ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    December
    18, 1980
    ILLINOIS POWER CONP~NY,
    (Hennepin Power Plant),
    )
    Petitioner,
    v.
    )
    PCB 79—243
    ILLINOIS
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
    AGENCY,
    Respondent.
    ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (by D,
    Satchell):
    On November
    5,
    1980 Illinois
    Power
    (IPC)
    filed a motion for
    rehearing and on November
    6,
    1980 Illinois Environmental Protection
    Agency
    (Agency)
    filed
    a motion for clarification, or alternatively
    for rehearing,
    concerning the
    Boardvs October 2,
    1980 Opinion and
    Order.
    On November
    19, 1980
    each party filed a response to the
    other’s motion.
    On November
    20 the
    Board agreed to reconsider and
    denied an Agency
    motion for relief
    from clerical error.
    CHLORINE LIMITATION
    The Agency objects to the last paragraph on page
    3 of the
    Opinion which concerns Rule 910(a) (6)
    of Chapter
    3 and the ques-
    tion of whether the Agency
    is
    authorized to impose its own effluent
    limitations in a permit different from the federal limitation,
    where there is
    a federal limitation but no state limitation.
    The
    Agency is concerned
    that
    the language of the Opinion
    may preclude
    it from imposing its own
    effluent
    limitations where the parameter
    is subject to neither a federal or a state effluent limitation.
    When the entire paragraph is read it is clear that this latter
    question was not before the
    Board.
    The
    October 2,
    1980 Opinion
    and Order was not intended as a holding on this point.
    CHLORINE MONITORING
    In connection
    with the chlorine
    monitoring requirement, IPC
    objects to the option
    given the Agency
    of either imposing a permit
    condition based on total
    chlorine
    residual with quarterly concen-
    tration curves or a
    chlorine
    monitoring condition based on
    a
    dif-
    ferent method of measuring
    chlorine.
    IPC’s evidence on
    chlorine
    monitoring centered
    upon the lack of
    necessity for weekly monitor--
    ing curves.
    However, in connection with the evidence on what
    standard should be applicable, there was some indication that
    IPC
    preferred monitoring by free available chlorine.
    Had the
    option
    40—129

    —2—
    not been included in the Opinion,
    the result would have necessarily
    been a permit with effluent limitations expressed as free available
    chlorine and monitoring by total residual chlorine.
    In expressing its decision as an option the Board intended to
    allow IPC to amend its application to request monitoring by way
    of free available chlorine if that were indeed its desire.
    The
    information attached to the motion as Exhibit C should be present-
    ed to the Agency by way of an
    amendment
    to the application.
    In its response to IPC~smotion the Agency has requested that
    the Board remand the condition so that the Agency may rewrite it
    to require that free available chlorine be monitored by means of
    a
    chlorine concentration curve to be developed quarterly.
    This
    appears to be what IPC is requesting in its Exhibit C.
    However,
    IPC did not make its request for free available chlorine monitor-
    ing in connection with the permit application which resulted in
    this appeal.
    The question as to whether free available chlorine
    on quarterly concentration curves is required to accomplish the
    purposes of the Act is not before the Board.
    There is ample leeway
    in the Order as it is written for the Agency to so modify the con-
    dition.
    The Board therefore declines to modify its Opinion and
    Order with respect to this condition, except to the extent that IPC
    is specifically authorized to
    amend
    its permit application
    on remand.
    REMAND
    IPC objects in general to the remand for further action “not
    inconsistent with the Board~sOpinion of this date.”
    IPC contends
    that the Board should have rewritten the permit conditions in
    question
    and
    ordered the Agency to incorporate those particular
    conditions in the permit.
    Section 4(g)
    and Section 39 of the
    Environmental
    Protection Act
    (Act)
    confer upon the Agency the duty
    and
    authority
    to
    issue
    permIts.
    Procedural Rule 502(a) (10) provides
    that
    the
    Order
    of
    the
    Board in a permit
    appeal
    “may
    affirm
    or
    re-
    verse
    the
    decision
    of
    the
    Agency
    in
    whole
    or
    in
    part,
    may
    remand
    the
    proceeding
    to
    the
    Agency
    for
    the
    taking
    of
    further
    evidence
    or
    may
    direct
    the
    issuance of the permit in
    such
    form
    as
    it
    deems
    just,
    based upon the law and the evidence.”
    Remand
    of
    the
    permit to the Agency for further
    action is con-
    sistent with the Act and Board Procedural Rules and is not a sub-
    delegation of the Board~sSection 40 appellate powers.
    40—130

