ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
October
3,
1972
JOHN W. BENDER
)
v.
)
#
72—324
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
Opinion
& Order of the Board
(by Mr. Currie):
Mr.
Bender seeks permission to connect
a new single
family dwelling
to a Waukegan sewer.
Connections to all
sewers in the North Shore Sanitary District were forbidden
by our order of March 31, 1971
(League of Women Voters
v.
NSSD,
#70-7,
1 PCB 369).
Mr. Bender began excavating
for his home October 11,
1971,
the foundation was erected
November
1,
and construction
is now at least 75
complete.
In cases in which construction was begun before the
connection ban was imposed, we have generally allowed variances
because of the commitment of substantial resources
in
good faith reliance on the expectation of ability to connect,
and because of the danger of vandalism or other damage to
an unoccupied structure.
See, e.g., Illinois National Bank
of Springfield v.
EPA,
#72—307,
5 PCB
(Oct.
3,
1972)
On the
other hand, we have held that one who proceeds to
construct
a home with knowledge that a connection ban has
been imposed assumes the risk that the ban will not be lifted
in time for him to connect when he desires;
to hold other-
wise would allow a builder to avoid the ban simply by defying
it.
Cook v.
EPA,
#72-178,
5 PCB
(Aug.
29, 1972).
Mr. Bender concedes that he took a calculated risk when
he began construction with knowledge that no connection could
be had until the ban was lifted.
However, he argues, the
ban was initially imposed on the basis of inadequate facilities
for treating sewage once it reached the plant:
It seemed logical
to me that by the time
I would be
in need of
a sewer the Districtvs treatment plants
would be upgraded to the point where the ban would be
relaxed.
As he observes, this prediction was correct, since our orders
of January
31 and March
2,
1972
(North Shore Sanitary District
v,
EPA, #71—343,
3
PCB 541 and 697) did in fact authorize the
District to allow additional connections on the basis of
treatment plant improvements,
What he did not foresee when
he began construction was that our later decision would
5—591
—2--
limit relief from the ban on the ground that certain sewers,
later designated by
the Agency, were inadequate to transport
their present waste loads to the plant for treatment:
I applied for
one
of these permits from the Sanitary
District but was informed by letter
5 June 1972 that my
lot was in an area of the city on which the Environmental
Protection Agency had placed a ban.
This sewer ban
was placed on Waukegan
21 April 1972.
My house was
about 75
complete on this 21st day of April 1972.
As a technical matter,
it would be possible for us to
take the position that the original connection ban has never
been lifted with regard to the sewers in question, although
the reason for forbidding connections has changed.
But the
outcome of this case should depend upon the Detitioner’s
legitimate expectations and not upon technicalities as to
whether there was one ban or two.
The risk Mr. Bender
voluntarily assumed was the risk that treatment plant improve-
ments would be delayed, not that an unforeseen and unrelated
problem with the adequacy of the sewer itself might inter-
vene.
His expectations with regard to the transport problem
were just the same as they would have been if there had
never been a ban based on the treatment problem.
Only a single house, with limited wastes,
is involved.
Mr. Bender has expended considerable personal effort in building
it in his spare time.
He has alleged substantial and credible
hardships resulting from double housing payments and the
nonuse of substantial savings if the house must stand empty.
His neighbors have filed a petition asking that we grant the
variance to protect the neighborhood
from vandalism.
We believe we should take the above facts, none of which
are disputed,to indicate that Mr. Bender commenced construction
before he had reason to know of the present cause of his in-
ability to connect; that he assumed the risk only of a de-
lay in treatment plant improvements; and that we should
allow the variance under the doctrine of the Illinois National
Bank case cited above.
We note that we were most favorably impressed by Mr. Ben-
der’s forthright and forceful presentation of his own case
before the Board.
ORDER
John W. Bender is hereby granted a variance to permit
connection of his home at 339 Pioneer Road,
Waukegan,
to the
appropriate municipal
sewer.
5
--
592
—3--
I, Christan Noffett, Clerk of the Pollution Control Board,
certify tha~tthe Board adopted the above Opinion
& Order
this
~
day of October, 1972, by a vote of
~
C
~7
/
5
—
593