ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
October 14, 1976
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Complainant,
v.
)
PCB 75—285
SAMUEL BINGHAM COMPANY,
a Delaware corporation,
Respondent.
Mr.
Larry
B.
Blackwood, Assistant Attorney General, appeared
£or Complainant
Mr.
Harvey M.
Sheldon,
(Plunkett, Nisen, Elliott
& Meyer)
appeared for Respondent
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by
Mr.
Young):
This matter comes before the Board on the Amended Complaint
filed
October
10, 1975 by the Environmental Protection Agency
charging that Respondent Samuel Bingham Company operated from
June
1,
1973 until the date of the filing of the Amended Complaint
its Blanket and Roll Preparation Departments
without
operating
permits in violation of Rule 103(b) (2)
of Chapter
2:
Air Pollution
Control Regulations and in further violation of Section
9(b)
of
the Environmental Protection Act.
Hear~~gs were
held
in
this
matter on November 26,
1975 and
March30,
1976.
At the close
of
Complainant’s case in chief Respondent
filed a Motion to Dismiss
which Motion the Board ruled on February
11,
1976 would be taken
with the case.
That Motion is hereby denied.
rphe
Sdmue
1.
B~nqham
Company
IH~rIUt~ic~
I
nr e~-~
r~iIIer
c~overod
rollers, polyurethane covered ro.lers,
qelatine
Covered
rollers
and
1
i Lhoqraph~c
blankets.
These
prodiic
L5
~I
re
Used
pr
i
inn r i l~y
in the printing industry, but are also used in steel mills,
tex-
tile mills, and general industrial uses wherever
a rubber coated
roller might be useful such as conveyor belts.
In the Roller Preparation Department steel cores are prepared
by either salvaging the steel case from a used roller or starting
with
a new shaft and shot blasting either to clean and provide a
proper surface for adhesions.
If a used roller
is used, the old
rubber is removed by a process described by Respondent
as burning
24
—
7
off and/or stripping mechanically.
(Comp.
Exh.
#1,
p.
7.)
Re-
spondent then continues
in its description of the operation by
stating that smoke from the induction burn—off station is captured
by
a wet scrubber.
It is this induction heating machine and the
emissions produced thereby with which Count II of the Complaint
is concerned.
On July
12, 1973,
Respondent filed an application with the
Agency for an operating permit for
its
Roll Preparation Depart-
ment.
The Agency notified Respondent that the Agency considered
the application inadequate because it
did
not contain a flow
diagram,
an Episode Action Plan,
the
process
weight rate for the
induction burn—off furnace
(induction heating machine)
,
or actual
test data or calculation supporting emissions from the scrubber.
(Comp. Exh.
#2,)
On January 28,
1974 the Respondent again resubmitted its
application for the Roll Preparation Department with the informa-
tion which Respondent believed had been requested by the Agency.
The Agency notified Respondent in a letter dated February 25,
1974,
that this application was likewise considered inadequate because
the Agency still desired actual test
data
or calculation showing
that the scrubber efficiency
is
93 percent
at
.1 micron particle
size.
Just~ificationfor the alleged inlet grain loading to the
scrubber was also requested.
Respondent~sVice President in charge
of the permit application and the officer
to
whose attention
the
letter was sent testified that he was unaware of the existence of
this letter prior
to the filing of the Complaint
in this matter
(R.
160).
It was never established
at the
hearing whose signature
appeared on the postal receipt.
(Comp.
Exh,
#3.)
No further correspondence regard
this permit occurred
between the parties until February
27,
~975 when the Agency in-
formed Respondent
in an Official Legal Notice that no operating
permit was in existence.
Respondent was informed that unless
satisfactory action was taken in response to the Notice,
the
Agency would immediately institute enforcement proceedings.
(Resp.
Exh.
#14.)
After receipt of the Official Leqni
Notice
oC
F’ebruary 27,
1975,
Respondent’s Plant Engineer,
contacted Complainant’s
Chicago Regional Manager and was advised that certain information
requested by the Agency necessary to the processing of the permit
application had not been received and that the Official Legal
Notice had been issued as a result thereof.
In reply
to the
Notice, which requested response within 14 days, Respondent’s
Plant Engineer on March
5, 1975 by letter
(Resp.
Exh.
#5) advised
the Agency that two of the three items
of information allegedly
missing had been in fact submitted to the Agency by certified mail
on January
28,
1974, over a year before the Notice and that the
third item would be submitted after Respondent had received a
visit from an Agency field engineer who was to determine the cx—
24
—
8
—3—
tent of certain test data the Agency required.
An internal
memorandum of the Agency dated 4/11/75
(Resp.
Exh.
#3)
acknowledges
that the material had been furnished as requested and that Respon-
dent should be asked to request the reopening of his prior permit
applications.
No such request was made of the Respondent;
the
record indicates no further correspondence by the Agency or any
notification
to Respondent that Respondent was required to request
that the permit application be reopened before the Agency would
take action to consider the permit application
information sub-
mitted to them over a year previously.
Without notifying Respondent that any of its actions were
considered to he unsatisfactory, the Agency filed this enforcement
action on July
24,
1975.
After the filing of this action Respondent
continued its attempts
to supply the Agency the requested informa-
tion and provide the Agency with an understanding of the Roll
Preparation operation.
