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Releases
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Picture Diary
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Visioning Visit
On Thursday evening, 4/13/06, a few of us met with Vince Mosca of Hey and Associates to hike the wetland area and begin thinking about
how they might be restored. Returning them to their pre-settlement condition is likely impossible and perhaps
unacceptable to surrounding development. But returning the water to its floodplain could convert impoverished biological
community to a richer ecosystem, stabilize the eroding soils, distribute increasing flows from the STP and reduce water
level fluctuations. Click the flower for a dozen pictures telling the story of our outing. Besides the low quality,
polluted and channelized Slocum Drainage Ditch, several berms and endless Reed Canary Grass evidenced human
intervention. Other inconsistent water levels around the perimeter suggest the work of beavers or other impoundments, or
new sources draining into existing ones. |
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Semi '05
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Sludge Tests
Wauconda's wastewater treatment plant is not designed to remove
toxic chemicals that might be sent to the plant by any of scores of industries
it serves. Instead of requiring a pretreatment program, their IEPA permit
requires only a list of the industrial sources, and their NPDES and sludge
permits only require gross measurement of the sludge volume, and expected fecal
coliform bacteria. These semi-annual sludge tests do not reveal whether toxic chemicals have reached the wetlands,
or whether the
sludge is too contaminated for their chosen disposal method. |
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May '05

April '05

March '05 |
Test Well Reports
Thanks to the LOA (see below) we've received these reports. Our
goal was to make the data easily available to the public. |
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Brief
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Parting Ways
The local Residents Group is determined to put an end to any STP
discharge by the Wauconda STP into the Fiddle Creek wetlands. While we felt
effort to negotiate an IGA achieved all that was legally likely, they felt
betrayed in their effort, and attempted to realign their lawsuit against us and
the villages. Here is the brief submitted in our defense. |
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IGA

Stipulation

LOA

Press Releases |
Inter-Governmental Agreement
Realizing that the appeals jeopardized their plans, the Village
of Wauconda was willing to pursue an agreement with Lake Barrington to overcome
the shortcomings of the flawed permit. Sierra Club was approached to offer
guidance. Here are the resulting documents:
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IGA (Inter-Governmental Agreement). Wauconda must include
improvements in IEPA permits, we drop our appeals.
- Stipulation. Gives all settling parties the authority to
enforce the IGA.
- LOA (Letter of Agreement). Gives us access to data.
- Press Releases. One from us, one from them.
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Sierra Club