    —3—
    1\ny NPDES permit issued pursuant to the Board’s mandate in
    this case will be
    a final action of the Agency appealable to the
    Board pursuant to Section 40(a),
    If the Agency does not follow
    the Board’s Order, or
    if IPC has
    additional objections to condi-
    tions in the permit as issued,
    it may raise these objections in
    this manner.
    SCREEN BACKWASH
    IPC has stated at several points that the
    Board
    must
    either
    apply
    Rule
    401(b)
    or Rule 403.
    However,
    Rule
    401(b)
    contains at
    least
    five
    references
    to other rules in Part
    IV.
    It
    is
    intended
    to
    be
    read
    in
    conjunction
    with the rest
    of
    Part
    IV.
    Indeed,
    if
    Part
    IV
    contained
    no
    effluent
    limitations, then
    Rule
    401(b)
    would
    be
    meaningless.
    In
    an enforcement
    action
    Rule
    401(b)
    creates
    an
    affirmative defense to a complaint alleging
    violation
    of
    the
    ef-
    fluent standards--the respondent
    can
    admit that the contaminant
    is present in its discharge, but demonstrate that it is also
    present
    in
    its
    intake water,
    Its
    function
    in
    the
    context
    of
    a
    permit is somewhat
    similar,
    Section
    40(a)
    of
    the Act
    places the burden of proof in a permit
    appeal upon the permit applicant.
    The burden
    of demonstrating that
    a
    contaminant in a discharge
    is
    a part of the intake background
    is
    upon
    the
    permit
    applicant.
    With respect to the screen backwash
    effluent
    limitation
    IPC
    has
    several
    arguments concerning the
    application
    of
    Appalachian
    Power Company v.
    Train
    545 F,
    2d 1351,
    1377,
    4th
    Circuit
    1976.
    ~~TTIEflmTtation
    in question
    is based on Rule 403 of Chap-
    ter 3, not upon any federal effluent limitation.
    Section 301(b)
    (l)(C)
    of the Clean Water Act
    (CWA)
    requires that the permit
    con-
    tain
    any more stringent limitations, including those necessary to
    meet water quality standards or treatment
    standards
    established
    pursuant to state law or regulations.
    Similar provisions are
    found in Section 39(b)
    of the Act and Rule 910(a)
    of Chapter
    3.
    The State of Illinois is
    free
    to adopt more stringent water pollu-
    tion rules than the federal rules and these must be included in
    the NPDES permit.
    If a state?s substantive law requires
    background
    contamination to be cleaned up, then a condition must be included
    in the NPDES permit, regardless of whether the CWA so requires.
    The question before
    the Board was
    exclusively one of state law:
    Do the fish constitute an offensive discharge under Rule 403 and,
    if so, are they nevertheless background under Rule 401(b)
    of Chap-
    ter 3?
    IPC
    quotes
    the following language from
    Section
    12(f)
    of
    the
    Act:
    “No permit shall be required under this
    Subsection
    and under
    Section 39(b)
    of the Act for any discharge for which a permit
    is
    40—131

