ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    April 18, 1984
    ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
    )
    PROTECTION AGENCY,
    )
    )
    Comolainant,
    )
    )
    PCB 83—178
    V.
    I
    DE RALB—PFIZER GENETICS,
    an Illinois partnership,
    )
    )
    Respondent.
    )
    MR. NEIL F. FLYNN, MARTIN, CRAIG, CHESTER & SONNENSCHEIN,
    APPEARED ON
    BEHALF OF RESPONDENT.
    MR.
    JAMES
    MORGAN, ASSISTANT
    ATTORNEY
    GENERAL,
    APPEARED ON
    BEHALF
    OF COMPLAINANT.
    INTERIM ORDER OF THE BOARD (by 3
    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). The complaint
    alleges that DPG committed open burning in violation ot Sections
    9(a) and 9(c) of the Illinois Environmental Protection Act (Act)
    and former Rule 502(a), now recodified at 35 Ill. Mm. Code
    237.102(a).
    A hearing was held on March 8, 1985 at which time the
    parties incorporated a properly signed copy of the Stipulation
    and Proposal for Settlement into the record.
    According to the stipulated statement of facts, DPG owns and
    operates a seed corn conditioning plant near flhiopolis, Sangamon
    County, Illinois. At the plant, recently harvested “green” corn
    undergoes preparation for distribution as seed corn. The corn is
    dried, shelled, sized, treated and
    bagged for subsequent sale.
    During these conditioning processes, waste materials ate
    accumulated consisting of corn cobs, chaff, husks and sheller
    dust (hereinafter the “conditioning wastes”).
    During every harvest season since 1966, DPG has burned the
    conditioning wastes in the open. The harvest season lasts for
    twelve to fifteen weekd each autumn and during the season
    approximately eight truck loads of wastes are hauled from the
    plant daily. Burning has taken place at several locations; the
    last location was approximately four miles from the village of
    flliopolis and three—quarters of a mile from the nearest
    residence.
    83-483

    2
    On Septouber 23, 1982 an Agency inspector visited
    t
    to invootigate a complaint about the burning regirtct
    £~
    jr
    ~n-vTh7resident. At that time the inspector obse:v~C“hc bu.niag
    n’! the raditioning wastes. The Agency notified
    X’3
    by Jetter of
    its contention that this practice violated the .~t. Consequently,
    D’fl ‘liocoatinued burning its conditioning wastes cu~
    this ‘efuse is spread over the cropland where ço ‘~r~
    --
    plowed under.
    The parties tgrne that the statement of facts ‘~.ca i’
    the 3tipult’ion
    nixi
    rn?osal for Settlement repr~n~.
    .,
    tir
    suninry of ~ae ovida .a and testimony which wou
    -
    intr&Iund were a f’i:~ henring held. The partt’n
    . •
    ot~
    ,
    however, as to whethr nfl’s conduct constitute’ i
    - ‘-
    c. o.
    the act. DtG nainta”ts that the conditioning wi’i’~rt
    agricultural wastes as clefmed in 35 Ill. Adm. C~ 9 3 1 a C
    are therefore
    o’tnpt
    from the prohibition agatha:
    ~.rc.1
    ‘‘. .
    trc.
    “agricultural wastes” are defined in relevant p
    -
    t
    refuse, except garbage and drtd animals, generatti t
    - -
    r
    -
    ranch by crop and livestock production practices nc.~’ is
    items as
    . . .
    crop rest’ns but excluding landa”;n
    ?1.
    Under section 237.120 these wastes are specifinV-y (“Q !-
    the prohibition against open burning contained
    :~
    ‘a’:. i
    237.102.
    The Agency, however, contends that the condttionsig -- es
    are a trade waste as defined ta Section 237.S1. ~r I as
    are not exempt from the prohibition against o~sn:-•irrtin
    Ti
    waste is “any refuse rentttng from the prosecutti ± i’ t~d~
    business, industry, co~nercialventure, utility or
    c~
    v
    2
    activity, and any go’nrnent or institutional acts-nty, wtethcr
    or not for profIt. The term includes landscape
    n-tate
    it
    excludes agriculturnt ~nste.” Consequently, refuse thic. falls
    within the definition n~ rn ngricultural waste cannot also
    constitute a tr’t’Je tn’~n.
    The settle’nent agreement sets out the parties’ contentions
    and goes on to require ttnt D?G cease and desist from i~,
    practice of open burning and that it pay a stipulated penalty of
    two thounnd dollars ($2.000.00). The Doard has t’io ob;ectio-is
    to this agroonant.
    First, tin proposed nettte~entagreement contains nr
    admission of ‘itolat3ri. ~i
    ftct, DPG
    expressly dcniea cr~~
    violation basol on Its ctriin that it was burning “agri~t3~ral
    wastes’. Purthornore t’23 rettlenent agreement, talcr. .3(r
    seens to preclule the Nnrd from finding a violation sin~c :t
    requests that the D’nrd adopt and accept it “as wri’-ter
    otherwise, it shall Fe “null and void”. The Respondent
    otate
    its view at hearing, however, that the settlement agreet an
    presented sufficient stIpulated facts for the Board to ‘h mine
    whether the burning of the conditioning wastes const1ru,~~o
    violation of the Act and regulations (R. at 6). Th~
    2”
    r(er
    83-484

