Commonwealth, Department of Environmental Resonrces v. Harger

61 Pa. D. & C.2d 289
CourtPennsylvania Environmental Hearing Board
DecidedApril 27, 1973
DocketEnvironmental Hearing Board, docket no. 72-161
StatusPublished

This text of 61 Pa. D. & C.2d 289 (Commonwealth, Department of Environmental Resonrces v. Harger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Environmental Hearing Board primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth, Department of Environmental Resonrces v. Harger, 61 Pa. D. & C.2d 289 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1973).

Opinion

GOLDBERG,

Member of the Board:

—William L. Harger and Helen Harger, his wife, appellants herein, own a large tract of land in Cherry Township, Butler County, Pa., upon which they desire •to construct a mobile home park. They submitted an application to the Department of Environmental Resources (hereinafter department) for a sewage treatment plant permit. The plant was designed by appellants’ engineer, Richard A. Deiss, P. E.

On October 5, 1971, the department requested additional information, which was submitted by appellants on October 22, 1971. On January 5, 1972, the department again requested additional information. This was submitted to the department on February 2, 1972.

On February 15, 1972, the department denied the permit, and appellants filed a timely appeal with the Environmental Hearing Board.

There are two basic issues to which the board must address itself in this case:

(1) Whether the department may deny a permit for [291]*291a sewage treatment plant because the design of the plant failed to include a baffle to the outlet pipe;1 and

(2) Whether such permit may be denied because the application in question was submitted after Cherry Township adopted the Butler County Sewage Facilities Plan which was submitted to the department in December of 1970, nine months prior to the submission of the application of appellant for a sewage treatment permit.

This matter was first heard before the Hon. Gerald H. Goldberg, Member of the Environmental Hearing [292]*292Board, on April 11, 1972. At the conclusion of that hearing, the parties were requested to submit additional information. A second hearing was held before the board on November 21, 1972, at which time the parties stipulated that the notes of testimony taken at the initial hearing of the matter need not be transcribed and made a part of the record, for the reason that the issues raised during the course of that initial hearing are now deemed moot by all of the parties, and all of the issues presently before the board are incorporated in the record with respect to the hearing of November 21, 1972.

Summary of Testimony

Arthur E. Hall, Jr., an engineer for the Department of Environmental Resources, testified that he recommended denial of appellants’ permit because he determined a baffle was necessary on the outlet pipe from the treatment lagoon proposed by appellants. Mr. Hall started with the department in December 1971, with a degree in chemical engineering, having had no engineering experience prior to starting to work with the Commonwealth. The Harger application was only the fourth or fifth application Mr. Hall had ever seen or worked on. Mr. Hall stated that in his opinion, which was concurred in by two other engineers of the department, a baffle is necessary to prevent solids from entering the discharge pipe. Mr. Hall further stated that the department had required baffles on other systems similar to those of appellant, although he had personally never seen one. In fact, Mr. Hall had seen only one or two lagoon-type systems such as this, and had never designed one.

Mr. Hall further testified that he is not familiar with the literature, rules and regulations, standards or [293]*293criteria used by other agencies or government with respect to this type of facility, and that he had never seen an outlet design such as that in the application in actual operation, nor had he ever made an investigation outside his office as to whether or not the designed facility which has been in operation in other areas is or is not operating correctly.

There is no rule or regulation or standard of the Department of Environmental Resources which requires a baffle on this type of treatment facility and, in fact, in the past, Mr. Hall admitted that the department has approved exactly the same type of facility using the same features as those in the application. In further testimony, Mr. Hall admitted that to his knowledge there have been no violations of floating solids from any of the other sanitary sewage facilities with identical design which have been in operation since June of 1971.

Richard Arthur Deiss is a sanitary engineer, registered with the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania since 1965. He was employed by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in the Department of Health for five years as Chief of the Facilities Section in Meadvifle, Pa. His job was to review all applications such as the present application to determine whether or not they would comply with the rules, regulations and laws. During his tenure with the Commonwealth, he worked on about 600 sewage applications of various types. Since 1969, when Mr. Deiss formed a consulting engineering firm, he has personally designed about 10 sewage facilities of the same general type as appellants’.

During his tenure with the Commonwealth, Deiss was also in charge of the operations section responsible for the inspection and compliance of operating facilities. In his opinion, there is no need for a baffle [294]*294on this type of a sewage system, since, in his knowledge and experience, there has never been a violation of floating solids getting out through the outlet structure.

■ The structure designed by Deiss is virtually identical to a number of other such sewage facilities designed by his firm, which have received permits from the Department of Environmental Resources, and which have exactly the same outlet design, none of these have ever been found in violation. Mr. Deiss testified that he had designed an outlet structure which will prevent floating solids from leaving the pond without the necessity of a baffle. He admitted that he could design a baffle, but such a baffle would violate some of the other requirements of the department. In fact, in Mr. Deiss’ judgment, the addition of such a baffle woúld have an inimical effect with respect to the operation of the sewage treatment plant and would make no difference with respect to the discharge of solid matter into the stream. Although there is a considerable amount of literature on the subject of treatment plant design, and Mr. Deiss testified that he is familiar with the rules, regulations and standards of the Federal government and of those of other States, he knew of no requirement or recommendation for a baffle of the type requested by the Commonwealth.

With respect to the second basis for the department’s refusal of appellants’ permit, Mr. Hall testified that, in his opinion, the department had no authority to issue a permit for a sewage plant not included in a municipal plan. He stated on cross-examination that appellants’ proposed sewage system was not within the Butler County Comprehensive Sewage Plan, which had been adopted by Cherry Township as its official Municipal Plan. This plan was submitted to the [295]*295Department of Environmental Resources in December 1970, and approved by the Department of Environmental Resources on June 15, 1972. As hereinbefore noted, the application here in question was submitted to the department on September 16, 1971. However, the application was not completed until the submission of additional information requested by the department on October 22, 1971, and February 2, 1972.

On later redirect examination, Mr. Hall acknowledged that there exists a procedure in the department’s rules and regulations for the revision of municipal comprehensive plans.

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61 Pa. D. & C.2d 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-department-of-environmental-resonrces-v-harger-paenvhrbd-1973.