;ia~Lhjl5  
Pu) LU LION C~iNLROL BOARD
Aug~t 2, 1984
1LLI~:
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83~17
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MR. VINCFNW N. ~ORBLH, ASSIflANT aTTORNEY GENERAL, APPEARED FOR
THE COMPLAIN8NL;
MR. 9HOMAS J. Iu9b~ ATTORNI~AT~LAW,APPEARED FOR RESPONDENTS
RUSSELL 
EL1SS~ 
JBRR&’RUSSELL BLISS, INC., AND JAY COVERT;
(PINION AND URDEr~~ THE BOARD iby Bill Forcade):
Ttis 
matteL ~es before the Board on the five—count complaint
filed February 4, 1983, by the Illinois Environmental Protection
Agency (~Agtuc; ;JaLEat Nusnell Bliss (“Bliss”), Jerry—Russell
Bliss un.    
1c,1), Jay Covert and Illinois Central Gulf
Rat ~on5 (“Ccj    
fo~c ~spondents are charged with various
‘;oa i us ~ h Ic. h1i~ B tsc, Inc and ICC are charged
~‘tithviolatiocs ci ccipter 3. Special Waste Hauling (“Chapter
9”) coulattoui; 
~‘t~   
F’tas, Icca is charged with violating
cit~~ sta::d~~   
cc sts special waste hauling permit.
~th cur~plaint ai (~p~
air.  
incido~stthat cucurred on April 14, 1982,
a tank tr  sith BaiSs Inc. insignia spread a partial
A contaruanate~oil on the ICC railroad yard in Venice,
r 
a
B 
dJnng  
cc ht~d
Oi ia~uary  
4, 1984. Or January 9, 1984,
t  
A~5cy filel a a tion to amend cite complaint to correct
r~
~ephicaa errors which the hearinj officer granted. On
.‘ 
24, l9aB, the Ygency fised a motion to amend the Record,
c~ r~edcc granted by tne hearing officer, On February 27,
~3A. he attorney for respondents Bliss, Blj~ss, Inc. and Covert
~i   
~in t~idayr 
)E 
filing the complaint, in violation of 35 Iii.
ça    
O3~l2E~The Board, on March 21, 1984, denied the
~cr 
~~,tts’    
eot4o~:to dismiss because the issue was moot and no
59 191
prejudice 
had resulted from t:t~ 
d~1ny. The Board finds 
further
support for 
this 
ruling in G~~e3. Hoffman & Sons Inc. 
v.
Pollution Control Board, 
16 11, App. 3d 325, 306 N.E~2d 
330
fl~7~4T~?he court found 
that failLre to comply with 
the
hearing date requirement 
dia no~result ~n the 
loss of
jurisdiction and dismissaL 
Cu ~iaj 5 1984, attorney for
respondents, Bliss, Covert 
an B 
i~,  
Inc., filed a supplemental
brief not 
in 
the briefing 
scheduJe The Agency 
filed a motion to
strike 
the 
additional pleading aid 
the respondents filed 
a reply.
While the 
Board generally 
frc ~rs or ~nch pleadings, no 
new
arguments 
were presented. 
Tt~~jcrry~s aotion 
in opposition to
respondents~ brief is denied.
Count I of the complaint 
claigeF all four 
respondents with
causing or allowing the dispo.al 
of waste in violation of S21(a),
(d), and (e) of the Act. 
Count II charges Bliss, 
Inc. 
and
Russell 
Bliss, 
the corporatio&b 
president, with delivery of 
a
special waste to a facility 
that wa~not permitted under Chapter
7: 
Solid Waste regulations 
in violation of Rule 302 
(a) of
Chapter 9. Count III chargeb 
ICG with accepting a special waste
for 
disposal from a special 
waste hauler without a completed 
and
signed Part V manifest in 
viola ion of Rule 302 (a) of 
Chapter 
9.
Count IV charges all four 
respondent~with violating ~l2 (a) and
(d) 
of 
the Act by causing 
or allowing the 
discharge 
of con~~
taminants to enter the 
en~7iron~ent-o2 tI’e Sfatc~so as to 
cause 
or
tend to cause a water 
pollution hazard in 
Illinois, 
The final
count, Count V, charges Bliss, 
Inc  with violating 
S21(d) of 
the
Act by violating four of 
the atandard conditions of its Illinois
special waste hauling permit
The 
evidence 
in this mattnr  
i~ 
the aub~’ect of numerous
objections 
at hearing, 
The 1~g~
~j  
ca led five witnesses and
introduced a number of exhibits 
includ_ng 
photographs, lab
reports, 
and documents,  
The hearing officer 
made a number 
of
restrictive evidentiary 
ruling.’ at the uroceeding from which no
offers of proof or appeals 
we~e uade to ‘~he Board,  Respondents
Bliss, 
Bliss, Inc. and Covert 
presented no 
testimony 
in this
matter at 
hearing. They 
did submit fi~ur lab 
reports 
into
~zidence,     
Respondent ICG 
d~~ln~t apucar at 
the hearing. 
The
Bcard~ 
disposition of 
the five~~~coentcomplaint 
is based
primarily 
on the sufficiency of 
the ev~denc~and it is,
therefore,  
important to 
review the evidence aicsented.
