RE CE ~\F ED
    CLERK’S OFFICE
    BEFORE THE ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    ~ 2004
    CHAMPAIGN COUNTY, ILLINOIS
    STATE OF ILUNOIS
    Pollution Control Board
    MORTON F. DOROTHY,
    )
    )
    Complainant,
    vs.
    )
    No. PCB O4~-_____
    )
    FLEX-N-GATE CORPORATION,
    )
    an Illinois Corporation,
    )
    )
    Respondent.
    NOTICE
    To:
    Flex-N-Gate Corporation
    Angela M. Brooks
    Registered Agent
    502 East Anthony Drive
    Urbana, Illinois 61802
    TAKE NOTICE THAT I HAVE FILED THE ACCOMPANYING COMPLAINT WITH THE
    ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD. YOU MAY BE REQUIRED TO ATTEND A
    HEARING AT A DATE SET BY THE BOARD. (35 III. Adm. Code 103.204(a)).
    Failure to answer this complaint within 60 days may have severe consequences.
    Failure to answer will mean that all allegations in the complaint will be taken as if
    admitted for purposes of this proceeding. If you have any questions about this
    procedure, you should contact the hearing officer assigned to this proceeding, the
    Clerk’s Office or an attorney. (35 III. Adm. Code 103.204(f)).
    tv~o
    ~Zr~)
    fl4 ../
    Morton F. Dorothy, Complainant
    Morton F. Dorothy
    804 East Main
    Urbana IL 61802
    217/384-1010

    RE CE ~1V ED
    CLERK’S OFFICE
    BEFORE THE ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROLBOA~P082004
    CHAMPAIGN COUNTY, ILLINOIS
    STATE OF ILUNOIS
    Pollution. Control Board
    MORTON F. DOROTHY,
    )
    )
    Complainant,
    vs.
    )
    No. PCB
    ____
    FLEX-N-GATE CORPORATION,
    )
    an Illinois Corporation,
    )
    )
    Respondent.
    )
    COMPLAINT
    Complainant, Morton F. Dorothy, for his complaint against respondent, Flex-n-
    gate Corporation, an Illinois corporation, alleges as follows.
    ALLEGATIONS COMMON TO ALL COUNTS
    1.
    This is a citizens complaint filed pursuant to Section 31 of the Environmental
    Protection Act (“Act”) (415 ILCS 5/31) and 35 III. Adm. Code 103.200.
    2.
    Complainant is an individual residing in Champaign County, Illinois.
    3.
    Respondent, Flex-n-gate Corporation, is an Illinois corporation which owns and
    operates a facility known as Guardian West, 601 Guardian Drive, Urbana,
    Champaign County, Illinois.
    4.
    The facility produces bumpers for vehicles. The facility includes a “chrome
    plating line” in which steel bumpers are cleaned, electroplated with several layers
    of nickel, electroplated with chromium, and rinsed.
    5.
    The cleaning, plating and rinsing operations take place in open-top tanks holding
    up to 10,000 gallons of various chemicals in water solution. The tanks are
    arranged in two rows, with a catwalk between the rows to access the tops of the
    tanks.
    6.
    The tanks are mounted on concrete piers above a coated concrete floor. Spilled
    chemicals fall to the floor, where they accumulate in sumps to be pumped to a
    hazardous waste treatment unit.
    7.
    The spillage on the floor is hazardous waste as defined in 35 III. Adm. Code 721.

