ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
April
17,
1973
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
Complainant,
v.
)
PCB 72—158
ROYAL PACKING COMPANY,
INC.,
Respondent.
John W. Leskera, Assistant Attorney General, on behalf of the
Environmental Protection Agency;
Leo H.
Konzen,
on behalf of Royal Packing Company,
Inc.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by Mr. Seaman):
By complaint filed on April 14,
1972,
the Environmental
Protection Agency
(“Agency11)
charged the Royal Packing Company,
Inc., owner and operator of certain facilities including but
not limited to an inedible rendering plant located at
St. Clair
Avenue and Ice Plant Road, National Stockyards, Illinois.
The
Agency further charged that on or before September 20,
1971,
that the Respondent discharged obnoxious odors and other
contaminants into the atmosphere so as to cause or tend to cause
air pollution,
either alone or in combination with contaminants
from other sources, in violation of Section 9(a)
of the Environ-
mental Protection Act
(“Act”) (Ill.
Rev.
Stat.,
1971,
Ch. 111
1/2,
§1009(a)) and in violation of Rule 3-3.280 of the Rules and
Regulations Governing the Control of Air Pollution
(hereinafter
“Air Rules”), continued effective pursuant to Section 49(c)
of the
Act.
Further,
on or about December, 1967,
Respondent caused or
allowed the installation and/or operation of a blood dryer system
without first obtaining an installation permit from the
Complainant in violation of Section
9(b)
of the Act and Rule
3-2.100 of the Air Rules.
The record further indicates that on
January
4,
1973,
the Complainant,
the Agency, filed an amendment
to the complaint and substituted the following language:
that
in the years 1969 and 1970, Respondent caused or allowed the
installation and/or operation of a blood dryer system without
first obtaining an installation permit from the Complainant in
violation of Section 9(b)
of the Act and Rule 3-2.100 of the
Air Rules.
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583
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The Respondent,
in answer to the amended complaint, denies
all of the allegations with the exception of ownership and the
type of operation that is described in the Agency ‘s complaint as
stated above.
In addition, the Respondent’s answer to the
amended complaint urges four affirmative defenses.
The first
is that the definition of
“Air Pollution”
in Section 9(a)
of
the Act is
“so vague, uncertain,
and indefinite that men of
common intelligence must guess at its meaning, and citizens are
not adequately apprised of the conduct proscribed therein, and
the person charged with violations of the Act is not fairly
informed of the nature and cause of the charges against him”.
The definition of
“Air Pollution” is not contained in Section
9(a)
of the Act but in Section
3(b) and is defined as follows:
“SECTION
3
(b)
‘AIR POLLUTION’
is the presence in the atmosphere of one
or more contaminants in sufficient quantities and of such
characteristics and duration as to be injurious to human, plant,
or animal life,
to health,
or to property,
or to unreasonably
interfere with the enjoyment of life or property.”
It is the finding of the Board that the
definition of “Air
Pollution”
as defined in the Act is not vague, uncertain or
indefinite and that men of common intelligence can certainly
understand
its meaning.
Statutory authorization need not
delineate with scientific precision,
the characteristics of all
types of pollution.
To do so would be unrealistic.
The second affirmative defense goes to Rule 3-3.280 of the
Rules and Regulations Governing the Control of Air Pollution
and alleges that attempts to permit deprivation of private
property without due process of law by the use of improper and
inadequate standards and methods to prove violations
of law, all
in violation of Article
II, Section
2, of the Illinois Constitu-
tion and Article XIV, Section
1,
of the Constitution of the
United States.
The third affirmative defense goes to Rule 3-2.100 of the
Rules and Regulations.
The Respondent alleges that Rule 3-2.100
of the Rules and Regulations Governing the Control of Air
Pollution is illegal, void and invalid in that it unlawfully
attempts to legislate by the adoption of rules of greater scope
and breadth than authorized by the statutes of the State of
Illinois, or the attempt by the General Assembly to delegate to
the Air Pollution Control Board such authority is an unlawful
delegation of legislative power.
That said Rule amounts to the
attempt to deprive the rights of persons to private property in
violation of Article XIV of the Constitution of the United States
and Section
2 of the Constitution of the State of Illinois.
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584
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We reject the Respondent’s first three affirmative defenses,
the subject matter having been covered thoroughly in
Environmental Protection Agency v. Granite City Steel Company,
PCB72-34, and C. M. Ford v. Environmental Protection Agency, and
Pollution Control Board of the State of Illinois, PCB71-307.
