ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    February
    7,
    1972
    hAYES
    BRANCH
    DRAINAGE DISTRICT
    CF
    DOUGLAS COUNTY,
    ILLINOIS
    anc~
    )
    PCB 71—356,
    71-357
    DRAINAGE DISTRICT NO.
    4 OF THE
    TOWN
    OF TtJSCOLA, DOUGLAS COUNTY,)
    ILLINOIS
    v.
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    Messrs.
    John H. Armstrong and Craig Van Meter appeared for the
    Petitioners
    Mr.
    Delbert
    D.
    Haschemeyer appeared
    for the Environmental Protection
    Agency
    OPINION
    0?
    THE
    BOARD
    (by Richard
    3.
    Kissel)
    The Drainage District No.
    4 of the Town of Tuscola
    (District
    No.
    4)
    and the Hayes Branch Drainage District of Douglass County
    (Hayes District) originally filed a variance petition before
    the
    Pollution Control Board
    (“Board”)
    in July,
    1971.
    Both Districts
    sought a variance from the Environmental Protection Act and from
    the
    Rules and Regulations Governing the Control of Air Pollution
    (“Rules”)
    in order to dispose of wood and vegetable matter.
    (PCB 71-175,
    71-180).
    The Board ordered that hearings be held on
    each petition.
    Such
    a hearing was held on August 23,
    1971 in th~
    Douglas County Courthouse.
    On September
    2,
    1971, with
    the Board’s
    adoption of
    the Open Burning Regulations,
    H 70-il,
    the Board dis-
    missed the variance petitions
    in PCB
    71-175,
    71-180.
    The Board
    directed the petitioners to proceed under
    the
    permit provisions
    contained
    in the new regulations.
    (See Section
    404
    of R70-1l).
    Both Districts subsequently
    filed
    a permit. application with the
    Division of Air Pollution Control of the Agency.
    On November
    10,
    1971,
    the Agency refused the Districts
    a permit, stating that
    the request “does not meet the requirements or the intent of the
    open burning regulations.”
    3
    611

    On November 12 and 15,
    1971,
    District No,
    4 and the Hayes
    District filed
    a variance petition with
    the Board..
    No hearing
    was scheduled and the Board instead sought an Agency recommenda-
    tion.
    On January
    26,
    1972,
    the Agency filed its recommendation
    and asked that the variance requests be denied.
    District No.
    4 and the Hayes District are both quasi-municipal
    corporations organized for the purpose of providing an adequate out-
    let
    for surface and subsurface drainage of agricultural
    lands.
    On
    June
    22,
    1970,
    the Circuit Court of Douglas County entered an Order
    directing
    the District No.
    4
    to reconstruct its open drain
    in accord-
    ance with plans and specifications prepared by the Soil Conservation
    Service and the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
    This Circuit
    Court Order included the clearing and removal from the channel and
    banks
    of the ditch of trees, brush,
    logs,
    rubbish and debris.
    The
    District No.
    4 project covered 2.03 miles, containing approximately
    5 acres.
    A similar project was ordered by the same Circuit Court
    on April
    23,
    1971
    for the
    Hayes
    I;~istrict; it covered 13.65 miles,
    containing about
    40
    acres.
    Both Districts proposed to dispose
    of
    the wood and vegetable matter by open burning on one day.
    The
    District No.
    4 matter had already been removed
    as
    of November,
    1971,
    and was merely waiting disposal;
    that of the Hayes District is
    still being
    removed.
    The evidence to be considered by the Board
    in determining whether
    a variance should be granted consists of
    the record in the proceedings PCB 71-175 and PCB 71-180 and several
    aerial photographs submitted with the variance petition.
    The District No,
    4 project consists
    in removing about 18,300
    yards
    of silt
    and clearing the brush from the channel.
    (H.
    17)
    The prr~jectcovers two miles of the channel.
    The lower half mile
    and the upper mile of the channel is covered with trees.
    Brush
    is blocking
    the channel itself.
    (R.
    21)
    The District’s engineer
    estimated that about 750
    tons
    of material would have to be removed
    from within and near the channel.
    CR.
    46)
    The District investi-
    gated
    the
    use of an Air Curtain Destructor as an alternative means
    of disposal;
    total estimated cost for such
    a method of buraing
    was about
    $12,000.
    (H.
    48)
    Total cost of the District No.
    4 pro-
    ject is estimated at about $36,000; use of an Air Curtain Destruc-
    tar would raise such cost to $48,000.
    The Hayes District project covers 11.4 miles of channel im-
    provement.
    This work involves the removal
    of. ~ non—merchantable
    type of brush.
    The brush
    is blocking
    the channel at present.
    (R.
    15)
    The Hayes District project involves the removal of 241,000
    yards of dirt.
    (R.
    16)
    This channel
    is heavily covered from bank
    to bank with shrub trees and underbrush.
    (H.
    21)
    The trees vary
    in diameter from
    2
    to 10 inches and cover all but
    a half mile of
    3
    612

