905D77001
                              REGION 5
                              WATER DIVISION
        UNITED STATES                230 S. DEARBORN STREET
        ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY       CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60604       MARCH 1977
        ENVIRONMENTAL                      DRAFT
        IMPACT STATEMENT
        TUNNEL COMPONENT OF THE TUNNEL
        AND RESERVOIR PLAN PROPOSED BY THE
        METROPOLITAN SANITARY DISTRICT
        OF GREATER CHICAGO
        Lower Des Plaines Tunnel System

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    DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL  IMPACT STATEMENT


           TUNNEL COMPONENT OF THE

          TUNNEL AND  RESERVOIR PLAN

               PROPOSED  BY THE

       METROPOLITAN SANITARY DISTRICT

             OF GREATER  CHICAGO


          LOWER DES PLAINES SYSTEM



               Prepared  By The

UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

                  REGION V

             CHICAGO,  ILLINOIS

                   And

       BOOZ,  ALLEN AND HAMILTON, INC.

              BETHESDA,  MARYLAND
                               APPROVED BY:
                                                     
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                          SUMMARY SHEET


(X). Draft
{ > Final

J.S. Environmental Protection Agency

L.   ( x)  Administrative Action
    ( )  Legislative Action

2.   Description of the Action - see Executive Summary,  pgs.  xvii to xxviii
3.   Environmental Impact - see Executive Summary,  pgs.  xxix  to xxxvi
4.   Alternatives Considered - see Executive Summary,  pg.  xviii to xix

5.   Federal, State, and Local Agencies and Individuals  Notified to
    this Action

    Senator Adlai E. Stevenson, III
    Senator Charles H. Percy
    Representative George M. O'Brien
    Representative Philip M. Crane
    Representative Frank Annunzio
    Representative Abner J. Mikva
    Representative Sidney R. Yates
    Representative Dan Rostenkowski
    Representative Martin A. Russo
    Representative Candiss Collins
    Representative Henry J. Hyde
    Representative John G. Fary
    Representative Edward J. Derwinski
    Representative Morgan F. Murphy
    Representative Ralph H. Metcalfe

    Water Resources Council
    Council on Environmental Quality
    Environmental Protection Agency
        Office of Federal Activities
        Office of Public Affairs
        Office of Legislation
        Office of Water Programs Operations
        Environmental Evaluation Branch
    Department of the Interior
        Bureau of Outdoor Recreation
        Fish and Wildlife Servies
        National Park Service
        Geological Survey
        Bureau of Mines
    Department of Defense
        Army Corps of Engineers
            North Central Division
            Chicago District Office
    Department of Agriculture                            •  • •- >
        Soil Conservation Service                         '.+
        Forest Service
    Department of Health, Education, and Welfare
    Department of Housing and Urban Development

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                             -2-
    Department of Transportation
       Federal Aviation Administrator
       Coast Guard
    Department of Commerce
       Natinal Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
    Department of Labor
       Occupational  Health and Safety Administration
    Great  Lakes Basin Commission

    Governor of Illinois
    Illinois Institute for Environmental Quality
    Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
    Illinois Division of Waterways
    Illinois Department of Public Health
    Illinois Department of Conservation
    State  Historic Preservation Office
    Business and Economic Development
    Bureau of Soil and Water  Conservation

    Northeastern Illinois Planning  Commission
    Cook County Department of Environmental Control
    Metropolitan Sanitary District  of Greater Chicago
    City of Chicago
       Department of Environment Control
       Department of Development and Planning
       Department of Aviation

    Public Libraries

    Others

6.   Dates  Draft  Statement made available  to:
       The Council on Environmental Quality:April 1,  1977

       The Public:   April 8, 1977

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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

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                        FORWARD
     This executive summary supplements the Draft Environ-
mental Impact Statement (EIS)  on the Tunnel Component of
TARP, specifically the segments and branches of the Lower
Des Plaines Tunnel System.  Copies of the Draft EIS may be
obtained by writing the U. S.  Environmental Protection
Agency, Region V, Planning Branch, EIS Preparation Section,
230 South Dearborn Street, Chicago, Illinois 60604; or by
telephoning the TARP project officer at  (312) 353-2157.

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            TABLE   OF   CONTENTS
                    Executive Summary
                                                      Page
                                                     Number
  I.  BACKGROUND INFORMATION                            -iii-

     1.1  Legal Basis for the EIS                       -iv-
     1.2  Scope of the EIS                              -iv-
     1.3  Identification of the Applicant               -iv-
     1.4  Project History                                -v-
     1.5  Objectives of TARP                           -vii-
 II.  EXISTING ENVIRONMENTAL SETTING                   -viii-
                                i
     2.1  Natural Environment                         -viii-

          2.1.1  Water Resources                      -viii-
          2.1.2  Land Resources                         -xi-
          2.1.3  Atmospheric Resources                 -xii-
          2.1.4  Biological Resources                  -xii-

     2.2  Man-made Environment                        -xiii-

          2.2.1  Socioeconomic                        -xiii-
          2.2.2  Land Use                              -xiv-
          2.2.3  Sensitive Areas                        -xv-
          2.2.4  Financial Resources                    -xv-
          2.2.5  Labor Resources                       -xvi-
          2.2.6  Transportation                        -xvi-
          2.2.7  Major Projects and Programs           -xvi-


III.  THE PROPOSED ACTION                              -xvii-

     3.1  Alternative Plans                           -xvii-
     3.2  Plan Selection                             -xviii-
     3.3  TARP Tunnel Systems                          -xix-
     3.4  TARP Subsystems                              -xxi-
     3.5  Des Plaines Tunnel Segments and Branches    -xxii-
     3.6  Cost of Tunnel System and Subsystems        -xxii-
     3.7  TARP Financing                              -xxiv-
 IV.  PRINCIPAL FINDINGS CONCERNING THE EFFECTS OF
     THE PROPOSED ACTION                              -xxix-
  V.  CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS                -XXXVii*.

                           -ii-

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                 I.  BACKGROUND INFORMATION
     This chapter first defines the legal basis and the  scope
of the EIS and then describes .the authority and program  of  the
applicant for EPA funding, the MSDGC.  Finally, the history
and objectives of the Tunnel and Reservoir Plan  (TARP) are
reviewed.  This chapter of the executive summary  corresponds
to Chapter I of the -.environmental impact statement (EIS) .
1.1  LEGAL BASIS FOR THE EIS

     The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency  (EPA)  is  the
administering agency for a major Federal environmental  pro-
gram entitled "Grants for Construction of Treatment  Works."1
This program allows the EPA Administrator to provide finan-
cial aid to any state, municipality, intermunicipal  agency,
or interstate agency for the construction of publicly owned
water pollution control facilities.  The program will en-
courage reduction of point sources of water pollution and
improve national water quality.

     The EPA's granting of funds for a water pollution  con-
trol facility may require an EIS.  Each proposed water  pollu-
tion control facility is evaluated on a case-by-case basis
by the appropriate EPA regional office to determine  whether
the proposed facility is expected to have significant en-
vironmental effects or be highly controversial.  The EPA has
prepared this EIS because it expects the environmental  ef-
fects of the tunnel system to  be significant.

     This EIS is being issued  pursuant to PL 91-90,  the
National Environmental Policy  Act  (NEPA) of 1969,  and Exe-
cutive Order 11514, "Protection and Enhancement  of Environ-
mental Quality" dated March 5, 1970.  Both NEPA  and  Execu-
tive Order 11514 require that  all Federal agencies prepare
such statements in connection  with their proposals for  major
Federal actions significantly  affecting the quality  of  the
human environment.
     Authorized by Title II, Section 201(g)(1), of the Federal Water
     Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972, Public Law 92-500 (FWPCAA)
                             -ill-

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     This EIS has been prepared in accordance with the
regulations and guidance set forth in the President's Council
on Environmental Quality (CEQ) Guidelines dated August 1, 1973/
and the EPA's Final Regulations 40 CFR-Part 6, dated April 14,
1975.
1.2  SCOPE OF THE EIS

     The EIS addresses the cumulative effects of constructing
and operatirg three conveyance tunnel systems which are part
of the total Tunnel and Reservoir Plan  (TARP) proposed by
MSDGC.  These three tunnel systems are:

          Mainstream  (59th Street to Addison Street)
          Calumet
          Lower Des Plaines.

Where appropriate, this statement also assesses the effects
associated specifically with the Lower Des Plaines Tunnel
system route.  Two other statements address separately the ef-
fects associated with the Mainstream Tunnel system and the
Calumet Tunnel system.  The Mainstream and Calumet statements
have already been developed and issued.  These tunnel systems
comprise what is referred to in the statement as "TARP, Phase I,

     The subject of these statements is confined to the tun-
nel systems and their associated components because EPA is now
considering whether to grant funds to construct these tunnels
under its water pollution control authority.  Other compo-
nents of TARP, including the reservoirs, flood relief tun-
nels, instream aeration, and wastewater treatment plant im-
provements, are either ineligible for EPA funding or are not
now under consideration for construction grants.  Therefore,
these other components are not considered to be part of the
proposed action under review.  The effects of these other
components on water quality and the likelihood of their being
financed is analyzed in this EIS in order to provide a con-
text for evaluating the significance of the water quality
improvements expected from the three tunnel systems.


1.3  IDENTIFICATION OF THE APPLICANT

     The Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago
(MSDGC)  is the construction grant applicant for the compo-
nent of Tunnel and Reservoir Plan (TARP) addressed by this
EIS.  The MSDGC was organized in 1889 under an act to create
sanitary districts to remove obstructions in the Des Plaines
                           -iv-

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and Illinois Rivers.-*-  Under the provisions of the act, the
MSDGC is responsible for providing surface water and sewage
drainage within the District's boundaries, which it does by
constructing necessary facilities, conveyance systems, and
treatment plants.  The MSDGC is authorized to treat waste-
water, either totally or partially, from any municipality
within its designated jurisdiction, as well as to own and
operate all wastewater facilities located within the MSDGC
jurisdiction.

     The MSDGC service area is approximately 860 square miles.
Approximately 44 percent of this area, or 375 square miles,
is served by MSDGC-owned combined-sewer systems  (see Figure  1-1)
in which wastewater or sewage collected in local sewer systems
is conveyed to treatment plants.  These systems serve 120
municipalities which have a total population of approximately
5.5 million.  The District owns and operates 70.5 miles of
navigable canals, 6 wastewater treatment plants, and approxi-
mately 440 miles of intercepting sewers.  The three major
plants  (North-Side, West-Southwest, and Calumet) in the MSDGC
service area have a secondary capacity of over 1,750 million
gallons per day  (MGD).  The remaining plants have a combined
tertiary capacity of over 70 MGD.  A water reclamation plant,
the John F. Egan plant, is presently under construction and
will have a capacity of about 30 MGD.


 1.4   PROJECT HISTORY

      The MSDGC initiated its wastewater facilities planning
 study in September 1967,  with a ten-year clean-up and flood
 control program.  The objectives of the program are to solve
 the  District's flooding problem, protect Lake Michigan from
 further pollution, and improve the water quality of rivers
 and  streams in the Chicago metropolitan area.   The Tunnel
 and  Reservoir Plan (TARP)  has evolved from this ten-year
 program.

      Concerned officials from the State of Illinois, Cook
 County, the MSDGC, and the city of Chicago reactivated a
 Flood Control Coordinating Committee (FCCC)  in November 1970
 to investigate the pollution and flooding problems in the
 Chicago metropolitan area.  The Committee's primary assign-
 ment was to develop a viable plan to minimize the area's
      Illinois Revised Statutes,  Chapter 42,  Section 320,  approved
      May 29, 1889.
                            - v-

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                                    FIGURE 1-1
                        Metropolitan Sanitary  District
                              of Greater Chicago
                                 Service Area
SERVICE AREA OF MSDGC
COMBINED-SEWER
SERVICE AREA
BOUNDARY
                     -VI-

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pollutant discharges and the flooding caused by overflows
of mixed sewage and wastewater.  Another priority item in
the plan was elimination of the need to release polluted
river and canal flood waters into Lake Michigan.  The Com-
mittee's plan was to address the combined-sewer area within
Cook County, covering 375 square miles.  The deliberations
and studies of the FCCC and of a technical advisory commit-
tee which they formed resulted in the selection of TARP as
less costly and more environmentally acceptable than the
other plans they evaluated.  The Committee then initiated
additional studies to develop and refine TARP.


1.5  OBJECTIVES OF TARP

     A primary objective of TARP is to improve surface water
quality within the planning area.  TARP is designed to meet
the standards set forth in the "Water Pollution Regulations
of Illinois."^  These regulatory standards were established
for three surface water-use classifications:   (1) General
(primary body contact), (2) Public and Food Processing
(drinking water), and (3) Secondary Body Contact and Indigenous
Aquatic Life.  All surface waters in the State of Illinois
have been given a water-use classification by the Illinois
Pollution Control Board (IPCB) and should comply with the ap-
propriate water quality standards.  Details of these standards
are presented in Chapter II of this EIS.  Other important
objectives of TARP are to:

          Preserve the health and well-being of the population
          Prevent further pollution of Lake Michigan due to backflow
          Utilize treated waste byproducts
          Prevent flooding.

     The final TARP is a combination of several alternative
plans designed to collect urban runoff during all wet wea-
ther conditions except those storms of a magnitude equal to
the three most severe storms recorded to date by the U.S.
Weather Bureau Service.
                            -vii-

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             II. EXISTING ENVIRONMENTAL SETTING
     To provide a basis for assessing the impacts of a pro-
posed project, an EIS initially describes the existing natural,
social, economic, and cultural setting of the area which
may be affected by a project.  This chapter summarizes the
major findings of the EIS with respect to the natural and
man-made environments of the Chicago metropolitan area.  This
chapter is divided into two sections which correspond to
Chapters II and III of the EIS text:  Natural Environment
and Man-made Environment.
2.1  NATURAL ENVIRONMENT

     The existing natural environment of the Chicago area
summarized in this section focuses on those features rele-
vant to impact assessment of the proposed TARP project.  This
section is divided into the following categories:

          Water Resources
          Land Resources
          Atmospheric Resources.
2.1.1  Water Resources

     The surface water systems of the Chicago area consist
of a network of rivers and canals whose natural flow into
Lake Michigan is controlled by a series of locks.  These
surface water systems include the Chicago River, the Sanitary
and Ship Canal, the Calumet River system , and the Des Plaines
River system.  Lake Calumet and Lake Michigan also constitute
an important part of the area's surface water resources.

     The quality of the surface water systems is affected by
steady-state effluent discharges and by injections or dis-
charges of polluted wastewaters.  The polluted wastewater
results from overflows of combined-sewer systems during rain-
fall events of nominal size  (approximately 0.1 inches or
greater).  The frequency of these rainfall events is approxi-
mately 100 times per year, and the resulting overflows are
discharged directly to the Chicago area's streams and rivers.

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Pollutant concentrations in the  streams and  rivers presently
exceed water quality  standards established by the State of
Illinois  Pollution  Control Board.   Concentration ranges of
various pollutants  in the Chicago  area's  surface systems are
presented in Table  II-l.  Further  details on the water  quality
of specific water systems are presented in Section 2.1.1 of
the EIS.
                          Table II-l
          Summary of Pollutant Concentration  Ranges
             in Chicago's Surface Water Systems
Pollutant
Dissolved oxygen (DO)


Biochemical oxygen
demand (BOD)
Ammonia (as N)

Suspended solids (SS)
Fecal coliform

Chicago River —
Sanitary and
Ship Canal System
1.2 to 7.7 mg/1



5.2 to 9.2 mg/1
0.8 to 6.2 mg/1

19 to 54 mg/1
477 to 12, 700
(counts/100 ml)
Calumet River
System
3.9 to 9.O mg/1



4.1 to 7.3 mg/1
1.3 to 13 ng/1

12 to 73 mg/1
152 to 738
{counts/100 ml)
Des Plaines
River System
6.0 to 10 mg/1



5.0 to 6.7 mg/1
0.3 to 1.2 mg/1

29 to 68 mg/1
411 to 8,700
(counts/100 ml)
Applicable Illinois Standards*
Secondary
Contact
5.0 mg/11
4.0 mg/1 (1978)2
3.0 mg/1
4.0 mg/1 min.^
2 . 0 mg/1 nun .
4-20 mg/14
4.0 mg/1 (winter)
2.5 mg/1 (summer)
5-25 mg/15
1000/100 ml1

General
Use
6.0 mg/1
5.0 mg/1 min.



4-20 mg/14
2.6 mg/13

5-25 mg/15
200/100 ml2

  *  Effluent discharge standards apply if water quality standard is not designated.
  1  North Shore Channel Standards
  2  Chicago River-Sanitary and Ship Canal System and Calumet River system.
  3  General Use Standard applicable to Des Plaines River system.
  4  4 mg/1-Hanover, Egan, and O'Hare Sewage Treatment Plants
    10 mg/l-WSW and Calumet Sewage Treatment Plant
    20 ma/1-Lemont Sewage Treatment Plant
  5  5mg/l-Hanover, Egan, and O'Hare STP
    12mg/l-WSW and Calumet STP
    25mg/l-Lemont STP

      Serious  public health problems  involving contamination
 of Chicago's  drinking  water supply has  led to implementation
 of regulatory measures to  protect Lake  Michigan,  an important
 drinking water  resource, from pollution.   Locks  and gates have
 been  installed  to divert river flows  away from Lake Michigan,
 allowing eventual drainage into the  Illinois River.  Lake
 Michigan supplies most of  the drinking  water for the Chicago
 area.  The withdrawal  amount is approximately 1,600 cubic
 feet  per second (CFS), and the maximum  amount that can be
 withdrawn  from  Lake Michigan is 3,200 CFS.l  This withdrawal
 limit, or  allotment,  is  presently divided into three usage
 types:  domestic water supply, indirect waterway diversion,
 and direct waterway diversion.  The  diversion usages allow
 improved effluent dilution and improved navigation.
      Supreme Court Decision.
                               -ix-

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     In the Chicago metropolitan area, there are two main
aquifer systems:  the upper aquifer, which consists of gla-
"cial drift and dolomites, and the lower aquifer, which con-
sists of dolomite and sandstone formations.  Unconsolidated
Quaternary deposits and Silurian dolomites of the upper aqui-
"fer are hydraulically connected and function, in most areas,
as a single water-bearing unit.  Clayey deposits  in the gla-
cial drift act as confining layers to create artesian condi-
tions in the upper aquifer.  The lower aquifer  includes dolo-
mite and sandstone formations extending from the base of the
Maquoketa Group to the top of the Eau Claire shales of the
Cambrian system.  The average thickness of the  upper aqui-
fer and lower aquifer is approximately 400 feet and 1,000
feet, respectively.  The sources of recharge for the ground-
water in the upper aquifer are infiltration of  precipitation
and influent streams.  The lower aquifer is recharged in
parts of McHenry, Kane, and De Kalb Counties where the
Maquoketa Group outcrops, and further west where the Group
has been removed by erosion.  With respect to using the
aquifers as a water resource, studies indicate  that the
lower aquifer is capable of producing about 25  Million Gal-
lons per Day (MGD) and the upper aquifer is capable of a
potential yield of 108 MGD.

     Discharges into the waterways of the Chicago area ori-
ginate from several sources, including:  wastewater treat-
ment facilities, industrial plants, and combined-sewer over-
flows.  Six wastewater treatment facilities currently dis-
charge treated water to existing waterways.  The outfalls
are located adjacent to the facilities.  Most of these faci-
lities are in compliance with the BOD and SS effluent
standards  (under present permit conditions), and two smaller
plants are within the ammonia-nitrogen standard.  With re-
spect to industrial plants, wastewater is conveyed to treat-
ment plants and processed before discharging.   The industrial
waste load averages approximately 195 MGD or equivalent to a
population of 4.5 million.  Combined-sewer overflows, which occur
about 100 times per average year, inject pollutants in large
amounts into waterways at approximately 640 outfall points in the
Chicago area.  During such events, minimum Illinois water quality
standards established for restricted-use waters are not met.

     Numerous water resource management programs have been
initiated to address the flooding and/or pollution problems
of the Chicago area.  These programs have been  or are cur-
rently being conducted either regionally or locally.  A few
of these programs include:  the Section 208 Areawide Waste
Treatment Management Planning program, the Chicago-South
End of Lake Michigan study (C-SELM), the City of Chicago
                            -x-

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Sewer Construction program, Thornton Quarry Flood Control
project, and the Chicago Metropolitan Area River Basin Plan
(CMARBP).
2.1.2  Land Resources

     The Sanitary and Ship Canal and the Calumet-Sag Channel
have significantly altered the natural drainage patterns
which are from west to southwest in the area near Lake Michigan.
Prior to construction of the Canal and Channel, the drain-
age flow was toward Lake Michigan.  The flow is presently
toward the Chicago River and the Sanitary and Ship Canal,
which drain into the Illinois Waterway system.  The overall
low relief of the MSDGC combined-sewer system area makes it
prone to flooding caused by sewer system backups and/or over-
bank flows.  The areas with the highest overbank flooding
potential lie along the North Branch-Chicago River and in
the Calumet River system.

     The Chicago area lies on the broad, gently sloping, north-
westerly-trending Kankakee Arch.  This arch, which connects
the Wisconsin Arch to the northwest with the Cincinnati Arch
to the southwest, separates the Michigan Basin from the
Illinois Basin.  The northeast sector of the Chicago area
lies on the northeastern side of the Kankakee Arch, while
the southwestern sector of the Chicago area lies on the
southwest flank of the Arch.  In the Chicago area, overall,
a number of gentle east-west-trending folds are superimposed
on the area's broad regional geologic structures.  Numerous
minor faults and several major faults have been mapped, in-
cluding:  the Sandwich fault near Joliet and the Des Plaines
disturbance near the community of Des Plaines.  The upper-
most 500 feet of rock layers, particularly the dolomites
and shales between the top of the Racine formation and the
base of the Brainard formation, will be relevant to the pro-
posed construction of the TARP tunnel systems.  The surface
layer  (glacial deposits) has an average thickness of approxi-
mately 80 feet.  Drop shaft and construction shaft installa-
tions will be constructed within this layer.

     Based on 175-year historical earthquake records, four
major earthquakes occurred within 100 miles of Chicago with
intensities equal to or greater than MMI VIII  (Modified
Mercalli Intensity scale).  These earthquakes originated at
Fort Dearborn (Chicago)  (1804), near Rockford  (1909), near
Aurora  (1912), and near Amboy  (1972).  Within the MSDGC
combined-sewer service area, there are 30 faults with moder-
ate vertical displacement characteristics and 86 minor
faults with small vertical displacement characteristics.
                            -xi-

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2.1.3  Atmospheric Resources

     Air quality in the Chicago metropolitan area is pres-
ently monitored by the city of Chicago Department of Environ-
mental Control and the Cook County Department of Environ-
mental Control.  A total of 61 monitoring stations have been
established in Cook County; 30 of these are located within
the city limits of Chicago.  Based on the 1974 Annual Air
Quality Report published by the State of Illinois EPA, am-
bient air quality standards were frequently violated at one
or more stations.  The pollutant standards violated include:
sulfur dioxide, particulate matter, carbon monoxide, hydro-
carbons, and photochemical oxidants (measured as ozone).

     The existing outdoor noise levels in most areas of
Chicago are caused mainly  by  street traffic.  Other noise
sources include trains, aircraft, and industrial plants in
city areas, and power lawn mowers, power tools,  and other
motor-driven equipment in residential areas.  Based on a
recent EPA study, typical noise levels for the Chicago area
ranged from 36.3 dBA (decibels-A scale)  (night)  to 106.2
dBA  (day).  The day-night level  (Ldn)  ranged from 59.0 dBA
to 71.2 dBA (overall average).


2.1.4  Biological Resources

     Many species of wildlife reside in or migrate to the
forest preserves, parks, and other natural areas in the
Chicago region.  Over 200 species of birds have been sited
in these areas and about half of these species are the mi-
gratory and waterfowl type.  Common mammals residing in the
preserves include:  whitetail deer, eastern cottontail,
opossum, raccoon, gray squirrel, red fox, and woodchuck.
Approximately 28 species of reptile and amphibian can also
be found in the Des Plaines area.  A comprehensive list of the
wildlife species is provided in Appendix J of the EIS.


     Aquatic life in the rivers and streams of the Lower Des
Plaines watershed is currently limited to pollution-tolerant or
hardy species.  Poor water quality conditions in the Cook
County reaches of the Des Plaines River have reduced the
diversity and abundance of aquatic life.  The major species
of fish in the watershed include:  goldfish, carp, green
sunfish, black bullhead, golden shiner, hybrid sunfish, black
crappie, blunt-nosed minnow, pumpkinseed sunfish, northern
pike, largemouth bass, yellow bullhead, redfin shiner, white
crappie, bluegill and yellow perch.
                           -xii-

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     The natural vegetation normally found in the natural
areas of the Des Plaines Tunnel project area consists of a
modified form of the beech-maple forest, in the more moist
areas, and oak-hickory forests in the more open areas.  The
transitional flora between these two forest types include
maple-basswood and maple-basswood-red oak forest.

     In the stretch between the Lake-Cook County line and
Summit, Illinois, the Des Plaines River flows through a highly
urbanized primarily residential watershed.  However, most of
the river and adjacent flood plain is owned by the Cook County
Forest Preserve District so that some woodlands and wetlands
have been preserved, and urban development has generally
been kept out of the Des Plaines River flood plain. Thus, the
Des Plaines flood plain is an attractive greenbelt.  It is
composed of several types of vegetation including cottonwood,
ash, oak, willow and boxelder.


2.2  MAN-MADE ENVIRONMENT

     The various components related  to man's activities  in
the Chicago area are summarized  in this section.  These  com-
ponents include:  Socioeconomic, Land Use,  Sensitive Areas,
Financial  and Labor Resources, Transportation, and Major
Projects and Programs.
   f

2.2.1   Socioeconomic

     The Chicago metropolitan  area has  experienced growth
and change in its demographic  profile similar  to other major
cities  in  the United States.   Chicago,  the  third largest
standard metropolitan  statistical area  (SMSA)  in the United
States, has experienced  typical  population  redistribution
trends  within the SMSA.    The  close-in  suburban  jurisdic-
tions  grew rapidly during  the  1950's from a substantial  in-
migration  of population  from the south  and  an  out-migration
of people  from  the city  of Chicago.  During the  1960's,  the
counties adjacent to Cook  County urbanized  rapidly.  Con-
tinued  redevelopment of  the City, when  combined  with  smaller
household  trends, uncertainties  regarding energy availability
and cost,  and the increasing cost of suburban  new  construction,
                           -Xlll-

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should result in a strengthening of the urban centers and a
lessening of the outward population movements.  Chicago's
population is expected to stabilize after 1980.

     Contract construction income accounts for less than
eight percent of total earnings in the Chicago region.  While
average monthly wages  for construction employment are high
relative to other industries in_the Chicago region, , total __.
earnings from contract construction have ranged from 6.5  to
7.7 percent of total earnings over the period 1950 to 1971.
The construction industry is heavily unionized, and the
current union hourly wage rate averages $11.02.   (Refer to
Table III-6 of the EIS).

     The Chicago area has traditionally sustained strong
construction activity in the public and private sectors.
Major public redevelopment projects have stimulated private
investment and development, particularly within the city  of
Chicago.  Construction employment opportunities have thus
attracted and created a large construction labor force.   Con-
struction employment in the Chicago SMSA numbered 136,897
people in 1970 or approximately 4.8 percent of the total
employed.  Construction employment in the Chicago SMSA ac-
counted for 61 percent of total construction employment in
the State of Illinois.  The Chicago area construction work
force is highly flexible and can expand rapidly, given the
demand for construction services.
2.2.2  Land Use

     The predominant land use bordering the Des Plaines
tunnel route can be characterized by its residential  zoning
in which large portions of land are fully developed.  Rock
taken from the tunnel will probably be disposed of at two
sites on Forest Preserve lands as well as at McCook,  Stearns,
and Thornton quarries.  Sludge will be disposed of at a
number of sites or by a number of programs, including:  the
Fulton County project, NuEarth, broker sales, Lawndale
Lagoons, and other landfills.

     The land areas bordering the proposed tunnel route are
expected to remain generally the same along the main  and
branch segments.  Enhanced recreational uses along the
riveredges are envisioned as a land improvement by the
communities in the Des Plaines area.
                           -xiv-

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2.2.3  Sensitive Areas

     There are no known archeological or historically  signi-
ficant sites adjacent to or within the  Des  Plaines  Tunnel
route.  MSD is presently investigating  areas  adjacent  to
planned tunnel routes.  There are selected  sites  of historic
and architectural interest within the vicinity of the  tunnel
route, but none within the immediate 500-foot  impact area
of the tunnel.  These sites are listed  in Chapter III  of
the EIS.
2.2.4  Financial Resources

     Financial resources are currently available  to  fund  the
Calumet Tunnel system.  TARP's Phase I tunnel  system cost
breakdown is approximately  $1.46 billionl  for  water  pollu-
tion elements and $0.69 billion for  flood  control measures.
Operation and maintenance of TARP  has been estimated at
$13.6 million annually.  The estimated cost of the Des Plaines
system alone is $346.9 million, with an  annual maintenance
cost of $2.5 million.

     Analysis of the funding resources required to finance
the Des Plaines Tunnel system reveals that  sufficient  funds
are currently available from the Federal Government,  the
State, and the MSDGC.  (See Section 3.3.1'of the  EIS).
Additionally Federal Water Pollution Control funds of  ap-
proximately $456.7 million will be required to meet  the
implementation plan for all three  conveyance tunnel  systems.
In view of the sound fiscal posture of the MSDGC,  the high
funding priority assigned TARP by  the State, and  the very
conservative estimates of future Federal appropriations,
it can be reasonably assumed that  future financing require-
ments can be satisfied.

     Maintenance costs can  either  be covered through an ad
valorem property tax, or through a user  charge system based
on water consumption.  EPA  favors  the latter approach and
has awarded the MSDGC two grants to  develop such  a user
charge system.
     Cost estimates based on values presented in MSDGC"s "Facilities
     Planning Study—MSDGC Overview Report," Revised, January 1975.
                            -xv-

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2.2.5  Labor Resources

     Labor resources are considered adequate to meet con-
struction and implementation needs of TARP and other proj-
ects.  The diversified labor force in the Chicago metro-
politan area is vulnerable to economic recession because
of the emphasis upon manufacturing and nonservice employ-
ment.  Thus/ while national unemployment was about  8.4 per-
cent in the third quarter of 1975, Cook County had  a 9.6
percent rate, and the city of Chicago sustained a 11.2 per-
cent rate of unemployment.  Increasing productivity rates
and an expanding labor force should contribute to keeping
Chicago unemployment levels higher than the national rate
for the next few years.  Therefore, new employment  oppor-
tunities presented by TARP and other projects should not
experience a shortage of labor resources.

     The labor force is predominantly male, with white
collar workers comprising 53 percent of the labor force in
the SMSA.
2.2.6  Transportation

     Implementation of the Des Plaines Tunnel system will in-
volve the use of roadways and waterways.   Trucks carrying
rock and spoil material from construction sites will utilize
several surface streets and expressways in reaching the
quarry or disposal site.  The roadways range from dirt roads
to. six-lane divided highways.  The Des Plaines  tunnel route
is proximate to the Des Plaines River although  no waterborne
commerce is possible  since the river is not physically
navigable.


2.2.7  Major Projects and Programs

     There are no planned major projects and programs pro-
posed over the next 10 years in the vicinity of the Des Plaines
Tunnel route.
                           -xvi-

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              III.  THE PROPOSED ACTION
     Identifying and defining a plan and its systems and
subsystems establishes the proposed action for which the en-
vironmental setting is described and the environmental im-
pacts are assessed.  The proposed action identified and de-
fined for this EIS is the Phase I conveyance tunnel systems
and their associated subsystems only.  The planned storage
reservoirs, waste treatment plant upgrading and expansion,
on-line reservoirs, and instream aeration facilities were
not included.

     The information presented in Chapter IV and V of the
EIS is summarized in this chapter and divided into seven
parts:

          Alternative Plans
          Plan Selector
          TARP Tunnel Systems
          TARP Subsystems
          Des Plaines Tunnel Segments and Branches
          Cost of Tunnel System and Subsystems
          TARP Financing.
3.1  ALTERNATIVE PLANS

     Many plans to resolve the Chicago area's flooding and
water pollution problems were developed during the past two
decades by concerned government agencies, local organiza-
tions, and individuals.  At first, the plans focused prima-
rily on the flood control problem, however, as water quality
conditions in the area worsened, more emphasis was placed
on controlling the water pollution.  A total of 23 plans
were formulated, and many were evaluated in detail by a
Flood Control Coordinating Committee (FCCC), consisting of
representatives from the State of Illinois, Cook County,
the MSDGC, and the city of Chicago.

     In screening the alternative plans, the FCCC established
overall flood and pollution control objectives which pro-
vided a basis for evaluating alternative plans.  A plan was
automatically rejected if it did not:
                           -xvii-

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          Prevent all backflows to Lake Michigan to protect
          water supply resources

          Reduce pollutant discharges caused by combined-
          sewer overflows

          Reduce flooding in the combined-sewer and down-
          stream areas.

     In the initial screening, 6 plans were eliminated and
the remaining 17 were modified to meet the objectives more
fully as well as to provide a more quantitative basis for
comparison.  The modifications were referred to as MODs,
and consisted basically of a combination of different sto-
rage capacities and waterway improvement actions.  The
resulting MODs yielded 51 alternative subsystem plans, or
subplans, to be evaluated by the FCCC.  In the next screen-
ing phase, the FCCC defined eight principal parameters,
including capital costs (1972 dollars), estimated annual
operating and maintenance costs (1972), project benefits,
land acquisition acreage, underground easement requirements,
resident and business relocations, construction impacts,
and operation impacts.  A technical advisory committee was
organized by the FCCC to evaluate the modified alternatives
in detail using the eight parameters.  The advisory commit-
tee's interim report, "Evaluation Report of Alternative
Systems," recommended a 50,000 acre-feet (ac-ft) storage
level, which was part of the modified alternative designated
as MOD 3.  After reviewing the report, the members of the
FCCC unanimously concluded that the flood and pollution con-
trol plan should be in the form of one of the four Chicago
Underflow plans developed (four of the seventeen plans) or
a combination of these plans, along with the recommended
storage level.  The FCCC stated that, "These alternatives
are less costly and more environmentally acceptable to the
community than any of the other plans presented.  Detail
studies along the lines of these alternatives should pro-
ceed to develop the final plan layout."
3.2  PLAN SELECTION

     In August 1972, the FCCC members presented their final
recommendations in a report with seven technical appendices.
The report recommended consolidating the favorable features
of the four Underflow plans into the Tunnel and Reservoir
Plan (TARP).  TARP was developed further and refined, then
                          -xviii-

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evaluated in detail with four selected alternatives and the
"no-action" alternative.  In this evaluation, 15 significant
environmental impact parameters were identified as the basis
for evaluation.  The FCCC concluded that very few negative
impacts are expected for any of the alternatives incorporat-
ing conveyance tunnels, and that adverse impacts will occur
if the "no-action" alternative is chosen.  The FCCC also con-
cluded that the construction impacts of all plans on the en-
vironment will most likely be relatively short-term and local-
ized.  Finally, the beneficial "impacts of the plans will far
exceed the adverse impacts.  Within*the scope of the FCCC
analysis, TARP had the highest ranking and was selected as
the most suitable plan to solve the1 flood and pollution prob-
lems of the Chicago metropolitan area.

     TARP would provide the most benefits for the lowest
cost and the least adverse environmental impacts.  Field
studies and subsurface exploration programs further refined
the plan; however, they did not change the original TARP
concept.  They were conducted only to optimize overall sys-
tem effectiveness.  Presently, TARP will enable collection
of runoff water resulting from all but three of the severest
rainfall storms recorded during the past 21 years.


3.3  TARP TUNNEL SYSTEMS

     The four  tunnel systems that are ~a part' of the Tunnel
and  Reservoir  Plan are  the Mainstream, Calumet, Lower Des
Plaines, and O'Hare systems.  Each  system is a completely
independent operating unit with collection,  storage, convey-
ance, and treatment capabilities.   Figure III-l shows the
present routes and layout of these  systems relative to the
MSDGC combined-sewer service area,  the MSDGC overall, service
area, and Cook County.  Each of the TARP systems  shown in
the  figure consists of  three component systems:   reservoirs,
conveyance tunnels, and sewage treatment plants.  A total
of three reservoirs, 120 miles of conveyance tunnels, and
four sewage treatment plants are included in the  plan.

     The TARP  systems have two basic  features which play a
major role in  solving the flood and pollution problems.
First, the combined storage capacity  of the  plan  is almost
136,800 ac-ft  of which  127,600 ac-ft  of the  total is reser-
voir capacity  and 9,200 ac-ft is tunnel capacity.  The
planned treatment capacity of TARP will be approximately
2,240 MGD.  Second, over 640 existing overflow points
will be eliminated within the MSDGC combined-sewer service
area by the TARP  systems.
                            -xix-

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                                                    FIGURE  III-l
                                           Tunnel  and  Reservoir Plan
                                           System  Layout  and Routes
      COOK COUNTY    P

     I             ^
r
  .J
	I
      LEGEND:
       D
          ON-LINE RESERVOIR


          ROCK TUNNEL
          STORAGE
          RESERVOIRS
          TREATMENT
          WORKS


        SCALE. 1" - 6 MILES
                                     -xx-

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     The proposed locations for the three reservoirs are:
McCook quarry, Thornton quarry, and an area northwest of
O'Hare International Airport.  The conveyance tunnels,
located 150 to 290 feet below ground level, will be con-
structed under existing waterways and public rights-of-way.
Of the sewage treatment plants, three of the four plants
are currently activated sludge plants with a combined
planned capacity of approximately 2,150 MGD.  The remaining
plant is the proposed O'Hare-Des Plaines plant which will
have a treatment capacity of over 70 MGD.  A water reclama-
tion plant, the John F. Egan plant, is presently under con-
struction and the capacity will be 30 MGD.
 3.4  TARP SUBSYSTEMS

     The subsystems common to all TARP tunnel  systems  in-
 clude drop shafts, collecting structures, and  pumping  sta-
 tions.  The drop shafts range from 4 to  15  feet  in  diameter
 and have two basic designs.  One design  features a  slotted
 inner wall to assist in aerating the incoming  water.   The
 wall separates the air shaft from the water shaft and  allows
 air either to enter or to escape while water is  flowing  in
 or being pumped out.  The other design features  a separate
 air shaft, to be installed in areas where high overflow  rates
 prevail.  The inside diameter of this drop  shaft design
 ranges  from 10 to 15 feet.

     Approximately 640 collecting structures will be con-
 structed to collect the overflows at established locations.
 The collecting structure basically consists of a diversion
 unit at the overflow point and a connecting pipe to the
 drop shaft entrance chamber.  Most of the new  structures
 will be constructed near curbs or in low points  adjacent to
 major public thoroughfares.

     Pumping stations will be constructed underground  at the
 end of  all conveyance tunnel routes and  adjacent to all  sto-
 rage reservoirs.  These stations permit  a rate of dewatering
 of the  tunnels and reservoirs which will allow a full  tunnel
 or reservoir to be emptied within two to three days.   The
 stations will also be used to transport  bottom sludge  dredged
 from reservoirs to treatment facilities.
                            -XXI-

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3.   DBS PLAINES TUNNEL SEGMENTS AND BRANCHES

     The Des Plaines system of TARP consists of:   one  waste
treatment plant with a total capacity of  approximately 220
MGD; over 26 miles of conveyance tunnel with a  storage
volume of 1,668 ac-ft; and onw main storage reservoir  with
a maximum capacity of 84,000 ac-ft.  The  component subsys-
tems associated with the Des Plaines system include 55 drop
shafts; and one pumping station located near the  West-
Southwest Sewage Treatment Plant.  The system and its  com-
ponent subsystems will be constructed in  one pahse.

     This EIS addresses the TARP Phase I  segments and
branches of the Des Plaines system and focuses  only on the
conveyance tunnel system.  The overall length of  this  tun-
nel system is approximately 26 miles.  The subsystems
associated with it include 55 drop shafts, 5 construction
shafts, 10 access shafts, 80 collecting structures, and
1 pumping station.
 3.6  COST OF TUNNEL  SYSTEM AND  SUBSYSTEMS

     The MSDGC estimated  cost   of  a  10-foot diameter tunnel
 in rock with nominal aquifer protection  is  $200^  per lineal
 foot.  In rock with  high  quality aquifer protection, the
 cost is $230.  Tunnel cost for  soft  ground  construction is
 $350.  Similarly,  for a 35-foot diameter tunnel,  the esti-
 mated costs are  $1,030, $1,090, and  $1,680  per  lineal foot,
 respectively.

     Large rectangular  tunnels  adjacent  to  construction shafts
 will be excavated  by the  drill  and blast method and the estimated
 cost with nominal  aquifer protection is  $2,090  per lineal foot
1    MSDGC, January 1975.

2    All cost figures presented in this section are based on 1972 values.
                          -xxii-

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for a 30-foot square tunnel.  The  same  type and size of tun-
nels with high quality aquifer protection would cost an esti-
mated $2,170 per J\neal foot.

     The tunnel costs estimated  above include the following
base figures:

          Cost of muck disposal, estimated to be $4.00 per
          solid cubic yard

          Nominal grouting  for  control of infiltration
          during construction, estimated to be $0.30 per
          square foot of  tunnel  wall

          Access and ventilation shaft construction

          Ventilation and hoist  equipment

          Grout and grout inspection equipment

          Average aquifer protection costs.

Additional  grouting for  aquifer  protection in unlined tun-
nel  segments  in the upper aquifers is estimated to cost
$1.50 per square  foot of  tunnel  wall.  This grouting would
be provided to a depth of about  one tunnel diameter beyond
the  excavated tunnel  limit.

     The total construction cost for all the Phase I TARP
tunnel  systems is approximately  1.46 billion.  The estimated
total costs for  the subsystems are:  $93 million for collect-
ing/connecting structures, and $38 million for pumping
stations.   These  subsystem costs are based on the following:

          Collecting  Structures  and Connecting Lines.  The
          cost of the near-surface collection structures
          leading to  the drop shafts includes the gravity
          interceptor sewers and the necessary connecting
          structures.   Table III-l lists the costs  for these
          subsystems  with respect to the TARP tunnel systems,
      Grouting is a procedure whereby a mixture of cement and water is
      injected under pressure into a drilled hole that intersects a
      source of seepage such as an open joint, fault, or bedding plane.

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                        Table III-l
                    Estimated Costs For
        Collecting Structures and Connecting Lines
Tunnel System
Mainstream
Calumet
Lower and Upper
Des Plaines
TOTALS
Estimated Cost ($ Million)
Intercepting
Structures
8.701
1.084
1.043
10.828
Collection
System
3.648
1.088
3.489
8.225
Total
12.349
2.172
4.532
19.053
          Drop Shafts.  The estimated cost of drop shafts
          includes all drop shaft components.  The costs are
          related to the shaft diameter and to the depth of
          penetration into the rock formations.  The cost of
          250-foot deep drop shafts varies from $80,000 for
          a shaft two feet in diameter to $1,400,000 for a
          20-foot diameter shaft.
          Pumping Stations.  The estimated construction cost
          of pumping facilities includes the structure, pump-
          ing equipment, power generation for the operation
          of larger units, and discharge piping to the appro-
          priate treatment plant.  The estimates have been
          based on use of variable-speed, motor-driven units,
          Total capital costs for pumping vary as follows:
            Lift
           Height
          300 feet
          525 feet
Estimated Cost ($ Million)
     Pumping Capacity
 1000 cfs      100,000 cfs
    5.6
    5.7
200

300
3.7  TARP FINANCING

     Financing of the entire $3.75 billion MSDGC Flood and
Pollution Control Plan over the next 11 years is doubtful.
As illustrated in Table III-2, however, the financing re-
quirements for all conveyance tunnels could be met by a
modest increase in Federal and MSDGC funding over a period
of 11 years, from 1976-1986.  An additional $456.7 million
appropriation of funds are estimated to be required to
                           -XXIV-

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                                                 -XXV-

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                        FOOTNOTES  TO TABLE  III-2
1     All cost estimates are based on those presented in the MSDGC's
      Facilities Planning Study (January 1976)  and are escalated 6
      percent annually for inflation.

2     These funds represent the remainder of the FY 1975 and FY 1976
      PL 92-500 appropriation which are expected to be allocated to
      MSDGC by the State.

3     These are Federal funds, above and beyond the existing PL 92-500
      appropriation, which are expected (in the form of a new appropria-
      tion) over the period FY 1977-1982.

4     These are Federal funds above and beyond the additional $780 million
      expected over the FY 1977-1982 period.

5     These are funds, under the State's current $750 million bonding
      authorization, which are expected to be available to MSDGC to
      finance the Tunnel Plan.

6     The funds in this category represented those available by virtue
      of the unused bonding authority of the MSDGC under the current
      $380 authorization.

7     This category represents funds expected to be available under an
      additional $200 to $400 million bonding authority for which the
      MSDGC is currently formulating plans to ask the State of Illinois.

8     There is no current COE appropriation for any MSDGC Flood and
      Pollution Control Plan elements.

9     There is no near future COE appropriation expected for any MSDGC
      Flood and Pollution Control Plan elements.

10    Includes approximately $49.6 million already obligated to the
      North Shore section of the Mainstream Tunnel Plan (Addison-
      Wilmette segment).

11    Figure doesn't include the estimated $124 million already obligated
      for the O'hare treatment plant project.

12    The total estimated cost $3311.9  million differs from the >3750
      million (Table 111-10 of the main body of the EIS) because of the
      exclusion of the following projects: sewers, solids disposal,
      O'Hare Treatment plant, and flood control (non-TARP).
                               -xxvi-

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finance the three (Mainstream, Calumet, and Lower Des
Plaines) TARP tunnel systems.  The additional Federal
funds represent a modest portion  (58.5 percent) of the
conservatively estimated $780 million of new PL 92-500
money which is expected to be forthcoming to MSDGC over
the next six fiscal years.  Congress, however, has not
yet approved any additional appropriation beyond the
initial $18 billion which was authorized under PL 92-500
and totally allocated over the FY 1972-1976 period. The
$73.5 million of MSDGC funds represents an increase of
about 19 percent over the current MSDGC bonding autho-
rization.  This amount, however, represents a very modest
proportion of the additional $200-400 million bonding
authorization for which MSDGC is currently formulating
plans to ask the State of Illinois.

     If the Phase I tunnels of TARP are not implemented, there
is a very high probability that approximately  90 percent of
the currently available Federal funds assigned  to  the MSDGC
will be lost by both the State of Illinois and  the MSDGC.
This potential loss to the MSDGC  and  state stems from the
fact that the Calumet treatment facility expansion project,
(which represent the next major project in terms of priority
for Federal funds) will not meet  the  September  30, 1977 dead-
line for Step 3 funding eligibility.  Assuming  this project
did not qualify in time for existing  Federal funds, it is
estimated that only approximately 10  percent of the $323.6
million could alternatively be allocated to other MSDGC or
statewide prioritized pollution control projects.

     The financing feasibility of other key elements  (non-
Phase I TARP) of the MSDGC's Flood and Pollution Control
Plan  (see Table III-2), which are closely related  to the
overall goal of meeting the  1983  water quality  standards,
ranges  from almost certainty to near  zero.  Addressing
these elements in the order  of priority specified  in the
MSDGC's 1975 Facilities Plan, instream aeration stands
slightly ahead of the  conveyance  tunnels.  The approximately
$30.7 million required for instream aeration can easily be
met from existing state and  MSDGC funding sources.-1- It is
very unlikely, however, that the  financing will be available
to increase the treatment  levels, efficiencies, and capacities
at the Calumet and West-Southwest treatment plants.  The
total required financing  ($1.13 billion) would necessitate
a significant increase above the  additional levels of Federal
 ($780 million) and MSDGC  ($200-400 million) funds  expected
to be available over the FY  1977-1986 timeframe.   The fi-
nancing feasibility of the Calumet treatment plant expansion,
however, is reasonable in  view of their combined total
1    As of May 1976, funding for  instream aeration has already been
     authorized.
                            -xxvii-

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estimated costs of $356.5 million.  The Federal funding
portion ($267.4 million) could be provided from the additional
$780 million PL 92-500 appropriation expected over the next
six years.  The MSDGC portion ($89.1 million) could be
provided from the anticipated $200-400 million additional
bonding authorization.  In terms of the West-Southwest'
treatment plant expansion project (estimated cost of $774.7
million), the financing feasibility is very questionable in
view of the requirement for additional funds beyond the
levels  (Federal and MSDGC) expected to be available over
the period FY 1977 to 1986.

     The operation and maintenance costs of the TARP tunnel
systems will be financed by a user charge system rather than
the current ad valorem tax system.  PL 92-500 requires the
development of a user charge system and the State of Illinois
presently has the authority to impose a user charge.  This
system of financing the annual operations and maintenance
costs of the tunnel systems is not expected to have a sig-
nificant economic impact in the commercial, industrial, and.
household sectors.  The incremental charge in the MSDGC tax
rate per $100 of assessed valuation (1975 rate was $.4005)
is estimated to be $.0736  (for operations and maintenance)
and $.002  (for tunnel construction) by the year 1986.  The
tunnel construction impact will continually decline after
1986 with the continuing growth of the tax ba.se.  Details
of this financial system are provided in the EIS in Sections
3.3.1 and 9.3.
                         -XXVlll-

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       IV.  PRINCIPAL FINDINGS CONCERNING THE EFFECTS
                  OF THE PROPOSED ACTION
     Chapters VI through IX of the EIS assess the beneficial
and adverse effects of the construction and operation of the
conveyance tunnel systems on greater Chicago's natural and
man-made environments.  This chapter presents the principal
findings of that analysis only for those effects expected
to be relatively significant.

     The most significant finding relates to the expected
improvement in water quality resulting from the operation
of the three Phase I tunnel systems.  To assess the signi-
ficance of this improvement, the EIS includes the considera-
tion of the possible and likely cumulative effects of TARP
components which are not a part of the Phase I systems.  These
other components are the reservoirs, treatment plant improve-
ments, and instream aeration.

     The principal findings of the EIS are listed as follows:

      (1)  Effects of Operation on Water Quality
      (2)  Funding Uncertainty for TARP
      (3)  Effects of Rock Spoil Generated During Construction
      (4)  Effects of Construction on Employment
      (5)  General Effects of Construction
      (6)  Effects of Infiltration and Exfiltration
      (7)  Worker Safety During Construction
      (8)  Effects of Operation on Land Use
      (9)  Effects of a Significant Earthquake on Tunnel System
      (10) Effects of Flooding on Lake Michigan.
     EFFECTS OF OPERATION ON WATER QUALITY

     THE TUNNEL WILL SIGNIFICANTLY REDUCE THE POLLUTANT LOAD
     CURRENTLY DISCHARGED TO CHICAGO'S WATERWAYS, HOWEVER,
     THE TUNNELS ALONE WILL NOT RESULT IN ATTAINING APPLI-
     CABLE ILLINOIS WATER QUALITY STANDARDS, AND, THEREFORE,
     WILL NOT ENABLE ADDITIONAL USES OF THE AFFECTED WATER-
     WAYS.  THE ATTAINMENT OF ILLINOIS WATER QUALITY STAN-
     DARDS DEPENDS ON ADDITIONAL CONTROL MEASURES FOR WHICH
     THE FUNDING PROSPECTS ARE NOW POOR.
                          -xxix-

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This conclusion is based on the following findings:

     The tunnels will capture approximately 90 percent
     of the pollutant load now discharged during com-
     bined-sewer overflows and will reduce the pollu-
     tant load 75 percent overall and the frequency of
     overflows from 100 to 10 times per year.  1977
     Illinois water quality standards will continue to
     be violated during overflow events because of un-
     controlled injections of pollutants into the water-
     ways.

