ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
December 19, 1974
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF SPRINGFIELD
)
Trustee of Trust No. 3010
)
v.
)
PCB 74—298
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
Mr. Robert S. Cohen, appeared on behalf of Petitioner;
Mr. Henry J. Handzel, Jr., and Mr. Delbert Haschemeyer,
appeared on behalf of the Environmental Protection Agency.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD (by Mr. Dumelle):
On August 12, 1974, petitioner filed a variance petition
seeking relief from an Environmental Protection Agency
(Agency) sewer ban on connections to the Springfield Sanitary
District sewers. The Agency filed an objection on August
15, 1974. On September 10, 1974, the Agency filed a Recommendation
to deny the requested variance. Four days of hearings were
held during October, 1974 in Springfield. Both parties
submitted briefs in this matter.
Petitioner seeks a variance from the ban on further
sanitary sewer extensions in the southwestern area of the
City of Springfield, which was imposed by the Agency pursuant
to Rule 21(a) of Chapter 3: Water Pollution Regulations of
the Illinois Pollution Control Board (Water Pollution Regulations).
If the requested relief was granted, petitioner would be
able to obtain an operating permit which would allow petitioner
to connect the four apartment units it has constructed to
the Springfield Sanitary District sewers. Petitioner seeks
the variance for four apartment buildings known as the
Westbrook Phase II, located in the Pinebrook Subdivision,
southwestern portion of Springfield. Petitioner serves as
trustee under an Illinois land trust. The beneficial
interest in this trust is held by Mr. Roy Lambert and Mr.
David Eades. Mr. Lambert was the contractor and managing
beneficiary (R. 25).
Westbrook Phase II is the second phase of a two-phase
apartment complex. Phase I consisted of 144 apartment
units, a swimming pool and a laundromat. Phase II consists
of 76 apartment units contained in four buildings. Three
buildings each house 24 2-bedroom apartments. The fourth
building houses 4 1-bedroom apartments. Phase I was the
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subject of a previous Board Order (First National Bank
of Sprin9field v. EPA, PCB 72-301, 5 PCB 649 (October 10,
1972)) (hereaf~tercited as PCB 72-301). In this earlier
variance proceeding, the Board granted petitioner a variance
to allow the connection of Phase I. Phase I had been constructed
at the time the Board entered its Order. The Board dismissed
that portion of the original petition with respect to Phase II,
the remaining 76 units for which construction had not
begun. These 76 units are the subject of the present
variance petition. When fully rented, Phase II will generate
approximately 22,400 gallons per day (gpd) of sanitary
wastes (R. 15).
The chronology of events which have occurred proceeding
the filing of this petition is relevant in light of petitioner’s
claim that it should be granted a variance based upon reliance.
On March 1, 1972, petitioner purchased the land in question
with the intention of developing it into multi-family dwellings.
Construction on Phase I was begun on March 1, 1972. On July
12, 1972 the Agency imposed a two-fold sewer ban on the
southwest portion of the City of Springfield (Petitioner
Exhibit 3). The sewer ban was imposed for two reasons: 1)
because of inadequate treatment plant capacity and 2) because
of repeated overflows and basement backups in the Outer Park
Drive area of Springfield. Construction of Phase I was
completed in the Fall of 1973 (R. 130). The Board granted
petitioner a variance for Phase I on October 10, 1972
(PCB 72—301).
The Agency issued a conditional installation permit on
December 21, 1972 (Petitioner Exhibit 6). During March
1973, petitioner began to acquire materials and labor and to
contract with subcontractors for construction of Phase II
(Page 9, Variance Petition). During March 1973, petitioner
obtained a permanent mortgage commitment and construction
loan CR. 61). Construction began on Phase II in March or
April of 1973 (R. 60 and Page 9, Variance Petition). By
October of 1973, petitioner had completed 60 of the construction
of Phase II (R. 65). In December of 1973, the Agency, the
Springfield Sanitary District, and numerous developers,
including Mr. Lanthert, held a meeting to discuss the issuance
of operating permits to holders of conditional installation
permits in return for construction of a pumping station by
the Springfield Sanitary District (R. 186). During April
and May of 1974, petitioner completed construction on Phase
II. On July 19, 1974, the Agency denied petitioner’s request
for an operating permit for Phase II (Petitioner Exhibit 9).
