ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    June
    18,
    1976
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
    )
    Complainant,
    v.
    )
    PCB 75—353
    )
    EDWARD H.
    WEIDE,
    )
    Respondent.
    Mr. Steven Watts, Assistant Attorney General, appeared on behalf
    of Complainant
    Mr. Paul Perona, Perona and Perona, appeared on behalf of
    Respondent.
    OPINION
    AND
    ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (by Mr. Goodman):
    This matter comes before the Pollution Control Board
    (Board)
    upon the September
    9,
    1975 Complaint of the Environmental Protection
    Agency
    (Agency)
    charging that Mr. Edward H. Weide
    (Weide) violated
    Rule
    203(a)
    of the Water Regulations and Section 12(a)
    of the
    Environmental Protection Act
    (Act)
    on or about August
    9,
    1974.
    Weide
    is accused of causing or allowing the discharge of corn silage wastes
    into an unnamed tributary of Big Sandy Creek resulting in unnatural
    sludge or bottom deposits,
    odor, unnatural color,
    and a fish kill.
    Respondent is also charged with violation of Water Rules
    203(f)
    (causing said stream’s ammonia nitrogen level to exceed acceptable
    levels)
    and 203(d)
    (causing said stream’s dissolved oxygen to be
    less than 5.0 mg/i).
    Mr. Michael Conlin testified that he was called to investigate
    a fish kill in August,
    1974.
    Mr. Conlin traced the upper
    limit of
    the fish kill to the entrance of an unnamed tributary to Big Sandy
    Creek
    (R.l5-16).
    The fish kill covered 2.6 miles.
    The water being
    cloudy, dirty,
    and milky,
    and having a putrid odor
    (R.16).
    Mr.
    Conlin followed the unnamed tributary by sight and smell
    to
    white turbid water on Weide’s pasture
    (R.17).
    He found the banks
    to be saturated with waste material
    (R.l7).
    Mr. Conlin spoke
    to
    Weide, who admitted placing corn silage at that spot two days be-
    fore
    (R.l8).
    22—123

    —2—
    Mr. Conlin set up three sampling areas each consisting of 150
    feet,
    in
    light, moderate and heavy kill areas respectively
    (R.30-31)
    Mr.
    Conliri then counted the fish in these areas and projected a
    fish
    kill of approximately 25,000
    fish
    (R.15 Comp.
    Ex.
    1).
    Mr. Conlin
    testified that corn silage has a high BOD which could result in oxy-
    gen depletion thereby suffocating fish (R.23).
    Mr. Weide testified that on August
    9,
    1974, he cleaned his silo
    putting the waste in a manure spreader.
    Using the manure spreader,
    Weide placed the siiage in the ditch to help stop erosion;
    no water
    was seen in the ditch at that time.
    Mr. Weide neither cultivated
    under the silage nor seeded on top.
    A total of
    6
    to
    8
    cubic
    yards
    of silage was deposited, having a fairly high moisture content.
    The
    silage was placed on top of soil and concrete foundations which had
    been placed previously to control erosion
    (R.58-68,
    129).
    Mr.
    William Tucker testified that high organic material, such
    as corn silage, will cause oxygen depletion and could cause an in-
    stantaneous fish kill
    (R.81—86).
    In addition, he testified that
    the stream could recover in
    as little as
    1
    1/2 days
    (R.109).
    He
    measured the dissolved oxygen
    (DO)
    to be 9.3
    +
    10.3 ppm upstream
    and downstream from the discharge.
    At the point of discharge the
    DO was 0.6 ppm
    (Comp.
    Ex.
    4, R.121).
    On the 10th of August
    .60 inches of rain fell
    (Camp.
    Ex.
    3).
    Mr. Weide testified that usually the ditch has water in the spring
    or after a hard rain
    (R.62).
    He estimated that 2 to
    2
    1/2 inches of
    rain fell two days after he spread the silage
    (R.128).
    Mr.
    Jim Frank,
    an Agency Agricultural Advisor, testified that
    the best way to spread silage
    is with a manure spreader but that
    nc
    silage should be spread closer than two to three hundred yards from
    any stream
    (R.73).
    Although corn silage
    is an acceptable cover
    material,
    it should be used on dry land; without cultivation or seed-
    ing,
    it would have minimal effect on erosion
    (R.75).
    Mr. Weide testified that he is purchasing the 647 acre farm
    one mile south of Magnolia, Marshall County,
    Illinois.
    In 1974,
    40
    acres were planted in beans,
    230 in corn,
    20-25
    in alfalfa.
    Three
    hundred acres were in pasture land
    (R.57).
    The area is rolling
    pasture with some timber
    (R.58).
    Mr. Weide also testified that the
    placement area was
    three hundred to four hundred feet from the
    flow-
    ing portion of the unnamed tributary
    (R.127).
    No information was
    22—124

    —3—
    presented to the Board concerning the Respondent’s financial condi-
    tion.
    We must presume that Respondent could have placed the silage
    in an area farther from the stream at little or no additional
    cost.
    Complainant’s Exhibit
    4 shows violation of Rules 203(d)
    and
    203(f)
    as alleged in the Complaint.
    The Board also finds that
    Respondent has violated Rule 203(a) of the Water Regulations and
    Section 12(a)
    of the Act.
    Complainant asks that a penalty be assessed on the basis
    of
    the cost of replacing the fish killed.
    The Agency estimates that
    25,002 fish were killed having a value of $4,354.76 (Complainant
    Ex.
    1).
    The Board finds that the sampling method utilizing 450 feet
    as against
    2 1/2 miles leaves an excessive margin for error.
    In
    consideration thereof,
    the Board finds that an assessment of
    $2600.00 is appropriate.
    This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact and con-
    clusions of law in this matter.
    ORDER
    It is
    the Order of the Pollution Control Board that:
    1.
    Weide is found to have violated Rule
    203(a),
    (d)
    and
    (f)
    of the Water Regulations and Section
    12(a)
    of the
    Act.
    2.
    Weide shall pay,
    as
    a reasonable value of the
    fish
    killed through said violations,
    $2600.00 by certified
    check or money order payable to the Game and Fish Fund,
    State of Illinois, 2200 Churchill Road, Springfield,
    Illinois
    62706 within thirty-five days of the date of
    this Order.
    3.
    Weide shall cease and desist from depositing corn
    silage wastes in such a way as to contaminate the un-
    named tributary to Big Sandy Creek.
    Mr.
    Young abstained.
    22— 125

    —4—
    I, Christan L.
    Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board,
    hereby certif
    the above Opinion and Order were adopted on the
    ___________day of
    ,
    1976 by a vote of
    ~
    Christan L. Moffett,
    k
    Illinois Pollution
    ol Board
    22—126

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