     The tunnels may not result in the attainment of 1977
     Illinois standards for ammonia over lengthy reaches
     of waterway, because high concentrations of this
     pollutant are discharged from local wastewater
     treatment plants.  Although data are not presently
     available to allow a more definitive determination
     of effects on this point, the attainment of water
     quality standards in the area's major river systems
     is clearly and intimately tied to the upgrading
     and expansion of MSDGC treatment plants.

     With the tunnels on line, 1977 Illinois standards
     of 4 mg/1 for dissolved oxygen (DO) will still be
     violated along approximately 50 of the 80 miles
     of the Main Channel and of the Calumet River sys-
     tems during the critical late summer months.  Con-
     ditions along the Des Plaines River system have not
     yet been modeled by the MSDGC, but will be com-
     pleted under the Section 208 planning program.

     1977 Illinois standards for DO are likely to be
     met over the entire 80-mile length of the modeled
     waterways during critical summer dry flow condi-
     tions, assuming implementation of the following
     pollution control components:

          Tunnels
          Reservoirs
          Treatment plant improvements
          Instream aeration.

     The water quality impact of these various pollu-
     tion control options is summarized in Table IV-1.

     Given current projections of Federal, state, and
     MSDGC financing capabilities and policies, the fi-
     nancing of the tunnels and instream aeration ap-
     pears secure.  The financing of the Calumet treatment
                      -XXX-

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          plant expansion is probable; but financing the
          costly West-Southwest Treatment Plant is very
          doubtful.  The financing of the reservoirs in the
          near future is very unlikely given the absence of
          any Federal commitment to provide assistance.

     Additional details on water quality are provided in Sec-
tions 2.1 and 8.1 of the EIS text and details on financing
in Section 3.3.1.
2.   FUNDING UNCERTAINTY FOR TARP

     THE CONVEYANCE TUNNELS CAN BE FINANCED BETWEEN 1976-
     1987 WITH MODEST INCREASES IN ANTICIPATED FEDERAL AND
     LOCAL FUNDING.  HOWEVER, THE FUNDING OF THE RESERVOIR
     DURING THIS TIME PERIOD IS NOT A PART OF THE CURRENT
     FINANCING PLAN AND COULD NOT BE ACCOMPLISHED WITHOUT
     HAVING A MAJOR FINANCIAL IMPACT ON THE STATE, CITY, OR
     MSDGC.

     Additional details on this finding may be found in Sec-
tion 3.3.1 of the EIS.
3.   EFFECTS OF ROCK SPOIL GENERATED DURING CONSTRUCTION

     THE ROCK SPOIL MATERIAL GENERATED DURING TUNNEL CON-
     STRUCTION IS NOT EXPECTED TO BE MARKETABLE.  THEREFORE,
     ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS ASSOCIATED WITH DISPOSAL OF THE
     ROCK SPOIL WILL DEPEND LARGELY ON THE AVAILABILITY OF
     LANDFILL DISPOSAL SITES.

     Approximately 3,784,000 cubic yards (bulk measure) of
spoil will be removed from the Des Plaines tunnel segments
and branches.  Although this amount can be adequately con-
tained within area quarries, approximately 2,200,000 cubic
yards of spoil will be stored on Forest Preserve lands for
their use.  Disposal of rock spoil from the reservoirs was
addressed briefly in Section 6.2.4 of the EIS.  A signifi-
cant portion of rock spoil generated by reservoir construc-
tion is likely to be marketable and to be stockpiled on the
quarry site for eventual sale by the quarry owners.

     Major findings supporting the above conclusions are:

          Shale and other constituents present in the rock
          excavated from the Phase I tunnels will limit the
          rock's suitability for low-grade commercial uses.
                          -xxxii-

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          Landfill disposal sites capable of accepting the
          entire volume of tunnel spoil to be generated dur-
          ing TARP Phase I have not yet been identified by
          the MSDGC.

          McCook Quarry has enough volume to accept the en-
          tire quantity of spoil to be excavated from the
          Des Plaines tunnel segments and branches.

          Since conventional methods will be used to exca-
          vate rock from area quarries for reservoir con-
          struction,  it is likely that a significant portion
          of the spoil will be marketable.  Present plans
          envision stockpiling the saleable portion on the
          quarry sites for eventual sale by the quarry owners,
          Various stockpile configurations are being con-
          sidered.  Non saleable spoil can be stockpiled on-
          site, as is proposed for the McCook Quarry site.

     A more detailed discussion is provided in Section 6.2.4
of the EIS.
4.   EFFECTS OF CONSTRUCTION ON EMPLOYMENT

     CONSTRUCTION OF THE DES PLAINES TUNNEL WILL PROVIDE
     ABOUT $87 MILLION IN CONSTRUCTION INCOME OVER A 7-YEAR
     PERIOD AND WILL CREATE A PEAK SUPPLY OF APPROXIMATELY
     548 JOBS OVER A 3-YEAR PERIOD.

     Further information may be found in Section 7.1.3.


5.   GENERAL EFFECTS OF CONSTRUCTION

     CONSTRUCTION OF THE TARP TUNNEL SYSTEMS WILL RESULT IN
     TEMPORARY PUBLIC ANNOYANCE AND INCONVENIENCE FROM THE
     CUMULATIVE EFFECTS OF NOISE, HANDLING OF CONSTRUCTION
     DEBRIS, VIBRATION FROM BLASTING, DISRUPTION OF VEHICULAR
     AND PEDESTRIAN TRAFFIC, AND GLARE FROM THE ILLUMINATION
     OF CONSTRUCTION AREAS AT NIGHT.  ALTHOUGH THE CUMULATIVE
     EFFECTS MAY BE NOTICEABLE, TAKEN SINGLY, EACH EFFECT IS
     MINOR.

     This conclusion is supported by the following findings:

          Surface construction sites are located in areas
          which are generally either vacant or near low-
          utilized industrial land.
                         -xxxni-

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          Noise at each construction site  should  be within
          levels mandated by Chicago ordinances and,  at each
          surface construction site, noise will only  occur
          for periods of 3 to 9 months.

          Because blasting will be used only  to excavate shafts
          and not the tunnel, itself, blasts  will be  relatively
          infrequent and will continue at  any one site for not
          more than 120 days.

     Further information on this subject may  be found in
Sections 6.3.1, 6.3.2, 7.1.1, 7.2.1, 7.4,  and 10.2.
     EFFECTS OF INFILTRATION AND EXFILTRATION

     IF THE GROUTING PROGRAM IS NOT EFFECTIVE,1  GROUNDWATER
     INFILTRATION DURING CONSTRUCTION AND WASTEWATER EXFIL-
     TRATION DURING TUNNEL OPERATION CAN BE A  SIGNIFICANT
     PROBLEM.

     This conclusion is supported by the following  findings:

          The inflow rate of groundwater for the TARP tunnel
          systems is estimated to be an average  of  approxi-
          mately 0.5 MGD per mile of tunnel.   In the absence
          of appropriate mitigative measures,  this  rate  is
          sufficient to lower the piezometric  or hydraulic
          pressure level of the upper aquifer.   Tunnel grout-
          ing is the most effective method to  reduce infil-
          tration and a grouting program has been incorporated
          in TARP.  Grouting integrity, however,  must be main-
          tained to keep inflows below the allowable limit
          of 500 gallons per day per inch of tunnel diameter
          per mile of tunnel.  Observation wells will be re-
          quired to monitor integrity throughout the opera-
          tional phase of the tunnel.

          Exfiltration will most likely occur  when  tunnel
          pressures exceed inflow pressures during  high
          storm runoff conditions.  The TARP grouting pro-
          gram is expected to prevent extensive  exfiltration
          of tunnel wastewaters into the upper aquifer.
     The objective of grouting is to achieve maximum penetration and a
     uniform grout spread.  If grouting is ineffective,  maximum infil-
     tration/exfiltration flows will result.
                          -xxxiv-

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          However,  if grouting integrity is not maintained
          during tunnel operation,  exfiltration will be at
          a high enough rate to degrade groundwater quality
          of the upper aquifer.  Observation wells will be
          necessary to determine whether exfiltration is oc-
          curring along the tunnel routes.

     EIS Sections 2.1.2, 6.1.2, and 8.1.2 provide more in-
formation on the subject of groundwater infiltration and
wastewater exfiltration.  Specifications for observation
well spacing and for the monitoring program are also pre-
sented in these sections.
7.   WORKER SAFETY DURING CONSTRUCTION

     TUNNEL OR UNDERGROUND CONSTRUCTION WORKERS WILL BE MORE
     SUSCEPTIBLE TO INJURY, DISABILITY, AND FATALITY THAN
     SURFACE CONSTRUCTION WORKERS.  THE INCIDENCE OF INJURIES
     AND FATALITIES, HOWEVER, IS NOT EXPECTED TO BE GREATER
     THAN NORMAL FOR THIS TYPE OF CONSTRUCTION WORK.

     This conclusion is supported by the following findings:

          Based on recent national statistics for all types
          of construction activities, the Des Plaines Tunnel
          system construction may result in 84 disabling in-
          juries and intone permanent disability or fatality.
    «•---•  "  For construction of the entire tunnel system, in-
          juries and fatalities*" are expected to increase pro-
          portionately.

          Based on the safety statistics of the current con-
          struction of a rapid-transit system subway in Wash-
          ington, D.C., construction of the entire TARP tun-
          nel system could result in 1,525 injuries and in
          9 fatalities.

          Analysis of the geologic and seismic characteris-
          tics of the project area indicates that most of
          the area is stable and suitable for the construc-
          tion of underground tunnels.  Precautionary measures
          will be required to protect workers in segments
          where rockfall and partings  (loosened material) may
          occur frequently and shale deterioration conditions
          prevail.

     Further information on this subject may be found in Sec-
tions 6.2.2 and 7.1.2.
                           -xxxv-

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8.   EFFECTS OF OPERATION ON LAMP USE

     THE QUALITY OF LAND IN CERTAIN RIVERBANK SECTIONS ALONG
     THE DES PLAINES TUNNEL ROUTE MAY BE ENHANCED BY REDUCED
     FLOODING CONDITIONS.

     Vacant land exists in the flood-prone areas associated
with the Des Plaines Tunnel system.  The reduction of flood-
ing in these areas may enable development of this under-
utilized land into open space uses such as:  parks, play-
grounds, sport fields, and parking areas.
9.   EFFECTS OF A SIGNIFICANT EARTHQUAKE ON TUNNEL SYSTEM

     IF A SIGNIFICANT EARTHQUAKE OCCURS IN THE CHICAGO AREA,
     THE EVENT MAY OFFSET TUNNEL ALIGNMENT AND CAUSE SIGNI-
     FICANT DAMAGE TO PORTIONS OF THE TUNNEL SYSTEM.

     This conclusion is based on the following findings:

          The 175-year historical earthquake records indicate
          that a seismic event with a Modified Mercalli In-
          tensity (MMI)  of VIII can recur in the Chicago area
          at a rate of about once per 100 years.   Assuming
          the tunnel system is in operation for 100 years,
          the probability of this event occurring at some
          time during this period is 100 to 1 or 10,000 to
          1 for any given year.  If an MMI VIII event occurs,
          severe alterations to tunnel alignment or tunnel
          surface may result.

          The conveyance tunnels will pass through several
          active faults prevalent in the TARP project area
         " and will be sensitive to earth movement at these
          locations.  Information on the distribution and na-
          ture of the active faults is insufficient to assess
          accurately the extent of damage which could result
          from an MMI VIII earthquake.

     Further information on this subject may be found in Sec-
tions 2.2.3, 2.2.4,  and 8.2.2 of the EIS.
10.  EFFECTS OF FLOODING ON LAKE MICHIGAN

     THE FLOODING PROBLEM EXISTING IN THE CHICAGO AREA WILL
     NOT BE RESOLVED BY THE PHASE I TUNNELS.  OVERFLOV7 TO
     LAKE MICHIGAN WILL STILL PERSIST IF THE PROPOSED RESER-
     VOIRS ARE NOT IMPLEMENTED.
                          -xxxvi-

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             V.   CONCLUSIONS  AND  RECOMMENDATIONS
     The following is a summary of the principle  conclusions
of the Draft EIS,  as well  as recommended  and  suggested  miti-
gative measures.

     1.   Implementation of the  Lower  Des  Plaines  System will
significantly reduce the pollutant load in the Chicago  water-
ways.  These loadings will be reduced further with  the  imple-
mentation of the Mainstream and Calumet Tunnel systems.
Water quality will be enhanced  further with the upgrading of
MSDGC's treatment facilities and the  construction of the flood
control aspects of the Tunnel and Reservoir Plan.

     2.   The rock spoil excavated from the Phase  I  tunnels is
not expected to be marketable.   Evaluation of various disposal
alternatives leads to the  conclusion  that adequate environ-
mentally acceptable landfill sites are available  to handle
the volume of rock which will be generated by the Phase I
tunnels under consideration.  We will rely on existing  local,
state, and Federal regulations  to insure that disposal  takes
place in an acceptable manner.   Additionally the  MSDGC  will
be required to inform USEPA of  their  spoil disposal program
as it is developed through discussion with the Contractor.
This will be a condition of any grant awarded to the MSDGC
for the Lower Des Plaines  Tunnel System.

     3.  Although an effective grouting program is proposed,
it must be sufficiently flexible to respond to the actual
conditions encountered during construction.  Should the
grouting not be sufficient, additional infiltration could
adversely affect the hydraulic pressure of the upper aquifer.
Additionally, under surcharged  conditions, exfiltration
will occur, resulting in adverse impacts on the groundwater
quality of the upper aquifer. Observation wells to monitor
grouting integrity during  operation are necessary along
the entire tunnel alignment. If pollutants are detected
in the observation wells,  additional  mitigative measures
must be implemented to protect  the upper aquifer, including
a groundwater recharge system.  Chapter X discusses particular
aspects of the monitoring  program, which will be developed
in conjunction with the MSDGC,  IEPA and USEPA. This monitoring
program will also be a grant condition.

     4.  Since the majority of the construction shafts  and
drop shafts are in close proximity to area waterways, runoff
from these sites could adversely affect water quality.  Berms
will be constructed around stockpiles of construction materials
and spoil materials to preclude runoff into the waterways.
                            xxxvii

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     5.  It is presently proposed that water pumped from the
tunnels during construction be discharged directly to the
waterways after a period of settling.   Since the possibility
of silt and other pollutants still exists after settling, it
is recommended that these dewatering flows be discharged to
MSDGC's intercepting system for treatment, except during
periods of combined sewer overflows.  This will be a condition
of any grant awarded for the Lower Des Plaines Tunnel System.

     6.  Although no known historic, architectural, or arch-
aeological resources will be affected by the proposed project,
the possibility of finding archaeological resources must be
investigated by the MSDGC.  This must be accomplished by
contacting the State Historic Preservation Officer.

     7.  Conformance with applicable regulation of the Occupa-
tional Health and Safety Administration, U.S. Department of
Labor, and the Bureau of Mines, U.S. Department of the Interior
is essential for safety of construction workers.

     8.  Significant earthquake events could adversely affect
tunnel alignment and tunnel lining.   Smaller earth movements
could also affect the lining and grouting of the tunnels. It
is, therefore, essential that MSDGC's inspection and main-
tenance program be extensive enough to insure efficient
operation of the system.

     9.  There exists a wide range of potential adverse impacts
which could develop during construction.  This includes blasting,
waste spillage, traffic congestion,  light glare, and fugitive
dust at construction and disposal sites.  While these effects
could be considered insignificant any measures taken to reduce
their impact would aid in public acceptability of the project.
These suggested mitigative measures are discussed in Chapter X.
                             XXXVlll

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DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT

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           TABLE   OF   CONTENTS
                                                    Page
                                                   Number
 I.  INTRODUCTION                                    1-1

    1.1  Environmental Policies and Goals           1-1
    1.2  Environmental Impact Statements            1-2
    1.3  Government and Public Participation        1-4
    1.4  Identification of the Applicant            1-4
    1.5  Background Information and Project
         History                                    1-6

         1.5.1  Background Information              1-6
         1.5.2  Project History                     1-7

    1.6  Objectives and Description of the
         Plan                                       1-9
    1.7  Environmental Reviews of the Plan          1-11
    1.8  Scope of the TARP EIS                      1-12
II.  EXISTING NATURAL ENVIRONMENT                   II-l

    2.1  Water Resources                           II-l

         2.1.1  Surface Water                      II-2
         2.1.2  Groundwater                        11-24
         2.1.3  Pollution Sources                  11-35
         2.1.4  Water Management Programs          11-39

    2.2  Land Resources                            11-46

         2.2.1  Drainage Basins                    11-46
         2.2.2  Flood-Prone Areas                  11-51
         2.2.3  Geology                            11-51
         2.2.4  Seismicity                         11-74

    2.3  Atmospheric Resources                     11-82

         2.3.1  Air Quality                        11-82
         2.3.2  Noise                              11-83
                        -11-

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                                                     Page
                                                   Number
     2.4 .Biological Resources                       11-85
          2.4.1  Vegetation                          11-85
          2.4.2  Fish                                11-85
          2.4.3  Wildlife                            11-86
III.  EXISTING MAN-MADE ENVIRONMENT                  III-l

     3.1  Socioeconomic                             III-2

          3.1.1  Current and Projected Population   III-2
          3.1.2  Contract Construction Income       III-4
          3.1.3  Contract Construction Employment   III-7

     3.2  Land Use                                  III-ll

          3.2.1  Current Urbanization Patterns      III-ll
          3.2.2  Urbanization Plans                 111-13
          3.2.3  Archeological Sites                111-15
          3.2.4  Cultural Sites                     111-15
          3.2.5  Historical Sites                   111-17
          3.2.6  Recreational Sites                 111-18

     3.3  Resources                                 111-18

          3.3.1  Financial                          111-19
          3.3.2  Labor                              III-34

     3.4  Transportation                            111-36

          3.4.1  Highways and Streets               III-36
          3.4.2  Waterways                          111-37
                          -in-

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                                                   Page
                                                  Number
IV.   SUMMARY OF ALTERNATIVES                        IV-1

     4.1  Alternative Plans                         IV-1

          4.1.1  Description of Plans               IV-3
          4.1.2  Plan Evaluation and Elimination    IV-11
          4.1.3  The No-Action Alternative          IV-12

     4.2  Alternative Plan Modifications            IV-14

          4.2.1  Description of Modifications       IV-15
          4.2.2  Evaluation and Comparison of
                 Modified Plans                     IV-16
          4.2.3  Recommendations and Further
                 Studies                            IV-22
          4.2.4  Plan Selection                     IV-23

     4.3  Waste Disposal Alternatives               IV-26

          4.3.1  Drainage Flow From Tunnel
                 Construction                       IV-26
          4.3.2  Ultimate Disposal of Sludge        IV-27
          4.3.3  Disposal Costs                     IV-29
          4.3.4  Spoil Material                     IV-31


V.   DESCRIPTION OF THE PROPOSED ACTION              V-l

     5.1  The Selected Plan                          V-l

          5.1.1  TARP Systems                        V-2
          5.1.2  TARP Subsystems                     V-4

     5.2  The Lower Des Plaines                      V-7

          5.2.1  Component System                    V-ll
          5.2.2  Component Subsystems                V-18

     5.3  Des  Plaines Tunnel  System, Operation
          and Maintenance                            V-24

          5.3.1  System Operation                    V-24
          5.3.2  Maintenance  Steps                   V-25
          5.3.3  Operation and Maintenance Costs     V-26
          5.3.4  Management Steps                    V-27
                          -iv-

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                                                     Page
                                                    Number
 VI. EFFECTS OF CONSTRUCTION ON THE NATURAL
     ENVIRONMENT                                    VI-1

     6.1  Water Resources                           VI-1

          6.1.1  Surface Water                      VI-2
          6.1.2  Groundwater                        VI-4
          6.1.3  Effluent Disposal From Tunnel.
                 Dewatering Operations              VI-8
          6.1.4  Water Management Programs          VI-9

     6.2  Land Resources                            VI-9

          6.2.1  Flood-Prone Areas                  VI-9
          6.2.2  Geology                            VI-10
          6.2.3  Seismicity                         VI-19
          6.2.4  Spoil Disposal                     VI-20

     6.3  Atmospheric Resources                     VI-27

          6.3.1  Air Quality                        VI-27
          6.3.2  Noise                              VI-29

     6.4  Biological Resources                      VI-31

     6.5  Commitment of Resources                   VI-31
VII. EFFECTS OF CONSTRUCTION ON THE MAN-MADE
     ENVIRONMENT                                   VII-1

     7.1  Socioeconomic                            VII-1

          7.1.1  Public Annoyances                 VII-1
          7.1.2  Worker Safety                     VII-4
          7.1.3  Construction Income               VII-8
          7.1.4  Business Disruption               VII-12
          7.1.5  Spoil Disposal                    VII-14

     7.2  Land Use                                 VII-16

          7.2.1  Alterations Near Surface
                 Construction                      VII-17
          7.2.2  Rock and Spoil Disposal           VII-18
          7.2.3  Archeological and Historical
                 Sites                             VII-19
          7.2.4  Cultural and Recreational Sites   VII-19
                           -v-

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      7.3  Resources
                                                      Page
                                                     Number
                                        VII-20
           7.3.1  Financial Resources               VII-20
           7.3.2  Labor Resources                   VII-24

      7.4  Transportation                           VII-24

           7.4.1  Construction Shaft                VII-25
           7.4.2  Drop Shafts                       VII-25

      7.5  Major Projects and Programs              VII-26

           7.5.1  Transit Improvements              VII-26
           7.5.2  Streets and Expressway
                  Improvements                      VII-26
           7.5.3  Public Acquisition of Energy
                  Utility Corridor                  VII-27

      7.6  Commitment of Resources                  VII-27
VIII. EFFECTS OF OPERATION ON THE NATURAL
      ENVIRONMENT

      8 . 1~ '"Water Resources

           8.1.1  Surface Water
           8.1.2  Groundwater
           8.1.3  Wastewater
           8.1.4  Water Management Programs

      8.2  Land Resources

           8.2.1  Flood-Prone Areas
           8.2.2  Geology and Seismicity
           8.2.3  Sludge Waste

      8.3  Atmospheric Resources

           8.3.1  Air Quality
8.3.2
8.3.3
8.3.4
                  Odor
                  Aerosols
                  Noise
      8.4  Biological Resources
VIII-1

VIII-1

VIII-1
VIII-8
VIII-13
VIII-16

VIII-17

VIII-17
VIII-18
VIII-22

VIII-23

VIII-23
VIII-24
VIII-24
VIII-24

VIII-25
                            -VI-

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                                                    Page
                                                   Number
    8.5  Commitment of Resources                  VIII-25
IX. EFFECTS OF OPERATION ON THE MAN-MADE
    ENVIRONMENT                                     IX-1

    9.1  Socioeconomic                              IX-1

         9.1.1  Operation-Related Income            IX-1
         9.1.2  Operation-Related Employment        IX-1

    9.2  Land Use                                   IX-2

         9.2.1  Alterations Near Surface
                Structures                          IX-2
         9.2.2  Sensitive Resource Areas            IX-2
         9.2.3  Sludge Disposal                     IX-3

    9.3  Financial Resources                        IX-4
    9.4  Transportation                             IX-7
    9.5  Major Projects and Programs                IX-7
    9.6  Commitment of Resources                    IX-8
 X. UNAVOIDABLE ADVERSE IMPACTS AND MITIGATIVE
    MEASURES                                         X-l

    10.1 Natural Environment                         X-l

         10.1.1 Water Resources                      X-l
         10.1.2 Land Resources                       X-3
         10.1.3 Atmospheric Resources                X-5
         10.1.4 Mitigative Measures                  X-6

    10.2 Man-Made Environment                        X-10

         10.2.1 Socioeconomic                        X-10
         10.2.2 Land Use                             X-12
         10.2.3 Financial and Labor Resources        X-12
         10.2.4 Transportation                       X-12
         10.2.5 Major Projects and Programs          X-13
         10.2.6 Mitigative Measures                  X-13
XI. CONCLUSIONS AND  RECOMMENDATIONS                 XI-1
                        -vii-

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                    APPENDICES


A.   WATER QUALITY MONITORING DATA

B.   STRATIGRAPHY DESCRIPTION FOR THE CHICAGO AREA

C.   DESCRIPTION OF FAULTS LOCATED IN THE CHICAGO AREA

D.   AIR QUALITY STANDARDS

E.   NOISE:  UNITS AND STANDARDS

F.   SOCIOECONOMIC DATA BY COMMUNITY FOR THE MAINSTREAM,
     CALUMET, AND DES PLAINES TUNNEL SYSTEMS

G.   CHRONOLOGY OF IMPORTANT EVENTS - 1954 THROUGH 1975

H.   METROPOLITAN SANITARY DISTRICT OF GREATER CHICAGO -
     GENERAL SPECIFICATIONS - CONSTRUCTION CONTRACTORS

I.   METROPOLITAN SANITARY DISTRICT OF GREATER CHICAGO -
     GENERAL SPECIFICATIONS - SEWERS

J.   WILDLIFE AND VEGETATION INVENTORIES
                           -Vlll-

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I. INTRODUCTION

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                   I.  INTRODUCTION
1.1  ENVIRONMENTAL POLICIES AND GOALS

     In 1969, Congress enacted the National Environmental
Policy Act, Public Law 91-190 (NEPA).  NEPA established a
Council on Environmental Quality  (CEQ) and a  national  policy
to:

          Encourage productive and enjoyable  harmony between
          man and his environment

          Promote efforts to prevent or  eliminate damage  to
          the environment and stimulate  public  health  and
          welfare

          Enrich man's understanding of  ecological systems
          and of the Nation's natural  resources.

NEPA states that the Federal Government  will  have the  con-
tinuing responsibility of improving  and  coordinating Federal
actions  (i.e., plans, programs, resources, and  functions)
which affect environmental, resource,  and  health  quality.
NEPA further states that all Federal agencies are required
to "... utilize a systematic, interdisciplinary approach
which will insure the integrated  use of  the natural and
social sciences and the environmental  design  arts in plan-
ning and in decisionmaking which  may have  an  impact on man's
environment  ..."  Federal agencies  are also required to in-
vestigate and develop procedures  and technology to evaluate
unquantifiable environmental amenities and values and  give
them appropriate consideration, in  addition to  quantifiable
technical and economic factors.

     The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is ad-
ministering a major Federal environmental  program entitled
"Grants for Construction of Treatment  Works."!  This program
allows the EPA administrator to provide  financial aid  to any
state, municipality,  intermunicipal agency, or  interstate
     Authorized by Title II, Section 201(g)(l), of the Federal Water
     Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972, Public Law 92-500 (FWPCA)
                             1-1

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agency for the construction of publicly owned water pollu-
tion control facilities.  The national program encourages
reduction of point sources of water pollution to  improve
water quality.
1.2  ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENTS

     Pursuant to Section 102(2) (c) of NEPA, all Federal
agencies are required to prepare environmental impact  state-
ments (EIS) for those actions significantly impacting  the
human environment.  On August 1, 1973, the CEQ published
guidelines^ on the preparation of an EIS to instruct agen-
cies in meeting NEPA requirements.  The EPA subsequently
published its own regulations2 for the preparation of  an
EIS.  The regulations specify minimum standards to present
all pertinent data in a consistent, organized and comprehen-
sive manner to enable the reader to assess the proposed action
independently.  As stated in both the CEQ and EPA guidelines,
the purpose of an EIS is to provide a means of assessing
impacts on the environment and not to provide a justification
for decisions made.

     The EPA's granting of funds for water pollution control
facilities may be contingent on whether an EIS is required.
Each proposed water pollution control facility is evaluated
on a case-by-case basis by the appropriate EPA regional office,
Generally, an EIS is required if the action is expected to
have significant environmental effects or is highly contro-
versial.  The EPA has determined that the TARP tunnel  system
may have an effect on the environment and, therefore,  has
prepared this EIS.

     An EIS presents only the information necessary to address
the specific environmental issues of the action, while focus-
ing on the critical issues and summarizing the less critical
issues.   An overview of the contents of a typical EIS  is
presented as a flow scheme in Figure 1-1.  The scheme  illus-
trates the approach normally used for systematic gathering
and processing of information during document preparation.
Initially, a draft statement is prepared and circulated for
comment.  After the comment period, the final statement is
prepared and issued to all agencies, organizations, and indi-
viduals affected by the proposed action.
1    Title 40, Code of Federal Regulations (CFR),  Chapter V, Part 1500.

2    Title 40, CFR, Chapter I, Part 6.
                             1-2

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1.3  GOVERNMENT AND PUBLIC PARTICIPATION

     The draft EIS must satisfy, to the fullest extent pos-
sible, the requirements established for the final EIS as
set forth in Section 102(2)(c) of NEPA.  Once completed, the
draft statement is distributed for comment in accordance
with the CEQ guidelines.  Decisionmakers and outside reviewers
are allowed at least 45 days to comment on the environmental
issues as described in the draft statement.  Comments from
Federal, state, and local agencies with jurisdiction by law
or with special expertise in environmental impacts are solicited
and considered in the impact statement process.  In addition,
comments are solicited from public and private sources.

     Although every effort is made to define and evaluate
all major environmental effects of the proposed action in
the draft statement, the commenting process often reveals
additional environmental effects, relevant facts, and differ-
ent viewpoints.  When previously overlooked issues and opposing
views are brought to the attention of the agency preparing
the EIS, the agency addresses them in the final environmental
statement.  All substantive comments received on the draft
EIS are included as an attachment to the final EIS, some of
which may be addressed by the agency in the EIS text.
1.4  IDENTIFICATION OF THE APPLICANT

     The Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago
(MSDGC) is the construction grant applicant for the Tunnel
and Reservoir Plan (TARP) addressed by this EIS.  The Dis-
trict presently covers an area of approximately 860 square
miles within Cook County, Illinois, as shown in Figure 1-2
The MSDGC was organized in 1889 under an act to create sani-
tary districts to remove obstructions in the Des Plaines and
Illinois Rivers.1  Under the provisions of the act, the MSDGC
is responsible for providing surface water and sewage drain-
age within the District's boundaries.  The District, constructs
the necessary facilities, conveyance systems, and treatment
plants to service this area and is authorized to treat waste-
water from any municipality within its boundaries.  In addition,
MSDGC may operate all wastewater facilities located within
its jurisdiction.

     Although the major function of the MSDGC is planning,
construction, and operation of sewers and sewage treatment
facilities, the District also oversees various flood control
and electrical generation operations.  Other MSDGC functions
     Illinois Revised Statutes, Chapter 42,  Section 320, approved
     May 29, 1889.
                            1-4

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                                           FIGURE  1-2
                                     Metropolitan Sanitary
                                  District of Greater Chicago
                                          Service  Area
,' COOK COUNTY r
                                                          LAKE
                                                        MICHIGAN

     SERVICE AREA OF MSDGC
     COMBINED-SEWER
     SERVICE AREA
     BOUNDARY
     CHICAGO CITY LIMITS
                                        COOK COUNTY
                                1-5

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involve:  purchasing or leasing real and personal  property,
both within and outside its jurisdiction;  initiating  con-
demnation proceedings within its  service area;  approving
sewer connection plans; and issuing water  discharge permits.

     The MSDGC presently collects, treats,  and  disposes  of
wastewater from a highly urbanized and  industrialized area
consisting of 120 municipalities  and a  total  population  of
approximately 5.5 million.  The district owns and  operates
70.5 miles of navigable canals, six sewage treatment  plants,
and over 440 miles of intercepting sewers.  The three major
plants  (North-Side, West-Southwest, and Calumet) in the
MSDGC service area have a secondary capacity  of over  1,750
million gallons per day (MGD).  The remaining plants  have
a combined tertiary capacity of over 70 MGD.  A new plant,
the John Egan Reclamation Plant,  will be operational  in
the near future and will have a capacity of approximately
30 MGD.
1.5  BACKGROUND INFORMATION AND PROJECT HISTORY

     The MSDGC initiated its wastewater facilities  planning
study in September 1967, with 10-year cleah-up and  flood
control program.  The objectives of the program  are to  solve
the District's flooding problem, protect Lake Michigan  from
further pollution, and improve surface water quality in the
Chicago metropolitan area.  The Tunnel and Reservoir Plan
(TARP) evolved from this 10-year program, as most of the
MSDGC's planning efforts have to date.  The following sections
present background information on the MSDGC's TARP  planning
effort and describe the events leading to its selection.


1.5.1  Background Information

     Approximately 44 percent of the 860-square  mile MSDGC
service area, or 375 square miles, consists of
combined-sewer systems (see Figure 1-2) in which sewage
collected in local sewer systems is conveyed to  treatment
plants.  These combined-sewer systems handle only industrial,
commercial, and household wastewater at the present time, and,
when urban runoff in amounts greater than 0.1 inch  enters ths
systems during wet weather conditions, the systems'  capacity is
easily exceeded.  Once this.occurs, the pollutant-laden runoff
bypasses or overflows to adjacent streams. Overflows have
occurred on an average of 100 times per year in  the Chicago
area and have significantly affected the water quality  of the
streams.1
     The Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago, "Environ-
     mental Impact Statement," preliminary draft, November 1973.
                            1-6

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     During heavy rain storms, excessive overflows raise the
water levels in the region's waterways several feet above
flood stage levels.  The resulting flooding damages private
and public property and creates health problems along certain
reaches of the waterways.  In addition, backflows to Lake
Michigan are allowed to help reduce flooding when water levels
reach a critical height.  Over a 30-year period, many
plans and studies were made to solve the flooding problem,
which have been followed, since 1967, by efforts to solve
both the flooding and pollution problems.
!'5'2 Project History

     Concerned officials from the State of Illinois, Cook
County, the MSDGC, and the city of Chicago reactivated the
Flood Control Coordinating Committee (FCCC) in November 1970,
to investigate the pollution and flooding problems in the
Chicago metropolitan area.  The Committee's primary assign-
ment was to develop a viable plan to minimize the area's
pollutant discharges and flooding caused by overflows of
mixed sewage and runoff water.  Another priority item in the
plan was elimination of polluted river and canal flood water
backflows into Lake Michigan.  The Committee's plan was to
address the 375-square mile combined-sewer within Cook
County.  The location of this area with respect to the
surrounding counties is shown in Figure 1-3.  The Committee,
formed a technical advisory committee to develop the plan and
to solicit engineers and scientists from government agencies
and private consulting firms to assist in the study.  Fifty-
one alternative solutions were identified which met water
quality standards, reduced flooding conditions, and prevented
backflows to Lake Michigan.  These alternative solutions
were analyzed by comparing their capital cost, annual
maintenance and operation costs, benefits, land acquisition
and underground easement requirements, and requirements
for relocating residential, commercial and industrial
developments.

     The Flood Control Coordinating Committee members evalu-
ated the alternative plans in detail and selected TARP as the
least costly and most environmentally acceptable.  They
initiated further studies to develop and refine TARP and in
October 1972, the final TARP plan was presented at a public
meeting conducted by the MSDGC to obtain community and citizen
reaction.  On July 26, 1973 the MSDGC conducted a public
meeting to discuss TA~'.P environmental issues and assessments.
Many hearings conducted by government and local agencies have
been held on TARP.  A few of the recent hearings include:
                            1-7

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          FIGURE  1-3
      Planning Area and
     Surrounding  Counties
                  AREA COVERED BY TUNNEL
                  AND RESERVOIR PLAN
1-8

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          The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers hearing  on  the
          entire tunnel and reservoir plan  (November 1975)

          The State of Illinois EPA hearing on  the  design
          grants for the first phase tunnels  (September  1975)

          The MSDGC hearing concerning the EPA  construction
          grants for the Wilmette-to-Addison  segment of  TARP's
          Mainstream system (July 1975)

          The Northern Illinois Planning Commission (NIPC)
          hearing on the TARP facility plans  (April 1974).


1.6  OBJECTIVES AND DESCRIPTION OF THE PLAN

     The primary objective of TARP is to improve surface
water quality within the planning area.  The  plan is designed
to meet water quality standards set forth in  the "Water  Pol-
lution Regulations of Illinois."-'-  These regulatory standards
were established for three surface-water-use  classifications:
(1) General (primary body contact), (2) Public  and  Food  Pro-
cessing (drinking water), and (3) Secondary Body Contact and
Indigenous Aquatic Life.  All surface waters  in the State of
Illinois have been given a water-use classification by the
IPCB and must comply with the applicable water  quality stan-
dards.  These standards are described in Chapter II of this
EIS.  Other objectives of TARP include:

          Preserve the health and well-being  of the population
          Prevent further pollution of Lake Michigan
          Utilize treated waste byproducts
          Prevent flooding.

     The final TARP is a combination of features from  several
alternative plans.  TARP is designed to collect urban  runoff
during all wet weather conditions except those  storms  of a
magnitude equal to the three most severe storms recorded to
date by the U.S. Weather Bureau Service.  The plan  consists
of four tunnel systems, 150 to 290 feet below existing water-
ways, as shown in Figure 1-4, with a total length of approx-
imately 120 miles.  Within the 375-square-mile  combined-
sewer area, urban runoff from 640 existing overflow points
and sewage from industrial facilities and residents will be
collected in the tunnel systems, conveyed to  four treatment
     Issued by the Illinois Pollution Control Board (IPCB) on January 31,
     1974  (amended).
                            1-9

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           FIGURE 1-4
    Tunnel and Reservoir Plan
    System Layout and Routes
1-10

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plants, and then discharged to waterways.  Three storage
reservoirs are also a part of TARP and will have a total
capacity of over 130,000 acre-feet.  During peak rainfall
periods, overflow water will be collected in these reservoirs,
stored until dry weather conditions, and then conveyed  to
treatment facilities and processed.
1.7  ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEWS OF THE PLAN

     In view of the potential environmental impacts of TARP,
the MSDGC has prepared facilities planning documents and
several environmental assessment reports.  The reports and
planning documents pertain to the tunnel, reservoir, and
treatment systems of the plan and their component parts or
subsystems..  Four tunnel system routes have been identified
by the MSDGC and are designated as follows:

          Mainstream
          Calumet
          Lower Des Plaines
          O'Hare - Des Plaines.

To obtain environmental approvals and construction grants,
the MSDGC submitted the facilities planning documents and
environmental reports to the U.S. EPA, U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, and the State of Illinois EPA  for  review and
evaluation.  The U.S. EPA review focused  on all the pollution
control aspects of TARP, while the Corps  of Engineers review!
included the water management aspects of  the  entire Chicago
area.  The Illinois EPA review focused on the design aspects
of the Phase I tunnels only.

     In accordance with U.S. EPA procedures for determining
whether an environmental impact statement is  necessary, the
EPA reviewed the proposed TARP systems and subsystems based
on the reports and plans presented by the MSDGC.  The EPA
concluded that no  significant environmental impacts  are,
expected for the Addison-to-Wilmette segment  of the Main-
stream system.  Consequently, a decision  not  to prepare an
EIS was made for this segment.  However,  in the EPA review
of the other tunnel system segments  (Mainstream, Calumet,
Lower Des Plaines, and O'Hare - DCS Plaines), the possibility
of significant environmental impacts prevailed.  The EPA
concluded that an environmental impact statement will be
necessary for each of these tunnel segments.
     The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is presently preparing an overall
     EIS for the water managements aspects of the Chicago area.
                            I-11

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1.8  SCOPE OF THE TARP EIS

     The EIS for the MSDGC's Tunnel and Reservoir Plan ad-
dresses the environmental issues relevant to the pollution
control systems of the plan.  These systems include the
tunnels only and their associated subsystems of the four
routes identified in the previous section.  The purpose of
the EIS is to assess the positive and negative impacts of
TARP pollution control systems, on the physical, biological
and socioeconomic environment.  Thus, no proposed storage
reservoirs are included, since their primary purpose is
flood control.

     The environmental impacts associated with each TARP
system will be presented in a separate statement and will
focus on the conveyance tunnels only.  This EIS has been
prepared for the Des Plaines Tunnel system in accordance
with the regulations and guidance set forth in the President's
Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) Guidelines (August
1, 1973), and the U.S. EPA Final Regulations CFR-40-Part 6
(April 14, 1975), which concern the preparation of environ-
mental impact statements.

    For the proposed Des Plaines Tunnel and Reservoir Plan,
the U.S. EPA, Region V, Chicago, Illinois, is the "responsible
or lead Federal agency" as required by the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA).

     To ensure that the public is kept fully informed re-
garding this action, and that it participates to the fullest
extent possible in the Agency's decisionmaking process,
this draft EIS is being circulated for a 45-day review as
required by the CEQ, August 1, 1973, Guidelines.
                           1-12

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II.   EXISTING NATURAL ENVIRONMENT

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          II.   EXISTING NATURAL ENVIRONMENT
     This chapter describes the natural environment in the
Chicago metropolitan area which may be affected by the pro-
posed tunneling project and is divided into four main sections

          Water Resources
          Land Resources
          Atmospheric Resources
          Biological Resources.

     In the Water Resources section the quantity and qual-
ity of surface water and groundwater that are likely to be
affected by the Des Plaines Tunnel systems are discussed.
Sources polluting these waters are also identified.  Finally,
programs to abate pollution and to manage water resources
in the entire Chicago metropolitan area are described.

     The Land Resources section provides information on
drainage basins served by the Des Plaines Tunnel systems.
and identifies the flood prone areas in the project service
area.  The geology and seismicity of the entire Chicago
metropolitan area are described and pertinent details on the
areas affected by the proposed project are given.

     Finally, the air quality and noise levels in the Chicago
metropolitan area are presented in the Atmospheric Resources
section and the wildlife, vegetation, and aquatic life
inventories of the area are described in the Biological
Resources section.

     The information contained in this chapter provides a
basis for evaluating the effects of the proposed project on
the natural environment.  Thus, only those elements of the
natural environment that are likely to be affected by the
proposed project are discussed.  Instead of an exhaustive
environmental inventory, only those details that are neces-
sary for impact evaluation are presented in the sections
below.
2.1  WATER RESOURCES

     Chicago depends on the area's groundwater and surface
water supplies for many uses beyond drinking water,  including
                          II-l

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commerce, transportation, recreation,  and sanitation.   This
section describes the status of Chicago area water resources
prior to the implementation of TARP.   The discussion of
groundwater and surface water addresses the quality, avail-
ability, and uses of these water resources, as well as pol-
lution sources, resource management programs, and flood prone
areas.
2.1.1  Surface Water

     The surface waterways of the Chicago area constitute
an interconnected network of rivers and canals whose natural
flow into Lake Michigan has been reversed by a series of locks,
The major surface waterways under study are the Chicago
River - Sanitary and Ship Canal System, the Calumet River
System, the Des Plaines River System, Lake Calumet, and
Lake Michigan.  The remainder of this section describes the
quality and availability of surface water supplies, the
regulation of surface water flow, the potable water supplies,
and the deposition of sludge in the three water systems.
These systems are depicted in Figure II-l, along with water
use classifications which were established by the state of
Illinois EPA.

     The Chicago River System includes:

          North Shore Channel from Lake Michigan at Wilmette

          North Branch of the Chicago River from the con-
          fluence of West Fork and the Skokie River down-
          stream to the Chicago River

          Chicago River flowing westward from the Chicago
          River Controlling Works at Lake Michigan to the
          junction with the North and the South Branches
          of the Chicago River

          Tributaries to the North Branch of the Chicago
          River as they cross the Lake-Cook County line.

     The Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal System includes
the South Branch of the Chicago River from the junction with
the North Branch, the Chicago River, and the Sanitary and
Ship Canal downstream to the Lockport Lock and Dam.
                           II-2

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                                                          FIGURE  II-l
                                                Chicago Area Waterways  and
                                                        State  Water Use
                                                        Classifications
       COOK COUNTY
       CO
      \
  J
                %
nf^O
r
j.	1
             LJ
ff
I
I	
   LEGEND-

   ^m,ma, CHICAGO RIVER-SANITARY AND
        SHIP CANAL SYSTEM

   _BM CALUMET RIVER SYSTEM

   • ••• DESPLAINES RIVER SYSTEM

   [   |  LAKE CALUMET & LAKE MICHIGAN
         SCALE. 1" -4.5 MILES
                                         II-3

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     The Calumet River System includes:

          The Grand Calumet River from Lake Michigan westward

          The Little Calumet River which originates east of
          Gary, Indiana near Lake Michigan and crosses the
          Indiana-Illinois state line to its junction with
          the Calumet-Sag Channel (the MSDGC boundary is at
          the state line)

          Calumet-Sag Channel to its confluence with the
          Sanitary and Ship Canal.

     Tributaries to the Calumet River System are the Grand
Calumet River which joins the system south of the O'Brien
Locks and Thorn Creek which flows into the Little Calumet
River.

     The Des Plaines River System originates in the southern
part of Wisconsin.  In the MSDGC service area, the system
consists of the Des Plaines River from where it crosses Lake-
Cook County line to just above its confluence with the
Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal above Lockport, Illinois.
Salt Creek, a tributary to the Des Plaines River, joins the
river at Riverside, Illinois.
     (1)  Surface Water Quality

          The quality of Chicago area waterways is affected
     not only by steady-state effluent discharges, but also
     by periodic injections of pollutants as well.  These
     pollutants are due to combined sewer overflows during
     storm events.  Approximately 100 times per year, rain-
     fall runoff causes the combined sewer loads to over-
     flow to area streams and rivers.  The frequency and
     severity of these overflow episodes is sufficient to
     negate any improvements in water quality due to control
     of other point sources.  The problem of combined sewer
     overflows is discussed in more detail in Section 2.1.3
     on pollution sources.  This section presents existing
     water quality data and the relationship with allowable
     water uses in the Chicago area.

          The MSDGC routinely carries out a water quality
     sampling program of the Chicago River - Sanitary and
     Ship Canal System, the Calumet River System, the Des
     Plaines River System, and their tributaries.  Samples
     are taken by the MSDGC at least once each month at
     41 stations which are shown in Figure II-2.  Some
     stations are sampled twice each month.  The samples
     are analyzed for various physical, chemical, and bio-
     logical characteristics.  The physical analysis includes

                            II-4

-------

-------
                  ^                        I
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-------
of 22nd Street and south of the Kennedy Expressway as
the disposal sites for rock excavated for the Des
Plaines tunnel system (see Figures V-6 and V-7).   It
is the Forest Preserve District's intention to utilize
the rock for their facilities, such as bicycle paths
and equestrian trails on a long-term basis.  In the
interim, the stockpiled rock will be developed for
winter recreational facilities.  It is estimated that
2,200,000 solid cubic yards out of a total of 3,800,000
cubic yards can be placed on Forest Preserve District's
property from the Des Plaines tunnels.
                       IV-3 3

-------
furnish approximately 5,000,000 cubic yards per year
of dolomitic rock.  This rock is used mostly as con-
crete aggregate.  Some of the material is used as
select fill material by the area's construction industry.
(2)  Throw-Away to Operating Quarries

     In exercising this option, the contractor would
merely transport the spoil' to either McCook or Thornton
quarries, and provide the material free for subsequent
sale by the quarry operators.  This action would dis-
charge the contractor's obligation to dispose of the
material in an environmentally acceptable manner al-
though it would not enable the contractor to defray
his transportation costs through sale of the spoil.
(3)  Spoil Disposal in Inactive Quarries

     Disposal of nonsaleable spoil in the commercially
inactive Stearns quarry is attractive because of the
possibility of upgrading land use in that area.  The
quarry has a capacity of about 6.5 million cubic yards
to street grade.  Once filled to this grade, the site
could be designated for recreational or other valuable
land uses because of its central location.  The city
of Chicago is currently disposing ash waste in this
site.
 (4)  Sale to Other Parties

     Contractors may find it to their advantage to sell
some portion of the spoil products to users other than
the quarry operators.  This is expected to be an ac-
ceptable disposal alternative because of the existing
system of permits and licenses regulating uses of spoil
material.  The permit system, enforced by the city of
Chicago, has been effective in avoiding abusive dis-
posal practices in previous tunnel projects.
     Storage on Forest Preserve Land

     The Cook County Forest Preserve District has
requested that all rock taken from under Forest Pre-
serve lands be placed in stockpile areas on Forest
Preserve property.  They have designated areas north
                     IV-32

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4.3.4  Spoil Material

     For the ten-year construction period, excavation of the
Phase I TARP tunnels will produce a solid measure of approxi-
mately 11,747,000 cubic yards (roughly 26 million tons) of
earth and rock that must be disposed of in an environmentally
acceptable fashion.  For comparison purposes, the total
solid measure of spoil produced by the construction of TARP
(including reservoirs) is 183 million cubic yards.  Peak
spoil production from tunnel excavation is expected to be
approximately 2.2 million cubic yards (4.9 million tons)
at the midpoint of the ten-year construction period.  Con-
struction of the Des Plaines tunnel will account for approxi-
mately 3,784,000 cubic yards (bulk volume) of spoil material
including excavation of the pumping stations.  The duration
of constructing this segment is approximately 6+ years.
MSDGC has indicated that disposal of the excavated spoil
material will be the responsibility of the construction
contractor for each tunnel section.  Since each contractor's
proposed disposal plan and criteria will not be identified
until the preconstruction meetings with the MSDGC, we pre-
sent here only those alternatives most likely to be imple-
mented by the contractors.  These disposal options are
discussed briefly in the following sections and include:

          Sale of spoil to quarry operators
          Throw-away to operating quarries
          Disposal in defunct quarries
          Sale to other parties
          Storage on forest preserve land.
          Sale of Spoil to Quarry Operators

          Direct sale of the marketable portion of excavated
     material to the operators of area quarries may be an
     alternative method for disposing of a small portion
     of the tunnel rock.  The large portion of the excavated
     material will be low grade rock spoil usable only as
     select fill for such uses as road base material and
     site grading.  Although such applications are not
     typical of the uses of materials currently extracted
     from area quarries, quarry operators may be receptive
     to marketing the low grade material.

          Two major quarries are actively operating in the
     metropolitan area:  the McCook quarry operated by
     Vulcan Materials,  Inc. and the Thornton quarry operated
     by Material Service, Inc.  These quarries currently
                           IV-31

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-------
     (5)   Incineration With  Landfilling  of  Ash Residue

          Incineration of  raw sludge  reduces  substantially
     the  volume  of material  that  must ultimately be disposed
     of.   The  combustion process  converts the volatile  frac-
     tion of the sludge solids largely to carbon dioxide
     and  water vapor, leaving the nonvolatile component for
     landfill  disposal, which comprises  about 30 percent of
     total sludge solids.  An energy  savings  may be realized.

          Incineration was a relatively  inexpensive means of
     reducing  the volume of  sludge to be disposed of until
     the  advent  of strict  air pollution  regulations.  Require-
     ments to  add costly emission control devices have  caused
     many municipal  incinerators  across  the country to  close
     down.  Chicago  is presently  an air  quality maintenance
     area (AQMA)  and compliance with  established ambient air
     quality standards is  required.

          Landfill disposal  of 'ash residue  is subject to the
     same restrictions that  cover land disposal of digested
     sludge.
4.3.3 Disposal Costs

     Disposal costs have been developed by the MSDGC for
sludge produced at the treatment facilities, including
sludge from the TARP Mainstream/Calumet Tunnel operations,
for various combinations of the disposal alternatives
identified above.  The cost analysis of sludge disposal
systems presented here does not include a discussion of
alternative sludge stabilization systems examined by the
MSDGC for the treatment plants.  The interested reader
is referred to the MSDGC "Facilities Planning Study -
Overview Report" for detailed descriptions of these alter-
natives and their potential interfaces with the various
disposal schemes.

