ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
November
7, 1985
IN THE MATTER OF:
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION
)
R83~-7
PROPOSED AMENDMENTS TO
)
35
ILL.
ADM~CODE 900.103
)
and 901.104
DISSENTING
OPINION
(by
B.
Forcade and
J.
D.
Dumelle):
We
dissent
from the majority action because
it
is an
ill—
advised relaxation of
a
well
established
standard, will not
provide
the relief General Motors seeks, will essentially
eradicate an already weakened noise control program,
and provides
very vague guidance on what standards actually apply.
First,
it
is beyond dispute that the proposed replacement
of
the existing decibel levels with
the
Leg standard
will
represent
a significant relaxation
of
the regulations except as applied
to
a continuous source of constant noise level.
The decibel
level
is an instantaneous level never
to be exceeded.
The Leq
is
a one
hour logarithmic average.
The majority provides no explanation
for
a significant relaxation under
the guise of
a modified
testing protocol.
The existing standards have served
the State
well
for many years
and
it seems bad practice to relax
a
statewide
standard as an attempt
to resolve
a few localized
problems.
Second,
the regulatory change will not solve
General Motor’s
problems~
The Board’s noise regulations
are
an
attempt
to
~
noise problems by establishing general
numerical
standards that reflect community annoyance levels.
The numbers
do
not prevent noise
annoyance,
If the Board finalizes
these
regulations the citizens of Thilton (who have already complained
about noise)
will not cease
to exist,
nor will their
comp1aints~ Moreover,
the problem can still
be
brought
to this
Board for
relief under existing noise regulations
Noise
Pollution Rule 102: Now 35
Ill. Adm,
Code 900,102j.
Thus,
the
rule change will not solve the problem that prompted
it.
Most importantly,
this subtle rule change will essentially
eradicate what little noise program that remains
in Illinois.
None of the Agency’s existing
35
noise meters have the
capacity
to measure Leg.
These meters are used by the Agency and loaned
to
local governments.
With the complete elimination of Federal
funds for
noise control, the
severe cutbacks at
the State
level,
this minor measurement change will decimate noise control,
except
by the
“annoyance” standar&
This Board has always
sought
68~377
numerical
support
for
its “annoyance” cases but now it
eliminates
the
utility of the equipment that would provide
it,
Lastly,
the proposed regulatory change provides only vague
guidance
about when
Leg should apply.
Basically,
one—hour Leq is
to apply
in all cases except where another
time
period
or
measurement standard provides a higher degree
of correlation with
human response.
Presumably this
is
a recognition by the
majority
that
if people still complain,
there still must
be
a noise
problem.
However,
the standard
is vague
as to
how that
correlation is
to be established
or what human population
is
to
be considered
(those next
to the
source or some national
average).
Since
the complainant has
the burden of
demonstrating
that the “alternative” standard has
a higher correlation with
human response
it
is unlikely this Board will
see many cases
brought under
alternative numerical standards.
There
is great wisdom in the idiomatic statement,
“If
it
ain’t broke, don’t
fit it”,
There
is
no evidence
in this
proceeding
that the existing Statewide standards are
flawed,
and
the
proposed cure fixes nothing.
Lastly,
that remedy
is itself
flawed
and vague.
I,
Dorothy M.
Gunn, Clerk
of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby
certify that
the a~gveDissenting Opinion was
submitted
on the
~
day of
~4~/_~
,
1985.
~
Dorothy
M. Gunn
Clerk of the Board
Member
of
the
Board
acob D.
Dumelle
airman of
the Board
66-378