ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
November
6, 1975
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
)
Complainant,
v.
)
PCB 75—126
)
COLLINS IMPROVEMENT COMPANY, INC.,
an Illinois corporation, LAVERNE
COLLINS, d/b/a/ CONCRETE CASTING
COMPANY, and LAVERNE COLLINS,
an individual,
Respondents.
Ms. Joan C.
Wing, Assistant Attorney General, appeared for the
Complainant;
Mr. Laverne Collins, Pro se, appeared for the Respondents.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr.
Zeitlin):
The Environmental Protection Agency,
(Agency),
filed the
original Complaint
in this matter on March 21,
1975.
The
Agency subsequently filed an Amended Complaint on April
1, 1975,
charging Respondents individually and jointly with the operation
of a solid waste management site in Winnebago County, Illinois,
without the required operating permits from the Agency during
the period July 27, 1974 to April
1,
1975.
The Amended Complaint
charges violations
of Sections 21(b) and 21(e)
of the Environmental
Protection Act and Rule 202(b) (1)
of Chapter
7: Solid Waste,
of the Pollution Control Board,
(Board), Rules and Regulations.
Ill. Rev.
Stat.
CII 111—1/2,
§ 1021(b) (1973); PCB Regs.,
CII 7,
Rule 202(b) (1).
A hearing was held in Rockton,
Illinois, on
July 14,
1975.
All Respondents were represented at that hearing
by Mr. Laverne Collins.
There is no doubt that no solid waste management site
operating permit was issued for the site in question.
In fact,
Mr. Collins admitted at one point that he decided not to apply
for an operating permit because of the expense involved,
(R.
57),
buttressing Agency evidence on that point.
Instead, Respondents’
rather disorganized Pro
se defense on this Complaint concentrated
on the following issues:
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1.
The site in question is not a landfill,
(H.
5).
2.
Part of the site in question is owned
and operated by individuals other than Respondents
here,
(R. 45).
3.
Respondents here should not be held
liable for activities generally carried on in
the area,
(R.
39,
46)
None of these defenses
is valid.
First, the record is
replete with admissions that the site was operated as a landfill,
(H.
39, 46).
Second, cross-examination by the Agency clearly
showed that,
regardless of the activities of others on adjacent
properties,
the site for which violation is charged in the
Complaint
is owned and operated by one or more of the Respondents
here,
(R.
48-50).
Third,
Respondents claim as
a defense that
others are performing essentially the same activities as are
charged in the Instant Complaint is wholly without merit;
the
activities of others provide no excuse for any violations by
Respondents.
In addition, Mr. Collins claimed at the hearing that he
was,
“filling a hole...it was not a landfill.”
(H.
40).
Apparently, because of that conclusion and Mr.
Collins’
additional
conclusion that he was just using “clean fill,”
(e.g.,
R.
54),
he
felt that the site in question was not in violation.
We also find this defense to be wholly without merit.
It is
apparent that Mr. Collins closed the site in question, at least
partially as
a result of his failure to obtain a solid waste
management site operating permit,
(e.g.,
H.
42,
37,
45).
He
at that time apparently felt that the Permit requirement applied
to this
site.
At some time in 1974, however,
Mr. Collins
“.
looked across the river at this Jerges property and their dumping.
They are building there with the same material.
.
.
I figured
why should
I
stop.
.
.
.
So
I just told the corporation to go
back and dump more foundry dirt in there.”
(R.
46; see also
H.
36,
38).
There is,
in summary, no question here as to whether
a
violation of the operating permit requirement occurred here.
Respondent clearly operated a solid waste management site, and,
without the required permits.
Nor do the factors in Section 33(c)
of the Act affect our
determination that
a violation occurred here.
The operation of
a solid waste management site without the necessary permits
presents a serious challenge to the permit system, which the
Board has instituted to protect against environmental damage.
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See, EPA v.
Watts Trucking, PCB 74-131
(September
29,
1975,
-~
Opinion at
9).
The social and economic value of a properly
run solid waste management site cannot be questioned here,
but without the necessary operating permits
it becomes impossible
to weigh that value against the possibility of significant
environmental harm.
Nor, do Respondents’ contentions as to
the “clean” nature of the fill used at this site affect our
judgement
in this regard.
Although Mr. Collins claimed that
the Agency stated his site was suitable for “dry fill,” no
evidence of such
a statement by the Agency was entered at the
hearing.
Regardless of the site’s general suitability, no
site can be adjudged suitable as a solid waste management site
unless the conditions of the permit system have been met, as a
guarantee of said suitability.
Nor
is priority of location
an issue here;
there is no question that Respondent Collins
reopened the subject site without a permit after the July 27,
1974 date on which the permit requirement became applicable
for existing solid waste management sites.
As regards the economic reasonableness and technical
practicability of compliance with Board regulations, we
again feel that Respondents’ failure
to obtain an operating
permit is unexcused.