Petitioner bases its current variance request on two
grounds: reliance and hardship. Petitioner claims that
reading the totality of the circumstances leading up to the
present would lead a normal person to conclude that an
operating permit would be granted by the Agency once Phase
II was constructed (R. 49 and ill thru 115).
14—724
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As previously stated, petitioner proceeded to apply for
and obtain a conditional installation permit. The application
for this conditional installation permit is Respondent
Exhibit 3. The actual permit is found in Petitioner Exhibit
6. Petitioner presented testimony to demonstrate that it
acted in good faith, in reliance on representations on the
Agency and the Pollution Control Board in arriving at its
present situation, and thus cannot now be justifiably prevented
from obtaining a permit to enable the total rental of the
complex. Mr. Lambert testified that he had expected to be
issued a permit because the original recommendation of the
Agency in PCB 72-301 (Petitioner Exhibit 1)
,
Opinion and
Order of the Board, in PCB 72-301 (Petitioner Exhibit 4),
letter from Mr. William Pye to Mr. Paul Troemper (Petitioner
Exhibit 3), the Agency amended recommendation in PCB 72-301
(Petitioner Exhibit 2), and its application for a conditional
installation permit (Agency Exhibit 3) (R. 70 and 71). The
Board finds that reliance upon either the original or amended
Agency recommendation in the prior variance proceeding (PCB
72-301), could not warrant the granting of the requested
relief.
The original Agency recommendation was to grant a
variance for those units for which construction had begun
——
Phase I
--
and to deny the variance relief for the 76-apartment units
for which construction had not commenced
--
Phase II (Petitioner
Exhibit 1, page 3)
.
The amended recommendation was modified
based upon a representation by the Springfield Sanitary
District that it was engaging in a program, which if properly
implemented, would eliminate the overload on the Outer Park
Drive interceptor sewer (Petitioner Exhibit 2, page 4). The
Agency stated that “it was willing to issue conditional
installation permits for construction in the area tributary
to that sewer, with connections to be permitted when the
overload at the treatment plant is eliminated”. The Agency
further referred to the Pye letter of August 29, 1972 which
imposed the sewer ban (Petitioner’s Exhi~bit3). It is clear
that the Agency’s amended recommendation is based upon a
representation made to it by the Sanitary.District that the
sewer transport problems in the Outer Park Drive area, at
the time of the Agency’s recommendation, were partially
solved and would be further solved by the removal of a total
of 3.0 MGD of stormwater flow from the Outer Park Drive
sanitary sewer. Thus, the Agency’s recommendation was
changed based upon a representation from the District which
failed to materialize, namely that the Outer Park Drive
sewer transport problem would be solved. The Board finds
that the Agency is not estopped from recommending a denial
or the Board estopped from denying the requested relief
based upon either of the Agency’s original or amended
recommendation in PCB 72-301.
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Petitioner bases in part its reliance upon the Board’s
Opinion and Order in PCB 72-301. As previously stated, the
Board dismissed as moot a requested variance for Phase II.
“There is no evidence or allegation that connections will be
needed for the units not under construction (See R. 73)
,
and
no suggestion that such an installed only permit will be
insufficient to fulfill the petitioner’s needs as to those
units” (PCB 72-301). The Board, therefore rejected the
Agency’s recommendation and did not grant the then requested
relief for Phase II. The Board noted that the Agency was
willing to issue conditional installation permits and that
the petitioner did not warrant additional relief. Reliance
upon this previous Board order does not work an estoppel
upon the Board’s denying the present variance petition.
