ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
Nay
23,
1974
ENVIRONIENTAL
PROTECTION
AGENCY,
)
)
Complainant,
)
)
vs.
)
PCB
73—109
)
ARNOLD
N.
MAY;
H1~LLVIEW FARMS
)
FERTILIZERS,
INC.,
a
domestic
)
corporation;
and
ARNOLD
N.
MAY
)
BUILDERS,
INC.,
a
domestic
)
corporation,
)
Respondent.
)
DISSENTING OPINION (by Mr. Dumelle):
While I agree with the findings that violations were proven,
I
emphatically
disagree
with
the
miniscule
penalty
levied
by
the
majority.
The $2,500 penalty is far too low
and
$25,000
in
my
mind
would
have
been far more appropriate.
We have here the situation of a knowledgeable, experienced
aggressive businessman, Mr. Arnold N.
May, irresponsibly continuing
this enterprise while severely interfering
with many others and their
own
rights
to a clean and pleasant environment
as guaranteed by both
the Illinois
Constitution
and the Environmental Protection Act.
The record in
this proceeding is replete with references
to the
odor nuisance and its consequences
(see pages
77,
79, 83,
102,
125,
159,
161,
169, 213,
321,
397, 402, 408,
469; 476, 504, 545,
552, 555,
564, 571,
644, 749,
761, and 809).
Let me cite just two of the many
instances
of citizen testimony
Mrs.
McNish
(an adjacent farm owner to
the permit
area)
Q
Has
this
ever
caused
you
any physical
A
It makes you really sick.
It really does.
Q
We~Ll,when you say sick, what do you mean by
that?
A
You get sick to your stomach from something
that smells bad.
12—333
Q
Has
that
happened?
A
Oh,
yes.
Last
year
I
went
outside.
It
was so
bad one day
I
went
to
do
some
work
and I up—
chucked
over
the
bannister.
(R.
79)
And an
industrial physician at International Harvester, Dr. Roland
Olsson, who resides
in Spring
Grove, testified as follows:
Q
Would you describe these odors
that you have
mentioned?
A
Well,
it was foul.
I would say it was comparable
to an open box latrine in the Army.
That is
as
close to it
as
I can come.
It wasn’t chemical.
It wasn~tthat of a paint factory or a refinery.
It was,
as I said,
comparable to an Army
latrine, which I am quite familiar with.
(R. 545)
The language of the majority opinion (p.
11) reduces the penalty
because the “social
value
of such projects
is
very
important and weighs
heavily
in
mitigation.t’
The
very
abuse
of
placing
unsuitable
and
partially digested sludge on land,
as was done in this proceeding,
may make
it
difficult for other sanitary districts and cities to ever
go
to land disposal of their sludge.
Put another way,
the user of any new technology has a responsibility
to
act responsibly.
The environment
is not hi8 laboratory
to
do with
it what he will, regardless of consequences.
The immediate world ought
not to smell like
an “Army open box latrine” and farm women ought not
to have to “upchuck over the bann:ister”.
Nowhere in the record does any attempt appear on the part of
Mr. Arnold N. May to reject loads
of sludge or to ask that they be
properly digested,
To me, mitigation
would only be called for in this
case had a good faith effort been made
to cease
causing a nuisance.
Mr. May’s sworn testimony stands on its own
o
Now, have you ever rejected a load of
material
from Mr. Larsen’s trucking company on the
basis of odors associated with the material?
A
I have not.
(R.
1399)
The
penalty in this
case should have been at least
$25,000.
12
334
—3—
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois
Pollution
Control
Board,
hereby
certify
that
the
above
Dissenting
Opinion
was
filed
this
of
1974.
,...i
~
q?..:.•......~T....
....
12
—
335