    8.
    The spillage on the floor is a complex mixture that includes chromic acid, nickel
    sulfate from the nickel plating tanks, sulfuric acid, and various proprietary high-
    sulfur additives used in one of the nickel plating tanks to form a high-sulfur,
    corrosion resistant nickel layer.
    9.
    The spillage on the floor includes contaminated debris and sludge beds.
    10.
    The facility includes a hazardous waste treatment unit, which includes pH
    adjustment, reduction of hexavalent chromium with sodium metabisulfite, and
    precipitation of a nickel and chromium hydroxide sludge. Treated wastewater is
    discharged to a sanitary sewer owned by the Urbana Champaign Sanitary
    District. Sludge is hauled off site for recycling and disposal. Sludge is F006, a
    hazardous waste listed in 35 Ill. Adm. Code 721.131.
    11.
    The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency has not issued a RCRA permit for
    the facility.
    12.
    Respondent claims that the facility operates pursuant to 35 III. Adm. Code
    703.123(a) and 722.134(a), as a large quantity generator of hazardous waste
    which is treated on-site in tanks, without a RCRA permit or interim status. In the
    event the Board determines that this claim is valid, Section 722.134(a)(4)
    requires compliance with 35 III. Adm. Code 725.Subpart D, including Sections
    725.151 through 725.156. In the event the Board determines that this claim is
    invalid, respondent is operating an unpermitted hazardous waste treatment and
    storage facility which is subject to Sections 725.151 through 725.156 directly.
    13.
    Under and adjacent to the catwalk there is a piping system used to transfer
    concentrated sulfuric acid to certain tanks.
    14.
    On or about August 5, 2004, a pipe containing sulfuric acid ruptured or
    separated adjacent to the catwalk, spilling concentrated sulfuric acid onto the
    floor under the catwalk.
    15.
    The sulfuric acid reacted with the waste mixture on the floor, producing hydrogen
    sulfide gas.
    16.
    Hydrogen sulfide is a toxic gas that is heavier than air. It is listed as a “highly
    hazardous chemical which presents a potential for a catastrophic event” in 29
    CFR 1910.119 App A. Hydrogen sulfide is often encountered when entering
    sanitary sewer manholes. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration
    (OSHA) recommends a limit of 10 ppm hydrogen sulfide for entry into manholes
    (29 CFR 1910.146 App E).
    17.
    35 III. Adm. Code 721.123(a)(5) defines one type of D003, “reactive waste” as
    follows: “It is a cyanide or sulfide bearing waste which, when exposed to pH

    conditions between 2 and 12.5 can generate toxic gases, vapors, or fumes in a
    quantity sufficient to present a danger to human health or the environment.”
    18.
    Section 725.151 requires that the owner or operator have a “contingency plan”
    for the facility.
    19.
    Section 725.155 requires an “emergency coordinator”.
    20.
    Respondent has a safety office, with one safety officer generally present at the
    facility at all times.
    21.
    Certain line workers at the facility are required to attend 24-hour “hazwoper”
    training as first responders to an emergency situation. They are trained to
    contact safety in the event of a release. The trained line workers are then to
    assist safety and other responders if needed.
    22.
    After discovering the acid spill and determining that a hydrogen sulfide release
    was occurring, the hazwoper-trained line workers began an immediate response
    and paged safety.
    23.
    When safety arrived, the line workers explained the situation to safety, and
    requested that safety get a hydrogen sulfide probe to determine whether the
    levels were safe.
    24.
    Safety responded that he did not know what a hydrogen sulfide probe was and
    did not know whether one was present at the facility.
    25.
    Line workers told safety that hydrogen sulfide was a toxic gas, that the Urbana
    Fire Department had a hydrogen sulfide probe, and that safety needed to
    consider evacuation of the building. Safety responded by recommending that
    people stay back from the immediate area of the release, and asked if fans
    would help. Line workers responded that they had no fans. Safety then departed
    and was not seen again by the first responders for the remainder of the
    immediate response.
    26.
    Line workers directed water hoses toward the area of the emission, and then
    retreated from the area, allowing water to dilute the acid and waste, washing it to
    the hazardous waste treatment unit.
    27.
    Line workers became light-headed, dizzy and nauseated from the release.
    COUNT I
    OPERATION WITHOUT A RCRA PERMIT OR INTERIM STATUS
    Complainant realleges and incorporates by reference the allegations common to

    all Counts in this Count.
    1.
    Respondent is operating a hazardous waste treatment and storage facility
    without a RCRA permit or interim status, in violation of Section 21(f) of the Act
    and 35 III. Adm. Code 703.121 (a).
    2.
    Because of the age of the waste under the catwalk, chemical or biological
    reactions may have converted part of the sulfate waste to the sulfide form,
    allowing the formation of hydrogen sulfide gas on contact with acid.
    3.
    Section 42(a)(3) of the Act provides for a civil penalty of $25,000 per day for
    violation of the RCRA permit requirement in Section 2 1(f) of the Act.
    4.
    35 III. Adm Code 103.400 etseq. Include procedures under which the Board
    would supervise the issuance of a RCRA permit.
    WHEREFORE Complainant prays:
    A.
    That the Board set this matter for hearing.
    B.
    That the Board determine that respondent has violated the RCRA permit
    requirement of Section 21(f) of the Environmental Protection Act and 35 III. Adm.
    Code 703.121(a).
    C.
    That the Board assess a civil penalty of $25,000 per day for the violation.
    D.
    That the Board enter an order requiring that Respondent file a Part A and Part B
    RCRA permit application with the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency.
    E.
    In the event that, following enforcement hearings in this case, the Board
    determines that it is necessary for the Board to order the issuance of a RCRA
    permit, that the Board enter an interim order pursuant to 35 III. Adm. Code
    103.402.
    F.
    For such other relief as the Board may determine to be necessary.
    COUNT II
    FAILURE TO CARRY OUT CONTINGENCY PLAN
    AS REQUIRED BY SECTION 725.151
    Complainant realleges and incorporates by reference the allegations common to
    all Counts in this Count.
    1.
    Section 725.151(b) requires the contingency plan to be carried out “immediately
    whenever there is a fire, explosion or release of hazardous waste or hazardous

