ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
November 22, 1974
MR. AND MRS.
OWEN
BULLS
v.
)
PCB74—305
ENVIRONNENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
~by.
Mr.
Dumelle):
Petition for variance from
a sewer connection ban in
Waukegan was filed August 19, 1974. The petitioners allege
that their rental unit at 1636 Ferry Street is unfit for
human habitation.
They want to build a home on property which
they own at 2803 Blanchard Road also in Waukegan.
No public
hearing was held in this case.
The Board on August 29,
1974 entered an order requesting
information as to the location of the sewer to which the
Bulls wish to connect and additional facts as to economic
hardship.
The
information
requested
was
supplied
on
September
19,
1974.
The family numbers five. The rental paid is
$170 per
month. The gross income of the wage earner, Mr. Bulls,
is
about $14,100 annually or more. The present residence is
alleged to be unfit for habitation. The major deficiencies
appear to be unsafe wiring and leaky plunthinq.
On October
30,
1974 a letter from the City of Waukegan Building Department was
submitted
by
the petitioners and orders the immediate vacating
of the Bulls’ residence because of “a dangerous situtation
to
life safety, health, and welfare of the tenant.”
The sewer to which the proposed new residence would connect,
eventually connects to the Judge Avenue sewer which has inadequate
capacity to transport wastes. The City of Waukegan states that the
corrective work has been designed but will cost in excess of
$4,000,000. The City seems to place the start of construction as
being
from
two
to
three
years
away.
The
Agency
recommendation
was
received
on
October
21,
1974.
It
recommends
a
grant
of
the
variance
and
likens
the
case
to
Mc Adams
V.
Environmental Protection Agency, PCB71-113.
In
Mc Adams, the family income was under $6,000 per year and federal
mortgage
assistance
as
at
stake.
Those circumstances are not present in this case.
The family
income
is
more
than
twice
as
great
and
no
mention
is
made
of
federal mortgage assistance being involved. The Agency states that
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507
—2—
the petitioners have investigated only two other apartments.
Sufficient collateral
is held by the Bulls to secure a
construction loan.
Since no showing is made of any type of residence
restriction to a certain location, we feel that a greater
effort to secure an apartment is warranted.
Petitioners
might
find something available in North Chicago or Lake
Bluff or elsewhere in the area. And a greater rent might
have to be paid, even if it
means dipping into the collateral
they have built up for a home purchase.
The alternative in this case is to put more sewage into
an overloaded sewer which the Agency states
“During periods of wet weather
this sewer
(Judge Avenue)
is
subject to excessive flows from
storm water runoff. This runoff
results in the by—passing of un-
treated waste into Yeoman Creek
and further results in the flood-
ing of basements of homes in this
area.”
Basement flooding, where sanitary wastes are involved,
brings with it the danger of hepatitis,
polio, dysentery,
and other waterborne diseases.
Since the sewer corrective
work is so far into the future
(perhaps four years
to
completion, assuming Federal grant funds are made available)
it seems best to deny the variance without prejudice.
If the
suits
against the President’s impoundment of grant funds are
successful, then the timetable may be speeded up in Waukegan.
The alternative of constructing a hoiding tank,
as has
been done in
a dozen cases in Rockford, where sewers are
similarly overloaded, ought to be considered by the Petitioners.
More effort in seeking alternative apartments ought be put
forth by the Petitioners.
ORDER
The petition for variance is denied without prejudice.
IT IS
SO ORDERED.
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify that the above Opinion and Order was
adapted
on
the,~~day ~
,
1974, by a vote of
14—508