ILLINOTh
~OLNUTION
CONTROL
BOARD
Fehr~:av
28,
1974
i~oo~
be
tina~
PCB
73—482
~~7j~’T~T
PRO’i
AGENCY,
Respondea.
~r.
~b~Idon
A.
ZaP~G, Attorney,
on behalf of Petitioner;
Mr.
JoLn
T. Bernb~, Attorney,
on behalf of
Respondent.
JNL~N
~GN,ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr.
Seaman):
~vember
14,
1973,
Illinois Power Company filed
a
~aI~:a(~
for Variance which this Board found to be
so
lackPn~
in
substance
and detail that Petitioner was
ordered
tD
f~e an amended petition.
Petitioner
submitted
the
roqn~rect
information
on January
14,
1974.
Petitioner
is the owner and operator
of
a coal—fired
tOectric power generating station near Hennepin,
Putnam
onnty1
Illinois.
Petitioner requests
a three—month variance
~:om
tTh December
31,
1973 compliance date required by Rule
(raspended and total dissolved solids)
of Chapter
3:
vinter
Pollution Regulations
of Illinois.
The
Agency,
in
its Recommendation,
states that wastewater
from
otitioner~s generating
station
is presently discharged
Gii:ec~1~v into
the Illinois
River via two separate waste
~t~oans.
One waste
stream
is made up of untreated wastewater
from Pntitioner~s demineralizer regenerant,
ash hopper overflowr
from Unit
I and
2 Boilers,
and non—contact condenser
cooling
water.
The second waste stream is composed of wastewater
from Petitioner’s
Unit
1 and
2 ash basin lagoons.
Petitioner
suomits
no information on this point.
The Agency Recommendation informs
us that Petitioner’s
ash basin lagoons rarely discharge
an effluent due to evapo-
ration and due
to percolation attributable
to the permeable,
sandy soil
of the locale and that Petitioner’s
untreated
wastewater discharge does not have
a noticeable adverse en-
vironmental
impact upon the
Illinois
River.
We note
thth
broad conclusions of this nature would better aid our de-
liberations
if supported by specific
data.
The term “manly”
is not helpful
in this context and the effluent percolated
through sandy soil might well reach the river by
a
different
route,
Test
results
of
recent Agency
effluc:nt:
qr
P
550Oles
i.naiicate
the
following:
—2—
Suspended
Total
Dissolved
Date
Solids
(mg/i)
Solids
(mg/i)
Jan 1/73
8
360
Sep 25/73
85
480
Petitioner obtained Agency approval of Project Completion
Schedules and an Agency Construction Permit for re—routing
and collecting of the Unit
1
&
2 ash hopper overflows and
demineralized regenerant wastewater into the Unit
1
&
2
ash basin lagoons for treatment prior to release into the
River.
The Agency believes that the completion of these
projects will assure compliance with Rule 408.
The permits and associated Project Completion Schedules.
show the anticipated completion date to be December 31,
1973.
Petitioner alleges that the mechanical work associated with
its project cannot be completed before March
31,
1974,
and
variance is sought to that date.
The primary reason advanced by Petitioner to justify
the grant of the subject variance is the alleged delay
encountered in procuring materialsand equipment.
On
May 1,
1972, Petitioner issued a work order to its consulting
engineer to begin the work intended to comply with Rule 408.
By July of 1972, Petitioner determined in principle to proceed
with certain changes and began preparing the necessary
mechanical design and engineering.
By May 11,
1973, Petitioner
submitted a permit application to the Agency for the Hennepin
facility.
The Agency notes that though delay in filing
a
permit application until May of 1973 appears unusually long,
Petitioner apparently believed at the time of this submittal
that timely compliance was possible.
A permit for the
Hennepin facility was issued on August
8,
1973.
The Agency believes that Petitioner reasonably anticipated
that timely compliance could be met if contracts were awarded
by September
1,
1973.
On August 14,
1973,
a piping contract
was awarded.
The Agency notes that pumps for the Hennepin
project were ordered as early
as March
19, 1973.
The
shipping date for the pumps was scheduled for October 1973.
As of the date of the Amended petition
(January 11,
1974)
the pumps had not yet been shipped.
Similar delays were
experienced in the shipment of piping.
Though substantial
portions of the piping are presently on site,
the balance of
the piping had not been delivered as of the date of the Amended
Petition.
Delays in the shipment of pumps resulted in delays
in the installation of related electrical equipment.
Petitioner
attempted to mitigate delays be refurbishing existing electrical
equipment.
We are satisfied that the facts as presented by Petitiore::
indicate that the delays encountered were substantially
beyond its control and that the Petitioner took reasonable
measures to avoid delay.
11—392
—3—
This
Opinion
constitutes
the
findings
of
fact
and
conclusions
of
law
of
the
Board.
ORDER
~T IS
THE
ORDER of the Pollution Control
Board that
Illinois Power Company be granted
a variance,
as
regards
its Hennecin facility,
from Rule
408
of
Chapter
3:
Water
Pollution Renulations, until March
31,
1974.
IT
IS SO ORDERED.
I, Christan
L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
Control Board, certify ttht
the
above Oninion and Order
was
adopted
on
this
~
day of
~
by
a
vote
of
~