ILLINOIS
POLLUTIONdONTROL BOARD
March
 7,
 1974
ST. CHARLES MANUFACTURING COMPANY
v.
 )
 PCB 73—545
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
ORDER OF THE BOARD
 (by Dr.
 Odell)
On December 20, 1973, Petitioner filed with this Board
a petition for variance to extend through June
 30,
 1974, alleg-
ing supply shortages as the impediment to achieving compliance
by December 31,
 1973, ~ith Rule 205(f)
 of Chapter Two: Air
Pollution Regulations.
Petitioner’s facility paints steel cabinetry.
 Total
enployment is about 370 persons.
 Current paint usage is about
37,000 gallons per year, and Petitioner needs a variance for
2,400
 gallons of this paint to July 1,
 1974.
 Their current
solvent usage is 22,720 gallons per year.
 About 10,220 gallons
of solvent is used annually to thin the paint to proper viscosity
for application; another 12,500 gallons is used to clean equip-
ment.
 Petitioner submitted evidence that certain photochemically
nonreactive solvents
 (85C and lO5B) were not available as thinner.
To stay in operation,
 Petitioner requests that it be allowed to
use Toluol and SC100 as substitutes for 85C and lO5B in the
formulation of its paint.
The Environmental Protection Agency
 (EPA)
 recommended on
February
 8,
 1974,
 that the variance be granted.
 In its recommend-
ation EPA pointed out that:
1.
 Petitioner was granted an Operating Permit on April
24, 1973.
 This permit-included a Compliance Plan whereby com-
pliance with Rule 205(f) would be achieved before December 1,
1973, by reformulation of paints with photochemically nonreactive
solvents.
 Failure to achieve its Compliance Plan resulted in
permit expiration on December 1,
 1973.
2.
 Petitioner is presently violating the
 8 lbs/hour
limitation in Rule 205(f)
 in two of its spray booths.
 One booth
is emitting 10.71 lbs/hour of organic material;
 the other emits
12.16 lbs/hour.
3.
 “Petitioner’s facility is located in an industrial/
commercial area and its painting operations do not affect
citizens.
 No complaints concerning Petitioner’s facility have
been received” by EPA.
11
—
493
We grant Petitioner~svariance~ Petitioner~sshortage
of photochemically nonreactive solvents is not self-imposed.
Petitioner has demonstrated good. faith in its efforts
 to obtain
satisfactory materials,
 To deny the variance would
 impose an
arbitrary and unreasonable hardship upon this Petitioner.
The Federal Energy Office has established
 mandatory
allocation of petrochemical feedstocks to petrochemical producers
 —
including solvent manufacturers
 in a quantity equal to 100 per-
cent of the producers current requirements
 (Fed,
 Reg.
 Vol.
 39,
No.
 10, Part III, Subpart 2llJ, January
 15, 1974).
 Petitioner
should utilize such exempt solvents as they become available.
ORDER
Petitioner
 is granted a variance from Rule 205(f)
 of
Chapter Two through June 30,
 1974,
 to use up to 2,400 gallons
of nonexempt paint plus 5,100 gallons of photochemically reactive
solvents for thinning 18,500 gallons of paint subject to
 the
following conditions:
(a)
 Petitioner
 is required to uti1ize~as much exempt solvent
formulations
 as can be furnished by its suppiiers~
(b)
 Petitidner
 muE.t
 apply
 to
 the
 EPA
 for
 an
 Operating
Permit
 within
 30
 days
 of
 the
 adoption
 of
 this
 Order,
Cc)
 Petitioner
 must
 submit
 to
 the
 EPA
 within
 90 days of
the
 adoption
 of
 this
 Order
 a
 Program
 of
 Con.~pliance
 to replace
the initial Compliance Plan which has been affected by shortages
of certain materials.
(d)
 Petitibner must submit monthly progress reports to:
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
Division
 of
 Air Polution Control
Control
 Program
 Coordinator
2200 Churchill
 Road
Springfield
 Illinois
 62706
Said
 reports
 must contain:
(i)
 Information
 on
 the
 amount
 of
 usage
of exempt and
 non~exempt
 formulations
during
 the
 period.
(ii)
 Steps taken
 •to achieve compliance
either by
 use
 of
 exempt
 solvents
 or
use of alternate technology.
IT IS SO
 ORDERED.
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board,
 certify
 that
 the
 alove
 Opiniop
 and
 Order
 was
 .adoptedby
th~p Board
 on
 the
 ~~day
 of
 1974,
 by
 a
 vote
 of
to
 ~::~