ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
October 22,
1981
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
Complainant,
)
v.
)
PCB 80—134
COMMONWEALTH EDISON COMPANY, an Illinois
)
Corporation
(LaSalle County Station),
Respondent.
JOHN
VAN
VRANKEN,
ASSISTANT
ATTORNEY
GENERAL,
APPEARED
ON
BEHALF
OF
COMPLAINANT.
ROBERT
H.
WHEELER,
ISHAM,
LINCOLN
& BEALE, APPEARED ON BEHALF OF
RESPONDENT.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by
I.
Goodman):
On July 21,
1980,
the Illinois Environmental Protection
Agency
(Agency) filed a Complaint before the Board alleging that
Commonwealth Edison Company
(Edison) had violated its NPDES
permit at Edison’s LaSalle County Nuclear Power Station located
southwest of Seneca,
Illinois.
Citizens For a Better Environment
(CEE) was granted status as an Intervenor
in the proceeding by
Order of the Board on October
2,
1980.
CBE, however, has not
participated in this proceeding
in any way.
The Agency filed an
Amended Corv~plaint, which, pursuant to agreement of the parties,
Edison responded to by filing an Affidavit.
The Board has
received no public comment in this matter.
In its brief, Edison reasserts the objection made at hearing
~o the filing of an Amended Complaint by the Agency concerning
continuing alleged violations during pertdency of this matter.
Upon review of the record, the Board finds that the Hearing
Officer exercised great care in assuring Edison of its rights
with regard to the Amended Complaint.
In fact,
the record shows
that Edison agreed with the Agency to the procedures used with
regard to the Amended Complaint in the face of the Hearing
Officer’s suggestion that an additional hearing be scheduled
to cure Edison’s alleged surprise at the filing of the Amended
Complaint.
The Board finds no prejudice to either party due to
the procedure worked out by the parties and hereby overrules
Edison’s objection.
The LaSalle County Station is a nuclear generating facility
designed to consist of two 1078 mw units.
Start—up of the two
units is expected sometime after
1981, and at no time during
43—53 1
2
the period covered by the Complaint was the LaSalle Station
operational. The Station was issued a NPDES permit providing for
low—volume waste discharge,
sanitary treatment plant discharge,
and construction runoff discharge into the LaSalle cooling pond
and discharge from the cooling pond into the Illinois River.
The Agency alleges that Edison violated permit limitations
on discharges from the sanitary waste treatment plant, low volume
waste,
and construction runoff starting September,
1978 extending
through August,
1980.
In support of the alleged violations, the
Agency put into evidence Edison’s discharge monitoring reports
and correspondence fror~Edison to the Agency during that period.
The Agency presented
rio witnesses or other evidence at the
hearing.
Edison presented one witness and five exhibits which
purport to explain why the discharge monitoring reports indicate
excursions over the permit limitations for certain constituents
which the Agency alleges are violations of Sections
l2(~a,) and
12(f) of the Environmental Protection Act in addition to being
violations of the NPDES permit pursuant to Rule 901 of the
Board’s Rules and Regulations, Chapter
3: Water Pollution.
The real issue in this case revolves around the interpre-
tation of the permit requirements.
The Agency points to the
plain wording of the permit which says there are limitations on
the individual discharges to the cooling pond in addition to the
limitations on the discharge of the pond itself to the Illinois
River.
Edison,
on the other hand, argues that since the cooling
pond was not being used as such during the period of the alleged
violations, the portions of the permit controlling discharges
into the pond and contained within the pond were not active, and
that they were not therefore obligated to notice any instances of
non-compliance.
From a
legal standpoint,
it appears to the Board that
the
permit and its conditions are clearly stated and susceptible to
very little interpretation.
The fact that it is a permit which
was supposedly issued after consultation between the Agency and
Edison buttresses this conclusion.
Page
3 of the permit clearly
states that “during the period beginning on the effective date of
this permit and lasting until the expiration date the permittee
is authorized to discharge from outfall(s) serial number(s)
001(b) sanitary treatment plant waste.”
“Such discharges shall
be
limited
and
monitored
by
the
permittee
as
specified
below:”.
The other discharges to the cooling pond have similar conditions
in the permit.
The time for Edison to have resolved problems with
interpretation now before the Board was during permit negotiations
and through the appeal route subsequent to the issuance of the
permit.
That time has now passed.
From a practical standpoint,
it is important that Edison’s discharge
to the cooling pond be
under
control
as
early
as
possible
so that subsequent blowdown
of the cooling pond to the Illinois River does not pose a sudden
and unexpected environmental problem.
The subject permit
conditions are specific and reasonable. The Board therefore holds
43—532
3
that Commonwealth Edison was responsible for reporting violations
of the permit conditions with respect to discharges into the
cooling pond beginning on the effective date of the permit.
The Agency’s case herein consists entirely of the monitoring
reports and communications between Edison and the Agency during
the period covered by the Complaint.
Edison presented testimony
and exhibits that purport to show that it faithfully followed the
NPDES permit conditions as Edison had interpreted them.
Edison
filed non—compliance reports for discharges into the cooling pond
during those times when the cooling pond itself was discharging
to the river,
i.e., during blowdown operations.
It did not,
however,
file non—compliance reports during those periods when
the discharges to the cooling pond were contained within the
cooling pond itself,
in accordance with its interpretation that
the NPDES permit conditions applied only during periods of
discharge from the cooling pond into the river.
Although the Board has found against Edison’s interpretation
of the NPDES permit,
Edison’s evidence does have weight with
respect to mitigation of the violations filed.
The Board notes,
in passing, that the evidence presented indicates violations of
the
permit
conditions
with
respect
to
discharge
001(a),
the
cooling pond discharge to the Illinois River, during blowdown
operations, but since there are no allegations of these violations
in the Complaint,
the Board will not address them.
Since this
matter appears to be a matter of legal misinterpretation of the
permit conditions, which the Board has
now
settled,
and since
there appears to be little or no harm to the environment due to
the violations found, the Board will not assess a penalty
in this
case.
This Opinion constitutes findings of fact and conclusions of
law of the Board in this matter.
ORDER
1.
Commonwealth Edison Company
is found in violation of
Sections 12(a)
and 12(f)
of the Illinois Environmental Protection
Act and Rule 901 of the Illinois Pollution Control Board Rules
and Regulations, Chapter
3:
Water Pollution,
at its LaSalle
County Station located in LaSalle County Illinois.
2.
Commonwealth Edison Company shall
cease and desist from
further such violations of the Act and the Board’s regulations.
IT
IS SO ORDERED.
I,
Christan L.
Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board,
hereby
ce$tify
that
t e above Opinion and Order
was adopte~on the
~t
day of
_________________,
1981 by a
vote of
...S-~
Q~stanL.Mft1Clerr
Illinois Pollution Control Board
43—533