ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    April
    8,
    1976
    INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY,
    Petitioner,
    V.
    )
    PCB 73—211
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
    -
    and
    -
    CITIZENS FOR A BETTER ENVIRONMENT,
    Complainant,
    v.
    )
    PCB 74—318
    INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY,
    Respondent.
    Mr. Alan
    I. Becker, Kirkland
    & Ellis, appeared for Petitioner.
    Mr.
    Roger
    C.
    Zehntner, Appeared for Respondent.
    OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (by Mr. Goodman):
    This matter comes before the Board upon Petition of International
    Harvester Company
    (Harvester)
    in PCB 73-211 appealing the Illinois
    Environmental Protection Agency
    (Agency) denial of their operating
    permit application for coke ovens at Harvester’s Wisconsin Steel
    facility.
    PCB 74-318 was consolidated, herewith,
    by the Board Order
    of November 13,
    1975.
    In PCB 74-318,
    Petitioner
    is charged with
    operating a pollution source without an operating permit issued by
    the Agency in violation of Rule 103(b)
    of the Air Pollution Control
    Regulations of the State
    of Illinois.
    The issue to be determined
    in this case
    is whether the Agency
    rightfully denied Petitioner
    a permit to operate their coke ovens
    at Wisconsin Steel.
    The resolution of that issue will be determi-
    native of the issue
    in PCB 74-318,
    i.e., whether Harvester has been
    21—1

    —2—
    operating its coke ovens without a permit.
    A hearing was held in
    this matter on October 14,
    1975,
    following which a number of briefs
    were filed by both parties, the last being filed with the Board
    on
    January 26,
    1976.
    An open waiver of Harvester’s right to
    a decision
    within
    90 days pursuant to Section 40 of the Environmental Protection
    Act was filed by Harvester on August
    9,
    1974,
    The Permit Appeal, PCB 73-211, was filed by Harvester on May
    21,
    1973.
    At that time Harvester requested the Board to defer consider-
    ation of the permit appeal until after the proceedings
    in
    a pending
    variance case,
    PCB 73-176, were concluded.
    The Board, on May 24,
    1973,
    granted this motion to defer consideration and subsequently granted
    the variance on July
    26,
    1973.
    Nothing in
    the variance Opinion and
    Order referred to a variance from the Permit Rules
    or required
    Harvester to obtain a permit.
    On August
    4,
    1975, Harvester moved to amend
    its Notice of
    Appeal incorporating the variance petition and supporting testimony
    of PCB 73-176.
    In an Order of August 28,
    1975,
    the Board
    in grant-
    ing Harvester’s motion to amend their petition stated:
    “The question
    of whether a permit should have been forth coming
    (sic)
    after the
    grant of a variance
    in International Harvester Company v. Environ-
    mental Protection Agency,
    PCB 73—176 of July
    26,
    1973,
    is not at issue
    in this case.”
    What
    is at issue in this case
    is whether Harvester is entitled
    to an operating permit for their coke ovens based upon their original
    application for a permit together with the variance granted by this
    Board in PCB 73—176.
    Harvester argues that during negotiations with
    the Agency concerning the permit application and the variance pro-
    ceeding,
    it was their understanding that,
    should the Board grant the
    variance,
    the Agency would thereafter issue an operating permit.
    This, Harvester claims,
    is the basis for the voluntary dismissal of
    an appeal they were prosecuting concerning the air regulations.
    The
    Agency, on the other hand,
    argues that
    it was incumbent upon Harvester
    to reapply for an operating permit subsequent to the issue of the
    variance by the Board
    in PCB 73-176.
    There can be no question that this situation
    is the progeny of
    a very heavily burdened permit procedure which existed back
    in 1972.
    There
    is also no question that this case is stale.
    The Board, after
    full consideration of the three year old permit denial and the more
    recent arguments by the parties concerning that denial,
    finds that
    the Agency did not err
    in their denial of a operating permit for the
    coke ovens.
    This
    is based upon the fact that Harvester’s permit appli-
    cation did not contain a proposed compliance plan.
    In mitigation, the
    Board finds that there was some basis for Harvester’s belief that their
    21—2

    —3—
    procedure, whereby they sought to cure the defect
    in their permit
    application through a variance proceeding,
    was reasonable.
    The Board
    must,
    nevertheless, find that Harvester’s reliance on its novel pro-
    cedure was misplaced and that the permit denial was correct.
    Having upheld the permit denial,
    it
    is an inescapable conclusion
    that Harvester has been operating their coke ovens at Wisconsin with-
    out an operating permit issued by the Agency.
    Harvester,
    therefore,
    has indeed operated in violation of Section 103(b)
    of the Air Regu-
    lations as
    alleged by Citizens For A Better Environment
    in PCB 74-318.
    Considering the confusion inherent
    in the permit procedure
    in l972-
    1973,
    the Board finds that a penalty would he unjustified
    and none
    will be assessed.
    This Opinion constitutes the finding of fact and conclusions
    of
    law of the Board
    in this matter.
    ORDEP
    It is the Order of the Pollution Control Board that:
    1.
    The operating permit denial appeal by International
    Harvester Company in PCB 73-211 be, and
    is hereby,
    denied.
    2.
    International Harvester shall apply for and receive an
    operating permit for their coke ovens at Wisconsin Steel
    Division within 120 days from the date of this Order.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    I, Christan L.
    Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
    Control Board, hereby c~rtify the above Opinion and Order
    were adopted on the
    8’
    ~‘
    day of
    ,
    1976 by a vote
    of
    ~
    21
    —3

    Back to top