     By the year 2000, the MSDGC expects the plants to be
processing an average of 1,266 tons of sludge daily (dry
weight)/ including the tonnage contributed by the TARP
Mainstream, Calumet, and Des Plaines tunnels.  Sludge col-
lected by TARP is expected to contribute about 25 percent
of the volume handled by the treatment facilities.  Since
using certain stabilization processes, such as anaerobic
digestion, can reduce the amount of sludge to be disposed
of, disposal costs are presented in terms of the actual vol-
umes of sludge to be handled.  These costs are summarized
in Table IV-3.
                          IV-29

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(2)   NuEarth Program

     The MSDGC currently makes available air-dried sludge
from its West-Southwest treatment plant for area residents
to use as fertilizer for gardens.  Air-drying of di-
gested sludge is done by spreading it on sandbeds for
about two weeks, which dewaters the sludge so it can
be bagged as fertilizer.  The positive initial public
response indicates that this method of recycling wastes
may find long-term acceptance.  Unfortunately, climatic
factors limit the use of this method of sludge dis-
posal to approximately eight months of the year.
(3)  Sale of Sludge to Brokers for Fertilizer

     Sludge that has been dried under heaters, retains
a higher nitrogen content than digested sludge and
makes an acceptable soil-builder and fertilizer.  Heat-
dried sludge is sold by the MSDGC to a broker who sells
it as fertilizer, so that a portion of the cost of
drying the sludge is recovered.  This process consti-
tutes a significant means of sludge disposal for the
MSDGC.  Costs of various disposal options are compared
later in this section.
 (4)  Sanitary Landfill

     Placing digested sludge in a sanitary  landfill  is
another approved method of sludge disposal.  Wastes  placed
in a landfill are spread, compacted, and, at the  end of
each day, covered with a layer of soil.  Thus,  each  day's
wastes are sealed into a daily "cell."  Decomposition of
the biodegradable element then takes place, but this is
a slow process, requiring several years.  Problems
associated with a landfill are leachate, methane  gas pro-
duction, occasional fires, odors, and an unsightly appear-
ance.  Sanitary landfilling recognizes  these problems,
and, with proper site selection and through protective
measures/ treats them or reduces them.  Thus,  to  protect
groundwater supplies from contamination by  leachate, a
drainage collection system may be installed beneath  the
 site or the area's surface "capped off."  In addition,
gases generated in the decomposition process must be
vented to the atmosphere to eliminate the possibility
of an explosion or crop damage.

     The MSDGC plans to utilize sanitary landfills as
 one component of its sludge disposal program.   In so
doing, they will adhere to land disposal practices
 recommended by EPA.-*-
Brunner,  D.R.,  and Keller, D.J., "Sanitary Landfill Design and
Operation," U.S. EPA, Washington, D.C.,  1972.


                       IV-2 8

-------
grout waste, and other construction waste material.  Another
alternative for the settled solids is to transport the material
to approved disposal sites.


4.3.2  Ultimate Disposal of Sludge

     The capture of combined-sewer overflows during storm
events will require the eventual disposal of sludge solids
flushed into the tunnels.  Several alternatives are avail-
able for the disposal of sludge solids captured by the tun-
nel system and conveyed to the West-Southwest plant for
treatment.  The major options open to the MSDGC presently
are:

          Land reclamation program in Fulton County
          NuEarth program
          Sludge sales to a broker as fertilizer
          Sanitary landfill
          Incineration with landfilling of ash residue.

These alternatives are discussed more fully in the sections
below.
     (1)   Land Reclamation Program in Fulton County

          The application of stabilized sludge to soil as a
     fertilizer in either liquid or solid form completes
     the recycling of the waste products.  The MSDGC cur-
     rently practices spreading of stabilized sludge on
     strip-mined land in Fulton County, Illinois.  Reintro-
     ducing organic material to the depleted soil by re-
     cycling sludge has been shown to be effective for land
     reclamation.  The MSDGC is still researching various
     aspects of land application of sludge including rates
     and methods of application and rates of vegetation up-
     take for various elements.  The basics of the program
     are well established and understood, however.

          At the Fulton County site, a monitoring program
     samples soil, plant, and runoff components of the eco-
     logical cycle for the presence of various elements and
     compounds.  Agricultural crops are regularly sampled
     for nitrogen and heavy metal concentrations.  Also,
     runoff from the area is tested for compliance with ap-
     plicable standards.  The MSDGC is capable of recycling
     the runoff if water quality is found to be unacceptable
                           IV-2 7

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4.3  WASTE DISPOSAL ALTERNATIVES

     Construction and operation of the tunnel system will
generate waste materials that must be disposed of in an en-
vironmentally sound manner.  The large volumes of spoil
material generated during tunnel excavation should be removed
from the tunnel and conveyed to waste treatment facilities.
Drainage flow through the tunnels from groundwater infiltra-
tion and from grouting operations should be treated at
appropriate facilities before discharging into existing water-
ways.  Wastes generated during normal operation of the
tunnels will consist largely of sludge solids which would
impede proper operation of the tunnel's system if the material
is not removed.

     The available alternatives for disposal of these wastes
and the estimated cost of required disposal operations, are
discussed in the following sections.


4.3.1  Drainage Flow From Tunnel Construction

     Inflows of groundwater during tunnel construction and
operation can be expected, especially in fault zones and
places where the groundwater table is high.  Where infiltra-
tion is high, grouting operations will be carried out to limit
the flow to approximately normal sewer infiltration levels
(roughly 500 gpd/in. diam./mi). Water from the grouting
operation will add little to the tunnel drainage flow.
Maximum flow expected in the Des Plaines Tunnel will peak
at about 3.64 MGD over the length of the tunnel due largely
to groundwater infiltration.

     Current MSDGC construction specifications require holding
effluent from tunnel dewatering until most rock, mud, grout
material, and other solids settle.  A turbidity test should
be performed to determine the extent of settling.  The MSDGC
specifications further require the tunnel contractor to dispose
of settled solids in an environmentally safe manner.

     Should further treatment be necessary, drainage flow
could be pumped from the construction shaft to the nearest
treatment plant.  However, the anticipated quality of .the  in-
filtrating water is such that necessary treatment beyond set-
tling is unlikely.  The 3.64 MGD maximum drainage flow repre-
sents  less than one-half of  1  percent of the  average  flow
through the WSWSTW plant.  For this reason, the cost of treat-
ing the drainage flow is most  likely a minor  factor in deciding
the proper disposal method for tunnel drainage.  For settled
solids, the waste material could be conveyed  to the appropriate
waste treatment facilities for processing.  This waste will
contain deleterious substances such as:  concrete particles


                           IV-2 6

-------
from negative to beneficial, depending on whether rock and
overburden are disposed on-site, in a nearby landfill site,
or used in one of the proposed Lake Michigan landfill de-
velopments (e.g., lakefront peninsulas or islands and the
central area air-rights development).  If the material is
utilized in lakefront development, construction impacts
will probably be beneficial instead of negative for
any of the alternatives evaluated.  Other negative construc-
tion impacts may include:  localized degradation of air
quality, construction and traffic noise, construction-related
vibrations, energy consumption, and traffic congestion.  The
magnitude of these impacts will cover a wide range, depend-
ing on what abatement procedures will be routinely applied,
as well as on what construction procedures will be used.
Overall, the alternatives with more subsurface systems will
have less construction impact than surface-system-oriented
alternatives.

     The short-term and long-term impacts assessed for each
alternative will be beneficial.  Alternative D ranks lowest
in this respect, primarily because of the plan's surface
reservoir feature which will cause a substantial negative
impact on adjacent land uses.  Although Alternatives Ap, E,
and F, which were given a rank in the assessment analysis,
are essentially equal with respect to short-term and long-
term impacts.  They will achieve overall project objectives
on a nearly equal basis.

     TARP ranks slightly higher than the other alternatives
with respect to construction, short-term, and long-term im-
pacts.  The plan's greater reservoir capacity reduces the
untreated overflows to waterways.  In addition, the plan
ranks high in short-term land reclamation because existing
sludge beds will be removed.

     In summary, the FCCC concluded and stated that very
few negative impacts are expected for any of the alterna-
tives with tunnels, and adverse impacts will occur if the
"no-action" alternative is selected.  The negative impacts
of construction activities on the environment will most
likely be transitory, relatively short-term, and localized,
regardless of alternative.  Finally, the beneficial impacts
of Alternatives Ap,  D,  E,  F,  or TARP will far exceed the nega-
tive impacts.   Within the scope of the analysis,  TARP has the
highest ranking and  was,  therefore,  selected as the most suit-
able plan to  solve the flood and pollution problems of the
Chicago metropolitan area.
                           IV-2 5

-------
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          Provide  flood  protection for the recurrence of the
          heaviest storms  of record without the need of re-
          leasing  flood  waters to Lake Michigan

          Capture  99.7 percent of BOD substances in the com-
          bined-sewer overflows and provide subsequent treat-
          ment before discharging this water to the water-
          ways,  for all  but the largest storms of record
           (75 percent net  BOD removal)

          Overflow a substantial quantity of water only dur-
          ing a  recurrence of the three worst storms of
          record

          Reduce overflow  events so that fish and other aqua-
          tic life will  not be harmed by short-term DO de-
          pletion

          Provide  the least costly plan, as compared to the
          MOD 2  and MOD  4  plans, with the least disruption
          to the urban community.

     In August 1972, the FCCC published a report  presenting
a final recommendation.  The report,  including seven technical
appendices, recommended  a  consolidation of Alternatives G, H,
J, and S, which  ultimately resulted in the Tunnel and Reservoir
Plan (TARP) .  The  committee -then initiated a detailed environ-
mental assessment  study  to compare TARP with five selected
alternatives, including  the "no-action" alternative.  Alter-
natives Ap, D, E,  and F  were selected based on the previous
comparative analysis (see  Section 4.2.2).  Fifteen environ-
mental parameters  and five regional goal factors were identi-
fied as significant impact items.  The impacts on these para-
meters and  factors and the implications of the "no-action" al-
ternative were assessed  -to determine  the degree to which each
alternative met  the overall project objectives.  Table IV-2
summarizes  the results of  this assessment.  The final plan
selection, which was revealed in a detailed report/* was based
on this assessment.
4.2.4  Plan Selection

     The results of the detailed assessment of the six selected
alternatives showed negative  construction impacts for all al-
ternatives.  In four of the alternatives, the impacts range
     Flood Control Coordinating Committee,  August 1972.

     MSDGC, "Environmental Assessment of Alternative Management Plan
     for Control of Flood and Pollution Problems Due to  Combined-
     Sewer Discharges in the General Service Area of the MSDGC,"
     November 1973.

                            IV-2 3

-------
          frequency and severity of overbank flooding and
          basement flooding adjacent to the waterways, and
          will improve movement in the waterway systems.

          Land.   The amount of land needed for construction
          of works is different for each alternative.

          Sewer  service benefits.  A system of tunnels will
          reduce the cost of auxiliary outlet sewers; bene-
          fits would be attributable to MOD's 2 and 3 and,
          due to small storage capacity, no benefits for im-
          proved sewer service would be credited to MOD 4
          projects.

          Water  supply.  Alternatives which include major
          project features sited in the underground aquifer
          systems, will include recharge systems for aquifer
          protection.

          Navigation and surface traffic.  Benefits from
          navigation and surface traffic are limited to MOD
          4 for  all alternative projects; the estimated
          equivalent annual benefit accruing to these proj-
          ects is $15 million.

          Other  factors.  Flexibility of phasing, expansion,
          and construction were considered in the evaluation,
4.2.3  Recommendations and Further Studies

     A technical advisory committee was organized by the
FCCC to prepare a detailed report on the proposed alterna-
tive plans.  The committee issued an interim report, entitled
"Evaluation Report of Alternative Systems," which the FCCC
reviewed and then unanimously agreed that the final plan
for flood and pollution control in the Chicago metropolitan
area "...should be in the form of the Chicago Underflow
plan (Alternatives G, H, J, and S) with MOD 3 level of stor-
age.  These alternatives are less costly and more environ-
mentally acceptable to the community than any of the other
plans presented.  Detail studies along the lines of these
alternatives should proceed to develop the final plan layout.1

     The advisory committee presented the MOD 3 reservoir
storage level of 50,000 ac-ft in the interim report and recom-
mended to the FCCC the adoption of the MOD 3 subsystem.  The
committee concluded that the modification will:
                           IV-2-2

-------
     are low,  the aquifer can be recharged to prevent ex-
     filtration of polluted water from tunnel and reservoir
     subsystems.   Groundwater levels in the Galena formation
     will be above proposed mined storage cavities in most
     of the planned locations.  Groundwater inflow is not
     expected in these areas because the piezometric (hy-
     draulic pressure)  level is lowered annually about 13
     feet due to overdevelopment.  Costs for an artificial
     recharge well system have been included in each alter-
     native.  This system would prevent leakage of polluted
     water into the aquifers.  The recharge water quality
     specifications will comply with present drinking water
     standards, and the mineral content will not exceed
     natural groundwater concentrations.  Thus, the overall
     quality of the groundwater will be protected.

          Alternative D is the only plan that may affect
     wildlife and vegetation in the Chicago metropolitan
     area.  If excavated rock and spoil material is dis-
     carded adjacent to the canals, some habitats may be
     permanently damaged.  Transporting the material to a
     disposal site away from existing waterways will miti-
     gate this effect.

          Fish species are not expected to be affected ad-
     versely during overflow periods.  The DO level during
     dry weather, the high temperatures during the summer,
     and the ammonia-nitrogen levels in the restricted water-
     ways have limited the variety of fish.  In nonrestricted
     waterways, warm water biota and native game fish are
     also not adversely affected by short-term oxygen de-
     pletion during overflows.

          Existing and planned recreational lands adjacent
     to waterways will be enhanced by any of the alterna-
     tive plans.   Swimming, boating, and fishing may be
     allowed in waterways which presently are restricted
     because of poor water quality.

     In summary,  the results of the comparative analyses
are as follows:

          Land enhancement.  All alternatives will meet
          specified water quality standards; land enhance-
          ment of the recreational resources of the region
          will be similar for all alternatives.

          Overbank flooding.  All alternatives will elimi-
          nate backflows to Lake Michigan, will reduce the
                           IV-21

-------
     Most alternatives are expected to be located under-
ground in industrial areas.  Disruptions caused by con-
struction activities will most likely be minimal.  For
example, noise will be minimal and, if necessary, cur-
rent noise abatement technology can be applied.

     Disruptions to navigation are expected to occur in
all MOD 4 alternatives which require increased depth
and channel width in the Calumet-Sag Channel and the
Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal.  The impact is un-
avoidable and measures to mitigate this impact are
limited.  The other alternatives do not require water-
way improvement.
(5)  Operation Environmental Impacts

     The environmental impacts of each alternative will
most likely be minimal, since many of the systems will
be located underground.  Surface systems will be on
land zoned for industrial use.  Quarries are presently
surrounded by undeveloped land barriers, which will
minimize noise and adverse aesthetic effects.  Since
surface reservoirs occupy relatively large tracts of
land, the structure should be designed to be aestheti-
cally acceptable.

     Odor may become an operational problem, and a
properly operated facultative lagoon will be necessary
for each quarried pit or surface reservoir.  All pits
and surface reservoirs will most likely require mechani-
cal aeration equipment, which oxidizes the odor-causing
organic matter contained in the combined-sewer waste-
water.

     Conveyance tunnels and mined storage subsystems
specified in various alternative plans will be located
in the Niagaran and Galena geologic formations, about
300 and 800 feet below ground surface, respectively.
The level of the groundwater aquifer in the Niagaran
formation is above the proposed tunnels in most places,
and infiltration of groundwater into the tunnels will
result.  The water flow will be at a sufficiently high
rate, however, to eliminate the probability of aquifer
pollution.  The amount of water infiltrating the tun-
nels is expected to be small in relation to the total
aquifer supply, and no adverse effects on the long-
term water supply will occur.  In overdeveloped areas
(e.g., McCook) where the upper aquifer water levels
                      -IV-20

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     The purchase of land for surface reservoirs, hold-
ing basins, pits or quarries, and the extensive ease-
ments required for mined storage chambers may result
in costly delays.  Land and underground easement acqui-
sition, therefore, is an important consideration in
the evaluating alternatives.  Many of the alterna-
tives will not require displacement of homes or busi-
nesses.  Alternatives with surface reservoirs or hold-
ing basins located in densely populated or developed
areas, are expected to have a significant relocation
impact.
     Construction Environmental Impacts

     Construction activities of each alternative are
expected to have localized effects on the environment.
These effects may include such impacts as:  traffic
disruptions, navigation disruption, fugitive dust emis-
sions, and higher noise levels.  Construction activity
will cause relatively short-term impacts, and these
changes are not irreversible.  Thus, areas can be re-
stored and used.

    -Rock and spoil disposal is expected to be a major
problem with most of the alternatives.  Alternatives
which will produce large quantities of rock and spoil
will require either land or water disposal sites.  Rock
may be stockpiled and sold commercially, used as fill,
or used to develop winter recreational areas.  Rock
and spoil material is considered "clean" and treatment
or refining will not b~e required.

     Fugitive dust emissions resulting from quarry exca-
vations, surface reservoir dike construction, and other
rock handling operations must employ proper construc-
tion techniques to minimize dust problems.

     Vehicle traffic is not expected to be interrupt
significantly.  However, in a few locations near drop-
shafts, some disruption will be unavoidable.  The sepa-
ration of combined-sewers into separate storm and
sanitary sewers, (Alternative T), may cause a major
impact on the environment.  Excavation of many
streets is required to implement this alternative.
This will result in traffic noise and other dis-
ruptions over most of the project area throughout
the construction phase of the project.
                      IV-19

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construction.  In addition, the costs and benefits were
not escalated to reflect inflation.
(2)  Tangible Benefits

     The cost studies previously described were made
to determine the most economical plan which would com-
ply with established pollution standards, as well as
provide flood control for the several surface water-
ways without releasing flood waters into Lake Michigan.
Since this public policy has been established, the
least cost project for fulfilling the policy is assumed
to be justified and the benefits of the project to the
public are equal to project costs.  Some of these bene-
fits are tangible and can be quantified, while other
intangible benefits cannot.  Benefit analyses were per-
formed to determine whether appreciable differences in
the tangible, quantifiable benefits exist among project
schemes.

     Monetary values for some of the tangible benefits
were assigned to determine whether the benefits effec-
ted the relative desirability of the alternatives
evaluated.  Benefits for pumped-storage power genera-
tion differed from surface transport and navigation in
alternatives.  However, benefits for recreation and
land enhancement, and flood damage alleviation were
essentially equal to all alternatives.  The revenues
from pumped-storage power generation were considered
to increase total project costs.  Benefits for navi-
gation and surface transport are applicable only for
the MOD 4 alternatives, as shown in Table IV-1.  The
incremental navigation benefit, expressed as an equiva-
lent annual value, is approximately $15.0 million per
year and is less than the cost increment between the
MOD 3 and 4 alternatives, which is approximately $30.0
million (see Alternative H).  The benefits, therefore,
are nearly equal for all schemes of a given MOD and
do not significantly affect alternative selections.
(3)  Acquisition, Easements, and Relocations

     The tax base is normally reduced when land is
transferred from private ownership to public owner-
ship.  For several alternative plans, land require-
ments for either surface or underground easements do
not apply since the land is already publicly owned.
                       IV-18

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4.2.2  Evaluation and Comparison of Modified Plans

     The evaluation and comparison of the 51 subsystems
(17 plans with 3 modifications each) was based on 8 princi-
pal factors, all of which were given equal weight in the
next step.  The parameters, for which values were estimated,
included:  present worth (1972) capital costs, expected
annual operating and maintenance costs  (1972 value) , pro-
ject benefits, land acquisition acreage, underground ease-
ment acreage, resident and business relocations, overall
construction environmental impacts, and overall operation
environmental impacts.  For the purpose of comparing the
alternatives, Table iv-l presents a matrix of the factors
and the modified plans under each MOD category.  The deri-
vation of the values indicated in the table and the ratio-
nale used in the evaluation, are summarized in the follow-
ing sections. 1
     (1)  Capital Costs and Annual Costs

          The capital cost and equivalent annual cost fig-
     ures shown in Table IV- 1 under each alternative, were
     calculated on a present worth basis as of 1972.  The
     total equivalent annual costs include estimates cal-
     culated for the project, operation, maintenance, equip
     ment replacement, and power sales, with the latter
     treated as a negative benefit (a benefit which will
     cause an impact on existing conditions).

          A present worth analysis was performed to deter-
     mine, on a comparative basis, one-time construction
     cost factors and continuing operation, maintenance,
     replacement, and benefit factors.  A preliminary con-
     struction schedule for the pertinent phases of the
     flood control and pollution abatement program was
     developed for the 10-year period from 1972 to 1982,
     and taken into consideration in the analysis.

          For the economic analysis, a discount rate of
     7 percent was used, and all costs and benefits were
     based on 1971 price levels that were accumulated to
     1972.  The project life selected for the purpose of
     financial analysis is 50 years and covers the period
     of 1972 to 2022.  No charges were specifically in-
     cluded in the analyses which reflect interest during
     The Flood Control Coordinating Committee, August 1972."
                          IV-16

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achieve uniformly the project objectives, thus, eliminating
complex weighting factors and allowing immediate direct com-
parison of alternatives.  The committee applied four collec-
tion storage levels  (MODS) to each of the alternative plans.
This section addresses the MODS (modifications) or subsystems
of the plans developed by the FCCC in the following sections:

          Description of Subsystems
          Evaluation and Comparison
          Recommendations and Further Studies
          Plan Selection.
4.2.1  Description of Modifications

     The subsystems or MODS, as developed by the FCCC and
evaluated in detail by the FCCC's technical advisory com-
mittee, are described as follows:

          MOD 1 is the original plan, as proposed by the
          author, in which the storage volume differs signi-
          ficantly from the other plans.

          MOD 2 provides a system storage capacity of 118,000
          acre-feet  (ac-ft) to contain the largest storm
          event of record.

          MOD 3 provides a storage capacity of 50,000 ac-ft
          to prevent backflow to Lake Michigan without im-
          provements to existing waterways.

          MOD 4 adds a storage volume of 20,000 ac-ft to
          the plan to collect a worst-storm rainfall which
          has a recurrence interval of one year, and includes
          waterway improvements to prevent backflow to Lake
          Michigan for all storms recorded to date.

     The estimated storage volumes for MODS 2, 3, and 4 were
based on precipitation data collected during a 21-year period
(1949 to 1969).  The largest storms of record occurred during
this period and were considered in the storage volume esti-
mations.  To maintain consistency in the evaluation and com-
parison of alternatives, a computer program incorporated the
features of each MOD in each alternative.  MOD's 2, 3, and 4
were the only modifications applied to each alternative plan
in this computational effort.  MOD 1 was eliminated from fur-
ther consideration because it represents the original pro-
posed plan, which did not meet the established overall ob-
jectives of the program.  Some of the MOD 1 or original plan
features, however, have been incorporated in MOD's 2, 3, and 4
                           IV-15

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     (3)   Water  Management  Goals

          The  Federal  Water Pollution  Control  Act  Amendments
     of  1972,  PL 92-500,  have  established  goals  for  main-
     taining or  improving the  water  quality  of the Nation's
     surface water systems.  PL 92-500 states  that pollutant
     discharge sources must be eliminated  by 1983  and,  wherever
     attainable, interim  water quality standards must be met
     by  1977 to  protect and propagate  fish,  shellfish,  and
     wildlife, as well as to provide for water recreation.
     These goals will  not be achieved  in the combined-sewer
     service area of Greater Chicago even  when existing dis-
     chargers  meet current  Federal and state effluent re-
     quirements.
     (4)   Flooding and Backflow

          Flooding frequency within the combined-sewer ser-
     vice area and backflows to Lake Michigan will also in-
     crease as the area grows in population and develops.
     Damages to shorelines,  personal property, public thorough-
     fares, and businesses will increase at a rate greater
     than that of flooding frequency, and the impact will
     be more severe than before.   Backflows,  carrying com-
     bined-sewer overflow pollutants, will increase in volume
     and frequency and will  further pollute Lake Michigan.
     (5)   Financial Resources

          The only beneficial impact of the no-action al-
     ternative on the community is in the area of taxes.
     Tax  assessments for water and sewer use will increase
     by approximately 10 to 15 percent as a result of im-
     plementing any of the alternative plans.  For example,
     a maximum of one-third of the costs projected for im-
     plementing Phase I, the tunnel system phase of the
     Tunnel and Reservoir plan, could be funded by the local
     property taxes since Federal and state funds might
     cover only two-thirds of the project costs.  Normal tax
     rate increases can be expected if the no-action alter-
     native is implemented.
4.2  ALTERNATIVE PLAN MODIFICATIONS

     The Flood Control Coordinating Committee (FCCC)  modified
each of the remaining 17 alternative plans so that they would
                           IV-14

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          Surface  (or near  surface)  plans:   Alternative T
          and C-SELM  (certain portions) .
4.1.2  Plan Evaluation and Elimination

     Of the 23 alternatives described in the previous sec-
tions, six alternatives were  eliminated which did not meet
overall project objectives.   The  remaining 17 plans were
modified to meet the established  objectives.  The rationale
for eliminating the six alternatives, as stated in the FCCC
report,^ is summarized in  the following sections.
      (1)  Leffler Plan  (Alternative  K)

          The Leffler plan did  not meet the project criteria
     because it used the  existing  waterways to convey un-
     treated combined-sewer  overflows to a series of diked-
     in storage ponds along  the Lake Michigan shor.eline.
      (2)   Meissner Plan  (Alternative  L)

          The Meissner plan  was  entirely a flood control plan.
     It proposed channel  improvements to convey large quan-
     tities of water downstream  and into Lake Michigan and
     to store water in surface reservoirs and quarries.  No
     provisions were provided for  the treatment of combined-
     sewer overflows.  While the Meissner plan did not meet
     the criteria, some of its features  have been included
     in other alternatives.
      (3)  Ramey-Williams Channel  Improvement Plan (Alter-
          native M)

          This plan was a  flood water routing plan,  to re-
     duce flooding through waterway improvements.  It did.
     not include provisions  for water quality control and,
     therefore, does not meet  project criteria.
     The Flood Control Coordinating Committee,  "Development of a Flood
     and Pollution Control Plan for the Chicagoland Area," Summary of
     Technical Reports, August 1972.
                            IV-11

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          2.    Tunnel and Reservoir  Plan

               The Tunnel and Reservoir plan proposes  a
          series of rock tunnels in  the Niagaran formation
          to  convey combined-sewer flows  to a primary  stor-
          age reservoir in the McCook area.  The reservoir
          would be a 330-foot-deep rock quarry designed to
          hold 57,000 acre-feet of runoff.   Additional sur-
          face storage would be provided  near the proposed
          O'Hare Treatment Plant to  serve the northwest sub-
          urbs and at Stearns Quarry to reduce peak discharge,
          Captured overflows from combined-sewers would be
          treated at the West-Southwest Treatment Plant, as-
          suming upgrading and expansion  of this plant to
          handle one and one-half times dry weather flow.
          This plan is a composite of Alternatives G,  H, J,
          and S, which were presented on  the preceding pages.
          3.    C-SELM Study

               The Chicago South End of Lake Michigan study,
          reviewed by the U.S.  Army Corps of Engineers,  is
          a regional approach to wastewater management.
          This study assumes that some variation of an under-
          ground conveyance and storage system would be
          adopted to capture combined-sewer overflows.  The
          C-SELM study goes on to discuss various methods
          of  treatment of all wastewater flows, including
          advanced physical-chemical waste treatment, ad-
          vanced biological waste treatment, and spray ir-
          rigation of effluent in a land treatment system.

     The alternative plans can be divided into four cate-
gories:  deep tunnel, underflow, waterway improvement, and
surface.  These categories represent different flood/pollu-
tion control  schemes, which have also been evaluated.  The
following listing groups the alternatives by scheme category:

          Deep tunnel plans:  Alternatives A, Ap, B, Bp, C,
          Cp, and E

          Underflow plans:  Alternatives.?, G, H, J, Q, Qp,
          R,  Rp, S, Tunnel and Reservoir, the Original Kexfer,
          and C-SELM

          Waterway improvement plans:  Alternatives D, K, L,
          M,  N, and P
                           IV-10

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(22) Chicago Underflow Plan, McCook and 0'Hare Storage
     (Alternative S)

     The McCook and O'Hare Storage plan comprises a
series of tunnels, conveyance structures, and storage
at McCook and at the O'Hare Sewage Treatment Plant.
Tunnels would be dewatered by pumping at the West-
Southwest and O'Hare plants.  The plan provides for pit
storage at McCook and surface storage at the O'Hare
plant.
(23) Separate System of Sanitary Sewers (Alternative T)

     The Sewer Separation plan, as outlined in the city
of Chicago, Bureau of Engineering Report of April 1971
(revised),  developed a cost estimate for the separation
of sanitary and industrial wastes from stormwater by
constructing parallel sanitary sewers.  The proposed
separate sanitary sewers would drain into existing MSDGC
interceptors for conveyance to existing wastewater treat-
ment plants.  The separate storm sewers would discharge
directly to the waterways as at present.  No treatment
for storm sewer outflows was provided.
(24) Additional Plans

     Plans developed, but not evaluated by the FCCC,
are described below.  Although these plans appear to
be additional alternatives, they are variations or com-
binations of evaluated plans.
     1.   Original Keifer Underflow Plan

          Tunnels would be constructed in bedrock ap-
     proximately 200 feet below the surface to serve
     both as a conveyance system and as a storage facil-
     ity.  For larger storms, excess runoff would still
     be released to the waterways.  After each storm
     the tunnel-sewer would be dewatered by pumping
     to the interceptor sewer.  The original plan sug-
     gested that a series of special tributary sewers
     be installed throughout the metropolitan area with
     connections to large main sewers extending along
     the waterways.  Three of these underflow sewers
     are now under construction.
                      IV-9

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(18)  Four Storage Plan (Alternative Q)

     The Four Storage plan is a further development of
the three storage locations and three quarry plans.
The plan comprises a series of separate zone tunnels
and conveyance structures and storage at the four major
sewage treatment plants:   West-Southwest, Calumet, North-
Side, and proposed O'Hare.  Tunnels would be dewatered
by pumping, typically to surface or pit storages at
the North-Side, West-Southwest, Calumet, and O'Hare
Sewage Treatment Plants.   Surface storage would be pro-
vided where it would be more economical.  The North-
Side area storage would be in both a mined area and a
surface reservoir.
(19) Four Storage Plan with Pumped Storage Power (Al-
     ternative Qp)

     The Four Storage plan described above (Alternative
Q) includes a variation which utilizes pumped-storage
power as a source of revenue benefits.
(20) McCook, Calumet and O'Hare Storage Plan (Alter-
     native R)

     The McCook, Calumet, and O'Hare Storage plan com-
prises a series of separate zone tunnels and convey-
ance structures and storage at West-Southwest, Calumet,
and O'Hare Sewage Treatment Plants.  Tunnels would be
dewatered by pumping at the West-Southwest and pro-
posed O'Hare locations.  The plan would provide quarry
storage in the McCook area, surface storage at the
O'Hare plant, and mined and surface or pit storage in
the Calumet area.
 (21) McCook, Calumet, and O'Hare Storage Plan with
     Pumged-Storage Power (Alternative Rp)

     The McCook, Calumet, and O'Hare Storage plan de-
scribed above  (Alternative R) includes a variation which
utilizes pumped-storage power as a source of revenue
benefits.
                      IV-8

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(14) Meissner Plan(Alternative L)

     The flood control plan outlined in the Meissner
Engineers Report of August 1958, comprises channel im-
provements, surface reservoirs, and discharges to Lake
Michigan (possibly into reservoirs).  More than 100,000
acre-feet of surface storage along waterways and in Lake
Michigan would be provided.  The main capacity would
be increased to 56,000 cfs.  The possible use of stone
quarries to store stormwater runoff was first developed
in this plan.
(15) Ramey-Williams Channel Improvement Plan  (Alter-
     native M)

     This flood control plan, outlined in the Metro-
politan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago Report
of April 1959, was developed to correct inadequacies
of the main channel outlet at Lockport.  Widening im-
provements to the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal would
increase the outflow at Lockport to 30,000 cfs without
attaining flood stages in the waterway.
(16) Sheaffer Plan  (Alternative N)

     The Sheaffer plan proposes abandonment of the
existing sewage treatment plants and conveyance of all
combined sewage to areas in central Illinois for treat-
ment in aerobic treatment cells with spray irrigation
of effluent on underproductive farmland.  This plan
could be a supplement to the several containment sys-
tems, with or without the abandonment of the sewage
treatment plants.
(17) Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago
     Flood Control Studies (Alternative P)

     A flood control project outlined in the MSDGC Re-
port of July 1964, proposed flow diversions to the Des
Plaines River at Willow Springs and at Sag Junction,
removal of the rock humps at Summit, and utilization
of quarries, clay pits, and surface storage for flood
water storage.
                      IV-7

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(10) Chicago Underflow Plan - Single Quarry (Alterna-
     tive G)

     The Single Quarry plan by the city of Chicago,
Bureau of Engineering, comprised a series of tunnels
in the Niagaran formation to convey combined sewage to
a pit in the McCook area.  Flow into the pit would be
by gravity during storms.  The tunnels would be de-
watered by pumping the tunnel volume to the pit.  Cap-
tured combined-sewer overflows would be treated at the
West-Southwest Treatment Plant.
(11) Chicago Underflow Plan - Two Quarries (Alterna-
     tive H)

     The Two Quarry plan proposed by the city of Chicago,
Bureau of Engineering, is a modification of Alternative
G, comprising a series of tunnels in the Niagaran for-
mation which would convey combined sewage to pits in
the McCook and Calumet areas.  Flow into the pits would
be by gravity.  The tunnels would be dewatered by pump-
ing into the pits.  Captured combined sewage would be
treated at the West-Southwest and Calumet Sewage Treat-
ment Plants.
 (12) Chicago Underflow Plan *- Three Quarries  (Alter-
     native J)

     The Three Quarry plan, a further modification of
Alternative G, also proposed by the city of Chicago,
Bureau of Engineering, is similar to Alternative H.
Stearns Quarry, however, has been added to provide ad-
ditional storage volume and to improve the hydraulic
behavior of the system.
 (13) Leffler Plan  (Alternative K)

     The Leffler plan comprises the construction of a
 series of dikes in Lake Michigan to develop ponds with
 a total area of about 14,680 acres:  3,800 acres for
 the North Shore Channel, 2,560 acres for the Chicago
 River, and 8,320 acres for the Calumet River.  The
 plan visualizes the development of an uninterrupted
 highway from Wilmette to 95th Street, a series of
 swimming areas, skating ponds, small boat harbors, a
 local sightseeing highway, and a depository for river
 dredgings.
                      IV-6

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(7)   State of Illinois, Division of Waterways Plan
     (Alternative D)

     The Waterway Improvements plan outlined in the
Illinois Division of Waterways Report of November 1968,
included channel improvements and treatment of combined-
sewer overflows.  Waterway improvements would comprise
a ten-foot widening and deepening of the Calumet-Sag
Canal and the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal up to
Throop Street, removal of Brandon Road Lock and Dam,
and reconstruction of the Lockport Lock and Dam.  This
plan was subsequently updated to delete the channel im-
provements and to provide for 341 detention basins near
major outfall points that would be connected to MSDGC
interceptor sewers for the controlled release of de-
tained combined-sewer flow.
(8)  Composite Plan (Alternative E)

     The Composite plan, outlined in the city of Chicago,
Bureau of Engineering Report of September 1968, in-
cluded a series of tunnels in Niagaran and Galena-
Platteville formation to transfer overflows to the West-
Southwest, Calumet, North-Side, or O'Hare Sewage Treat-
ment Plants.  Volumes of mined storage, surface storage,
pit or quarry storage, tunnel capacity, and pumping
capacity would be optimized.  Mined storage areas at
several locations would be included to reduce tunnel
sizes.  Captured combined-sewer overflows would be
treated at the West-Southwest, Calumet, North-Side,
and O'Hare Sewage Treatment Plants.
(9)  Chicago Underflow Plan - Lockport (Alternative F)

     The Underflow plan, as outlined in the city of
Chicago, Bureau of Engineering Report of May 1970, in-
cluded a series of conveyance and storage tunnels to
increase conveyance to Lockport, to provide the re-
quired storage volumes in the tunnel systems, and to
provide for the treatment of the captured volumes either
through existing plants or new facilities at Lockport.
The system would have an outlet below the Lockport Dam.
Tunnels would slope to existing and proposed wastewater
treatment plants where captured combined-sewer over-
flows would be pumped to treatment.
                      IV-5

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area.  The plan includes pumped-storage power as a
source of revenue benefits.
(3)  peep Tunnel Plan With Mined and Surface Storage
     In the Calumet and Stickney Areas (Alternative B)

     The plan, proposed in the Harza-Bauer Report of
November 1968, included a series of tunnels in the
Niagaran and Galena-Platteville formations to convey
combined sewage to storage locations in the vicinity
of the West-Southwest and Calumet Sewage Treatment
Plants.  Mined storage volumes would be provided in the
Galena-Platteville formation.  Survace storage in con-
junction with the mined volumes could accommodate peak-
ing power generation.
(4)  Deep Tunnel Plan (Calumet, Stickney Storage) With
     Pumped Storage (Alternative Bp)

     The Deep Tunnel plan described above (Alternative
B) included a variation which would utilize pumped-
storage power as a source of revenue benefits.
(5)  Deep Tunnel Plan With Mined and Surface Storage
     in the Calumet, West-Southwest and North-Side
     Sewage Treatment Plant Areas (Alternative C)

     This plan is a modification of Alternatives A and
B.  A series of tunnels in Niagaran and Galena-Platteville
formations would convey combined sewage to the vicini-
ties of the three major sewage treatment plants:  Calumet,
West-Southwest, and North-Side.  Mined storage in the
Galena-Platteville formations and pumping to either
surface reservoirs or to constructed quarries would be
optional.  Captured combined-sewer overflows would be
treated at the existing West-Southwest, Calumet, and
North-Side Sewage Treatment Plants.
 (6)  Deep Tunnel Plan (Storage in Three Locations) With
     Pumped-Storage Power  (Alternative Cp)

     The Deep Tunnel plan described above  (Alternative
C) includes a variation which would utilize pumped-
storage power as a source of revenue benefits.
                      IV-4

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4.1.1  Description of  Plans

     This section provides a brief description of  the  plans
proposed to solve the  flooding and water pollution problems
in the Chicago metropolitan area.l  The plan designation in-
dicated in parentheses are found in the FCCC's report,  "De-
velopment of a Flood and Pollution Control Plan  for the
Chicagoland Area"  (August 1972).  The plan descriptions were
extracted from this report.
      (1)  Original  Deep Tunnel Plan with Mined and  Surface
          Storage ir^ the Calumet Area  (Alternative  A)

          The original  Deep Tunnel plan was outlined  in the
     Harza-Bauer Reports of 1964, 1966, and 1968.   The  1964
     report proposed large tunnels under the waterways  to
     store and convey the overflows from combined-sewers to
     treatment points.   The 1966 and 1968 reports proposed
     a series of tunnels in the Niagaran and Galena-Platteville
     rock strata to convey the combined-sewage to a single
     storage location in the Calumet vicinity.  Mined stor-
     age volumes would  be provided in the Galena formation.
     Surface storage,  in conjunction with mined storage,
     could be used  for  power generation.  Captured  combined-
     sewer overflows would be treated at the Calumet  Sewage
     Treatment Plant and at a new plant constructed nearby.
     Variations of  these plans considered underground storage
     in other locations, such as under the North-Side Treat-
     ment Plant.
      (2)  Deep  Tunnel Plan With Pumped Storage  Power (Al-
          ternative  Ap*)

          This  plan  is the Deep Tunnel plan, as described
     above, with mined and surface storage in the  Calumet
     The Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago, "Environ-
     mental Impact Statement," preliminary draft, November 1973.

     The subscript "_" indicates a power generation plan  for the al-
     ternative plan of the same letter.  The flood and pollution con-
     trol features of the basic plan are still retained in the "n",
     designated plan, except where noted.
                            IV-3

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metropolitan area have been developed by government
agencies, local organizations, and individuals.  The
early plans focused mainly on flood control, but as
degradation of water resources continued to increase,
plans began to address water pollution control.
Promulgated water quality standards arid Lake Michigan
backflow regulations also influenced the development
of additional plans.

     In November 1970, the Flood Control Coordinating
Committee (FCCC) was reactivated to review and
evaluate the plans developed and formulate additional
ones to address both the flooding and water pollution
problems.  The committee consisted of representatives
from the State of Illinois, Cook County, the MSDGC,
and the city of Chicago.  Twenty-three alternative
plans were evaluated in detail with respect to
possible facility sites, sizes, and costs.  Alternatives
were selected for detailed study if they met overall
objectives.  Details of the process used in this
selection are presented in Section 4.1.2.  The overall
project objectives were established by the MSDGC to
comply with Illinois Pollution Control Board  (IPCB)
standards, and are as follows:

          Prevent all backflows to Lake Michigan to
          protect water supply resource

          Reduce pollutant discharges caused by combined-
          sewer overflows

          Reduce flooding in the combined-sewer and
          downstream areas.

     A chronology of the plans proposed and studies
performed during the past 22 years is provided in
Appendix G, "Chronology of Important Events -  1954
through 1975."

     The first section of this chapter identifies the
alternative plans evaluated by the FCCC from 1970 to
1972 and the additional plans developed since  1972.
In the following sections, the evaluation process used
is discussed, as well as the consequences of the  "no
action" alternative.
                           IV-2

-------
IV.  SUMMARY OF ALTERNATIVES

-------
             IV.  SUMMARY OF ALTERNATIVES
     Several basic alternatives have been  considered to re-
solve the flooding and pollution problems  of  the Chicago
metropolitan area.  These alternatives  are:

          Separate sewers, which provide a separate storm
          sewer line parallel to existing  sanitary sewers
          and involves laying over  440  miles  of additional
          lines under city streets

          Collect discharges from 640 outfalls into 340 col-
          lection basins and provide surface  or subsurface
          storage at or near each of those outfalls

          Ultimate surface collection,  which  conveys and
          collects wastewaters  from the 340 basins into
          several large reservoirs  or storage basins

          Tunnels and reservoirs  (TARP)  which is similar to
          ultimate surface collection except  conveyance is
          done by deep tunnels.

     It is EPA's opinion that these alternatives have been
thoroughly weighed and evaluated in past studies and that
the proposed action  (TARP) is clearly the  most effective and
least costly.  The following sections summarize many of the
options which have been analyzed over the  past five yearsl
and highlights the events leading up to the selection of
TARP.
4.1  ALTERNATIVE  PLANS

     During the past  20  years,  numerous plans to solve the
flooding and water pollution problems in the Chicago
     Based on information presented in the Flood Control Coordinating
     Committee report, "Summary of Technical Reports - Alternatives,"
     August 1972.
                            IV-1

-------
                                              FIGURE III-l
                                      Harbors  and  Waterways cf
                                          the Chicago Area!
                                                     INLAND WATERWAYS
                                                    NORMALLY NAVIGABLE
                                                    BY LAKE VESSELS
                                               	NAVIGABLE BY BARGES

                                               =>—  NOr PHYSICALLY NAVIGABLE
                               CHICAGO
                                     umaf Harbor


                                         Indiana Harbor
                                           Mfington Harbor
                                                 Oar,
   l_Joll«t
 Jf
  Brandon Road
  Lock and Oam
                                       LAKE  CO.
PORTER CO.
Harbors and WMn/iyt of Hie Chicago Ant tUpdatad from Mid-Chicago
Economic Oavelopmvnt Study, Mayor's Commfft0» tor Economic ana1 Cultural
Davalopmunt of Chicago. 1969 )
 Booz, Allen & Hamilton,  Identification of  Facilities at the Port
 of Chicago, for State of Illinois  Department of Business  and
 Economic  Development, June  1975.
                              111-38

-------
          by truck to the Hillside Quarry via North Avenue
          and Manheim Road.

          F)$OIB construction shaft No. 3  (near 1st Avenue
              Cermak Road in North Riverside) rock spoil
            y fee transported by conveyor to  a Forest Pre-
          serve storage site just north of 22nd Street.

          Construction shaft No. 4 (Plainfield Road at  43rd
          Street) lies in the Material Services Riverside
          Quarry so that transportation of rock spoil may
          not be necessary.
               construction shaft No. 5  (Ogden Avenue  at
          Hiilgrave Avenue) rock spoil may be trucked  to
          a&t-her the Federal Quarry or McCook Quarry via
                 Avenue and 47th Street.
     Among tfife roads mentioned as possible disposal  routes
North Ave"nu*e is a major artery handling between  39,400  and
44,000 vehicles daily according to the latest available
figures (1969).^  Manheim Road, another major thoroughfare
sustained a 1969 average daily traffic load of 28,600 to
35,600 vehicles along the segment leading to the Hillside
Quarry.  Traffic along Eberly Avenue near the McCook Quarry
ranged from 6,000 to 11,000 vehicles per day over  the affected
segment in the 1969 estimate while daily traffic along  47th
Street averaged between 14,700 to 17,900.  More  recent
traffic volume estimates are not available.  Because of
the limited volume of rock to be transported now that
storage in Forest Preserve lands is possible, transportation
of rock spoil over surface arteries is not expected  to  con-
stitute a significant impact on the area during  construction
of the Lower Des Plaines Tunnel.
3.4.2  Waterways

     As indicated in Figure III-l, the Des Plaines  River
is not physically navigable by commercial vessels.   There-
for, construction of the Lower Des Plaines Tunnel system
will have no effect upon waterborne commerce  in  the area.
1    MSDGCT "truck Haul Routes for Muck Disposal Studies - Exhibit B,"
     1976.
                           111-37

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3.4  TRANSPORTATION

     This section describes the existing condition of high-
ways, streets and waterways likely to be affected by con-
struction of the Lower Des Plaines Tunnel system.


3.4.1  Highways and Streets

     The roadways that are likely to be affected by the pro-
posed project primarily include those to be used by trucks
transporting rock and spoil material from construction sites
to disposal areas.  The Cook County Forest Preserve District
has requested that all rock taken from under Forest Preserve
Lands be placed in stockpile areas on Forest Preserve property,
They have designated areas north of 22nd Street and south
of the Kennedy Expressway as the sites for the Des Plaines
Tunnel system.  (See Figures V-5 and V-7).  It is the
Forest Preserve District's intention to utilize the rocks
for their facilities, such as bicycle paths and equestrian
trails on a long-term basis.  In the interim, the stock-
piled rock will be developed for winter recreational facil-
ities.  It is estimated that 2,200,000 bulk cubic yards out
of a total of 3,800,000 cubic yards can be placed on Forest
Preserve District's property from the Des Plaines Tunnels.
The close proximity of these disposal sites to MSDGC con-
struction shaft locations effectively eliminates transporta-
tion impacts for a major portion of the Des Plaines rock
disposal operations.  No details have been provided as to
the relative amounts and disposition of the rock to be
stored at each of the two Forest Preserve sites.

     Potential disposal sites for the remaining 1,600,000
cubic yards (bulk) of excavated rock include the Hillside
Quarry along Manheim Road and the McCook, the Federal and
the Material Service Riverside Quarries at the southern
end of the Des Plaines Tunnel system.

     The most likely truck routes for disposal of rock from
the five Des Plaines construction shafts are as follows:

          From construction shaft No. 1  (located near Higgins
          Road and Des Plaines River Road) rock may be
          transported only a few blocks to a Forest Preserve
          storage site just south of the Kennedy Expressway
          via Des Plaines River Road and Bryn Mawr Avenue.

          From construction shaft No. 2  (Thatcher Avenue
          near North Avenue) rock spoil could be transported
                          111-36

-------


















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3.3.2  Labor

     This section provides a general profile of Chicago's
labor force and should be reviewed in conjunction with Sec-
tion 3.1.3 which discusses in detail the contract construc-
tion labor force.
     The Chicago metropolitan area labor force is diverse.
Traditionally, it has drawn workers from nearby states and
from rural areas in the south as employment opportunities
have lncrea.sed or were j>ercej.ved to be better than those
elsewhere in the south "and "central United States.  In  1970,
the Chicago SMSA civilian labor force comprised 64 percent
of the total Illinois labor force.  Labor force character-
istics for 1970 are detailed in Table 111-14.  The labor
force is predominantly male, with women comprising approxi-
mately 40 percent of the civilian labor force in 1970.
Total white collar workers comprised 53 percent of the labor
force in the Chicago SMSA in 1970.
     Unemployment rates  (not seasonally adjusted) from the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Commerce are
shown below:

        Jurisdiction         Rate            Date

     State of Illinois       6.7%          May 1976
     Cook County             7.1%          May 1976
     City of Chicago         8.6%          May 1976

     National unemployment for  the third quarter was  8.4
percent.  Chicago's employment  profile  is heavily depen-
dent upon manufacutring  and nonservice  employment, all of
which were more vulnerable to the economic recession  than
other employment types.  Two other general trends that will
contribute to the Chicago area's keeping a relatively  high
unemployment rate are higher productivity and labor force
growth.  Nationwide, productivity increased faster than
employment during the busy recovery period of 1970 to  1973
and this is expected to  happen  again during 1975 to 1978.-1-
The labor force is also  growing because of an increasing
participation rate among women.  It is unlikely that this
trend will reserve itself in the next decade.
     Fortune Magazine, November 1975, p.  22.
                           111-34

-------
The benefits derived from the construction of the
reservoirs primarily are control of overbank flood-
ing and decrease of flood discharges into the down-
stream reaches of the waterways.

     The reservoirs, however, could potentially
qualify for Federal flood control funding.  The
Flood Control Act of 1937 established the principle
of Federal participation in flood control projects.
The 1944 Flood Control Act redefined flood control
to include channel and major drainage improvement.
In practice, however, this authority (drainage im-
provement) has only been applied to the agricultural
area.  There is no precedent for Federal partici-
pation (drainage improvement) in urban applications
such as the TARP reservoirs.

     The Corps of Engineers is now in the process
of determining the Federal interest in providing
funding for the total Underflow Plan.  The Chicago
District Corps of Engineers has prepared a report
entitled Urban Water Damage Study, The Chicagoland
Underflow Plan, dated December 1975.  Final recom-
mendations regarding the division of Underflow Plan
responsibilities depend on the character and degree
of interest at EPA headquarters.  The Chicago
District has sent the report to the North Central
Division office of the Corps of Engineers which
will, in turn, be sent to the Office of the Chief
of Engineers.
4.   Relationship of TARP Phases

     The systems and subsystems of TARP will be
constructed in two phases.  Phase I involves
construction of only the pollution control elements
of TARP and consists of the main wastewater
conveyance tunnels, drop shafts, and pumping
stations.  The remaining phase will be the construc-
tion of the flood control elements, which include
the relief tunnels and storage reservoirs.
                 111-33

-------
     of this total is required for implementation of
     the Phase I Tunnel system.  The remaining $323.3
     million of Federal funds would more than cover
     the required $267.4 million  (75 percent of $356.3
     million)  for the Calumet treatment plant expan-
     sion project.  The MSDGC's share of the project
     ($89.1 million)  will increase the District's
     additional funding requirement from $298.9 million
     (additional funds required for the_Tunnel Plan-and
     instream aeration) to $388.0 million.  In view of
     the MSDGC's AA general obligation bond rating and
     its current formulation of plans to ask Illinois
     for an increased or additional bonding authority
     in the vicinity of $200-400 million, it is reason-
     able to expect that the Calumet treatment plant
     expansion project can be financed.

          For the West-Southwest treatment plant ex-
     pansion project, the financing feasibility cannot
     be defined at this time.  According to current
     estimates, this project will not be ready for
     Step 3 FWPCA funding until December 1979.  The
     remaining portion of the $780 million of FWPCA
     funds estimated to be available to the MSDGC for
     the period FY 1977-1982, would fall short by approxi-
     mately $718.8 million, if it were obligated to the
     West-Southwest treatment plant expansion project.
     In addition, the funding of this project would
     increase the MSDGC's additional funding require-
     ment from $388.0 million to $581.7 million.  The
     projected shortfall in Federal funds and the sig-
     nificant increase in MSDGC funds required combine
     to make the funding feasibility highly doubtful for
     the West-Southwest treatement plant expansion
     project.
     3«   Reservoirs

          The estimated cost of the three TARP  storage
     reservoirs (Upper Des Plaines, Mainstream,  and
     Calumet systems) is $505.7 million in  1976  dollars.
EPA's portion of this project would be approximately $581.0 mil-
lion; the MSDGC's portion would be $193.7 million.
                      111-32

-------
    the inFtream aeration phase of  the  project.   The"
    funding requirement  (approximately  $30.7 million
    for a series of eleven batteries  of diffusers
    located adjacent to and parallel  to the banks of
    the waterway) will most likely  be met  from the
    $300 million of State funds targeted for the
    MSDGC or from funds raised by the District through
    an anticipated increased or additional bonding
    authorization.

