ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    August
    5,
    1982
    WASTE MANAGEMENT OF ILLINOIS,
    INC.,
    )
    Petitioner,
    v.
    )
    PCB 82—55
    )
    BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF
    TAZEWELL
    )
    COUNTY,
    Respondent.
    DISSENTING OPINION (by
    J.D. Dumelle):
    My reasons for dissenting are:
    the obviously inadequate
    legal notice regarding special wastes;
    the lack of due process
    for East Peoria in its request for a hearing before this Board;
    the majority’s position on prohibiting the County from considering
    technical “subsurface” issues;
    and
    the admittedly “leaky landfill”
    to be built over a major water supply aquifer.
    The printed notice
    (Joint Exhibit
    6)
    is clearly deficient
    in telling the public that special wastes were to be considered
    for disposal at the site under review,
    All the notice says is
    “for location approval of a solid waste disposal facility
    will be used as a regional landfill.”
    This notice,
    prepared by
    Waste Management of Illinois, Inc. does not mention that special
    wastes are to be disposed of at the site.
    The County Board Chairman,
    in his opening
    statement on
    February 18,
    1982 describes
    the
    application as desiring approval
    to dispose of “nonhazardous household,
    industrial and special
    wastes.”
    This statement does not cure the printed notice
    defect.
    Some of the public may have relied upon the printed
    notice and thus not attended the hearing.
    The majority in its
    opinion gives a warning to future applicants to be more precise
    in notices.
    That does not cure the legal defect in this case.
    At the very least,
    I would have disallowed permission to dispose
    of special wastes at this site because of failure of the printed
    notice to inform adequately.
    The second defect in this proceeding was the majority’s
    failure to grant East Peoria a hearing before the Board.
    In
    the Board’s hearing on July 1,
    1982 the Hearing Officer only
    allowed intervention at the end of the hearing.
    Thus East Peoria,
    a city of 22,083,
    could not present any evidence at all because
    of this late ruling
    on
    intervention,
    Its evidence might have
    dealt with the adequacy of the record or the fundamental fairness
    of
    the County proceedings.
    Sufficient time
    (17
    days)
    remained
    for a hearing
    (see July
    21
    and July
    26
    orders and the dissent
    filed by me).
    The acceptance of the offers of proof by the
    majority is not sufficient.
    47-497

    —2—
    The third problem in this case is the majority’s reading
    of legislative intent to leave technical
    (translated as “subsur-
    face”) matters to the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
    and to exclude the County from considering them.
    I do not read
    criteria #2 in P.A.
    82—682 as saying that.
    Indeed a plain reading
    shows the opposite intent.
    What could be plainer than “The facility
    is so designed, located and proposed to be operated that the
    public health,
    safety and welfare will be protected”
    (underlining
    added)?
    The leading case in Illinois to date of errors
    in landfill
    “design and location”
    (to paraphrase the criterion cited above)
    is the Wilsonville landfill,
    Here,
    a site was approved over
    abandoned mine shafts,
    That fact is certainly germane to approval
    or disapproval of a site.
    Yet the majority’s ruling on legis-
    lative intent would prohibit an elected County Board from consi-
    dering subsurface geology whether involving abandoned mine shafts
    or earthquake faults or nearby potable water aquifers or the safety
    and adequacy of a clay layer.
    It can be argued that a County Board is not sufficiently expert
    in hydrology and soils to decide issues concerning these areas.
    At the same time, however, the County Board members are charged
    with protecting public health and certainly with protecting
    their county’s major water supply.
    Somewhere in the political
    process the elected layman has to make technical decisions
    if
    all of us are not to be governed by “experts”.
    Lastly let us analyze those “subsurface” factors,
    The Waste
    Management landfill will leak into the Sankoty aquifer.
    Joint
    Exhibit 13A gives the time period for this to happen (Appendix IV).
    Using
    a leachate percolation rate of 0.206 feet per year
    it would
    take 50 years to penetrate the 10 feet of clay,
    And using 1.03
    feet per year it would take
    90 more years to penetrate the average
    90 feet of soil below the clay layer and above the Sankoty aquifer.
    That totals to 140 years.
    Two questions arise.
    How reliable are these time estimates?
    How “clean” will be the leachate after attenuation and cationic
    exchange by the clay layer?
    The Waste Management witness,
    Dr. Murray M. McComas,
    an
    expert hydrogeologist, testified on Feb.
    18,
    1982 at the County
    hearing.
    He increased the flow rate through the clay layer by
    50
    over that estimated by Patrick Engineering,
    Inc. in Joint
    Exhibit 13A.
    He used 0.3 feet per year instead of 0.206 feet
    per year
    (R.93).
    The time necessary to penetrate 10 feet of clay
    then becomes
    33 years and not the 50 years referred to above.
    Dr. McComas then states that the next layer to be encountered
    is a “buried silt zone” with a transmission velocity of 0.002 feet
    per year (R.95).
    But Patrick Engineering had put it at 1.03 feet
    per year or 515 times more porous!
    These major discrepancies by
    experts from the same side are not explained.
    47-498

