ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    August 15, 1972
    ELGIN SANITARY DISTRICT
    v.
    )
    #72—211
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    Opinion and Order of the Board
    (by Mr. Currie):
    The Elgin Sanitary District operates a secondary sewage
    treatment plant providing activated sludge treatment to a
    portion of the flow
    (2.5 mgd) and trickling filter treatment
    to the rest
    (6.1 mgd) before discharge to the Fox River.
    The
    implementation plan for Rules and Regulations SWB-l1, adopted
    by the
    Sanitary Water Board in 1967,
    imposed an effluent
    standard of
    20 mg/i BOD and 25 mg/i suspended solids for
    municipal plants on the Fox, with stricter requirements for
    those having
    a stream-to-effluent dilution ratio of less than
    2 to
    1.
    (SWB-ll, Rule 1.08 ~ll;
    see also Technical Release
    20-22
    (1968).) Dischargers having less than secondary treat-
    ment were given future compliance dates; the Elgin Sanitary
    District, which already had secondary treatment, was not.
    Our new Rule 404 (b) makes the same standard -effective
    throughout the State, with certain exceptions not here material,
    by July
    1,
    1972 or such earlier date as may have been
    prescribed by earlier rules
    (PCB Regs.,
    Ch.
    3, Rule 404(b).)
    The District’s first petition
    (#72-138) recited that the
    plant effluent had averaged
    37 mg/i BOD and 34 mg/i suspended
    solids from March 1971 through February 1972, with higher
    values for same months; reported on the status of the District’s
    program for upgrading the secondary facilities to meet the
    standard; and asked for a year’s extension of the deadline of
    July,
    1972, which was attributed to Rules and Regulations
    SWB_l4.*
    A revised petition (#72-211) was later filed,
    in light
    of our amended regulations, requesting specifically a year’s
    extension of the alleged July
    1,
    1973 deadline of the new
    Rule 404(b)
    and expressly allowing the Board
    90 days from the
    *SWBl4, with its July 1972 date, actually applied only to waters
    not covered by earlier regulations such as SWB—11.
    5
    169

    —2—
    amended filing in which to decide the case.
    We rejected an Agency
    motion to dismiss for failure to file a procedurally adequate
    petition (June 27,
    1972).
    The Agency recommends that we deny the petition on the
    ground that no showing has been made to justify the failure
    to meet the applicable deadline.
    We agree for two reasons.
    First,
    as we have often held,
    the mere failure to meet a
    deadline does not justify a variance;
    if it did every violation
    would be its own excuse.
    Decatur Sanitary District v.
    EPA,
    #71-37 (March
    2,
    1971)
    .
    The District has not alleged any
    reason for its delay in meeting the standard, which was adopted
    as long ago as 1967.
    The present regulation embodying the
    1972 completion date
    (or an earlier one where former regulations
    so provided) did not suddenly catch the District unawares;
    the
    District had had since 1967 to comply.
    There is no allegation
    here,
    as in EPA v. Marion, #71-25
    (Oct.
    28,
    1971)
    ,
    that the im-
    provements were held up by a relevant change in the applicable
    standard;
    20 and 25 were the rule in 1967 and have been ever since.
    Second, even though it
    is clear that further time will be
    needed to build permanent facilities to meet the standard,
    there
    are no allegations to establish that the District cannot meet
    the 20-25 standard by introducing standard chemicals
    into its exist-
    ing tanks to improve precipitation.
    See North Shore Sanitary
    District v.
    EPA,
    #71-343
    (Jan.
    31, l972)for an instance of dramatic
    improvements by this method.
    In the absence of allegations which,
    if proved, would
    demonstrate either that-the variance is necessary or that the
    delay is justified, we must dismiss the request without prejudice to
    such further proceedings as the parties may deem appropriate.
    It is so ordered.
    I, Christan Moffett, Clerk of the Pollution Control Board, c,~rtify
    that the Board adopted the above Opinion and Order this /~‘ ~
    day of August,
    1972, by a vote of
    -
    5—
    170

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