Respondent Collins did, in 1973,
submit
an application for an operating permit to the Agency; that
application was rejected because Mr. Collins used an obsolete
form.
After inquiring with consulting engineers,
Mr. Collins
decided not to reapply for an operating permit,
for economic
reasons,
CR.
57). Mr.
Collins apparently felt that three to
four thousand dollars was more than an operating permit was
worth, for a site with a “couple of years” remaining useful
life,
(H.
59).
Applying the same factors under Section
33(c)
of the
Act to the imposition of
a penalty, we find that a penalty
of three thousand dollars
($3,000.00)
is reasonable for the
deliberate,
blatant and unexcused violations we find here.
Respondent’s failure to obtain an operating permit was
irresponsible, and his deliberate operation of the 100 acre
site without such a Permit constitutes unacceptable conduct
in flagrant violation of the Environmental Protection Act and
this Board’s rules.
In mitigation,
Respondent seems to claim that he used
“clean fill” on this site.
It
is within the purview of this
Board’s technical expertise that we may, and do, reject
Respondents’ contention as to the “clean fill” quality of
foundry sand without further evidence.
Foundry sand,
after
use,
can contain significant quantities of various chemicals
used in foundry processes.
Unfortunately, the Agency failed
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to explore the actual nature of the foundry sand being
accepted at Respondents’ landfill, or the possibilities of
resulting leachate,
etc., which would have had considerable
bearing on the issues of aggravation or mitigation.
We are
left only with Respondents’ admittedly deliberate violation
of the permit requirement.
After repeated warnings and
inspection visits from the Agency,
Respondent, as of the
date of hearing in this matter, had still failed to file
a new
permit application.
For that reason we shall,
in addition
to a $3,000.00 penalty, order Petitioner to cease and desist
all operations on the subject site, unless a solid waste
management site operating permit has been applied for within
90 days of the date of our Order here,
and received within
180 days thereafter.
We take this action as a result of
Respondents’ admission,
(R.42,
54),
that the site is still
in operation.
We also feel that the record here supports the imposition
of our orders, regarding both the penalty and the cease and
desist requirement, against both Mr. Collins,
individually,
and Collins Improvement Company,
Inc., an Illinois corporation.
Mr. Collins individually directs all landfill operations on
the site, representing both himself and the corporation.
The corporate form cannot,
in this instance, shield Mr.
Collins from individual liability,
(See H. 41—42,
48—49).
The record contains no indication,
however, that Mr. Collins,
d/b/a Concrete Casting Company, has any interest in the
site.
The Board has previously stated that a violation of
Rule 202 (b) (1)
of the Solid Waste Regulations will not support
a finding of violation of Section 21(b) of the Act; e.g.,
EPA v.
E
&
E Hauling, PCB 74-473
(March
26,
1975); EPA v.
Robinson,
PCB 74-391
(April
4,
1975): EPA v. Wauconda Sand and Gravel Co.,
PCB 74-415
(Aug.
14,
1975).
No violation of Section 21(b)
of
the Act has been shown here;
that portion of the Complaint alleging
open dumping must be dismissed.
This Opinion constitutes the findings of fact and conclusions
of law of the Board in this matter.
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ORDER
1.
IT
IS THE ORDER OF THE POLLUTION CONTROL BOP~RD
that Laverne Collins, an individual, and Collins Improvement
Company,
Inc., are found to have operated a solid waste
management site in Winnebago County, Illinois, from July 27,
1974,
to April
1,
1975, without the required operating
permits from the Environmental Protection Agency,
in violation
of Section 21(e)
of the Environmental Protection Act and
Rule 202(b) (1)
of Chapter
7: Solid Waste,
of the Pollution
Control Board Rules and Regulations.
2.
Respondents Laverne Collins,
an individual,
and
Collins Improvement Company,
Inc.,
shall, within
30 days of
the date of this Order,
jointly or severally, pay as
a
penalty for the above violations the sum of three thousand
dollars
($3,000.00), payment to be made by certified check
or money order to:
Environmental Protection Agency
Manager, Fiscal Services
2200 Churchill Road
Springfield, Illinois
62706
3.
Respondents Laverne Collins, an individual,
and
Collins Improvement Company,
Inc.,
shall cease and desist all
solid waste management operations or disposal operations on the
subject
site.
Unless all appropriate permits have been applied
for and received within 180 days of the date of this Order,
Respondents
shall close such site in a manner consistent with
all applicable Board Regulations.
4.
That portion of the Amended Complaint in this
matter alleging violation of Section
21(b)
of the Environmental
Protection Act is dismissed.
I,
Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, herqby certify the above Opinion and Order were
adopted
on the
4’~
day of
~
1975, by a vote of
Christan L. Moffe
erk
Illinois Pollutio
ntrol Board
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