ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
September 20, 1985
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
)
PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
)
Complainant,
)
)
v.
)
PCB 83-178
)
1)E KALB-PFIZER GENETICS,
)
)
Respondent.
)
JAMES MORGAN, ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL, APPEARED ON BEHALF OF
COMPLAINANT.
NEIL F. FLYNN, HARTIN, CRAIG, CHESTER & SONNENSCHIEN, APPEARED ON
BEHALF OF RESPONDENT.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD (by J. Theodore Meyer):
This matter comes before the Board on a November 28, 1983
complaint by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
(Agency) against De Kalb-Pfizer Genetics (DPG)
.
DPC allegedly
committed open burning in violation of Sections 9(a) and 9(c) of
the Illinois Environmental Protection Act (Act) and former Rule
502(a), now recodified at 35 Iii. Adm. Code 237.102(a).
A hearing was held on March 8, 1985 at which time the
parties incorporated a properly signed copy of a Stipulation and
Proposal for Settlement into the record. By Board Order of April
18, 1985 the Stipulation was rejected because it contained no
admission of violation and lacked sufficient information for the
Board to determine whether a violation had occurred. A revised
Stipulation and Proposal for Settlement was filed on June 13,
t 985.
DPG owns and operates a seed corn conditioning plant near
Illiopolis, Sangamon County, Illinois. The plant prepares
recently harvested ~‘green”corn for distribution as seed corn.
This process generates waste materials including corn cobs,
husks, and dust (hereinafter the “conditioning wastes”.) From
1966 to 1982, for approximately six to nine weeks of the harvest
season, DPG burned the conditioning wastes in the open at several
locations. DPG discontinued this practice after the Agency
notified it of its contention that the burning was a violation of
the Act. Presently the wastes are spread over and plowed under
the cropland where the crops were generated. (Stip. at 2-4).
The Agency and DPG disagree over the proper characterization
or the wastes. DPG maintains that the wastes are “agricultural
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wastes”
and therefore exempt from the
prohibition against open
burning.
The Agency contends that the
wastes are “trade wastes”
for which
no exemption exists,* The
Stipulation provides that
should the
Board determine
that DPG has committed the violations
alleged that a penalty of $2,000 is appropriate.
As construed by the Board in its
order of April 18, 1985 in
this matter, “agricultural waste” entitled
to an exemption must
be waste
that is 1) generated on a farm; 2)
as a result of the
farm’s crop production practices; and 3) be
burned on that farm’s
premises.
Previously, the only facts before
the Board were that
DPG owns and operates a seed corn conditioning plant which
generates a waste of disputable nature, As revised, the
stipulated statement of facts provides that “the
corn
comes
from farm land owned by the principal partner in
DPG, Dc
Kalb Ag
Research, Inca (~De Kaib”) or from farm land farmed
and owned
by
persons under contract to DPG.” (Stip.
at 2). It is further
provided that Dc Kaib or DPG has conducted the
burning “on farm
land owned by Dc Kaib from which a portion of the
corn was
produced.” (Stip~ at 3).
Based on these facts, the Board finds that the waste
attributable to crops produced under contract
to DPG is not
agricultural waste and consequently is not
exempt from the
prohibition against open burning. The
wastes are clearly not
generated on the same farm where the crops were
sown
but at the
conditioning plant where the crops were
transported to. As
stated previously in this matter by the
Board, “waste which
is
the
product
of crops imported from outside
farms
is
not exempt
simply because the processing facility is also a
farm.”
(Op. at 3).
As to the waste attributable to corn grown
by Dc Kalb, not
enough information exists in the record to
determine
its
nature. The Board construes the term
agricultural waste to apply
to only those wastes actually generated
on
the
premises
of a
farm. Although the parties have stipulated that the
corn
“comes
*HAgricultural wastes” are defined in relevant part as
“any
refuse, except garbage and dead animals, generated on a farm
or
ranch by crop and livestock production
practices
including such
items as
. .
crop residues but excluding
landscape wastes.” 35
Ill, Adm. Code 237,101. Under Section
237.120
these
wastes are
specifically exempt from the prohibition against
open burning
contained in Section 237.102.