         Funding of instream aeration with the currently
    available State funds would increase the additional
    funds required by the MSDGC to  implement the Tunnel
    Plan, from $268.2 million to $ 298.9 million  (see
    Table 111-13).  In view of the  sound fiscal  posture
    of the MSDGC, it can reasonably be  assumed that the
    future financing requirements can be met.
    2.    Treatment Plant Improvements

         Treatment plant improvements(Calumet and West-
    Southwest plants) require an estimated  $1.13
    billion.  Construction of the O'Hare treatment
    plant is planned for the near future;  the pro-
    ject entails an estimated cost of  $124 million,
    of  which EPA has obligated $93 million in Step 3
    FWPCA funding, and the MSDGC is  funding the  re-
    mainder.

         In terms of priorities, the treatment plant
    expansion at Calumet (estimated  cost of $356.5   -,
    million) stand directly behind instream aeration.
    According to current estimates,  this project will
    be  ready for Step 3 FWPCA funding  in January of
    1979.  The West-Southwest treatment plant expansion
    project (estimated cost of $774.7  million) is
    currently expected to be ready for Step 3 FWPCA
    funding in December 1979.2

         Focusing on the higher priority Calumet ex-
    pansion project, it is anticipated that sufficient
    FWPCA and MSDGC funds will be available to finance
    the proposed project.  As discussed in a previous
    section of this report, the MSDGC  can  reasonably ex-
    pect $780 million of additional  FWPCA  funds  over the
    FY  1977-1982 period.  An estimated $456.7 million
MSDGC Facilities  Planning Study, January 1975, p.  M-XI-14.

The cost estimates for the three treatment plant projects are based
on the estimates  provided in the MSDGC's Facility Plan (January, 1975)
These estimates were in 1975 dollars and had to be escalated for
the assumed 6 percent annual inflation rate.
                      Ill-31

-------
     Despite the fact that many municipalities histor-
ically have funded operation and maintenance costs  of
treatment facilities by imposing ad valorem taxes,
this system does not provide incentives  for domestic
and low-volume commercial users to conserve water.
EPA headquarters has contended, however,  that  "a  prop-
erly formulated user charge system based  on ad_ valorem
taxes is a viable and appropriate method  of funding
operatipn and maintenance costs."^  Region V EPA  has
awardedf two grants to the MSDGC to develop  a user charge
system  to comply with the requirements  of PL 92-500.
The final system will probably be based on  water  usage
(as opposed to ad valorem taxes) with several  categories
of user charge schedules.
 (5)   Major Non-Phase I TARP Elements; Currently
      Available and Additionally Required Funds

      This  section  addresses the financing schedule and
 availability of  funds  for  certain elements of the MSDGC's
 Flood and  Pollution  Control Plan,  which are not part of
 the Phase  I Tunnel and Reservoir Plan and are closely
 associated with  the  overall goal of  meeting 1983 water
 quality standards.   These  elements include:

           Instream aeration to  add dissolved oxygen to
           the  waterway system receiving plant effluents

           Increases  in treatment levels, efficiencies,
           and  plant  capacity

           Excavation of three TARP storage reservoirs
           to capture remaining  pollutant discharges,
           reduce backflows to Lake Michigan, and
           contro1  flooding.
      1.    Instream Aeration

           In terms of project  phasing and priorities,
      instream  aeration  stands  ahead of the Tunnel Plan
      (tunnel systems, drop  shafts,  and connecting
      structures).^  Instream aeration is not a treatment
      system and  is thus not eligible for FWPCA funding.
      The  Illinois  EPA,  however,  has committed funds for
Letter from EPA Administrator Russell E. Train to House Speaker
Carl Albert, February 3, 1975.

MSDGC Facilities Planning Study, January 1975, p. M-XI-14.


                      111-30

-------
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                                111-29

-------
     in the 1974 survey)  and to projected state popula-
     tion in 1990.  It is reasonable to expect that a
     formula similar to this will be adopted by Congress
     and applied to the FY 1977 appropriation.  The
     impact of this change in the allocation formula
     would be to reduce Illinois' share of future na-
     tional appropriations to approximately 5.2 percent.
     Even if the allocation formula remains the same,
     the state's share of the national appropriation
     is expected to decline somewhat because its needs
     have been declining as a result of employing Pol-
     lution Control Bond funds.  The MSDGC's share of
     future Federal water pollution control appropri-
     ations is conservatively estimated to be 50 per-
     cent over the FY 1977-1982 period.  Assuming a
     $5 billion annual appropriation and a 5.2 per-
     cent allocation to the State of Illinois, the
     District could reasonably expect $780 million of
     additional Federal funds available over FY 1977-
     1982.
 (3)  Phase I Tunnels Financing Schedule - Currently
     Available and Additionally Required Funds

     Table 111-13 presents the award schedules antici-
pated for the Mainstream, Calumet and Lower Des Plaines
Tunnel systems, and the total Flood and Pollution Con-
trol plan.  The table shows that the existing available
funding from the State and the MSDGC is sufficient to
implement the Calumet Tunnel system.  Additonal Federal
Water Pollution Control funds of approximately $456.7
million will be required to meet the implementation
schedule for the Mainstream,Calument and Lower Des Plaines,
In view of the very conservative estimates of future
Federal appropriations, it can be reasonably assumed
that the future financing requirements can be met.


 (4)  Financing of Maintenance and Operations Costs

     For maintenance and operations, the District is
authorized to levy an ad valorem tax in an amount not
to exceed $.37 for each $100 of assessed valuation,
less the amount received pursuant to the Industrial
Waste Surcharge Ordinance.  The State statute also
contains authority to impose a user charge which is
currently required under PL 92-500.
                      111-28

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      Unobligated Federal funds  currently total
 approximately $646.1 million ($5.5 million FY 1973
 and 1974  funds;  $68.9 million FY 1975 funds;  and
 $571.7  million FY 1976 funds).   FY 1975 and prior
 f&afs1  funds  must be obligated  by June 30, 1976;
 Flf 1976 funds must be obligated by September 30,
 1S77.   Of this $646.1 million funds total, approxi-
 ma%ely  $323.1 million will be available to the"
 MSDGC in  FY 1976 and 1977.  The Illinois priority
 schseme  for the allocation of these remaining funds
 feo the  District provides that:

           Mainstream tunnels, drop shafts, and
           collecting structures receive 100 per-
           cent priority.

           The Calumet system has some Step 2 and
           Step 3 projects in funding range.

           The Lower Des Plaines system has some
           Step 2 projects within funding range.

      EPA  headquarters has requested an increase of
 $42 billion in the future Federal Pollution Control
 funding authorization under PL  92-500.  EPA recom-
 mends an  annual appropriation of $7 billion for
 FY 1977-1982.  Staff members of the Senate Public
 Works Subcommittee have indicated that the Office
 of Management and Budget (OMB)  recommendation to
 the President will probably entail a multiyear
 appropriation of $5 billion annually.  The staff
 also indicated that the allocation scheme used to
 parcel  out funds to the states  is likely to change.
 The FY  1973-1976 funds ($18 billion)  were allocated
 primarily on  the basis of needs, as defined in the
 1974 Needs Survey.   Under this  scheme several
 staftes  (including New York, California, Illinois,
 Michigan,  New Jersey, Ohio, and Pennsylvania)  were
 allocated over 50 percent of the total appropria-
 tion.   The allocation of the State of Illinois
 has averaged  approximately 6.32 percent.  EPA-
• Washington has recommended a formula which would
 give equal weight both to state needs (as defined
                 111-27

-------
(by agreement with the State)  to the MSDGC for im-
plementing Phase I TARP.  For FY 1976, the MSDGC
statewide appropriation of these funds is $206
million; therefore, it would be unreasonable to
expect that a major portion of this potential $300
million would be available in FY 1976 to the MSDGC
for the Tunnel Plan.  A conservative posture would
suggest that approximately $300 million would po-
tentially be available to the District in FY 1976-
1977.

     The State's ability to raise funds in the
general obligations municipal bond market is good,
as exemplified by its AA bond rating, which should
ensure that funds can be raised at reasonable cou-
pons.  The prospects of future or increased bond-
ing authorization are extremely bleak because of
lack of political feasibility and the requirement
for referendum.
3.   Federal (PL 92-500)

     Of the total $18 billion appropriation under
PL 92-500, the State of Illinois was allocated a
total of $1.137 billion ($125 million in FY 1973;
$187.5 million in FY 1974; $252.3 million in FY
1975; and $571.0 million in FY 1976).  By virtue
of the State's priority scheme, the MSDGC antici-
pates that approximately 50 percent of the funds
will be allocated for its Water Pollution Control
Program.  Substantial portions of FY 1973-1975
funds have already been obligated to the District,
The major obligations include:

          $43.65 million for the O'Hare Sewer
          Project

          $49.22 million for the North Shore sec-
          tion of TARP  (Addison-Wilmette)

          $93.0 million for the construction of
          the O'Hare Treatment Plant Facilities.
                 111-26

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                           Table  111-12
      1976 Estimate of the  Change in Property Tax Rate
             Attributable to the Implementation  of
                     the Phase I  Tunnel  System
Fiscal
Year
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
Cost of Tunnel
Piafl ($Mlllions)
50.7
92.2
159.8
183.5
189.9
173.0
95.7
57.5
22.2
5.7
2.2
Incremental Change
in Tax Rate $/$100
Assessed Valuation
.005
.007
.013
.013
.012
.021
(.004)
(.005)
(.002)
(.003)
(.003)
Cumulative Change
in Tax Rate $/$100
Assessed Valuation
.005
.012
.025
.038
.049
.070
.066
.061
.059
.056
.053
Assumptions;

         MSDGC's share of construction costs is  25 percent

         MSDGC financing is accomplished with 20-year bonds,  5  1/2 percent
         coupon

         TAX BASE ($22.7 billion in 1975) is escalated at six percent annually

         Operating/maintenance cost not included in Tunnel Plan cost figures

         Effect of  construction grant program disbursement schedule on MSDGC
         is not considered.
   This represents a 13.3 percent increase over the  1975 MSDGC  tax
   rate of $.%005 per $100 of assessed valuation
                               111-25

-------
     In support of existing national and state
goals, the District has already issued $249.5 in
Capital Improvement Bonds and has remaining unused
authority to issue $130.5 million of additional
bonds.  Approximately $66.3 million of the remain-
ing authorization is targeted by the MSDGC for the
Phase I Tunnels.

     The present authorization of the District to
issue bonds for pollution control work is based
on previous water quality standards.  Since water
quality standards have become more stringent, the
MSDGC is currently formulating plans to ask Illinois
for an increased bonding authority in the vicinity
of $200-400 million.  In view of the District's
AA bond rating and additional debt-carrying capac-
ity, additional bond funds in the range of $200-300
million should be available in the near future at
a reasonable interest rate.
     The MSDC is also authorized to levy an ad
valorem tax for construction purposes in an amount
not to exceed $.26 for each $100 of assessed valu-
ation.  Table 111-12 presents an estimate of the
change in property tax rate attributable to the
anticipated Tunnel Plan financing reqirements.
As is indicated in the table, the ceiling on the
ad valorem tax rate allowed for construction pur-
poses will have to be raised to cover TARP ex-
penditures even if the $300 million of state funds
targeted for TARP are appropriated.
2.   State of Illinois

     By approval of the bond issue referendum of
1970, the State of Illinois was authorized to
issue bonds up to a maximum of $750 million.  Ap-
proximately $150 million of these funds have al-
ready been raised through bond sales leaving ap-
proximately $300 million potentially available
                 111-24

-------
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                                             111-23

-------
     Table III-ll presents the construction and award
schedules for the Phase I Des Plaines tunnel system.
The estimated construction cost for the Des Plaines tun-
nels (in 1976 dollars, escalated 6 percent annually) is
$346.9 million.  It is further assumed that approximately
84 percent ($240.2 million in 1976 dollars) of the col-
lecting structure and drop shaft costs will be eligible
for construction grant funds under the Federal Water
Pollution Control Act Amendment of 1972 (PL 92-500).
The other 16 percent is assumed to be associated with
flood control benefits and is, therefore,  ineligible
for pollution control funding.  The annual operating
and maintenance costs for the Des Plaines tunnel system
are estimated to be approximately $2.5 million; the esti-
mate for the entire tunnel system is $13.6 million
annually.
 (2)  Sources of Funds

     Certain funds are either already availabor or may-
be requested under existing legislation for implementing
a part of the total Flood and Pollution Control Plan.
These funds are derived from local, state, and Federal
sources.  The Federal sources include grant programs in-
volving water pollution control, flood control, urban
renewal, and recreation facilities development.  This
section focuses on the sources of pollution control funds
for implementing the Des Plaines Tunnel system.
     1.   Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater
          Chicago  (MSDGC)

          The MSDGC customarily finances construction
     and facilities replacement by proceeds from the
     sale of construction bonds.  The District is autho-
     rized to incur indebtedness in an amount not to
     exceed 5 percent of its total assessed valuation.
     As of January 1, 1976, the unexercised debt-incurring
     capacity is $718.5 million.

          Prior to 1971, the plan to issue bonds required
     a referendum.  In 1971, however, a bill was enacted
     authorizing the issuance of up to $380 million in
     general obligation construction bonds without re-
     ferendum.  The MSDGC can issue these bonds at a
     maximum rate of $100 million per year, plus carry-
     over of the unused portion of that rate from pre-
     vious years.  The bonds must be repaid within 20
     years from the date of issuance.
                     111-22

-------
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                                111-21

-------
is uncertain.  The complex issue of the authority of the
Corps of Engineers in the case of urban drainage improvement
projects is currently under consideration.  However, there
is presently no congressional appropriation and no request
from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for an appropriation
to help support the construction of the TARP reservoirs.
     (1)  Construction Cost Schedule

          The total Chicago Flood and Pollution Control Pro-
     gram has two major parts:  TARP, to correct the
     combined-sewer overflow problem; and a series of proj-
     ects identified by the MSDGC.  Major goals of this series
     of projects include:

               Increases in treatment levels, efficiencies,
               and plant capacities

               Extensions and enlargements of interceptor
               sewer facilities

               Flood control in separate storm sewer areas

               Waterway dredging

               Provision of sludge handling facilities.

     Table 111-10 presents the MSDGC construction and financ-
     ing schedule designed to meet the 1983 goals of the
     Federal Water Pollution Control Act  (PL 92-500) and the
     flood control abatement objectives.  The schedule re-
     quires that project awards be forthcoming through FY
     1986.  The table presents a  summary of the Flood and
     Pollution Control Plan by major category and anticipated
     award levels.  The cost projections are based on 1976
     construction costs and incorporate a 6 percent annual
     cost escalator.  Although the sewer construction cost
     index rose 20 percent in 1974 and rose an estimated 12
     to 13 percent in 1975, the consensus of opinion among
     Federal and business financial leaders is that the in-
     flation rate will stabilize  at 5 to 7 percent over the
     next decade.  The 6 percent  escalator thus represents
     a reasonable expectation in  terms of the future impact
     of inflation on the relevant construction cost figures.
     The plan has a total expected cost of approximately $3.75
     billion, of which approximately $2.16 billion is asso-
     ciated with TARP.  Of the $2.16 billion, elements re-
     lated to water pollution control account for approxi-
     mately $1.46 billion and measures related principally
     to flood control for $.69 billion.1
     This $.69 billion primarily includes the TARP  storage reservoirs.

                           111-20

-------
3.3.1  Financial

     This section discusses the financing schedule and avail-
ability of pollution control funds for:

          The MSDGC's Flood and Pollution Control Program

          The Des Plaines tunnel system (water pollution
          control tunnels only)

          The total Phase I tunnels (water pollution con-
          trol tunnels only).

     In addition, this section addresses the availability
of funds for certain elements  of the MSDGC's Flood and
Pollution Control Plan, which  are not part of the plan for
the Phase I tunnels and which  are closely related to the
overall goal of meeting the 1983 water quality standards.
These elements include:

          Instream aeration

          TARP storage reservoirs

          Increases in treatment levels, efficiencies, and
          plant capacities.

Both existing and potential funding sources are considered
for the pollution control aspects of the program and for
the key elements which are not part of the Phase I Plan
to assess how much financial assistance current programs
might provide and to indicate  how these programs must be
augmented to complete program  implementation.  The impact
of the Phase I tunnels on the  MSDGC's property tax rate
is also considered, and the annual sequence of anticipated
contract award dollars is identified for the construction
of the Phase I tunnel projects.  The fund commitment sched-
ule is also presented, indicating anticipated sources
necessary for the support of this award program.  The data
and analyses presented in this section indicate that the
financing requirements of constructing the Phase I tunnels
of TARP can be met.  In addition, it can be reasonably
assumed that the financing requirements of other key ele-
ments of the MSDGC's Flood and Pollution Control Plan as-
sociated with meeting 1983 water quality standards (instream
aeration and expansion of the  Calumet treatment facilities)
can be met.  In the case of the West-Southwest treatment
plant expansion project, the financing feasibility is very
doubtful.  Finally, financing  for the TARP storage reservoirs
                          111-19

-------
in Section 3.2.3, however, if, during construction, specimens
of historic or archeological interest are uncovered, the
contractor must preserve and deliver same to the project
engineer for safekeeping.
3.2.6  Recreational Sites

     As the Des Plaines tunnel route follows existing
waterways there are several parks and recreational facil-
ities located nearby or adjacent to the route.  These have
been identified as follows:

          Camp Ft. Dearborn
          Between Devon Avenue and Higgins Road

          Indian Boundary Golf Course
          Between Addison Street and Belmont

          Riverside Golf Club
          Between Cermak Road & 26th Street
          east of 1st Avenue

          Chicago Zoological Park  (Brookfield Zoo)
          Between Logan Avenue and Jackson Avenue'
          west of 1st Avenue

          Shawmut Park
          Between 6th Avenue and 9th Avenue
          at Ogden Avenue

          Village Park
          Between Lincoln Avenue and Burlington R.R.
          East of Salt Creek

          Chautaugua Park
          Between Henry Avenue and Algonquin Road
          in Des Plaines

          Shagbark Lake
          Between Algonquin Road and Wicke Avenue.
 3.3  RESOURCES

     The following two sections discuss  financial and  labor
 resources.  The first section provides an analysis of  the
 financial resources available to  fund the Des Plaines  tunnel
 system and the other two tunnel systems, and the second
 section presents a profile of the labor  force in the Chicago
 metropolitan area.
                          111-18

-------
          St. Francis Xavier School
          Ogden Avenue South and Waiola Avenue
                .jAvenue School
          OeJ*den Avenue North and Waiola Avenue
                   Academy
          Ogtlen Avenue and Brainard Avenue

          St. Joseph Military Academy
          Ogden Avenue and Edgewood Avenue

          Our Lady of Bethlehem Academy
          Ogden Avenue and Gilbert Avenue

          School
          Kemman Avenue and Cossit Avenue

          ChSrch
          Roosevelt Road and 17th Avenue

          Church
          415th Street and 9th Avenue

          All Saints Cemetery
          South of Higgins Road

          Saint Joseph Cemetery
          Between Belmont Avenue and Chicago,
          Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific R.R.

          Concordia Cemetery
          Portions between Madison Street and
          Eisenhower Expressway

          Waldheim Cemetery and Forest Home Cemetery
          Between Eisenhower Expressway

          Jewish Cemeteries
          Poftion between Roosevelt Road and 16th Street.
              Sal Sites

     There* are no sites or facilities of historic signifi-
cance along the Des Plaines tunnel route which appear in the
National Historic Register.  There are also no sites or fa-
cilities under construction for registration.  As mentioned
                          111-17

-------
or archeological.   These sites are considered cultural sites
and are identified as follows:

          Central School
          Thacker Street & Des Plaines River Rd.

          Proviso East High School
          Between Washington Blvd. and Madison Street east
          of 1st Avenue

          High School
          Between Monroe Avenue and Washington Avenue west
          of 1st Avenue

          Church
          Chicago Avenue and 1st Avenue

          Church
          Scotts Wood Road and Fairbank Road

          Hines Hospital
          Between 1st Avenue and 9th Avenue at Roosevelt
          Road

          Church
          Roosevelt Road and 20th Avenue

          Church
          Eberly Avenue and Cossitt Avenue

          Church
          Rochester Avenue and Kemman Avenue

          Church
          Rochester Avenue and 9th Avenue

          Church
          Ogden Avenue and La Grange Road

          Church
          Ogden Avenue North and Kensington Avenue

          Church
          Ogden Avenue South and Kensington Avenue

          Church
          Ogden Avenue and Spring Avenue
                         111-16

-------
               Breakwater construction and shoreline exten-
               sion and creation of sheltered water areas
               which increase shore protection and provide
               opportunities for small boating, swimming
               and fishing.

     Overall, the Lakefront Plan depends on suitable exca-
     vated material from the TARP project to construct these
     new land forms.
     (3)   Potential Tunnel-Sludge Disposal Areas

          The metropolitan area will probably continue to
     rely on the Fulton County site for disposal of sewage
     sludge, including tunnel sludge cleaned from TARP tun-
     nels.
3.2.3  Archeological Sites

     There are no known sites of archeological interest
along the route of the Des Plaines tunnel system.  There is
provision in the MSDGC Contract Documents, General Specifica-
tions for Sewers, Page GSS-6 for the preservation of his-
torical as well as archeological specimens.  This section
reads as follows:

          "Historical and Scientific Specimens

          The Contractor shall preserve and de-
          liver to the Engineer any specimens of
          historic or scientific value encoun-
          tered in the work as directed by the
          Engineer."

     Any archeological sites which may have existed at poten-
tial rock disposal or sludge disposal areas cited above
have probably been destroyed or covered with fill.
3.2.4  Cultural Sites

     There are several sites and facilities near the tunnel
route which could be termed sensitive rather than historic
                          111-15

-------
(1)  Tunnel Route

     The Des Plaines tunnel system section of TARP is
designed to serve the west facility area of the Metro-
politan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago which
contains approximately 293.2 square miles.  The Des
Plaines tunnel system service area contains mainly sub-
urban communities including. Des Plaines and Park Ridge.
The area has become highly urbanized with land use
and development planning functions fragmented among
many jurisdictions.

     There are currently no large scale land develop-
ments or redevelopments being actively pursued or con-
sidered for the communities along the Des Plaines
tunnel system route.  The tunnel route follows existing
waterways and if constructed would improve water
quality, which might attract additional water-using
industry to the Des Plaines area, as well as improve
recreational park and water-oriented development along
the Des Plaines River and Salt Creek.
(2)  Potential Rock Spoil Disposal Areas

     The operating quarries are likely to continue
in operation, while Stearns quarry will probably be
filled up eventually and possibly used as a park.

     The Chicago Lakefront Plan has several alternatives
One alternative recommends landfilling along the Lake
Michigan shoreline and constructing numerous islands
about a mile off shore.  This operation could provide
adequate sites for rock excavated from TARP tunnels.
Although construction of the tunnel would make ex-
cavated material available, use of the rock for this
purpose would have to be examined as part of the en-
vironmental assessment of the Lakefront Plan itself.
The other alternatives will also require landfilling
and recommend the following:

          Expansion of the park base through shoreline
          extension.  This landfill would complete a
          continuous public shoreline, add new park-
          land, and strengthen the shoreline to with-
          stand erosion.
                    111-14

-------
     The largest rock size expected from tunnel excavations
     will be about 3 inches in diameter, and the rock will
     be roughly cubical in shape.  Stearns quarry is
     commercially inactive and is capable of accepting
     large quantities of nonsaleable fill from TARP.  Non-
     saleable fill includes rock fines and clayey or flint-
     like rocks which make up the majority of the excavated
     material.  All of these quarries are located in indus-
     trial areas.

          The Cook County Forest Preserve District has re-
     quested that all rock taken from under Forest Preserve
     lands be placed in stockpile areas on Forest Preserve
     property.  They have designated areas north of 22nd
     Street and south of the Kennedy Expressway as the
     sites for the Des Plaines tunnel system.  It is the
     Forest Preserve District's intention to utilize the
     rocks for their facilities, such as bicycle paths and
     equestrian trails on a long-term basis.  In the interim,
     the stockpiled rock will be developed for winter rec-
     reational facilities.  It is estimated that 1,400,000
     solid cubic yards out of a total of 2,400,000 cubic
     yards can be placed on Forest Preserve District's
     property from the Des Plaines tunnels.
      (3)  Potential Tunnel-Sludge Disposal Areas

          Approximately 32 percent of the metropolitan area's
      sewage sludge is shipped to the MSDGC's 10,000-acre
      site in Fulton County.  The balance o.f the sludge is
     distributed to the NuEarth Program, broker sales, Lawn-
     dale Lagoons, and landfill.  Although only a few suit-
     able landfill sites exist in the metro area, the Fulton
     site is capable of accepting additional sludge removed
     from the proposed tunnels.
3.2.2  Urbanization Plans

     This section describes the relationships between the
Des Plaines area's land use plans and the existing land
use along the proposed tunnel route, and at existing sites
which could be used for the disposal of excavated rock and
dredged sludge from the tunnels.
                          111-13

-------
          Roosevelt Road Lateral

               West of 1st Avenue.

Due to the heavy ownership of lands on the tunnel route
by the Forest Preserve District, little development will
be contiguous to construction location.  There are
many portions along the route however where residential,
industrial and commercial development occurs within
the 500-foot impact area.

     Land within the 500-foot impact zone of the main
tunnel route (59th Street to Prairie) has a variety
of land uses to 31st Street.  These include fairly
dense industrial, commercial and residential develop-
ment.  From 31st Street to Irving Park Road, the tun-
nel route generally traverses vacant space with inter-
mittent industrial, commercial, and residential develop-
ment.  From Irving Park Road to Oakton Street, the
500-foot impact zone of the tunnel is nearly all vacant
with mainly residential development from Oakton Street
to Prairie Avenue.

     The Riverside lateral generally traverses vacant
space adjoining the Salt Creek.  Surrounding develop-
ment is mainly residential.  Thus, development within
500 feet of the Riverside lateral is residential.

     The Roosevelt Avenue lateral is routed through
lands more highly developed than most along the Des
Plaines system.  Directly adjacent to Roosevelt Avenue
are lands heavily developed for commercial use.  Lands
away from the main thoroughfare, backing up from com-
mercial properties are residential.

     Lands adjoining the 13 A extension are mainly
residentially developed with some industrial develop-
ment included.  On the north side of Ogden Avenue,
the tunnel traverses open space, including agricultural
lands.
 (2)  Potential Rock Disposal Areas

     Rock accumulated from tunneling operations will
be of a type similar to currently quarried rock in the
metropolitan area, such as rock from McCook and Thornton
quarries.  These two quarries have temporary storage
capacity for rock prior to its sale for commercial use.
                      111-12

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3.2  LAND USE

     The current and future land uses near the proposed
TARP project are described in this section.  Archeological
sites, present and planned cultural sites, and historical
sites are also presented as well as the locations of existing
and planned recreational sites near the proposed tunnel
system.
3.2.1.  Current Urbanization Patterns

     The current land uses in the vicinity of the proposed
Des Plaines tunnel system are described below for the land
within 500 feet of the tunnel route, the proposed locations
of drop shafts and construction shafts, and access shafts.
Consequently, this section is limited to only the current
land uses and facilities within these 500-foot limits.
     (1)   Tunnel Route

          The tunnel route of the Des Plaines portion of
     the TARP system generally follows the basins of the
     Des Plains River and Salt Creek.  The majority of
     tunneling and conveyance structures follow existing
     waterways and should not cause relocation of existing
     development.

          The tunnel routes of the Des Plaines system
     traverse lands owned by the Cook County Forest Preserve
     District for nearly the full length of the project.
     Portions of the routes not owned by the Forest Preserve
     District are as follows:

               Des Plaines Tunnel

                    Between project origin and Ogden Avenue
                    From 26th Street to 24th Street
                    From Roosevelt Road to Madison Street.

               Riverside Lateral

                    Between Bloomingbank Road and the Des
                    Plaines River

               13 A Extension

                    East of Gilbert Avenue
                         III-ll

-------
                         Table III-8
          Change  in Construction Employment Level
                  Chicago Region 1967-19711

Chicago Region
1967
123,048
1969
142,180
1971
134,019
         Illinois State and Regional Economic Data Book,  1973 Edition,
         State of Illinois Department of Business and Economic Develop-
         ment, p. 80.
     The past few years of national economic recession and
the cutbacks  in Federal and local  program spending  have had
a significant impact on the construction industry employment
levels.  Current construction employment estimates  for the
Chicago SMSA  and State of Illinois are shown in Table III-9.
                         Table III-9              1
          Current Construction Employment Levels"

Illinois
Chicago SMSA
1970
225,416
136,897
1975*
185,800
119,000
Percent
Decrease
17.6
13.1
     Division of State and Area Monthly Surveys,  Bureau of Labor Statis-
     tics, U.S.  Department of Commerce, November  1975.

     Private communication, MSDGC, verbal estimate.
The overall  impact was apparently more severe in other re-
gions of the state given  the  17.6 percent drop in  employ-
ment in Illinois as compared to the 13.1 percent drop in
Chicago.
                             111-10

-------
the downtown area, which added significantly  to  the demand
for construction services; these projects  include:
          Project

Sears Tower and Plaza
Water Tower Place
Standard Oil Building
CNA Center
Illinois Center  (One, Two)
Marina City
First National Bank Complex
John Hancock Center
Hyatt Regency

Total
Year Completed
Cost
1974
1975
1974
1974
1969, 1972
1966
1973
1969
1974
$150 million
$150 million
$150+ million
$ 80 million
$ 83+ million
$ 40 million
$150 million
$100 million
$ 45 million
                  $948  million
      Much of the above  activity was stimulated by the pub-
 lic sector construction which began to revitalize the older
 downtown areas.

      The construction-related employment opportunities in
 the Chicago SMSA have established a skilled labor force
 which is predominantly  unionized, and have accounted for ap-
 proximately 61 percent  of  total construction employment in
 Illinois in 1970.  Table III-7 presents construction employ-
 ment levels for Illinois,  Cook County, and the Chicago SMSA
 in 1970.  Table III-8 reflects the fluctuation in construction
 employment levels  for the  Chicago region for 1967, 1969,
 and 1971.  As shown, the industry added over 19,000 jobs in
 one 2-year period  and then dropped 8,161 jobs in the suc-
 ceeding 2-year period.   The industry is flexible and can
 expand or contract rapidly given the demand for construction
 services.

                          Table III-7             ,
           Construction  Employment by Area - 1970

Illinois
Chicago SMSA
Cook County
Civilian
Labor
Force
4,591,634
2,954,153
2,355,804
Total
Employed
4,419,915
2,852,017
2,269,683
Construction
Employment
225,416
136,897
99,866
Construction
Employment
as Percent of
Total Employed
5.1
4.8
4.4
 County and City Dfrta Book, 1972 Edition, "A Statistical Abstract Supplement,"
 U.S. Department &<£ Commerce,  Bureau of the Census, pp. 128, 550, 680.
                           III-9

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                        Table III-6
              Current Union Hourly Wage Rates'
           Worker Class
                            Dollars/Hour
Common Laborer

     Heavy Construction
     Building Construction

Skilled Laborer

     Bricklayer
     Carpenter
     Structural Iron Worker
     Plasterer
     Electrician
     Steam Fitter

Equipment Operator

     Hoist-One Drum
     Tractor  (including dozer)
     Tractor - Scraper  (15-16 c
     Power Crane
     Motor Grader
     Air Compressor
     Air Tool
                y.)
Truck Drivers

     Dump Truck
     Dump Truck
(4
(4
c.y.)
c.y.)
Average Hourly Rate
                                8.80
                                8.80
                               11.63
                               11.69
                               13.17
                               10.92
                               12.94
                               12.37
                            12.50
                            11.20
                            11.20
                            12.50
                            12.50
                            10.05
                             9.105
 8.90
 9.15

11.02
     "Engineering News  Record," January 1, 1976, p. 28.
                            III-8

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     Current monthly wages in contract construction have been
estimated at $1,653, based on 1,800 hours per man-year at
an average hourly rate of $11.02.  Estimated 1976 union labor
rates for the major trades in contract construction were pub-
lished in "Engineering News Record," and are shown in Table
III-6.  These rates are considered to be appropriate for the
Chicago metropolitan area.
3.1.3  Contract Construction Employment

     Contract construction employment in the Chicago metro-
politan area naturally fluctuates according to the magnitude
of construction activity generated by both the public and
private sector.  Levels of construction activity are in-
fluenced by national economic conditions, the status and
availability of Federal program assistance, and state and
local government spending programs.  The city of Chicago has
been particularly successful in obtaining Federal program
assistance for urban renewal, model cities, and other assis-
ted housing development.  The following examples typify major
public construction and development projects which occurred
in the Chicago metropolitan area during the past two decades:

          University of Illinois Circle Campus

          Me Cormick Place Convention Center

          Rapid transit development and expansion

          Expansion and improvements at O'Hare Airport

          Civic Center - a complex of Federal and local govern-
          ment office buildings

          Major expansions in infrastructure - particularly
          schools and sewage system facilities.

     Private sector activity has been consistently strong
in the metropolitan area over the past 20 years, as well.
During the past ten years, several major projects were ini-
tiated and completed in the city of Chicago, particularly
                           III-7

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      Secondary employment earnings related to contract  con-
 struction  in  the  Chicago region cannot be determined.   Goods
 and  services  of several industries are directly  involved  with
 construction  activity,  such as trucking, finance and  insurance,
 real estate,  manufacturing, and wholesale and retail  trade.
 Trying  to  derive  construction-related income for a  specific
 region  or  jurisdiction  would be highly speculative.   However,
 the  economic  benefit or multiplier of construction  employment
 income  could  be up to 1.8 on a secondary basis.  Table  III-5
 shows the  proportionate share of contract construction
 earnings to total earnings  (wages and salaries)  within  the Chi-
 cago region.   Contract  construction income has  accounted for
 about eiqht percent of  total Chicago regional earnings  since  1969

                          Table III-5
               Contract Construction Earnings as           ,
   Proportionate Share of Total Earnings - Chicago Region

Year


1950
1959
1965
1967
1969
1971
Contract Construction

Earnings
Millions
514.7
992.6
1,174.0
1,400.2
1,858.4
2,055.4
Percent
6.5
7.5
6.7
6.9
7.7
7.7
Total

Earnings
Millions
7,964.1
13,208.9
17,404.1
20,409.1
24,203.2
26,790.3
Percent
100.
100.
100.
100.
100.
100.
  1    Illinois State and Regional Economic Data Book, 1973 edition, State
      of Illinois Department of Business and Economic Development, p.  70.

       Average monthly wages for construction  employment are
  high,  relative to other industries  in  the  Chicago  metropoli-
  tan area.   Average wage levels are  shown below:

                                   Average Monthly Wages (Jan.-Mar.)
                                          1970     1971    1972
Industry

    Selected Industries,  Total

Mining
Contract Construction
Manufacturing
Transportation, Communication
 and Public Utilities
Wholesale and Retail Trade
Finance, Insurance, and Real  Estate
Services and Miscellaneous  Industries
                                          $675
$709
:   764

   961
1,099
   826

   961
   644
   800
   640
Source:  Illinois State and Regional Economic Data Book,  1973 Edition, Bureau
        of Employment Security, Illinois Department of Labor, p. 81.
                             III-6

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                                 Table  III-4
            Contract  Construction Income1  -  Chicago Region*
                                (in Millions)
Year
1950
1959
1965
1967
1969
1971
Percent Increase
1950-1959
Percent Increase
1959-1969
Percent Increase
1969-1971
Contract
Construction
Income
$ 514.7
$ 992.6
$1,174.0
$1,400.2
$1,858.4
$2,055.4
92.9%
87.2%
10.6%
Industrial
Sector Earnings**
$ 9,286.3
$15,365.8
$20,126.4
$23,452.4
$27,468.4
$30,426.5
65.5%
78.8%
10.8%
Total Personal
Income
$10,945.7
$18,169.4
$24,528.6
$28,417.0
$33,274.1
$37,299.6
66.0%
83.1%
12.1%
*     The region is defined as the SMSA plus Kendall, Grundy,  and Kankakee
      Counties.

**    Earnings include only wages and salaries.
1     Illinois State and Regional Economic  Data Book, 1973 Edition, State of
      Illinois Department of Business and Economic Development, p. 70.
                                    III-5

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     Growth in the SMSA is anticipated to slow to an average
annual rate of .97 percent through 1980 and, subsequently, to
.43 percent through 1985.  Chicago's population should begin
to stabilize after 1980 with the projected completion of the
Chicago 21 Plan for the Central Area Communities, and the South
Loop New Town, which will assist the city in reestablishing
vital urban neighborhoods.  Several general demographic trends,
which should also help stablize the higher density urban areas
of Cook County and the city of Chicago in the late 1970's and
1980's are:

          The decreasing size of the household

          The increasing rate of household formation due to
          the increasing rate of marriage dissolution and the
          increasing segregation of the elderly into separate
          households

          The increase in numbers of all adult households

          The increase in high compensation service employ-
          ment.

The above trends have been experienced in most of the large
metropolitan areas in the United States.  When these demo-
graphic factors are combined with the uncertainties of energy
and fuel availability and the rising costs of fuel, energy,
and housing, the urban centers should be strengthened and
the outward population trends of the 1950's and 1960's slowed.
3.1.2  Contract Construction Income

     The Chicago metropolitan area has long been a center
for large-scale public and private construction projects,
including mass transit system development, airport construc-
tion, and major commercial and residential development.  The
relatively high level of construction needs in the area has
resulted in a large construction employment base.  The in-
come derived from contract construction employment from 1950
to 1971 is shown in Table III-4.  Contract construction em-
ployment income exceeded two billion dollars in 1971.  As
shown in Table III-4, income earned from contract construc-
tion increased at a faster rate than industrial sector earn-
ings and total personal income until 1969.  In the years
from 1969 to 1971, Chicago experienced a depression economy,
which is reflected in the significant drop in earnings and
income growth.  (See Table III-4) .
                            III-4

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                             Table  III-l
                   Population Changes 1950-1970'
Jurisdiction
Chicago
Cook County
Chicago SMSA
1970
3,362,825
5,488,328
6,978,947
1960
3,550,404
5,124,489
6,220,913
1950
3,620,962
4,508,792
5,495,364
Percent Percent
Change Change
1960-1970 1950-1960
-5.1
7.1
12.2
-1.4
13.7
13.2
County and City Data Book,  1972 edition,  "A Statistical Abstract  Supplement/" U.S.
Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, pp.  126, 550, 678.
                             Table  III-2
                 Population Share  Trends 1950-1970

Chicago as
Percent of Cook County
Cook County as
Percent of SMSA
1970
61%
78%
1960
69%
82%
1950
80%
82%
                             Table  III-3
                 Population Projections 1970-1985
Jurisdiction
Chicago
Cook County
Chicago SMSA
1970
3,369,357
5,488,328
6,978,947
1980
3,172,315
5,664,848
7,655,200
1985
3,148,791
5,831,094
7,987,800
Percent Change
1970-1980 1980-1985
-5.8
3.2
9.7
-.71
2.9
4.3
OBERS Projections, U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, p.  109.
                                III-3

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3.1  SOCIOECONQMIC

     The current and projected demographic profile of the
study area provides a basis for analyzing the socioeconomic
element of the man-made environment.  For the purposes of
this environmental impact statement, the study area, or im-
pact area of the proposed action, is Cook County.  There are
over 40 communities, including Chicago, within Cook County
which are located within the service area of the Mainstream,
Calumet, and Des Plaines Tunnel Systems.  Demographic data
will be presented in this section for Cook County, Chicago,
and the Chicago Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area (SMSA)
levels.  Data for individual communities are contained in
Appendix F.
3.1.1  Current and Projected Population

     The population growth trends in the Chicago metropoli-
tan area have been similar to those experienced in other
major cities in the United States.  The city of Chicago has
been losing population since 1950 at an average annual rate
of -.02 percent during 1950 to 1960, and at -.51 percent
from 1960 to 1970.  The great movement from Chicago into
the suburban areas of Cook County, as well as a substantial
immigration of people from the south to Cook County, occurred
during the 1950's, as shown in Table III-l.  The growth rate
for Cook County was 13.7 percent for an average annual rate
of 1.37 percent,  which represents 61,570 new residents per
year.  During the 1960's, the greatest growth occurred in
the outlying but rapidly urbanizing counties bordering Cook
County, such as Du Page and Lake.  Table III-2 further em-
phasizes the geographical redistribution of the population
by presenting population share trends of the city of Chicago
and Cook County,  and Cook County and the SMSA.  The position
and proportionate population share of both Chicago and Cook
County, is decreasing within the expanding SMSA.

     Population projections through 1985 are presented in
Table III-3.  They have been based upon the more conservative
OBERS projections forecast for the Chicago SMSA by the U.S.
Department of Commerce.  Local and regional planning groups'
population projections are consistently higher than OBERS.
The NIPC projection for the Chicago SMSA in 1985 is 8,750,000
compared with 7,987,800 from OBERS.  The NIPC projection as-
sumes an accelerated rate of population growth which is not
consistent with growth trends for the SMSA.  As shown in
Tables III-l, 2, and 3, the annual growth rates have declined
since 1950.  Given current demographic patterns of smaller
household size and a depressed birth rate, the OBERS projec-
tions which assume a slightly declining growth rate are con-
sidered more defensible.

                           III-2

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         III.  EXISTING MAN-MADE ENVIRONMENT
     This chapter contains a description of the man-made en-
vironment of the Chicago metropolitan area, which may be af-
fected by the proposed tunneling project and is divided into
five main sections:

          Socioeconomic
          Land Use
          Resources
          Transportation
          Major Projects and Programs.

     The initial section describes the socioeconomic con-
ditions of the Chicago area and presents the current and
projected population statistics.  Contract construction
income, and employment, from primary as opposed to second-
ary sources, are also described.  The land use section
discusses current urbanization patterns and future urban-
ization plans.  Also identified are the archeological,
cultural, historical, and recreational sites in the Chicago
metropolitan area which may be affected by the proposed
project.  The third section discusses the financial and
labor resources of the area which may be affected by the pro-
ject and the fourth section presents the applicable trans-
portation systems which may have an impact on the proposed
project.  Finally, the major projects and programs possibly
related to the proposed action will be described.

     The information in this chapter provides a basis to
evaluate the effects of the proposed project on the man-
made environment.  Instead of an exhaustive description of
the man-made environment, only those elements that are
necessary for this impact evaluation are presented in the
following sections.
                           III-l

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III.  EXISTING MAN-MADE ENVIRONMENT

-------
and poor water quality.   Most of the fish in these streams
and rivers are pollutant-tolerant or very hardy species.
Fish which have been collected in these waters include:

           Goldfish
           Carp
           Carp-goldfish hybrids
           Green sunfish
           Black bullhead
           Golden shiner
           Hybrid sunfish
           Black crappie
           Blunt-nose minnow
           Pumpkinseed sunfish
           Northern pike
           Largemouth bass
           Yellow bullhead
           Redfin shiner
           White crappie
           Bluegill
           Yellow perch
2.4.3  Wildlife

      There are 18 species of amphibians, 24 species of
reptiles, 126 species of birds and 41 species of mammals
which are known to exist or are likely to be found in the
Des Plaines River Watershed.  The most common among these
animals are squirrels, rabbits, raccoons, pheasants, and
songbirds.   Waterfowl using migration corridors that pass
through the area include mallards, baldpates, pintails,
black ducks, scaup, ring-necked ducks, Canada geese and
snow geese.  The watershed also includes 11 species of
birds and four species of amphibians that are considered
rare in the State of Illinois.
                           11-86

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2.4  BIOLOGICAL RESOURCES

     The forest preserves, parks, wetlands,  and  other
natural preserves of the Chicago area consist  of many
types of vegetation which provide habitats  or  food  resources
for a wide variety of wildlife.  In general, however,  the
river systems of the area do not have a wide variety of
aquatic life.  This is due to the high pollutant load
conditions of these systems.  To establish  the existing
biological resources of the Chicago area, the  following
sections identify and describe the area's major  fish and
wildlife species and dominant vegetation types.
2.4.1  Vegetation

     The vegetation in the natural  areas  southwest of
Lake Michigan is basically a transitional zone  type which
follows a narrow route near the  lake.  Adjacent to this
zone, a modified form of the beech-maple  forest is found
in the moister areas, and oak-hickory  forests are found  in
more open areas west of the beech-maple.   The major vege-
tation species found between these  two forest types fall
into the category of maple-basswood and maple-basswood-red
oak forest.1

     In the stretch between the  Lake-Cook County line and
Summit, Illinois, the Des Plaines River flows through a
highly urbanized, primarily residential watershed.
However, most of the river and adjacent flood plain is
owned by the Cook County Forest  Preserve  District so that
some woodlands and wetlands have been  preserved, and urban
development has generally been kept out of the  Des Plaines
River flood plain.  Thus, the Des Plaines flood plain is
an attractive greenbelt.  It is  composed  of several types
of vegetation including cottonwood, ash,  oak, willow, and
boxelder.
2.4.2  Fish

     In the Cook County reaches  of  the  Des  Plaines River
system, the waterways are characterized by  sludge deposits,
a septic odor, heavy algal blooms in  the summer months,
     Soil Conservation Service,  "Environmental Resource Inventory -
     Calumet-Sag Channel Watershed, Cook, DuPage, and Will Counties,
     Illinois," October 1975.
                          11-85

-------
may be considered as representative of the noise  levels in
most areas  along the proposed  tunnel routes.

     The monitored sites in the  EPA study were  located in
areas with  population density  varying from 6,600  to 65,000
persons/square mile.  The recorded noise levels varied from
a minimum of  36.3 dBA at night to a maximum of  106.2 dBA
during the  daytime.  The L(jn varied from 59.0 dB  to 71.2 dB.
Table 11-11 summarizes the EPA  findings.

     The data in Table 11-11 do  not indicate a  direct rela-
tionship between L^n and population density.  However, the
noise levels  in the downtown area (sites 7 and  8)  were
generally higher than those in the residential  areas  (sites
2,3,4,5,6).   The noise level at  site No. 1 was  the highest
despite the lowest site population density, primarily be-
cause the noise monitor there  was located close to an arterial
street.  In all cases, the outdoor noise levels are lower
then those  levels identified by  the EPA as the  limit neces-
sary to protect the public against hearing loss (see Appen-
dix E).  However, these outdoor  noise levels are  generally
higher than those identified by  the EPA as the  limit neces-
sary to protect the public against annoyance.

                         Table  11-11
Site
Number
1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Noise Monitoring Data for Chicago
Population Roadway
Site Density Type at Site
Location (people/mi2) (vicinity)* Traffic
W. lllth St. 4
S. Bell Ave.
W. 110th PI. &
S. Bell Ave.
W. 73rd St. &
S. Pauline Ave.
64th St. i
Wolcott
•*71st &
S. Hermitage
65th St. &
S. Peoria
15th St. i
Drake
W. Douglas Blvd.
& St. Louis

6,

7,

12,

19,

20,

32,

65,

65,

600

400

900

800

600

600

000

000
Arterial
(Collector)
Local
(Collector)
Local
(Collector)
Collector
(Arterial)
Collector
(Arterial)
Local
(Collector)
Collector
(Arterial)
Collector
(Arterial)
LDN
(dB)
Cars,
Trucks
Cars,

Cars,

Cars,

Cars,
, Buses
Trucks

Trucks

Trucks

Trucks
Buses

Cars,

Cars,
Cars,

Trucks

Trucks
Trucks
Buses
71
59

60

66


64

63

68

70
.2
.0

.6

.9


.4

.1

.4

.7
         The items within parentheses refer to the roadway in the general "icinity while those
         without parentheses refer to the monitored site.


           U.S. EPA, Population Density Distribution of the United States as a Function of Out-
           door Noise Levels, Vol. 2, June 1974.
                            11-84

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         Although the one-hour primary  standard  for  carbon
         monoxide was metf the eight-hour  standard was  fre-
         quently violated.  Of the  192  violations of the
         eight-hour standard, 174 were  recorded  at the  moni-
         tor next to Congress Street, a very  heavily travel-
         led commuter route.

         The annual standard of  0.05 ppm for  nitrogen dioxide
         was met at all monitoring  sites.

         The only hydrocarbon monitor,  at  the University  of
         Illinois Medical Center in Chicago,  recorded 67
         violations of the three-hour primary standard  of
         0.24 ppm from 6 a.m. to 9  p.m.

         The one-hour standard of 0.08  ppm for photochemical
         oxidants was frequently violated  at  five of the  ten
         monitoring stations in  the metropolitan area.
2.3.2  Noise

     Because construction of the proposed project will  gener-
ate some noise, it is important to analyze the  existing noise
levels in the Chicago area.  This section describes  the exist-
ing ambient noise levels in the Chicago area  in terms of the
Day-Night Sound Level, L
-------
2.3  ATMOSPHERIC RESOURCES
2.3.1  Air Quality

     Air quality depends on the quantity of air pollutants
emitted into the air,  local meteorological conditions, and
topography.  Since air pollutants are likely to be generated
by the construction of the proposed project, it is important
to analyze the current air quality of the area.

     Ambient air quality is usually reported in terms of the
concentration of pollutants in the air.  The following sub-
stances have been identified by the U.S. EPA as air pollu-
tants for which Federal and state air quality standards have
been established:  sulfur dioxide, particulate matter, car-
bon monoxide, hydrocarbons, photochemical oxidants, and nitro-
gen dioxide.  Federal and state air quality standards for
these pollutants are described in Appendix D.  This section
describes the observed 1974 air quality in the Chicago area.

     Air. quality in the Chicago metropolitan area is moni-
tored primarily by the city of Chicago Department of Environ-
mental Control and the Cook County Department of Environmental
Control.  These agencies have 61 monitoring stations in Cook
County, including 30 within the city of Chicago.  They moni-
tor one or more of the following pollutants at each station:
particulate, sulfur dioxide, carbon monoxide, nitrogen dio-
xide, and oxidants.  Hydrocarbons are measured at one central
location by the State of Illinois EPA.

     Air quality data from the above monitoring sites are
published monthly and quarterly in preliminary form, and an-
nually in final form by the Illinois EPA.  The latest avail-
able data are found in the 1974 Annual Air Quality Report,
and the data applicable to the Chicago metropolitan area are
summarized below.

     Except for nitrogen dioxide, the ambient standards for
all the pollutants were exceeded at one or more monitoring
sites in the Chicago metropolitan area in 1974:

          The annual primary standard of 0.03 ppm for sul-
          fur dioxide was exceeded at the Medical Center
          monitor.  The sulfur dioxide levels in other parts
          of the metropolitan area were below the standards.

          The annual primary standard of 75 Mg/m3 for parti-
          culates was exceeded at 29 monitoring sites.  The
          24-hour primary standard, on the other hand, was
          exceeded at only two sites.
                           11-82

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This conclusion is likely to be  conservative if ground
motions at  the  surface are typically greater than  those
at depth at the fault
      In  previous reports,  it  has  been estimated  that  a
peak  particle velocity of  12  inches per second  (in/s)
or  30.5  centimeters per second (cm/s) will cause rock
along unlined tunnels to fall out along existing cracks
or  joints;  and a velocity  of  24  in/s (61.0 cm/s)  will
cause new cracks to develop,  along which rockfall will
also  occur. 3  These estimates may be somewhat high be-
cause they were developed  from experience in blasting
projects,  however, they are useful for comparison to
observed particle velocities  in  earthquakes.

