ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL
    BOARD
    September 6,
    1972
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
    Complainant,
    vs.
    )
    PCB 72-2
    CITY OF SALEM AND THOMAS ARNOLD
    Respondents.
    Larry
    R.
    Eaton, Assistant Attorney General for the EPA
    Alfred Pfaff,
    City Attorney for Respondents
    OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (by Mr. Henss)
    The Environmental Protection Agency filed its complaint
    against the City of Salem and Thomas Arnold alleging that they
    had committed numerous violations of the Environmental Protection
    Act and the Rules
    and Regulations for Refuse Disposal Sites and
    Facilities in the operation of
    a landfill near Salem, Illinois.
    It was charged that there had been open burning, open dumping
    of garbage and refuse, scavenging, failure to confine dumping
    of refuse to the smallest practical area,
    failure to provide
    adequate vector control,
    failure to properly spread and compact
    refuse,
    failure to provide daily cover or final cover, and the
    deposition of refuse in standing water on numerous occasions
    between February 1966 and January 1972.
    The site of these
    alleged violations was a twenty acre landfill owned by the City
    of Salem and operated by Thomas Arnold,
    a city employee, about
    two miles northeast of Salem.
    The evidence introduced at the hearing dealt mainly with
    violations alleged to have occurred since July
    1,
    1970,
    the
    effective date of the Environmental Protection Act.
    From the
    record we conclude that Respondents were guilty of open dumping
    and failure to provide adequate daily cover on several occasions.
    Respondent Thomas Arnold said that he tried to cover but under
    cross examination admitted that photographs taken on different
    dates
    showed the existence of un~covereddebris overnight.
    Arnold
    also said he ~‘cou1dn’tcover it everyc~ay” CR.
    42)
    and left demo-
    lition overnight if it arrived on the site close to the quitting
    hour.
    Brush burning, lasting for a week at a time, occurred on
    four or five occasions in 1971.
    There was no evidence that the
    Respondents started the fires and it seems that all of the fires
    began at night.
    These fortuitous
    fires benefited Respondents by
    removing brush piles which Respondents would otherwise have had
    difficulty in covering.
    5
    341

    —2—
    Respondent Thomas Arnold testified:
    “Q.
    So, your practice is not to cover or put the
    brush in the
    fill?
    A.
    We always put our brush in this one place.
    Q.
    Well, what would you do with that brush if it
    would never burn?
    You say the pile keeps getting
    larger.
    A.
    Well,
    I guess we would just keep piling it up.
    Q.
    You would have
    a big mountain of brush?
    A.
    You’ve got a hundred dollar question.
    I don’t
    know what you would do.”
    (R.
    121)
    In our opinion the Respondents are clearly responsible
    because of their accumulation of the materials to be burned
    and failure to extinguish the fires once they started.
    Scavenging occurred occasionally but was not a serious
    problem. The City did post “No Scavenging” signs and did chase
    violators away.
    The dump was available for the public between
    the hours of
    8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
    five days per week and from
    8 a.m.
    until noon on Saturdays.
    It was locked at other times.
    Some leachate flowed from the site into a nearby stream.
    Samples from the stream indicate that the water quality did not
    seriously suffer from the introduction of the material.
    Rats were controlled fairlywell but there was no attempt to
    control flies.
    The biggest problem with littering came from an attempt to
    use the area fill system in a low lying area.
    The trench system
    was used generally and cover material was close at hand.
    The
    City Manager admitted that there had been violations
    in the lower
    end of the fill based upon failure to cover on
    a daily basis.
    The problem with this landfill operation was stated rather
    succinctly by the City Manager.
    He said.
    “The history of Salem’s present landfill site dates
    back to 1941 when it was opened——of course,
    then
    as an
    o!en dump——and it was operated for many, many years as
    an open dump.
    And when the regulations were established
    to convert it to a sanitary landfill, the City began to
    make efforts
    in this direction and began to make some
    progress,
    I think, despite what we’re discussing here
    today.
    5
    342

    —3—
    But,
    it’s very difficult to convert an open dump
    to a sanitary landfill.
    The design of the area is not
    very conducive to that.
    It’s been used one way, and
    it’s just really impossible to change it to another.”
    (R.
    158)
    Over the past year the City has attempted to locate
    a new
    landfill.
    Contacts were made with other units of local govern-
    ment but first the County Board and then the City of Centralia
    declined to create an area landfill.
    Arrangements have now been
    made by the City of Salem to use a landfill
    not, operated by the
    City.
    A permit has been issued and the City has entered into a
    contract to use the site starting August 1,
    1972.
    The Assistant
    Attorney General who prosecuted this case commended the City for
    having found a new disposal site.
    The City has been moving toward compliance with the law.
    We
    agree that it is difficult to change the habits of the public and
    the long established use of the old site, and that compliance
    is
    more likely to occur at a new location.
    In view of the progress
    made by the City we believe a small penalty in the amount of
    $250.00 would be appropriate along with an order for the closing
    of the old dumping site.
    The City takes the position that we have no jurisdiction to
    impose a monetary penalty upon a municipality.
    Section 42 of the
    EPA provides~that “any person” who violates the Act shall be
    liable to pay the monetary penalty.
    This term is broad enough to
    include corporations and municipalities.
    We adhere to our view
    that monetary penalties may be imposed upon municipalities.
    City
    of Springfield vs. EPA, PCB 70—55.
    ORDER
    It is ordered that:
    (1)
    Respondents City of Salem and Thomas Arnold cease and
    desist from their violations of the Environmental
    Protection Act and the Rules
    and Regulations for
    Refuse Disposal Sites and Facilities.
    (2)
    Respondent City of Sa1~mshall close the landfill
    which was the subject of this hearing and shall not
    in the future use
    bhe site for a landfill unless
    a
    permit for doing so is first obtained from the
    Environmental Protection Agency.
    Final cover shall
    be applied within six months
    from the date of this
    order.
    5
    343

    —4—
    (3)
    Respondents jointly or severally shall pay to the
    State of Illinois by October
    6,
    1972 the sum of
    $250.00 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.
    I, Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Pollution Control Board,
    certify that the Board adopted the above Opinion and Order this
    ________day
    of September,
    1972, by a vote of
    ~
    ~/77
    J~4~
    Christan L. Moffett, C?~p5~
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    5
    344

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