The reasonableness of the reliance upon the August 29,
1972 letter from Mr. William V. Pye, Manager, Division of
Water Pollution Control of the Agency, to Mr. A. Paul Troemper,
Executive Director, Springfield Sanitary District, (Petitioner
Exhibit 3) has been discussed in prior cases dealing with
the Agency’s imposed sewer ban in the Springfield area (See
Springfield Marine Bank v. EPA, PCB 74-117, 13 PCB 196,
(July 25, 1975)). Petitioner’s Exhibit 3 was sent directly
to the District not to petitioner, and therefore, petitioner
should have examined other correspondence and events proceeding
and following the issuance of the letter. This letter refers
to letters of August 11 and August 23, 1972 from the District, whic
outline the future steps to be taken by the District to
relieve the sewer overload problem. The August 29, 1972
letter did not lift the sewer ban but merely warned the
District that continued issuance of conditional installation
permits would depend on further progress in relieving the
overload problem in the Outer Park Drive area. Reliance
upon this letter alone does not warrant the granting of the
present requested relief.
The conditional installation sewer permit which was
issued to petitioner contains four conditions which are
relevent to the question of reliance upon either the conditional
installation sewer permit or Petition Exhibit 3. Condition
#2 states that hookup to the existing sewers shall not be
completed without an operating permit issued by the Agency
(Petitioner Exhibit 6). Condition #3 requires that installation
of new sewers stop 10 feet from existing sewers and that
connection shall not be made until a permit to operate the
proposed sewer is issued by the Agency (Petitioner Exhibit
6). Condition #3 also states that the conditional installation
permit is issued in reliance upon representations made in
Part I and Part II of the application for a conditional
permit. Condition #2 of Part II of the application states
that relevant parts of the sewer system must have the capacity
to adequately transport anticipated waste from the sewer
extension described in Part I (the sewers petitioner proposes
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to connect) (Agency Exhibit ~ The Sanitary District
signed Part II, therefore attesting adequate capacity.
However, there is testimony which shows that the sewers
continued to surcharge, sewer overflows existed and basement
backups existed during the time and subsequent to the time
that the conditional installation permit was issued. Special
Condition #4 of the conditional installation permit states
that “issuance of this permit must not be construed as
termination of the sanitary sewer extension restricted
status imposed by our letter of July 12, 1972, which remains
in effect” (Petitioner Exhibit 6).
Mr. Lambert testified that it was normal experience to
proceed in the face of a permit which says one may not use a
building until you have various inspectors come out and
inspect a building and issue an occupancy permit (R. 25).
He therefore stated that it was normal for a contractor or a
developer to receive construction permits with reliance on
the fact if they do what the construction permit allows them
to do properly that it is routine that they would receive a
use permit (R. 25). However, such is not the case with
conditional installation permits. As in previous cases
based with reliance upon similar conditional installation
permits issued by the Agency, the Board finds that reliance
upon such a permit is a calculated business decision with
potential adverse results.
The Board finds that the previously discussed events do
not alone or in total constitute a basis upon which sufficient
reliance could be made in this case in order to mandate the
granting of an operating permit by the Agency or the granting
of the requested variance to allow Phase ,II to be connected
to the existing sewer system. Petitioner Exhibit 7, a
letter from the Agency to the Sanitary District dated March 15,
1973, clearly establishes that the sewer ban was still in
effect and that the Agency was precluded from allowing the
operation of sewers installed tributary to the Outer Park
Drive area under a “conditional installation permit”. Mr.
Thompson, the building superintendent, testified that he did
not know of the existence of Petitioner Exhibit 7 in March
of 1973, and in fact first became aware of the letter in
October, 1973 (R. 63). He further testified that if he had
known of the existence of Petitioner Exhibit 7 on March 15,
1973, that he would have recommended to Mr. Lanthert that the
construction be stopped on Phase II because “it still would
have been possible to gotten out with very little damage”
(R. 180)
The Board finds that it is regrettable that the Agency
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did not send notice to all holders of conditional installation
permits of the existence of Petitioner Exhibit 7. However,
such notice is not mandatory. Mr. William Bush testified
that it was a standard practice to send such correspondence
to the particular service area (in this case, the Springfield
Sanitary District) of restrictions on sewer systems (R.