      Trifunac and Brady4 have used a much more exten-
sive  data set than previous authors to correlate peak
velocities and earthquake  intensities between V  and VII.
The data are still insufficient  for calculating  mean
values and standard deviations of peak velocities cor-
responding to other intensities.   However, a projection
of  their data to an MMI of VIII  suggests that peak ver-
tical velocities of 38 cm/s with a standard deviation
about 18 cm/s may occur.   Thus,  peak vertical velocity
may be expected to be between 20  and 56 cm/s for about
68  percent of MMI VIII earthquakes.  Because rockfall
along existing joints begins  at  about 30.5 cm/s,  rock-
fall  could be extensive along a  tunnel wherever  other
than  isolated single joints intersect.  The particle
velocity,  however, is still not  likely to be high enough
to  cause new crack formation  and  general rockfall.
Kanai, K.,  Takahashi,  R. , and Kawasumi, H.,  "Seismic Characteristics
of Ground," Proc. World Conference on Earthquake Engineering,
Berkeley, California,  1956, p. 31-1.

Tamura, C., Mizukoshi, T.,  and One, T., "Characteristics of Earth-
quake Motion at Rock Ground," Proc. of 4th World Conference on
Earthquake Engineering, Chile, 1969,  No. A2,  p. 26-37.

Langefors,  U., and Kihlstrom, B., "The Modern Technique of Rock
Blasting," John Wiley  and Sons, 1963.

Trifunac, M.D., and Brady,  A.G., 1975, On the correlation of seis-
mic intensity scales with the peaks of recorded strong motion:
Bulletin Seismological Society of America, V. 65, No. 1, pp. 139-162.
                        11-81

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     Previous reports state that no evidence of activity
has been observed for the faults described, however, no
studies to detect fault activity appear to have been
performed.  Therefore, the historic earthquake record
provides the best indication of activity of faults cros-
sing the tunnels.

     The 1804 Fort Dearborn earthquake occurred within
the bounds of the project area.  Given the lack of defini-
tive information, it should be assumed, in order to be
conservative, that this event was associated with the
Des Plaines disturbance or with one or more of the faults,
fault zones, or minor faults that intersect the tunnels.

     The 1909 Aurora earthquake could have occurred as
close as five to ten miles to the southwest of the pro-
ject area.  It could also have occurred on a fault that
traverses the project area.  In view of the local seis-
micity record, the faults in the project area should be
assumed to be potentially active.


(4)  Relationship of Seismic Causes and Effects

     Two types of potential tunnel damage resulting
from seismic activity have been identified in earlier
reports:

          Dislocation of the tunnel along a fault
          Rockfalls along faults or joints.

     Tunnel dislocation along a fault could only occur
if an active fault intersects a tunnel and if an earth-
quake or fault creep occurs.  Because there is no evidence
that the faults intersecting a tunnel are inactive, this
sort of damage is possible in a local earthquake.  Two
local earthquakes have occurred in the 175-year his-
toric record.  Both may have had epicentral intensities
of VIII, and presumably were associated with minor move-
ments on faults.

     Rockfalls along faults or joints could occur either
from vibratory ground motion, as suggested in previous
reports, or in association with dislocation on a fault
which intersects a tunnel.  The previous reports con-
clude that damage to a tunnel will likely be limited to
small rockfalls in highly fractured areas of a tunnel.
                      11-80

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                                           FIGURE 11-29
                                   Recurrence  Period for  Macro-
                                   seismic Effects Greater Than
                                       or Equal to Specific
                                             Intensities^
   400

   300


   200
-r 100
ce.
UJ
a.
    50
g   40
g   30
    20
    10
     III
                              100 years
                               I
                                              1
             IV
V       VI      VII      VIII
INTENSITY (MODIFIED MERCALLI)
IX
           1IEC,  1975.
                              11-79

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(2)   Frequency, Magnitude, and Probability of Occurrence

     The catalog of earthquakes felt in Chicago over
about 175 years contains only four moderate earthquakes
within 100 miles of Chicago, but several more distant
and larger earthquakes have been felt.  Of these, only
the New Madrid, Missouri events significantly affected
Chicago.  Historical records are not sufficient to es-
tablish magnitude-frequence relationships or determine
probability of occurrence.  However, from the data in
previous reports, suggested relationships have been
evaluated between probable intensity at the project and
frequency of occurrence (Figure 11-29) .  Figure 11-29
shows the recurrence period at Chicago for macroseismic
effects greater than or equal to a specific Modified
Mercalli Intensity  (MMI), based on data from Tables II-
9 and 11-10.  As presented in the figure, the historical
earthquake record suggests that an intensity of VIII
can be expected to recur at Chicago at the rate of about
once each 100 years.  The figure also suggests that
higher intensities might occur at longer intervals.
Insofar as the historical earthquake record can be re-
lied upon to predict seismic events, a high intensity
earthquake is not expected to occur over the life of
the project.  A detailed evaluation of geologic struc-
ture potential in the Chicago region to generate earth-
quakes would be required to estimate the magnitude of
earthquakes likely to occur.
 (3)  Relationship of Faults and Seismicity

     Two areas are identified as major disturbances due
 to faulting:  the Des Plaines disturbance, within the
 area of the project; and the Sandwich Fault zone, ap-
 proximately 30 miles to the southwest.  There are 30
 minor faults or fault zones within the project area as
 revealed by Vibroseis surveys and drilling.  Eighty-
 six other minor faults  (small vertical displacement
 and width) were found in a sewer excavation area which
 may affect a small portion of the project area.  Faults
 of this type can be assumed to occur through the project
 area.  Classification of these faults as minor, however,
 may not be justified in view of the lateral nature of
 displacement suggested by the faults' slickened sides.
                       11-78

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          The following  sections discuss the possible risk to the
     project from future earthquakes and the factors affecting
     this assessment.


           (1)   Epicentral Location Accuracy

                All  of the earthquakes  discussed above were lo-
           cated by  evaluating macroseismic effects.  Any of  these
           events may actually have occurred 10 to 15 miles from
           the  locations of maximum intensity reported in the  cata-
           logs. 1 This does not reduce the importance of the  1804
           event, because it probably occurred within the boundary
           of the project area.  However,  the 1909 earthquake,
           near  Aurora, may have occurred  only five to ten miles
           from  some of the proposed project structures.  An  epi-
           central location nearer to Chicago is supported by  re-
           ports of.macroseismic effects.    Similarly, the 1912
           earthquake may have occurred 25  miles from some of  the
           structures of the project.   The  foregoing is summarized
           in Table  11-10, which also includes revised epicentral
           intensities from the previous section.  It should  be
           noted that these are probable epicentral intensities,
           not maximum intensities.

                              Table 11-10
                 Revised Partial Earthquake Catalog


       Probable                         Probable Intensity  Minimum Epicentral
      Epicentral                           at Chicago        Distance from
       Intensity                         or the Project    Project Structures
Date     (MMI*)           Location         	(MMI*)	  	(Miles)	

1804      VIII     Fort Dearborn                VIII                  0

1811-
1812      XII      New Madrid, Missouri         VI-VII            ~400

1909      VIII     Aurora,  Illinois           VII-VIII            ~   7

1912      VI       SW of Aurora, Illinois          V                ~ 25
*    Modified Mercalli Intensity.
1    HEC,  1975.

     1Docekal, 1970.

     2    EQHUS and Docekal, 1970.
                                  11-77

-------
     and the fact that intensity V may have occurred
     200 miles away in Indiana, the earthquake may well
     have had an epicentral intensity of about VIII.
     Although the location cited is 15 miles from Chicago,
     it is within the northern boundary of the project.

     1811-1812 New Madrid, Missouri series.  Informa-
     tion on the intensity at Chicago of the New Madrid,
     Missouri earthquakes of 1811 and 1812 is not avail-
     able, and no intensity is listed in the project
     earthquake catalog.  Nevertheless, the observed
     attenuation of earthquake intensity from events
     occurring 200 to 400 miles south of Chicago and
     the descriptions of effects in EQHUS and Fuller1
     suggest that any of these three earthquakes may
     have produced an intensity of VI to VII at Chicago.

     1909 "Springfield, Illinois" earthquake.  The so-
     called Springfield, Illinois event is reported
     with an epicentral intensity of VII in the project
     earthquake catalog; an intensity with which other
     sources agree.  However, no other sources suggest
     Springfield, near the center of the state, to be
     near the epicenter.  The latitude and longitude
     cited in EQHUS and in the project earthquake cata-
     log is on the Wisconsin border.  From the felt re-
     ports in EQHUS and other sources, the most probable
     epicenter was found to be in the vicinity of Aurora,
     approximately 35 miles from Chicago.2  Felt reports
     suggest a maximum intensity of VIII in parts of
     Aurora and near Chicago.  In the absence of speci-
     fic data that would relate intensity VIII effects
     to. softer ground and poorly constructed structures,
     this earthquake should be assumed to have approached
     intensity VIII.  This event may actually have oc-
     curred closer to Chicago, or less than 35 miles
     away.

     1912 near Aurora, Illinois.  An epicentral inten-
     sity of VI is attributed to the Illinois earth-
     quake of 1912, and the epicenter is recorded as
     being southwest of Aurora.  The location indicated
     by the epicenteral coordinates, 41.5N-88.5W, is
     about 50 miles from Chicago.


Fuller,  Myron L., "The New Madrid Earthquake," U.S.  Department of
Interior, Bulletin 394, 1912, p. 21-30.

Docekal, 1970.
                      11-76

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                                                     11-75

-------
     orientation of the  northwest-southwest joint set.  The
     number of faults  found  in the tunnels, appears to indi-
     cate that faulting  with small vertical displacement  is
     common in the Chicago area and that numerous small
     faults should be  expected throughout the proposed tun-
     nel system.  A detailed description of the minor faults
     and a discussion  of survey results are provided in Ap-
     pendix C.


2.2.4  Seismicity

     From the 175-year historical earthquake record, four
earthquakes were identified  as significant in terms of their
size and distance from the proposed project.  These earth-
quakes occurred within 100 miles of Chicago during the re-
corded history of the  area.   In addition, a series of the
most violent earthquakes in  United States history occurred
in 1811 and 1812 at New  Madrid, Missouri, about 400 miles
southwest of Chicago.  Table II-9 summarizes the known earth-
quakes, with intensity III or greater, assumed to have been
felt in the Chicago area.

     The four earthquakes,  identified as significant, origin-
ated at Fort Dearborn  (Chicago) in 1804, near Rockford  in
1909, near Aurora in  1912,  and near Amboy  in 1972.  These
earthquakes have been  characterized as follows:

          1804 Fort  Dearborn earthquake.   The Fort Dearborn
          earthquake  of  1804 has been assigned an epicentral
          intensity  of VII  in the project's earthquake  cata-
          log.  This  earthquake has also been assigned  an
          intensity  of V to VI1.  EQHUS2 reports no  inten-
          sity in the  catalog and remarks  sections, but  VIII
          to XI on  the generalized map in  the inset.  Con-
          sidering  the comparatively low population density
          and the probably  irregular population distribution
          in 1804,  as  well  as the small number of felt  reports,
     Docekal, J.D., Earthquakes of the Stable Interior, With Examples
     on the Mid-Continent, University of Nebraska, Ph.D.,  University
     microfilms,  Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1970.

     Coffman, J.L., and von Hake, C.A., Earthquake History of the United
     States (EQHUS), Pub. 41-1, revised (through 1970), U.S. Department
     of Commerce, NOAA, Environmental Data Service, 1973,  p. 37-58.
                              11-74

-------
relative to the southern block.  Maximum displacement
is 900 feet 20 to 30 miles west of Chicago, but de-
creasing eastward.  South of Joliet, another fault
paralleling the main zone, shows a reversal in movement
indicating a scissors-like motion.  This second fault
has a maximum displacement of 100 feet.

     The Des Plaines disturbance, on the Des Plaines
River, is a roughly circular area, 5.5 miles in diameter,
of intense faulting.  Numerous nearly vertical faults
with displacements of up to 600 feet bring rocks as old
as the Middle Ordovician St. Peter sandstone and lower
Ordovician Oneota dolomite to the bedrock surface.  In
addition, Mississippian and Pennsylvanian rocks not
found in the surrounding area have been preserved in
some of the downthrown blocks.

     The location of faults within, and the complexity
of, the Des Plaines disturbance is indicated in Figure 11-28
The Des Plaines structure is surrounded by nearly hori-
zontal Silurian rocks in which there are, comparatively,
few faults (Figure 11-27).  The bedrock is buried be-
neath 75 to 200 feet of glacial drift, and there is no
indication of the structure on the present surface.1

     Aside from these areas of major disturbances, pre-
vious exploration has indicated the existence of addi-
tional faults or fault zones within the project area.
A Vibroseis survey conducted by Seismograph Service
Corporation in 1968 provided the greatest overall cover-
age of the area.  The faults mapped by this survey are
shown on the Fault Location Map, Figure 11-27.

     Along the Mainstream, North Branch, and Des Plaines
tunnels, where core drilling was done during the 1971
program, holes were drilled specifically to confirm the
existence of the faults mapped by the Vibroseis survey.
In the Calumet area, no drilling has been done to con-
firm faults indicated by Vibroseis survey.

     Not shown on Figure 11-27, are 86 minor faults
mapped in three recently constructed tunnels.  Nearly
90 percent of these faults are oriented in a northwest-
southeast direction, generally parallel to the similarly
trending major joint set.  The remainder parallels the
Willman , 1971.
                      11-73

-------
                                         FIGURE 11-28
                                       Complex Faulting
                                    Des Plaines Disturbance-
                                                 KEY

                                            upward movements
                                            downward movements
HEC, 1972.
                                                     SCALE

                                                       I mile
                                                               2 milss
                           11-72

-------

-------
determination of temperature and concentration of sus-
pended and dissolved solids.  Chemical factors analyzed
include:  dissolved oxygen  (DO), biological oxygen de-
mand (BOD), chemical oxygen demand  (COD) , ammonia-
nitrogen, nitrite-nitrate nitrogen, total phosphorus,
methylene blue-active substances (MBAS), cyanide  (CN),
and the heavy metals.  Bacteriological tests are per-
formed to determine total and fecal coliform concentra-
tions and the presence of fecal streptoccoci.

     A summary of the data collected and analyzed by
the MSDGC is presented in the sections below for the
three major waterway systems.  The presentations of
average pollutant concentrations for the three systems
follow closely the discussion of the MSDGC's monitor-
ing program for water quality found in Appendix C of
"Facilities Planning Study - MSDGC Overview Report,"
second revision, January 1975.  Of the many parameters
routinely monitored by MSDGC, five key water quality
indicators are discussed in the sections below:  dis-
solved oxygen (DO), biological oxygen demand  (BOD),
ammonia nitrogen/ suspended solids  (SS) , and fecal coli-
form counts.  The measured  levels of each parameter are
summarized in tabular form and related to applicable
standards for each of the three major waterways at the
close of the discussion of water quality in Table II-2.

     Reference is made in the discussion to Table II-l
showing Illinois water quality  standards.  Virtually
all of Chicago's major surface water bodies, except
for Lake Michigan, are classified under water standards
for Secondary Contact and Indigenous Aquatic Life.
This is the lowest water use designation made by  the
State of Illinois, allowing only uses in which "contact
with the water is either incidental or accidental and
in which the probability of ingesting appreciable quan-
tities of water is minimal".!
     1.   Chicago River - Sanitary and Ship Canal

          Average water quality parameters for  the
     Chicago-River-Sanitary and Ship Canal System for
     1973 are presented in Table A-l of Appendix A.
Illinois Pollution Control Board Rules and Regulations, Chapter III,
Water Pollution.
                      II-6

-------
 I
H
H


-------
The average dissolved oxygen concentration
decreased with increasing distance from Lake
Michigan, ranging from 7.65 mg/1 at the upstream
stations on the North Shore Channel to 3.4 mg/1
at Ohio Street on the North Branch of the Chicago
River.  The Sanitary and Ship Canal showed dis-
solved oxygen levels that varied from 5.53 mg/1
just after the confluence of the Chicago River
down to 1.2 mg/1 at the downstream stations.

     The average BOD of the water entering the
North Shore Channel was about 5.2 mg/1.  This in-
creased to 9.2 mg/1 in the downstream sector of
the North Branch of the Chicago River while the
observed levels of BOD in the Sanitary and Ship
Canal ranged between 5.5 and 7.4 mg/1.

     Ammonia levels increased as incoming Lake
Michigan waters mixed with effluents discharged
from area treatment plants and other sources.
Ammonia-nitrogen averaged 0.84 mg/l-N near the
lake and increased downstream to 5.49 mg/l-N.
After mixing with Chicago River water the average
ammonia concentration decreased to 3.49 mg/1, but
then increased to 6.22 mg/1 below the West-Southwest
Sanitary Treatment Works discharge.

     The average suspended solids concentration
decreased from 54 mg/1 to a level of about 22 mg/1
in the lower reach of the North Branch of the
Chicago River.  Levels at the stations along the
Sanitary and Ship Canal varied between 19 and
31 mg/1.

     Fecal coliform counts ranged from a geometric
mean of 3,134 per 100 ml at Central Avenue to
12,705 per 100 ml at Ohio Street on the North Branch
of the Chicago River.  However, immediately below
the North Side Sanitary Treatment Works the geo-
metric mean dropped to 477 per 100 ml.  The highest
counts in the Sanitary and Ship Canal System were
at Damen Avenue with a geometric mean of 5,512
per 100 ml.  These levels dropped below the West-
Southwest Sanitary Treatment Works to a geometric
mean of 770 per 100 ml.

     The significance of these measurements becomes
apparent from an examination of Table II-l, Illinois
Water Quality Standards.  Water standards for
                 II-8

-------
Secondary Contact and Indigenous Aquatic Life are
not met for dissolved oxygen, ammonia-nitrogen and
fecal coliforms along large segments of the Chicago
River - Sanitary and Ship Canal System.  Standards
for biological oxygen demand (BOD) and suspended
solids (SS) have been set only for effluents dis-
charged to streams.  BOD values in the open water-
ways are close to the discharge standard, and SS
concentrations exceed the discharge standard in
many argas.  This situation emphasizes the need for
continued upgrading of existing pollution sources
to comply with effluent discharge regulations.
2.   Calumet River System

     Table A-2 of Appendix A shows the average
values of various water quality parameters for
1973 from sampling stations along the Calumet
River System.  Dissolved oxygen levels in the
Calumet River System averaged 9.0 mg/1 at the
mouth of the river and gradually declined down-
stream until at Highway 83 on the Cal-Sag Channel.
The average concentration was 3.9 mg/1.

     The BOD of the Calumet River stations averaged
4.1 mg/1, increasing to 7.3 mg/1 below the Calumet
Sanitary Treatment Works and the confluence of the
Little Calumet River.  The BOD level then declined
slowly to 6.2 mg/1 in the Calumet-Sag  Channel just
above the confluence with the Sanitary and Ship
Canal.

     Within the main waterways of the  Calumet
River System the ammonia concentrations ranged
from 1.31 mg/l-N at 92nd Street to 9.1 mg/l-N at
Ashland Avenue below the Calumet Sanitary Treat-
ment Works.  The highest ammonia levels occur in
the Grand Calumet River with an average of 13.3
mg/l-N.

     The average concentration of suspended solids
at the various sampling stations of  the main water-
ways fell between 12 mg/1 and 73 mg/1.  The highest
concentrations occurred in the tributary streams.
                  II-9

-------
          Fecal  coliform counts were lowest near the
    mouth of  the Calumet River with a geometric mean
    of  152 per  100  ml.   The highest counts were ob-
    served in the lower part of the Cal-Sag Channel
    with  a geometric mean of 738 per 100 ml.  Extremely
    high  fecal  coliform counts were obtained in the
    two tributaries just below the Indiana-Illinois
    line  averaging  18,200 and 24,500 counts per 100 ml
    on  the Grand Calumet and Little Calumet River,
    respectively.

          In summary, dissolved oxygen concentrations
    along the Calumet River System currently exceed
    the water standards for Secondary Contact and
    Indigenous  Aquatic  Life.  Measured values of
    ammonia-nitrogen and fecal coliforms did not meet
    minimum standards over large portions of the sys-
    tem and measured values for suspended solids in
    the stream  did  not  meet the effluent discharge
    standard.
     3.    Des  Plaines  River System

          Average  1973 values for various water quality
     parameters  are  given in Table A-3 of Appendix A.
     The average dissolved oxygen levels found in the
     Des Plaines River ranged from 6.0 mg/1 to 10.2 mg/1
     Some  values greater than saturation occurred pro-
     bably as  a  result of photosynthetic oxygen produc-
     tion. 1

          BOD  levels at the Lake-Cook County line aver-
     aged  6.7  mg/1.   This level decreased slightly
     moving downstream to an average of 5.0 mg/1.  Some
     of the highest  levels were observed in Salt Creek,
     with  an average of 6.1 mg/1, just above the junc-
     tion  with the Des Plaines River.

          The  Des  Plaines River had relatively low
     levels of ammonia with average concentrations be-
     tween 0.34  mg/l-N and 1.21 mg/l-N.  Salt Creek
     had the highest ammonia levels averaging 2.92
     mg/l-N at one location.
MSDGC, "Facilities Planning Study - MSDGC Overview Report,"
Appendix C, "Water Sampling, Testing and Water Quality Moni-
toring Program," Revised January 1975.
                      11-10

-------
     The concentration of suspended solids fluctu-
ated from a high of 68 mg/1 at the Lake-Cook County
line down to a low of 29 mg/1 at Ogden Avenue in
the lower reach of the river.

     Fecal coliform counts on the Des Plaines
River fluctuated from a low geometric mean of 411
counts per 100 ml at the county line to a high of
8,699 counts per 100 ml in the middle reach and
then declined to 1,692 counts per 100 ml at Willow
Springs Road.

     In comparison with the General Use Standards
applicable to that portion of the Des Plaines sampled
by the MSDGC, the data presented in Table II-2 shows
that concentrations of dissolved oxygen and ammonia-
nitrogen are better than those levels mandated by
the standard; however, fecal coliform counts exceed
allowable levels along portions of the Des Plaines
River.  In addition, suspended solids concentrations
in the river are higher than those allowed under
effluent discharge standards.
4.   Water Quality Standards

     As indicated in Table II-l, Illinois has de-
veloped four classifications of water use:  general
use, public and food processing water supply, re-
stricted use, and Lake Michigan.  General use
waters should be suitable for supporting aquatic
life; all waters except those designated as re-
stricted are for general use.  Water standards
for public and food processing are somewhat more
stringent than those for general use.  As noted
in Table II-l, all Illinois waters should be suit-
able for public and food processing water supply
except for restricted waters and the Chicago and
Little Calumet Rivers.  Standards for Lake Michigan
are even more stringent than those covering public
and food processing water supply.

     Those waters classified as restricted  (Sec-
ondary Contact and Indigenous Aquatic Life water
use) are allowed to meet less stringent water
quality standards.  All Illinois waterways on the
restricted list belong to one of the three major
waterways under discussion here.  The presenta-
tion of water quality data made earlier showed
                  11-11

-------


















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           II-12

-------
     that standards for restricted use are not met along
     sizable segments of all three river systems.  This
     data is summarized and compared to Illinois Stand-
     ards in Table II-2.  For these areas even secondary
     contact would be .ruled out.  Eventual use of the
     substandard segments would depend largely upon im-
     provements in dissolved oxygen, ammonia-nitrogen,
     and fecal coliform values.

          Some Federal guidelines in this area are avail-
     able in the form of suggested minimum standards
     for various water uses (see Table II-3).   Although
     these suggested standards do not provide  a compre-
     hensive basis for deciding appropriate water uses
     in the Chicago area, these Federal guidelines do
     indicate that, if Illinois standards for  water use
     were met, water quality would be suitable on cur-
     rently substandard segments for designated recrea-
     tional uses.  In addition, if applicable  Illinois
     water quality regulations were met, primary contact
     would be possible on -the river sections not clas-
     sified as restricted (North Branch of the Chicago
     River, Des Plaines River upstream from McCook,
     part of the Little Calumet River, Des Plaines-
     Illinois River, and Lake Michigan).  In other
     areas at least secondary contact  (boating but not
     swimming or game fishing) would be allowed.  These
     potential water uses, assuming Illinois water
     quality standards are met, are shown in Figure II-3
(2)  Surface Water Quantity

     Data on the flows and elevation levels of the
major surface waterways in the Chicago area are pre-
sented below.  These surface waterways include the
Chicago River - Sanitary and Ship Canal, Des Plaines
River, Calumet River, Lake Calumet, and Lake Michigan.
For the river systems, the existing low, mean, and
high flow rates (annual average) are provided for spe-
cific locations.  For the river systems and lakes, the
low, mean, and high surface evaluation levels (annual
average) are given based on U.S. Geological Survey
Datum.  (Elevation 579.48 USGS corresponds to Eleva-
tion 0.00 Chicago City Datum.)
     1.   Chicago River - Sanitary and Ship Canal

          Annual average flow rates  (low, mean, and
     maximum) for gaging stations along the North
                      11-13

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                             Table II-31                     .
     Minimum  Federal Standards for  Selected Water Uses'

Fecal Coliform
Mean
Maximum
PH
Normal Range
Absolute Range
Dissolved Oxygen
Coldwater Biota
Mean
Spawning Mean
Normal Mean
Warm Water Biota
Mean
Minimum
Total Dissolved
Solids
M aximum
General
Recreational

2,000/100 ml
4,000/100 ml














Designated
Recreational

1,000/100 ml
2,000/100 ml












•

Primary
Contact

200/100 ml
400/100 ml

6.5-8.3
5.0-9.0










1,500 mg/1
Growth of
Freshwater
Organisms

-
—

-
6.0-9.0


7.0 mg/1
6.0 mg/1
4.0 mg/1

5.0 mg/1
4.-0 mg/1



a    These are suggested  standards.

 b   G eneral recreational use areas are those areas suitable for human use
     in recreation activities not involving significant risks of ingestion
     without reference  to official designation of recreation as a water use,

 c    Designated recreational use areas are those areas suitable for recrea-
     tional activities  not  involving significant risks of ingestion and
     officially designated  as a recreation area.

d    Primary contact  use  areas are those areas suitable for human use in
     recreation activities  involving significant risks of ingestion.
     Federal  Water Pollution Control Administration, U.S.  Department of
     Interior, Water Quality Criteria:  Report of the National Technical
     Advisory Committee, April 1, 1968, Washington, D.C.  (U.S. EPA expects
     to publish  later  this year a set of guidelines to replace this report.)
                                  11-14

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                                     FIGURE II-3
                             Recreational Uses of Chicago
                              Waterways Assuming Illinois
                                 Standards Are Met
PRIMARY USE
(SWIMMING AND GAME FISHING)
DESIGNATED RECREATIONAL USE
(BOATING)
                          11-15

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Branch of the Chicago River for the years 1960 to
1969 are shown in Table II-4.  Also shown in Table
II-4 are the stream stages corresponding to the
annual maximum flow rate.  As the table shows, the
lowest mean stream flow for the North Branch, 2.48
cubic feet per second (CFS), occurred in 1963 while
the highest values for mean flow, 118 CFS and 112
CFS, were recorded in 1965 and 1969, respectively.
Over this 10-year period, the largest fluctuation
in stream elevation at maximum flow, was almost
four feet.  It was recorded at the gaging station
farthest downstream and measured from 611.82 feet
to 608.08 feet above Mean Sea Level (MSL).  Table
II-4 also contains flow data for the same period
recorded farther downstream at the Lockport Lock
on the Sanitary and Ship Canal.  At this point,
lowest values for mean flow, 3359 CFS and 3342 CFS,
were observed in 1963 and 1964 while the highest
value for mean flow, 3473 CFS, was recorded in
1962.  The water depth and flow rate in the Sani-
tary and Ship Canal is maintained at a nearly con-
stant level by additions from Lake Michigan to
allow navigation.
2-   Calumet River System

     The Calumet River, from 1971 through October
1975 had an average flow rate of 335 CFS with high
and low flow values of 4,378 CFS and 238 CFS,
respectively, as measured just downstream of
O'Brien Lock and Dam.  The river level at this
point fluctuated six feet over that four-year
period, or between 582.98 and 576.98 feet with a
mean elevation of 577.58 feet above MSL.

     Little Calumet River over the same period
had a mean flow rate of 324 CFS with high and low
flow extremes of 3,176 CFS and 38 CFS, respectively,
Surface water levels ranged from 582.98 and 576.98
feet with a mean level of 577.38 feet above MSL.

     In the Calumet-Sag Channel over the period
from 1966 to 1975 estimates of flow rates past the
Cal-Sag Junction ranged from a low of 293 CFS to
a high of 10,000 CFS with a mean value of 1,078
CFS.  Levels in the Cal-Sag Channel varied 5.4 feet
from 580.88 to 575.48 feet with a mean elevation
of 577.18 feet above MSL.
                 11-16

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-------
     3«   Des Plaines River System

          Data for 1970 on flow and water elevation
     were reported by the Illinois Division of Water-
     ways for two gaging stations along the Des Plaines
     River and for one station on Salt Creek.  At Hoff-
     man Dam on the Des Plaines River the mean yearly
     flow rate was found to be 890 CFS, with average
     high and low flow rates of 3,800 CFS and 366 CFS,
     respectively.  Water elevation varied from 606.88
     feet at low flow to 612.78 feet at flood level
     with a mean elevation of 609.48 feet above MSL.

          Further upstream at the Des Plaines Gage
     stream flow averaged 503 CFS with average high and
     low flow rates of 2,000 CFS and 215 CFS, respec-
     tively.  Water elevations measured at this point
     fluctuated about a mean of 627.28 feet above MSL
     with high and low elevations of 629.88 feet and
     626.78 feet recorded, respectively.

          The Western Springs Gage on Salt Creek regis-
     tered high and low flow rates of 1,050 CFS and
     85 CFS, respectively, with a calculated mean flow
     rate of 137 CFS.  Stream elevation fell to between
     631.88 feet and 625.68 feet above MSL with a mean
     elevation of 626.98 feet.
     4.    Lake Calumet and Lake Michigan

          The surface elevations of these two lakes, as
     observed from 1900 through 1974, have varied to-
     gether from 585.08 feet to 576.68 feet above MSL
     with a common mean elevation of 579.38 feet.
(3)  Flow Regulation                 **

     Serious public health problems involving contamina-
tion of the city's drinking water supply led Chicago
to implement measures to protect Lake Michigan, an impor-
tant source of drinking water, from pollution.  The ap-
proach adopted was to alter the drainage pattern of the
area through the construction of a system of canals,
locks, and sluice gates.  Under this program the natural
flow or several waterways into Lake Michigan was diverted
and in some cases reversed so that rainfall runoff
drained away from Lake Michigan and into the Illinois
                      11-18

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River.  This -rogram led to the creation of the Chicago
River - Sanitary and Ship Canal System and to the modi-
fication of the Calumet River System as described below.
     1.   Control Measures

          The Sanitary and Ship Canal was completed in
     1900 followed by the completion of the North Shore
     Channel in 1910.  The construction of this system
     allowed surface water flow from the North Branch
     of the Chicago River, the North Shore Channel, the
     Chicago River and the South Branch of the Chicago
     River to be discharged to the Illinois River rather
     than to Lake Michigan, the original receiving body.
     Water levels in the Chicago River are now controlled
     by a system of sluice gates.  Navigation is made
     possible by a boat lock at Wilmette.

          Similarly, the completion of the Calumet-Sag
     Channel in 1922 allowed the MSDGC to either fully
     or partially reverse the flow of the Little Calumet,
     the Grand Calumet, and the Calumet Rivers away
     from Lake Michigan.  These rivers now flow, by
     means of the Calumet-Sag Channel, into the Sani-
     tary and Ship Canal at Sag Junction.  Water levels
     in the Calumet River System are regulated by the
     Thomas J. O'Brien Controlling Works and Locks on
     the Calumet River.
     2.   Stormwater Runoff

          The lock system is designed to prevent the
     flow of polluted water into Lake Michigan.  Prior
     to a storm the water level in the Sanitary and Ship
     Canal is lowered at Lockport to accommodate ex-
     pected runoff volumes.  Storms generating in ex-
     cess of 0.1 inch of runoff exceed the capacity of
     the interceptor sewers and cause an overflow of
     rainwater and raw sewage into local waterways at
     about 640 locations.  This currently happens ap-
     proximately 100 times per year.1  Under severe
     circumstances rainfall runoff surpasses even the
MSDGC, "Facilities Planning Study - MSDGC Overview Report," Re-
vised January 1975.
                      11-19

-------
     storage capacity of the river systems, threatening
     widespread flooding of the combined sewer area.
     Water levels at the controlling locks, located at
     Wilmette on the North Shore Channel, at the mouth
     of the Chicago River, and at O'Brien Lock on the
     Calumet River, are allowed to rise to heights of
     five feet, three feet, and three feet, respectively,
     above Chicago City Datum (approximately the level
     of Lake Michigan).  Above this point, impounded
     waters are released to Lake Michigan to prevent
     severe flooding.  Over the last 21 years there
     have been 30 occasions on which the locks were
     opened to Lake Michigan, releasing biological
     oxygen demand  (BOD) substances, sediment, phosphorus,
     and other pollutants.

          Releases made during the summer cause the
     closing of public beaches until coliform counts
     are reduced to safe levels.  Other impacts include
     flooding of basements and ground floors of homes
     and businesses as well as flooding of major trans-
     portation arteries.  Navigation along waterways
     is disrupted during the drawing down of waterway
     levels in anticipation of a storm and does not
     return to normal until channel levels and veloci-
     ties have subsided.
(4)  Domestic Water Supply

     Lake Michigan traditionally supplies most of the
drinking water for the Chicago area.  Withdrawal of
water from the lake was essentially unlimited until
1930 when the U.S. Supreme Court set a ceiling of 1,500
CFS including domestic pumpage.  The amount was revised
upward in 1970 to 3,200 CFS including domestic pumpage.
This amount of water taken from Lake Michigan over a
period of 1 year, 2,317,000 acre-feet in all, supplies
most domestic needs and supplements waterway flows,
allowing for improved effluent dilution and nagivation.

     The 3,200 CFS allotment is divided among three
uses:  domestic needs, indirect diversion, and direct
diversion.  Indirect diversion is that estimated quan-
tity of stormwater runoff which formerly drained directly
into Lake Michigan but which now is diverted to other
area waterways.   This amount varies depending upon
yearly rainfall.  In 1970, domestic use constituted
about 50 percent or 1,600 CFS of the total of 3,200 CFS.
This amount supplied the water needs of 4,520,000 people
within the city of Chicago service area.
                     11-20

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When the wauer supplied for domestic use and the
water diverted from Lake Michigan  (indirect diversion)
are subtracted from the 3,200 CFS allotment, the amount
remaining is available for direct diversion use, i.e.,
diversion to local waterways for effluent dilution and
for navigation.  The relationship among these three
components of Lake Michigan pumpage is portrayed in
Figure II-4.

     It is clear from the discussion that as domestic
water needs increase, less water will be available for
direct diversion uses.  This assumes that the 3,200 CFS
ceiling is to be maintained and that indirect diversion
remains relatively constant.  Present water supplies
are adequate for current needs but increases in popula-
tion and in commercial and industrial water users are
likely to lead to increased demands for water.  Although
some of this demand may be met by increased groundwater
utilization, groundwater pumpage in some portions of
the Chicago area already exceeds recharge.  By storing
combined sewer overflow until it can be treated and re-
leased to area waterways, the proposed tunnel systems
with their total storage capacity of 9,200 acre-feet
will help to alleviate dilution and navigation problems
to an extent dependent on the frequency and severity
of storms.
 (5)  Benthai Deposits

     Raw  sewage  sludge and  sediment washed  into  surface
waterways during overflow episodes add  to the  pollution
load.  Organic material deposited in this manner de-
grades water quality by consuming oxygen during  its
stabilization and by liberating BOD to  overlying waters.
During stabilization of the organic wastes  anaerobic
as well as  aerobic conditions prevail as the depth of
the  deposits increases.  Figure II-5 illustrates the
accumulation of  benthal  (bottom) deposits in the Chica-
go Sanitary and  Ship Canal  from below the Lockport
Lock to just above Damen Avenue.  Canal deposits lying
between Willow Springs Road and Damen Avenue range from
about five  to 13 feet in depth.  Waterway deposits
                      11-21

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                                         FIGURE  II-4
                                 Components of  Lake  Michigan
                                          Diversion^-
                                                    Decreasing
                                                    quantity of water
                                                    for dilution and
                                                    navigation

                                                    Indirect diversion
                                                    of runoff from Lake
                                                    Mich, watershed due
                                                    to urbanization
                                                     Increasing quantity
                                                     of domestic water
                                                     requirements
                      TIME
MSDGC Environmental Assessment - Alternative management plans  for
control of flood and pollution problems due to combined sewer  dis-
charges in the general  service area of the Metropolitan Sanitary
District of Greater Chicago,  November 1973, p. 114.
                           11-22

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                                               FIGURE II-5
                                     Benthal Deposits  in the Chicago
                                         Sanitary and  Ship Canall
                      Rock Section
Earth Section
   South Branch
Top of
Wall
                                   No ural Bank
                                                             Troop  st
                    Lockport
                    Controlling"
                    Works
  -Harlem
   Avenue
                                       Willow Springs  Road
                                 -Sag Junction
               Lockport Lock
               and Powerhouse
        Brandon Road
        Lock and  Dam
                             40      35     30
                            MILES FROM WILMETTE
      25
20
                          2

                          I
                          O
                          o
                          <
                          O
                          X
                          O
                           LU

                           01
           MSDGC - Alternative Management Plans for Control of Flood and
           Pollution Problems due to Combined Sewer Discharges in the General
           Service Area of the Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater
           Chicago, November 1973, p. 129.
                                   11-23

-------
     measured by the MSDGC as part of the bottom sampling
     program are shown in Figure A-l of Appendix A.   Sampling
     locations shown on the map are described in Table A-4
     of Appendix A.

          The full impact on water quality of sediment de-
     posited during combined sewer overflow events is not
     always felt immediately.  The stabilization of organic
     material deposited during the winter months is sup-
     pressed because of the cold temperatures.  This ulti-
     mately results in heavy biological loading of the water-
     ways during the summer months with the overdriving of
     the assimilative capacity of the rivers and streams.
     The intense demand for oxygen in the waterways during
     the warm months often leads to anaerobic conditions in
     the deposited material and septic or near-septic con-
     ditions do not meet minimum Illinois standards for re-
     stricted water use as described in Section 2.1.1,
     Surface Water Quality.
2.1.2  Groundwater

     Quality and quantity of subsurface waters are of major
importance to the construction and operation of the tunnel
system.  This section describes the groundwater regime of
the Chicago area in Cook County.
     (1)   General Hydrogeology

          As  summarized in Table II-5,  there are two main
     aquifer  systems within the study area:   the upper aqui-
     fer  comprised of glacial  drift and dolomites,  and the
     lower (Cambro-Ordovician)  aquifer  comprised of dolo-
     mites and sandstones.  Unconsolidated Quaternary de-
     posits and Silurian dolomites  of the upper aquifer are
     hydraulically connected and function as a single water
     bearing  unit,  except in localized  areas where  imper-
     meable strata separate them and perched water  conditions
     exist.  Clayey deposits in the glacial  drift act as
     confining layers and thus,  create  artesian conditions
     in the upper aquifer.  Ordovician  shales and dolomites
     of Maquoketa Group (on the average 150  feet thick)  sepa-
     rate the upper and lower  aquifers  and act an an effec-
     tive aquiclude.
                           11-24

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                        Table II-5
         Generalized Hydrology of the Chicago  Area
  System
   Series or Group
  Hydrology
Quaternary
Silucian
Orduvician
Cambrian
Pleistocene
Niagaran Alexandrian
Maquoketa
Galena
Platteville
Ancell
Prairie Du Chien
Upper Aquifer

Aquiclude


Lower Aquifer
         The lower aquifer includes dolomite and sandstone
    formations  extending from the base of the Maquoketa
    Group to the top of the Eau Claire shales (Cambrian).
    Average thickness of the upper aquifer is approximately
    400 feet, while average thickness of the lower aquifer
    is  about 1,000 feet.
    (2)   Recharge-Discharge Relationships

         Sources of groundwater recharge to the upper aqui-
    fer  are precipitation and influent stream infiltration.
    In general,  response of water levels to precipitation
    is rapid.   The lower aquifer is recharged in parts of
    McHenry,  Kane, and DeKalb Counties where the Maquoketa
    aquiclude outcrops and further west where the Maquoketa
    has  been removed by erosion.  The lower aquifer has a
    lower potentiometric head than the upper aquifer; there-
    fore, the lower aquifer is also recharged by leakage
    from the upper aquifer through confining layers of
    Maquoketa shales.  Vertical permeability of the Maquoketa
    shales is about 5xlO~5 gpd/ft2, and the calculated! re-
    charge to the lower aquifer, for the northeast Illinois
    area, is about 2,100
    Walton, W.C.,  "Selected Analytical Methods for Well and Aquifer
    Evaluation,"  Illinois State Water Survey, Bulletin 49, 1962.
                          11-25

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     Groundwater is discharged primarily by  pumping
activities in the area.  Water levels  fluctuate  widely
and are indicative of these activities.  Groundwater
also discharges as base flow to  streams and  to Lake
Michigan.  In addition, a relatively small amount is
consumed by evapotranspiration.
 (3)  Water Levels - Areal and Temporal  Character

     A contour map of the potentiometric  surfaces of
the lower aquifer in the region  around  the study area
is provided in Figure II-6.  The figure indicates several
significant cones of depression  in  the  lower aquifer
around major pumping centers in  Cook  County.  Con-
sequently, the direction of groundwater flow in the
study area is toward these potentiometric depressions.
Figure II-7, showing potentiometric contours of the
upper aquifer, indicates that similar depressions occur
in the vicinity of McCook and Thornton  quarries, the
locations of the proposed storage reservoirs.   These
depressions are attributed to long-term quarry dewatering
operations.  Elsewhere, groundwater levels exhibit a
low gradient.

     In the Chicago Central Business  area (CBA), Lake
Michigan appears to be recharging the aquifer, while
a piezometric high in the area north  of Belmont Avenue
indicates the aquifer may be discharging  into the Lake.
The lower water levels in the CBA probably result from
dewatering operations in deep basements of commercial
buildings.  The groundwater contour configuration does
not indicate that the Chicago River and the Chicago
Sanitary and Ship Canal are hydraulically connected to
the upper aquifer.-*-

     With regard to temporal fluctuations in water
levels, long-term records indicate  that the most
Harza Engineering Company (HEC),  Geotechnical Design Report:
Tunnel and Reservoir Plan - Mainstream Tunnel System, August 1975,
                       11-26

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                                           FIGURE II-6
                               Elevation*of  Piezometric  Surface  of
                                  Lower  (Cambrian-Ordovician)
                                   Aquifer in October  1971.1
*mean  sea level  (msl)
   Sasman, R.T., C.R. Benson, G.L. Dzurisin and N.E. Risk, "Water
   Level Decline and Pumpage in Deep Wells in Northern Illinois,
   1966-1971,"  Illinois State Water Survey, Circular 113, 1973.

                              11-27

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1.   Quartenary

     Underlying the surficial soil and artificial
fill material in the project area are the
Pleistocene Series of deposits.  These consist of
a variety of materials transported by, or directly
related to, the continental glaciers that covered
the Chicago area.  These deposits, designated as
glacial drift, range in thickness locally from 0
to over 200 feet.  The depth range of the glacial
deposits at most places is perhaps 60 to 90 feet.
2.    Silurian

     The Racine dolomite, the youngest most
variable and topographically highest of the
Silurian system consists of dolomite with some
chert and shale.  The thickness of the formation
is 0 to 20 feet, north of the O'Hare Airport
area.  Towards the south and east, the thickness
reaches 70 feet in Wilmette, 213 feet at
Roosevelt Road and Lake Shore Drive, and a maxi-
mum of 291 feet in the Lake Calumet area.  The
overall thickness throughout the Chicago area
ranges from 100 to 175 feet.

     The Joliet formation is the next underlying
formation in the Silurian system and consists of
three members:  the Romeo,  the Markgraf, and the
Brandon Bridge. The Romeo member is a persistent
thin, uniform, light gray,  very dense, fine
grained dolomite, generally about 9 to 17 feet
thick, that underlies the Racine dolomite and
grades downward into the Markgraf member.  The
Markgraf member, however, is a widespread, dis-
tinctively light bluish gray dolomitic unit with
an average thickness of 31 feet.  The member
underlies the Romeo member with a sharp contact
and minimum thickness is 9 feet with a maximum
of 51 feet. The Brandon Bridge member is absent
in most of the Chicago area.  This member is
found chiefly in the northwestern portion of the
area, especially in the Des Plaines Valley.
                11-60

-------
     Below the Joliet formation in the Kankakee
the characteristic features of the dolomite in
this formation are:  wavy beds of fine to medium
grained gray, locally pink, dolomite layers, 1 to
3 inches thick.  The Kankakee dolomite as found
throughout the Chicago area, usually has a thick-
ness of 35 to 45 feet, but may vary somewhat from
these figures.  The contact with the Edgewood
formation below is conformable.

     The Edgewood formation is the lowermost
formation in the Silurian System.  The material
in this formation is a light gray, fine to medium
grained, argillaceous, cherty dolomite.  It
includes a porous upper zone and a middle and
lower zone that contain numerous shale partings.
Deposited unconformably on the irregularly
channeled, eroded surface of the Ordovician
Maquoketa Group (generally the Brainard Shale),
the Edgewood thickens from averages of approxi-
mately 20 feet in interchannel areas to over 100
feet in depressions within the Brainard.
3.   Ordovician

     The Neda formation, the uppermost formation
of the Ordovician system is an iron oxide-bearing,
brick red shale, 0 to 15 feet thick (5 feet
average) of restricted distribution.  In general,
the formation is found in the same places as the
Brandon Bridge Formation.  Much of the Neda was
probably removed by pre-Edgewood erosion.

     The Brainard formation consists of a mater-
ial that is a dark green-gray, thin bedded
fossiliferous, silty claystone to shale, and
interbedded dolomite.

     As a result of pre-Edgewood erosion, as
described above, the Brainard Shale as observed
                11-61

-------
     has acquired a variable thickness of from I to
     136 feet depending on the configuration of the
     Brainard-Edgewood unconformity.  In many holes,
     thickness of the formation is less than 50 feet.
     In the Calumet area, the Brainard is absent at
     places.
(3)  Unconformities

     Contacts between adjacent rock strata which show
that deposition was interrupted and that beds have been
removed by erosion are unconformities.  Most of the
rock units in the Chicago area show conformable rela-
tions with the beds above and below.  This indicates
that there was no major interruption in deposition
within or between these formations.

     Major unconformities within the general Chicago
region occur at the base of the Middle Ordovician, the
Silurian (top of the Maquoketa), the Middle Devonian,
the Pennsylvanian, the Cretaceous, and the Pleistocene
(bedrock surface)' systems.  Of these major unconformi-
ties, only two, the bedrock surface and Maquoketa un-
conformities, may be affected by the TARP project.
These two unconformities are discussed below while
the other unconformities have been previously discussed,
     1.    Bedrock  Surface  Unconformity

          The  surface  of bedrock  is  an erosional  sur-
     face.   Over most  of the  Chicago area the  Niagaran
     Racine  dolomite forms the  bedrock surface.   Both
     older and younger rocks  are  at  the top of rock
     within  the disturbed  zone  of the Des Plaines com-
     plex.   To the northwest  of this faulted area,  the
     Joliet  formation,  Kankakee,  and Edgewood  dolomites
     and  the Maquoketa shale  are  locally at the bedrock
     surface.

          Erosion  during and  following the uplift of
     the  Kankakee  Arch contributed to the exposure of
     the  present rock  surface.  Glacial erosion,  how-
     ever, appears to  have been a major factor in shap-
     ing  and lowering  the  rock  surface to its  present
     form.   Topography on  the bedrock surface  shows a
     rolling plain cut by  steep eastward grading  valleys
                      11-62

-------
     over 100 feet deep.   Evidence of previous geologic
     structure caused by  folding and faulting has been
     modified by the preglacial and glacial erosion.
     Glacial drift has unconformably filled in depres-
     sions in the bedrock surface so that present day
     drainage patterns are almost entirely independent
     of preglacial drainage.
     2.   Top of Maquoketa Group Unconformity

          The top of the Maquoketa group is an erosional
     surface.  Generally eastward grading valleys up to
     150 feet deep have been carved into the Maquoketa
     surface.  The configuration of the surface appears
     to be independent of that of the underlying Galena
     surface.  In some areas, a structural high on the
     top of the Galena may be reflected in a correspond-
     ing topographic high on the top of the Maquoketa,
     as in the southern portion of the Mainstream Tunnel
     segment between Western and Kedzie Avenues.  The
     effect of the high Maquoketa top in this hole and
     others appears, however, to be reflected upward
     in sedimentary beds  (e.g., Edgewood, Kankakee,
     and Joliet formations) deposited at a later time.

          Erosion has removed the Neda shale at the top
     of the Maquoketa group over most of the area.  In
     the drilling program, Neda was encountered only in
     the northwestern part of the project area, along
     the Des Plaines River and along the North Branch
     of the Chicago River.  Erosion has also thinned
     the Brainard shale in all holes where the Neda is
     absent.  In portions of the Lake Calumet area,
     erosion has cut entirely through the Brainard shale
     into the Fort Atkinson dolomite.
(4)  Folds

     Folding of the bedrock units in the Chicago area
is represented by very gentle folds with eastwest trends
which are superimposed on the regional southeasterly dip
of 10 to 15 feet per mile.  The folds are gentle struc-
tures which develop relief of 200 feet, or generally
less, over an extent of several miles.  Structure sur-
face slopes, which may be taken to approximate the
                      11-63

-------
dip of the strata  involved  in the folding, are  found
locally to approach  100  feet per mile.  The  fold axes
in the Galena  trend  east-west and appear  to  be  gen-
erally conformable with  deeper  structures.   The gently
undulating fold  structures  can  be observed in the geo-
logic sections prepared  from the core borings which
have been included in this  report as Figure  11-22 for the
Calumet system tunnel route.  Borings for the other
tunnel routes  are  shown  in  Figures  11-23  and 11-24 for
the Mainstream system, and  11-25 and 11-26 for  the Lower
Des Plaines system.  The dip of the strata shown on the
sections, even if  the sections  were constructed true to
scale rather than  with 20:1 exaggeration  as  drawn, would
not represent  true dips  at  many places  because  the
geologic section lines often cross  the  fold  axes
obliquely.
 (5)  Joints

     Data on the orientation dip and spacing of joints
in the Silurian strata were obtained primarily from
the mapping of outcrops and quarries as well as tunnels,
especially during construction of the Southwest
Intercepting Sewer ISA, Calumet Intercepting Sewer
18-E, Ext. A, and Lawrence Avenue Tunnels  (including
the Harding Avenue Tunnel).  Vertical drill holes of
relatively small diameter rarely intersect essentially
vertical joints.  Such joints were intersected, however,
in some drill holes and were followed intermittently
throughout considerable lengths of the holes.  The
orientation of the most highly developed set of joints
trends northeast ranging from north-50-degrees-east to
north-60-degrees-east.  Another important set trends
northwest, from north-25-degrees west to north-65
degrees west.  Joint data for formations underlying
the Silurian strata are not available but could be
gathered from outcrops remote from the Chicago area or
from mines such as those near Galena.

     The tunnels listed above were excavated in dolo-
mite strata of the Racine, Joliet, and Kankakee form-
ations, all belonging to the Silurian system.  The
Racine formation was encountered only in the Calumet
Tunnel and the Kankakee was found only in the South-
west and Lawrence Avenue Tunnels.  Only the upper five
feet of the Kankakee was penetrated in each case.
                       11-64

-------
 i1-
                                FIGURE 11-22
                       Geologic Section Crawford St
                           to  Grand Calumet River
                               Calumet System^
                             s   §
HEC, 1972.
                     11-65

-------
                             FIGURE  11-23
                           Geologic  Section
                      59th Street  to Damen Avenue
                           Mainstream System-'-
                                           i  i
-I
                         \-.\U
                       5885?
  HEC, 1972.
11-66

-------
                              FIGURE 11-24
                           Geologic Section
                    Damen Avenue to Addison Street
                           Mainstream System^
                                          I i
                   o

                   <*»>
EEC, 1972,
                    11-67

-------
                              FIGURE 11-25
                      Geologic Section 47th St. to
                          Fullerton Ave. Lower
                           Des Plaines System^
HEC, 1972.
                     11-68

-------
                                FIGURE 11-26
                         Geologic Section Fullerton
                         Ave. to Thacker Lower  Des
                               Plaines System-'-
                                              I
                                              I  i
r

                                          11    f i .
                                         nl*  ii
                                         i: i  * HI i
                                         L *^ - 5 "§ §^>,"^
                                             5 fc ** "^ fc 5"
                                      I   I
  EEC,  1972.
11-69

-------
Data on jointing from tunnel exploration, therefore,
was limited essentially to the Joliet formation and to
strata a few feet above and below the formation.