    the riverbed.
    The Hayes District similarly investigated the use
    of
    an Air Curtain Destructor
    as
    a means of disposal;
    total esti-
    mated cost for
    the use of this method, including the expense of
    digging the holes, would be approximately $100,000.
    (H.
    42)
    Use
    of the destructor would involve
    64 burning sites.
    (H.
    89)
    The
    District engineer also investigated the burial of the brush and
    trees;
    he found such
    a method to be objectionable.
    CR.
    42)
    The
    material removed from the channel could not be piled densely in
    a
    burial trench since it is difficult
    to pack
    down.
    It then must
    be covered with earth
    for the farmer to get any use from the
    soil banks.
    If the farmer
    is
    not able
    to use
    the land,
    the brush
    grows
    up wild again.
    In addition, with burial there
    is
    a void
    among the branches
    and limbs which eventually results in the
    ground subsiding when the wood begins
    to decay.
    Sink holes are
    then created over each burying pit.
    This
    then creates substan-~
    tial hazards when the field
    is farmed such that
    a tractor or
    other such vehicle could just slip into
    the sink hole.
    The witness
    admitted however that there may be room on
    the existing right-of-
    way to bury the debris,
    ‘but that it might prove difficult because
    channel widening is
    to occur in the near future.
    (R.
    44)
    No cost
    analysis was conducted to determine the economic feasibility of
    burial.
    (H.
    90)
    To haul
    the debris out of the
    area and bury it
    elsewhere would involve trucking it over agricultural
    land,
    an
    expensive
    and detrimental practice since it results in packing
    the ground.
    (H.
    90)
    The District did not look into further haul-
    ing
    and termed it “inconceivable.”
    (H.
    75)
    We must then turn to the question of whether the
    variance
    should be granted.
    In order for
    a petitioner to be granted a
    variance by
    the Board he must prove that compliance with the
    law
    will create
    an arbitrary or unreasonable hardship.
    (See Section
    35
    of the Act).
    This Board has consistently held that the question
    of determining whether an arbitrary or unreasonable hardship exists
    is determined by
    a balancing process, that is, balancing
    the
    benefits
    to the petitioner and the public in granting the’~ariance
    versus
    the harm to the public and the petitioner in denying the
    variance.
    This is not an equal balance;
    the benefits to be ob-
    tained by the public
    and the petitioner must be significantly
    greater in allowing the variance, then the harm caused by denying
    it.
    Open burning has been prohibited
    in Illinois
    for several years
    and
    such
    a ban was reaffirmed with the passage of the Environmental
    Protection Act.
    (See Section 9(c)).
    In this
    case, we do not
    believe that
    the
    two Districts have demonstrated that compliance
    with
    the Act and
    the Rules would impose an arbitrary or unreasonable
    hardship.
    3—613

