ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
December
22,
1987
MODINE MANUFACTURING COMPANY,
Petitioner,
V.
)
PCB 85—154
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by
B.
C.
Flemal):
This matter comes before the Board upon
a Petition for
Variance
filed by Modine Manufacturing Company
(“Modine”)
on
October
16,
1985.
Modine seeks variance relief until December
31,
1987 from Ill.
Adm. Code Sections 302.212 and 304.105 a~they
relate
to ammonia nitrogen and un—ionized ammonia nitrogen,
and
from Section 304.120(c)
as
it relates to biochemical oxygen
demand
(“BOD51’)
and total suspended solids (“TSS”).
History
Modine owns and operates
a manufacturing plant
in
Ringwood,
Illinois,
Mcflenry County,
which fabricates air conditioning
condensors and evaporators.
•Modine’s Ringwood plant has sought
legal protection
from the above cit~dstandards in six different
actions prior
to the present action
.
In PCB 82—111, the Board
granted Modine variance relief
for ammonia nitrogen, un—ionized
ammonia,
BOD5,
and TSS, from
May
29,
1984 to March
1, 1985~.
Hearings were held
in
this matter on February 3,
1986,
September
23,
1986,
October
22,
1986 and October
23,
1986.
The
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (“Agency”)
filed its
recommendation to gran~tthe variance on December 11,
1985,
1 PCB 82—111 was the most recent major Board action involving
thE
Ringwood facility’s effluent discharges.
The prior proceedings
were discussed
in PCB 82—111
(58 PCB
207), and
it
is not
necessary to the disposition
of this action
to repeat these here.
2 At several places
in the instant record the present request
is
characterized
as an “extension”
of the prior variance.
The Boarc
believes that the present request
is more properly characterized
as
a request
for
a new variance.
84—735
subject
to conditions
(this document also appears
in the record
as Petitioner’s Exhibit
2).
Petitioner filed
its brief
in
support
of amended variance petition on August
7,
1987, and
its
amended brief
in support of amended variance petition on
Sept~mber3,
1987.
The Agency filed
its brief on October
2,
l987~,and Petitioner
filed
its reply brief on October
15,
1987
with
a motion
to file instanter.
That motion
is granted.
In
addition,
the
above have been accompanied by many delays,
requests for continuances,
and filings of many motions.
For the reasons discussed below,
the Board finds that
arbitrary or unreasonable hardship would
be suffered
if the
requested variance were denied.
Therefore, variance will be
granted subject
to conditions.
Ringwood Plant
Modine’s condensor products are primarily fabricated from
aluminum parts which are metallurgically bonded together using
zinc and fluoride salts, under the influence of heat,
utilizing
the Alfuse process (Petition at
2).
As
a part of its
manufacturing operations,
Modine generates process wastewater.
The process wastewater
is treated by preliminary physical—
chemical
t:reatment,
followed by mixing with non—contact cooling
water
and treated domestic wastewater.
It
is then discharged
into three
lagoons for further treatment,
and
is later
chlorinated and discharged into an unnamed tributary to Dutch
Creek (Modine’s Amended Brief at
2).
It is for
the excess levels
of BOD~,TSS, ammonia nitrogen and un—ionized ammonia present
in
the effluent that Modine seeks variance.
Hardship
Modine asserts that there is no technically feasible and
economically reasonable means
for
it to comply with the Board
effluent standards noted
above.
Since
the filing of its petition, Modine has installed
a
new process on its evaporator line,
the Nocolok process, which,
as Modine states,
has eliminated
the process wastewater
from that
line of production.
The cost of installation of
the system was
approximately $4 million.
Modine asserts
that although
the new
process yields evaporators acceptable
to its customers,
the
process
is not adaptable
to the condensor line because of the
The Agency
in its brief amended
its recommendation deleting
conditions
1 and
2 pertaining
to further
testing of the
wastewater effluent from the Ringwood plant, stating
that the two
conditions have become moot.
84—736
—3—
large number of individual condensors produced
on that
line.
Modine therefore states that
it cannot come into compliance
even
with the
use of
this new production process due
to the process
wastewater generated
by the condensor line production
(Modine
Amended Brief
at 19—20).
Modine has previously investigated other compliance options
(See PCB
82—111).
Modine retained James W.
Patterson,
a
consultant, who made recommendations
for
improving the quality of
Modine’s effluent.
The treatment system designed by Dr.
Patterson included retrofitting
the existing system through the
use of rotating biological
contact units and certain lagoon
modifications
(R.
at
457).