     Surface observation and tunnel mapping in the
Silurian formations excavated shows an average spacing
of joints of approximately 30 to 40 feet.  This spacing
is subject to great variation in local areas.  Joints
appear to be open near the bedrock surface with depths
of 100 feet or more.  Joints are thought generally to
close with depth but exceptions may occur.  Joint
openness as a near-bedrock-surface phenomenon has been
discussed in the section on Racine stratigraphy.

     Most of the joint surfaces are separated from a
hairline to a fraction of an inch, however, a few
obtain greater widths.  For example, the Southwest
Tunnel has a fracture width of 12 inches, the Calumet
Tunnel one of 24 inches, and the Lawrence Avenue Tunnel
one of 6 inches.  The joints are variably filled with
grey, black or green clay, and frequent residual rock
fragments.  Crystallization of calcite, quartz or
pyrite is also found along joint surfaces.  In some
areas solutioning along joint plains has produced hori-
zontal fluting or a "washboard" structure, in which clay
fills the pockets.  Up to 100-foot wide sections filled
with clay have been reported near the Lake Shaft of
the Chicago Avenue Tunnel.  Seepage was noted as
being common in such sections and structural support
was usually required.
(6)  Faults

     Two areas of major disturbance due to faulting as
well as numerous individual faults or minor fault zones
are known within the Chicago region.  The major zones
are the Sandwich Fault lying to the southwest of the
project area, and the Des Plaines disturbance.  The
location of the Sandwich Fault zone is shown in Figure
11-19 while the location of the Des Plaines structure
and the distribution of otner faults are shown in the
aerial map presented as Figure 11-27.  A detailed map of
the Des Plaines fault structure is given in Figure 11-28,

     The Sandwich Fault zone extends northeastward
from near Ottawa, Illinois for some 80 miles into the
southern part of the Chicago area.  This major fault
is nearly vertical with the northern block moving down
                      11-70

-------
rf  N
D"  (t  "fl
It  & M
       O
n  co c
tr  ft »
H-  n  n
o  m
Dl  fT H
03  p. H
O 'O   I
    M  NJ
>  P  H
h T3
n>  p1
    o
    o

-------
                                     FIGURE 11-20
                            Physiographic Divisions  in
                                  the Chicago Area1
      GEOLOGY OF THE  CHICAGO AREA
              — Mittittippi Riv«> Droinog* Dmd»-
                 Stfor* Chicago Riwr divtrtf
                 Afl«r tht dl»*r»ion
A    '   B
 Willman,  1971.
                        11-58

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Interior low plateaus and Ozark plateaus along its
north-south axis.  The boundary between two major sub-
divisions of the central lowlands, the Great Lakes
section, and the Till Plains section lies just to
the west of Cook County.

     The Great Lakes section includes the younger gla-
cial-drift surrounding the Great Lakes and is character-
ized by permanent rough-surfaces moraines and many lakes.
Within the Chicago area the Great Lakes section has two
subdivisions, the Wheaton Morainal Country and the
Chicago Lake Plain.  The former contains continental
glaciation physiographic features including glacial
deposits, hill and hollow topography, short ridges
and numerous lakes.  The Chicago Lake Plain comprises
the former bottom of glacial Lake Chicago and is rela-
tively flat and uneroded by modern streams.

     The Till Plains section also has two subdivisions
in the Chicago area, the Bloomington Ridges Plain and
the Kankakee Plain.  The Bloomington Ridges Plain is
an area of older Wisconsinan drift and is less rugged
and with fewer lakes than the Wheaton Morainal Country.
The scarcity of Lakes is in part due to the older age
of the drift.  The gentler slopes and lower relief is
due to the slower melting of the ice and less stagna-
tion at the front of the glacier.  The Kankakee Plain
lies in the southwest portion of the Chicago area and
is a comparatively flat surface.  The physiographic
subdivisions of the Chicago area are shown in
Figure 11-20.
 (2)  Site Stratigraphy

     The uppermost 500 feet of strata, particularly in
the dolomites and shales between the top of the Racine
formation and the base of the Brainard formation are
most relevant to the proposed construction of the
tunnel and reservoir systems.  The glacial deposits
are relevant to the drop shaft construction and, par-
tially, to the reservoir containments.  The formations
above the base of the Maquoketa group's Brainard forma-
tion are a part of the Quartenary, Silurian, and
Ordovician systems and a brief description highlight-
ing their major features are presented below.  The
.general stratigraphic relations of the rock formations
below this group have been described in a broad manner
in the previous section on geologic history.  The gen-
eral geologic column for the Chicago area is presented
in Figure 11-21 and a brief description of the three
uppermost rock systems is provided in the following
sections.  A more detailed description of these sys-
tems is provided in Appendix B.

                      11-57

-------
     Most of the glacial drift in the Chicago area was de-
posited during Woodfordian time.  This was a time of maxi-
mum Wisconsinan glaciation, which was 22,000 to  12,500 years
ago.  At its maximum, the Woodfordian glacier extended west-
ward nearly to the Mississippi River, southwestward to Peoria,
and southward to its contact with the Erie lobe  advancing from
the east.  At the maximum, the Chicago area was  buried by
3,000 to 5,000 feet of ice.  As the glacier retreated north-
ward, the Lake Michigan Basin filled with melt water which
formed -Lake Chicago.1

     Readvance of the glaciers in northern Michigan during
Valderan time caused a rise in Lake Chicago level.  Sub-
sequently, the Valderan glaciers advanced on the land as
far as Milwaukee and even further south in the central
part of Lake Chicago.  Valderan time is marked by lacus-
trine, fluvial, and aeolian deposits in the Chicago area.

     The post-glacial stage has been called the  Holocene
and, according to some, includes the present or  recent
geologic processes acting on the landscape.  The Holocene
is considered to have commenced some 7,000 years ago and
in the Chicago area is marked by soil formation, peat,
stream, and Lake deposits.  Additionally, such man-made
features as lake fill, land fill, and strip mine wastes,
may be considered as Holocene deposits.
      (1)  Physiography

          The present topography or physiography  of  the
     Chicago area owes its origin to the glacial  and post-
     glacial processes including stream erosion,  wind
     blown deposits, and wind erosion.  Depositional fea-
     tures of the area include substantially unaltered
     moraines (glacial deposits), outwash plains,  valley
     trains, filled lake basins, river flood plains, and
     sand dunes.  Erosional features include glacial flood-
     water sluiceways, glacial lake wave cut cliffs, and
     numerous small stream valleys.  Total relief is on
     the order of 590 feet.

          The Chicago area is in the Central Lowlands Prov-
     ince, a broad, relatively low glaciated area extending
     from the Appalachians to the Great Plains  along its
     east-west axis and from the Superior uplands to the


     Willman,  H.B.,  "Summary of the Geology of the Chicago Area,"
     Illinois State  Geological Survey, Circular 460, 1971.
                            11-56

-------
     Mississippian sediments are found around the edges of
the Michigan and Illinois Basin and the Ozark Dome, north-
east and southwest, respectively, of the Chicago area.  These
rocks are predominately limestone and cherty  (flintlike)
limestone with some shales, dolomite, and sandstone.  Within
the Chicago area, the Mississippian is found as shale and
cherty limestone in the Des Plaines fault zone.

     Pennsylvanian rocks are found south, west, and east of
Chicago and may be present in the Des Plaines structure.  A
major unconformity marks early Pennsylvanian time, resulting
from regional uplift and warping of the Kankakee Arch.  De-
pression of the Illinois Basin in mid to late Pennsylvanian
resulted in deposition of upper Pennsylvania sediments on
the truncated older rock units.  The Pennsylvanian rocks
are predominately shales and sandstone with clay and coal
measures and occur in cyclothams.

     The Chicago area was uplifted and warped during the
major tectonic movements in the Appalachians at the end of
the Palezoic.1  Renewed uplift along the Kankakee Arch
caused the erosion of Pennsylvanian sediments from the
Chicago area.  Although Cretaceous sediments are found
west and south of Chicago, there is no evidence for their
deposition within the area.

     A major unconformity occurs between the Paleozoic and
Quaternary systems.  In the Chicago region, the glacial
deposits of Pleistocene age rest directly on the erosional
surface of Pennsylvanian and older rocks.  During the
Wisconsinan stage, the Chicago area was buried under sev-
eral thousand feet of glacial ice that spread over the re-
gion from the northeast.  These glaciers were part of the
Lake Michigan lobe  (rounded division or projection) but
may have included marginal portions of the Saginaw and
Green Bay lobes.

     The Wisconsinan glaciation eroded the Chicago area  so
intensely that no deposits of earlier glaciers have been
found.2  Deposits from the Illinoian glaciation which pre-
ceded the Wisconsinan, may remain in some of  the bedrock
valleys in the Chicago region.  Deposits of the Kansan  stage
are present southwest of Chicago and it is probable that
the northern edge of a Kansan glacier from the northeast
also may have covered part of the region.  There is no  evi-
dence that the earliest Pleistocene glaciers  of the Nebraskan
stage covered the Chicago area.
     Willman, H.B.,  "Summary of the Geology of the Chicago Area,"
     Illinois State Geological Survey, Circular 460,  1971.

     Ibid.


                            11-55

-------
                                        FIGURE 11-19
                                Bedrock  Surface Geologyl
         GEOLOGY  OF THE  CHICAGO  AREA
•K* *¥-'<••*. *t>'i*ns3?M
                                               PENNSYLVANIA
                                             PC Corbondal* Pm
                                               Spoon Fm
                                             S SILURIAN
                                               ORDOVICIAN
                                               Moquokvta Gr
                                             Og GotanaandPlattavilltGrs.
                                             Oa Anctll Gr.
                                             — FOUK,Sandwich
Willman,  H.G., "Summary of the Geology of the Chicago Area,"
Illinois  State Geological Survey, Circular 460,  1971.
                            £1-54

-------
     In the immediate Chicago area, the Precambrian/Cambrian
unconformity is 3,000 to 5,000 feet below the surface.  The
Cambrian rock is composed of marine deposits comprising both
near-shore and deeper water sediments.  The rocks are pre-
dominately sandstones in the lower portion and mixed sand-
stones, siltstones, dolomites, and sandy dolomites in the
upper portion.  These sediments represent a sea that covered
the entire region.  Only a minor unconformity separates the
Cambrian and lower Ordovician rocks.

     After the deposition of the lower Ordovician, erosion
occurred and the middle Ordovician lies directly on Cambrian
strata or truncates lower Ordovician rocks.  The unconformity
is irregular and is locally marked by sandstone-filled valleys
and sinkholes.  This unconformity is exposed in areas to the
west, south, and north but lies 300 to 1,000 feet deep within
the Chicago region.  The erosion in lower Ordovician time may
represent an earlier movement along the Kankakee Arch.l  The
Ordovician sediments include sandstone, shale, dolomite, and
limestone, and are considered to be of marine origin.

     The end of Ordovician time was marked by uplift, and
resulted in deep valleys being cut in the uppermost Ordovician
rocks.  In places these valleys are 150 feet deep.  The
Silurian sediments are indicative of shallow interior seas.
The rocks are almost all dolomite, and highly fossiliferous
reef deposits mark the Niagaran series.  The Silurian rocks
form much of the bedrock surface in the Chicago area as
shown in Figure 11-19.

     Within the immediate region of Chicago, a marked uncon-
formity occurs at the base of the middle Devonian.  This con-
formity coincides with the tectonic uplift in the Appalachians.
The Middle Devonian truncates units as low as the middle
Silurian, although lower Devonian rocks are present and undis-
turbed to the south in the center of the Illinois Basin.
Devonian rocks are found in the Chicago area beneath Lake
Michigan and possibly in some crevices in the eroded sur-
faces of the Silurian Racine formation, as well as in the
Des Plaines disturbance.  The relations of the Devonian to
older units appears to be the result of uplift along the
Kankakee Arch.l  rp^e Devonian sediments consist of lime-
stone and shales with occasional sandstones.
     Willman, H.B., "Summary of the Geology of the Chicago Area,"
     Illinois State Geological Survey, Circular 460, 1971.

     Ibid.
                             11-53

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                                                 FIGURE  11-18
                                          Areas Subject to Overbank
                                                    Flooding1
LEGEND
             MSDGC Environmental Assessment - Alternative management plans for control
             of  flood and pollution problems due to combined sewer  discharges in the
             general service area of the Metropolitan sanitary District of Greater
             Chicago, November 1973, pg. 101.

                                      11-52

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2.2.2  Flood-Prone Areas

     The lack of topographic relief throughout the Chicago
area is a significant factor in overbank flooding.  Because
high waterway elevations can seriously affect sewer hydrau-
lic capacity, overbank flooding often occurs concomitantly
with combined-sewer backup.  Areas subject to overbank
flooding are shown in Figure 11-18.

     The greatest potential area for overbank flooding lies
along the North Branch of the Chicago River and in the Calu-
met River System.  Releases of flood waters to Lake Michigan
at Wilmette, at the mouth of the Chicago River, and through-
out the Calumet River have largely forestalled overbank
flooding along the North Shore Channel, the North and South
Branches of the Chicago River, and the Calumet River.  Were
such releases not allowed, significant overbank and basement
flooding would occur in these areas.  Along the Des Plaines
River, flooding is limited chiefly to forest preserve lands.


2.2.3  Geology

     The Chicago area lies on the broad, gently sloping,
northwesterly-trending Kankakee Arch.  This arch connects
the Wisconsin Arch to the northwest with the Cincinnati
Arch to the southwest and is a structural high separating
the Michigan Basin from the Illinois Basin.  The northeast
part of the Chicago area lies on the northeastern side of
the arch and the lower Paleozoic formations here dip east-
ward.  The southwestern portion of the area lies on the
southwest flank of the arch and the upper Paleozoic sedi-
ments dip southwest toward the Illinois Basin.  Erosion of
the Kankakee Arch has exposed older geologic units along
the arch and younger rocks along the flanks.

     The oldest rocks in the region are of Precambrian age,
collectively known as the basement complex, and can be found
in several northern states areas.  These rocks are composed
of metamorphic and igneous materials which were subjected to
complex tectonic and erosional processes prior to the de-
position of the oldest Paleozoic sediments.  The effects of
erosion results in stratigraphic breaks, or unconformities
in the sedimentary rock sequence.  A sharp unconformity
marks the division between these Precambrian rocks and the
lowest Cambrian rocks.
                           11-51

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                                               FIGURE  11-17
                                            Areas with Drainage
                                        Problems During  100-Year
      COOK COUNTY r


               ^
r
   j
   ?:>
'I J-'1
 Vu
     r- I- '
  LEGEND

  HEADWATER AREAS WITH DRAINAGE PROBLEMS
  DUE TO SEWER FLOW LIMITATIONS,
  100-YEAR FREQUENCY STORM,
  5-YEAR FREQUENCY STORM-SEWER DESIGN


       SCALE.  1" = 6 MILES
         MSDGC Environmental Assessment - Alternative management, plans  for  control
         of flood and pollution problems due  to combj ned  sewer  discharges in  the
         general service area of the Metropolitan San j tar y  District  of.  Greater
         Chicago,   November 1973, pp. 105-108.
                                   11-50

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                                           FIGURE  11-16
                                        Areas  with Drainage
                                     Problems During  50-Year
                                                Storm-1-
    COOK COUNTY
                                                                LAKE
                                                              MICHIGAN
HEADWATER AREAS WITH DRAINAGE PROBLEMS
DUE TO SEWER FLOW LIMITATIONS,
50-YEAR FREQUENCY STORM,
5-YEAR FREQUENCY STORM-SEWER DESIGN
      SCALE: 1"= 6 MILES
                                              COOK COUNTY
     MSDGC Environmental Assessment - Alternative management plans for control
     of flood and pollution problems due to combined sewer discharges in the
     general service area of the Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater
     Chicago,   November 1973,  pp. 105-108.

                               11-49

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                                              FIGURE 11-15
                                          Areas with Drainage
                                      Problems During  25-Year
                                                  Storm
                                                         1
   I COOK COUNTY rJ
                                                                LAKE
                                                               MICHIGAN
HEADWATER AREAS WITH DRAINAGE PROBLEMS
DUE TO SEWER FLOW LIMITATIONS,
25-YEAR FREQUENCY STORM.
5-YEAR FREQUENCY STORM-SEWER DESIGN
      SCALE: 1" = 6 MILES
                                              COOK COUNTY
       MSDGC Environmental Assessment - Alternative management plans for control
       of flood and pollution problems due to combined sewer discharges in the
       general service area of the Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater
       Chicago,  November 1973, pp. 105-108.
                                 11-48

-------
                                                  FIGURE 11-14
                                             Areas with Drainage
                                        Problems During  10-Year
                                                     Storml
r'
      COOK COUNTY rJ
                 k
               Vl
               .-• 'r,  I
  LEGEND
  HEADWATER AREAS WITH DRAINAGE PROBLEMS
  DUE TO SEWER FLOW LIMITATIONS,
  10-YEAR FREQUENCY STORM,
  5-YEAR FREQUENCY STORM-SEWER DESIGN


        SCALE: 1" = 6 MILES
            MSDGC Environmental  Assessment  - Alternative  management plans for control
            of flood  and  pollution  problems due  to  combined sewer discharges in the
            general service  area of the Metropolitan  Sanitary District of Greater
            Chicago,   November 1973,  pp.  105-108.
                                      11-47

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     Enhanced use of the waterways is an essential goal of the
     plan and contingent upon the extent of water quality im-
     provements largely as a result of TARP.  The broader as-
     pects of the plan are discussed in Section 3.2, Land Use.
2.2  LAND RESOURCES

     The following section describes the land resources of
the Chicago metropolitan area, and is divided into separate
discussions of drainage basins, flood prone areas, geology,
and seismicity.
2.2.1  Drainage Basins

     Construction of the Sanitary and Ship Canal in 1900
and the Calumet-Sag Channel in 1922 significantly altered
drainage patterns around Lake Michigan.  Drainage from an
area of about 70 square miles north of downtown Chicago and
along Lake Michigan previously flowed to Lake Michigan.
Now, however, this drainage feeds the Illinois waterways via
the Chicago River - Sanitary and Ship Canal System.  In
addition, reversal of water flow through the Calumet-Sag
Channel has diverted normal flow from the area around Lake
Calumet away from Lake Michigan and into the Illinois water-
ways.  Ultimately, the Illinois Waterway System flows into
the Illinois River along with two other large tributaries,
the Des Plaines River and the Du Page River.

     The overall low relief of the combined-sewer system
area makes it prone to flooding from sewer system backups.
The sewer system is designed to contain a five-year storm.
Total land area flooded by storms larger than present sewer
capacity is given below:

     Event                  Size of Flooded Area (Sq.Mi.)

Ten Year Storm                           50
Twenty-five Year Storm                  161
Fifty Year Storm                        210
One Hundred Year Storm                  254

Figures 11-14 through 11-17 show graphically the spread of
flooding throughout the combined-sewer system area as a re-
sult of successively larger storms.
                           11-46

-------
 (8)  Du Page County - Salt Creek Study

     This plan, sponsored by the Forest Preserve Dist-
rict of Du Page County and the Illinois Division of
Water Resources, was developed for flood prevention
along Salt Creek.  It employs land use zoning and the
construction of flood-retaining structures.
 (9)  Addison Creek Improvements

     The Illinois Division of Water Resources plans
 the construction of a retention reservoir near George
 Street and a channel bypass from a point near where
 the creek enters Cook County to the vicinity of Mann-
 heim Road.  Four flood-retention reservoirs would ulti-
 mately be constructed.
 (10) Dredging of Illinois Waterways

     The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers currently per-
 forms regular maintenance dredging of the major river
 systems in the MSDGC's service area.  The dredging of
 oxygen-depleting wastes in the waterways is important
 in the upgrading of dissolved oxygen concentrations
 in the waterways.
(11) Lakefront Plan

     The city of Chicago's ambitious Lakefront Plan calls
for extensive new recreational improvements along the Lake
Michigan shoreline.  Development alternatives include:

          Expanding the park base through  shoreline
          extension

          Expanding the park base through  shoreline
          extension and creation of sheltered water
          areas either through the use of  peninsulas
          or through the construction of off-shore
          breakwaters

          Expanding the park base through  the develop-
          ment of  islands as well as shoreline exten-
          sions.
                      11-45

-------
(4)  Thornton Quarry Flood Control Project

     The U.S. Soil Conservation Service is currently
considering using a portion of Thornton Quarry as a
flood reservoir.  Flows during peak rainfall periods
would be routed from Thorn Creek on the region's far
south side to the quarry.  TARP also plans to use the
quarry for storing combined-sewer overflows until treat-
ment measures can be applied.  Different areas of the
quarry and separate facilities may have to be employed
so that this project and TARP are compatible and com-
plementary.
(5)  City of Chicago Sewer Construction Program

     Auxiliary outlet sewers are planned for areas
within the city as well as for some suburban communi-
ties.  This program will increase the conveyance capa-
city of the sewer systems in the local tributary areas.
TARP is currently designed to accommodate the projected
increased flow rate.
 (6)  Area Treatment Plant Upgrading and Expansion

     As part of its effort to improve water quality,
the MSDGC plans significant upgrading and expansion of
existing wastewater treatment plants.  Modification of
the West-Southwest, North-Side and Calumet plants is
proposed as an integral part of the effort to meet
Illinois water quality standards.
 (7)  Des Plaines River Watershed - Floodwater Manage-
     ment Plan

     This program is being carried out under the spon-
 sorship of the U.S. Soil Conservation Service and the
MSDGC.  The plan affects the Des Plaines River and its
 tributary streams.  Significant aspects include:

          A program for land treatment of wastewater
          Flood plain management
          Construction of flood-retarding structures.
                      11-44

-------
establish priorities for the construction and modifi-
cation of treatment plants.  Principal agencies in
this study are the U.S. Soil Conservation Service and
the MSDGC.  The plan explicitly recognizes the need
for TARP as part of a larger plan for upgrading water
quality of the Chicago area.
(2)  208 Planning Program

     An areawide waste treatment management planning
program, as required under Section 208 of PL 92-500,
has been initiated under the direction of Northeastern
Illinois Planning Commission (NIPC)  which is the desig-
nated planning agency.  Their effort will take about
two years and culminate in a comprehensive regional
report which will address the results of several man-
agement programs currently underway.

     Under the 208 Program, sampling projects will be
conducted to assess and characterize:

          Existing water quality
          The extent of floodwater pollution
          Benthic conditions
          Diversity and abundance of aquatic life.

Data resulting from the planned 45 in-stream monitoring
stations will provide input to a computerized water qual-
ity model.  This model will be used to project the im-
pact of additional development and system response to
suggested water resource management strategies.

     The regional overview gained from the 208 Planning
Program is expected to provide the additional documenta-
tion needed to substantiate the requirement for planned
waterway improvements, of which TARP is a major component,
 (3)  .The Chicago-South End of Lake Michigan  (C-SELM)
     Study

     The C-SELM Study represents another regional ap-
proach to wastewater management.  C-SELM discusses
various methods to treat all wastewater flows in the
Chicago area.  Methods considered include:   advanced
physical/chemical treatment of wastes, advanced tech-
niques for biological treatment, and spray irrigation
of effluent in a land disposal system.  The  study
assumes that an underground conveyance and storage
system would be adopted.
                        11-43

-------
                                   FIGURE  11-13
                          Simulation of  Dissolved Oxygen
                          Concentrations Under Existing
                            Conditions Along  Chicago
                          River - Sanitary  and Ship Canal
                                                    oo
                              
-------
                                  FIGURE 11-12
                           Simulation of Dissolved Oxy-
                            gen Concentrations Under
                            Existing  Conditions Along
                               Calumet River System^-
                                     LU
                                     5
                                     z
                                       Z
                                       O
                                                       in
                                                       8
                                                      •8
                                                       8
                                                    --S
                                                       in
                                                       •«*
                                                       s'
                        oo
                               co
                              INdd - N3DAXO Q3A10SSia
J.  Irons, MSDGC, Personal Communication, February 10,  1976.


                        11-41

-------
                                       FIGURE  11-11
                               Simulation of  Dissolved Oxy-
                                gen Concentrations Under
                                Existing Conditions  Along
                                    North Shore Channel1
                                 NORTH BRANCH
                                 CHICAGO RIVER
X
o
a
>
_j
Si
tfl
a
              1977IEPA
                                STANDARDS
                                                EXISTING CONDITIONS
                                               (ATTAINMENT)
                                                (VIOLATION)
        1234   5   6789

                          MILE STATIONS
                                      10  11   12  13  14   15
 J.  Irons, MSDGC, Personal Communication,  February 10,  1976.
                            11-40

-------
          Beyond the immediate impact of the combined-sewer
     overflow are long-term effects on water quality.  Sew-
     age solids that settle in the waterways eventually de-
     compose liberating BOD in the stream and decreasing
     the dissolved oxygen (DO)  content of the waters.  The
     stabilization of sewage solids is suppressed during
     the cold months so that the maximum impact on the water-
     ways results in the summer months when other pollutant
     loadings are also high.  Figures 11-11, 12, and 13 show
     DO profiles developed by the MSDGC which simulate exist-
     ing dry weather conditions in the North Shore Channel
     and North Branch of the Chicago River, in the Chicago
     River and Sanitary and Ship Canal, and in the Calumet
     River and Calumet-Sag Channel.  1977 Illinois standards
     for DO are shown with each figure.  Maintenance of DO
     concentrations at mandated levels during the critical
     summer months is possible only if benthal loads depo-
     sited during combined-sewer overflow episodes are eli-
     minated.  The magnitude of the problem is so great
     that combined-sewer overflows constitute the largest
     obstacle to attaining state water quality standards.
     Estimates of BOD released to area waterways during
     the approximately 100 yearly overflow occurrences indi-
     cate that on an average basis BOD from sewer overflow
     nearly equals the total BOD output for all six MSDGC
     treatment plants .1
2.1.4  Water Management Programs

     Management of area water resources is being addressed
in the Chicago area by a variety of programs on a regional
and local basis.  These programs and their relationship
with the Tunnel and Reservoir Plan are discussed briefly
below.
     (1)  The Chicago Metropolitan Area River Basin Plan
          (CMARBP)

          The CMARBP program focuses on eliminating further
     pollution of the Chicago Basin and developing manage-
     ment strategy to meet water quality goals.  The basin
     plan will assess the extent of pollution in the basin's
     waters as well as define the nature and volume of pol-
     lutants that can be discharged and still meet certain
     minimum water quality standards.  The plan will also
     Hearing on the Proposed Chicago Tunnel and Reservoir Plan,
     Chicago, Illinois, March 28, 1974.
                          11-39

-------
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                                                    11-38

-------
 facilities,  including  the receiving  stream, the average
.flow for  1973,  and  the average  influent and effluent
 concentration of  BOD,  SS, and ammonia nitrogen are
 presented in Table  II-8.

      The  largest  treatment plants; West-Southwest,
 Northside .and Calumet, provide  preliminary, primary
 and  secondary treatment using chlorination and post-
 aeration.  Hanover, Lemont and  Streamwood provide pre-
 liminary,  primary,  secondary and tertiary treatment
 using chlorination  and post-aeration.  The John E.
 Egan plant,  presently  nearing operation, will also
 provide tertiary  treatment.

      Both BOD and SS concentrations  easily meet the
 Federal guidelines  of  30 mg/1  (roughly equivalent to
 30 ppm) for  each.   Although more stringent Illinois
 discharge standards for BOD, SS and  ammonia nitrogen
 (see Table II-8)  do not have to be met until December
 31,  1977, most  of the  MSDGC plants are already in com-
 pliance with the  BOD and SS standards, 10 mg/1 and  12 mg/1,
 respectively, and two  plants better  the ammonia nitrogen
 standard.
 (2)   Industrial Waste Loads

      Industrial waste flows sent to MSDGC treatment
 plants total about 195 MGD, broken down as follows:
 135  MGD to the West-Southwest facility, 22 MGD to the
 Northside facility and 38  MGD to the Calumet plant.
 In addition there are other industrial and privately-
 owned treatment plants which discharge in the area
 as shown in Figure A-2 of  Appendix A.   Discharges from
 these sources are subject  to the MSDGC Sewage and Waste
 Control Ordinance and must meet the State of Illinois
 effluent discharge standards shown in Table II-l.
 (3)   Combined-Sewer Overflows

      Chicago area waterways are subject to increased
 pollutant inputs from the combined sewers during periods
 of overflow.  Rainfall runoff in excess of about 0.1
 inches leads to discharge of raw sewage and runoff at
 about 640 outfalls in the area.  Such events occur
 approximately 100 times per year, injecting BOD, SS,
 grease, pathogenic organisms and other pollutants into
 the waterways in large quantities.  During such events
 minimum Illinois standards for restricted use waters
 are not met.
                       11-37

-------
                                              FIGURE 11-10
                                          Locations of MSDGC
                                         Wastewater Treatment
                                              Facilities
     !COOK COUNTY rJ
r
           STR CAMWOOD
           PLANT
      HANOVER
      PARK PtANT
                 JOHNE. A
                 EGAN PLANT
    LEGEND:

    A OPERATION IMMINENT

      OPERATIONAL WASTEWATER
       TREATMENT FACILITIES
                                 11-36

-------
          Water hardness in the lower (Cambro-Ordovician)
     aquifer increases towards the east in the study area
     from about 350 ppm in the vicinity of the Des Plaines
     River to about 600 ppm near Lake Michigan.1  In this
     same area, chloride concentrations also show west to
     east increases from about 40 ppm at the river to 150
     ppm at the lake.1

          During late 1974, water quality tests were per-
     formed on samples obtained from test wells penetrating
     the upper aquifer.  Results of these analyses are sum-
     marized in Table A-6 of Appendix A.  The concentrations
     of many constituents are greater and more variable than
     those reported in Table A-5 for the upper aquifer.  With
     the exception of the test well located on the NE side of
     McCook Quarry (see Figure II-6), water hardness was high
     due to the presence of calcium sulfate.  Water from the
     NE-McCook well was polluted with high concentrations of
     COD, ammonia, surfactants, metals, and coliform bacteria
     which may have originated from a nearby landfill site.
2.1.3  Pollution Sources

     Surface water quality in the area served by the combined-
sewer system is dependent upon inputs from three major
sources;  sanitary outfalls, industrial waste outfalls and
combined-sewer overflows.  Characteristics of these sources
of input and the implications for area water quality are
discussed in the following sections.


     (1)  Municipal Waste Loads

          Six wastewater treatment facilities are currently
     in operation within the MSDGC service area.  They are
     Streamwood, Hanover, Lemont, Northside, West-Southwest
     and Calumet.  Location for these plants and for the
     John E. Egan Water Reclamation Plant, which is currently
     nearing full-scale operation are shown in Figure 11-10.
     Outfalls from the existing facilities are adjacent to
     the plants.  Characteristics of the existing treatment
     Suter, et al, 1959.
                           11-35

-------
                                                   FIGURE  II-9
                                             Projected Groundwater
                                            Deficiencies-'- - Natural
                                               Recharge and Mining
                                           LEGEND:
                                                o
        • ARLINGTON HEIGHTS
                      AREA SUPPLIED WITH
                      LAKE MICHIGAN WATER
YEAR 1990
                                                    YEAR 2000
                                                    YEAR 2020
                                               WATER DEMANDS (MGD) IN EXCESS OF
                                               GROUNDWATER AVAILABLE FROM
                                               NATURAL RECHARGE AND
                                               GROUNDWATER MINING
1    Schicht  and Moench, 1971,
                                11-34

-------
                                            FIGURE II-8
                                      Projected  Groundwater
                                 Deficiencies^-Natural Recharge
                                         LEGEND:
                                             o
       • ARLINGTON HEIGHTS
                     LAKE MICHIGAN WATER
                                                  YEAR 1980
                                                  YEAR 2000
                                                  YEAR 2020
                                             WATER DEMANDS (MGD) IN EXCESS OF
                                             GROUNDWATER AVAILABLE FROM
                                             NATURAL RECHARGE
1    Schicht and Moench, 1971.
                                11-33

-------
which resulted  in a potential yield of 92 MGD  for the
Silurian dolomites of the upper aquifer and  6  MGD for
the glacial  sand  and gravel sediments.1

     Groundwater  use in the area is currently  exten-
sive.  In  1970, pumpage from glacial sand and  gravel
was about  3  to  4  MGD and about 36.5 MGD from shallow
dolomites.   Therefore, about 59 percent of the total
potential  yield was undeveloped.  Pumpage of the lower
aquifer, however, was more extensive and exceeded prac-
tical sustained yield in the vicinity of Summit by
2.3 times.   By  1966, water levels in the Chicago, Des
Plaines, and Elmhurst pumping centers declined below
levels at  the top of the lower  (Cambro-Ordovician)
aquifer, resulting in some dewatering of the Galena-
Platteville  strata.  Figures II-8 and II-9 provide an
indication of groundwater deficiencies that  may result
if water demands  projected through the year  2020 are
realized.  Groundwater conservation and management will
be necessary in the future to optimize use of  ground-
water resources.
 (6)  Chemical  Characteristics

     Tabulated water quality data from  test wells in
 the study  area,  for both the upper and  lower aquifers/
 is presented  in Table A-5 of Appendix A.   Several con-
 stituents  found in the upper Silurian aquifer (e.g.,
 Fe, S04, and  turbidity)  are highly variable.  Water
 from Galena-Platteville strata  (lower aquifer)  has a
 higher mineral content and more uniform water quality
 characteristics than the upper aquifer.   In general,
 water quality  from different geologic series through-
 out the  lower  aquifer does not change significantly
 with depth.
Moench, A.F. and A.P. Visocky,  "A Preliminary Least Cost Study of
Future Groundwater Development  in Northeast Illinois," Illinois
State Water Survey, Circular 101, 1971.

Buschbach, T.C.  and George E. Heim, "Preliminary Geologic Inves-
tigations of Rock Tunnel Sites  for Flood and Pollution Control
in the Greater Chicago Area," Illinois State Geological Survey
Environmental Geology Notes, Number 52, 1972.
                       11-32

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                     Table  II-6
            Permeabilities  of Aquifers
                in the Chicago Areal
Aquifer
Upper
Aquifer
Lower
Aquifer

Geologic
System
Silurian
Cambrian-
Ordovician

Series, Group
or Formation
Niagara-Alexandrian

Galena-Platteville
Glenwood-St. Peter
Prairie du Chien,
Eminence and Potosil
Franconia
Iron ton-Galesvi lie

Thickness
Ft.
394
1,058
328
91
340
127
172

Transmissibility
gpd/ft.
400
•22,400
300
500
17,500
5,500
15,200

Storage
(HEC 4 Bauer
Engineering,
Inc., 1969)



0.00013
0.0005
0.0012
0.000075

Permeability
-4
10 ft/min
1
21
1
5
50
40
82

-4
10 cm/sec
0.5
11
0.4
3
24
20
42

Harza Engineering Company,  "Development of a Flood and Pollution
Control Plan for the Chicagoland Area," Geology and Water Supply,
Technical Report Part 4, December 1972.
                     Table II-7               .
      Results  of Tests  in the Upper Aquifer
                 (Silurian Dolomite)
Well
KM side of
McCook Quarry

sw side cf

McCook Quarry


SE corner of
McCook Quarry



1 mile NE of
McCook Quarry

1 mile south of
Thornton Quarry
Thornton Quarry

Pumping
Recharge
Recharge
Bail

Pi 9


Punping



Bail


Bail
Punping



400
505
790
5




42



15


2.5
440 Av

l-D«y
(gpm/
U 5
10 S*/
5. Si/





0. 1



.


-
3.9


Of
30,150

190

'


295



530


16
18,900


Coefficient
1.4 x 10*4

4.0 x 10~5
_5
I 0 x 10


1.3 x 10~5



1.0 x 10"*


1.0 x 10~4
2 4 x 10-4


Widespread
homogeneous
conditions


negative boundary
about I/ mile
S of ait
Slight I aky aquifer
conditio s, no
hydrauli connection
w/river; coefficient
0-50062 gpd/ft1
Partially
penetrating
monitoring wel 1

At least two negative
test well

Upper half of Edgewood Foraa-
and Harkgraf Members
Limited, sporadic zones in

middle Edgewood
Romao-MarXgraf contact

Lower Kankakee down 75" thru
most of oeadwood (extremely
permeable)


Upper Silurian dolomite


Interreaf Racine
Racine reef


290-340'
310-255
45-90

J07-317
182-192





'^-133 and
149-154

Upper 100'
Top Of rock
-240' and
100-140 a
test weljj
HEC, 1975.
                         11-31

-------
     Numerous  aquifer tests have been  conducted in the
area along  the proposed tunnel route,  and various
aquifer properties observed near the McCook and Thornton
Quarries  are  summarized in Tables  II~6 and II-7.  During
aquifer testing,  it was found that horizontal (bedding
plane) permeability was significantly  more pronounced
than vertical  (joint controlled) permeability.

     According to Table II-6, the  overall transmissi-
vity of the lower aquifer  (Cambro-Ordovician) is 22,400
gpd/ft.   This  value is lower than  the  sum of the trans-
missivities of individual units due to the hydraulic
connection  between the units.  Additional testing in
the Chicago area  indicated that transmissivity of the
lower aquifer  ranged from 10,800 to 20,600 gpd/ft and
averaged  about 16,000 for 14 wells.^

     While  Figure II-7 shows the location of the McCook
and Thornton  Quarries, Table II-7  points out the variable
transmissivity of the dolomites in the upper aquifer
where values  from 16 to 30,150 gpd/ft  were obtained.
This is typical of fracture and bedding place permea-
bility conditions.
 (5)  Water  Supply

     Results of previous studies  indicate that deep
aquifers  in Cook County are capable  of producing about
25 MGD.2  This value is based on  an  average aquifer
thickness of 800 feet  (above the  top of the Ironton-
Gal'esville  formations of lower Cambrian age)  and an
average specific yield of 0.05.   The upper aquifer in
Cook County has a total potential yield of 108 MGD.3
These  estimates are consistent with  previous  calculations
Suter, Max, et al., "Preliminary Report on Groundwater Resources
of the Chicago Region, Illinois," State Water Survey and State
Geological Survey, Cooperative Groundwater Report 1, 1959.

Schichc, R.J., and Allen Moench, "Projected Groundwater Deficiencies
in Northeastern Illinois, 1980-2020," Illinois State Water Survey,
Circular 101, 1971.

Schaeffer, R.R. and A.J. Zeizel, "The Water Resources in North-
eastern Illinois," Illinois State Water Survey, Circular 101,  1966.
                       11-30

-------
     significant trend has been an overall decline  in  water
     levels in the lower aquifer as a result of  pumpage.
     The average decline was 15 feet per year  for the  period
     1961 to 1966, and 9 feet per year from 1966 to 1971.1
     Water levels declined in the upper aquifer  between
     McCook Quarry and LaGrange about 5 feet annually  due
     to aquifer overdevelopment.2

          Seasonal fluctuations in water levels  generally
     reflect climatological conditions as well as pumpage.
     From March 1972 to March 1973, precipitation in the
     Chicagoland area was 33 percent above normal and  the
     average rise of water levels observed in  an 86-square-
     mile study area in the northeast part of  Cook  County
     was about 3.4 feet.3  Generally, daily fluctuations in
     water levels reflect changes in the pumpage from  pro-
     duction wells and changes  in barometric pressure.
     (4)  Aquifer Hydraulics

          Flow of groundwater through  the  aquifers is largely
     controlled by secondary permeability,  which is affected
     by joints, fractures, and bedding planes.   Hydraulic
     conductivity, therefore, is  variable  spatially, and
     some of the openings  in the  dolomites  have been solu-
     tion-enlarged.  Generally, primary permeability and
     porosity in the dolomites are  very low.   In both the
     upper and lower aquifers, permeability exhibits a de-
     crease toward Lake Michigan.   Silurian dolomites, for
     example, have permeabilities of  1 to  10~4 ft/min near
     the lake and increase westward to about 10 to 200xlO~4
     ft/min.
     Sasman, R.T., C.R. Benson, G.L. Dzurisin and N.E. Risk,  "Water
     Level Decline and Pumpage in Deep Wells in Northern Illinois,
     1966-1971," Illinois State Water Survey, Circular 113, 1973.
2    HEC, 1975.

3    Ibid.
                            11-29

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*  -t
                  V. DESCRIPTION  OF THE  PROPOSED ACTION

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        V.   DESCRIPTION OF THE PROPOSED ACTION
5.1  THE SELECTED PLAN

     TARP was selected among all alternatives as the most
feasible plan to solve the flooding and pollution problems
of Chicago.  The plan is a composite of several alternatives
(G, H, J, and S) modified to provide optimum benefits for the
lowest cost and minimum adverse environmental impacts.  TARP
was first described in the FCCC's report of August 1972.
Refinements were incorporated as field studies and subsur-
face exploration programs were completed.  The studies and
programs, however, did not change the original TARP concept,
but only incorporated design revisions to optimize overall
system effectiveness.

     Essential to full utilization of the design capacity of
TARP and, therefore, to the realization of maximum benefits
of TARP is the full participation of the combined-sewer
communities that are tributary to TARP.  This participation
means not only connecting excess overflows to TARP but also
upgrading combined-sewer systems to transport flows from a
five-year storm to TARP connecting structures, a condition
assumed in the design of TARP and in subsequent analyses of
ultimate water quality benefits.

     TARP was developed to enable collection of storm run-
off from urban  communities within the MSDGC's combined-sewer
service area.   The polluted runoff water will be diverted
and conveyed to storage reservoirs.  When favorable dry wea-
ther conditions prevail, the wastewater will be pumped  from
the reservoirs  into  conveyance tunnels and transported  to
appropriate sewage treatment facilities.  Based on rainfall
records  of the  past  21 years,  the plan is designed to have  the
capability of handling runoff volumes equivalent to all ex-
cept three of the severest storms recorded.

     The four systems that are part of the Tunnel and Reser-
voir Plan are:  Mainstream, Calumet, Lower Des Plaines, and
O'Hare, which are described in the following sections.  Each
system is a completely independent operating unit with  col-
lection, storage, conveyance, and treatment capabilities.
Although this chapter summarizes the entire TARP, the objec-
tive of this EIS  is  to assess the effects of those tunnel
portions of the plan directly related to water pollution
                            V-l

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      control.   For  the  purposes of the impact analysis, this
V     statement  describes  and evaluates the conveyance tunnels
      system  and its subsystems  only.   Figure V-l shows the pres-
t     ent  routes and layout  of the  TARP systems relative to the
      MSDGC combined-sewer service  area, the MSDGC overall service
      area, and  Cook County.


      5.1.1   TARP Systems

          Each  of the TARP  systems (Mainstream,  Calumet,  Lower
      Des  Plaines, and O'Hare) consists of  three  component systems:
      reservoirs, conveyance  tunnels,  and sewage  treatment plants.
      For  the TARP project as a  whole,  the  planned component sys-
      tems include three storage reservoirs,  approximately 120
      miles of conveyance  tunnels,  and four sewage treatment
      plants.  McCook, the main  storage reservoir, will have a
      capacity of about  84,000 ac-ft and will be  located at
      McCook  Quarry,  which is adjacent to the Sanitary and Ship Canal
      and  the Des Plaines  River.  One  of the  other two reservoirs,
      will be located near the northwest boundary of O'Hare Inter-
      national Airport and the other approximately six miles south
      of the  existing Calumet Sewage Treatment Works.   The O'Hare
      reservoir  will  be  a  small  surface storage reservoir  with a
      capacity of 2,700  ac-ft and Thornton  Quarry, the Calumet
      reservoir  will  have  a much larger storage volume of  about
      39,000  ac-ft.

          The conveyance  tunnels,  located  150 to 325  feet below
      ground  level,  will be constructed under existing waterways
      or public  rights-of-way, and  within,  for most of the route,
      the  Silurian limestone  (dolomite)  geologic  formation.
      Mining  machines or "moles"  will  be used to  excavate  most of
      the  tunnels, which presently  range from 10  to 30 feet in
      diameter.1 The tunnels will  be  concrete-lined as required
      in certain areas.  The  lining thickness will range from 7
      to 23 inches,  based  on  one-half  inch  per foot of tunnel dia-
      meter and  two  additional inches.   For the entire 120-mile
      length, the total wastewater  capacity of the conveyance
      tunnels is approximately 9,200 ac-ft.

          The combined-sewer wastewater collected in the  tunnels
      (and later the reservoirs)  of the three TARP systems, O'Hare,
      Calumet, and Mainstream are transported to their respective
      treatment  plants,  O'Hare,  Calumet, and West-Southwest, for
      complete treatment.  Capacity equal to approximately 0.5
      average dry weather  flow of each plant will be available
      during  dry weather for  continuous treatment of TARP  flows, as
           The diameter expressed is an equivalent diameter,  since tunnels
           will be somewhat oval-shaped and not a true circle.
                                 V-2

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            FIGURE V-l
     Tunnel and Reservoir Plan
     System Layout and Routes
V-3

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summarized below  (the plant capacities are future design,
not existing capacities) :

                          Nominal     Available for
                         ADWF, MGD      TARP, MGD

       West-Southwest       1358            679
       Calumet               354            177
       O'Hare               _ 7_2             36
                            1784            892

A water reclamation plant, the John F. Egan plant is pre-
sently under construction and will have a capacity of 30 MGD.


5.1.2  TARP Subsystems

    The subsystems common to all TARP systems include col-
lecting structures, drop shafts,  and pumping stations.  In
addition, the groundwater protection program and the tunnel
grouting program are considered common subsystems.  This
section presents a brief description of these subsystems.


    (1)  Collecting Structures

         New intercepting structures to collect existing
    combined-sewer overflows are  shown in Figure V-2.  The.
    collecting structure consists of a diversion unit at
    the overflow point and a connecting pipe to the entrance
    chamber of the drop shaft.  Most of the new structures
    will be located near curbs or low points of major pub-
    lic thoroughfares.  For collecting flows from existing
    interceptors,  the structure consists of an overflow
    weir in addition to the diversion unit.   The weir will
    allow the flow from existing  interceptors to pass
    through the connecting pipe along with the flow from
    the new structure.
    (2)   Drop Shafts

         The drop shaft accepts the flow from the collec-
    ting structures and diverts this flow to th^ conveyance
    tunnel.   Figure V-2 illustrates the type EM15 drop
    shaft which is one of the two drop shaft designs pro-
    posed for the TARP systems.  The EM15 drop shaft will
    have a dividing wall with slots to aerate the incoming
    water.   Since the fall distance of the incoming water
    is expected to range from 200 to 280 feet, aeration of
    the water will reduce the impact at the bottom of the
                            V-4

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                                            FIGURE  V-2
                                          EM15 Drop Shaft
                                     and  Collecting Structure
COLLECTING
STRUCTURE
AIR VENT CHAMBER
                                           AIR SHAFT
                                               TOP OF SILURIAN DOLOMITE FORMATION
                                                 DEAERATION AREA
                                                        CONVEYANCE TUNNEL
                                 V-5

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drop shaft.  The dividing wall of the shaft allows air
to enter or to escape on one side and water to flow in
on the other, larger side.

     The other drop shaft design is the DW4 type which
features a separate air vent shaft instead of a dividing
wall.  Although the concept and design features of both
drop shaft types are similar, the purpose and the phy-
sical dimensions are different.  The EM15 drop shaft
has a finished inside diameter of 4 to 9 feet and will
be used for low flow rate areas.  The DW4 has a 10 to
17 foot diameter and will be used for high flows.
 (3)  Pumping Stations

      Pumping stations will be constructed underground
 at the end of all conveyance tunnels and adjacent to
 all storage reservoirs.  These stations permit dewater-
 ing of the tunnels and reservoirs at a rate which will
 allow a full tunnel or reservoir to be emptied within
 two to three days.  If dewatering can be accomplished
 within this time, the need for aeration facilities is
 eliminated, thus saving some treatment costs.  In addi-
 tion to dewatering, the pumping stations will be used
 to transport bottom sludge dredged from reservoirs to
 treatment facilities.

      The capacity of each pump installed in a station
 is rated at 265 cfs, or 171 MGD.   The number of pumps
 necessary for each station depends on the expected
 maximum water inflow rate of a particular tunnel or
 reservoir.  The pumps are driven by variable-speed
 electric motors powered by Commonwealth Edison sub-
 stations located in the vicinity of the stations.
 The lift-height  (static head) requirements of the
 pumps, which provide an indication of pump depth, is
 expected to range from 60 to 300 feet.  The actual
 requirement will depend on operating conditions en-
 countered when the TARP systems are implemented.
 (4)  Groundwater Protection Program

      Groundwater infiltration into the component sys-
 tems (tunnels and reservoirs) may occur at rates signi-
 ficant enough to deplete aquifers used as water supply
 resources.  To protect these resources, an aquifer
 protection program has been incorporated in TARP.  The
 program consists of grouting, installation of recharge
 wells,  and tunnel lining as required to limit ground-
 water inflow rates to a maximum of 1.5 MGD, or 2.3 cfs.
                       V-6

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     This maximum  rate  limit  is based on  the  established
     500 gallons per  inch of  tunnel diameter,  per mile  of
     tunnel  per average day.   In  tunnel segments requiring
     a  number  of recharge wells,  they will  be constructed
     approximately 1,000 feet apart.  The areas where re-
     charge  wells  may be needed are described in Section  8.1.2,
     Part  (2).  The wells will be used as a means of inject-
     ing potable water  or water of equivalent quality into
     the aquifer to increase  the  piezometric  or hydraulic
     pressure  level.  Thus, the aquifer will  be replenished
     to its  original  level.   In addition, wastewater exfil-
     tration or outflow from  the  conveyance tunnels will  be
     prevented.  To monitor the extent of groundwater infil-
     tration and wastewater exfiltration, observation wells
     will be installed, and the sampling  program to be  fol-
     lowed  is  described in Section 10.1.4,  Part  (2).
     (5)   Grouting Program

          The objective of the grouting program is to achieve
     maximum penetration and a uniform grout spread for the
     purpose of effectively reducing groundwater infiltration
     and wastewater exfiltration.   The pattern and orienta-
     tion of grout holes in the TARP conveyance tunnels will
     depend on the observed amount of groundwater infiltra-
     tion.  In areas with relatively high inflow rates, an
     impermeable zone at least equal to the tunnel diameter
     will be provided around the perimeter of the tunnel.

          Cement grout, which is a mixture of cement and
     water, will be injected under pressure into a drilled
     hole that intersects a source of seepage such as an
     open joint, fault, or bedding plane.  The grout mix
     will be composed of cement, sand, and water in varying
     proportions.  Liquifiers will also be used as required
     to counteract normal grout shrinkage, to retard grout
     setting time when pumping at low rates, and to increase
     flowability of thick grout mixes used at high inflow
     areas.  The water-cement ratio of the grout to be used
     will vary from location to location within the tunnel
     and may even vary at a given location.  The range in
     water-cement ratio by volume is about 0.6:1 to 10:1.
5.2  THE LOWER DBS PLAINES SYSTEM

     The components of the TARP Des Plaines Tunnel system
include:  one wastewater treatment plant,  over 26 miles of
                            V-7

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conveyance tunnels, and a proposed storage reservoir.  The
system layout is displayed in Figure V-l.  This figure shows
that the system consists of one main tunnel and four branches
The main tunnel stretches in a north-south direction, par-
allel to the direction of flow of the Des Plaines River.
This tunnel extends from 59th Street north to Thacker Street.
The four branch tunnels include:

          A branch that extends westward from the main tun-
          nel along Roosevelt Road

          A branch that extends westward from the main tun-
          nel along Salt Creek

          A branch that extends eastward from the main tun-
          nel into the community of Riverside

          A branch that will extend the existing 13A rock
          tunnel farther west from 59th Street into the
          community of Western Springs.