490). The Board finds that the conditional installation
permit which stated that the sewer ban was still in effect
should have given Petitioner sufficient notice that potential
problems existed in obtaining an operating permit. The
Board agrees with the Agency that a developer expending
large sums of money should be even more careful that the
average person in pursuing construction based only on a
conditional installation permit. Petitioner stated that it
had no contact with the Agency from the date it was issued a
conditional installation permit until October, 1973 (R. 146
and 147). Petitioner cannot base reliance upon one document
sent to the District without once seeking to determine if
contrary documents exist. Petitioner had several readily
available means of determining that adequate transport
capacity (including wet weather flows) existed so that the
Agency would be able to issue an operating permit. Petitioner
could have contacted the District or could have contacted
the Agency in this eleven month period. Reasonable care
would seem to have directed inquiry to the Agency in view of
the nature of the conditional installation permit, the
history of previous transport problems, special conditions
found in the conditional installation permit continuing the
sewer ban, and the amount of investment in the project.
Having determined that petitioner has failed to establish
sufficient reliance upon which the Board must grant the
requested relief, the Board must proceed to weigh the hardships
imposed upon petitioner versus the hardships that would be
imposed upon the public in the event that the requested
relief were granted. The hardship to petitioner is in the
form an economic loss to the two beneficiaries of the land
trust, Mr. Lambert and Mr. Eades. It is alleged that the
rental income from the partial occupancy of Phase II, together
with the profit from Phase I, is insufficient to meet the
expenses of Phase I and Phase II (Variance Petition, page
16 and Petitioner’s Brief, page 9). From examining the
record it appears that this monthly loss is in the approximate
amount of $4,800 (Petitioner Exhibit 16). The offsetting
income from Phase I is approximately $2,000 (Petitioner
Exhibit 16). Petitioner states that its total monthly loss,
including interest on equity borrowing and 1975 taxes would
be approximately $7,500) (Petitioner Exhibit 16). The Board finds
this to be a considerable economic loss. However, petitioner
presented no proof that either beneficiary of the land trust
would suffer irreparable financial loss which would result
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in bankruptcy. Petitioner alleges on page 9 of its Brief
that Petitioner will be subjected to bankruptcy if the loss
it is suffering is not curtailed. No testimony was presented
to indicate that the venture could not be sold to recover
any alleged loss of investments.
While the record is not abundantly clear on this point,
Mr. Lambert, one of the beneficiaries of the land trust is
the sole owner of M & L Construction Company, which was the
general contractor for Westbrook Phase II. Mr. Lambert
testified that the intent of the construction agreement was
for M
&
L Construction Company not to make a profit (R.
150). However, M & L Construction Company received substantial
payments for work done on Westbrook Phase II to cover overhead
and other expenses. Mr. Lainbert’s income statements for
1972 and 1973 show a substantial portion of his income was
derived from the endeavors of 11 & L Construction Company
(Agency Exhibits 4 & 5).
By October, 1973, Mr. Thompson testified that he had
become aware of a potential problem in obtaining an operating
permit through a newspaper article which appeared in the
Springfield paper (Petitioner Exhibit 12). By October, 60
to 65 of the construction had been completed (R. 66).
Petitioner proceeded with construction because the buildings
would have been very vulnerable to deterioration due to the
elements of weather (R. 65 and 67). Petitioner testified
that by December, 1973 construction was some 90 completed.
Petitioner testified that they had proceeded to complete the
project because they felt a permit would be issued. Petitioner
also testified that it felt an operating permit would be
forthcoming because of a proposed project by the Sanitary
District that would provide additional sewer capacity. The
Board finds that Petitioner, having once made a business
judgment to proceed with the construction based on a conditional
installation permit, instigated a series of steps to protect
the original investment, while hoping to eventually be
issued an operating permit for the project.
Petitioner bases, in part, its request for a variance
from the Agency imposed sewer ban upon a proposal by the
Springfield Sanitary District to construct a pumping station
at Fayette Avenue and Jacksonville Branch in Springfield (R.
