ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
June
18, 1976
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Complainant,
v.
)
PCB 75—452
VILLAGE OF MONTROSE,
Respondent.
Mr. George
W. Tinkham, Assistant Attorney General, Attorney
for Complainant
Mr. Harlan Heller,
Attorney for Respondent
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr.
Young):
This matter comes before the Board on the Complaint filed
by the Environmental Protection Agency on December 1, 1975
charging that the Village of Montrose operated a solid waste
management site from July 27,
1974 to the date of the filing
of the Complaint without an operating permit in violation of
Rule 202(b) (1)
of Chapter
7:
Solid Waste Rules and Regulations
and in further violation of Section 21(e)
of the Environmental
Protection Act.
Hearing was held in Montrose on March 31,
1976.
As a result of the pleadings in this matter the facts are
not in dispute since the Village has admitted operating a solid
waste management site for the benefit of its 350 citizens without
a permit.
The record indicates that the Village immediately closed
the site upon being served with the Complaint in this matter.
The Board finds that the Village operated its solid waste
management site without the requisite operating permit in violation
of the Regulations and the Act and will assess
a penalty of $100.00
for these violations.
The Board will also require the Village to
discontinue refuse operations and to properly close the site.
It was undisputed that the site was operated in general
com-
pliance with the Regulations, except for the permit requirement.
While the Village alleges that the permit violation is a mere
technical violation, the Board does not agree.
In order to obtain
a permit, an operator must submit relevant geological and hydro-
logical information to the Agency.
Only with this information can
the Agency determine whether the site is properly located so that
environmental damage will be avoided.
This analysis is fundamental
22—143
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to the permit process and if an operator runs a landfill without
having this analysis performed, he exposes the environment
to
uncertain hazards.
This the Board will not allow.
The Village
also alleges that it cannot afford to expend the $4000—5000 re-
quired for the engineering services necessary to complete the
permit application.
If the Village wishes to provide its
citizens
with a proprietary service,
it must be willing to bear the costs
of doing business.
One of the necessary expenses of the landfill
business is the cost of the engineering report to ensure that the
site is properly located environmentally, and if the Village wishes
to provide
in this proprietary service,
it must be willing to bear
this associated cost.
This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact and con-
clusions of law in this matter.
ORDER
1.
Respondent, Village of Montrose,
is found to have operated
its refuse disposal site without the required permit in violation
of Rule 202(b) (1)
of the Board’s Solid Waste Rules and Regulations
and in further violation of Section 21(e)
of the Environmental
Protection Act and shall pay a penalty of $100.00 for such vio—
lations.
Penalty payment by certified check or money order payable
to the State of Illinois shall be made within
35 days of the date
of this Order to:
Fiscal Services Division, Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency,
2200 Churchill Road, Springfield, Illinois,
62706.
2.
Respondent shall discontinue all refuse disposal activities
at the site and properly close the site unless application for an
operating permit is made to the Agency within 30 days of the date
of this Order and such permit is obtained within 120 days of the
date of this Order.
IT
IS
SO
ORDERED.
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, here~ycertify the
bove Opinion and Order were
adopted on the
“
day of
,
1976 by
a
vote of
_______
Illinois Polluti
Board
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