Figure V-3 provides an overall profile view of the Des
Plaines system, showing some major streets and tunnel
elevations.

     The 26 miles of conveyance tunnels will be constructed
over a period of 6 years.  The system will include 55 drop
shafts and will have a storage volume of approximately 1,662
acre-ft.  The construction schedule of the system is shown
in Figure V-4.

     The wastewater treatment plant associated with the Des
Plaines Tunnel system is the West Southwest Sewage Treat-
ment Works.  The plant is located in the center of Cook
County in Stickney, Illinois, near 59th Street.  Its pro-
posed capacity after expansion will be 1,358 MGD, and it
will serve both the Des Plaines System and the southern
half of the Mainstream Tunnel system.

     The combined-sewer overflow conveyed by the system's
tunnels will be stored in the proposed reservoir to be lo-
cated at McCook Quarry.  This reservoir will also store
overflow wastewater conveyed by the Mainstream system.  The
storage capacity planned for this reservoir is 84,000 acre-
ft., and the projected wastewater inflow from both of these
systems can be stored for a period of up to 9 months.  Aera-
tion systems will be installed in the storage reservoir to
control odor and septicity.
                           V-8

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                                                                      FIGURE  V-3
                                                 Profile  of  the  Des  Plaines  Tunnel  System
 g  100-.
THOUSANDS Of- FEET 	1

        STORAGE
                                 'LOWER DES PLAINES SYSTEM!

                                            OES PLAINES RIVER SYSTEM
      •0 CCD ELEVATION EQUALS 579 48' M S L
                                d  200 -'
                                       SILURIAN DOLOMITE
                                      SALT CREEK BRANCH
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DITCH
                                                                               CCD
                                                                               M 5 L
CHICAGO CITY DATUM-
MEAN SEA LEVEL
                                           DES PLAINES RIVER BRANCHES
                                                V-9

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             FIGURE V-4
         Des Plaines System
        Construction Schedule
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-------
     The portion of the Des Plaines system addressed by
this Environmental Impact Statement is described in de-
tail in the following sections:

          Component System
          Component Subsystems.

The component system discussed is the Des Plaines conveyance
tunnels only, and does not include the reservoir or the
wastewater treatment plant.  The subsystems described are
those associated with the conveyance tunnels and include
drop shafts, collecting structures, and pumping stations.
5.2.1  Component System

     The total area served by the Des Plaines Conveyance
Tunnel system is 36 square miles.  Of this area, 3 square
miles is located within the city limits of Chicago.  The
remaining 33 square miles include all or part of the follow-
ing suburban communities:  Broadview, Brookfield, Des Plaines,
Elmwood Park, Forest Park, Franklin Park, Harwood Heights,
La Grange Park, Lyons, Maywood, Melrose Park, Norridge,
North Riverside, Park Ridge, River Forest, River Grove,
Riverside, Rosemont, Schiller Park and Western Springs.

     The overall length of the Des Plaines  unnel system is
26.4 miles; the total number of subsystems includes 55 drop
shafts, 5 construction shafts, 10 access shafts, and
pumping station.  The tunnel will be excavated using full-
faced, deisel driven, mechanical boring machines, or moles,
and the inside diameters will range from 10 to 33 feet.
Approximately 70 percent of the tunnel length will be lined.
The lined portion of the tunnel will have a 12-inch concrete
wall.  In the unlined portions, rock bolting and grouting
will be done to assure rock bed stability and to minimize
infiltration of groundwater or exfiltration of wastewater.
The average excavation rate for the Des Plaines tunnels is
40 feet per day, based on a 24-hour work day and a 6-day
work week.

     Until the capacity of the West Southwest Sewage Treat-
ment Works is expanded to 1,358 MGD, the dewatering rate of
the Des Plaines conveyance tunnels is restricted to the
treatment works' existing capacity of 866 MGD, or 1,340 cfs.
The 866-MGD dewatering rate results in a tunnel flushing
velocity of 6.7 feet per second or greater for a period of
about 4 1/2 hours.  Thus, the dewatering cycle provides
                           V-ll

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self-cleaning for the tunnel system and minimizes accumula-
tion of bottom sludge, debris, and other benthal deposits.

     Several features characterize specific tunnel segments
within the Des Plaines system.  To describe these features,
the system has been divided into four segments:  59th-to-
Cermak, Cermak-to-Fullerton, Fullerton-to-Prairie, and the
13A Extension.
     (1)  Fifty-Ninth Street-to-Cermak Road

          This section of the Des Plaines Tunnel system has
     an overall length of 37,200 feet, or 7.1 miles.  Of
     this total length, 14,700 feet (2.8 miles) will have
     a finished diameter of 10 feet and 22,500 feet (4.3
     miles)  will have a finished diameter of 33 feet.   This
     tunnel section will service an area of 6.9 square
     miles with a population just over 52,100, and has a
     total storage capacity of 523 acre-ft.

          A map showing the proposed tunnel route in rela-
     tion to the areas major thoroughfares, railways,  water-
     ways, and communities is displayed in Figure V-5.  As
     the figure shows, the 59th-to-Cermak section has  three
     major parts:

               The main tunnel extends in a northerly  di-
               rection from 59th Street to Cermak Road,
               parallel to the direction of flow of the Des
               Plaines River.  This tunnel branch is 33 feet
               in diameter.

               One branch begins at the intersection of the
               main tunnel and Ogden Avenue and extends
               northwest along Salt Creek for a distance
               of approximately 8,000 feet.  This branch
               tunnel is 10 feet in diameter.

               The other branch section extends in an  easterly
               direction from the main tunnel into Riverside.
               This tunnel branch is approximately 6,700 feet
               long and is 10 feet in diameter.

          Based on the geologic and hydraulic characteris-
     tics of the area, these tunnels will be aligned pri-
     marily within the Joliet and Kankakee rock formations.
     These formations consist for the most part of Silurian
     dolomite.   The tunnels will have an average slope of
                           V-12

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                                                         FIGURE  V-5
                                             59th Street  to  Cermak  Road
N-
                                                 LEGEND:

                                                  A Conitruction Shaft

                                                  J^ Drop Shaft

                                                  ^1 Access Shaft
DES PLAINES TUNNELSYSTEM
  59th Street to Cermak Road
              Proposed Tunne!
                                        V-13

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1.34 feet per 1,000 feet with a minimum rock covering
of 230 feet, and they will all be lined with concrete.

     One 30-foot diameter construction shaft will be
located in the 59th-to-Cermak segment of the Des Plaines
tunnel route.  This shaft will be at the intersection
of Plainfield Road and First Avenue in the community
of Lyons.  Construction equipment, machines, and ma-
terial will be transported into"the tunnel through
this shaft.  During the tunnel construction phase,
rock and spoil material will be removed through the
same shaft.
(2)  Cermack Road-to-Fullerton Avenue Tunnel

     The Cermak-to-Fullerton segment of the tunnel
system has an overall length of 37,400 feet (7.1 miles)
This segment of the system is composed of two tunnels:

          The main tunnel extends along the Des Plaines
          River from Cermak Road to Fullerton Avenue.
          This tunnel is 33 feet in diameter,  has a
          length of 26,000 feet (4.9 miles), and is
          concrete-lined.

          A branch tunnel extends westward from the
          main tunnel along Roosevelt Road to Pusheck
          Road.  This tunnel is 11,400 feet (2.2 miles)
          in length and has a diameter of 10 feet.
          It is not lined with concrete.

     These tunnels will service a total area of 11.8
square miles, with a population of more than 117,000.
The total storage capacity of the tunnels will be 594
acre-ft.  A map of this segment of the Des Plaines
Tunnel system is displayed in Figure V-6.

     The tunnels will be aligned predominantly in the
Joliet and Kankakee dolomite formations.  This align-
ment is based on the area's geologic and hydraulic
features.  The tunnels will have an average slope of
1.34 feet per thousand feet, with a rock cover rang-
ing from 200 feet to 235 feet.

     Excavation moles and other construction machines
as well as equipment and material will be transported
through one construction shaft.  This construction
shaft will be 30 feet in diameter, and will be located
                     V-14

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                  FIGURE  V-6
    Cermak  Road to  Fullerton Avenue
           LEGEND-

            ^f Construction Shaft

            A Drop Shaft

            ^1 Access Shaft
DES PLAINES TUNNEL SYSTEM
 Cermak Road to Fullerton Road
              Proposed Tunnel

              Forest Preserve Storage Site
V-15

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at the end of the Cermak-to-Fullerton tunnel, where
the segment intersects the 59th-to-Cermak segment.
That location lies in the community of North Riverside
During the tunnel construction phase, rock and spoil
material will be removed through this same shaft.
(3)  Fullerton Avenue-to-Prairie Avenue Tunnel

     This segment of the TARP Des Plaines Tunnel sys-
tem is comprised of a conveyance tunnel which extends
from Fullerton Avenue north to Thacker Street.  At
Thacker Street, the conveyance tunnels intersect a
combined sewer line that extends further north to
Prairie Avenue.

     The Fullerton-to-Prairie tunnel section will have
finished diameters of 28  feet for a  length of  26,400
feet (5 miles), 22 feet for a length of 7,400 feet
(1.4 miles), and 20 feet for a length of 13,000 feet
(2.4 miles).  The slope of the tunnel varies from 1.0
to 1.4 feet per 1,000 feet, and its rock cover will
vary from 140 to 220 feet.  As in the case of the
other tunnel segments of the Des Plaines Tunnel system,
these tunnels will be aligned primarily in the Joliet
and Kankakee dolomite rock formations.  The lengths
of tunnel which are concrete lined or unlined are as
follows:
   Tunnel
  Diameter        Length (ft)        Surface

    28 '0"            26,400          Unlined
    22 '0"             4,200          Unlined
    22 '0"             3,200          Lined
    20'0"            13,000          Lined

     Figure v-7 is a map of the Fullerton-to-Prairie
branch of the tunnel system.  The map shows the re-
lationship of the tunnels to the waterways, railways,
and major thoroughfares in the area.  This system seg-
ment will service an area of 14.2 square miles with a
population greater than 112,620 persons.  The total
storage capacity of the system will be 512 acre-ft.

     As can be seen on the map, this tunnel segment
also includes two construction shafts.  One is located
at the intersection of the tunnel with the Kennedy
                     V-16

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             FIGURE V-7
         Fullerton Avenue to
           Prairie Avenue
V-17

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     Expressway, in the community of Rosemont, and the other
     is located in Fullerton Woods  (in the community of River
     Grove) near the intersection of the tunnel with Fuller-
     ton Avenue.  Both construction shafts will be 30 feet in
     diameter, and they will 4be used to introduce excavation
     machinery and equipment into the tunnels and to remove
     rock and spoil from the tunnels during construction.
          The 13A Extension

          The 13A Rock Tunnel is an existing rock tunnel lo-
     cated near the southern end of the proposed Des Plaines
     Tunnel system.  This rock tunnel extends in a westward
     direction along 47th Street from Joliet Road to East
     Avenue and north along East Avenue to Elm Avenue.  The
     13A Extension consists of two lines.  One would extend
     from the intersection of East Avenue and Elm Avenue
     northward to Ogden Avenue, then westward along Ogden
     Avenue to Central Avenue.  A branch line would extend
     from the intersection of Ogden Avenue and Edgewood Ave-
     nue north to the point where Monroe Avenue intersects
     the Salt Creek.  A map of this system is shown in
     Figure V-8.

          The total length of the 13A Extension is 18,100
     feet, or 3.4 miles.  The entire tunnel system segment
     is to be 10 feet in diameter and concrete-lined.  The
     tunnels will be aligned in the Joliet and Kankakee dolo-
     mite rock fomations.  The slope of the tunnels will be
     1 foot per 1,000 feet, and they will have a minimum rock
     cover of 180 feet.

          This segment of the tunnel system includes one,
     30 foot diameter construction shaft.  The shaft will
     be located at the intersection of Ogden Avenue and
     Sawyer Avenue, in the community of LaGrange.   This
     shaft will support the transportation of machinery,
     equipment, and spoil associated with the excavation
     of this segment of the tunnel system.
5.2.2  Component Subsystems

     The subsystems of the Des Plaines Tunnel system in-
clude drop shafts, access shafts, pumping stations, and
collecting structures.  In this section, the sizes, lo-
cations, and number of these subsystems are described for
each of the four tunnel segments identified in the previous
section.
                           V-18

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            FIGURE V-8
           13A Extention
V-19

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(1)   Fifty-Ninth Steet-to-Cermak Road

     The primary purpose of drop shafts is to intercept
wastewater overflows and transfer them to the tunnel
system.  Toward this end, 13 drop shafts will be con-
structed along the tunnel route.  The finished diameters
of these drop shafts will vary from 4 to 9 feet as sum-
marized below:

     Number of Shafts        Finished Diameter

            6                      9'0"
            3                      7 ' 2 "
            1                      5 ' 8 "
            3                      4 ' 0 "

This segment of the system will also include four ac-
cess shafts, all of which will have a finished diamter
of 4 feet.  Figure V-5 shows the location of all of the
drop shafts and access shafts in this segment, and
Table V-l summarizes the MSDGC identification numbers,
locations, and sizes of the drop shafts.

     The pumping station for the entire Des Plaines
Tunnel system will be constructed underground near the
West Southwest Sewage Treatment Works, at the down-
stream (southern)  end of this tunnel segment.  Four
pumps will be installed approximately 40 feet below
the tunnel bottom elevation, and each pump will have
a rated capacity of 265 cfs or about 171 MGD.  For
removing any infiltrated groundwater from the tunnel,
a 5,000 GPM capacity pump will be installed at the
station.

     The 59th-to-Cermak tunnel segment will consist of
21 collecting structures to intercept combined-sewer
overflows.  Twenty drop shaft connections will inter-
cept the overflow points directly, and one overflow
connection will lead to an existing interceptor.  This
overflow connection will require the construction of a
conduit of sufficient size to allow for maximum flow
to the interceptor in the event that the existing
sewer line is filled to capacity.
(2)   Cermak Avenue-to-Fullerton Avenue

     The Cermak-to-Fullerton segment of the tunnel
system will have a total of 17 drop shafts.  The finished
                      V-20

-------








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-------
diameters of these shafts vary from 15 feet to 5 feet
8 inches.  The numbers and sizes of these shafts are
as follows:

    Number of Shafts        Finished Diameter

           1                     15'0"
           8                      9 ' 0 "
           2                      7 ' 2 "
           6                      5 ' 8 "

This segment of the system will also include two access
shafts, both of which will be 4 feet in diameter.  The
locations of the drop shafts and access shafts in this
segment of the system are shown in Figure V-6.  A sum-
mary of the drop shafts describing location, size, and
MSDGC identification number, is given in Table V-l.

     This portion of the tunnel will not have a separ-
ate pumping station.  All the wastewater overflows
will be conveyed by gravity to the main pumping station
located near the West Southwest Sewage Treatment Works.

     The tunnel segment design includes a total of 27
collecting structures intercepting the combined-sewer
overflows.  Twenty-two of these drop shaft connections
will intercept overflows directly, and five will be re-
lief structures for existing interceptors.  All exist-
ing overflow connections will be maintained to enable
relief of the combined-sewer system when the tunnels
become filled.
(3)   Fullerton Avenue-to-Prairie Avenue

     This segment of the tunnel system will have a
total of 21 drop shafts.  These shafts will range in
size from 4 feet to 15 feet in diameter.  The break-
down by size is as follows:

    Number of Shafts        Finished Diameter

           1                     15'0"
           4                     12'0"
           6                      9 ' 0 "
           7                      7 ' 2 "
           1                      5 ' 8 "
           2                      4 ' 0 "
                      V-22

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This tunnel route will also include two access shafts,
both of which will be 4 feet in diameter.  The location
of these shafts is shown in Figure V-7, and drop shaft
data are summarized in Table V-l.

     This portion of the tunnel system will not have a
pumping station.  All wastewater overflows will be con-
veyed by gravity to the pumping station near the West
Southwest Sewage Treatment Works.

     This tunnel system segment also includes a total
of 35 collecting structures to intercept combined-
sewer overflows.  Thirty-one of these are drop shaft
connections which intercept overflows directly, and
the remaining four will be relief structures for exist-
ing interceptors.
 (4)  The 13A Extension

     Four drop shafts to intercept and transfer waste-
water overflows to the tunnel system and two access
shafts will be constructed along this tunnel branch.
The finished diameters of these drop shafts will vary
as shown below:

    Number of Shafts        Finished Diameter

           1                      9 ' 0 "
           3                      5'8"

Figure V-8 shows the location of the four drop shafts
and two access shafts along the tunnel routes, and
Table V-l summarizes the number, locations, and sizes
of the drop shafts.

     The 13A Extension will consist of six collecting
structures.  All of these will be drop shaft connec-
tions which intercept overflows directly.

     This portion of the tunnel system, as in the
case of the two preceding segments of the system, will
depend upon wastewater conveyance by gravity to the
pumping station near the West Southwest Sewage Treat-
ment Works.
                      V-23

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5.3  Des Plaines Tunnel System Operation, Maintenance, and
     Management

     This section describes the important operation, main-
tenance, and management steps necessary to maintain the tun-
nels and ensure their proper functioning.  This section also
provides estimates of the operation and maintenance costs,
which are treated separately in the following sections.


5.3.1  System Operation

     The operation of the tunnel system has one basic mode
during wet weather conditions, namely the dewatering of the
tunnel at a rate which does not overburden the treatment
capacity of the West Southwest Sewage Treatment Works  (WSWSTW).
In other words, the flow rate of water pumped from the tun-
nels plus the flow rate of water from other sewers which
connect to the WSWSTW must not exceed the allowable peak
flow through the WSWSTW.  The operator of the pumping sta-
tion uses two or more of the four variable speed pumps
simultaneously to set the dewatering rate so that total flow
through the WSWSTW will be less than or equal to design flow.
When required, such as during periods of extremely wet weather,
and during subsequent full tunnel flow, the dewatering rate
can be increased so that tunnel flow through the treatment
system is at allowable peak flow.  Thus, in order to control
the dewatering pump rate, the operator must constantly moni-
tor the allowable flow rate through the WSWSTW.  This allow-
able rate will depend upon three variables:

          The extent of "down-time" for scheduled maintenance
          The frequency of manfunctions
          The extent of capacity to be added to the plant.

     Another factor setting pump rates is the maximum tun-
nel inflow rate.  Since the tunnels can become pressurized
in the beginning of a large storm event, the dewatering rate
must be slightly greater than the maximum inflow rate to
prevent pressurization.

     High dewatering rates are necessary to achieve velocities
of tunnel water which will scour sediment from the tunnel
floor.  When dewatering time is increased, removal of sedi-
ment is increased as well.  To remove more sediment, the
operator can increase dewatering time from about 4 1/2 hours
to 8 hours by directing about 240 cfs of canal water to a
drop shaft upstream of the pumping station.  The operator
can pump this canal water to the WSWSTW.
                           V-24

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     During dry weather periods,  only water infiltrating
from aquifers will flow into the tunnel.  To rid the tun-
nel of this water, the pumping station operator will use a
separate pump with a capacity of about 5,000 gpm to lift the
water to the treatment system.  This dewatering of infil-
trating groundwater could probably be made automatic if
necessary.  To perform the dewatering manually, the operator
must shut the pump off when there is not enough water to
warrant its use and keep it shut off in wet weather when the
main dewatering pumps are in use.

     A routine task that is critical to system operation
is the checking and testing of power sources to the pumps.
Lack of power or loss of power during wet weather could re-
sult in polluting overflows at interceptor connections,
drop shafts, and outfalls.
5.3.2  Maintenance Steps

     Maintenance of various components in the Des Plaines
system can be divided into four categories.

      (1)  Equipment Maintenance

          Pumps, pump controls, and power supply equipment
     must be checked and maintained routinely.  Preventive
     maintenance procedures should be applied to equipment
     used for emergencies or other needs critical to the
     proper functioning of the tunnel system.
      (2)  Repair to Tunnel Lining

          Those areas of the tunnels which are lined, bolted,
     grouted, or otherwise stabilized, will require periodic
     checking for leaks and structural faults, and repaired
     as necessary.  In addition the possibility of monitor-
     ing and recharge well plugging as a result of grouting
     should be assessed during the inspection.
      (3)  Maintenance of Surface Structures

          Permanent surface structures will be built at con-
      struction shaft, drop shaft, and pumping station lo-
      cations.  These structures will require routine main-
      tenance to assure aesthetic appeal, structural soundness
      and safety for workers and the public.  Access roads
      must be kept in repair as well.
                           V-25

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      (4)  Tunnel Sludge  Cleaning

          The tunnels  will  be designed so that dewatering
     will scour the  tunnel  floor.   However, some sludge
     may accumulate  over a  period  of several years and may
     eventually require  removal.  If removal becomes neces-
     sary, the deposits  will be gathered with a dragline,
     lifted to the surface  through construction shafts,
     and transported by  truck to appropriate disposal areas.
     The material is not expected  to be odiferous or dif-
     ficult to dispose of in an environmentally sound manner,
     because it will probably be composed mostly of sand,
     and partly of silt  and benthal deposits.
5.3.3  Operation and Maintenance Costs

     The best estimate  of  operation and maintenance costs
at the time of publication of this report is an annual
equivalent cost of  $2.46 million.   This estimate is based
on the one given in the Environmental Impact Statement
prepared for the MSDGC  in  November 1973. J-  The total TARP
equivalent annual cost  was given as $13.6 million, which
included total equivalent  annual operating and maintenance
costs, replacement  of equipment costs, and water costs for
aquifer protection.  The estimate of $2.46 million for the
Des Plaines Tunnel  system  was derived as the product of the
ratio of tunnel volume  for this segment to total TARP tun-
nel volume times the total cost of $13.6 million.2  The ra-
tio of tunnel volumes was  used because pumping station opera-
tion and maintenance costs are proportional to dewatering or
tunnel volumes, and these  pumping costs far outweigh any
other operation and maintenance costs.  The derived estimate
is somewhat conservative,  because the total estimate includes
the water costs for aquifer protection by recharge wells.
Recharge wells have been found to be no longer required for
most of the Phase I tunnel length, based on a recent study
conducted by MSDGC.
     "Preliminary Draft Environmental Impact Statement:  A Plan for
     Control of Flood and Pollution Problems Due to Combined-Sewer
     Discharges in the General Service Area of the Metropolitan Sani-
     tary District of Greater Chicago," MSDGC, November  1973.
     Tunnel volume (Des Plaines)   TaRp n     ^  _ Des
     Tunnel volume (TARP)                      ~ O&M Costs
     or 1662 ac-ft
           - — r- x $13.6 million = $2.46 million.
                          V-26

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5.3.4  Management Steps

     The reliability of the tunnel system will depend heavily
on the development of suitable management plans and on their
routine effective execution.  Important requirements of such
management plans are discussed below.
     (1)  Pump Operation

          A standard procedure will be required for control-
     ling starting time, pumping rate, and duration of pump-
     ing.  This procedure will allow for maximum possible
     dewatering rates to be kept within the constraints of
     maximum tunnel inflow and of treatment flow capacity
     at the WSWSTW.  The first constraint is use of accu-
     rate, timely information on the maximum inflow rate
     and water depth in the tunnel.  The second constraint
     is consideration in the plan of allowable flows at the
     WSWSTW.  Since treatment capacity is likely to be in-
     creased at the Des Plaines plant, increases should be
     reflected in the pump operation plan.
      (2)  Canal Water Flushing

          The proposed use of canal water to flush the tun-
     nels would necessitate treatment of the water at the
     WSWSTW.  Since treatment capacity at the Des Plaines plant
     can be regarded as a scarce resource, canal water flush-
     ing should be monitored and evaluated carefully.  For
     example, sediment build-up on the tunnel floors could
     be measured periodically in the cases where no canal
     water is used for flushing.  The difference in sedi-
     ment removal could then be calculated and evaluated
     against the costs of diverting the canal water to the
     tunnel and treating it at the WSWSTW.

          For the proposed flushing operation, a procedure
     should be developed to control the timing of addition
     of canal water to the tunnel so that the handling capac-
     ity of the tunnel is not exceeded.
      (3)  Drop Shaft Gate Operation

          To minimize the potential for overflowing at up-
      stream interceptor connections and drop shafts during
      the heaviest storms, a procedure should be developed
                           V~27

-------
for the pump station operator to control the timing of
closing downstream drop shaft gates.  The procedure
would rely on tunnel inflow rate data, tunnel water
level data, and upstream drop shaft water level data.
Experience under operating conditions might be neces-
sary to perfect this procedure.  Similarly, a procedure
should be developed to control the duration of the gate
closings to minimize the resultant overflow at down-
stream drop shafts.
 (4)  Infiltration Monitoring

     Routine inspection of the tunnels and recording
of groundwater dewatering rates and dry weather tunnel
water level would allow for strict control of infiltra-
tion.  Any significant increase in recorded infiltra-
tion could be followed up by tunnel inspection to
investigate possible causes.  Experience under operat-
ing conditions could be used to develop procedures for
determining norms and variations from norms in dry wea-
ther tunnel flow.  This might warrant investigation for
leaks in tunnel lining and grouting.
(5)  Training of Operators and Maintenance Crews

     The management plan should make provisions for
adequate training of operators.  While the tunnel sys-
tem itself is not complicated, the decision criteria
which control the system are rather complex.  It is
important that all operators be both knowledgeable in
the fundamentals of the decision criteria and well
equipped to execute the management plan.  Maintenance
crews should require adequate technical training and
should be well practiced in any safety procedures
which the management plan might recommend.
                     V-28

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VI.  EFFECTS OF CONSTRUCTION ON
       THE NATURAL ENVIRONMENT

-------
            VI.   EFFECTS OF CONSTRUCTION ON
                  THE NATURAL ENVIRONMENT
     Construction of the conveyance tunnels, in the Phase
I construction period,  is expected to be spaced over a ten-
year period, although construction times for individual tunnel
segments will be shorter than ten years.  This chapter describes
construction impacts upon the water, land, and air resources
of the Chicago area and continues the discussion of Chapter II,
Existing Natural Environment, and is, thus, divided into the
same five main sections:

          Water Resources
          Land Resources
          Atmospheric Resources
          Biological Resources
          Commitment of Natural Resources.

     In the water resources  section, the effects of tunnel
construction upon surface water and groundwater supplies
are identified and evaluated.  Impacts  examined include
those associated with dewatering of the tunnels during con-
struction and interactions with other area water management
programs.

     Under  land resources, construction impacts related to
the geologic and seismic regimes are evaluated.  The land
resources section also  addresses spoil  disposal problems
and effects upon flood-prone areas.

     The section discussing  impacts upon atmospheric re-
sources includes an evaluation of the air quality  impact of
emissions from construction  equipment,  as well as  impacts
from noise  and dust during construction activities.

     The remaining sections  identify and discuss the possible
impacts of  TARP construction on the biological resources of
the project area and describes the expected commitments of
natural resources.


 6.1  WATER RESOURCES

      The effect of tunnel construction on area water re-
 sources is  examined in the following sections.  Sections
 6.1.1 and 6.1.2 evaluate construction impacts on surface
 water and groundwater supplies,  respectively.  Anticipated
                           VI-1

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effects related to the disposal of water pumped from the
tunnels during construction are addressed in Section 6.1.3
Foreseeable impacts on other water management programs are
described in Section 6.1.4

     In general, impacts on water resources during the tun-
nel construction phase are expected to be minor since most
of the construction activities will be carried out under-
ground.  In addition, impacts would probably be amenable to
mitigative measures, should their application prove necessary,
Measures for ameliorating potential construction impacts are
described in Chapter X.
6.1.1  Surface Water

     Impacts on surface water quality and quantity caused by
construction of the Des Plaines Tunnel and its branches are
discussed in this section.  Effects on water quality from
effluent discharged in tunnel dewatering operations during
construction are treated separately in Section 6.1.3.  The
Des Plaines Tunnel system has been divided into four segments
for further discussion.

          59th Street to Cermak Road
          Cermak Road to Fullerton Avenue
          Fullerton Avenue to Prairie Avenue
          13A Extension.
     (1)   59th Street to Cermak Road

          This tunnel segment runs roughly parallel to the
     Des Plaines River and is approximately 7.1 miles in
     length.  One construction shaft, 13 drop shafts, and
     4 access shafts will ultimately be excavated along its
     length (see Figure V-5).  These shafts generally will
     be placed in paved or otherwise impervious areas which
     will result in construction runoff and additional sedi-
     mentation loading of the Des Plaines River and existing
     sewer systems during construction.  Several shafts are
     sited in locations with high erosion potential, and the
     construction of a berm around the sites will be required
     to prevent soil from washing into the Des Plaines River
     and adjacent sewers during rainstorms.  Stockpiles of
     spoil materials at the construction shaft are expected
     to be small, but the potential for sedimentation of the
     waterways exists if a berm around the pile or other
     suitable controls are not provided.
                            VI-2

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     Dewatering operations during construction are ex-
pected to contribute a minor amount of flow to the Des
Plaines River after appropriate treatment (see Section
6.1.3).  The 59th Street to Cermak Road segment of the
Des Plaines Tunnel system is expected to yield a maxi-
mum flow of about 1.07 MGD of infiltrated groundwater
after construction of this system which will eventually
be discharged into the Des Plaines River.  This addi-
tional flow will have an insignificant effect upon the
average flow in the river.
 (2)  Cermak Road to Fullerton Avenue

     The main tunnel extends along the Des Plaines River
from Cermak Road to Fullerton Avenue  (see Figure V-6).
This tunnel is 33 feet in diameter, has a length of
4.9 miles, and is concrete lined.  A branch tunnel ex-
tends westward from the main tunnel along Roosevelt Road
to Pusheck Road.  The tunnel is 2.2 miles long, has a
diameter of 10 feet, and is not lined.

     One construction shaft, 17 drop shafts, and 2 ac-
cess shafts will be excavated along the tunnel length.
As on the 59th-to-Cermak segment described above, several
prospective shaft sites are expected to have associated
sedimentation problems.  As noted before, berms to con-
trol the runoff of soil and spoil materials will be
required at shaft sites.  No serious impact to area
waterways is expected, however, because of the developed
nature of the selected shaft sites and the anticipated
rapid removal of spoil material to a disposal or stor-
age site.

     Construction dewatering operations are expected to
yield a maximum flow of about 1.16 MGD over the length
of the tunnel.  This additional flow will have an in-
significant effect upon the average flow in the river.
 (3)  Fullerton Avenue to Prairie Avenue

     This segment of the tunnel system is composed of
a conveyance tunnel, which extends from Fullerton Avenue
north to Thacker Street.  At Thacker Street, the tunnel
intersects a combined sewer line that extends further
north to Prairie Avenue.  The total length of the tunnel
segment is 8.6 miles and along the segment are 2 con-
struction shafts, 21 drop shafts, and 2 access shafts
 (see Figure V-7).  Although the area along the tunnel
                      VI-3

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     route  is  largely developed  and residential,  several drop
     shafts are  located on  lands owned by the Forest Preserve
     District  of Cook County.  Special measures,  including
     the  construction of berms about the excavation site,
     will be required in these special areas to prevent sil-
     tation and  sedimentation.

         About  1.27 MGD maximum drainage flow of infiltrated
     groundwater is expected to  require dewatering during
     tunnel construction.   Given the annual average flow of
     the  Des Plaines River  presented in Chapter II, this ad-
     ditional  flow will be  insignificant.
     (4)   13A  Extension

          The  13A Extension  is  an  extension of  an  existing
     rock  tunnel near  the  southern end of  the proposed  Des
     Plaines Tunnel  system (see Figure V-8).  The  total length
     of  the extension  is to  be  3.4 miles with the  10-foot
     diameter  tunnels  to be  concrete-lined.  There will be
     one construction  shaft,  four  drop shafts,  and two  ac-
     cess  shafts.

          Approximately 0.2  MGD of infiltrated  groundwater
     will  have to be removed during construction if maximum
     infiltration rates pertain.   This amount would consti-
     tute  a negligible increase to the existing flow  in nearby
     Salt  Creek.

6.1.2  Groundwater

     During construction,  infiltration of groundwater into
tunnels will  necessitate dewatering.   Since all of the tun-
nel sections  will be in the upper aquifer, construction
should have negligible effects on the lower aquifer.   Ex-
tensive inflow studies to measure piezometric or hydraulic
pressure levels have been carried out by HEC in boreholes
along the tunnel route,  and inflow studies have been carried
out in existing tunnels.   Based on these data,  estimates
can be made of dewatering which will  be  required during
construction,  and of the effect of this  dewatering on the
groundwater system.
     (1)   Infiltration Projections

          Infiltration results when the aquifer pressure
     level exceed pressure level in the tunnel, except during
     severe storms.  In this case, runoff water conveyed by
     the tunnels will raise pressure levels to a point greater
     than the aquifer's level.  When this occurs,  exfil-
                           VI-4

-------
tration wixl result rather than  infiltration.   In view
of the geohydrologic character of  the  upper aquifer,
as discussed in Section  2.1.2, most  inflow to  the tun-
nel will occur along joints,  faults, and bedding planes.

     Studies of existing  tunnels have  indicated two
significant factors concerning infiltration:

          Notable inflows in  existing  tunnels  were
          generally associated with  the upper  and lower
          contact of the  Romeo member  of the Joliet
          Formation.

          Inflows through faults,  bedding planes, and
          joints decrease with time  as dissolved car-
          bonates precipitate at leak  points and seal
          openings.

     Inflow via the contacts  of  the  Romeo member in
the proposed tunnels may  not  differ  significantly from
inflow through joints  in  adjacent  rocks.1  The primary
solution proposed for  the inflow problem will  be a
grouting program.  Grouting should limit infiltration
of groundwater to 500  gal./inch  of tunnel diameter/
mile/day and will be widespread  to assure that no
concentrated leakages  will occur.

     Due to the heterogeneous nature of aquifer per-
meability, it is difficult to predict  groundwater in-
flow to tunnel segments.   HEC2 used water pressure test
data from boreholes as input  to  a  computer simulation
to predict inflow to sections of the TARP Tunnel systems.
Two different approaches  were evaluated to approximate
the secondary permeability of the  rock mass for use
with the finite element  analysis.  One approach expresses
permeability as a function of equivalent porous rock,
and the other approach expresses it  as a function of
only the openings between the intact rock.   Using the
first approach, permeability  can be obtained easily
from results of water  pressure tests performed in drill
holes.  Using the second  approach, difficulty  is en-
countered in assessing the complex geometry of natural
fracture systems with  sufficient accuracy.
 Harza Engineering Company, "Geotechnical Design Report, Tunnel
 and Reservoir Plan, Mainstream Tunnel System," Metropolitan Sani-
 tary District of Greater Chicago, Chicago,  Illinois, 1975.

 HEC,  1975.
                       VI-5

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     Inflows were computed using a finite element
computer program developed by Taylor and Brown .3  This
program solves problems of steady state flow through
porous media.  It can accommodate zones of different
permeabilities in both horizontal and vertical directions,
This program was easily applied, and the results were
believed to be as reliable as any available method.
These results, however, were found to be sensitive to
variations in assumptions and the input data had to be
screened carefully and in a meticulous manner.

     The inflows calculated provided a range of K^/K
values (ratio of horizontal to vertical permeability;.
The pre-grouting inflows tabulated by HEC in their
1975 report represents K^/KV values in the range of
10 to 500.

     Inflow projections for a section of the Calumet
Tunnel system indicated that pre-grouting total inflows
at Kft/Kv = 10 would be about 1.0 MGD.  The reported
pre-grouting inflow estimate after construction of the
Calumet section was about 0.7 MGD.  Comparing predicted
and observed inflow, HEC states "...  the water pressure
test results combined with the finite element computer
program used give an accurate estimate of relative
tunnel inflow and a reasonable, but generally low
estimate of actual inflows."!  Inflow estimations were
also completed for other sections of the TARP Tunnel
systems and included the southwest intercepting sewer
and the Mainstream Tunnel system.

     By studying the geohydrologic cross sections and
analyzing the pressure test data, the following was
concluded:

          On the average, sections of tunnels which
          penetrate the Brainard shale exhibit an
          infiltration rate of about 0.001 MGD/mile or
          less.

          Infiltration from the Edgewood is approximately
          0.012  MGD/mile; from the Joliet and Kankakee
          formations collectively, about 0.033 MGD/mile;
          and from the Racine formation, about 0.030
          MGD/mile.
 HEC, 1975.
                       VI-6

-------
          Where the tunnel is near the top of the
          bedrock, the permeability probably increases,
          therefore, the infiltration rate for the Racine
          is estimated to be 0.040 MGD/mile.

     Due to the heterogenous nature of the aquifer,  it
is virtually impossible to predict specific locations
and quantities of leakage that may be encountered dur-
ing construction.  Consequently, the exact dewatering
requirements will only be found as construction  proceeds.
(2)  Devatering

     In view of the relatively low transmissivity
(movement between two points) of the aquifer,  dewater-
ing at rates of several hundred gpm could  result in
minor temporary declines in  local water  levels.  Average
transmissivity values reported from tests  in  the upper
aquifer range from about 16  gpd/ft to  30,150  gpd/ft.
In areas of low transmissivity, the cone of depression
that would result from dewatering would  characteristi-
cally be deep, but of small  diameter and steep sided.
Conversely, in areas of higher transmissivity,  cones
of depression associated with dewatering operations
would be of large diameter but shallow (small draw-
downs) and with flat side slopes.
     Pumping tests conducted by EEC-  did  not include
data for a sufficient number of observation wells to
enable construction of distance versus  drawdowns graph;
however, semi-quantitative evaluation of  the data in-
dicates that the radius of influence  of pumping at
400 gpm for 156 hours  (6.5 days)  is probably less than
2,000 feet where calculated transmissivity is about
34,700 gpd/ft.  In addition, the  EPA  reports that in
the area of the Des Plaines-O'Hare System, "two pump-
out tests performed in the course of  the  subsurface in-
vestigations failed to reflect any effect on observa-
tion wells as close as 75 feet away."^  Due to the
fractured nature of the bedrock and resulting hetero-
geneity, the cone of depression will  most likely be
asymmetrical.  From this data it  appears  that dewater-
ing of the tunnel during construction will have a mini-
mal, temporary effect on the local groundwater regime.
HEC, 1975.

EPA, "Final Environmental Impact Statement for the Metropolitan
Sanitary District of Greater Chicago, Des Plaines-O'Hare Convey-
ance System," Chicago,  Illinois, 1975.
                        VI-7

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     (3)  Water Quality

          Tunnel grouting operations may result in clouding
     of groundwater drawn from nearby wells.  If this occurs,
     alternative measures will be required to provide users
     of these wells with another water supply source.  For
     the Des Plaines Tunnel system and its branch tunnels
     there are not water supply wells located near the pro-
     posed tunnel route, and the clouding effect is not ex-
     pected to occur.


6.1.3  Effluent Disposal From Tunnel Dewatering Operations

     Infiltration of groundwater during tunnel construction
can be expected, especially along fault zones and along the
boundaries between different rock types.  Where the infil-
tration rate is high, grouting operations will be carried
out to limit the flow to the amount of conventional sewer
infiltration, i.e., roughly 500 gallons per inch of tunnel
diameter per mile per day.  Water from grouting operations
will add little to tunnel drainage flow.  Maximum flow due
to groundwater infiltration expected for the entire Phase I
Calumet Tunnel system will be about 4.6 MGD after grouting.

     Drainage water present in the conveyance tunnels may
contain clay, concrete particles, grout waste, and other
deleterious  substances.  Current MSDGC construction specifi-
cations-^- forbid the discharge from a construction site of
drainage water containing these substances.  Thus, drainage
flow pumped  from the tunnels will be held in settling tanks
until rock, mud, grout  material,  and other  solids  settle
and a water quality test has been performed prior to discharge
to waterways.  The tunnel contractor is required to dispose
of settled solids in an environmentally safe manner although
the method of disposal will not be identified until the pre-
construction meetings with MSDGC.

     The disposal of effluent from dewatering operations dur-
ing tunnel construction is expected to have a negligible
impact upon the environment.
     MSDGC,  General Specifications - Construction Contracts,  Section 19,
     March 1974.
                            VI-8

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6.1.4  Water Management Programs

     Construction impacts upon water management programs,
identified in Section 2.1.4, are expected to be minimal.
Most of the programs anticipate that construction of the
tunnels and related facilities will avoid adverse inter-
actions through proper planning.

     The only water management program identified as having
some potential for adverse interaction with tunnel construc-
tion is the 208 planning program currently underway.  A
major part of this program will be in-stream monitoring of
water quality parameters at 45 locations on the three major
river systems.  Inadvertent placement of a monitoring station
in the immediate vicinity of a construction site could produce
misleading data because of the discharge from tunnel drainage.
This is not expected to occur, however, since the construc-
tion shafts for each tunnel segment have been identified
clearly on reports available to the Northeastern Illinois
Planning Commission  (NIPC), the designated 208 planning
agency.

     Tunnel construction is not expected to interfere with
navigation of the affected waterways since precautions will
be taken to avoid discharge of_sediment to these waterways.
Therefore, tunnel construction is not expected to necessi-
tate an increased frequency of waterway dredging by the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers.
6.2  LAND RESOURCES

     The construction impacts of TARP on the land resources
of the project area are discussed in detail in this section
and divided into the following topics:

          Flood-Prone Areas
          Geology
          Seismicity
          Spoil Disposal.
6.2.1  Flood-Prone Areas

     Construction of the Des Plaines Tunnel system is not
expected either to aggravate or to relieve problems in areas
                            VI-9

-------
subject  to overbank  flooding.   Construction  of the reser-
voirs, however, would provide  relief from  flooding.   In
addition,  tunnel dewatering operations will  be postponed
during rainfall episodes which may cause flooding.
6.2.2   Geology

     Throughout the Chicago metropolitan  area, an extensive
program of subsurface exploration has been performed.   After
analyzing the information obtained, the conclusion has been
drawn  that the geological formations underlying the  area
are well suited to  construction of underground conveyance
and storage systems.   The impact of construction on  the
Chicago area's seismic and subsurface geologic conditions
should be negligible.  The effect of the  geologic conditions
on construction is  dependent  on a number  of interrelated
factors and can be  controlled by careful  design and  construc-
tion.   The following effects  are described based on  the in-
formation presented in reports issued by  Harza Engineering
Company:1'2'3 DeLeuw, Gather,  and Company;4'5'6 and  Bauer
Engineering, Inc.7
     Harza Engineering Company (HEC),  "Evaluation of Geology and Ground-
     water Conditions in Lawrence Avenue Tunnel, Calumet Intercepting
     Sewer 18E, Extension A,  Southwest Intercepting Sewer 13A," Chicago,
     Illinois, 23 p., 1972a.

     HEC, Geology and Water Supply, "Technical Report Part 4,  Develop-
     ment of a Flood and Pollution Control Plan for the Chicagoland
     Area," Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago (MSDGC),
     Chicago, Illinois, 1972b.

     HEC, Geotechnical Design Report,  "Tunnel and Reservoir Plan Main-
     stream Tunnel System," MSDGC, Chicago, Illinois, 1975.

     DeLeuw, Gather, and Company, "Southwest Side Intercepting Sewer
     13A, Report of Tunnel Inspection," MSDGC, Chicago, Illinois, 1971.

     DeLeuw, Gather, and Company, Geotechnical Report on Upper Pes Plaines
     Tunnel and Reservoir Plan, Vol. 1, "Bedrock Geologic Investigation,"
     MSDGC, Chicago, Illinois,  196 p., 1974a.

     DeLeuw, Gather, and Company, Geotechnical Report on O'Hare Under-
     ground Storage Reservoir,  MSDGC,  Chicago, Illinois, 123 p., 1974b.

     Bauer Engineering, Inc., Environmental Assessment, MSDGC, Chicago,
     Illinois, 237 p., 1973.
                              VI-10

-------
     A variety of factors control the interrelated impact of
geology and construction.  The geologic factors include:  en-
gineering properties of the rocks, rock structure variability,
bedding attitude, presence of geologic structures (faults,
folds, and joints)  within each rock unit, and other occur-
rences such as the presence of natural gas.


     (1)   Geological Constraints

          The physical aspects of the individual rock units
     define the impact that construction will have on sub-
     surface geology and, conversely, the impact geology
     will have on construction.   The engineering-geology as-
     pects of the rock units are summarized in Table VI-1 and
     the  following  sections discuss the potential impacts of
     the  relevant geological formations on TARP.


          1.   Racine Formation

               Tunnel excavation and support conditions
          are expected to be variable but satisfactory within
          the Racine formation,  especially in the reef core
          facies.

               Intensely fractured and faulted zones may re-
          quire steel supports.   The upper portion of the
          Racine is generally more permeable and less com-
          petent than the lower portion.  Structures such
          as shafts may encounter weathered rock as they
          penetrate the upper portion of the formation.  The
          interreef facies contains shale partings which
          crumble or disintegrate on exposure.  The follow-
          ing possibilities should be considered in design
          and construction planning:

                    Overbreakage may be fairly high in reef
                    flank areas where the beds strike  (trend)
                    parallel to the tunnel line and dip at
                    higher angles.

                    Overbreakage will occur in unstable
                    areas which normally are found with more
                    frequency in fractured, weathered, and
                    thinly bedded zones than in the more
                    massive reef core facies.

                    In the interreef facies the chert beds •
                    and nodules might create difficult local
                    conditions of variable hardness.
                            VI-11

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-------
          Differences between the unconfined com-
          pressive strengths of reef and interreef
          rock could also create local conditions
          of variable hardness.

          Zones containing numerous shale part-
          ings will slake.
2.   Joliet Formation - Romeo Member

     The uniform, tough, dense character of the
Romeo member should make it good material for un-
derground construction, except in fractured zones
where excessive groundwater may be encountered
and where steel support and/or concrete lining
may be required.

     One potential problem associated with the
Romeo member is the possible accumulation of ground-
water at the upper contact where the Racine over-
lays the unit.

     The consistency of engineering-geology charac-
teristics would indicate generally satisfactory
tunneling conditions.  Rockfall and overbreakage
should be minimal except in intensely faulted or
jointed areas.
3.   Joliet Formation - Markgraf Member

     Aside from fractured zones where concrete
lining and/or supports may be necessary, and where
greater quantities of groundwater may be encountered,
the Markgraf should prove to be a satisfactory
rock for underground construction.

     The soft condition'of the chert in the upper
zone may be slightly troublesome for machine tun-
neling.  The shale partings of the lower zone do
not appear to slake badly.

     The Lawrence Avenue, Southwest, and Calumet
intercepting tunnels have been constructed
principally in the Joliet formation.  Although
little short-term support has been required to
stabilize these unlined tunnels, the rock has a
tendency to break along its flat bedding planes
which will affect future tunnels in the Joliet
formation, under the projected operating conditions.
                  VI-13

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4.   Joliet Formation - Brandon Bridge Member

     This member is absent from most of the pro-
ject area and, therefore, is not considered as a
subsurface site for underground features.  If it
is found, the shale content of the rock will de-
tract from the suitability of the Brandon Bridge
member for construction of underground facilities.
Although this member is uniformly thin-bedded,
overbreaks were rarely reported in previous tun-
neling projects.
5.   Kankakee Formation

     Preliminary study of the Kankakee formation
suggests that the rocks may have a number of pro-
perties that would detract from their suitability
as a medium for underground construction.  The
potential difficulties include overbreaks and
groundwater control problems, which could become
important where rocks are severly fractured.  Most
difficulties will be associated with the numerous
green shale partings characteristic of the forma-
tion, especially in its lowest 15 to 20 feet.
The formation has several thin-bedded zones.
6.    Edgewood Formation

     Wherever the Edgewood formation is badly frac-
tured, groundwater inflow may be heavy.  This for-
mation, however, is good rock for tunneling.  The
upper part is less argillaceous, less laminated,
and has softer chert, thus, it will be better than
the lower part which is more argillaceous, con-
tains harder chert, and is more closely laminated.

     Machine tunneling through the lower parts of
the Edgewood may be impeded by the chert nodules
and lenses, which are up to four inches thick, com-
bined with the increasing frequency and thickness
of shale partings and the gradation of the rock
to dolomitic shale.

     Another significant problem which will be en-
countered tunneling through the Edgewood formation
and the underlying Brainard shale is the irregularity
of the contact between the two formations.  The
                 VI-14

-------
     contact is somewhat more irregular than it is
     shown on the geologic sections.   Thus,  predicting
     conditions at elevations or levels near the con-
     tact will be variable and subject to a  large error.
     7 •    Neda and Brainard Formations

          Together with the Neda shale above and the
     Scales shale below, the Brainard shale has a ten-
     dency to slake,  which makes it the least satisfac-
     tory rock of the project for underground construc-
     tion.  No portion of the Calumet tunnel system
     will be constructed in the Brainard shale.

          The Brainard and Neda exhibit pronounced slak-
      ing and crumbling in rock core samples which are
      exposed to the atmosphere or placed under water.
      There may also be some stress-relief phenomena
      present.  Pronounced slaking will lead to serious
      impairment of rock strength.  The dolomite inter-
      beds are not subject to slaking or disintegration.

          Since shale has a tendency to slake, and pos-
      sibly to swell with the atmosphere, it will be
      necessary to take remedial actions as soon after
      exposure as possible to control these phenomena.
      In these rocks, plastic strain is expected to
      occur throughout significant lengths of excava-
      tion.  It would be extremely difficult to position
      a significant length of tunnel in the Brainard
      formation because of its variable thickness .

     The geologic constraints on construction are only
partially related to rock type.  Additional impediments
which have some impact on construction include faults,
folds, and joints.
     1.   Faults

          A number of fracture, or fault, zones have
     been mapped  (Figures 11-22 through 11-26).  Within
     the Mainstream Tunnel area, these zones are found
     near Chicago Avenue, Roosevelt Road, and Lawndale
     Avenue.  Along the Des Plaines Tunnel system faults
     have been mapped near 26th Street, Roosevelt Road,
     North Avenue, and Irving Park Road  (not located in
     drilling).  Additionally, the Des Plaines Tunnel
                      VI-15

-------
will pass through the southern and western sections
of the Des Plaines structure, a zone of multiple
and complex faulting.  The Calumet Tunnel systems
are expected to encounter faulting near Little
Calumet Creek and State Street, Little Calumet
Creek and Cottage Grove, Dalton Avenue, Torrence,
118th Street, 109th Street, 107th Street, and
Burnham Avenue.  Additional faults have been mapped
in recently constructed tunnels.  As stated in
Section 2.2.3, faulting with small vertical dis-
placement is common in the Chicago area and numerous
small faults should be expected throughout the
proposed tunnel systems.

     Faulting is expected to have several types
of impact on tunnel construction.  Fault zones
may be accompanied by brecciation of the rock or
may be marked by the presence of fault gouge or
mylonite.  These zones, as zones of inherent weak-
ness in the tunnel roof and walls, pose a concomi-
tant danger of an increase in rock fall.  The faults
are planes of movement which may cause abrupt rock
structure changes during tunneling operations.
Such abrupt strata changes may alter tunnel exca-
vation rates as well as increase (or decrease)  the
potential of overbreakage and rockfall.
2.   Folds

     The folds in the Chicago region are quite gen-
tle and generally have east-west trends.  Folding
should have only indirect impact on construction.
The structural characteristics involved in fold-
ing have raised or depressed various rock layers
in relation to a horizontal plane or line.  The
tunnels will, thus, pass through different rock
layers because of folding.  The Des Plaines
project area, however, contains only gently
folded beds with dips of less than 5 degrees.
These dips derive from the presence of the
Kankakee Arch.  No major folds are present.
3.    Joints

     Joints are widespread throughout the rocks
in the Chicago area and may have an impact on con-
struction where:
                  VI-16

-------
               The tunnel is parallel to the joint orien-
               tation

               Complimentary joint sets or joints of
               varying orientation intersect

               Intense weathering or alteration has
               occurred along joint planes

               Joints abruptly change dip angle or horse-
               tail in passing from one lithologic unit
               to another.

