ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
March 16,
1978
VILLAGE OF CARY,
Petitioner,
v.
PCB 77—339
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY,
Respondent.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr. Dumelle):
Petitioner has requested a variance from the Drinking
Water Standard fo~:::~a~iinn. The Petition claims hardship
based upon an aileqed
lack of medical data to support the
Board’s present standard of 1.0 mg/i.
Costs of compliance
of $650,000 capital and $40,000 annual operating expense
are quoted with no facts
to show these costs to be excessive.
Petitioner feels that more environmental damage from softened
water would
result: from compliance than non—compliance.
The
Agency’s RecommendaHon supports the Petition and recommends
a variance until January
1,
1981.
This 22—month period
would allow the Agency to collect more data on the actual
levels of barium
in Petitioner’s water supply and would provide
time
to wait for a change
in Board and Federal drinking water
standards.
The Board has addressed the barium standard in its
recent decision in
City
of Crystal Lake v. EPA, PCB 77-332
(February
16,
1978)
The Board stated in that case that
variances
from
Board
si:andards
must
be
condi
Lionod
upon
ultimate
compliance
unless
anti
trary
or
unreasonable
hardship
can
be
shown.
In
this ease,
compliance
is
technically
feasible
and there
is no demonstration of any disastrous economic
effects.
The Agency itself states that the additional expense
would not be “overly burdensome”
for the Petitioner.
The Federally-sponsored study on effects of barium in
drinking water is not yet available and consequently
is not in this record.
It seems best to the Board to proceed
slowly in matters involving public health.
29
—383
It should
be
noted that
the
Board cannot grant relief
from the
Federal
Standard which
is
also 1.0 mg/i.
That
standard
became
effective
on June
24,
1977.
Section 1415
(a)
(1)
(A)
of
the
safe drinking water act provides that a
state may grant temporary relief only after the Administrator
of USEPA delegates primary enforcement responsibility under
Section 1413 of that Acts
No delegation of that authority
has occurred to
dateS
Thus, because no compliance plan
is
given and no hardship
proven
and
because
material
on
medical effects
is lacking,
the
Board
must
deny
the
variance.
This
Opinion
constitutes
the
Board’s findings of Fact
and Conclusions of Law in this matter.
ORDER
It is the Order of
the
Pollution Control Board that
Petitioner’s request for a variance from the drinking water
standard for barium be
denied.
I, Christan
L.
Moffett,
Clerk of the
Illinois Pollution
Control Board,
hereby
‘ertify the above 0 inion and Order
were adopted~on
the
J~~day
of
___________,
1978 by
avoteof
~
Christan L. Moffé~~Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board
29
—
384