On 
April 14, 1982, 
three enpioy e  of tBe Illinois
~nvironmenta1 Protection 
Agency observed ~ tanker truck enter
Illinois  
from Missouri 
via the HcK1v1~y Bridge 
(R. 
l2~l3),  The
truck cab 
had ~Bliss Oil 
Inc.. Ellieville   
N~ssouri, 527 6666w
nainted 
on 
each door (R. 
l2~13)  The trick ha~ the MissourI
license number 27~~246(R. IP,. 
~he Igency employees followed the
truck into the ICG railyard 
in Venice  I~1inois 
(R, 14). 
The
truck began to spray a black 
liquid upor the 
qr~undthe 
length 
of
the yard 
until stopped by 
Agancy amp oyee  Patrick Mccarthy 
and
~‘~G
employee, Mr. Hemline (R, 8  
After stopping the vehicle,
McCarthy showed the driver 
h~iaAgency I D   card 
and asked if he
could take a sample of the 
liquid material that the 
truck sprayed
on the ground (R. 
23). 
The driver, who identified 
himself as Jay
Covert, refused to allow a sample 
to be taken 
from the truck
(R.24), and 
told McCarthy that 
he would have 
to get permission
from 
his 
boss, McCarthy then asked who his boss was and the
driver indicated 
that he could 
contact 
his boss at the phone
number on the 
side of the truck (R. 
28),  
Numerous photographs
were taken 
of 
the truck, 
clearly showing 
the license number,
~B1iss, inc.~name, address 
and phone number 
painted on the cab,
as well as the name ~Jay” 
painted 
on the hood (Cornp1ainant~s
Exhibit 
Nos, 1, 5, 7a, and 
9). These 
photographs show the truck
standing in a large puddle 
of black 
liquid with more liquid
dripping 
off the spray booms, 
Other 
photographs show a fresh
path 
of 
black liquid with puddles 
through 
the ICG yard
(Complainant~sExhibit Nos, 3a, 
3h, 
4a, and 4b). All
photographic exhibits were 
admitted 
only against respondent
Covert (R. 106—108),
After the driver refused 
to allow the 
contents of his tank
truck 
to 
be sampled, McCarthy asked 
him if 
he had a special waste
manifest or bill of lading 
for 
the load CR. 30). The driver told
McCarthy that he had no such documents CR. 30). McCarthy then
obtained a sample of the liquid by placing a lab—approved
sampling 
container directly underneath the nozzle of 
the spray
boom, thereby, catching the liquid that was dripping onto 
the
ground (R, 3l)~ Additional samples were collected from 
pools of
black liquid formed around the wheels of the truck and 
in the
path of sprayed liquid thoughout the yard CR. 31)~ Analysis 
of
the samples by the Agency revealed that the liquid was 
composed
of 
*2 fuel 
oil which was contaminated with between 10,600 
and
10,900 micrograms per gram 
(parts 
per million) of trichioro”
ethylene 
(TCE). TCE is listed 
as a toxic 
hazardous substance
under Resource Conservation 
and Recovery 
Act regulations, 
40
C.F,R. 261,31. The Board has 
adopted 
this federal listing 
in 
its
waste 
disposal regulations 
at 
35 Ill. Adm0 Code 721, Appendix H.
The 
contaminated oil had a 
flash point 
under l40~Fahrenheit
(Complainant~sExhibit 
Nos, Il, 12, 
and 13). After taking 
these
samples, 
McCarthy again attempted to determine the nature 
of the
liquid 
material deposited 
in the yard 
by asking 
the driver what
the origin 
of the material was, 
The driver again 
refused 
to
respond 
to MeCarthy~s inquiries 
(R. 47),  A 
number of 
photographs
were taken 
by the Agency 
of the sampling sites 
and 
sampling
procedure 
and were admitted 
against respondent, 
Jay Covert
(Comp1ainant~sExhibit Nos. 
1, 2, 3a, 3b, 
4a, 4b, 6a, 6b, 
and
Th).
Agency employee, Patrick 
McCarthy, testified  
that 
he
recognized 
the driver of the 
tank truck 
as 
Jay 
Covert, a 
person
known by 
McCarthy to be an 
employee and driver for Bliss, Inc~~
(R~. 76~77), 
This identification 
was based on 
two photographs
from the 
Agency~sgeneral 
files which 
were purported to 
be of Jay
4
Covert   
These photographs w~ie hot 
produced at hearing 
CR.
7i~73),  
The hearing off 
ice~ adnitted 
the testimony concerning
how ~cOarthy   
made the identification  
and 
stated that questions
dec~t~ 
it its reliability 
went to the weight 
to be attached to
thac. ~aentifieatron,       
not it~ admissibility  
CR.  100).
Re~pondent, Bliss, Inc., was 
issued special waste hauling
pen it Nc, 0186 
for 
the peried between January 
27, 1982, through
March 31, 1983, 
by 
the Illinois  Environmental 
Protection Agency
(d. ~.l. ~116).   This permit consistc of an 
application, letter of
Is’~u~
v..a 
and a list of standarc conditions.   
These documents were
adrni ted as Comp1ainant~s ~x ibits Nos. 14 and 
14a, 
as 
against
31js~i Inc. and 
Russell 
BIno  (J~ 132—133).  
The relevant
information  from 
the 
permi~ indicates that the 
applicant was
Jerry Russell 
Bliss, 
Inc., tIe president 
of the corporation was
Russell Bliss, 
and that the 
elephone number 
of the corporation
was (314) 
527—6666, 
One of the vehicles listed 
on the permit
application 
was a 
1978 
GMC 
taik and tanker truck, 
containing a
‘3,500 
gallon tank bearing a 
Mtsc’ouLi license 
No. 27—246. 
