ILLINOIS
    POLLUTION CONTROL
    BOARD
    February
    5,
    1981
    CATERPILLAR
    TRACTOR CO.,
    )
    Petitioner,
    v.
    )
    PCB 80-3
    tJT1LLNOIS
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
    )
    AGENCY,
    Respondent.
    MR.
    RICHARD
    J. KISSEL, MARTIN,
    CRAIG,
    CHESTER
    &
    SONNENSCLTEJT’T,
    APPEARED ON BEHALF OF PETITIONER;
    MR.
    STEPHEN
    GROSSMARK,
    ASSISTANT
    ATTORNEY GENERAL,
    APPEARED ON
    REHALF OF RESPONDENT.
    OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (by
    I.
    Goodman):
    On January
    3,
    1980 Caterpillar Tractor Co.
    filed an appeal of
    the NPDES permit no.
    IL 0001732 issued by the Illinois Environiacn~l.
    Protection Agency (Agency)
    on December
    4,
    1979
    for Caterpillar~~
    Joliet manufacturing facility, the effluent of which discharqc~
    into the DesPlaines River after treatment with chemicals,
    an air
    floatation unit,
    an activated sludge treatment unit, aeration ba-
    sins and clarifiers.
    The application was made on December 28,
    1979,
    Of ten issues originally presented to the Board,
    the Agency
    has agreed to modify the permit regarding eight of these
    (Tr,
    2-9).
    The two remaining issues for the Board~sconsideration are as
    follows:
    1.
    Is
    there adequate authority for the Agency to include,
    as
    Par.
    six of Attachment
    B,
    the following condition?
    6.
    Facil~y_Process
    Evaluat
    ion
    Accompanying the reapplication for permit,
    the permittee
    shall submit to the Illinois EPA and USEPA an evaluation of
    all plant processes with regard to known or potential toxic
    pollutants* which may have been or are being discharged
    to
    the receiving water.
    40—397

    The process evaluation should consider the potential
    for
    discharge of pollutants by reviewing the raw materials,
    solvents, catalysts,
    modifiers,
    stabilizers,
    preservat.ic7e~,
    cleaning agents,
    intermediates,
    products, possible
    unintentional by-products,
    and other potentially toxic
    chemicals present at the plant.
    Following this evaluation,
    if a reasonable possibility is shown to exist for discharie
    of
    a toxic or potentially toxic pollutant in other than
    trace amounts,
    its presence or absence should he confirmed
    by wastewater sampling.
    Samples
    for analysis shall
    he
    composites taken so as to be representative of
    the
    d~sch~j:~ce
    which would occur during an operating day for
    the
    procc:i~s
    sampled.
    Insofar as is possible,
    samples shall
    be taken
    prior to dilution with cooling water or mixing with other
    process wastewaters.
    The analytical techniques shall he
    those specified
    in 40 CFR 136 or chosen from published
    methods with prior approval of USEPA.
    The final
    report containing the detailed results of the
    process evaluation,
    including measured or estimated amounts
    of any toxic pollutants
    found,
    shall be submitted no later
    than 180 days prior to the exoiration of this permit.
    *Toxic pollutants are defined in Section 502(13)
    of the
    Clean Water Act (PL 95—217).
    Note that the term “toxic
    pollutant”
    is not limited
    to the list designated under
    Section 307 of the Clean Water
    Act, nor to the 129 Priority
    Pollutants
    or any other
    list.
    The toxic substances of
    concern in the waste of this particular facility depend upon
    the raw materials, products, and processes employed at this
    facility.
    2.
    Was the Agency in error
    to have excluded the following
    language, contained
    in Caterplllarvs last,
    (JSEPA—issued permit?
    The permittee shall not, during the period of this permit,
    be authorized to discharge pollutants other than those
    specified in Part
    I herein,
    unless the concentrati:ns of
    those pollutants do not exceed the standards or limitations
    of the Illinois Pollution Control Board’s Water Pollution
    Regulations,
    Chapter
    3,
    in force on the date of any
    particular discharge of said pollutants;
    provided,
    however,
    that the concentrations of these pollutants shall not exceed
    any standard or limitation promulgated by the United States
    Environmental Protection Agency under Section 307(a) of the
    Federal Water Pollution Control
    Act,
    PL 92—500.
    At any time
    after compliance monitoring by the United States Environmental
    Protection Agency, the permittee on written request of the
    United States Environmental Protection Agency may demonstrate
    that any pollutant not specified in Part
    I herein is
    in com-
    pliance with the effluent limitations of this paragraph.
    40—:398