It was estimated
in
1982 that the
cost
of the system would be approximately $408,200 to $420,000,
and
that even with the system, Modine would
not meet the
applicable effluent limitations at all times
(R.
at
458; Modine
Exhibit
20,21).
Dr.
Patterson testified that the condensor
production at the plant has remained the same since his previous
studies
in 1982 and the data would
be representative of what he
would expect to
find at the present time
(R.
at 456).
£4odine has implemented
other
improvements previously
suggested by its consultants including
raising the pH level
in
the clarifier for more efficient removal
of suspended solids and
to better control ammonia nitrogen,
to cease
adding phosphorus
nutrients to the ponds. to avoid
increases
in suspended
solids,
and to isolate spent slurry for reuse
(B.
at 525—6,
500—1).
The Agency states that
in view of the
fact, that Modine
provided additional facts on the environmental
impact of its
effluent
at the public hearing,
that the variance
if granted
would shortly expire, and because Modine has spent significant
sums
in attempting
to control
its wastewater discharge, the
Agency believes
it would be
an arbitrary or unreasonable hardship
to deny the variance (Agency Brief
at
5).
Environmental Impact
Modine claims that continued operation of the condensor line
at the Ringwood facility will
not have an adverse impact on water
quality.
Modine currently discharges wastewater into an unnamed ditch
adjacent
to the Ringwood facility.
Upstream from Modine’s
discharge,
the unnamed ditch
is fed by drainage area from
a
marshy meadow.
Downstream from Modine’s discharge the stream
becomes
a flowing
stream, and because of the retention capability
of the Modine lagoons,
the stream remains even when
84—737
—4—
Modine
is not producing wastewater4.
Access
to the stream
is
greatly limited by the physical remoteness of the water course.
During
the summer
the stream
is overgrown and partially blocked
from view due
to vegetation which grows up to seven feet tall
immediately adjacent
to the stream.
For most of the
time the
stream is several
inches deep and one
or
two yards wide (Modine
Amended Brief at 20—2).
In 1979, Modine retained Dr. Charles Wahtola of Camp,
Dresser and
Mc!(ee, Incorporated
(“CDM”)
to review the receiving
stream.
(Dr. Wahtola’s study was discussed
in the Board’s
Opinion and Order
in PCB 82—ill.)
In 1986,
Mr. Thomas Meitner,
environmental engineer for Modine,
conducted
a study to determine
if any changes
in the ditch’s ecosystem have occurred since
Dr.
Wahtola’s study.
As the study indicates:
The scope of
this investigation includes an
overview of the ditch’s ecosystem, and concentrates on
the general types of organisms which were observed,
specifically the benthic macroinvertebrates.
The
primary objective was
to determine the presence or
absence
of macroinvertebrate and fish populations
at
various ditch locations,
and to note
if any marked
changes
in these populations have occurred
since the
three 0DM studies noted
above.
Secondly, this
investigation was also
to determine
if land use
in the
watershed has undergone any changes since the CDM
studies.
(Modine Exhibit 19
at
1)
Specific observation stations were established from points
upstream of Modine’s discharge to a point just below the ditch’s
confluence with Dutch Creek.
Mr. Meitner noted that fish,
macroinvertebrates, and aquatic vegetation were found
at points
upstream and downstream of the Modine discharge point.
He noted
a lack of diversity of macroinvertebrates (finding mainly
oligochaetes and diptera)
at two points downstream from the
discharge, though fish were observed
in those areas and at the
discharge point itself
(B.
at 558—560;
Modine Exhibit 19).
Mr. Meitner testified that the organisms he found
in
specific habitat areas were very similar
to the types of
organisms found by
Dr.. Wahtola
in those same locations
(B.
at
560).
Mr. Meitner further stated
that he observed no
quantifiable adverse impact on the receiving stream from Modine’s
discharge
(B.
at
569).
In his study he noted the character of
the surrounding area and concluded:
Morton Chemical also discharges
into
a ditch at
a point below
the Modine discharge.
The two ditches join before confluence
with Dutch
Creek.
84—738
—5—
Mr. Bryan Petrucci,
a Resource Conservationist
with the McHenry County Soil and Water Conservation
District, was contacted regarding the unnamed
ditch to
which Modine discharges.
Mr. Petrucci stated that
Ringwood,
Illinois, specifically the Dutch Creek
tributary area,
has remained basically unchanged since
1979.
Some subtle changes involving
land ownership
and
a shift
to larger farms have occurred since
the
CDM study.
Mr. Petrucci also stated that this area
has been classified
as
a “target watershed” due to
historic agricultural land erosion
...
