
with its optimization and maintenance schedule
which was attached as Exhibit
D to the Third
Amended Petition.
9.
Olin shall test to insure compliance,
prior
to
expiration of the variance period.
Notification is to be given
to the Agency no
later than fifteen days prior to compliance
testing.
10.
Olin shall comply with all provisions of any
construction permits issued by the Agency for
additional scrubbers for the tripoly A and B
buildings.
11.
That within forty—five days of the grant of
the variance, Petitioner execute and forward
to Renee
A.
Stadel, Division
of Legal Counsel,
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, P.O.
Box 19276, Springfield,
Illinois,
62794—9276,
a Certificate of Acceptance and Agreement
to
be bound by all terms and conditions of the
granted variance.
This grant of variance
118—233
—14—
shall be null and void if Petitioner
fails to
execute and deliver its certification in
accordance with this paragraph.
Section
41 of the Environmental Protection Act,
Ill. Rev.
Stat.
1989,
ch. 111 1/2, par.
1041, provides for appeal of final
Orders of the Board within 35 days.
The Rules of the Supreme
Court of Illinois establish filing requirements.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify that ~he above Opinion and Order was,
adopted on the
7~ day
of-t~~1
,
1991, by a vote of
‘.~
~
I
~:
~
Dorothy M./ Gunn,’ Clerk
Illinois~PollutionControl Board
118—234