ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    Septezñber
    3, 1981
    ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL
    )
    PROTECTION AGENCY,
    )
    )
    Complainant,
    v.
    )
    PCB 80—4
    ALBA MANUFACTURING COMPANY,
    )
    an Illinois corporation,
    Respondent.
    PHILIP
    L.
    WILLMAN, ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL, APPEARED ON BEHALF
    OF THE COMPLAINANT.
    PUCKETT, BARNETT, LARSON, MICKEY, WILSON
    & OCHSENSCHLAGER, ATTORNEYS
    AT LAW (TRIS 3.
    MICHELS, OF COUNSEL), APPEARED ON BEHALF OF THE
    RESPONDENT.
    OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (by N.E.Werner):
    This matter comes before the Board on the January
    4,
    1980
    Complaint brought by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
    (“Agency”).
    Count
    I of the Complaint alleged that,
    from August
    3,
    1977
    u.rit.i.i
    January
    4,
    1980
    (including, but not limited to,
    August
    3,
    1977,
    April
    26,
    1978, and June 8,
    1978), the Alba Manufacturing Company
    (“Alba” or the “Company”)
    allowed the discharge of an effluenL
    into
    Illinois waters from its manufacturing facility (the “facility” or
    “plant”) which contained visible oil and grease in violation of
    Rule 403 of Chapter 3:
    Water Pollution Control Regulations
    (“Chapter 3”) and Section 12(a) of the Illinois Environmental
    Protection Act (“Act”).
    Count II alleged that, from April
    26,
    1978 until January
    4,
    1980
    (including, but not limited to,
    April 26,
    1978,
    August 24,
    1978,
    December
    5,
    1978, and June 5,
    1979), the Company allowed the
    discharge of an effluent into Illinois waters which contained Eive—day
    biochemical oxygen demand (“BOD
    “)
    in excess of five times the
    numerical standard prescribed i~Rule 404(a) of Chapter
    3, thereby
    violating Rules 401(c) and 404(a) of Chapter 3 and Section 12(a)
    of the Act.
    Count III alleged that, from June 8,
    1978 until January
    4,
    1980
    (including, hut not limited to, June
    8,
    1978 and August
    24,
    1978),
    43—257

    —2—
    Alba allowed the discharge of an effluent into a State water which
    contained iron in excess of five times the numerical standard
    set
    forth in Rule 408(a) of Chapter 3, thereby violating Rules 401(c)
    and 408(a) of Chapter
    3 and Section 12(a) of the Act.
    Count III also alleged that,
    from April
    26, 1978 until January
    4,
    1980 (including, but not limited to, April
    26, 1978,
    June
    8,
    1978,
    and June 5,
    1979), the Respondent allowed the discharge of an effflue~iI
    into Illinois waters with pH levels lower than the level allowed by
    Rule 408(a) of Chapter 3, thereby violating Rules 401(c)
    and~,.408(a) of
    Chapter
    3 and Section 12(a) of the Act.
    Count IV alleged that,
    from October 24,
    1977 until January 4,
    lT~8O,
    the Company discharged contaminants into a water of the State of Illinois
    without possessing an NPDES Permit from the Agency for point source
    discharges
    in violation of Rule 901 of Chapter
    3 and Sections
    12(a)
    and
    12(f) of the Act.
    Count V alleged that the Company, by constructing “river bank
    coffer dam ponds to contain oil runoff and recycled water from the
    process area”, increased the likelihood of a discharge of containant:s
    into the Fox River and,
    from August 3,
    1977 until January
    4,
    1980
    (including, but not limited to, August
    3,
    1977,
    April
    26, 1978,
    June 8,
    1978,
    August 24,
    1978,
    December
    5,
    1978, and June
    5,
    1979),
    “deposited contaminants upon the land in such place and manner so
    as to create a water pollution hazard” in violation of Section 12(d)
    of the Act.
    A hearing was held on June 30,
    1981 at which an unsigned cojy
    of the Stipulation and Proposal for Settlement was read into the record.
    On July 10,
    1981, the parties filed an executed Stipulation
    and Proposal for Settlement which was substantially identical
    to the
    unsigned copy which was previously submitted.
    The Company owns and operates a plant which is located on
    4.2 acres of land on the west bank of the Fox River at 100 West
    Indian Trail in the City of Aurora in Kane County,
    Illinois.
    This
    facility manufactures and processes glycerin, vegetable acid oil,
    and other related products.
    (Stip.
    2).
    The Respondent stores vegetable oil and waste material
    in various
    tanks which are located on its property.
    Three of the storage tanks
    have a storage capacity of 14,500 gallons each, while the fourth tank
    is over twice as big and has a storage capacity of 29,044 gallons.
    (Stip.
    2).
    In prior years, the Company also used “an open circulation tank
    and two holding tanks”
    in addition to the four storage tanks.
    The
    circulation and holding tanks were located just west of the Fox Riv’~r
    and were utilized in the recycling of wastewater from the manufacti~inq
    process.
    (Stip.
    2).
    43—258

