ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    November 8, 1972
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    V.
    )
    #72—230
    C. M. FORD
    Mr. Prescott E. Bloom, Special Asst. Attorney General,
    appeared on behalf of the Environmental Protection Agency
    Respondent appeared pro se
    Opinion and Order of the Board (by Mr. Currie)
    Mr. C. M. Ford (“Respondent”) owns and operates certain
    facilities located in Bourbonnais Township, IKankakee County,
    and, by complaint filed on June 7, 1972, is charged with
    numerous violations of the Illinois Environmental Protection
    Act, Ill. Rev. Stat., 1971, ch. 111 1/2 (“Act”) and the
    Rules and Regulations for Refuse Disposal Sites and Facilities
    (“Rules”) on several separate occasions. Public hearing on
    the charges was held on September 5, 1972.
    Respondent has apparently constructed some kind of in-
    cineration device on his property which he calls his “smoke
    annihilator” invention CR. 20). Evidence indicated that
    Respondent has not secured a permit for the device or for
    the landfill sice itself, although he did make preliminary
    efforts to seek one for open burning (EPA Ex. #12)
    ,
    but
    apparently no such permit was ever issued. But Respondent
    maintained that he does not consider his site to be a
    “landfill” or a dump” and that he therefore did not really
    “want” a permit to conduct operations there. Re admitted
    without hesitation that he brings timber, and wood products
    to the site to burn (R. 18, 25)
    ,
    and. that the reason he
    bought the property in the first place was to be able to
    burn in an “out-of-the-way” place (F. 18). But he also
    maintained that burning operations
    were conducted only
    “about once
    a
    year” CR. 25)
    .
    Furthermore,
    Respondent denied
    any recollection
    of fires on his site on the dates alleged
    in the complaint,
    but added that if the fires did in fact
    occur, he did not set them (F. 37—38, 213—214) and
    is there-
    C
    t ~
    ~or
    them.
    An Agency witness testified
    that trees, brush and lumber
    are stockpiled around the annihilator (F. 50-51) and Res-
    ronhent maintained that since the material on the site is not
    subject
    to
    the rules and regulations
    governing landfills.,

    —2—
    it in his view not being a landfill at all, he did not have
    to cover the wood (R. 42-43). He stated: “It hasn’t never
    been covered. There is no
    — —
    we have no fill operation.
    There is no hole there or no nothing to fill with.” (R. 43).
    Respondent is charged with causing or allowing the open
    dumping and open burning of refuse at the site on five specific
    dates: May 7, 1971; June 24, 1971; Nov. 29, 1971; Dec. 9,
    1971; and March 7, 1972. We will consider each date indivi-
    dually:
    May 7, 1971
    A witness testified that he saw brush and lumber stock-
    piled near Respondent’s invention CR. 50)
    ,
    and concluded that
    it was “open dumped” (F. 51).
    An Agency inspection
    sheet
    (EPA Ex. #13) noted that combustible matter was present,
    was uncovered, but was properly spread and compacted. This
    constituted the extent of the Agency’s proof on this date.
    No proof was introduced regarding the time the materials
    had been deposited, how they had been deposited, who had
    deposited them, or whether they were covered by the end of
    the day as the regulations require. No burning was shown.
    We find the woof insufficient to support the allegations of
    violations on this date.
    June 24, 1971
    An Agency witness testified that he saw a pile of re-
    fuse, wood, tire rims and some wire on the site on this
    date, and he added that he observed an area “smoldering” there
    (R. 54-56)
    ,
    and detected some smoke as well CR. 64)
    .
    Another
    Agency witness also testified that he observed smoldering
    (F. 75—81) and smoke emanating from an area behind Res-
    pondent’s invention (R. 76)
    .
    Both witnesses testified
    that Respondent physically
    menaced them preventing
    their
    continued investigation of the site. A resident of Bour—
    bonnais said that burning at the site was a “common occur-
    rence” and that “there is constantly burning” there (F. 133)
    notwithstanding
    Respondent’s
    statement that burning only
    occurs approximately once a year at the site (F. 25—26,
    42)
    .
    This witness went on to confirm that there was a fire
    on the site on June 24 (F. 134).
    The testimony that the burning did in fact occur on this
    date is both believable and virtually uncontradicted. Res-
    pondent does not deny that open burning took place on his
    site on the dates alleged in the complaint, but merely states
    that he does not “recall” whether or not it did (R. 37-38).
    He repeatedly
    asserted that he should not be held responsible
    for
    the fires unless and until someone could show that he
    actually set them (F. 37-38, 213-214); no evidence was intro-
    duced to suggest that the fires were accidentally started,
    6— 166~

