© 2024 WSIU Public Broadcasting
WSIU Public Broadcasting
Member-Supported Public Media from Southern Illinois University
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

State's High Court Referees Environmental Regulators' Groundwater Battle

Jeff Hitchcock - Flickr / CC-By 2.0

The Illinois Supreme Court is being asked to settle a fight between two of the state’s environmental regulators. At issue is whether certain waste disposal sites should have to do groundwater testing.

Dana Vollmer reports.

Debris and soil from construction and demolition projects can be disposed of at some quarries, if it’s considered “clean.”

The state’s Pollution Control Board only requires some up-front testing of the material. Officials from Will County and the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency argue that’s not enough.

Marie Quinlivan Czech, an attorney for Will County, told the court the only way to ensure groundwater is potable is to monitor it.

“Like a doctor who hasn’t examined the patient, they’ve concluded—without ever looking at the water—that they’ve done their job,” Czech said. “There’s no way to verify that the water is fine.”

Attorney Marie Tipsord represents the Pollution Control Board. She said there is no evidence to suggest the current testing procedure is inadequate.

“The fact that something comes to the facility and gets rejected shows that the front-end screening, and the requirements that the board put on for checks and balances, work,” Tipsord said.

Not every load of material is tested. Tipsord said debris is considered clean if it originates from a construction or demolition area that has been certified by a licensed professional engineer or geologist.

Upon delivery to the disposal site, the soil undergoes a visual and olfactory check for contamination, and is also tested using a photo ionization detector.

Assistant Attorney General Carl Elitz told the court contaminants often pass through checks due to errors in the certifying process, as well as loose regulations allowing low levels of things like lead, arsenic and other cancer-causing elements.

The IEPA and Will County officials propose a two-step testing process, where groundwater is tested before and after it passes through construction debris. The Pollution Control Board held hearings about about groundwater testing in 2015, but decided not to change its testing standards.

Tipsord said the cost of groundwater monitoring could force sites that accept clean construction or demolition debris (CCDD) and uncontaminated soil fill (USF) to close, which would leave that material to go to a landfill.

Will County officials estimate groundwater monitoring would cost between six and 16 cents per cubic yard. More than 350,000 county residents rely on groundwater wells for their drinking supply.

The case is County of Will v. Illinois Pollution Control Board, Nos. 122798, 122813 cons.

Copyright 2019 NPR Illinois | 91.9 UIS

Dana Vollmer is a reporter with WCBU. Prior to moving to Peoria, Dana covered the state Capitol for NPR Illinois. She earned her master’s degree in public affairs reporting from the University of Illinois Springfield. She also graduated from Northern Illinois University, where she studied communication and produced Morning Edition for WNIJ. Dana's interests include criminal justice reform, economic equity and the environment.
As a WSIU donor, you don’t simply watch or listen to public media programs, you are a partner. By making a gift, you help WSIU produce, purchase, and broadcast programs you care about and enjoy – every day of the year.