The
permit 
was signed by Russell 
Bliss 
on January 18, 1982, 
in his
capacity as 
president 
(Complannart~s Exhibit No, 14).
After 
the incident at 
the ICG 
yard, Jerry Russell 
Bliqa,
Inc. sent ICS a bill 
for 
$1,500 for 
delivery of 3,000 
gallona o1f~’
Nc, 
2 oil 
on 
April 
14, 1982 
(Complainant~sExhibit No, 
17).  The
invoice was imprinted with the name 
~‘JerryRussell Bliss, inc.~’
an~ ias 
prepared May 
7, 1982.  The ICG 
district manager, 
James N.
Caip gno, 
testified that 
ICG ~ad a special 
contract with 
Jerry
Russ~11 
Bliss, Inc. to provide 
road oiling, 
when needed, 
fox. d;st
control at 
the Venice 
ICG rail yard (R. 
232—3), Campagno 
also
c~t lied that he had prev~o~Jy ~een  the invoice submitted by
B es Inc. and had approved pa~ert for the oil 
CR.  
212—2I3~.
The Agency 
presented 
testimony regarding the geooiy,
n~co~ogyand soil conditiors in md around the ICG rail yaxT~
~c y C. Mann, an Agency geologi’~’t, utilized soil surveys,
o..caraghieal maps, well—log data, as well as 
his general
r.~i.~edgeof the area as the basis for his 
testimony (R. 
155’~156).
tness made an on—site revthw of the ICG 
yard prior 
t~’ tea
~.“3l  4, 1982, incident (P. F/i;.  
The site is typified by a
.~,ni association known as American Bottoms which consists of tine
~..        
~tod,  silty Cahokia allivium over the coarser 
sand and 
gtav~1
~r. 
~i  
formation (P. 
160).  
The Cahokia alluvium 
varies 
~n
ni,.. rass from zero to 20 feet deep and is thin or non—existant
~ th~rmver and in low lying areas CR. 1~9).The ahunda~ mad
~  
al groundwater in the ar~a,in combination 
with the
An~r can Bottom soil assocthtion,  gives rise to 
~1eaky  artosi~n
qrIi 
ons~ 
which 
means that w~ter levels can rise above th..~
~e u~ e’evation (R. 160;, The witness testified that ha had
Lndlly observed this artesian effect elsewhere 
in the
~er Bottom region CR. 183).
..e ICC yard 
is 
approxina~e~y 1,200 feet from 
the
S ‘S~1~~1
River, 
Surface wator tends to flow 
toward 
the 
west
,~ 
~ithw~st(R,     
156).  
Utilizing well—log 
data, the witness
testi~~d that the water Jevel in the aquifer was 
at the same
level ~  the Mississippi River (P. 159).  Generally, 
groundwater
in tIm a 
~ea flows towards the south and 
southwest, or towards
the x~ ~   depending on the seasonal 
variations of the flow
~E~)         
C3~, 
When 
the level 
of the ri”er 
is high, this general
~Jow ~        
can be i~eversed away fron the 
river (P. 177—178).
Cont~rrr~.nts in the groundwater generally flow 
with 
the
g.coen 
i 
tar (R. 164),  Regardless of the seasonal 
variations in
the r~r flow  there is an abundant and perpetual 
source of
gi’. md~ tar in the American Bottom irea (P. 163),  
The City of
vejir~ ..Jlinois derives  t~ rvniciy~i ia”e: 
supply from the
c 
,ppj River (P. 184),
h  respondents Covert, Bliss ard Bliss, Inc. presented 
no
test~rn.y at 
the 
hearing (R~ 234     
In tneir 
brief, they
characterized the Agency s case as deficient in 
key areas, 
In 
an
enfor~ment case, the burden is on the 
complainant to prove the
violatiens of 
the 
Act and Board regulations by 
a preponderance of
the 
e’id~nce,  It is argued that tho driver of 
the truck 
~as  
not
cut fthiently identified as Jay Covert, 
the respondent in 
this
case,  
Respondent Covert 
was not present at the 
hearing 
and
Agency employee, 
Mccarthy, 
testified  that he 
utilized a 
hearsay
sourc~’ 
to make his initial  identification  
(R. 76—78),  The 4oard
finds, however, that there is a sufficient  basis 
in the 
re~crd to
conclude that the 
driver 
of the truck was Jay 
Covert, the
vcspo~dant in this case, and tha’~he was an 
employee of Blisi
Inc a 
the time of the incident.   
In Ritenour 
v, Police 
Board of
tLL C~,tv
of çfl~~ao,
53 Ill  ~pp.  3d 877, 369 
N.E. 2d 135 
(19/7),
tue 
ou”t upheld an administrative  
agency s decision to 
discharge
a po~ce officer who was found guilty of 
shooting a 
Street 1arp
n 
v    
tror of police departrneef rui s  The 
evidence against
off  r ~iithnour   was totally ~ir~nns~encial      
and 
comprised 
of
~.d~nci  ication 
of 
Ritenour~s Fcense plate number 
with the
~‘get~ay~   vehicle and comparison of ballistics  
data between 
tne
the street lamp and one of the officer~s handguns
-~    
wi~ no occurrence Wi tee 
‘c’ 
to  he lr~,ident and 
no 
one
tly identified Ritenour as the man who shot 
the lamp. 
the
~ii~   
held that ~the  lack of di 
t~Ct 
identification  testimony 
goes
ilv ~o the weight that the circu,nstan~ial 
evidence should 
b~
~    
cy the administrative  agency, a determination 
of 
whic~..