This problem
was evidenced at various locations throughout
the area
under
investigation.
Gully erosion and
areas of silt
accumulation
in the ditch were commonly observed.
*
*
*
The
presence
of
fish
directly in the Modine
effluent indicates that this water contains an
adequate supply of dissolved oxygen and
is of high
enough quality to support their
existence.
This may
also indicate that the overall quality of Nadine’s
effluent has
improved since the CDM studies.
(Modine Exhibit
19
at
2,
3)
There
is therefore
a basis for concluding that there has
been minimal adverse
impact on the receiving
water’s from Modine’s
discharge over the period
of the requested variance.
The
presence of fish,
aquatic vegetation, and other organisms,
as
indicated by the data presented,
support this finding.
Conclusion
The Board finds this matter to be
a difficult call.
The
long time that this matter has been extant,
both
in its present
and previous incarnations, compounded by the repeated delays in
bringing the matter to resolution,
suggest that some of the
hardship asserted by !4odine
is self—imposed.
Moreover,
the Board
is displeased with
a request for
a variance which has a term,
but
for
a few days, which
is after the fact.
While
the Board allows
that there may be circumstances where the latter
condition might
validly arise,
it also believes that after—the—fact grants of
variance are generally inconsistent with the intent of variance
relief as enuciated in the Environmental Protection Act.
At the
minimum,
it
is not the intent of
a variance to legitimize past
failure to comply with rules and regulations.
In considering the entirety of this matter,
the Board finds
that
in such
a close decision the recommendation and the post—
hearing brief
of the Agency to grant the requested variance
84—739
—6—
carries special weight.
With this
in mind,
the Board finds that
it has been shown that absent
a variance, the applicable effluent
standards would have imposed an arbitrary or unreasonable
hardship upon Modine,
and that there has been minimal adverse
environmental
impact as
a result
of the plant discharges over
the
period of
time for which variance
is requested.
The Board
therefore grants the variance,
to terminate on the date
requested,
December
31,
1987.
The Board must also decide
to what date
the variance
presently granted should be retroactive.
The Board finds that
the most reasonable outcome under the circumstance
is
to grant
the variance retroactive
to October 16,
1985,
the date of
filing
of the
instant request.
The Board further finds warranted
the
Agency’s request
(Agency Brief at
7) that condition
#2 of the PCB
82—111 variance also be incorporated
as
a condition in the
instant variance.
It
is also worth noting that Modine has recently filed with
the Board
a request for
a site—specific rule change involving
discharges from Modine’s Ringwood plant.
The Board’s action
today should not be construed as indicative of any predisposition
toward
the merits of that proposal, and Modine
is expected
to
provide all necessary information
in support
of that proposal as
it would under
other circumstances.
This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings
of fact
and
conclusions of law in this matter.
ORDER
Modine Manufacturing Company
is hereby granted variance for
its plant
in Ringwood, McHenry County, from 35
Ill. Adm.
Code
302.212 and 304.105 as
they relate
to ammonia nitrogen and un-
ionized ammonia and from 35
Ill.
Adm. Code 304.120(c) as it
relates to BOD5 and total
suspended solids, all subject to
the
following conditions:
1)
Variance shall begin on October
16,
1985,
and terminate
on December
31,
1987.
2)
The following effluent and water quality limitations,
in
xng/l,
shall not be exceeded:
BOD5
TSS
AMMONIA—N
UN-IONIZED NH3-N
Summer
60
35
5
1.48
Winter
120
20
15
1.3
3)
Within forty—five
(45) days of the date of this Order,
Petitioner shall execute
and forward
to wayne
L.
84—740
—
I—
Wiemerslage, Enforcement Programs, Illinois
Environmental Protection Agency,
2200 Churchill
Road,
Springfield, Illinois 62794—9276,
a Certification of
Acceptance
and Agreement to be bound
to all terms and
conditions of this variance.
The 45—day period shall
be
held
in abeyance during any period that this matter
is
being appealed.
Failure
to execute and forward the
Certificate within
45 days renders this variance void
and of no force and effect as
a
shield against
enforcement of rules
from which variance was granted.
The form of
said Certification shall
be as follows:
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 85—154,
December
22,
1987.
Petitioner
Authorized Agent
Title
Date
Section 41
of the Environmental Protection Act,
Ill.
Rev.
Stat.
1985
ch.
1111/2 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 the above Order was adopted on the
~~i~c/
day of
~
,
1987,
by a vote of
~c.’
Dorothy M. Munn,
Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board
84—741