    —3
    Howevor,
    the Company no longer uses the open circulation t~mk
    and the two holding tanks.
    Instead,
    the Respondent “now pumps
    wastewater into the sanitary sewer system owned and operated by t~ie
    Aurora Sanitary District”.
    (Stip.
    2).
    Deposits
    of
    “oil
    and
    grease
    materials”
    are
    sometimes
    found
    o~i
    the
    ground
    at
    the
    Company’s
    facility
    “due
    in
    part
    to
    accidents
    occurring
    during
    normal
    operations”.
    (Stip.
    2).
    Surface
    ~iater
    which
    flows
    across
    the
    property
    can
    then
    pick
    up
    the
    oily,
    greasy
    ~iaterialsand create various environmental problems.
    (Stip.
    3).
    For example, two separate accidents involving spills occurm:er~
    on April
    15,
    1977 and August ii,
    1978.
    About 30,000 gallons oF a
    red, oily substance was deposited on the ground when two storage
    tanks ruptured and spilled on April
    15, 1977.
    (Stip.
    2).
    Similarly,
    a smaller spill occurred on August 11,
    1978 when “approximately
    2,000 gallons of vegetable oil
    leaked
    from a railroad
    tank car
    int:.~’~
    a
    storm
    drain”.
    (Stip.
    2).
    At the time of these spills,
    the Company constructed two ~arthe~
    ditches to contain the oil spills and then pumped the oily sub;~-~rices
    into a tank truck for subsequent disposal.
    (Stip.
    2—3).
    Agency inspections of the Respondent’s facilities, which
    revealed surface water run—off that resulted in the discharge of
    contaminants into the Fox River,
    were conducted on August
    3,
    1977,
    April
    26,
    1978, June 8,
    1978,
    August 24,
    1978,
    December
    5,
    1978,
    and
    June
    5,
    1979.
    (Stip.
    3—5).
    The inspection which took place on August
    3,
    1977
    (in which
    both Kane County Environmental Division employees and Agency personn~i
    participated) showed that water had overflowed from the Company’s
    circulation tank, had flowed approximately
    60 feet along the river
    hank,
    and
    had
    then
    “entered
    the
    Fox
    River
    at
    a
    rate
    of
    about
    15—20 gallons per minute...”
    (See:
    Stip.
    3;
    Exhibit
    A).
    Water
    samples
    of
    the
    discharged
    overflow
    into
    the
    Fox
    River
    indicated
    that
    “an
    oily,
    greasy
    substance”
    was
    present.
    (Stip.
    3).
    At
    the
    inspection
    of
    Alba’s
    facilities
    on
    April
    26,
    1978,
    employees of the Kane County Environmental Division and the Agency
    observed that “water flowing from a grease coated pond into the
    circulation tank...was then overflowing from the circulation tank
    into three small cofferdam ponds that had been constructed on the
    bank of the Fox River”.
    (Stip.
    3).
    The inspectors also noted that
    polluted water from the three small ponds flowed through a trench
    into the Fox River.
    (Stip.
    3).
    Subsequent laboratory analyses of
    water samples from the Fox River discharges “showed a bio—chemical
    oxygen demand
    (BOD) concentration of greater than 420 milligrams
    per liter
    (mg/i)”.
    (See:
    Stip.
    3; Exhibit B).
    On June
    8,
    1978,
    inspectors from the Kane County Environmental
    Division and the Agency “observed that the surface area south oF the
    43—259

