ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
June
26,
 1975
VILLAGE OF ARGENTA
Petitioner,
v.
 )
 PCB 75—182
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
INTERIM OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
 (by Mr.
 Dumelie):
Petition for variance
 from Rule 203(c),
 402 and 404(f)
of the Water
Pollution Regulations was filed with the Board
on April
 30,
 1975.
 The Recommendation of the Environmental
Protection Agency was filed on June
 3,
 1975.
 No public
hearing was held.
The Village of Argenta is a community of 1,034
 in Macon
County near Decatur.
 It evidently has no existing sewer
system and sewage plant at the present time.
 A project to
provide sewers for the Village and a contact stabilization
sewage treatment plant has now been designed and a Federal
qrant offer of 75
 is pending.
The proposed sewage treatment plant is to be located
east of Argenta and will discharge to Friends Creek which in
turn flows to the Sangamon River.
 The Sangamon is dammed at
Decatur to form Lake Decatur.
 This discharge would thus
flow into Lake Decatur.
Effluent limits for the proposed plant are 10 mg/i BOD5
and 12 mg/i suspended solids under the upfeffer Exemptiont’
procedure,
 Construction
 is anticipated to begin about
October
 1,
 1975 with completion and operation of the sewage
plant on October
 1,
 1976.
The variance requested is from the phosphorus requirement
of Rule 203(c) which limits phosphorus
 to 0.05 mg/i in any
stream at the point where it enters any reservoir or lake.
The petitioner’s hardship is an economic one.
 If the Board
does not grant the variance, phosphorus removal
 (even to 1.0
mg/i)
 is
 said to cost each family an additional $7.10 per
month
 (from $12.30 to
 $19.40).
17—435
—2—
The Petitioner makes the conclusory statement that an
aiternate form of sewage treatment
 (land irrigation) which
would not require phosphorus
 removal would be too costly.
An annual equivalent cost of
$38r624
 is given for the land
treatment alternative but no separate costs are given for
the recommended contact stabilization plant and thus no
comparison
 is possible.
The future contribution of Argenta in terms of phosphorus
(without removal at the plant)
 is estimate at 6.7 lbs. per
day by the Petitioners
 Data are given from the Illinois
State Water Survey showing phosphorus loadings
 in the Sangamon
 River at a point 2-1/2 miles north of Oakley as 3,380 lbs.
per day.
 No map is provided in this record so we are not
sure
 that this is a pertinent measurement.
The Petition1,
 then, standing by itself,
 is not adequate
to
 fully judge the variance.
 Fiscal data are missing, and
no statement
 is given as to the existence or
 lack of existence
of an algae bloom problem on Lake Decatur.
 The entire
purpose of Rule 203(c)
 is to prevent eutrophication of lakes
and reservoirs.
We turn next to the Agency Recommendation for guidance..
It
reveals that the grant offer to Argenta was made
by
the
Agency on
April
 1,
 1975
 .in the amount of $1,291,400 for the
entire project, including both
the
 sewer collection system
and
 the
 treatment
 plant.
 A
 separate
 itemized
 cost
 for
 the
sewage
 plant
 alone
 is
 again
 not
 c~iven
and
 we
 still
 cannot
make
 the
 fiscal
 comparison
 with
 the
 land
 treatment
 alternate
discussed above.
The Agency discusses an alternate not mentioned by the
 Petitioner’s consulting engineer;
 namely, diversion of the
effluent
 to
 an intermittent stream tributary to the Sangamon
River below Lake Decatur.
 The Agency concludes that pumping
the effluent for five
 miles
 11would be prohibitive’~but again
no costs are
 given,
 We have ~o conclude that meaningful
examination of
 this
 alternate,
 absent a cost estimate,
 is
not
 possible.
The Agency recommends a grant of the variance citing
the future pendency of a regulation change and the impending
Federal grant.
 We cannot grant variances merely because the
Agency may propose a regulatory change.
 A regulatory change
must
 itself
 stand
 the
 test
 of
 public hearings and the statutory
conditions
 for a regulation.
 We
 agree that it is important
—3—
that Federal funds not be lapsed and that this tiny village
at long last should have installed a public sewer system.
The argument that the Argenta phosphorus
 is
 a small amount
of the total now going to Lake Decatur is important but not
persuasive.
 Perhaps there are many Argentas upstream.
 We
 do not know on this record,
 And, more ~importantly, we do
not know the algae condition now existing at Lake Decatur,
We would like to make an expedited decision in this
 case.
We
 find
 the
 record
 presently
 inadequate
 upon
 which
 to
 make
 a
reasoned judgment and remand
 it
 to
 the parties for a prompt
response.
 If prompt response is made
 we
 will decide this
cause on July
 10 or July
 11,
 1975.
ORDER
The parties
 shall, by July 10, respond and provide to
the Board,
 in suitable form,
 the following information:
1.
 A statement as to the extent,
 if any,
 of an algae
bloom problem on Lake Decatur,
2.
 A statement as to the existence of taste or odors
in the public water supplies originating from Lake Decatur
due to algae.
3,
 A separation of the cost estimates
 for the proposed
sewage treatment plant from the overall project on
 a basis
similar to the figures given for phosphorus removal.
 In
addition,
 a breakdown of the monthly charges shall be given
as to the sewage plant alternatives standing alone from the
sewer collection system.
IT IS SO ORDERED,
I, Christan
 L, Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, hereby certify the above Interim
 Opinion and
Order were adopted on the ~t.p~’ day of June,
 1975 by a vote of
C
ristan L. Moffett, C
Illinois Pollution Con
 Board
17 —437