ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
July
3,
1990
CITY OF WHITE HALL,
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 90—123
(Provisional Variance)
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(J.
Marlin):
This matter comes before the Board on receipt of an Agency
Recommendation dated July
2,
1990.
The recommendation refers to
a request from Petitioner,
City of White Hall, for a provisional
variance from the wastewater effluent biochemical oxygen demand
(BOD)
and total suspended solids
(TSS)
limitations,
as set forth
in 35
Ill.
Adm.
Code 304.120 and 304.141(a).
The City seeks a
provisional variance for the period from June 29,
1990 to July
20, 1990 or until the City of White Hall returns its activated
sludge plant to service, whichever comes first.
The City of White Hall owns and operates
a wastewater
treatment plant that discharges effluent to Seminary Creek which,
in turn,
discharges to Apple Creek and the Illinois River.
The
plant consists of
a bar screen aerated grit chamber,
a primary
clarifier,
an activated sludge plant,
a clarifier,
an aerobic
digester,
tertiary filtration, and effluent chlorination.
NPDES
Permit 1L0022390 presently requires the City to discharge
effluent with no greater than 10 mg/l BOD and 12 mg/i TSS
content,
on a monthly average basis.
The City claims to have experienced breakage problems with
the clarifier drive mechanism on the activated sludge plant.
The
mechanism failed on April
8,
1990,
and the City replaced it on
May 9,
1990.
It failed again on June 21,
1990.
Shear pin
failure on the clarifier drive units preceded both failures.
The
drive mechanism has been repaired and installed,
but the City
is
concerned that another problem may have caused the failures.
The City claims that
it is necessary to dewater the
clarifier to determine
if another problem exists.
This would
require the City to dewater all compartments of the treatment
plant because the internal dividers would not withstand the
pressures resulting from dewatering the individual compartment.
This would place the activated sludge unit out of
service during
dewatering and repairs.
During such
a period, however,
the City
could provide partial treatment by screening,
grit removal,
flow
measurement, primary settling, aeration in the excess flow tank,
rapid sand filtration,
and final settling.
This would result in
113—97
2
an effluent that would
not exceed 25 mg/i BOD and 40 mg/i TSS
during the period of repairs.
The City asserts that there is no available alternative
method to correct the situation with its plant.
It predicts that
far above average amounts of rainfall would result in no adverse
environmental effects.
Upon receipt of the request, the Agency issued its
recommendation,
concluding that the lack of an available
alternative method for correcting the situation with the City’s
plant “creates
a hardship adequate enough to justify granting”
the requested provisional variance.
The Agency concurs in the
City’s assessment as to the availability of an alternative method
~or correction and as to the prospective environmental impact of
grant of a pr
i—&i-ona-l
variance.
Th~Agency asserts that a
~enia1of the requested provisional variance would impose an
arbitrary and unreasonable hardship on the City.
The Agency
states that no federal laws would preclude a grant of the
requested provisional variance, and the Agency is of no public
water supply that such a grant would adversely affect.
The
Agency recommends that the Board grant the requested provisional
variance with conditions.
In light of the Agency Recommendation,
the Board hereby
grants the City of
White
Hall a provisional variance from the BOD
and TSS requirements of 35 Iii. Adm. Code 304.120 and 304.141(a)
on the following conditions:
1.
The term of this provisional variance shall commence on
June 29,
1990 and continue until the City of White Hall
returns its activated sludge plant to service,
or until July
20,
1990, whichever occurs first;
2.
The City of White Hall shall discharge no effluent that
exceeds 25 mg/i BOD or 40 mg/i TSS content during the term
of this provisional variance;
3.
The City of White Hall shall notify Bud Bridgewater by
telephone,
at 217-786-6892, when it begins dewatering the
activated sludge plant and when it returns that unit to
service;
4.
The City of White Hall shall verify each notification
made by telephone pursuant to condition number
3
in writing
within five days of such telephone notification, addressed
as follows:
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
Division of Water Pollution Control
2200 Churchill Road
P.O. Box 19276
113-98
3
Springfield,
Illinois
62794—9276
Attn:
Pat Lindsey
5.
The City of White Hall shall return its activated
sludge plant to service as soon as is possible and shall
provide the best treatment practicable during the term of
this provisional variance;
6.
The City of White Hall shall execute a Certificate of
Acceptance and Agreement in the following form:
CERTIFICATION
I
(We),
hereby accept and agree to be bound by all terms and
conditions
of the Order of the Pollution Control Board in
PCB 90—123,
dated July
3,
1990.
Petitioner
Authorized Agent
Title
Date
7.
The City of White Hall shall forward to the Agency an
executed copy of the Certificate executed pursuant to
condition number
6 within 10 days of the date of this Order
addressed as indicated in condition number
4.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
113—99
4
I, Dorothy M.
Gunn,
Clerk of the
I11ino:~sPollution Control
Board,
do hereby certi
hat the above Order was adopted on the
J1~
day of __________________________,
1990, by a vote of
Ill
erk
Control Board
113-100