~i1~ the province of the ag~ncy.” ID  at 882—883, 369 N.E. 2d
1  
9    
The court also stated that the law makes ~no legal
~trntion   
between direct axa crrcumstancial  
evidence 
as to ~th
~c.aid atfeet thereof ~ L), No criminal—type of in court
¶.‘ 
cation is required to sati~-fy the preponderance standard
~.n the present case, a man driving a tank truck with the
,  
~    
insignia identified  aimself as Jay Covert~ the
ua~ painted on the hood of the vehicle, the driver
ci e worked for Bliss Inc. Bliss, Inc. 
sent an 
irvo~
~ an April 14, 1982, lelivery of ~road oi1,~and a
-  
i~
oyee recognized the driver from 
photographs 
in .n-~
qeneral files (P. 12—13, ~4—28, 77—78).
S
:o~n.n ~ ath ~ariance proneedin~ roaght before the
Boa.~~ar  .r .4 
in eEtur~~~.,Ihe burder of proof in a civil
prcr.th~ ow is the preponthranc~ standard.  
~Lt2~2ais
Wa~ ~x 
.     
thl~erInteinatxora~~p~p.  
30 Ill. App. 3d 631, 333
N. 
E   
c      
1975 
; Pr tenon v.P 
oBoard ~~Cit~’of
ci 
owjnae 
fl~ 
a_v   
a      
yi~i Commission, 398 Ill.
.zi;      
‘.,    
34 303 (l94/),Boc.rd orders are afforded direct
r ~s     
r the Aj~pe11mte Court and the th~ndard of review is that a
Bc~. C    ~owr shell be inval:  if 
it is e~a~nstthe manifest 
weight
ci      
‘deu 
e.  
Ill, R~ 
,   
3  4  
198   
nh, 111½, par. 1041.  The
prt..p    
niece. stardard 
~:    
ir”- *har th  oroposition proved is
iss then fond Co th more orobanly true than not,
Cent  
e  R:3~ F 14   
‘c  .43, 39  N ~  .4 198, 79 111. App.
3d 5          
.       
~.     
:h~ prow  t case  tie  
oe.~‘y preset ted relevant
and  reurola eyawitne   
testimony, alor   
r’~n corroborating
phrt    
phic aid docume.i a   
‘xhunii 
c           
dentified the driver
ott’-t   
~kacther”prd~r              
Ja    
v      
Theevidence
p 
i    
( also shor ti   
0our t’° c dow  w    
dire’ted and
autho  z 
I 
by us employer, Bliss  
Inc       
resoondent presented
no ~vrience   
or defense at hearing.  
Tue  oard finds that ;he
Age 
....     
ba.~met its burde  of oroof that thL driver of tl-~ truck
was      
ruspondent  
Jay Covert  and that  ie was en employee and
cut    
zth agent of Bliss, Inc. on the data of the incident.
“p”ndents, Rassels B ows and Bliss  
inc. contend that  the
Age~  nver proved the exicte ice of the -orporation and that
this siculd result ir tleiz dismissal,  
A review of the reLord
ud   v d rtiary exhibits,  horever, provide a sound basis fcr
cit 4 
-    
hat Jarry~Russe11 B in  
Inc. ~xi~ted   
at the time of the
inn  
ard that Russell B a’°was tth p esident. complarnent’s
F    
N 5 14 a 
3     
4    
o’  ow  of at ~‘11inoic   
Environmenta~
0    
\ge.ncy Special 
‘i  
owe. 
Haul a  
ow    
t issued to the
p r .ar- Jerry~Russe1l Bl’ss, Inc. for the period between
In   
/ 
27, 
1982, and March 31, 1983,  
Russe.11 B1~ss signed the
a. 
~..                       
•           
03. -s 
precrRer     
Tow 
document was
c   o s’idence. ag inst Elisu Inc aid Russell Bliss ,R
F 
3;~  
The aitheuti ity of this thcumnit was not querLione3
u.  mg Test~monywas q.?vei by Josept umpagno, an ICC
•  a so as to the ente c~o tIe B :5 
:nporati.rn  and the
ths airangeient betwe..n Bl ss Irc and ICG CR. 232-3)
Ft  a    
u 
$5 
Extibit No  1 /  an invoice for the oil delivercd Co
C    
ow 
pr~ited o  a Jerry—Pencil  Blis.   
ow. letterhead aid is
ow 
ar  
avidence of the existerce  of tIe c rporation on the data
n r’ ow ton and the contractual  reaati orsi i  between the
Is  P. 232).  
The Bnrd finn tia  
the respondent
Lion existed on April 14, 198u, a 
.   
that Russell Bliss we.s
t    
rr ration presiden~
~ I  tfs b’rde- & ~roo~  rer’irs  ei   
the kgency turougheet
sme4 proceeding  
the burden of ;cmnj forward with the
-   
v-  
nir shift from the complairart  t  the respondents attn
a nie case las ben establishth, Amni~g~~~ur
RulerlntownaticraiCoap    
, 
~~jj~ya Once the A3ency has
cufficient  qua itn of ovilerce to prove a
50 196
7
pron.   
.~,     
t:e burden or going forward ~ttn  the evidence shifts
to 
t’.-    
.‘rc’Atats 
to disprove the propc’bitiors.  In the present
case1 
~.        