    In general, before beginning
    a channel project,
    the District
    will determine
    that
    the benefit
    to be derived from the project is
    at least $15
    per acre.
    (H.
    80)
    Costs for the project at present
    are about
    $9 per acre.
    To add an Air Curtain Destructor
    on the
    Hayes District project would cost about $10
    per acre more.
    This
    would raise
    the effective cost of the project plus disposal with
    an Air Curtain Destructor in excess of $15, thereby destroyin~Ythe
    cost-benefit ratio.
    The costs are not quite
    as dramatic
    for
    the
    District No.
    4 project;
    the addition of an Air Curtain Destructor
    would raise the expense by about one—third.
    Assuming again that
    the present cost is
    $10 per acre,
    the effective cost would then
    be raised to something
    in excess of
    $13 per acre with
    the use of
    an Air Curtain Destructor.
    Though such computations may make
    an
    Air Curtain Destructor
    an unfeasible technique for disposing of
    the wood and debris,
    the various other alternatives were never
    adequately explored by the Districts.
    Burying was disregarded
    because
    a tractor might ultimately slip into a sink hole which
    might result in the future.
    With hauling,the trucking across the
    field would lead to packing;
    it is not clear
    to the Board how
    packing down by trucks can be any different from packing down by
    tractors used to remove the growth from the channel.
    Further,
    no cost estimates were conducted of either of these latter alter-
    natives;
    rather, they were dismissed as “inconceivable.”
    No
    consideration was given to constructing
    one Air Curtain Destruc—
    tor,
    as opposed to the 64 sites proposed
    for the Hayes District
    project.
    With construction minimized, costs would surely be
    reduced.
    Note instead,
    the extension
    study of alternatives under-
    taken in Hardwick Brothers Company v.
    Environmental Protection
    Agency,
    PCB 71-17
    and Willow Creek Drainage District
    v. Environ-
    mental Protection Agency,
    PCB
    71-131.
    There is not even
    a pro-
    posed schedule and procedure for open burning
    in this
    case except
    to say “one time
    only”.
    -
    For all intents and purposes
    then,
    the
    Districts may well decide to do everything on one day or may spread
    it piecemeal over a whole year.
    To allow such open burning will impose
    a hardship upon the
    residents
    of Tuscola.
    Several
    of the proposed burning sites are
    within one mile
    of the Tuscola city limits;
    several others are
    not
    far distant therefrom.
    The Districts give
    rio indication that
    they would only burn when the prevailing wind conditions would
    drive the smoke
    away from the town.
    With the use
    of a Destructor,
    burning
    for the Hayes District would take 1170 hours,
    for District
    No.
    4,
    150 hours.
    Thus,
    though the Destructor is
    a more efficient
    burning process,
    it would still take 1320 hours.
    3
    614

    In variance cases,
    the burden of proof falls
    OF:
    ~.
    :itioner.
    Both Districts have failed to show that adoption of
    al
    ~.
    .
    .~
    ye
    means of disposal would impose an arbitrary or unreaso~
    -
    hardship
    upon their operations.
    The variance
    is hereby denied.
    This denial will not foreclose the Districts from coring to
    the Board with new evidence on the alternative means of disposal
    as
    compared to
    the harm caused by the burning.
    We recognize
    that the
    time grows short if the Districts
    are
    to be allowed
    to open burn,
    and we suggest, therefore,
    that if the Districts wish
    to file
    a new
    petition that
    it be done
    soon
    and contain all the
    facts, under oath,
    consistent with this decision,on which the Board
    can make
    a proper
    decision.
    This opinion constitutes
    the
    findings
    of fact and conclusions
    of law of
    the Board.
    Samuel Aldrich dissents from the opinion of
    the Board.
    I,
    Christan L. Moffett, Clerk of the Pollution Control Board,
    certify that the Board adopted the above Opinion and Qder this
    7
    day of February, 1972, by
    a vote of
    ~
    /
    ~
    -
    ~
    D~’~
    Christan
    L. Moff~tt,
    Clerk of the Board
    3— 615

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