    3
    also stated that ~‘theparties have stipulated that
    should ~tte
    Board make such a finding of violation that a penalty
    of $2,000
    is the apprOpDiate penalty for the actions complained
    of~ (R. at
    7)
    The explicit terms of the settlement agreement
    and
    ResDondent’S statements at hearing appear to be
    contradictory~ As
    decided in IEP~v, Chemetco, PCB 83—2, February
    20~. :L9$5,
    the
    Board cannot order pay~nt of penalties and other
    acts of
    compliance unless eere has been a concomitant
    finding of a
    violation. If the Parties wish the Board to make
    this
    determination,
    be:c~d on
    the stipulated facts, they should amend
    the
    nettiectent a~.cement accordingly.
    Second, the ttioulation and Proposal for
    Settlement does not
    present sufficient. sti~ulated facts
    upon which a
    detarminacion of
    ~iiolation
    can ~be
    made, The
    only facts before the 3oarci are that
    DPG owns
    and
    operates a need corn conditioning plant which
    generates a
    waste of
    disputable nature, Whether this refuse
    constitutes
    an
    agricultural waste entitled to
    an
    exemution terms
    on whether
    the waste
    itself was
    ~‘generated on a fer~i throuph
    croo production ~ractices~
    Simply
    put,
    the definition requires
    that the waste generator
    he producing a crop
    and
    that the waste
    at
    issue
    he
    directly attributable to the crop produceil.
    :Shus,
    waste which is the product of cro~s
    imported
    from ourerde farms
    for
    processing
    would not be
    exempt
    simply because the prccsseinq
    facility
    is also
    a farm.
    This interpretation is in keeping with the terms
    of the
    exemption for agricultural wastes, Specifically,
    agriculture.
    refuse
    may only
    he burned
    on ~the premises on
    which such waste is
    generated.~ 35 111. Adm~ Code
    237,120(a)(l).
    ~~1oreover, open
    burning may only take ~lace 1) in areas one mile
    or more away
    from the boundary of a municipality havingca
    population of 1,000
    or more; 2) when atmoonheric conditions will
    readily dissipat.e
    contaminants; 3) if such burning does not create
    a w:Lsit:Llity
    hazard on roadways, railroad tracks or air fields; 4)
    more
    than
    1,000 feet from residential or other populated areas; and
    5)
    when
    it can he affirmatively demonstrated that no economically
    reasonable alternative method of disposal i~ available.
    ~~hen
    read in conjunction, the regulations clearly require a threshold
    demonstration
    by the
    claimant
    to an
    exemption that. its refuse was
    1) generated on a farm; 2) as a
    result of the
    farm’s crop
    production Dractices and
    3)
    was burned on that farm’s oremses.
    The parties do
    not
    dicioute that the conditioning wastes are
    generated at P~l~3~sfaci1itfes~
    Unrevealed by the stipulation,
    however, is whether D~G’s facilities
    constitute a far~r and :Lf
    50r
    whether all the
    waste burned
    was
    in fact generated on the fern
    premises through ci:~opproduction practices.
    If
    the par ties
    intend that the heard make
    the
    determination as to whether a
    violation has occur::eci, clarification
    of these issues will be
    necessary.
    63~465

    4
    The Board hereby rejects the Stipulation Agreement and
    Proposal for Settlement and orders that hearing in this matter be
    scheduled within 30 and held within 60 days of the date of this
    order.
    Should the parties determine that they wish to file an
    amended settlement agreement containing either sufficient
    admissions of violation to support the remedy or to allow the
    Board to make such a finding based on sufficient facts, they may
    file within 35 days the appropriate pleadings.
    IT IS SO
    Ohdtb.ED.
    Chairman J~ St. Dumelle concurred.
    I, Dorothy Yb. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby
    certifv~th~at
    the above Opinion and Order was
    ddopted on the
    /_____
    day of
    ,
    1985, by a
    vote of 5—~-~
    (I
    /
    Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    63-466

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