7. ~.nc’ presented sufficient evLderce to prove 
that 
the
driv     
- 
ha “ehicle was the respondent, Jay Covert, 
and that
dsc, Inc., was iu 
existenc. at 
the time of the
incao  
‘a 
~a•’   ..  
14. 1982. 
Thi resporc’trtts  
Covert 
and Bliss,
Inc.   
tn. 
pnment 
M~ 
evidence on th•30e .a..esues. They
never  
2C*~a
‘id nor did they try to 
pnsJt  
L ct the driver of the
vehic   
‘ri     
act Cay Covert, the respondt~at. or that there was 
no
corpo- 
‘    
r 
is exist~nce on Ax ~ .1 14, 19d2   
Tht. 
Board must find,
in 
t.       
‘.atson, ttat the Z.qtvz.~’i~
;°~-•-  
tsors are proved by
the 
~.                 
~zance of 
the evadenue.
JaSTE Alli) 
sr;cnc 
WASTE 
‘,   
~‘s   
~ONS
‘i.t  
!  
II and III are all based 
a’.  
aleged violations of
the 
-              
ard regulations regarding U’ t ansport and
dispr  
&          
;aste or special ‘vaate. Sec-’ior 3 of the Act
c’ont..i   
- .•   
followirg relevaic definiti ot.s
,     
WASTE’ means any garbage, sli.dje from a wastt
t..c. -;ert plant, water stppiy 
treationt plant. or an
T  
~l aion control facility or other discarded material
~...  
tnng solid, liquid, semi—solid, cx containea gaseour
~.alresulting from industria~,coramercial, mining ant
a~, 
...: 
ilcural operations, and from community activities but
doe.~ not include solid or dissolved material in domestic
a•~ 
‘~,   
or solid or dissolved matetaals in irrigation return
& 
or industrial discharges whLc~are point sources
1  
t  
t 
to ~ernitsunder Section 402 ot the Clean Wat..r Act
roe spro’al nuclear, or b~psoductmaterials as
JbjtheAtomioEnrgyActofl5 asamended(6a
‘ 
a’. 921) or any solid or dissolved m-te~ialfrom any
-  
‘tl;ty subject to the Federal Surface Mining Control and
~-        
smat on Act of 1977 (P.L. 95-87) or the rules and
,~ 
: 
n1ons thereu’tdsr or any law or rule or regulati ns
s 
~ed by the State of Illinois pursuant thereto.
(3;   
RAiAR)OJS WAS?” means a waste, or combination of
ib. .8, 
whict because of its quantity, concentration, or
iv 
-   
I, ch’mi~alor infectious characte ‘.stics may ~ausu
..anificantly contribute to an 
is criase i’i mortal3ty or
t  
ncr~asein serious irreversible or incapacitating
‘u.nble, illness; or pose a sabctc’atial present or
-  
~‘ttialhazard to 
human 
health or 
tfM. 
tavironment when
perly 
treated, 
stored, tran.port.d, or disposed of, or
t ..n~.a.. 
managed, 
and which has been idettifted, by
a 
‘“ri:ti~sov listing, as hazathus jt~sua’ttto .Sctv)fl
( 
the Resource Conservation and RecoA.ry Act of t976,
J1’øO; ar pursuant to Board Regusattons
“PECIAL WASTE’ Deans any iniuz?traal pricess 
waste,
-  
‘ton control waste or hazardous 
‘45 8
o9-197
(e)  ~DISPOSAL~ means the discharge, deposit, 
injection,
dumping, spilling,  leaking 
or placing of any waste 
or
hazardous waste into 
or on any 
land or water or into any
well so 
that such waste 
or 
hazardous waste or 
any
constituent  thereof may 
enter the environment or 
be 
emitted
into the air or 
discharged into 
any 
waters, including ground
waters.
(n)  ~OPEN 
DUMPING~means 
the 
consolidation of refuse from
one or 
more sources 
at a disposal site 
that does not fulfill
the requirements of a sanitary 
landfill.
(s)  
~REFUSE~ means 
waster.
ill. Rev. Stat. 
1981, ch. 
111½, 
paragraph 1003,
In order to 
prove 
violations  of 
S21’(a), Cd) and (e) of the
Act, rule 302(a) and 302(b), it is 
necessary to present
sufficient  evidence 
that 
the material 
released at the ICG 
rail
yard 
was indeed 
a ~waste,” Hazardous wastes and special 
wastes
are subsets of the larger category of waste. Evidence was
presented by the 
Agency 
that the material released from the tank
truck possessed hazardous characteristics, Lab analysis 
of the
samples showed that it contained over 10,000 ppm of TCE, a 
listed
hazardous substance under RCRA regulations. 40 C,F.R. 
261.31,
TCE is 
listed in Board regulations as a hazardous constituent 
at
35 Ill. Adm, 
Code 721, Appendix H. It also had a flashpoint 
less
that 
140°Fahrenheit, An examination 
of 
the record shows,
however, 
that 
there is 
insufficient  
evidence for the Board 
to
make a determination that 
the 
substance released at the 
ICG yard
was a waste as defined by the Act.  No evidence 
was 
presented as
to the 
material~sorigin 
or 
prior 
use,
In ~                 
Cor,v.  EPA, 
PCB 80~l2, 39 PCB 38 
(July
10, 1980), the issue 
before 
the Board 
was whether flammable
solvents distributed  as part of a 
rental degreasing system 
were
“wast&~ and 
therefore regulated under Chapter 
9. 