Slocum Drainage District

Residents' |
Legal Challenges to IEPA's NPDES Permit
Given the problems with the permit discussed below, it is not
surprising that it drew legal challenges from three groups with similar intent.
The cases will be herd by the Illinois Pollution Control Board, which also has
the authority and responsibility for writing the rules to enforce the CWA. The
first flower link goes directly to the appeal, and the second one goes to the
page on the IPCB website that tracks the progress on the case. If any of these
cases are successful, the IPCB will instruct the IEPA to revise the permit.
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IEPA
NPDES Permit
IEPA
Cover Letter
Wauconda
Industry
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IEPA Issues Modified NPDES Permit No.
IL0020109 On August 23, 2004, the IEPA
unexpectedly issued a revised permit for the Wauconda STP Expansion, giving
Wauconda the green light to finish the design and begin construction.. It
includes three phases of expansion, but expires November 30, 2005 so that an
assessment of the impacts can be reflected in further revisions. Unfortunately,
such an impact assessment is required by the CWA before the permit is
granted. For Phase I, this permit allows:
- Increase in average flow to 1.9 MGD with a design maximum
of 6.0 MGD.
- No disinfection exemption, and a Fecal Coliform limit of
400/L. This implies disinfection of the effluent, but might not be sufficient
for human contact.
- Phosphorous (which harms fish and other aquatic animals by eutrophication)
limits of 16 lb/day, or a monthly average of 1 mg/L.
- Continued unlimited release of Nitrogen (nitrates and
nitrates) which also causes eutrophication.
Nitrogen and Phosphorous are two of the primary components of fertilizer.
- Increased release of Ammonia loading from 29 to 40 lb/day
through unimproved limits on concentration, and an increase in flow.
- Increased release of Total Suspended Solids (TSS), from 140
to 190 lb/day. That's 34 ton/year, and in addition to it's own mass, it
promotes plant growth and fills wetlands and water bodies.
- Unimproved BOD5 concentration restrictions, which
contribute to low Dissolved Oxygen (DO) levels in the effluent. Fish and other
aquatic animals need DO to breathe.
Instead of requiring the applicant to prove no harm, although
other STPs around IL subject to similar restrictions have proved
harmful, the IEPA has added some novel "Special Conditions" to this permit:
- Requiring that the effluent not violate 35 Ill. Adm. Code
302. This is ironic, as this is the law that calls for anti-degradation and
NPDES. It is the IEPA's job to make Wauconda prove that the proposed activity
will not violate these laws. Instead of putting limits in the permit that the
applicant has proven will be sufficient, IEPA has abandoned the precautionary
principal and adopted a remedial approach: If the effluent causes a violation,
Wauconda will be liable, even if it has not violated this permit's limits.
While this might be an improvement, it reveals IEPA's tendency to write permits
without confidence that the applicant has satisfied the burden of proof
required by law. Unfortunately, there will be further damage done during the
substantial delays and for monitoring, detection, analysis, revision, design,
construction and implementation of the improvements that should have been
required to assure no degradation occurs at the outset.
- An option to require an Influx and Infiltration control
program in the future. Wauconda's sewers are old and leaky, and when they
allow stormwater to enter, the capacity of the STP can be exceeded, and the
effectiveness of it's processes reduced. Again, the precautionary principle,
and the law, require that these measures be required to provide assurance, not
implemented as a remedy for a violation.
- A requirement that Wauconda report their industrial users
annually. Without a pre-treatment program, industrial users are likely to put
chemicals down the drain that are harmful to the STP and are likely to be
released into the environment. Wauconda has listed it's industries on p. 21 on
their
Village Demographics, and the three chemical facilities
and one medical facility, among scores of other facilities in their mature
manufacturing base, are worrisome. In addition are two superfund sites that
collect leachate and deliver it to the STP. Again, without pretreatment
(which might be stipulated by a different permit) reporting is not
precautionary, it's remedial. The permit also requires monitoring and
biomonitoring for a host of toxic materials that might evidence a problem in
the effluent, but that's insufficient to protect Fiddle Creek from
degradation.
- A requirement to monitor and study the DO in Fiddle Creek
before and after the expansion, to determine which pollutant levels must be
reduced to achieve legal DO levels. Such a study by Wauconda is required
before applying for a permit to prove the effluent will not decrease DO.
While good, this special condition is remedial, not precautionary.
These special conditions go beyond most STP permits written by
the IEPA over the last 30 years, and are an improvement. However, the IEPA
should be embarrassed that rather than serving the public by enforcing the legal
requirement that the applicant prove that they are or are not needed, they have
burdened the public and themselves with potential damage to our waters and
additional expenditure to review and revise the permit. |
Hearing
Responsiveness
Hearing Transcript
Hearing Transcript
Plug the
Pipe |
IEPA Hearing on Draft Modified Permit On September 9, 2003, IEPA held a hearing on this
permit. Hundreds of residents, officials and experts attended and many asked
questions and gave testimony. This is the transcript of that hearing. Key
sections include:
- p. 61 Mr. Huff (Lake Barrington), stating that
Wauconda's STP has since the 1980's severely violated the anti-degradation
requirements of the CWA, in effect since 1975, and that the draft permit would
allow it to continue to do so. His testimony is damning in many other
respects, including a clear indication that Wauconda is violating its present
NPDES permit, and that wells in the area are threatened. He calls for limits
on TSS, BOD5 and Ammonia; full removal of Phosphorus and Total Nitrogen
(nitrates and nitrates); wetland restoration and monitoring for heavy metals
likely from industry and superfund inputs, and Radium 226 from deep well water
treatment.
- p. 97 Mr. Ettinger (counsel for ELPC, Prairie Rivers & Sierra Club), stating that
it is the duty of the applicant (Wauconda) to prove their STP effluent will
not cause harm, and the duty of the IEPA to require that Wauconda do so. He
clarifies that the limits in the permit must be placed low enough to prevent
degradation of the public waters, regardless of common practices or
implications for Wauconda. He calls for alternatives consistent with the
definition of the National Pollution Discharge Elimination System that were
lacking in the draft permit.
- The testimony of many others at the hearing are also
noteworthy.
The residents in the Fiddle Creek region have formed a
large, loose group, and posted and maintained an informative website. They
have chosen the name Plug the Pipe, and that website has been the featured
Link of the Week on the W&W website for over a year. |
IEPA
Draft Permit
IEPA Extension
IEPA More "Facts"
IEPA Map
IEPA "Facts"
IEPA Notice
IEPA Web Permit Guide
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IEPA Draft NPDES Wauconda STP Expansion Permit
IEPA is the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency. NPDES is a part of the
federal Clean Water Act (CWA) that requires a National Pollution Discharge
Elimination System. Wauconda applied for a permit to increase the release from
their Sewage Treatment Plan (STP) - often also referred to as a Waste Water
Treatment Plant (WWTP) - in 2003.
IEPA released a draft permit to allow Wauconda to expand their
STP. It would have allowed:
- Increase in flow from 1.4 Million Gallons per Day (MGD) to 1.9 MDG for Phase I,
and to 2.4MGD for Phase II, with
a maximum of 7.9 MGD.
- Continued release of non-disinfected effluent, potentially
containing human pathogens, into the Fiddle Creek wetlands. Disinfection
should be required if human contact with the discharge waters is anticipated.
Wauconda claims that use of chlorine within the plant to maintain its process
have resulted in disinfection. The IEPA has presented misleading data about
Fecal Coliform in waters upstream from the discharge likely caused by
wildlife. Feces from wildlife do not contain human pathogens unless the
wildlife contact human waste. References and comparisons to Fecal Coliform in
Fiddle Creek from most local wildlife are irrelevant.
- Continued unlimited release of Phosphorous, which causes eutrophication (decrease in oxygen
levels caused by accelerated algae growth) which harms fish and other aquatic
animals.
- Continued release of Nitrogen compounds (nitrates and
nitrates) which also cause eutrophication.
- Continued release of Ammonia, which also cause eutrophication,
and depresses Dissolved Oxygen (DO) levels.
- Continued release of Total Suspended Solids (TSS) which promotes
plant growth and fills wetlands and water bodies.
- No limits on Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD5) causes low Dissolved Oxygen
(DO) levels in the effluent and in the receiving waters. Fish and other
aquatic animals need DO to breathe.
IEPA also distributed a supplemental "Fact" sheet bearing the
Director's imprimatur that proved very misleading on fecal coliform
contributions from the STP. |