As to the fourth affirmative defense, the Respondent alleges
that a permit has been issued for the installation of pollution
abatement equipment,
and also,
the Environmental Protection
Agency has issued an operators permit for both the blood drying
process and the meat rendering process.
This last affirmative
defense would appear to be more in mitigation than in defense
since for the years charged in the amendment to the complaint,
to wit:
1969 and 1970,
the Respondent presented no evidence to
rebut the Agency’s allegations, but did in fact admit to operating
without a permit in violation of Section
9(b)
of the Act and
Rule 3-2.100 of the Air Rules.
In the 350 pages of testimony,
there were two offers of
proof made by the Agency.
The first had to do with testimony
concerning violations predating the Act or any public health
regulation.
We think the Hearing Officer properly sustained the
Respondent’s objection.
The second offer of proof made by the
Agency had to do with the submission of certain exhibits consist-
ing of photographs and memorandums.
We think the Hearing
Officer properly overruled the Respondent’s objection in this
case and ratify the Hearing Officer’s Rulings.
There is no major disagreement
on the facts of this case.
Respondent’s operation consists of the rendering of meat scraps
and bones in the manner characteristic of operations of this
kind.
The violations alleged under Section
9(a)
of the Act and
of the Rules Governing the Control of Air Pollution we find have
been proven.
Testimony by the Agency’s witnesses after having
taken numerous scentometer readings, together with photographs
(Complainant’s Exhibits 1-5)
to illustrate the visibility of the
plume from Respondent’s
stack and the direction of the wind upon
which the scentometer readings were based, together with citizen
testimony as to the obnoxious odors.
Witnesses testified as
follows:
George Marshall
(P.
253) resides one—half block from Royal.
“Q
And, what about the smell? can you characterize
it at all?
A
No way you can describe it.
Q
Well,
can you describe whether it
is pleasant or not?
A
It’s unpleasant.
It sticks right in your throat.
Make you sick at your stomach.
Q
All right.
And, how long have you lived at your
current address?
A
We have been there,
I think,
about three years.
We
lived further down the street for around eleven years.
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585
—4—
Q
For how long have you been subjected to these odors?
A
Ever since we have been out there.
Q
For the last
--
A
Fifteen years.”
James Murphy
(P.
258) resides one-half block from Royal.
How long have you lived at your present location?
A
Be two years this March.
Q
And,
have you detected this odor throughout that time?
A
Yes,
I have.
Q
Are you able to have your dinner or your other meals
while that odor
is
--
A
No sir,
I cannot eat with that smell.”
Agnes Counts
(P.
262)
resides one-half block from Royal.
What can you tell us about odor emissions from the
Royal Packing Plant?
A
Well,
some days it’s nearly all day but most in the
evenings, oh say, from 5:00 on and it’s terrible.
Q
Can you describe it? Can you characterize it?
A
That’s hard to say.
It’s the worse smell you have
ever had,
I can tell you that.
Q
Are you able to have your dinner?
A
No.”
And even the Respondent’s witness admitted to the odors
(P.
341).
The evidence indicates that the Respondent now has a proper
permit and that
lie is proceeding with his control equipment,
the
cost of purchase and installation thereof aggregating $40,000
(P.
338)
,
either on or ahead of schedule.
This we take as
mitigating evidence.
We
direct that the Respondent cease and
desist its odor emissions and make a progress report within the
next 60 days to the Agency.
Because of the long standing
violations
as evidenced herein, we impose a penalty in the
amount of $3,000.
This opinion constitutes the findings of fact and conclusions
of law of the Board.
IT IS THE ORDER of the Pollution Control Board:
1.
Penalty in the amount of $3,000 is assessed against Royal
Packing Company for violation of Rule 3-3.280 of the Rules and
Regulations Governing the Control
of Air Pollution and Section 9(b)
of the Environmental Protection Act in failing to obtain
a permit
for
the
installation of its equipment and for causing air pollu-
tion in violation of Section
9(a)
of the Act.
Penalty payment
by
certified check or money order payable to the State of Illinois
shall be made to:
Fiscal Services Division,
Illinois ~Environmental
Protection Agency,
2200 Churchill Road,
Sprinqfield,. Illinois
62706.
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586
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2.
Within 60 days from the date of this order, Respondent
shall cease and desist the causing of odor emissions so as to
cause air pollution as defined in the Environmental Protection
Act and shall report its progress to the Environmental Protection
Agency.
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, certify that the above Opinion and Order was adopted by
the Board on the
IT~’
day of
~
,
1973,
by a vote
of~
top.
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S
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