The 
Board found
that the 
solvents, while 
flammable and 
possibly hazardous 
to
public safety, were not waste,  The 
Appellate court affirmed. 
the
Board’~sdecision, without an opinion, in Environmental
~                       
Pollution Control Board, 427 N.E. 3d 1053
(1981),  To become a waste, a substance must 
be discarded,
Through the rental system, Safety~K1een maintained control over
the solvents at all times,  
Safety~Kleen recovered the used
solvents and recycled them.  The solvents were 
never discarded
and never became waste,  Once a material has 
been discarded,
however,it becomes a waste regardless of how future owners use
the material,
The Agency argues that the material is 
hazardous 
and was
Ndiscarded~ when it left the spray~boom of 
the truck, 
This
release, it is argued, rendered the 
substance a 
waste, 
To Bliss,
Inc., however, the 
material was not discarded but was 
being
utilized as part of a valuable service,  
The next step of 
the
9
analysis 
to determine whether the 
substance was a waste would be
to determine if the material 
had 
been discarded and rendered a
waste 
by the 
previous owners of the material, The relevant area
of inquiry 
is the 
source where Bliss, Inc. obtained the oil prior
to 
the release at the ICG 
yard. The 
record is silent on this
issue 
even 
though this 
evidence 
could have been obtained by the
Agency~s attorney through the various 
discovery tools available
under the Board~sprocedural regulations. To hold that the
release of a substance from a spray-~boomrenders it a waste,
might result in a total ban 
on 
the legitimate and useful practice
of road oiling for dust control. The Agency further argues that
the 
hazardous nature of the 
substance 
somehow creates the
presumption that it is a 
waste, The 
~        
,  
case has
settled the issue of whether 
the 
hazardous nature of a substance
thootstraps” it into the catagory of waste, 
The 
Board finds that
there is insufficient evidence 
in the 
record to hold that the
substance released from 
the truck 
was a waste, Consequently,
Counts I, II and III must 
be 
dismissed as against all
respondents.
WATER POLLUTION AND 
WATER 
POLLUTION HAZARD VIOLATIONS
Count IV charges that 
all 
four respondents violated 
§12(a)
and (d) of the Act. Section 
12 
of the Act provides inter 
alia
that:
No person shall:
a, Cause or threaten 
or 
allow the discharge of any
contaminants into 
the 
environement in any State 
so 
as
to 
cause or tend 
to 
cause water pollution in 
Illinois,
either alone or 
in 
combination with matter from 
other
sources, or so as to violate regulations or standards
adopted by the Pollution Control Board 
under 
this 
Act;
d. Deposit 
any 
contaminants ‘upon 
the land
in 
such place and manner so as to create a water
pollution hazard;
ill. Rev. 
Stat, 1981, ch, 111½, 
paragraph 
1012. 
Water 
Pollustion
Is defined in 
S3 
to be:
nn. “WATER 
POLLUTION~ 
is 
such alteration of
the 
physical, thermal, chemical~ biological or
radioactive properties of any waters of the State, 
or
such 
discharge or 
any 
contaminant into 
any waters 
of
the State, as 
will 
or 
is likely 
to 
create a nuisance or
render such waters harmful 
or detrimental or injurious
to 
public health, 
safety 
or 
welfare, 
or to domestic,
commercial, industrial,  agricultural,  recreational,  
or
other 
legitimate 
uses, 
or to livestock, wild anima1s~.
birds, 
fish, or other aquatic life,
59499
10
Contaminant 
is defined as~
d~  ~CONTAM:NANT”is any 
solid, 
liquid, or gaseous matter,
any odor, or any form of 
energy, 
from whatever source.
Ill, Rev, St:at. 1981, ch, 111½, 
paragraph 1003.
A review 
of 
the tecord shows 
that 
respondents,  Covert and
Bliss, Inc., did cause a 
discharge 
of an unknown 
quantity 
of
trichioroethylene,  
a contaminant as 
defined in the Act, onto the
land. The soils and 
hydrology of the 
area create “leaky
art,esian” 
conditions where 
the 
water 
table rises above the soil
surface (R. 160), These 
facts 
indicate a high probability that
the TCE 
will 
contaminate 
the groundwater.   
Evidence was presented
that the groundwater 
generally 
flowed toward the Mississippi
River, which 
is 
1,200 
feet away 
from 
the Venice ICG yard and that
contaminants generally 
flowed 
with 
groundwater (R. 155~156). No
evidence was presented 
as to 
the 
existence of wells near 
the 
ICG
yard nor 
is 
there evidence that 
groundwater 
actually did 
come 
in
contact with the contaminants, The Board finds that there 
is
insufficient proof that 
the 
respondents actually caused 
water
pollution.
The respondents~ conduct has, 
however, threatened 
the surface
and groundwater in a manner 
that 
would tend to cause 
water
pollution in violation of §12(a) 
of the Act. The threat 
to the
ground and surface 
water is highly 
probable given the ICC 
yard~s
proximity to the 
river 
and its 
hydrologic conditions, The
contaminants were applied to 
the 
land in sufficient 
quantities to
saturate the soil and 
puddle on the 
surface, The Act defines
water pollution in terms of the potential 
harm and 
injury 
to
public health, safety and welfare. 
TCE is listed as a toxic
hazardous substance under 
Resource 
Conservation and Recovery 
Act
regulations. 49 C..F.R. 
261.31. The 
Board ha~adopted this
federal 
listing 
in its waste disposal 
regulations at 
35 ill. Acim.
