ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
January
26,
1984
TO~7NOF OTTAWA,
Petitioner,
V.
)
PCB 83—135
LASALLE COUNTY BOARD
)
and STATES LAND
IMPROVEMENT CORPORATION,
Respondents.
VILLAGE OF NAPLATE,
Petitioner,
V.
)
PCB 83—136
LASALLE COUNTY
BOARD
and STATES LAND
IMPORVEMENT CORPORATION
Resfondents.
DISSENTING OPINION
(by
J,
D.
Dumelle):
A landfill siting appeal
decision
is a
weighty
one.
On that
decision can rest the safety of an aquifer
supplying water to
residents of the area.
I agree with the Board majority in most
aspects of the
instant case,
The proceedings were fundamentally fair.
Conditions M
and
N were properly deleted by the
County and are
not needed
for
the safety of the site.
My dissent is based upon the great probability
that buried
railroad
ties and trees exist upon the site,
These wood materials
will decompose and create conduits for leachate
travel to the
aquifer.
The
original owner of the site, John
Duhach,
testified that
when he
acquired the site
“all the wood was there”
(R.
1458).
He
56-97
2
refers
to the
4”
x
12”
planks
16
ft.
long butted
tightly together
and the
4” x
4” ties
6 ft. long placed 1½
ft.
apart.
Total
length
of railroad bed existing was from 1,800 to
2,000
feet.
(R.
1460).
Thus, using the lower figure of
1,800 feet of
bed
some
1,800 planks each one foot wide remained and
some 1,200 ties
spaced 1½
feet apart were on the site.
The ties and planks were buried by Mr. Dubach as
the
shale
was moved
sideways to get at the coal and fire
clay which
lay
below.
(R,
1521—2),
The trees existing on the
site
were
buried
by
National Fireproofing Ca, when they owned the
site
before Mr.
Dubach,
(R.
1535),
A later owner of the site, John Bernardoni,
was evasive when
asked about
the railroad timbers,
(R,
1667—8),
The crane operator,
Herbert
Carr stated that he had not buried either
planks or ties.
(R,
1674),
The testimony on this important point is contradictory.
Whom does one believe?
Dr. Eric
Zimmerman,
an environmental engineer, testified
that timbers could act as a conduit
for liquids.
(P.
1144—5),
Some
of the borings showed “traces of wood” according
to
Dr.
Zimmerman,
(P.
1245—6).
(See also
P.
1259 which
speaks of
‘tone
boring,”)
The salient question is “Do ties and/or planks
exist
on
the
site?”
Dr. Zimmerman saw “several”,
(P.
1260),
John
Dubach,
the first site owner, testified to burying the timbers,
(R.
1521~—2),
And. John Bernardoni,
a later owner,
states that there were “very
few”
railroad
ties
“scattered
around.~
(P.
1668),
Three
persons
each
under
oath,
have
thus
verified
that
ties
or
planks
were
on
the
site.
When dealing with human health the prudent person
must
pursue
a
safe route,
My judgment is that there
is a great
probability of ties and planks and possibly trees being
buried on
the
site.
The county conditions require only five feet of
recompacting
on
spoil piles lying above the aquifer,
That would give
only half
the protection the 10 ft. deep liner is supposed to
bring.
Because of the great probability that the buried
timbers will
cause
pollution of the aquifer,
I respectfully
dissent.
I
~acoo u,
oumelle,
P.E,
Chairman
56-98
3
I, Christan
L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois
Pollution
Control Board, hereby ce~fy
that the
above Dissenting Opinion
was filed on the
~
day of
~
1984.
~
Illinois
Pollution Control Board
56-99