ILLINOIS
    POLLUTION
    CONTROL
    BOARD
    December
    16,
    1982
    TROJAN CORPORATION (WOLF LAKE),
    )
    Petitioner,
    v.
    )
    PCB 82—23
    ILLINOIS
    ENVIRONMENTAL
    )
    PROTECTION
    AGENCY,
    )
    )
    Respondent.
    ORDER OF THE
    BOARD
    (by D. Anderson):
    On November 23,
    1982 the Illinois Environmental Protection
    Agency
    (Agency)
    filed a motion for reconsideration of the Order
    and Opinion of the Board, adopted October 5 and 14,. 1982, which
    granted Trojan Corporation
    (Trojan)
    a variance to allow open
    burning of explosive and explosive contaminated waste at Trojan’s
    Wolf Lake facility.
    On December
    2,
    1982 Trojan filed a response
    to the motion.
    The Board will grant the motion and modify the Opinion as
    discussed below.
    The Agency has requested a specific ruling on two issues
    which underlie the finding of necessity for a variance from
    35 Ill. Adm. Code 725.482:
    the size of the RCRA facility and
    whether buildings can be considered RCRA hazardous waste.
    Section 720.110 defines “facility”
    as all contiguous land
    and structures.
    There is no express requirement that all land
    be owned in fee simple absolute.
    Leases of business property
    are common and the Board will not adopt a construction which
    would prohibit inclusion of leaseholds
    in RCRA facilities.
    The buildings became “waste”
    at the time they were abandoned
    (Section 721.102).
    They are “hazardous” because they meet the
    characteristic of ignitability in that they are capable of
    causing fire through friction or spontaneous chemical changes
    (Section 721.121).
    The hazardous nature of the buildings can also be deduced
    from the anti—dilution rule:
    that a mixture of a hazardous and
    non—hazardous waste is hazardous.
    The explosives are obviously
    hazardous.
    When the explosives are mixed with the buildings in
    such a way that they cannot be separated, while the explosives
    retain their hazardous nature, the mixture becomes hazardous.
    50-125

    If the buildings were successfully dismantled and
    trucked
    to any landfill, therewould be a danger of hot loads,
    fires
    or
    explosions during compaction and spontaneous ignition of under-
    ground fires in the completed landfill in years
    to come.
    The
    manifest system would be needed at a minimum to alert the
    operator to these problems.
    The Agency takes the position that the Board cannot
    grant
    variances from the RCRA regulations.
    The Agency quotes
    Sections 3006 and 3009 of the RCRA Act
    (42 USC 6926 and
    6929)
    and Section 35 of the Environmental Protection Act (Act).
    Sections 3006 and 3009 of the RCRA Act, and Section
    22.4
    of the
    Act, refer to adoption of a program by the Board, and
    its
    approval by USEPA.
    “Equivalence” and “identical
    in sub-
    stanc&’ relate to the program as
    a whole and are considered
    at the
    time of adoption and approval.
    They lose their
    meaning
    when
    applied to individual cases after the program has been
    adopted and approved.
    The variance mechanism derives from the Act as
    implemented
    by 35
    Ill. Adm, Code 104.
    Unless specifically excluded,
    it
    applies
    to all Board rules, and as such, was a part of the
    RCRA
    application and approval.
    Any regulatory system needs a safety valve to resolve
    situations which do not fit into the scheme correctly.
    In
    Illinois’ two agency system, the Agency is not able to issue
    any permit which departs
    from the letter of Board regulations.
    The
    variance mechanism is essential to this system.
    The Trojan case
    is an example of what would happen if the
    RCRA rules were adopted without a variance mechanism:
    Section
    725.482
    would absolutely prohibit the burning of existing
    explosive
    contaminated buildings or piles of unstable
    explosive
    waste located too close to the property line.
    These would
    have to
    remain for future generations to worry about
    in any
    facility closure.
    This is diametrically opposite to the
    intent
    of
    RCRA.
    The Agency contends that the introductory paragraph
    of
    Section
    35 of the Act absolutely prohibits variances from
    the
    RCRA
    rules.
    However, this paragraph also references the
    Clean
    Water
    Act and the Safe Drinking Water Act,
    Variances
    from 35
    Ill.
    Adm. Code Subtitles C and F are commonly granted
    in spite
    of this language.
    The Agency apparently takes the position that this
    facility
    is
    not subject to the RCRA rules at all and that no variance
    is
    necessary.
    The Board is not prepared to carve such an
    exception
    in this, the first case to come before it under the RCRA
    rules.
    50-126

    *
    3—
    This facility is clearly engaged in the storage and disposal of
    hazardous waste.
    It has the potential to cause serious future
    problems if it were abandoned without proper closure which will
    be required under the
    RCRA
    program.
    It should he noted that the RCRA rules became effective
    after the filing of the petition in this matter.
    The Board
    felt obliged to address the RCRA issues fully even though they
    were not raised by the variance petition.
    It would have worked
    an unfair hardship to have required an amended petition to deal
    with new regulations effective in the midst of a case with a
    decision date.
    By way of contrast, the air quality standards were in
    place long before the petition was filed.
    Rather than request
    a variance from them, Trojan contended that it would not cause
    violation of the air quality standards.
    Trojan did not amend
    its variance request after the Agency contested its assertion
    of compliance.
    This apparently resulted from a conscious
    decision by Trojan that it would rather have its variance from
    Rule 505 now, and take its changes with enforcement should it,
    in fact,
    cause violation of air quality
    standards,
    rather than
    wait for
    the
    additional
    SIP
    revision
    which
    would
    be
    required
    if
    a
    variance
    were
    granted from
    the
    air
    quality
    standards.
    The Agency has
    also
    contended
    that
    the
    Board’s
    doubts
    about
    the practicality of partial burns in place in the ponds
    is not supported by the record in light of the previous use
    at Marion.
    The Board notes that this burning was conducted in
    violation of the conditions of the variance
    in
    PCB 79-150,
    35 PCB 331,415, September
    6 and
    20, 1979.
    This explosive was
    to have been removed from the ponds,
    allowed to dry and burned
    on straw beds.
    As noted in the Opinion,
    the Board has doubts about the
    safety and environmental desirability of partial burns in place
    in the ponds.
    Evidence
    is weak both in support of and against
    this variance condition.
    The Board declines to order Trojan
    to do something which it suspects may be a more dangerous and
    less environmentally desirable alternative.
    The Board’s Order
    allows Trojan to conduct the burning as planned, and allows
    enforcement for any violation of air quality standards which
    may occur whether partial burnings are undertaken or not.
    The Board acknowledges the error on page
    6 of the Opinion
    and will delete the reference to the 85 pounds of CO per ton
    and the ten-fold reduction in emissions from prescription
    burning.
    however,
    the 8.3 pound figure is
    correct and the
    environmental impact of putting these amounts of CO and TSP
    over an uninhabited area is minimal compared with the advantages
    from cleaning up a hazardous waste site.
    50-127

    —4—
    The Board will hereby allow the Agency to file its motion
    after the
    time
    specified.
    The motion for reconsideration is granted;
    the
    Opinion is
    modified as noted.
    IT IS SO
    ORDERED.
    I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
    Control
    Board,
    hereby~-pertify
    that
    the
    above
    Order
    was
    adopted
    on
    the
    ((~
    day
    ~
    ~
    ~.
    ~,
    1982 by a vote of
    _______
    Christan
    L.
    Moffe~•4~erk
    Illinois
    Pol1utioh~Control
    Board
    50-128

    Back to top