    —3—
    and there was no apparent effort by Respondent to extinguish
    the flames after they had been detected.
    In our view, the testimony regarding the burning operations,
    the character and degree of the nuisance caused thereby,
    and the damage inflicted on
    Respondent’s neighbors as a
    result of such operations
    satisfied the initial burden of
    proof incumbent upon the Agency. As we have said
    in similar
    cases, the burden then
    shifted to Respondent to rebut the
    allegations,
    to offer a satisfactory
    explanation in defense
    of the charges.
    EPA
    v.
    Neal Auto Salvage, Inc., PCB 70-5
    (Oct. 28, 1970).
    No such explanation or mitigating evidence
    was forthcoming.
    The testimony also indicated that fires
    may have occurred at the site with a certain degree of
    regularity, and the hazard to nearby residents
    imposed upon
    Respondent the further duty to do all that he could to pre-
    vent a recurrence of such episodes. We find that he has
    failed to meet his burden to rebut the evidence presented
    against him; we find that Respondent has failed to provide the
    necessary degree of care to prevent the burning at his site,
    whether or not such burning was accidental or deliberate;
    and we find that there was open burning at the site on this
    date in violation of law.
    Nov. 29, 1971
    An Agency engineer, responding to a complaint he had
    received on the morning of Nov. 29, 1971, visited the site
    and witnessed several areas of fire and flame (R. 86-87).
    A builder, whose property is near the site, testified that
    there was a large fire at the site onthis date, measuring
    some 250 feet by 50 feet, which blew smoke and hot embers
    over the roof of his house (F. 107-108). He described the
    fire as being “enormous” CF. 134) and said flames and sparks
    were landing on his property, his shrubbery, and his house
    causing great damage (F. 135). He said there were often
    fires there that had affected the health of his children
    (R. 133, 136) and caused him financial damage as well
    CR. 138). We find the evidence supports the charge of open
    burning at the site on Nov. 29, 1971 for the same reasons
    stated above regarding the June 24 incident.
    Dec. 9, 1971
    A witness testified that there was a fire on Mr. Ford’s
    property on Dec. 9, 1971 (F. 135)
    .
    No other evidence was
    offered regarding alleged violations on this date, and we
    feel that the unelaborated statement that a fire occurred
    on that date, unsupported by additional evidence of any kind
    whatsoever, is inadequate grounds upon which to find vio—
    lation.
    6-- 167

    —4—
    March 7, 1972
    -
    An Agency witness testified that he observed stock-
    piled brush at the site on this date (F. 65) which Respon-
    dent told him was to be burned in the annihilator (F, 67)
    He said he saw some ashes, and evidence of past burning
    (F. 58) but did not testify that a fire was then burning.
    The neighbor who had observed the fire on Nov. 29 and had
    testified that a fire also occurred on Dec. 9 said he saw
    a fire there on March 7, 1972 as well (F. 135). No further
    evidence of this fire was introduced. We find this in-
    sufficient to prove a violation on this date.
    In summary, we find a violation of the open burning
    regulations on June 24, 1971 and on November 29, 1971. The
    evidence allows the reasonable inference that Respondent was
    accumulating or stockpiling wood products to burn in his
    incineration device, and whether or not this was the actual
    origin of the fires in question, there seems no doubt that
    Respondent allowed such fires to occur. EPA Exhibit #30
    is
    a petition signed by approximately fifty nearby
    residents
    asking that the fires
    on Fespondent’s property cease. Aside
    from individual instances of damage caused by the fires,
    therefore, it appears that such occurrences have caused a
    nuisance in the area, and have unduly bothered Mr. Ford’s
    neighbors.
    Mr. Ford’s defense seemsto be that since no one ever
    saw him toss a match into the accumulated wood and brush
    piled up on his land, and since he prefers to call his
    operation a “salvage yard” rather than a “landfill” or
    “dump,” he should be excused from applicable provisions of
    the law covering such activities. We reject such contentions.
    Under
    our State law, accountability for pollution violations
    extends to those who allow as well as to those who cause
    the contamination of our environment. We will order
    Respondent to immediately cease and desist violating the
    law at the site, and to pay $2,000 for the violations which
    have been proved, $1,000 for each instance. And since this
    is not the first time Fespondent has appeared before us on
    relatively similar matters, we remind him that we will
    not take kindly to a third appearance, and that the pollution
    laws which we enforce today are meant to be obeyed and not
    ignored.
    ORDER
    1. Respondent shall immediately cease and desist the open
    burning of any materials whatsoever on his property,
    and shall secure a permit from the Illinois Environmental
    Protection Agency in the event he wishes to burn materials
    in any enclosed device or incinerator;
    6
    168

    —5—
    2. Respondent shall pay to the State of Illinois within
    thirty-five (35) days from the date hereof, the sum
    of $2,000 as a penalty for th~ violations found
    in this proceeding. Payment shall be made by certified
    check or money order payable to the State of Illinois,
    and shall be sent to “Fiscal Services Division, Illinois
    Environmental Protection Agency, 2200 Churchill
    Drive,
    Springfield, Illinois 62706.”
    I, Christan Moffett, Clerk of the Pollution Control Board,
    certify that the Board adopted the above Opinion
    &
    Order
    this
    ;
    day of
    .
    ,
    1972, by a vote of
    ~
    6— 169

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