204). The proposal would have the District pumping excess
storm flows from the 27—inch sanitary interceptor sewer serving
the southwestern portion of Springfield into a 84-inch storm
sewer. Mr. Gerald L. Peters, a district engineer for the
Springfield Sanitary District, stated that the purpose of
the proposed pumping station would be to reduce the hydraulic
head in the interceptor sewer, thereby providing additional
capacity in that interceptor sewer (R. 201 and 202). Representatives
from the District, the Agency, and various developers who
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held install-only permits held a meeting on December 12,
1973 (R. 203). The District proposed that
if it proceeded
to build the pumping station,
then the Agency should issue
operating permits for those developers who held install—only
permits (R. 204).
The record is not clear on the exact nature of the
agreement, if any, that was reached at this meeting. Mrs.
Barbara Sidler, an Agency enforcement attorney, testified
that she felt an agreement of sorts was reached, but when
she later tried to reduce that agreement to writing she was
unable to do so (R. 366). She stated that apparently there
was not either an agreement or there was a certain amount of
fogginess as to whether an agreement had in fact been reached
(R. 366). Mr. Thompson said that he felt that there was a
verbal agreement reached, subject to approval by the Agency and
development of a design for the pumping station (R. 380).
He further stated that he felt it was not a binding agreement
(R. 380). Mr. Loudermilk, an Agency engineer who was present
at the December meeting, stated that the District proposed
to install a lift station. If, after actual testing, the
pumping station accomplished what it was represented to do,
then the Agency would lift the restriction and grant operating
permits for those outstanding construct-only permits (R.
404). From these statements of people who were present at
the December meeting, the Board finds that the Agency issuance
of operating permits in return for the installation of a
pumping station was at least conditional upon a showing that
the pumping station would in fact provide additional capacity
in the southwest interceptor.
While Mr. Peters represented that the pumping station
would provide an additional 3.0 MGD of capacity, Agency
calculations show a maximum 2.2 MGD. Mr. Peters testifies
that groundwater would not significantly reduce this additional
capacity (R. 229). Mr. William Bush, Permit Section Manager,
Division of Water Pollution Control, Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency, testified that the pumping station could
provide some additional increase in the effective capacity
in the southwest interceptor (R. 496). However, Mr. Bush
testified that “there may be more water waiting to simply
rush into the sewer and use up that capacity which the pump
has freed” (R. 497). Based upon his experience with the
Outer Park Drive sewer problems, Mr. Bush states that
infiltration of groundwater could result in nearly using up
all the capacity that the pump would free up (R. 498). Mr.
Bush stated that 1.8 MGD was reportedly eliminated in
extraneous flow from the sewer out of a capacity of 5.6 NGD,
yet the sewer surcharge problem continued to exist .(R. 499).
Mr. Bush was unable to provide a professional opinion,
because of his experience in the Outer Park Drive flow
elimination problem, when asked if the pumping station could
14
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provide an additional 25,000 gallons per day of flow (R.
502). The Board agrees with the Agency that, in light of
the history of infiltration problems occurring in the Outer
Park Drive area, it is reasonable to obtain demonstrated
results prior to agreeing to issue operating permits.
It should be noted that during the times when the
District proposes to pump excess storm flows into the 84-
inch combined sewer that the combined sewer will be discharging
untreated combined sewage to Jacksonville Branch (R. 236 and
237). That is the additional flow added to the 84-inch
combined sewer by the pumping station will be bypassed
during wet weather at the overflow located at Washington
Street (R. 237). Mr. Peters further testified that the
proposed pumping station would not eliminate the overflow on
the upper Outer Park Drive sewer system but was designed to
eliminate any possibility of overflow on the southwest
interceptor (R. 256).
Mr. Peters testified that the preliminary plans for the
pumping station had been submitted to the Agency and that he
estimated that the pumping station would be operating approximately
seven months from the date of the hearing (R. 211)
In weighing the hardship imposed upon petitioner, the
Board must also look at the hardship imposed upon the public.
The parties agreed to a stipulation that outlined the public
hardship caused by the inadequate sewer trnasport capacity
of the southwest portion of Springfield (October 10, R. 13
through 17). This stipulation. sets out citizen testimony
that would be presented by citizens in the proceeding and
what it would substantiate.