    —4—
    not
    required
    under
    the
    Federal
    Water
    Pollution
    Control
    Act
    Amen-
    ments
    of
    1972
    (PL92-500)
    and regulations pursuant thereto.’
    IPC
    contends that this, in connection with Appalachian Power,
    limits
    the Agency’s authority to impose permit conditions which would
    require a discharger to remove background contaminants.
    However,
    Section 12(f)
    relates to the permit requirement:
    the Board cannot
    require NPDES permits of dischargers which would not be required
    to have
    NPDES
    permits
    under
    the
    Clean
    Water
    Act.
    IPC
    has
    not
    at
    any time in this proceeding contended that the facility, or its
    cooling water discharge,
    is not subject to the NPDES permit re-
    quirement.
    Once the permit requirement is established, conditions
    required pursuant to state law must be included.
    CATEGORIES OF FISH
    IPC
    has
    indicated
    confusion
    about
    the
    categorization
    of
    fisn.
    It
    has
    demonstrated
    that there exist a certain number
    of
    dead
    fish
    in
    the
    river
    water
    before
    it
    is
    taken
    into
    the
    intake
    structure.
    These
    fish
    constitute
    background
    within
    the
    meaning
    of
    the
    Rule
    401(b);
    Rule
    403
    therefore
    does
    not
    require
    that
    they
    be
    removed
    from
    the
    discharge
    where
    no
    more
    than
    traces
    are
    added.
    There also
    exist
    in
    the
    Illinois
    River
    live
    fish,
    some
    of
    which are impinged
    in
    the
    intake
    structure.
    Those
    fish
    which
    die
    prior
    to
    discnarge,
    and
    which
    are
    floating,
    violate
    Rule
    403.
    They
    are
    not
    within
    the
    background
    exception
    of
    Rule
    401(b),
    even
    though
    they
    were
    present
    as
    live
    fish
    in
    the
    river
    prior
    to
    intake.
    Live
    fish
    are
    not
    ‘background” contaminants within the meaning of Rule 401(b) with
    respect to fish killed by IPC’s process.
    Illinois Power has expressed concern about fish which are
    merely injured in the impingement process but which may recover
    subsequently.
    The basis of the permit condition is not the pro-
    tection of fish.
    This was the subject of the Section
    316(b)
    study.
    The permit condition is based on Rule 403 which proscribes the dis-
    charge of dead, floating fish to the river.
    Rule 401(b)
    states that,
    “it is not the intent of these regula~-
    tions to require users to clean up contamination caused essentially
    by upstream sources or to require treatment when only traces of
    contaminants are added to the background.”
    Upon reconsideration
    the Board will modify its previous Opinion and Order in the follow-
    ing manner:
    “The permit should expressly authorize the discharge of
    background or the addition of traces to background.”
    Rule 401(b)
    also states that the effluent standards “are abso~-
    lute standards that must be met without subtracting background
    concentrations.”
    If IPC is adding more than traces to the back-
    ground of dead fish, then it must remove all of the dead fish from
    its discharge.
    40—132

    —5—
    COST
    OF
    COMPLIANCE
    Assuming
    that
    IPC
    is
    in
    violation
    of
    Rule
    403,
    it is subject
    to
    an
    enforcement
    action
    regardless
    of
    whether
    the
    condition
    re-
    quired by Rule 403
    is included in the permit.
    If IPC is already
    required to spend a certain amount of money to comply with Rule
    403
    and the same expense would bring it into compliance with the
    permit condition, then it cannot say that the condition imposes
    any hardship upon it.
    It is Rule 403 which causes the hardship,
    not the permit condition.
    Still assuming that Rule 403 requires the permit condition,
    IPC may petition the Board for a variance from Rule 403.
    Under
    Rule 914 of Chapter
    3 the Board can order modification of the
    iTPDES permit as a result of a variance.
    In a variance proceeding
    the cost of compliance may be alleged as arbitrary or unreasonable
    hardship.
    Section
    35
    of
    the
    Act
    authorizes
    the
    Board
    to
    award
    variances
    while
    Section
    39
    authorizes
    the
    Agency
    to
    issue
    permits.
    If
    the
    Agency were to consider the cost or difficulty of compliance in
    deciding whether to incorporate a permit condition required by
    Board regulations, then it would be usurping the authority dele-
    gated the Board under Section 35.
    The permit would be
    a type of
    variance from the Board regulation.
    MISCELLANEOUS CONDITIONS
    With respect to the redundant oil and grease reporting re-
    quirements, the Agency has responded to IPC’s motion by offering
    to
    delete
    the
    redundancy.
    The Board authorizes the Agency to do
    so
    on
    remand.
    With
    respect
    to
    Standard
    Condition
    No.
    27,
    the
    Board
    intended
    to
    endorse
    the
    Agency’s
    suggested modification in
    the
    language,
    which appears to adequately protect IPC.
    The permit conditions
    relate to exercise of the Agency’s
    authority to impose
    effluent limitations pursuant to Rule 910(a) (6)
    of Chapter
    3.
    If
    this authority is exercised,
    it will be by way of permit modifica-
    tion.
    IPC may challenge that authority by way of appeal of the
    modified permit.
    The Board does not perceive any additional pro-
    tection afforded by IPC’s surplusage.
    The Board’s Opinion and Order of October 2,
    1980 is modified
    as noted above.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    40—133

    —6—
    I,
    Christan
    L.
    Moffett,
    Clerk
    of
    the
    Illinois
    Pollution
    Control Board, hereby certify that the above Order was adopted
    on the
    j~
    ~
    day of
    j•.,.
    ,
    1980 by a vote of
    ~-‘-~
    ~
    Christan L. Moff~tt,Cle
    Illinois
    Pollution
    Control
    Board
    40—134

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