    waste constituents that could threaten human health or the environment”.
    2.
    The hydrogen sulfide emission was a release of hazardous waste or hazardous
    waste constituents that could threaten human health or the environment within
    the meaning of Section 725.151(b).
    3.
    Respondent utterly failed to carry out the contingency plan in response to this
    incident.
    4.
    Among other things, the emergency coordinator failed to:
    a.
    Notify local agencies with designated response roles (Section
    725.156(a)).
    b.
    Identify the amount and areal extent of the release (Section 725.156(b)).
    c.
    Assess possible hazards to human health and the environment (Section
    725.156(c).
    5.
    Respondent violated Section 725.151(b).
    6.
    Section 42(a)(3) of the Act provides for a civil penalty of $25,000 per day for
    each violation of a Board regulation relating to the RCRA program.
    WHEREFORE Complainant prays:
    A.
    That the Board set this matter for hearing.
    B.
    That the Board determine that respondent has violated 35 Ill. Adm. Code
    725.151(b).
    C.
    That the Board assess a civil penalty of $25,000 for the violation.
    D.
    For such other relief as the Board may determine to be necessary.
    COUNT Ill
    FAILURE TO NOTIFY ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    Complainant realleges and incorporates by reference the allegations common to
    all Counts in this Count.
    1.
    Section 725.156(j) requires that, within fifteen days after the incident, the owner
    or operator must submit a written report on the incident to the Illinois
    Environmental Protection Agency (Agency).

    2.
    Respondent failed to report the incident to the Agency within fifteen days as
    required by Section 725.156(j).
    3.
    Respondent violated Section 725.156(j).
    4.
    Section 42(a)(3) of the Act provides for a civil penalty of $25,000 per day for
    each violation of a Board regulation relating to the RCRA program
    WHEREFORE Complainant prays:
    A.
    That the Board set this matter for hearing.
    B.
    That the Board determine that respondent has violated 35 III. Adm. Code
    725.156(j).
    C.
    That the Board assess a civil penalty of $25,000 per day for the violation.
    D.
    For such other relief as the Board may determine to be necessary.
    COUNT IV
    FAILURE TO AMEND THE CONTINGENCY PLAN
    FOLLOWING FAILURE OF THE PLAN
    Complainant realleges and incorporates by reference the allegations common to
    all Counts in this Count.
    1.
    Section 725.154(b) requires that the owner or operator review and immediately
    amend the contingency plan when the plan fails in an emergency.
    2.
    The contingency plan failed during the hydrogen sulfide release in the following
    respects:
    a.
    The plan did not specifically address the possibility of an acid spill
    resulting in a hydrogen sulfide release.
    b.
    The plan did not require the ready availability of a hydrogen sulfide meter.
    c.
    The plan did not require that responders be familiar with measurement of
    hydrogen sulfide.
    d.
    The plan did not require the availability of respirators for use with
    hydrogen sulfide.
    3.
    Respondent failed to immediately amend the contingency plan to address the

    possibility of an acid spill resulting in a hydrogen sulfide release.
    4.
    Respondent has violated Section 725.154(b).
    5.
    Section 42(a)(3) of the Act provides for a civil penalty of $25,000 per day for
    each violation of a Board regulation relating to the RCRA program
    WHEREFORE Complainant prays:
    A.
    That the Board set this matter for hearing.
    B.
    That the Board determine that respondent has violated 35 III. Adm. Code
    725.154(b)
    C.
    That the Board assess a civil penalty of $25,000 per day for the violation.
    D.
    That the Board enter an order requiring that Respondent to prepare an amended
    contingency plan.
    E.
    For such other relief as the Board may determine to be necessary.
    COUNT V
    FAILURE TO AMEND THE CONTINGENCY PLAN
    IN RESPONSE TO CHANGED CIRCUMSTANCES
    Complainant realleges and incorporates by reference the allegations common to
    all Counts in this Count.
    1.
    Section 725.154(c) requires that the owner or operator immediately amend the
    contingency plan “if the facility changes ... in a way that materially increases the
    potential for ... releases of hazardous waste constituents, or changes the
    response necessary in an emergency.”
    2.
    The plan did not specifically address the possibility of an acid spill resulting in a
    hydrogen sulfide release.
    3.
    Since preparation of the contingency plan, the facility has changed in a way that
    materially increases the potential for releases of hazardous waste constituents,
    specifically, the hydrogen sulfide emission incident demonstrated the possibility
    that an acid spill could result in a release of hydrogen sulfide.
    4.
    Since approval of the contingency plan, the facility has changed in a way that
    changes the response necessary in an emergency, including the necessity of
    having a hydrogen sulfide meter available, having personnel trained in the
    measurement of hydrogen sulfide and having respirators available for use with