This stipu1~tionis set out on pages 13 through 17 Q~
the October 10, 1974 .he~ring. “Petitioner does, not dispute
the hardship to the public in general educed not only from
the testimony in this case, but also in several other cases
previously before the Board
“
(Petitioner’s Brief pages 9 and
10). The stipulated public testimony, the testimony presented
by Mrs. Dorothy Garwood, and the prepared, testimony of Mr.
James Frost and A.H. Loudermilk serve to reinforce the
Board’s finding that problems which resulted in the original
Agency sewer ban in July 1972 and the discontinuance of the
issuance of conditional installation sewer permits in March,
1973 still continues to exist.
The Board agrees with petitioner that there exists
adequate sewer capacity to transport dry weather flows in
the sewers in question. H~wever,~these sewers were designed
and intended t~serve as a sanitary sewer and at times
carry an equivalent dry weather flow in excess of ten times
the standard engineering design of 100 gallons per day per
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capita (R. 497). During periods of rainfall, the sanitary
sewers surcharge
-—
completely fill and begin to back up
--
resulting in sanitary sewage’ overflowing manholes located
above and below the point of interconnection with the Outer
Park Drive sewer (October 10, R. 13). Sanitary sewer overflows
which contain toilet tissue and human feces have been observed
by the Agency inspections on numerous occasions (October 10,
R. 14, and Agency Exhibits 6, 7, 9, and 10). The sewage
which overflows the manholes discharges through stormwater
inlets along Outer SPark Drive and eventually to a paved
storm channel which parallels Outer Park Drive. This paved
channel eventually discharges into a natural drainageway which
discharges to Jacksonville Branch, a tributary to Spring
Creek. Spring Creek flows to the Sangamon River through
both Washington and Passfield Parks. The Agency presented
testimony that such sanitary sewer overflows could interfere
and degrade the water quality in lakes contained within
these parks (October 10, R. 17 and Agency Exhibit 6). In
addition to the overflowing of manholes, the inadequate
transport capacity in the sanitary sewers results in the
backup of sewage into a large percentage of the basements in
the Outer Park Drive area (October 10, R. 15). The sewer
transport problem has existed for 30 years (October 10, R.
13). Numerous citizens have experienced backups every year
for the past 15 years (October 10, R. 15).
It is uncontroverted that the sewer overflows and
basement backups represent a health hazard to those who live
in the area (October 10, R. 17). Dr. Byron Francis of the
Illinois Department of Public Health testified that:
“A number of communicable diseases are acquired by
ingestion of the contents of material which comes from
the intestine of an animal or another human, and these
can be acquired by contact with sewage...” (R. 448).
Dr. Francis testified that salmonellosis, a communicable
disease, could result from fecal material ingested in
microscopic amounts (R. 449). He further testified that
other communicable diseases such as shigella, viral hepatitis
(also referred to as infectious hepatitis), intestinal
infections caused by E. coli, typhoid fever, polio xnyelitis,
and other internal viral infections were possible from the
context with fecal matter (R. 449 and 450). He testified
that he was aware of cases where teenage children had contracted
leptospirosis by swimming and diving in a pool contaminated
with fecal matter from farm animals (R. 452). He further
testified that he was aware of outbreaks of salmonella in
Riverside, California and other outbreaks of infectious
hepatitis where people had drank well water contaminated
with septic tank effluent (R. 456). Dr. Francis also presented
testimony that young children are more susceptible to these
communicable diseases (R. 450). Dr. Francis testified that
swimming or diving in water that is contaminated with sewage
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732
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is hazardous (R. 450). He further testified that drinking
sanitary sewage overflows occasioned a hazard to children’s
health (R. 454). 1r. Francis further concluded that based
upon the conditions described in the testimony of Mr. Frost
that the sewer overflows cause a health hazard (R. 462).
The record clearly establishes that instances of children
swimming and playing in the sanitary sewage overflow and
drinking sanitary sewage overflows have been observed in the
Outer Park Drive area (October 10, R. 14; Agency Exhibit 6,
and R. 433).
Petitioner, in an attempt to rebut the significance of
the health hazard, established that Dr. Francis was unaware
of any outbreak of any such communicable disease in the
southwest portion of Springfield R. 464). However, Dr.