    —4
    circulation tank had been filled in with sod”.
    (Stip.
    4).
    Never-
    theless, “they also noticed that a length of corrugated plastic
    piping had been buried between the tank and the coffer dam ponds”
    and that the pipe “was discharging at approximately 8—10
    GPT.i into
    the ponds, which in turn were overflowing into the Fox River”.
    (Stip.
    4).
    The laboratory analysis of a water sample from the Fox
    River discharges “showed that the water contained a BOD concentration
    of greater than 100 mg/i, an iron concentration of 58 mg/i,
    and
    ~t
    pH
    value of 2.5”.
    (Stip.
    4),
    A subsequent Agency inspection on August
    24,
    1978 indicated that
    conditions at the Respondent’s plant were about “the same as they
    were on June
    8,
    1978,
    except that the grease coated pond west of ~he
    circulation tank had been dammed off from the tank”.
    (Stip.
    4).
    Turbid water, which had oil spots on the surface, was being discha-jed
    into the Fox River at a rate of about 3-5 gallons per minute.
    (Stip.
    4).
    Laboratory tests of this water “showed a BOD concentration
    of greater than 480 mg/i and an iron concentration of
    13 mg/i”.
    (Sti2.
    1)
    Another inspection by Agency employees took place on Decemb~r5,
    1978.
    They observed that turbid water “continued to flow from the
    circulation tank into the coffer dam ponds and then into the Fox
    River”.
    (Stip.
    4).
    Laboratory tests of water samples “showed a
    801)
    concentration of 1200 mg/i”,
    (Stip.
    4—5).
    Approximately seven months
    later, on June
    5,
    1979,
    an Agency
    inspection revealed “that water continued to flow from the coffer dam
    ponds into the Fox River”.
    (Stip.
    5).
    Laboratory tests indicated
    that this water had “a BOD concentration of 350 mg/i and a
    pi~1vaimi~
    of
    2.9”.
    (Stip.
    5).
    The parties have stipulated that the Company has
    taken substan~:ial
    measures to prevent future spills and eliminate any further surface
    water run—off problems.
    The Respondent has re—graded the driveway
    and parking lot area to the west of the circulation tank
    in order to
    divert the flow of surface water away from this tank.
    (Stip.
    5).
    In addition to various sodding and grading activities, the Respondent
    has planted grass, trees, and bushes in this area.
    (R.
    11-12).
    To prevent water from draining underground into the circulation
    tank,
    two nearby manholes have been plugged with cement.
    (Stip.
    5).
    Moreover, both the circulation tank and the coffer dam ponds have
    been entirely filled in with clay which should “eliminate the flow
    of surface and ground water into the tank and the ponds”.
    (Stip.
    5).
    The proposed settlement agreement provides that the Company
    shall follow a specified compliance program to prevent oil spills
    (including daily inspections of all tank drainage fittings and valv
    replacement of faulty valves, daily tank inspections
    for leaks, and
    weekly steam pressure tests of the main transfer lines), conduct
    inspections twice a week of its property on the west bank of the
    Fox River to ensure that no discharges of contaminated water will
    occur,
    and pay a stipulated penalty of $2,500.00
    .
    (Stip.
    5-6).
    43—260

    —5—
    In evaluating this enforcement action and proposed settlement
    agreement,
    the Board has taken into consideration all the facts and
    circumstances in light of the specific criteria delineated in
    Section 33(c) of the Act,
    The Board finds the settlement agreement
    acceptable under Procedural Rule 331 and Section 33(c) of the Act.
    The Board finds that the Respondent, the Aiba Manufacturing
    Company, has violated Rules
    401(c),
    403,
    404(a),
    408(a), and 901 of
    Chapter
    3:
    Water Pollution Control Regulations and Sections 12(a),
    12(d), and 12(f)
    of the Illinois Environmental Protection Act.
    The
    stipulated penalty of $2,500.00 will be assessed against the Respondent.
    This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact and
    conclusions of law in this matter.
    ORDER
    It is the Order of the Illinois Pollution Control Board that:
    1.
    The Respondent, the Alba Manufacturing Company,
    has violated
    Rules 401(c),
    403,
    404(a),
    408(a), and 901 of Chapter 3:
    Water
    Pollution Control Regulations and Sections 12(a),
    12(d), and 12(f) of
    the Illinois Environmental Protection Act,
    2.
    Within 45 days of the date of this Order, the Respondent
    shall, by certified check or money order payable to the State of
    Illinois, pay the stipulated penalty of $2,500.00 which is to be
    sent to:
    Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
    Fiscal Services Division
    2200 Churchill Road
    Springfield,
    Illinois
    62706
    3.
    The Respondent shall comply with all the terms and
    conditions of the Stipulation and Proposal for Settlement filed on
    July 10,
    1981, which is incorporated by reference as if fully set
    forth herein.
    I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board,
    her~)DYcertify that the above Opinion and Order were adopted
    on thea
    ____day ~
    ,
    1981 by a vote of -VU.
    Christan L. Moff’ep~:fClerk
    Illinois Pollutiok (control Board
    I, ~l—
    7 fS
    1

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