    hydrogen sulfide.
    5.
    Respondent has not amended the contingency plan.
    6.
    Respondent has violated Section 725.154(c).
    7.
    Section 42(a)(3) of the Act provides for a civil penalty of $25,000 per day for
    each violation of a Board regulation relating to the RCRA program
    WHEREFORE Complainant prays:
    A.
    That the Board set this matter for hearing.
    B.
    That the Board determine that respondent has violated 35 III. Adm. Code
    725.154(c)
    C.
    That the Board assess a civil penalty of $25,000 per day for the violation.
    D.
    That the Board enter an order requiring that Respondent prepare an amended
    contingency plan.
    E.
    For such other relief as the Board may determine to be necessary.
    COUNT VI
    FAILURE TO CARRY OUT CONTINGENCY PLAN
    AS REQUIRED BY THE PLAN
    Complainant realleges and incorporates by reference the allegations common to
    all Counts in this Count.
    1.
    Complainant has obtained a copy of respondent’s “Emergency Response and
    Contingency Plan” (“Plan”) from the Champaign County Emergency Services
    and Disaster Agency (“ESDA”). The plan is dated May, 2001. The most recent
    revision is to the Call Lists, which were revised October, 2003,
    2.
    Page 6-3 of the plan specifies the duties of “Department Associates ... trained to
    provide response capabilities within their own department. Due to the experience
    and knowledge of the chemicals within the departments, they are able to
    respond appropriately to the threat.”
    3.
    Page 6-3 assigns to the department associates the responsibility of “Emergency
    recognition and determination of the level of spill response involvement”.
    4.
    The trained department associates recognized the emergency, and began spill

    response.
    5.
    Once the trained department associates recognized the emergency, respondent
    was required to follow the plan at least to the point of determining that there was
    no emergency.
    6.
    Respondent failed to make any determination that there was no emergency.
    7.
    Page 6-4 of the plan requires that the plan be implemented when there is “A spill
    that could cause the release of toxic liquids or fumes”.
    8.
    The sulfuric acid spill was a spill that caused the release of toxic fumes.
    9.
    Sulfuric acid is pumped from the bulk chemical storage area to the day tank,
    which is located under the catwalk, in the immediate vicinity of the spill. Acid is
    then pumped from the day tank as needed.
    10.
    The day tank normally contains more than 100 gallons of concentrated sulfuric
    acid, weighing more than 1000 pounds.
    11.
    The sulfuric acid spill “emptied the day tank”.
    12.
    Page 6-5 of the Plan defines a “large spill” as involving a quantity in excess of
    fifty-five gallons.
    13.
    Page 6-10 of the Plan requires reporting of sulfuric acid spills larger than 100
    pounds.
    14.
    Respondent failed to report the sulfuric acid spill as required on page 6-10 of the
    plan.
    15.
    Page 6-6 of the plan requires the separation of incompatible wastes.
    16.
    The spilled sulfuric acid is “RGN 1, Acids, Mineral, Non-Oxidizing”. The waste on
    the floor was “RGN 33, Sulfides, Inorganic”.
    17.
    Groups I and 33 are listed as incompatible wastes.
    18.
    The emergency coordinator failed to insure that incompatible wastes were
    segregated and stored in non-adjacent areas, in violation of page 6-6 of the plan.
    19.
    Respondent failed to carry out the plan in response to this spill.
    20.
    Respondent violated Section 725.151(b).

    21.
    Section 42(a)(3) of the Act provides for a civil penalty of $25,000 per day for
    each violation of a Board regulation relating to the RCRA program.
    WHEREFORE Complainant prays:
    A.
    That the Board set this matter for hearing.
    B.
    That the Board determine that respondent failed to carry out its contingency plan
    in connection with the hydrogen sulfide release incident.
    C.
    That the Board determine that respondent has violated 35 III. Adm. Code
    725.151(b).
    D.
    That the Board assess a civil penalty of $25,000 for the violation.
    E.
    For such other relief as the Board may determine to be necessary.
    Morton F. Dorothy, Complainant
    Morton F. Dorothy
    804
    East Main
    Urbana IL 61802
    217/384-1010

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