Code 
721.130 and 721.133. Contamination of 
groundwater 
with TCE
would adversely impact public health, 
safety and welfare. 
The
Aqency has 
proved the 
high probability 
of a threat 
to the ground
and surface waters of the 
State. The Board finds that
respondents,  Jay 
Covert arid 
Bliss, Inc., have 
violated 
S12(a) of
the Act.  The Agency presents no evidence 
or 
theory 
of liability
against 
Russell Bliss, the 
corporate 
president,  
and the 
record
thows no conduct by respondent ICG that would 
provide 
a basis for
a finding of violation,
Respondents Covert and Bliss, 
Inc. have also violated ~l2(d)
of the Act by depositing a contaminant upon the 
land 
so as to
create a 
water pollution hazard. 
As in the 
case of 
finding a
~,2(a~ 
violation that 
“threatens~ water pollution, a 512(d)
violation 
need not include 
evidence 
of 
actual water 
pollution,
~ince both sections of the 
Act are 
intended to address 
potential
threats 
and hazards,  
~   
Ilaert 
Renderinc mc,., PCB 
74~80,
35 PCB 281 (September 6, 1979). This 
case was affirmed 
on appeal
n 
Ali  ~t  Render 
in Inc 
v  flJ~nois 
Pollution 
Control 
Board,
~t 
ill. 
App. 3d 153, 414 N.E. 
2d, 492 
(December 12, 1980).
59~200
ii
In 
the present cases 
the respondents 
have discharged TCE in
sufficient quantities to create a 
risk of ground and surface
water pollution. It is more likely than 
not that there will be a
potential 
contamination of 
the 
ground and surface water with a
hazardous substance~ The 
Board 
finds that Jay Covert and
Jerry-~Russell
Bliss, Inc. have violated 
§12(d) of the Act.
SPECIAL WASTE HAULING PERMIT 
CONDITIONS VIOLATIONS
Count V alleges that 
respondent 
Bliss, Inc. violated
certain standard conditions 
of its 
special waste hauling permit
and thereby violated §12(d) 
of the 
Act.
The permit issued to 
the 
respondents 
contained the standard
conditions for a special 
waste 
hauling permit issued by 
the
Agency. As part of the 
conditions 
of this permit, the permitee,
Bliss, Inc. was required by paragraphs 4(c) and (d) to allow any
agent 
duly authorized by the Agency upon 
the presentation of
credentials to inter alia:
“(c) to inspect at reasonable times, including during any
hours of operation of vehicles, tanks or other 
equipment
operated under this permit such vehicles, tanks, or 
other
equipment permitted to 
be 
operated under this permit;
(d) to obtain and remove 
at 
reasonable times samples of any
discharge or emission of pollutants and samples of 
any
special waste being 
hauled;”
Paragraph 11 of the Standard Conditions of the respondent’s
special waste hauling 
permit 
provided that:
“11. 
The permittee(s) 
shall 
not haul or otherwise 
transport
any special waste generated within 
I11inQ~s9Z ~ny 
special
waste to be disposed, stored or 
treated within Illinois
unless that special waste 
is 
accompanied by a properly
completed and signed manifest, in accordance 
with 
the
requirements 
of 
Part V 
of Chapter 
9, unless such 
special
waste is exempted from 
the manifest requirements 
pursuant
to Rules 210 or 211 of Chapter 9.”
Paragraph 13 of 
the Standard 
Conditions 
provided that:
~13.   The 
permittee(s) 
shall 
not deliver any special 
waste
for disposal, storage or treatment 
except to a site 
facility
which has been designed by the 
deliverer of 
the special
waste and which site 
or facility 
has a permit to 
accept such
waste 
for disposal, 
storage 
or 
treatment as well 
as 
all
applicable permits 
as required 
by the Environmental
Protection 
Act and 
regulations  
adopted thereunder by the
I1l:inois 
Pollution 
Control 
Board,”
The 
record shows 
that on 
April 14, 
1982, a tank truck 
owned
by 
Bliss, 
Inc. and registered 
to 
haul special waste with 
the
59~20
I
12
Agency was operating in 
the State of Illinois  (R. 
l2~13,
113—116),  As a special 
waste hauling permittee, Bliss, 
Inc. 
was
required to comply with all 
special 
and standard conditions
attached to such a permit as well as 
all 
applicable sections 
of
the Act and Board 
regulations. 
It is clear 
from the evidence
presented 
that Bliss, Inc,~s employee, 
Jay Covert, refused to
allow the tank truck to be inspected and a sample 
to 
be taken,
The Agency employee identified 
himself and presented 
his 
official
credentials, 
in accordance 
with the 
standard conditions,   
The
Board finds that the 
conduct of Bliss, Inc,~s
authorized agent
violated 
standard 
conditions 
4 (c) and (d) of 
the 
special waste
hauling 
permit and 
thereby violated §21 (d) of 
the Act, 
The
Board is unable 
to make a 
finding of 
violation of paragraphs 1.
and 13 because the Agency 
has failed to 
provide 
any evidence 
that
the substance released 
from the tank truck was a waste or special
waste.
Violating permit conditions 
can be the 
basis for suspension
or revocation of a permit,  
This remedy is explicitly  provided by
the terms of 
the standard 
conditions 
(Comp1ainant~s Exhibit No,
l4A).  
