1. ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTALPROTECTION AGENCY~
      2. Respondent.
      3. Joan G. Anderson

ILLINOIS
POLLUTION
CONTROL
BOARD
January
24,
1985
ANDERSON CLAYTON FOODS,
INC.,
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB
84—147
)
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY~
Respondent.
CONCURRING OPINION
(by
J.
Anderson):
While this grant of
variance
for
only
three
years is not
an unacceptable option,
I
believe
a
grant
of
variance
for
five
years, with the Board retaining
jurisdiction,
and with an added
condition,
is much more
suitable
in
this
case,
The added condition
would
have
read
as follows:
ACF
must
file with
the
Board,
within
three
years from the
grant of variance, either
a
plan
to
ultimately comply with
35
III.
Adm. Code 216.121,
or
a petition for site—specific
relief
from
35
Ill,
Adm,
Code
216.121,
unless
a
generic
regulatory
proceeding
for
CO
that
would
apply
to
ACF~s
Wormser FBC system is
docketed
before
the Board.
I believe ACF
convincingly argued that it
needs as long
a
variance term as possible
to facilitate
long-term planning.
The
added condition balances
this consideration
with the requirements
imposed by the Environmental
Protection
Act (Act).
Implicit
in
the concept of variance
is
the
requirement
of
compliance.
35
Ill.
Adm.
Code 104,121(1).
However,
a
plan
for
compliance,
whether
it
entails
a
concrete
schedule
for
compliance
or
the
docketing
of
some
form
of
regulatory
change,
would
not be
re~~
cjuired
until
nearly
three years
after
such a
five
year
variance
had
elapsed.
Because
the
Board
would
retain
jurisdiction
in
this
matter,
the
parties
wculd
have
been
free to submit motions
for
modification,
including
extending
the
three
year
deadline,
thr
ou
ghout
the
ful
1
five
years
By
granting
only
a
three
year
~experimental”
variance,
the
Board
is
requiring
the
parties
to
initiate
a
piecemeal
variance
petition
process
before
the
three
years
have
elapsed,
and
still
address
the
same
compliance
options as
enunciated
in
the
added
condition.
On
the
other
hand,
had
the
five
year
conditional

variance been granted,
the Board,
ACF,
and the Agency would
have
had a longer,
far simpler,
and more flexible process for dealing
with this developing
technology.
For
these
reasons,
I
concur.
~
____
Joan G.
Anderson
I,
Dorothy M,
Guun, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control
Board,
hereby
certify
that the above Concurring Opinion
was
submitted
on
the
i~day
~
1985
Illinois Pollution Control Bourd

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