“Trade Wastes” are not exempt from the prohibition against
open burning and include “any refuse resulting from
the
prosecution of any trade, business, industry,
commercial venture,
utility or service activity, whether or not for profit. The term
includes landscape waste but excludes agricultural waste.” 35
Ill.
Adm, Code 237.101.
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from Dc Ka1b~sproperty”, unaddressed is the salient issue
whether the corn husks, sheller dust and cobs are generated on
the same property as the corn. To be entitled to an exemption,
the
waste generator must establish that in preparing a crop
for
market, wastes or
“crop residues”
are created at the same
location where the crops were
sown. Although this information
has
not
yet
been
provided, the Board finds that
in this instance,
the determination
of the issue
is unnecessary.
This is because
even if DPG were able to establish that the waste were produced
at
the
same location as the crops and therefore constituted
agricultural wastes,
it would still fail on the issue of
its
entitlement to
an
exemption. The
open burning
of agricultural
waste, although permitted, is still strictly
regulated under 35
itt.
t~dm.
Code 237,L20.* Of specific note is the
requirement.
that
it
“be affirmatively demonstrated
that no economicalLy
reasonable alternative
method of disposal is available.”
35
it.
Adm. Code 237.120 (a)(6).
DPG failed to
make this affirmative
demonstration and has, in fact, demonstrated that it does
have
a
reasonable alternative
disposal method, i.e., plowing the wastes
under. (Stip. at 4).
Accordingly, the Board
finds that the waste attributable
to
crops grown under contract as well as crops grown by Dc Kaih was
burned
in violation of
the prohibition against open burning
during the period 1966 to 1982. The Board finds that the
stipulated
penalty of $2000.00 is a reasonable penalty.
In evaluating this enforcement action and proposed
settlement agreement, the Board has taken into consideration
all.
of the facts and circumstances in light of the specific criteria
*Section 237.120 exempts the open burning of agricultural waste
“hut only”:
1) On the premises on which such waste is generated; and
2) In areas other than restricted areas; and
3) When atmospheric conditions
will readily dissipate
contaminants; and
4) If such burning does not create a visibility hazard on
roadways, railroads tracks or air fields; and
5) More than 305 meters (1,000 feet) from residential or
other populated areas; and
6)
When it can be affirmatively demonstrated
that no
economically reasonable
alternative method of
disposal
is
available,
35 Ill.
Adm. Code 237.120(a).
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—4-
delineated in Section 33(c) of the Act and finds the settlement
agreement acceptable under 35 Ill. Adm. Code 103.180.
The Respondent is hereby found to have violated Sections
9(a) and 9(c) of the Act and 35 Iii. Adm. Code 237.102(a). The
Respondent is ordered to comply with the terms and the conditions
of the proposed settlement agreement and to pay the stipulated
penalty of Two Thousand Dollars ($2000.00).
This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact and
conclusions of law in this matter.
OR DER
It is the order of the Illinois Pollution Control Board
that:
1. The Respondent, De Kalb-Pfizer Genetics, violated
Sections 9(a) and 9(c) of the Illinois Environmental
Protection Act and 35 Iii. Adm. Code 237.102(a).
2. Within 40 days of the date of this Order the Respondent
shall, by certified check or money order payable to the
State of Illinois, pay the stipulated penalty of Two
Thousand Dollars ($2000.00) which is to be sent to:
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
Fiscal Services Division
2200 Churchill Road
Springfield,
Illinois
62706
3. The Respondent shall comply with all terms and
conditions of the Stipulation and Proposal for
Settlement filed on June 13, 1985, which is incorporated
by reference as if fully set forth herein.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify that the above Opinion and Order was
adopted on the
~-Q~ day of
_________________,
1985, by a
Dorothy M. unn, Clerk
Illinois
Pollution Control Board
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