The Agency’s 
right to reasonably inspect 
and 
sample
permitted vehicles 
is 
critical to the 
success of the 
special
waste hauling permit system, 
If 
permitted 
special waste 
haulers
do not prepare special 
waste manifests or display special 
waste
placards on their vehicles, 
the only way to determine if 
special
wastes are being carried is through inspection 
and sampling. 
If
this right is denied, the 
intent 
and policy of the permit program
will be thwarted, For these compelling reasons, 
the Board
revokes Bliss, 
Inc.’s 
special waste hauling permit No, 0186.
While the permit in existence 
at the 
time of the incident 
expired
on March 31, 1983, the Board’s action today is 
not moot, 
The
revocation of a permit has a continuing effect that does not end
with the expiration of that permit. The grounds for the
revocation may 
serve as a 
basis for the future denial of a permit
application, ~                 
20 ill. 
2d 272,
170 N.E. 2d 159 
(1960),
SECTION 
33(c) 
FACTORS AND REMEDIES
Section 33(c) of the 
Act requires the Board to consider all
facts and circumstances 
bearing 
upon th~ reasonableness  of the
discharges 
or 
deposits before 
the Board may impose the remedial
provisions 
of the Act for 
violations alleged and proven in 
the
proceeding. The 
Board 
construes this requirement to apply 
to
permit violations as well as the §12(a) and (d) violations,
although not technically involving a “discharge.” Section 33(c)
establishes four criteria that must be considered by the Board.
The first criteria is 
the 
character and degree of 
injury to
or interference  with 
the protection of the health, general
welfare and physical property of the people, The Board has found
that the respondents violated §12(a) and (d) of the Act through
conduct that caused 
the 
release of a toxic contaminant, TCE, into
the 
environment 
of 
Illinois,   Ground 
and surface water has been
59~202
threatened 
with pollution.   
Respondent Bliss, Inc. has also
violated the standard 
conditions of its special 
waste hauling
permit. 
These 
permit violations 
are not 
trival, but go to the
very heart 
of 
the special waste 
hauling permit system’s ability
to 
ensure public safety and health. The respondents, by releas~
ing a listed hazardous substance in a hydrologically sensitive
area, have engaged in conduct that could imperil the health 
and
general welfare of the people of Illinois.
The second criteria the Board must consider is the social
and economic value of the pollution source. Bliss, 
Inc. is a
foreign corporation that operates in Illinois. Bliss, Inc.
engages in the business of hauling special waste as well as 
“road
oiling” for dust control. 
These 
activities are, as a general
rule, socially and economically valuable, but only when 
conducted
in a responsible and 
lawful manner. There is no social or
economic value in contaminating soil and threatening 
water
pollution with toxic 
substances nor is there value in flagrantly
violating special waste 
hauling permit conditions,
The third criteria is the suitability of the pollution
source to the area in which it is located, Bliss, Inc. operates
as a mobile source of pollution. Bliss, Inc. released toxic
contaminants on soil with 
“leaky artesian conditions,” The 1CG
yard is also very close to 
the Mississippi River and is
susceptible  to 
flooding. 
While this site was particularly
unsuitable  
for 
a toxic 
discharge, 
no site is “suitable” for 
the
uncontrolled  release of TCE,
The last 
criteria is the technical 
and economic
reasonableness of reducing or eliminating the emissions, in 
the
present case it is not unreasonable to utilize clean oil for
dust~eontrol, In light of these four factors, the Board finds
that the release of TCE in a manner that violated the 
Act and the
violation of the standard permit conditions were not reasonable,
The Board, therefore, will impose a penalty of $3,000 against
Bliss, Inc. and a penalty of $100 against Jay Covert, In
addition, the Board will revoke Bliss, Inc.’s special waste
hauling permit No, 0186 The Board notes that there is no burden
on the Agency to prove the unreasonableness of respondent’s
conduct in terms of each of the four criteria in §33(c), Once
the Agency establishes a ~ma facie showing of a violation, the
burden shifts to the respondent to introduce evidence relating to
the reasonableness of the respondents’ conduct, Proceas~
&Booksv,Pollution Control Board, 64 Ill. 2d 68, 351 N.E. 2d
865 (1976), No such evidence was introduced by Covert and Bliss,
Inc.
This opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact and
conclusions of law in this matter.
14
ORDER
I.   
The Board finds the following:
A. Counts 
I, II and 
III are dismissed 
against 
all
respondents.
B. Respondents Jay 
Covert 
and 
Jerry-Russell Bliss, Inc.
violated §12 
(a) and (d) 
of the Act.
C, Respondent 
Jerry-Russell Bliss, Inc. 
violated
standard conditions (c) 
and 
(d) of its special waste
hauling permit No. 
0186,
Ii. The Board imposes a penalty of $3,000 against respondent,
Jerry-Russell Bliss, mc,, 
and 
revokes special waste hauling
permit No, 0186 
issued to this respondent.
III. The Board imposes a penalty 
of 
$100 against respondent Jay
Covert.
IV. Within 10 days of the date 
of 
this Order, the respondents
shall, by certified check 
or money order payable to 
the
State of Illinois,  pay the penalties imposed in II. and Iii..
of this Order which is to be sent to:
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
Fiscal Services 
Division
2200 Churchill 
Road
Springfield, Illinois 62706
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Board Member J, 
Theordore Meyer dissented.
I, 
Dorothy M. Gunn, hereby certify that the above 
Opinion
and Order was adopted on the  
~  
day of 
_________              
1984 by a
vote of 
.$~-/    
,
I  
I
!;~~L 
~  
~
Dorothy H. Gunn, Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control 
Board
59~204