ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    July l0~ 1975
    CITY OF WOODSTOCK, a municipal
    corporation,
    Petitioner,
    vs.
    )
    PCB 74—210
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
    Respondent.
    MICHAEL CALDWELL, Attorney for Petitioner
    KURT ADAMSON, Attorney for Respondent
    OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD (by Mr. Henss):
    Woodsteck initially requested variance from Sections 22(a)
    and 22(d) of the Environmental Protection Act and from certain
    conditions of its sanitary landfill permit #1972—68 in order to
    operate its landfill for a period of three years without a
    leachate collection and monitoring system. The leachate col-
    lection system had been required in a permit issued to Woodstock
    by the EPA.
    The City of Woodstock failed to appeal the permit conditions
    pursuant to Section 40 of the Environmental Protection Act and
    Rule 206(b) of the Solid Waste Regulations but instead chose to
    seek variance.
    As this case progressed through Variance Petition, Amended
    Petition for Variance, the Agency’s Answer and Recommendation,
    Second Amended Petition for Variance, the Agency’s Amended
    Recommendation, Petitioner’s Reply to Amended Answer and Recom-
    mendation, the Agency’s Modification to Amended Recommendation
    and Petitioner’s Reply to Modification to Amended Recommendation,
    the precise type and extent of relief sought was considerably
    altered. Woodstock now requests variance from its permit
    conditions so that the landfill can be closed without installation
    of a leachate collection system.
    The landfill which was the subject of the permit and this
    variance proceeding is no longer being operated. By agreement of
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    —2—
    the parties the sole issue to be resolved by the Board is
    whether in this variance proceeding, the Board can and/or
    should require that all refuse collected in Woodstock,
    pursuant to the current waste disposal contract between the
    City and an independent waste disposal service, be disposed
    of at a site which holds a valid operating perrait from the
    Agency. We will briefly state the history of this proceeding
    prior to deciding that issue,
    The Stipulation of Facts shows that Petitioner received
    a permit from the Agency
    on October 27, 1972 to operate its
    46 acre solid waste management site, This permit was con-
    ditioned upon the installation of a leachate collection and
    monitoring system designed to protect the waters of Kishwaukee
    Creek.
    Leachate discharges into Kishwaukee Creek originate in
    areas of the landfill which have been under cover for a con-
    siderable period of time. Samples taken and analyzed by the
    Agency indicate that the water quality standards applicable
    to Kishwaukee Creek are not now being violated as a result of
    leachate discharges from this landfill. The Agency anticipated
    that leachate might cause a water quality problem at some time
    in the future.
    After receipt of the permit, Petitioner contracted for a
    study which would evaluate the capacity of the Woodstock sanitary
    landfill. This study concluded that the estimated life of the
    landfill did not exceed five years. The estimated cost of the
    leachate control system for the portion of the landfill already
    filled
    at the
    time of the evaluation report was $60,000. This
    cost. is now estimated to be in the neighborhood of $100,000.
    The leachate control
    system was not installed. Instead,
    upon recommendation of its City Manager, the City of
    Woodstock
    solicited bids from collectors and scavengers for the collection
    and disposal of residential solid waste. On December 17, 1974
    Petitioner entered into a franchise with the McHenry-Woodstock
    Disposal Company for the disposal of residential waste. On
    that same date the City of Woodstock voted to close its solid
    waste management facility effective January 1, 1975.
    Operation of the Woodstock landfill ceased on January 1,
    1975. No dumping has occurred at the landfill since that date.
    Studies by the Illinois State
    Geological Survey show that a
    ground water mound has formed beneath the landfill site. This
    mound acts to cut off the flow of other ground water through
    the site and into Kishwaukee Creek. The parties agree that final
    cover and contouring of this site will substantially reduce the
    present levels of infiltration creating the leachate discharges
    and will act to improve the water quality of Kishwaukee Creek.
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    —3—
    The Agency recommends the grant of variance excusing
    Woodstock from installation of the leachate control system.
    The Agency, however, recommends that certain conditions be
    imposed on this variance.
    The only condition opposed by
    Petitioner is
    the requirement:
    “that all waste collected from
    residences within
    the City
    of Woodstock, pursuant to contract or
    contracts entered into by the City of Woods tock
    under a bid advertised and received by the Wood-
    stock City Council on November 19, 1974, shall
    be disposed of only at a site or sites which
    have received an Environmental Protection Agency
    refuse disposal permit from the Division of Land
    Pollution Control or sites which had been granted
    a variance from said permit requirement by the
    Illinois Pollution Control Board.’’
    Petitioner argues that this Board has no authority to
    impose the condition suggested by the Agency; that the con-
    dition is not contemplated by the Regulations and bears no
    reasonable relation to the requested variance. Woodstock
    further contends that responsibility for enforcement of the
    law regarding permits rests with the Agency and objects
    most strongly to the Agency’s attempt to shift that enforce-
    rnent responsibility to the City. Petitioner claims that,
    under Owens
    v.
    Green (400 111.380), such a course would con-
    stitute an unwarranted delegation of legislative authority.
    The Agency argues that the Board has authority to impose
    the condition under Section 36(a) of the Environmental
    Protection
    Act which
    provides:
    “In granting a
    variance the Board may impose such
    conditions as the policies of this Act may require.”
    The Agency further states that it is a statutory policy to prevent
    the pollution or misuse of land and to prevent any refuse
    collection or refuse disposal without an EPA permit.
    We are not told whether the landfill
    which now
    receives
    the residential waste does in fact have a permit issued by the
    Illinois Environmental Protection Agency. We are not told
    whether the refuse collector has a permit or if that permit
    provides for the disposal of refuse at Agency penititted disposal
    sites. It seems to us that this particular variance proceeding
    is not a very good vehicle for determining the legality of the
    current disposal operations in Woodstock.
    ~8—6

