ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
October 25, 1973
WAUKEGAN
ICE
ARENA,
INC.
)
Petitioner,
PCB 73—302
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Respondent.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD (by Mr. Henss)
Petitioner requests variance from Order No. 7 of League of
Women Voters v. North Shore Sanitary District, PCB 70-7, 12, 13
and 14, which prohibits further connection to sewers of the North
Shore Sanitary District until the District demonstrates that it
can adequately treat the waste from those ne~~sources. Petitioner
wishes to connect a new ice arena to the sanitary sewer tributary
to the Clavey Road Sewage Treatment Plant, owned and operated by
the North Shore Sanitary District (NSSD)
On June 13, 1973 Petitioner signed a contract for the
purchase of about 10 acres of land near Greenbay Road and Grand
Avenue in Waukegan. Petitioner proposes to build a commercial
ice arena on the land and states that it has already expended
$100,000 for the development. The expenses include “$50,000 in
the form of an irrevocable letter of credit deposited as non—
refundable earnest money” and “$16,000 deposited in the form of
a non—refundable mortgage standby fee in connection with the
financing’ of the land purchase. Petitioner alleges that mortgage
financing for the ice arena is contingent upon the availability
of a sanitary sewer, without which Petitioner would be unable to
complete its contractual obligations and would forfeit all sums
invested and deposited.
Petitioner further claims that the granting of the variance
would impose no hardship on the general public since the proposed
use would “merely entail the introduction into the sanitary
sewer
system of human waste and minimal water in conjunction with toilet
facilities of a population equivalent of eleven (11)
,
approxi-
mating an addition to the system of less than three (3) single
family residences”.
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639
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The Clavey Road plant is a secondary treatment plant which
until recently had a design average capacity of 4.5 MGD and
maximum secondary treatment capability of 6.0 MGD. Flows in
excess 6.0 MGD received only primary treatment and were then
combined with secondary treated sewage prior to being discharged
into the plant’s aerated lagoon. Effluent from this lagoon is
chlorinated prior to being discharged to the Skokie Ditch. The
plant was overloaded with flows averaging 7.8 MGD during the
first eight months of 1973.
The EPA now informs us that “10 million gallon per day
capacity is presently possible. Full secondary treatment (18
MGD) expected by March 1, 1974. Advanced treatment by
September 1, 1975”. With this added capacity we believe we can
continue to ease the sewer ban in individual cases. Here, some
personal hardship exists. In addition, the connection of the
ice rink to the sewer system will apparently not result in a
large net increase in the load on the North Shore Sanitary
District. The ice rink is to be located well within the boundaries
of the North Shore Sanitary District and will probably draw most
of its patrons from that area. Net increase in hydraulic load on
the sewer system is likely to be small. Since construction of
the ice arena has not even commenced, it is possible that the
Clavey Road Plant will be giving full secondary treatment before
this ice arena is actually put to use. We will, therefore,
grant the variance.
ORDER
It is the order of the Board that Petitioner Waukegan Ice
Arena, Inc. be granted variance from Order No. 7 of League of
Women Voters vs. North Shore Sanitary District, PCB 70—7, 12,
13 and 14, for connection of its proposed ice rink to the North
Shore Sanitary District’s sewer.
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify the b ye Opinion and Order was adopted
this ~~4II
day of
________,
1973 by a vote of ~ to ~j
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