It should be noted that no additional pollu-
tion control equipment was required and that the operation is carried
on today under an Agency permit in the same manner as when the
application was
first submitted.
On the basis of these facts the Board finds
that Respondent
operated its Roll Preparation Department without the required
operating permit
in violation of Rule 103(b) (2)
and Section 9(b)
of the Act.
The Board rejects Respondent’s argument that the
permit was issued by operation of law on the theory that the
Agency had all necessary information before
it in February 1974
and therefore the application should not have been found to be
inadequate at that time.
The Board believes that the Agency
letter of February 25,
1974 did ask for information and supporting
data different from and in addition to t~hatalready supplied to
the Agency in January of 1974.
While~~~~
Ls certainly true that
the application
(Comp. Exh.
#1,
p.
30a)
does provide
a calculation
purporting to provide the emission rate,
this calculation is
based on the premise that the scrubber is 92—93
efficient.
The
Board believes the Agency was correct
in requesting Respondent
to support this alleged efficiency by test data and the February
25,
1 ()74
letter war; intended
to ncconp
1
I s1~
t
~) I
U
qna
I
rfl1e
md
~
oF
a violaLion
doeS
no L
rv
u
i.
re the
t;
a
pCfldI Ly
be assessed in every case,
however, and the I3oard believes that
to be the case with this particular permit violation.
With the sole
exception of the February 25, 1974 Agency letter,
the Board finds
that Respondent consistently responded
to all Agency inquiries and
letters.
Respondent’s failure to reply to the February 25,
1974
letter is inconsistent with its otherwise prompt responses
to all
other Agency correspondence, and for this reason the Board accepts
Respondent’s contention that the letter was never seen by responsi-
ble officers in the employ of Respondent.
It has not gone unnoticed
24
—
9
—4—
that the original permit application was misleading in its descrip-
tion of the induction heating process and the Board believes that
any lack of understanding that existed at the Agency was primarily
the result of the description of the process
as furnished by the
Respondent.
Thus, while Respondent certainly was not without fault
in regards
to the entire permitting process, Respondent nonetheless
exhibited a willingness
to cooperate with the Agency and did so
consistently throughout this period.
Respondent continued to co-
operate with the Agency after the Official Legal Notice of February
27,
1975, and there is no evidence in the record supporting an
opposite finding.
In consideration of the foregoing, the Board does not be-
lieve that any environmental goal would be furthered by the assess-
ment of a penalty on Count
I of this case.
Count II of the Complaint is concerned with the Blanket De-
partment wherein a layer of cloth has a rubber coating applied
with subsequent vulcanizing in a steam autoclave.
Toluene was
used during the time frame of the Complaint
to pretreat the rubber
stocks and was the reason for the permit difficulty in this depart-
ment.
The application for an operating
permit
for this department
was not obtained in July of 1973 because Respondent was unable to
show compliance with Rule 205(f)
of the Air Rules.
On December
20,
1973, Respondent filed a Petition br Variance with the Board
seeking relief from the application of Rule 205(f),
(PCB 75—556).
In their Recommendation in this matter, the Agency recommended the
grant of the variance and stated that
“all
of Petitioner’s appli-
cable permits appear to be in order,”
(Ai.
Rec,
PCB 75-556,)
This
variance was granted by the Board and
ovember of
1974,
Respondent
sought an extension thereof.
On Febru~t
l4~,1975,
the Board
granted Respondent the requested variance extension conditioned on
the fact that Respondent was to obtain all necessary construction
and operating permits.
(PCB 74—426,
15 PCB 507.)
Respondent’s
officers testified that this condition was construed by them to
mean
the t
pe rm
I t;s would
be
r(UU
I red
t
I
a hyd
roce
rbori
recovery system
was installed
(R.
172,
182,
183)
,
and that they were unaware that
this
cond~
t
ion
was intended
Lo
appi y
Lo
L 110
need
for
dtl
operating
permit for the Blanket Department.
Simply stated, Respondent be-
lieved it did not need an operating permit for the Blanket Depart-~
ment while operating the department under the terms
of
a variance
granted by the Board.
While Respondent’s belief
is
in error, the Board does not be-
lieve any purpose would be served by assessing
a penalty
for this
permit violation which the Board finds herein.
With the exception
of the general admonition in the Board Order
in the variance ex-
tension, there
is no evidence
in the record that Respondent was
24
—
10
—5—
informed of the need for the operating permit after the variance
was granted.
While the Board finds a violation existed, the
Board does not find a penalty appropriate.
The Board does not
perceive any reason why Respondent would file two successive
variance petitions and yet not apply for an operating permit ex-
cept to conclude, and the record supports this conclusion,
that
Respondent believed the variance grant eliminated
the need for
the permit.
This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact and con-
clusions of law in this matter.
ORDER
Respondent,
Samue.
Bingham
Company,
is
found to have operated
its Roll Preparation and Blanket Departments
in violation of Opera-
ting Permit Requirements of Rule 103(b) (2)
of the Air Rules and
hence
in further violation of Section 9(b)
of the Act.
Respondent
now has operating permits
for these departments and shall operate
these departments
in accordance with all permit conditions.
IT
IS SO ORDERED.
I, Christan
L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Con-
trol Board
hereby certify t e above Opinion and Order were adopted
on the
/‘~“
day of
‘~
,
1976 by a vote of
_____
Christan
L. Moffett~~erk
Illinois Pollution ~tro1
Board
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11