Francis testified that if the cases of communicable diseases
were widely scattered, that they could go unreported to his
agency (R. 468). Dr. Francis testified that it was normal
procedure for his division of the. Illinois Department of
Public Health to not undertake.a project if another State
agency with primary responsibility was taking steps to solve
the problem and he felt that such was the case at present
(R. 460 and 466). The Board finds that a signficant health
hazard is caused by such sanitary sewer overflows and
basement backups.
In addition to the health hazard, the problems caused
by the inadequacy of the sewer capacity in the Outer Park
Drive area result in economic and physicaJ~hardships to
those who live in the area (October 10, R. 16 and 17). The
individual economic and other hardships faced by the approximate
900 homes in the area, when totalled together, reach a
substantial economic figure (October 10, R. 17). Examples
of the economic hardship are citizens who have been required
to dry out air conditioning fans and motors, washing machine
motors, and dryer motors at considerable expense (October
10, R. 17). The backup of sewage in the basements has resulted
in the destruction of personal articles stored in the basements
(October 10, R. 17). During periods when the sanitary
sewers are backing up, the citizens are unable to use clothes
washing facilities or bathrooms located in their basements.
In rebuttal, petitioner tried to establish that the
overflows which occurred in 1973 were the result of rainfall
in excess of the average for the past 30 years. The record,
however, establishes that overflows have existed in the area
for at least 15 years (October 10, R. 15). In an attempt to
rebut petitioner’s characterization that 1973 overflows
occurred during periods where rainfall exceeded the 30 year
monthly average, the Agency established that overflows
occurred during the month of August, 1973 which had a monthly
rainfall average below the 30 year monthly average (R. 427
through 429). In addition, the record establishes that the
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733
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instances of basement backups and sewer overflows appear to
be increasing each year (R.511). Mrs. Dorothy Garwood
testified that such was the case and that during all of 1973
her records showed only 9 instances of basement backups and
that to date, that during 1974, 10 instances have occurred
(R. 514 and 515). Agency witnesses testified that petitioner’s
proposed connection would further aggravate the sewage backup
and sanitary sewage overflow problems (Agency Exhibit 6, page
10 and R. 481).
Petitioner established that there are available self—
help remedies available to those home occupants who have
experienced basement backups. These include sewer plugs,
sump pumps and standpipes. However, once a plug is installed,
the citizens cannot do such normal functions as laundry, use
of basement toilets, or basement cleanup (October 10, R.
16). In additiOn, “because the plug prohibits the backup
into the basement, the flooding of the sanitary sewers in
the street causes a buildup of pressure in the citizen’s
sanitary sewer leading from their home. This can cause
failure in the seals in the sewer joints, which in turn
results in a backup of sanitary sewage into the ground
surrounding the sewer leading to house, to the street, and
backup under the basement floor. This backup into the
ground can cause basement floors to crack. This cracking
results in basement flooding through the cracks even though
plugs are installed in the drains” (October 10, R. 16).
Mrs. Garwood testified that even with the plugs in place,
sanitary waste backed up through cracks in her basement
floor and that such backups had a very foul odor (R. 512).
The Board, after weighing economic hardship to the
petitioner versus the hardship worked to the public in
general, finds that petitioner has failed to establish an
arbitrary or unreasonable hardship which would allow the
Board to grant the requested relief.
Petitioner’s case is somewhat unusual because in prior
variance cases, the Board has normally granted requested
relief in sewer ban cases where the buildings in question
were already constructed. This was normally done to insure
that vandalism would not result in destruction of the facilities.
However, petitioner has taken self—help measures by allowing
connection to the sewer system and the occupancy of less
than 15 people in each of the four buildings constituting
Phase II (R. 358). Petitioner was told by the Springfield
Sanitary District that they could connect each building
separately without an Agency operating permit if they allowed
the occupancy of less than 15 people per building (R. 373).
Water Pollution Control Regulations, Rule 902 (now amended
and found in Rule 952), requires an Agency operating permit
for a sewer extension to serve a building designed or intended
14
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734
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to serve more than 15 people. Phase II consists of three
buildings which have a total of 24 units in each building.
