ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
November 19, 1982
DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY,
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 82—136
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
DISSENTING OPINION (by J.D. Dumelle):
My reasons for dissenting on this provisional variance are
because of the incompleteness of the pleadings on the merits and
the nature of the conditions as detailed below.
Variance is being granted for ammonia, unnatural turbidity,
and dissolved oxygen. The ammonia levels given (0.07 mg/l) are
probably un-ionized ammonia readings but this is not so stated.
The Board standard is 0.04 mg/i. What is not clear is whether
the act of dredging itself increases the ammonia content of the
returned river water. If it does not, then a valid argument can
be
made that variance is not needed to return river water to the
river.
The “unnatural turbidity” Board prohibition has been defined
by the Agency in terms of amount of sediment passing a given
sieve size. The Board here is thus granting variance really
not from the Act or a Board Rule but from an Agency criterion.
The Board, has no way, without a rulemaking proceeding or possibly
a permit appeal to determine whether or not this criterion is
“technically feasible and economically reasonable’t the statutory
requirememt for Board Rules. I strongly recommend that the Board
shortly, on its own motion, begin formal consideration of this
Agency turbidity criterion in order that the certainty of its
validity is established. Will barge tows that roil the water
need turbidity variances? Will pile driving cause a violation?
The third standard for which variance is granted is dissolved
oxygen. No information is given as to the cause of depression
of dissolved oxygen levels. Is it because of the ammonia levels
referred to above? Is it because of the sediments being dis-
lodged and exerting an oxygen demand? And will those lower levels
of dissolved oxygen cause fish kills? No information is available
to the Board in the pleadings on these important questions.
49-327
—2—
The conditions asked by the Agency and here granted by the
Board majority are troublesome. In Condition No. 2 a temperature
limit is given above which dredging may not be done. This was
done to reduce the toxic effects of the ammonia. But if the
dredging does not increase ammonia levels above ambient river
water content then the temperature limit becomes useless. The
ammonia is as toxic in the river as it ever was and returning
river water to the river doesn’t change that fact.
Conditon No. 5 asks for historical dredging data since
1927. Since these data are to be furnished by February 28, 1983
they obviously are not a portion of the instant 30—day variance.
Could the Agency not have requested these data under the Freedom
of Information Act instead of in a short term provisional variance?
Conditions Nos. 6 and 7 require a confined disposal area for
“further dredging”. Again, this requirement has no relationship
to the instant variance and thus in fact is beyond the Board’s
legal powers to so require.
Lastly, Condition No. 8 requires that a named dredge under
Federal control be kept in the Peoria area through February 1983
“barring emergency considerations”. No justification is given for
this sweeping order of deployment of a piece of Federal equipment.
What relation does this condition have at all to the instant
variance? Where is the Board’s legal authority to do this?
The Agency has here proposed a convoluted and troublesome
provisional variance to the Board. The Board, as a minimum,
should have struck down those conditions listed above.
Jacob D. Dumelle, Chairman
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, hereby certify that the above Dissenting Opinion
was filed on the
/f~
day of
/)~+?~-&-~.~ —
,
1982.
Christan L. Mof ~ Clerk
Pollution Contror~oard
49-328