    Section 39(h)
    of the Act sets forth the powers oE the Agency
    in issuing permits:
    “All ~9PDESpermits
    shall contain those
    terms
    and conditions
    ...
    which may be required to accomplish the purposes
    and provisions of this Act,”
    ...
    “and may include, among
    such con-
    ditions, effluent limitations and other requirements estahlts~ied
    under this
    Act, Board regulations, the Federal Water Pollution
    Control Act Amendments of
    1972
    Clean
    Water Act
    and regulations
    pursuant thereto.”
    The Board’s role in deciding permit appeal
    matters
    is to either uphold or overrule the Agency’s decision
    as
    to the conditions
    in issue.
    The Facility Process Review condition prescribes activity
    which is to be performed
    in the event Caterpillar applies
    for its
    next permit.
    Its terms are not linked to the period of the instant
    permit.
    The Agency argues that it imposed this condition pursu~n(;
    to
    it.s authority under §39 of the Act and certain of the Board’s
    Water Pollution Control Rules
    and Regulations
    (Chapter 3),
    The
    motivation
    for inclusion was the indication in Caterpillar’s appli-
    cation
    (at p.
    11—0,
    Item 16)
    of the presence of toxic pollutants
    listed pursuant to §307(a)
    of the Clean Water Act (algicides;
    chlorinated organic compounds/methyl chloride and methyl chloroforo;
    chlorinated cutting oils; “pesticides,
    see algaecides
    (sic)”;
    and
    chronium)
    (Tr.
    92—4,111).
    The question before the Board therefore is whether the permit
    condition may be required to accomplish the purposes and provtsLon~
    of the Act.*
    The Board finds the condition to be required to
    accomplish the following purposes of the Act:
    1.
    to assure that adverse environmental effects are fully
    considered and borne by those who cause them (~2(h)of the Act);
    2.
    to
    assure
    that
    no
    contaminants
    are
    discharged into the
    waters
    of the state without being made
    subject to conditions
    required in order to achieve compliance with state and federal
    law (~l1(b)of the Act);
    and
    3.
    to assure that the Board’s regulations are not
    construed to limit,
    affect,
    impair or diminish the authority,
    duties and responsibilities of the Agency to control pollution,
    to protect and enhance the quality of the environment,
    and to
    achieve all other purposes of the Act (~11(c) of the Act).
    There
    is no evidence in the
    record
    that
    Caterpillar
    knew
    oE
    the presence in its effluent of toxics other than
    those
    it
    reporLe~.
    *In Peabod~Coal Co.
    v.
    IEPA,
    PCB 79—296,
    May
    1, 1980, the
    Board referred to permit conditions such as the facility process
    evaluation here at issue as “discretionary,” and those conditions
    specifically required to be included pursuant to federal or state
    regulations
    as “mandatory.”
    As use of these terms has caused
    considerable confusion,
    the Board will no longer employ them
    in
    its analysis of whether appealed permit conditions are required
    to
    accomplish the purposes of the Act.
    40—39 9

    —4—
    The Agency maintains that the presence of some toxics indicates
    the
    possible presence of others
    (ft. 92—4).
    To impose the require-
    ment on Caterpillar to evaluate the potential of all of its plant
    processes for discharges of known and potential toxic pollutants
    which either are presently or may have been discharged to the
    receiving water (and to sample when they are present in other than
    trace amounts) will assure that the adverse environmental
    impact
    of those toxic discharges are
    borne
    by Caterpillar, and not the
    public, by assuring
    that
    Caterpillar considers them.
    Caterpillar is the best source for information regarding the
    presence of toxics and the degree of their presence in its discharges.
    (ft.
    115).
    To force the Agency to inspect
    and
    monitor these toxics
    not only would increase the burden upon that agency but would not
    place responsibility for considering the adverse environmental
    effects of the discharges on the one causing then.
    A toxic sub-
    stance present in a discharge but not identified or
    quantified
    is
    still
    in
    fact
    a
    substance
    which
    an
    NPDES
    permit
    must
    regulate;
    when
    it
    is
    suspected
    to
    be
    present
    but
    is not
    quantified
    it
    is
    reasonable for the Agency to regulate it
    with
    monitoring
    and
    sampling requirements as
    permit
    conditions.
    Moreover, the condition allows a construction of the Board’s
    regulations in a way which does
    not impair
    the Agency’s duties and
    authority under the
    Act
    to protect and enhance the quality of the
    waters of the state.
    As Caterpillar is the best source for inform-
    ation on its
    own
    toxic discharges, the Agency should not be prohth-
    ited
    from applying its monitoring authority to the evaluation of
    processes in order to have a discharger consider the existence arid
    potential existence of toxic substances.
    Under the Board’s regula-
    tions, the Agency must require monitoring.
    Under the condition at
    issue the Agency requires a specific kind of monitoring.
    This
    monitoring is not prohibited by either the Act or the Board’s regu-
    lations and it enables the Agency to fulfill its duties to protect
    and enhance the quality of waters of the state.
    However, the Board finds that the condition relates to what is
    required when Caperpillar, if ever, reapplies for an NPDES permit.
    The Agency lacks authority under the Act to expand the requirenents
    of an application for an NPDES permit which are set forth in thapter
    3, Rule 902.
    The Agency’s decision to include this provision is
    therefore reversed.
    As to the second issue presented by this appeal, the
    noninclusion of a condition which the USEPA had included in
    Caterpillar’s prior NPDES permit, the Agency is not bound either
    to include the substance of prior conditions or to word any
    condition in a specific way.
    The Board upholds the Agency’s
    exclusion of the condition Caterpillar had requested.
    There
    is no evidence
    that
    the wording of this condition is required
    to accomplish the purposes of the Act, the Board’s regulations
    or the Clean Water Act.
    The permit proceeding is remanded to the Agency for issuance
    of a permit consistent with this Opinion.
    40—400

    —~—
    This Opinion constitutes
    the findings of fact and the
    conclusions of law of the Board in this matter.
    ORDER
    It is the Order of the Illinois Pollution
    Control Board
    that
    the Agency’s
    inclusion of paragraph six of Attachment
    13 in the
    t’PDES permit No. IL 0001732 issued on December
    4,
    1979
    to
    Caterpillar Tractor Co.
    is reversed.
    The permit is remanded to
    the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency for further action
    consistent with the Opinion herein.
    IT
    IS SO ORDERED.
    I, ~hristan
    L.
    Moffett,
    Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
    Control
    Board, hereby certify that the above Opinion and Order
    were adopted on the
    ~
    day of
    /.
    ~
    ~
    1980 by a vote of
    Christan
    L.
    Moffetk~.Clerk
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    40—401

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