ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
January 30, 1973
ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY,
Complainant,
vs.
)
PCB 72—4
BESSIE LENZ and RICHARD A. LENZ,
individually and d/b/a
CHARLES LENZ
DISPOSAL COMPANY,
)
Resoondents.
Nicholas G. Dozoryst, II, Assistant Attorney General for the EPA
Bernard ~4cDevitt
Attorney for Respondents
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD (by Mr. Henss)
Respondents
are the owners of 19 acres in Palos Hills, Cook
County, Illinois which had been used as a refuse disoosal site for
a number of years.
The Environmental Protection Agency has alleged
that Resoondents operated the refuse disposal site without an EPA
permit; allowed the open dumping of garbage and refuse; allowed
refuse to be deposited in standing water; and are guilty of a number
of housekeeping violations,
including inadecuate fencing of the site
and failure to provide adenuate shelter, heating, lighting, water
and toilet facilities
for employees.
The principal charge is that
Respondents have failed to provide adequate daily and final cover
for the material deposited on the site.
The violations were alleged
to have occurred on August 3, 1970, September 11, 1970, October 14,
1970, January 11, 20 and 21, 1971, February 25, 1971, June 7 and 8,
1971 and December 28, 1971.
Respondents
alleged that the Village of Palos Hills had licensed
them to operate the landfill,
that they had operated it with a proper
control of rodents and pests and had closed the landfill operation
on February 18, 1972. They claimed that their application for a State
registration had not been acknowledged by the State.
When the
case
was called for hearing in June 1972 the
attorneys
submitted documents showing that the land had not been used for
refuse disposal since February 18, 1972, that large quantities of
fill dirt had been hauled. onto the property during the spring, and
that it was anticipated that another 12,000-15,000 cubic yards of
dirt would be brought onto the property during the following five
months for the purpose of applying final cover. An EPA inspection
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report showed that cover which had been applied was of inadequate
depth. The parties agreed that if later inspection revealed com-
pliance in the application of final cover, the recommended fine
would be $1500.
It seems to us that the parties should have, at that point,
been ready to submit the case to us for our decision and an order
that final cover he applied. They chose not to do so but postponed
further hearing until after the October 31, 1972 inspection date.
When that inspection by the EPA revealed that final cover had not
been completed, the agreement regarding penalty was rescinded. The
matter then proceeded to a hearing on the merits.
The EPA submitted inspection reports showing that the violations
had in fact occurred on the dates alleged. Photographs taken by
Agency inspectors support the Agency’s contention that there was a
gross amount of uncovered garbage and refuse on Respondents site.
The later photographs indicated that Respondents were making a better
effort to cover the debris but the cover was still inadequate. There
is clear evidence that Respondents allowed the open dumping of garbage
and refuse.
Respondents had submitted an Application to register the landfill
site, hut because of the violations, the Agency rejected the Appli-
cation. On August 14, 1970 and again in October 1970 the Environmental
Protection Agency notified Respondents to immediately cease all depo-
sition of materials at this site. Respondents did not comply with
this order until February 18, 1972.
The site was not used for refuse disposal purposes following
February 18, 1972. Large quantities of fill dirt were brought onto
the property but because of adverse weather conditions final cover
was not completely applied by the agreed October 31, 1972 deadline.
The Agency witness testified that the summer of 1972 had been unusually
wet and that the weather condition would interfere with the proper
application of the cover. Inspection on October 31, 1972 revealed
that 95 of the site had some cover and that about 50 of the site had
the required two feet of final cover. There was no leachate, no rats
or mosquitoes and no litter.
Respondent submitted weather service reports showinci the precipi-
tation during 1972 to be: July 2.86”, August 6.19”, September 5.75”,
October 3.62” and November 3.18”. Rain occurred on more than one-half
of the days in each of those months. Respondent requested that he be
permitted to complete the work in May 1973.
We find that the violations were serious, that Respondents
ignored the EPA demand that they cease operations for a number of months
and that the penalty originally agreed upon by the parties in the
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amount of $1500 is entirely justified by the evidence. We further
find that Respondent’s failure to apply final cover by the desired
date was due to circumstances beyond his control and that the request
for an extension of time to May 1973 for the application of final
cover is reasonable. We will, therefore, impose a monetary penalty
in the amount of $1500, order Respondents to cease and desist from
all operations and to close the site and apply final cover by May 15,
1973.
ORDER
It is ordered that:
1. Respondents shall pay to the State of Illinois
by March 9, 1973 the sum of $1500 as a penalty
for the violations found in this proceeding.
Penalty payment by certified check or money
order payable to the State of Illinois shall be
made to: Fiscal Services Division, Illinois EPA,
2200 Churchill Drive, Springfield, Illinois 62706.
2. Respondents immediately cease and desist from all
the violations found in this proceeding and
immediately cease the deposition of refuse or
garbage materials at the site.
3. That final cover be applied by May 15, 1973.
I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify the above Opinion and Order was adopted this
‘3ca4~ day of ~~M4?~.’ 1973 by a vote of
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to
p
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