    —4—
    The substance of the variance request is that Woodstock
    be authorized to close its landfill without installation
    of
    a leachate control system which had been included as a con-
    dition of its operating permit.
    The parties are in agreement
    that this can be done without damage to the environment.
    We
    have no difficulty at all in allowing that variance.
    The Agency’s attempt to impose an additional enforcement
    burden on the City is not properly a part of this proceeding.
    If the
    Woodstock residential waste is taken to a landfill,
    then that landfill must be permitted by the
    Environmental Pro—
    tection Agency whether such language is included in the
    franchise or not and regardless of the intent of the City.
    If a permit has not been granted then the EPA can quite easily
    file an enforcement action before this Board. Any duties which
    the Agency has with regard to such investigation
    and enforcement
    proceeding cannot be delegated away.
    Section 4(e) of the Act provides that:
    “The Agency shall have the duty to investigate
    violations of this Act or of Regulations adopted
    thereunder, or of permits or terms or conditions
    thereof, to prepare and present enforcement cases
    before the Board and to take such summary
    enforcement action as is provided for by Section
    34 of this Act.~
    it is clear that all landfill sites in Illinois must submit
    to the permit procedure.
    The current dispute is no more than
    ~
    argument over which party shall move forward to enforce the
    ~aw.
    The law authorizes enforcement actions to be filed by a
    municipality but
    we will not require the municipality to do so,
    at
    least not within the context
    of this current variance proceeding.
    ~e cannot infer that the
    City of Woodstock has deliberately entered
    into a
    franchise providing for the disposal of waste at a non—
    permitted site.
    Such a provision would not be effective.
    The
    law is to be enforced, and when the issue is properly presented
    to us we absolutely require that a permit be obtained for operation
    of a landfill.
    In this case, the franchise agreement does contain the
    following language:
    “The contractor agrees to comply at all times with
    the proper laws and ordinances of the City of
    Woodstock, the County of McHenry and the Rules and
    Regulations of the State of Illinois at any time
    applicable to the operation of the contractor under
    this franchise.”
    18
    —7

    —5--
    We conclude
    that the City of Woodstock has acted reasonably
    in complying with the requirements of the law.
    This Opinion constitutes the findings of fact and
    conclusions of law of the Illinois Pollution Control Board.
    ORDER
    It is the Order of
    the
    Pollution Control Board that:
    1.
    Variance is granted during the closing of the
    Woodstock landfill site from the conditions of Permit
    *1972—68, issued by the Environmental Protection Agency
    to the City of Woodstock, pertaining to installation
    and operation of a leachate discharge and monitoring
    system at the Woodstock landfill, and said conditions
    are hereby declared inoperative.
    2. City of Woodstock shall cause its
    landfill site
    to be properly
    closed in conformance with the Illinois
    Solid Waste
    Regulations within 60 days of the date of
    this Order.
    3. City of Woodstock shall not reopen its sanitary
    landfill site for disposal of refuse without having
    first secured all required permits from the Environ-
    mental Protection Agency.
    4. The City of Woodstock shall take quarterly
    samples of the Kishwaukee Creek at three locations to
    be
    determined by the Agency. The samples taken at
    these
    locations shall be analyzed for total dissolved
    solids, chlorides and total iron. Reports of the
    analyses for the above samples shall be submitted to
    the Agency on or before the 15th day of January, April
    July and October for a period of three years from the
    date of this Order. The first report shall be due
    October 15, 1975.
    I,
    Christen L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, hereby certify the a ove Opinion and Order was ad ted
    the ____________day of~
    ,
    1975 by a vote of
    -~
    Illinois Polluti
    :ontrol Board
    18—8

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