    A landfill above a major
    potaht~. water
    supply
    ought to be
    “fail—safe”.
    If we use Dr~
    McCc’n~
    ~:~uro of 0,3 feet per
    year
    as
    the
    worst
    case
    condition
    we
    are
    :~uciq
    about 33
    years
    to
    penetrate
    10
    feet
    of clay~ But the 1~feet of clay is the
    “natural
    clay”
    layer.
    it
    is not placed by man,
    A
    sand
    lense
    could
    occur
    in
    the
    bottom and negate the 1C feet of
    protection.
    Testimony
    by
    a
    local
    consulting engineer,
    Robert
    M. Randolph,
    points
    this
    out
    (R,203),
    If
    a sand lense has only
    two
    feet
    of
    clay
    over
    it, then using Dr. McCornas~0~3feet per year rate,
    the
    bottom
    integrity
    would
    be breached in 6.7 years,
    not
    33
    years!
    How
    much
    protection
    would be given by the layer
    below
    the
    clay
    also
    depends
    upon
    its
    integrity with reference to the
    sand
    lense
    problem.
    The Patrick Engineering use of “average”
    depth
    of
    90
    feet
    is
    not
    correct,
    The least depth
    (50 feet)
    should be used.
    In
    summary
    the
    “140
    year” figure
    is probaby much
    too
    generous.
    Leakage
    into
    the
    Sankoty
    Aquifer could well
    occur
    early
    in
    the
    21st
    century,
    The
    other
    question posed was the degree of attenuation of
    organics
    and metals by a clay layer.
    Dr, McComas testified
    that
    a
    layer
    of
    two feet is “more than adequate” for
    most
    landfills anywhere
    in the country
    (R,103),
    However,
    the
    technical
    literature has recently begun to discuss the deleterious effects
    upon clay of certain organic solvents0
    Will the clay liner resist
    this action and continue to attenuate or will
    it simply become much
    more porous?
    Will special wastes,
    which include oily sludges,
    metal
    fines,
    and hot lime, overwhelm the attenuation capacity of
    the clay?
    Certainly the County Board would wish
    to consider these
    “subsurface” factors when making its decision.
    Until other methods of refuse disposal such as recycling
    and incineration are better developed,
    landfills will be needed.
    But they should receive full scrutiny (surface and subsurface)
    by elected public officials if they are to protect their consti-
    tuents.
    And
    I believe that is the statutory intent.
    I,
    Christan L. Moffett, hereby certify that the above
    dissenting opinion was filed on
    ~~day
    of__________________
    1982.
    ~
    Illinois Pollutio
    ontrol Board
    ,~,
    Jumeile, Chairman
    I:Llinois Pollution Control Board
    d
    47-499

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