Clearly, petitioner’s buildings were designed and intended
to serve more than 15 people. The fourth building contains
4 1—bedroom apartments, and as such, was probably not
designed or intended to serve more than 15 people. Petitioner
met with representatives from the Agency to discuss the
possibility of connection without an operating permit and
was told to contact its attorneys (R. 375). Mr. Cohen,
attorney for petitioner, telephoned an Agency attorney and
told her that he was directing his client to proceed with
the installation of the sewer connections. Evidentally the
Agency has made a prosecutorial decision not to prosecute
the Petitioner for these connections (R. 377). However,
such a decision by the Agency does not absolve petitioner
from proceeding to connect its facilities without an operating
permit in violation of the Board’s Rules and Regulations and
in violation of Condition #3 of its conditional installation
permit.
This is not the first time that petitioner has proceeded
to connect buildings located at the Westbrook site without
an operating permit. In the previous proceeding, PCB 72-
301, the Board stated that “we note that in this case the
Petitioner took the law into its own hands and made the
connection for the completed units without a permit, well-
knowing that a permit was required (R. 70 and 71). That we
ultimately allow the use of the connection because of the
hardship does not justify such flagrant disrespect for the
permit system. We cannot simply ignore this behavior by
granting an unconditional variance to the benefit of the
wrong”. In granting ‘the variance for Phase I, the Board
imposed a $2,000 penalty to protect the integrity of the
permit system. Petitioner should have ample notice that an
operating permit was required before proceeding to connect
Phase II.
Because petitioner has allowed occupancy in its buildings,
Petitioner has not suffered from the ravages of vandalism on
Phase II, with the exception of several minor incidents (R.
141). After partial occupancy of Phase II, Petitioner has
suffered very little vandalism (R. 297). For these reasons,
the Board does not find that the variance should be granted
because of vandalism.
Petitioner has examined both sewage treatment systems
and holding tanks. Petitioner submitted preliminary plans
and bids for a small package treatment plant to treat wastes
from Phase II and a larger plant to handle wastes from other
developments within the area (Petitioner Exhibits 13, l3a,
14, 14a, 14b and 15). Mr. Thompson testified that a small
on- site “plant could be a practical solution for Phase II
14—735
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sanitary sewage disposal” (R. 278). He stated
that
such a
plant would “present an on—site degradation to the Westbrook
Apartments” (R. 278). Mr. Thompson testified that he felt
holding tanks were not practical (R. 190). He stated that
the principal objection was to the location of a large 10-
day holding tank (R. 193) and such a tank’s effect upon the
attractibility of the apartment complex (R. 192).
Petitioner alleges in the variance petition that it is
willing to install either holding tanks or a private sewage
treatment system. However, the Brief filed by Petitioner
does not so indicate. After examining the record, the Board
is not convinced that holding tanks or a private sewage
treatment system are unreasonable. Petitioner is therefore
free to further develop such alternatives with the Agency or
before the Board in an appropriate proceeding. Petitioner made
a calculated business decision to proceed with the construct—only
permit and is now suffering the consequences of that decision.
We will direct the Agency to act with the utmost haste
in the review of the application of the Sanitary District to
install the proposed pumping station. However, this Opinion
and Order should not be viewed as a prejudgment on the
merits of such a permit application. We are only requiring
that the Agency proceed with diligence to review and render
a decision on the permit application. The record establishes
that in approximately four months the pumping station could
be on line. The Agency at that time, after review of the
results of the pumping station, might see fit to proceed
with the awarding of operating permits for those developers,
such as petitioner, who have conditional installation permits.
This Opinion constitutes the Board’s findings of fact
and conclusions of law.
Mr. Henss dissents.
ORDER
Petitioner’s request for a variance from the Agency—
imposed sewer ban is hereby denied without prejudice. The
Agency is directed to proceed with diligence in the review
of the construction permit application currently on file
by the Springfield Sanitary District for the construction
of the proposed pumping station.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, hereby certify the above Opinion and Order were
adopted on the ~jday
of December, 1974 by a vote of
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736