ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
March 10,
1988
IN THE MATTER OF:
ORGANIC MATERIAL EMISSION
)
R86-l8
STANDARDS AND LIMITATIONS:
)
ORGANIC EMISSION GENERIC
RULE
)
DISSENTING OPINION (by J.D. Dumelle):
By
a 4—3 vote identical
to its original action the Board
majority has today again chosen not
to exempt the Viskase
Corporation from this rule.
At stake are 400 manufacturing and 600 research and
administrative jobs plus 650
jobs created
through the multiplier
effect.
Illinois badly needs those 1,650
jobs.
The March
2,
1988 newspaper stories of the closing of the nearby Campell Soup
plant
(460 jobs)
in Chicago and the possible closing
of
Inland
Steel’s plants in nearby Indiana
(750 to 1,450
jobs)
emphasize
the need
to keep Viskase
in operation in Bedford Park.
An article by David Moberg
in the Chicago Tribune of March
2,
1988 titled “The human cost of
‘restructuring’”
states:
Whenever
major
employers
shut
down
or
move,
even without this subsidy war,
there are major
costs
for
individual workers,
state
and
local
government
and
the networks
of suppliers that
have
grown
up
around
them.
Wisconsin
estimates
the
public
cost
of
the
Kenosha
shutdown at $100 million,
not counting all
the
negative
ripple
effects
on
the
economy.
But
those costs never show up on corporate books.
The shutdown of the Chrysler plant
in Kenosha, Wisconsin,
referred
to above,
terminates
5,000 jobs.
The “public cost”
according
to Moberg’s article
is $100,000,000.
On
a
proportionate basis, Viskase’s 1,000
jobs,
if terminated, will
result
in
a “public cost”
to Illinois of $20,000,000!
If this rule
is finally enacted
I can only urge Viskase
to
(a) immediately file
a variance (which stays
the effect
of the
rule)
and
(b)
appeal
to the Illinois Appellate Court.
Since this rule involves the Board’s determination of
“reasonably available control technology”
for Viskase the
87—127
—2—
Appellate Court will have
to then decide whether such technology,
which forces a major shutdown,
is
in fact and
in law,
“reasonable.
‘-~.
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~
~
I,
Dorothy
M.
Gunn,
Clerk
of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify that the above Disenting Opinion was
submitted on the
If~-~-
day of
___________________,
1988.
I~t~z1~1
p7,.
Dorothy M.
Gunn,
Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board
87—128