     The above features of joints would result in local
     instability and would increase the potential for
     rockfall and overbreakage during tunneling.

     Another possible hazard would be encountering
natural gas.  If ignited, the resulting fire or ex-
plosion could damage equipment and cause loss of life.
Such gas accumulations could be found in the glacial
drift or in the rock mass itself.  In the Chicago area,
the presence of gas has been reported in drilling opera-
tions in the glacial drift; and asphaltum, a solid petro-
leum residue, has been found in rock strata of the Racine
formation.  Such conditions indicate the possibility of
encountering accumulations of gas, though the probability
is believed remote.  Gas detection devices, of course,
must be used during construction as a safety precaution.
 (2)  Construction Constraints

     In addition to the effects of geologic phenomena
on construction, various facets of construction may
have an impact on geologic features.  These effects are
considered to be negligible or easily mitigated by sound
design and construction procedures.

     Those operations which could affect the geology
of the area are:  subsurface exploration, either core
drilling or seismic; drop or access shaft construction;
mined or machine excavation for tunnel or underground
storage; and surface excavation.  Except for subsurface
exploration by seismic means, all of these operations
would entail material removal.

     Seismographic exploration of subsurface soils and
strata utilizes sound waves to detect varying densities
                       VI-17

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 of material.   Sound  is  reflected  at those  levels or
 strata where  change  occurs.  This procedure would  have
 negligible effect on the geologic features.  For core
 drilling  exploration, drill  holes are  filled after
 tests have been  completed  to prevent interflow  between
 aquifers.

     The  effects of  construction  activities on  the geo-
 logic conditions may include the  following:

          Subsurface collapse
          Joint  or fault weathering and  alteration
          Induced motion along  faults  or fault  zones
          Rockfall or overbreakage
          Surface landsliding or  erosion.

     Where subsurface collapse  through rockfall is pos-
 sible, machine-excavated tunnels  may require support
 to prevent such  failure of the  surrounding soil or
 rock.  For much  of the  tunnel lengths, however, the
 rock cover over  the  tunnel crown  is considered  to  be  •
 sufficiently  thick and  structurally sound  to preclude
 widespread collapse. 1

     Weathering  or alteration along joint  planes or
 faults, due to the introduction of fluids  or exposure
 to the atmosphere, is expected  to be a minor phenomena
 during the construction stage.  Such alteration is
 further dependent on the characteristics of the rock
 layers traversed by  the tunnels.  The  excavation stages
 are probably  short enough  so that alteration along the
 joints will be locally  restricted in the susceptible
 shale units.

     Fault motion induced  by tunneling operations  (blast-
 ing, moling,  etc.) which includes rockfall or over-
 breakage, is  considered possible  but unlikely.

     Surface  excavation for  reservoirs and construction
 of drop and access shafts  could lead to  subsidence of
 adjacent  lands,  as well as pronounced  erosion.  Means
 to prevent such  erosion may  be  necessary.

     Consequentlv, under carefully controlled con-
 ditions and with proper construction procedures, the
 construction  phase of the  project should have no
Bauer, 1973.
                      ' VI-18

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     pronounced impact on the geologic conditions in the
     Chicago area.
6.2.3  Seismicity

     Seismic characteristics of the Chicago area, found in
the historical earthquake record, include frequency, magnitude
and probability of occurrence, and potential seismic events.
These characteristics have been described in detail in Section
2.2.4.

     The risk of the tunnel construction being impaired by
earthquakes is judged to be small, based on an evaluation
of this historical record.  As Figure 11-29 of Section 2.2.4
shows, the recurrence rate for a Modified Mercalli Intensity
 (MMI) VIII event is about once for every 100 years with longer
intervals for higher intensities.  Insofar as the record can
be relied upon to indicate the level of future seismicity,
these higher intensities would not be expected to occur during
construction.

      Considering the record of local seismicity, however,
 the  faults  in the project area should be assumed to be
 potentially  active.  In a seismic event, two types of po-
 tential tunnel damage could result:

          Dislocation of  the  tunnel along  a fault
          Rock falls along faults or joints.

 General rock fall, which  is unrelated to existing breaks, or
 the  formation of new cracks is unlikely.

      As discussed in Section  2.2.4, ground motion producing an
 MMI  of VIII  can be expected from a  local earthquake with  a
 recurrence  period of about 100 years.   This local earthquake
 will be generated by small movements on a  fault  (a  few centi-
 meters) .  If the causative fault intersects the  tunnel system,
 the  minor dislocation may offset the tunnel alignment.  Rock
 fall in the  vicinity of such  a dislocation may be extensive.
 Ground motion from a local earthquake may  also cause extensive
 rock fall in the tunnel wherever multiple  joints or faults
 are  present.  Both the impact of tunnel dislocation along a
 fault, with  the likely associated local rockfall, and general
 rockfall along joints throughout the tunnel system  caused by
 vibratory ground motion depend greatly  on  the distribution  and
 nature of faults and joints.  Insufficient information is avail-
 able on these subjects to make a valid  judgment  of  potential
 damage.  The assessment of impacts  depends on a  slight upward
                           VI-19

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revision in the possible intensities of past local earth-
quakes and cognizance of the imprecision of epicentral lo-
cations.  The occurrence of a large earthquake, however, dur-
ing the construction phase of the tunnel system is not likely.

     The probability of fault motion or seismic events being
caused or controlled by construction procedures, based upon
experience from the already existing tunnels, is also con-
sidered to be small.  No seismic events associated with faults
exposed to blasting, water influx, or rock falls have been
reported during previous tunneling projects.


6.2.4  Spoil Disposal

     This section outlines the environmental impacts asso-
ciated with the disposal of rocks and spoil material exca-
vated from the proposed tunnels and reservoirs.  The quantity
of spoil materials involved and the likely methods of dis-
posal are identified for both the TARP system as a whole and
the component Des Plaines Tunnel system.  Spoil volumes pro-
duced by reservoir construction are discussed here to pro-
vide a proper perspective to the spoil disposal problem and
to indicate the full extent of the impacts associated with
the spoil disposal.

     In general, rock excavated from the McCook and Thornton
quarries, to form the proposed storage reservoirs, is ex-
pected to be equivalent to rock presently excavated for com-
mercial purposes at the two sites.  End uses for this rock
include use as concrete aggregate and as fill material for
road base or such projects as the "Ski Mountain" plan.

     Rock excavated from the tunnels, however, is expected
to be suitable only for low-grade commercial uses and for
fill.  This assumption is based on past experience with spoil
produced from the MSDGC's Lawrence Avenue Tunnel, a deep
tunnel situated in the same rock formation as the proposed
tunnels and utilizing the same tunneling technology.  Moled
rock from the Lawrence Avenue Tunnel was not cubical in shape,
but rather was found to be thin and elongated and to contain
a large percentage of fines.  This material could not be
crushed to meet industry specifications and consequently could
not be marketed as concrete aggregate or road base.

     It is the MSDGC's stated policy that construction con-
tractors shall be responsible for the disposal of material
excavated from each Phase I tunnel segment.  The MSDGC's
expectation is that the contractors will either find markets
                           VI-20

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for excavated materials or will utilize suitable, environ-
mentally acceptable waste disposal sites.  Since actual dis-
posal plans will not be identified until the preconstruction
meeting between the contractor and the MSDGC, the disposal
schemes outlined in this section are only speculative.  It
is assumed for the purpose of this analysis that the con-
tractors will sell marketable spoil as fill material when-
ever possible and dispose of nonsaleable spoil at area land-
fills.  The marketability of the spoil is affected by the
amount of shale and other nondolomite constituents present,
as well as by the size and shape of the rock produced.
     (1)  Tunnel and Reservoir Plan

          Excavation of the Phase I tunnels and the proposed
     reservoirs at McCook and Thornton quarries will produce
     a bulk measure of approximately 275,000,000 cubic yards
     (183 million cubic yards solid measure) of spoil ma-
     terial.  About 165,000,000 cubic yards of the total will
     be generated in the excavation of the reservoirs at
     McCook while about 92,000,000 cubic yards will be pro-
     duced at the Thornton Quarry excavation site.  Construc-
     tion of Phase I tunnels will generate roughly 17,620,000
     bulk cubic yards of spoil material for disposal.  A de-
     tailed plan for the disposal of this c'onsiderable amount
     of material has not yet been developed.  However, the
     general disposal scheme which will be adopted is likely
     to be as follows.
          1.   Reservoirs

               Rock excavated from either McCook or Thornton
          quarry is likely to have much the same commercial
          value as rock currently quarried, because the ex-
          cavation will be done by conventional blasting me-
          ihods rather than by mole machines.  It is expected,
          therefore, that a large portion of the excavated
          rock will be stockpiled in another area of the
          quarry for eventual sale.  Unusable rock will be
          either stored on-site in a separate stockpile, as
          planned for McCook Quarry, or stored off-site at
          Lincoln Quarry or a MSDGC-owned site, as proposed
          for Thornton Quarry.

               Sufficient room for stockpiling of reservoir
          spoil exists at the McCook Quarry and neighboring
          sludge lagoons.  The required acreage varies with
          the allowable height of the stockpile.  Alternatives
                           VI-21

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     considered to date  for  stockpile  size  range  from
     298 acres for a  600-foot-tall pile, which could be
     entirely contained  by the quarry  site,  to 770  acres
     for a  100-foot-tall stockpile.  A 770-acre site
     is currently not available  in the Chicago area.
     The existing sludge lagoons, which could be  a  pos-
     sible  site if expansion were allowed,  are not  ex-
     pected to be expanded for storage purposes.  For
     reasons of air traffic  safety,  the Federal Aviation
     Agency recently  indicated that  the maximum eleva-
     tion of stockpiles  should not be  permitted to  ex-
     tend more than approximately 200  feet  above  street
     grade.  To limit stockpile  height to 200 feet, about
     600 acres would  be  needed for spoil storage.   This
     acreage would be available  at designated disposal
     areas  of the McCook site, assuming some utilization
     of neighboring MSDGC sludge lagoons for a small
     amount of additional storage.
      2.   Tunnels

          As  stated previously,  it  is  doubtful  that  spoil
      generated by  tunnel construction  could  find  high-
      grade commercial usage.  This  material  is  expected
      to be disposed by  landfilling.  Particular landfill
      sites have not yet been designated,  nor the  effect
      of spoil disposal  on their  capacities calculated.
      However, the  chemical composition of the spoil  ma-
      terial,  largely dolomitic limestone  with some shale,
      is unlikely to contribute to any  land disposal-
      related  environmental problems, such as surface or
      groundwater contamination by leachate.

          Excavation of all Phase I tunnel systems over
      the 10-year period from 1976 through 1985  will  pro-
      duce approximately 17,620,000  bulk cubic yards  of
      rock and soil for  disposal, weighing about 26 mil-
      lion tons.  Peak production of spoil material is
      expected to occur  in 1980 when approximately 2,162,000
      cubic yards  (solid measure) of rock  will be  exca-
      vated.  Assuming a bulking  factor (ratio of  volume
      of spoil produced  to the volume of rock mined)  of
      1.5, at  the peak of construction, contractors must
      dispose of roughly 3,243,000 cubic yards of  material.
      By assuming that the volume of spoil material pro-
      duced is roughly proportional  to  construction ex-
      penditures over the 10-year periodl  for the  Phase I
      tunnels, one  obtains the spoil production  rates
      shown graphically  in Figure VI-1.
See Table III-ll, p.  111-22.


                      VI-22

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             FIGURE  VI-1
       Spoil Production Rates  -
  Phase  I  Tunnel Plan and Des  Plaines
            Tunnel System
       Legend
       —Phase I Tunnels
       —Des Plaines
         Tunnels
                 i i i  I r
                 M S J  M S
                 1984   1985
YEAR Of CONSTRUCTION
VI-23

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          The  environmental effects  associated with
     such a plan are primarily emissions  to the atmos-
     phere from truck traffic  and truck noise.   These
     atmospheric effects  are evaluated in Sections  6.3.1
     and 6.3.2, respectively,  of  this chapter.

          Other potential impacts on the  natural environ-
     ment are  those related to spoil disposal.   Deposit
     of the spoil materials at an existing landfill site
     will reduce the space available for  municipal  ref-
     use or other solid waste  and may shorten the land-
     fill "s life expectancy.   Possibly, fugitive dust
     at the active face may need  to  be controlled.

          However, the stable  nature of the rock spoil
     precludes the sorts  of environmental problems  po-
     tentially associated with the landfilling of muni-
     cipal refuse.  Such  problems as methane gas pro-
     duction or leachate  contamination of ground or sur-
     face waters will not result  from deposit of non-
     water soluble, nondecomposable, inert rock frag-
     ments. Nuisance aspects  (odors, vectors,  etc.)
     will not  be aggravated.   Finally, the aesthetic
     impact to residents  of the rock spoil's visual ap-
     pearance  is expected to be minimized through appro-
     priate site selection and protective measures.
(2)  Des Plaines Tunnel System

     Excavation of the Phase I Des Plaines Tunnel
system over the 10 -year period from 1976 through 1985
will produce approximately 3,784,000 cubic yards (bulk
volume) of spoil for disposal weighing about 6,590,000
tons.  Peak generation of spoil material is expected
to occur over the period from February 1978 to October
1980 when the rate of spoil generation will reach
836,000 cubic yards per year.  This figure assumes the
excavation of 557,300 cubic yards per year and a bulk-
ing factor of 1.5.  Spoil production rates were cal-
culated from the MSDGC's construction schedule for
the Des Plaines Tunnel system shown in Figure V-4,
page V-9 and are portrayed graphically in Figure VI-1.
Spoil production rates for the Des Plaines Tunnel
system are as follows:

          1978:  688,000 bulk cubic yards
          1979:  868,000 bulk cubic yards
          1980:  834,000 bulk cubic yards
          1981:  770,000 bulk cubic yards
          1982:  600,000 bulk cubic yards.
                     VI-24

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     Commercial value of the Des Plaines Tunnel spoil
will be reduced by the presence of shale and other
constituents in material excavated north of Touhy
Avenue.  Moreover, as stated previously, the rock
spoil produced by machine moling is anticipated to be
laterally split, containing small particles and fines,
such that it cannot be made to meet industry standards
for high-grade commercial  usage.

     The Cook County Forest Preserve District has
requested that all rock taken from under Forest Preserve
Lands be placed in stockpile areas on Forest Preserve
Property.  They have designated areas north of 22nd
Street and south of the Kennedy Expressway as the
sites for the Des Plaines Tunnel system.   (See Figures
V-6, V-7).  It is the Forest Preserve District's
intention to utilize the rocks  for their facilities,
such as bicycle paths and equestrian trails on a long-
term basis.  In the interim, the stockpiled rock will
be developed for winter recreational facilities.  It
is estimated that 2,200,000 bulk cubic yards out of
a total of 3,784,000 cubic yards can be placed on
Forest Preserve District's Property from the Des
Plaines Tunnels. Potential disposal sites  for the
remaining rock include four quarries:  McCook, Federal,
Riverside, and Hillside quarries, located  within
reasonable haul distance from the Des Plaines construc-
tion sites.  The space available within these quarries
many times exceeds the anticipated Des Plaines spoil
volume, so all Des Plaines spoil could be  accommodated
by the quarries should storage  at the Forest Preserve
sites prove infeasible.  Site locations and possible
transportation routes from the  Des Plaines Tunnel
construction shafts are identified and discussed in
Section 3.4.1.

     The significant impacts associated with disposal
from the Des Plaines Tunnel system are:

          Land use implications of filling
          the quarries

          Emissions to the atmosphere from truck
          and/or barge traffic

          Noise from trucking operations.
                      VI-25

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     Sections 7.2.2 evaluate the impact on land use
that results from filling the quarries, while Sections
6.3.1 and 6.3.2 within this chapter detail the
impacts on air quality and noise levels derived from
disposal-related transportation.  Other potentially
serious impacts to the environment such as ground or
surface water contamination by leachate are unlikely
to occur as discussed before because of the stable
nature of the rock spoil material.
                     VI-26

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6.3  ATMOSPHERIC RESOURCES

     The effects of construction on air quality and noise
are discussed in the following sections.
6.3.1  Air Quality

     Construction of the proposed tunnel would have a minor
impact on ambient air quality.   The impact would result from
air pollutants emitted by construction-related vehicles and
equipment and would occur at the construction and drop shaft
sites and along the vehicle routes.  The impacts at the vari-
ous locations are discussed below.
     (1)  Construction Shaft Site

          The principal source of air pollutants at a con-
     struction shaft site would be exhaust from trucks used
     to haul rock and spoil material from the site to dis-
     posal sites.  In addition to an estimated three to
     five truck trips per hour, construction workers would
     add approximately 45 car trips per day and concrete
     trucks may make one trip per hour.  Diesel-engine-
     operated equipment may also emit air pollutants at the
     site.  They include the trolley used for transporting
     rocks inside the tunnel, air compressors for supply-
     ing air to the tunnel, and the crane used for raising
     the muck carts to the surface.  The total emissions
     from the above sources would be very small, and would
     have negligible impact on ambient air quality.

          Another potential source of air pollution would
     be dust generated when loading the muck from hoppers
     into trucks and when driving the trucks on unpaved
     roads.  However, with appropriate mitigating measures
     as discussed in Chapter X, the dust problem can be
     controlled.
     (2)  Drop Shaft Site

          The sources of air pollutants at the drop shaft
     site would be similar to those at the construction
     shaft site.  However, because of the fewer number of
     vehicles involved, there would be less impact.  Also,
     the impact would be relatively short-term, since the
     construction of a drop shaft is not likely to last for
     more than three months.
                           VI-27

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 (3)   Vehicle Routes

      The construction-related  vehicles  would emit pol-
 lutants when traveling to and  from  the  construction
 sites.  While the routes taken by the commuting workers
 would vary, the hauling trucks would follow well-planned
 routes.  The most likely truck routes for Des Plaines
 system are discussed in Section 3.4.

      Vehicle emissions would generally  depend upon the
 vehicle miles traveled  (VMT) and can be estimated by
 multiplying the VMT by suitable emission factors.

     For the Des Plaines  Tunnel system,  the average
daily  number of truck  trips  originating from  all  the
construction shaft  sites  and traveling to the proposed
disposal sites is estimated  at about 90, with an  average
round  trip  length of  8.0  miles.  Therefore, the average
daily  VMT by the haul  trucks to be used in the Des Plaines
system would be about  720.   The number of truck trips
during the  peak construction period in 1979 is expected
to be  twice the average  number.  The truck emissions.
are estimated using"the  peak year VMT and emission
factors, and are shown in Table VI-2.

                  Table  VI-2
    Estimated Emission From  Rock and Spoil
             Disposal  Trucks,  1979

Pollutant
CO
HC
N02
S02
TSP2
Emission
Factor1
(gm/mi)
28.7
4.6
20.9
2.8
1.3
Estimated
Emissions
(kg/day)
19 .9
3 .2
14 .5
1-9
0-9
           For heavy-duty diesel trucks from, Compilation of
           Air Pollutant Emission Factors,  Supplement No. 5,
           AP-42, U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, April
           1975.

           Total  suspended particulates.
     The estimated truck emissions  are very small com-
pared to those occurring from  normal  vehicular traffic
on the proposed routes.  Therefore, their impact on
                         VI-2 8

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     ambient air quality is likely to be insignificant.
     Similarly,  the incremental and cumulative impacts from
     the concrete truck trips and worker trips are not likely
     to be significant.  The cumulative impact from vehicle
     trips originating from the other two tunnel systems is
     also likely to be minor.
6.3.2  Noise

     Adverse noise impacts during construction of the pro-
posed project would occur primarily during surface excava-
tion at the construction and drop shaft sites and during
transportation of the rock and spoil material along the routes
to the disposal sites.  Since most of the construction and
drop shaft sites in the Des Plaines Tunnel system would be
located in residential areas, special measures will have to
be taken at the construction site to minimize noise impacts.
Noise impact of rock and spoil disposal trucks would not be
significant, because the number of truck trips generated
by lihe proposed project generally would be small compared
to the existing traffic volume on the most likely truck
routes to the disposal sites.

     In this section, noise impact is discussed as follows:

          Noise at the Construction Shaft Sites
          Noise at the Drop Shaft Sites
          Noise Along the Truck Routes.
     (1)  Noise at the Construction Shaft Sites

          Construction activities at the site of a construc-
     tion shaft can be divided into three phases.

          Phase 1 consists of excavating the soil to the
     depth of the bedrock, which is generally 20 to 25 feet
     below the surface.  This operation typically lasts for
     two to three months.  This operation uses conventional
     excavation equipment,such as a clam bucket.  The spoil
     material would be hauled by trucks to suitable disposal
     sites at a frequency of one to two trucks every two
     hours.

          Phase 2 involves blasting the rock with dynamite
     to the depth of approximately 300 feet.  Approximately
     400 feet of the initial section of the tunnel would
     also be blasted.  This operation may last for about
     six months.  Rocks would be removed by trucks in the
     same manner as the soil.
                            VI-29

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      Phase 3 involves  finishing the shaft walls and
 excavating the tunnel  by  mole.   The rock from the tun-
 nel would be brought to the  surface and taken in trucks
 to suitable disposal sites  at a frequency of about
 three to five trucks per  hour.   This operation would
 last about 5 years  at  the construction shafts of the
 Des Plaines system.

      Assuming that  two trucks and one loader operate
 simultaneously at the  construction site, and that their
 maximum noise levels,  at  50  feet, are 86 dBA in accord-
 ance with the Chicago  noise  ordinance, the cumulative
 noise levels near the  construction site would vary from
 91 dBA at 50 feet to 61 dBA  at 1600 feet.

      If exhaust  fans are  used for tunnel ventilation,
 the exhaust noise is likely to vary from about 75 dBA
 at 50 feet to about 50 dBA at 1600 feet.1  The noise
 from the mole and from blasting are not likely to be
 heard at the surface.  Since all of the construction"
 shafts are located  in  areas  which are relatively iso-
 lated from the general public,  the construction noise
 impact at the construction shaft site is not likely
 to be significant.
  (2)  Noise at  the  Drop Shaft Sites

      The construction period at the site of a drop
 shaft is shorter than that at the construction shaft
 site.  The soil is excavated in a manner similar to
 that at the construction shaft site.  A small pilot
 hole is then bored to the depth of the tunnel, which
 is already excavared.   The entrance from drop shaft to
 tunnel is excavated by blasting.   The drop shaft is
 then bored by  means of a raise drill, which is raised
 from the bottom to the surface.  The luuck is collected
 at the bottom  of the tunnel and transported internally
 to a construction  shaft.  Only soil, no rocks, would
 be transported from the drop shaft site.
Based on the noise from ventilating fans used in a traffic tunnel.
Environmental Research and Technology, Inc., Noise Level Analysis
for  Interstate 95 Fort McHenry Harbor Crossing and Approaches in
the  city of Baltimore, Maryland, prepared for the State Highway
Administration, November 1974, p. F-12.
                        VI.-30

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           The  construction  at  a  drop  shaft  site  would prob-
      ably last for  only  three  months.   However,  surface
      noise would be produced primarily  during surface ex-
      cavation.   Surface  excavation is not likely to last
      for more  than  a few weeks.   Thus,  the  noise impact
      would be  short-term at the  drop  shaft  sites.   Appro-
      priate measures to  mitigate the  noise  at sites near
      all public areas are discussed in  Chapter X.

      (3)   Noise Along the Truck  Routes

           On probable truck routes to the rock and spoil
      disposal  sites, the existing traffic volumes  range
      from 6,100 vehicles_per^ day_tp 22,90C)  vehicles per
      day.  The number of truck trips  generated at  each con-
      struction shaft site is likely to  be between  72 to 120
      per day.   The  number of truck trips generated during
      the peak  construction  period, involving construction
      of the three tunnel systems, would be  approximately
      575 per day.  However, these trips would be spread
      over several routes.  Thus, the  incremental truck
      trips resulting from tunnel construction would be very
      small compared to existing  traffic volume on  the haul
      routes.  Consequently, the  noise impact from additional
      truck trips is not  likely to be  significant.
6.4  BIOLOGICAL RESOURCES

      Several drop shafts and access shafts will be con-
structed near or just inside the boundary of forest preserves
in the Des Plaines Tunnel system project area.   The effected
areas are shown in Figures V-5,6,7 and 8.  Some vegetation
will be removed from the preserves during surface construction
activities, but the amount will be insignificant with respect
to the total available, or less than several hundred square
feet.  Wildlife abundance in the project area preserves is
low and not diverse, since each preserve is small in area and
surrounded by man's activities  (i.e., golf courses, railroad
tracks, residential development, and commercial establishments),
Drop and access shaft construction activities are expected
to have minor, short-term impact on the wildlife and vegetation
of these forest preserves.
6.5  COMMITMENT OF RESOURCES

     Approximately 11,750,000 cubic yards  (solid measure) of
dolomitic rock will be removed from several geologic forma-
tions within the Silurian system during the Phase I construc-
tion period of TARP.  This volume is equivalent to 26,200,000
dry tons, assuming an in-place rock density of 165 pounds
                           VI-31

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per cubic foot (4,455 pounds per cubic yard).  The distri-
bution of this total amount between the three tunnel systems
is:  5,750,000 cubic yards (12,800,000 dry tons) from the
Mainstream Tunnel system, 2,960,000 cubic yards (6,590,000
dry tons) from the Des Plaines Tunnel system, and 3,040,000
cubic yards (6,770,000 dry tons) from the Calumet Tunnel
system.  The average removal rate of rock throughout the
ten-year construction period will be 1,175,000 cubic yards
(2,620,000 dry tons) per year for all systems of TARP.
                          VI-32

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VII. EFFECTS OF CONSTRUCTION ON THE
          MAN-MADE ENVIRONMENT

-------
         VII.  EFFECTS OF CONSTRUCTION ON THE
                   iMAN-MADE ENVIRONMENT
     The effects of various activities related to the con-
struction of the proposed tunnel project on the man-made
environment are discussed in this chapter.  Only primary
and significant effects are assessed and evaluated.  To
present these effects, this chapter is divided into six
main sections:

          Socioeconomic
          Land Use
          Financial Resources
          Transportation
          Major Projects and Programs
          Commitment of Man-Made Resources.
7.1  SOCIOECONOMIC

     The socioeconomic section describes effects of the
projected construction activity evidenced by public annoy-
ances and incoveniences, worker safety, construction income,
and economic multiplier effect within the community, de-
scription of business activity and impact on the area labor
force.
7.1.1  Public Annoyances

     Major construction projects in urbanized areas usually
generate conditions which are considered annoying, and which
can create public inconvenience.  Tunnel construction in-
volves major activities which will necessarily reach
disparate parts of Cook County unlike single-site construction
projects.  These activities include:

          Construction of surface collection facilities

          Removal of pavement

          Excavation of trenches

          Blasting
                            VII-1

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          Replacement of necessary sewer lines

          Construction of access, drop, and construction
          shafts

          Haulage of debris and spoil material

          Exhaust and air support system operations.

The major annoyances and public inconvenience that are asso-
ciated with the above construction activities include:

          Noise and vibration effects
          Dust and dirt
          Traffic congestion and disruption
          Glare from night lighting.

Since much of the tunneling is performed by machines at
depths of up to 290 feet below ground/ the annoyances to
the general public are temporary and, to a great extent, can
be lessened through application of mitigating measures.
Effects of noise and fugitive dust have been discussed in
detail in Chapter VI and effects of construction traffic
congestion are discussed in Section 7.4.
     (1)   Glare From Night Construction Activity

          Glare from night lighting at construction access
     points can be annoying to surrounding residents.  This
     annoyance can be reduced by properly positioning the
     lights away from surrounding properties.
     (2)   Vibration Effects

          Construction of the construction access and drop
     shafts will require some blasting operations.  The
     vibration effects of blasting can potentially cause
     structural damage to residential homes if the velocity
     exceeds 4 inches per second.  Engineered structures
     can generally withstand 10 to 20 inches per second.

          The blasting operations while creating vibrations
     also create noise.  The average person's psychoacoustic
     response to the combined vibration and noise generally
     intensifies the import of the blast without making the
     important distinction between motion and sound.
                           VII-2

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     In addition to the reaction to motion and sound
effects, peopxe are sensitive to the duration of
a project and the frequency and time of blasting.  More
complaints and/or claims will be made the longer the pro-
ject lasts, the more often blasting takes place, and if
there is blasting during the night or quiet hours.

     Because of their concern over possible property
damage, people are more sensitive to blasting when
they are in their own homes.  They are less interested
and less concerned when occupying buildings in which
they have no financial interest but are still annoyed
by the noise.  Possible exceptions would be those persons
engaged in especially delicate work.

     With a well-planned operation, there is no need for
blasting effects to be either damaging, frightening or
of an unacceptable tolerance level.  First of all, the
MSDGC can make certain that no structural damage will
occur by placing blasting limitations in the project's
construction specifications.  Secondly, further reductions
in the allowable limits can be made to make the blasting
less noticeable  (usually not very cost effective) or
take steps to keep the public sufficiently informed so that
observers of the blasting will have no cause for alarm and
will be willing to accept some minor irritation in return
for- the benefits which the project will bring to the
community.

     The blasting need only occur during the day and will
be of a short duration.  Estimated duration periods for
both construction and drop shafts are stated below:

     Construction Shaft - 2 blasts per day, 10  seconds per
                          blast for 90 to 120 days.

     Drop Shaft         - 3 blasts per day, 10  seconds per
                          blast for 3 to 5 days.

     The blast vibrations and noise generated during the
construction of  the Des Plaines tunnel system may be
annoying to the public within 250 to 500 feet of the shaft
locations, but should not cause any structural  or physical
damage to properties nearby.
                      VII-3

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     (3)   Construction Locations Which May Cause Public
          Inconvenience

          Review of the proposed locations for construction
     access shafts and drop shafts in connection with the
     Des Plaines tunnel plans indicates several locations of
     potential conflict with public convenience.  However,
     the construction access shafts have purposely been
     placed in areas where there should be no conflict with
     surrounding properties.  Generally, the sites are va-
     cant, already owned by the MSDGC. and surrounded by va-
     cant or low-utilization industrial areas.

          Several drop shafts, shown in TableVII-l have been
     identified as potential locations of conflict with local
     vehicular and pedestrian traffic because of their prox-
     imity to a surface street or intersection.  Maneuvering
     space at each location will be required for workers and
     equipment as well as for the erection of safety barriers
     and equipment.  This might mean that portions of the
     shoulders and possibly traffic lanes would be blocked
     temporarily to traffic.  At least one drop shaft is
     located in a parking area, necessitating the rearrange-
     ment of parking spaces.  Of 55 drop shafts reviewed,
     10 appear to present potential conflicts.  This will
     require exercising particular care in the placement of
     equipment, materials and safety barriers as well as a
     well coordinated traffic control plan.  Since precise
     locations of shafts are not known at this time, it is
     difficult to predict the amount of inconvenience to the
     public.
7.1.2  Worker Safety

     Worker safety and prevention of accidents during TARP
construction and throughout maintenance and operation of
the completed systems requires adherence to all applicable
regulations of OSHA.  Much of the system construction in-
volves underground drilling, moling, and blasting; therefore,
the establishment of surface support and communications sys-
tems for workers underground are critical.   Scheduling of
underground work must also be sensitive to  weather conditions

     The MSDGC construction specifications  include an exten-
sive section regarding safety requirements  found in the gen-
eral specifications for their construction  contracts.  In
addition to compliance with OSHA, the contractor must comply
with the following regulations:
                           VII-4

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                        Table VII-1
 Drop Shaft Locations Posing Potential Conflict Conditions'
  Drop
  Shaft
 Number

   14
   16
   17
        General
        Location

Des Plaines River Road
and Belmont Ave.

Des Plaines River Road
and Grand Ave.
Des Plaines River Road
21, 25, 8  Lake Street near Des
           Plaines Ave.

   32      Quincy Street Exten-
           sion

   34b     Roosevelt Rd. at 19th
           Ave.

   34c     Roosevelt Rd. at 14th
           Ave

   34d     Roosevelt Rd. at 9th
           Ave.
        Comment
May block shoulder  of
Belmont Ave.

May block shoulders and
lanes of River  Road and
Grand Ave.

May block shoulders and
lanes of River  Road

May block shoulders and
lanes of Lake Street.

Will eliminate  some pri-
vate parking spaces

May block shoulders and
lanes of 19th Ave.

May block shoulders and
lanes of 14th Ave.

May block shoulders and
lanes of 9th Ave.
   34a     Roosevelt Rd. and
           Pusheck Rd.
                         May block shoulders and
                         lanes of Roosevelt Rd.
   63
Chicago Ave.
May  block shoulders and
lanes  of Chicago Ave.
     MSP Tunnel and Reservoir Preliminary Plans - "Photo Plan Maps
     from Aerial Photographs Taken January 25, 1973," Photo Control
     From USGS 7 1/2 Foot Quadrangle  Sheets, March 1974.
                            VII-5

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          Safety Rules - Metropolitan Sanitary District of
          Greater Chicago of March 1, 1970 and as amended

          The Illinois Health and Safety Act of March 16,
          1936 with all amendments thereto and all rules
          and standards implementing said act.

Safety engineers must approve and maintain the following
safety equipment for tunnel and excavation work:

          Adequate stretcher units convenient to work loca-
          tions

          Oxygen deficiency indicators

          Carbon monoxide testers

          Hydrogen sulfide detectors

          Portable explosimeter for the detection of explo-
          sive gases such as methane, petroleum, and vapors

          An adequate number of U.S. Bureau of Mines approved
          self-rescuers in all areas where employees might
          be trapped by smoke or gas

          An explosimeter at each heading to monitor con-
          tinuously the presence of explosive gases; it
          must automatically provide visual and audible
          alarms.

The contract specifications also require all power equip-
ment used underground to be certified and operated accord-
ing to OSHA regulations.

     Even with strict safety precautions during the construc-
tion period, accidents and injuries will occur.  Table VII-2
shows the incidence of injuries which could be expected based
on national injury frequency rates for 1974 within the con-
struction industry.  These rates are somewhat conservative
when applied to specific construction projects, but can pro-
vide a minimum scale of expectation.  As shown, the Des
Plaines system construction potentially could experience a
minimum of 84 disabling injuries and one fatal or permanent
disability case during its 7 years of contruction.
                           Vil-6

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                         Table  VII-2
          Potential Work Injuries and Disabilities,
        Related to Des Plaines  Tunnel Construction
Total Man-hours
of Exposure for
Des Plaines Tunnel*
5,921,970
Potential Disabling
Work Injuries''"
84
Potential Fatal
and Permanent
Disabilities^
1
*    Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago.

t    Frequency rate of 14.18 per million man-hours of exposure.

tt    Frequency rate of .16 per million man-hours of exposure.

1    Frequency rates from Accident Facts, 1975 Edition, National Safety
     Council, Chicago, Illinois, p. 35.
      A less conservative estimate can be made by  reviewing
 the safety statistics  of other tunneling projects.   The
 Washington, D.C. Metro (subway)  construction project has had
 45 miles of tunnels  and 41 stations under construction since
 1970.  They also have  been using moles for most of  the tun-
 neling work.  Based  on 45 million total construction man-
 hours, they have experienced eleven (11) fatalities and
 1,829 cases of  lost  time due to injury.  They have  not broken
 out injuries, disabilities, and deaths for tunneling per se_.
 While the man-hour estimates are not comparable,  the miles
 of tunnels give a  relative measure; approximately one death
 for every 4.09  miles,  and approximately 41 injuries every
 mile.  Using these measure's for Des Plaines1 26.4 miles of
 tunnels would yield  a  speculative maximum of six  fatalities
 and 1,082 work-related injuries.  This level of incidence
 is certainly too high  for Des Plaines Tunnel construction
 alone, and is only mentioned an an example of  an  underground
 construction project's safety record.  Worker  safety during
 the maintenance and  operation phase will also  involve ad-
 herence to OSHA and  State of Illinois safety standards, parti-
 cularly as they pertain to underground inspection and re-
 pair work.l
     Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, "Accident
     Experience Summary," December 1975.
                             VII-7

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7.1.3  Construction Income

     The construction of the Des Plaines tunnel system will
inject construction employment income into the Chicago area
economy.  Estimates of this income and of the secondary ef-
fect of this income or economic multiplier effect can also
be calculated.  The income injected into the Chicago area
economy due to construction employment on the Des Plaines
Tunnel system will generate a direct demand for goods and
services resulting in additional employment opportunities.
(See Table VII-3).

     This impact is commonly referred to as nonbase or sec-
ondary employment and it is generated through the salaries
and profits derived by the employees and the business created
in response to the identified direct demand.  The extent of
secondary impacts that will occur in any given situation is
dependent on a complex set of factors concerning the local
economy.  Essentially, the extent of secondary impact is
effected by the proportion of dollars that remain in the
economy under examination.  Dollars would not remain in
the economy, for example, if the products purchased through
direct demand had been manufactured outside of the subject
economy.  In this example, the dollar cost of the product
would escape generating employment elsewhere; only the
value added in the local economy would generate local employ-
ment.

     Given the diverse economy of the Chicago area, it is
quite possible that a high proportion of goods and services
will be purchased locally.  Thus, the dollars spent for con-
struction could potentially circulate in the local economy
two to three times.  We have attempted to estimate this
secondary impact through the selection of an economic multi-
plier which is then applied against direct construction em-
ployment income.  We have used a multiplier of 1.8 which
indicates that a significant proportion of direct expendi-
tures will remain within the local economy.

     Table VII-4 presents construction and labor cost esti-
mates for tunnel construction only by segment of the Calumet
system.  Table VII-5 presents construction employment in-
come estimates by segment by year during the construction
period and the secondary effect of the income in the local
economy.

     The assumption inherent in the calculations is that one
man-year equals 2,000 man-hours.   Man-hour costs ranging from
$13.28 to $14.62 based on January 1976 cost levels were used
for Des Plaines system projections.   The economic multiplier
                           VII-8

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                    Table VII-3
     Estimated  Jobs Generated By  Industry"
Fiscal
Year
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
Des Plaines
Construction
Cost in Millions
—
$ 7.7
$18.6
$18.7
$18.7
$18.1
$16.5
$ 2.8
—
—
Manufac-
turing*
—
86
208
209
209
203
185
31
—
—
Wholesale
Trade and
Transportation ,
Services*
—
40
97
98
98
94
86
15
—
—
Mining
and Other*
—
20
48
49
49
47
43
7
—
—
Derived by utilizing the following jobs per billion dollars of
contract construction:  40,523 total,  11,180  for manufacturing,
5,220 for wholesale trade transportation and  services, and
2,623 for mining  and other.

"BLS Unpublished  Data," Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Depart-
ment of Labor,  February 1975.
                        VII-9

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                         Table
  Construction and  Labor Cost Estimates by  Segment of the

                 Des Plaines Tunnel System
Des Plains
Section
59th to Cermak
Cermak to
Fullerton
Fullerton to
Prairie
13A Extension
Total*
Total
Construction
Estimates
(S millions)
30.1
33.1
30.9
7.0
101.1
Estimated
Labor
Cost
($ millions)
25.0
28.6
27.7
5.7
87.0
Estimated
Man Years
Needed
846
975
945
195
2961
Estimates of
Construction
Duration
(Years)
5.6
5.7
5.5
3.7
—
1   Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago.

*   Detail may not add to total due to rounding.
                             VII-10

-------
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-------
used is 1.8.  As shown, the peak construction man-loading
would occur in the years 1979 and 1980.  Construction income
would reach $16.1 million with a secondary economic effect
of $29.0 million within the Chicago area economy.  Contract
construction earnings in the Chicago region in 1971 totaled
$2,055.4 million, or $2.0 billion.*  The Des Plaines tunnel
project, at its peak, would represent less than 1 percent of
total area construction earnings based on the 1971 reported
earnings level.  Construction employment earnings from this
one project are not considered overly significant in the per-
spective of the Chicago region's economy.

     Related to construction earnings is the number of con-
struction jobs which would be generated by the Des Plaines
tunneling project.  Table VII-6 shows job generation by year
based on the construction and man-hour estimates previously
established by segment by year.  Job generation would range
from 215 jobs in 1977 to a peak of 548 in 1981, and 1982,
thereafter declining to 86 in 1983, the last year of construc-
tion.  The low level of job generation is due to the use of
boring machinery (moles) in tunneling.  Should the moles prove
inefficient or ineffective during the construction period,
it is quite likely that additional jobs would be generated
when conventional blasting and cutting methods are employed
as partial backup.

     Construction projects also generate jobs in other in-
dustries; primarily manufacturing, wholesale trade, trans-
portation and services, mining, and others.  Table VII-3
shows the generation of jobs in other industries based on
total cost of construction of the Calumet system.  These
jobs can be located anywhere depending upon the materials
and services bought and the natural chain of production.
7.1.4  Business Disruption

     Construction site activity and attendant truck traffic
in densely developed commercial retail areas can disrupt
operations of local businesses.  If public traffic flow is
impacted, business deliveries and services can be hurt.
This has varying degrees of effect on sales depending on the
business's response to adverse conditions.

     Table VII-1 in Section 7.1.1 identified those construc-
tion access points where potential conflict with public traf-
     Table III-5, Chapter III, p.  III-6.
                            VII-12

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                   Table VII-6
   Des Plaines Construction Job  Generation
Year
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
Construction
Income
$ 6,319,200
15,963,500
16,095,400
16,095,400
15,594,000
14,381,100
2,516,600
—
Construction
Man-Hours*
429,575
1,087,142
1,096,152
1,096,152
1,061,903
979,262
171,817
—
Construction
Job Generation
215
544
548
548
531
490
86
—
Based on  estimated average wage rates ranging from $13.28
to $14.62 which reflect January 1976 cost levels.

Based on  one man-year = 2000 man-hours.  Estimates provided
by Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago.
                        VII-13

-------
fie flow is most likely to occur.  Of those points, there are
several located in or near commercially and industrially de-
veloped areas.

     The following locations potentially could cause incon-
venience to surrounding business operations.  However, the
disruption would be temporary and should not cause signifi-
cant negative impacts on business activity and retail sales
volumes.


                            General Location

           34b       Roosevelt Rd. at 14th Avenue

           34c       Roosevelt Rd. at 14th Avenue
     Estimates of the land needed surrounding a drop shaft
are as follows:

          150' x 150' for average drop shaft of 7'2" or less
          in diameter

          200* x 200' for larger drop shafts up to 13' in
          diameter.

     Construction of the drop shafts may take approximately
3 months.  When built, the shaft will have a concrete
cover, flush with grade, with a metal grate for access by
workers  (similar to a manhole).  Both the grate and cover
can bear pedestrian and vehicular traffic.  The trucks ser-
vicing the construction sites have been purposely routed
along major surface streets to expressways to minimize traf-
fic flow interruption.  The impact of these additional trucks
in the downtown area is not considered significant enough
to create permanent adverse impacts on business activity.
No business structure will have to be acquired or demolished.

The only relocation needs are related to piles of material
in certain industrial yards which may have to be moved.
Thus, the effects are considered temporary and insignificant.


7.1.5  Spoil Disposal

     This section addresses the potential impact of disposal
of spoil from the tunnel construction and reservoir excava-
tions on the local markets for high quality rock products
(e.g., concrete aggregate, siluminous aggregate, etc.) and
low quality rock products (primarily landfill).
                           VII-14

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(1)  Tunnel Spoil

     It is estimated that the construction of the  Phase
I TARP tunnels will produce almost 12 million cubic
yards  (approximately 26 million tons) of excavated ma-
terial from the Mainstream, Des Plaines, and Calumet
Tunnel systems over a ten-year period.  The potential
impacts of disposing of this volume of spoil critically
depends on the quality of the material removed.  The
focal point of the quality assessment is a comparison
of the geological characteristics of the TARP tunnel
spoil with those characteristics of the spoil generated
from the construction of the Lawrence Avenue Sewer sys-
tem. 1

     The tunneling technology which is planned  for the
Tunnel Plan was also employed by the city of Chicago
in the recent Lawrence Avenue Sewer project.  Approxi-
mately 350,000 tons of dolomite limestone containing
some shale rock were excavated during the course of
the project.  Similarly, the material that will be
excavated from the TARP tunnels and drop shafts will
also be dolomite limestone with shale.  As shown in
Figure V-3, the Lawrence Avenue material comes  from
the same geological formation and yielded rock  spoil
identical to that which will be excavated for the
construction of the TARP tunnels.

     Utilization of the mole  (mechanical mining machine)
produces rock  spoil which  is  thin  and  elongated rather
than cubical in shape.  Typical  sizes  of  excavated rock
range  from  fine dust particles  to  laterally  split rocks
which  are about two to  five  inches  in  cross  section and
1/2 to 3/4  inches  in thickness.   In the  case of the
Lawrence Avenue project,  it  was  initially  assumed that
the rock spoil could be marketed  as concrete aggregate
and/or road base material.   It  was  discovered,  however,
that the excavated rock material  contained  shale and
failed to meet Illinois standards  for  use  in these cate-
gories.  As a  consequence,  this material  was primarily
used as low quality landfill.   Shale  and  rock fines
present in  the material tends  to  lower the  quality and
thus,  limit the marketability  or  uses.
    This system was recently constructed  to accommodate combined-sewer
    overflows and to act as an interceptor for the proposed Mainstream
    Tunnel system.
                       VII-15

-------
     Experience with the Lawrence Avenue system strongly
suggests that the primary use for excavated materials
from the TARP tunnels will be for landfill.  This con-
clusion is further supported by the experience of a
major quarry operator in the Chicago metropolitan area
who had to abandon efforts to market this type of mate-
rial because it could not be crushed and refined in a
manner that would meet industry standards for high qual-
ity rock products.

     Since there are no reliable current estimates of
the demand for landfill in the local area over the pe-
riod 1976 to 1986, it was not possible to develop re-
liable expected sales estimates of the excavated mate-
rial from the TARP tunnels.  Therefore, although there
will be no significant economic impacts on the markets
for high quality rock products, a definite conclusion
concerning the market for landfill cannot be reached
at this time.

     In the worst case, where the demand for landfill
is satisfied by the existing supply, the excavated
material may have to be stored or simply disposed of.
However, proposed plans, such as the Lakefront and Ski
Mountain plans, can utilize the material should these
plans be implemented.  Storage and disposal of rock
spoil is analyzed in Section 6.2.4.
(2)  Reservoirsi

     As described in Section 6.2.4, spoil produced dur-
ing excavation of the reservoirs is likely to be re-
tained in stockpiles at the McCook and Thornton quar-
ries under the ownership of the quarry operators.  Re-
lease of this material on the market will probably be
at the discretion of the quarry operators.  Thus, no
significant socioeconomic impacts are expected.
7.2  LAND USE

     The proposed tunnel system would make efficient use of
land resources for several reasons.  First of all, the chief
structural components, which are the tunnels and pumping
stations, would be located underground.  Second, maximum use
has been made in the plan of existing combined sewers and
interceptors, minimizing the need for interceptor connec-
tions and drop shafts in the plan.  Third, MSDGC property
has been utilized for shaft locations wherever possible to
                           VII-16

-------
lessen the need for access easements and purchase of private
properties.  Fourth, the system would convey overflows to
existing treatment and sludge handling facilities, at the
Calumet Sewage Treatment Works plant, which also uses
MSDGC-owned land.  Fifth, rock and spoil from construction
would be disposed of at approved sites.  Sixth, requirements
for new access roads to surface construction sites have been
minimized by locating shaft sites close to existing roads.
Finally, all shafts would be located as close to the river
bank as possible, so that nearly all of the shafts would
make use of land which is prone to overbank flooding.  This
land is of relatively low value.

     Because of the tunnel system's efficient use of land,
the potential impacts on land use during construction are
few.  Analysis of land use impacts follows under the following
subsections:

          Alterations Near Surface Construction
          Rock and Spoil Disposal
          Archeological and Historical Sites
          Cultural and Recreational Sites.
7.2.1  Alterations Near Surface Construction

     The construction of 55 drop shafts, 10 access shafts,
and 5 construction shafts would require adequate space
around,the shafts for maneuvering trucks and construction
equipment, for storing of equipment, and for mobile offices
where required.  The area needed at drop shaft and access
shaft sites would be a maximum of about 15,000 square feet,
or about one-third of an acre for the largest shaft,
which is 15 feet in diameter.  Space requirements for smaller
shafts would be less.  Each of these areas would be used
over a period of about three months.

     The five construction drop shafts are primarily located
in open areas away from street edges.  Surrounding lands
vary in their use.  Two shafts are adjacent to railroad lines.
One shaft adjoins what appears to be an industrial site.
Other shafts are adjoined by open space and vacant land areas,
some of which are potential recreation areas.

     The access shafts tend to be isolated in open space or
located along street edges.  The majority, again, are lo-
cated on vacant or open land.  Only three shafts are located
in residential areas.  The location of these sites does not
appear to conflict with the current development or future
residential development potential of the areas.  One loca-
                           VII-17

-------
tion is adjoined by open land which will very likely be de-
veloped for industrial use.  The shaft does not present any
apparent conflicts.

     All of the land use effects are temporary and do not
actually change land use, but comprise minor interruptions
to the utilization of land at the shaft sites.

     Generally, the impacts on land use would be temporary
during surface construction of the Des Plaines tunnel system.
These impacts are primarily consumption of a small amount
of valuable industrial property and reduction of traffic
capacity for periods of about 3 months at each of a few
drop shafts.
7.2.2  Rock and Spoil Disposal

     The Cook Forest Preserve District has requested that
all rock taken from under Forest Preserve lands be placed
in stockpile areas on Forest Preserve property.  They have
designated areas north of 22nd Street and south of the
Kennedy Expressway as the disposal sites for the Des Plaines
tunnel system.  It is the Forest Preserve District's inten-
tion to utilize the rocks for their facilities, such as bi-
cycle paths and equestrian trails on a long term basis.  In
the interim, the stockpiled rock will be developed for win-
ter recreational facilities.  It is estimated that 2,200,000
cubic yards out of an estimated total of 3,784,000 cubic
yards (bulk) can be placed on Forest Preserve District's
property from the Des Plaines tunnels.  As presently con-
ceived, excavated rock will be deposited on the Forest Pre-
serve sites although truck routes and numbers have not yet
been identified.

     The remaining rock will be disposed of in active and
inactive quarries in the area.  As noted previously in
Section 6.2.4, available space in the quarries exceeds anti-
cipated spoil volume many times over.  Thus material excavated
from the Des Plaines tunnel system should have a positive
effect on land use in Metropolitan Chicago and should not
interfere with current quarry operations.
                           VII-18

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7.2.3  Archeological and Historical Sites


     (1)   Archeological Sites

          The lands which have the highest potential for
     containing material of archeological value to be dis-
     turbed during construction are the banks of the Des
     Plaines River.  Although no archeological sites or ma-
     terials are known to exist there, these areas have been
     actively used for commerce since the late 1700's and
     earlier by the Potawatomi Indians who hunted, traded
     furs, and occasionally camped in these areas.  Because
     little is known about the use of the area prior to
     settlement by Europeans, any archeological finds in
     the lands along the Des Plaines River on which shafts
     will be constructed, could have high potential value.

          Fortunately, the conventional methods of surface
     excavation planned for shaft construction would prob-
     ably allow adequate recovery of any archeological finds.
     In fact, the net impact is likely to be favorable, be-
     cause more archeological material of value would likely
     be recovered than destroyed.  The mitigating measures
     in Chapter X would help to ensure this result.

          The storage and handling of rock at Thornton
     quarry would have no impact on archeological resources,
     because the land there has already been disturbed.

     (2)   Historical Sites

          There are no sites which have been designated
     as historically significant and none under consideration.
     Therefore, there are no impacts anticipated in this
     area of environmental concern.

7.2.4  Cultural and Recreational Sites

          No interference with any cultural sites is expected,
     because all proposed surface construction is at least 100
     feet away from any existing or planned site.  The several
     park and recreational facilities which border the waterways
     and Des Plaines tunnel route were identified in Section 3.2.6
     in Chapter III.  The construction of drop shafts and access
     shafts will cause temporary interference with public usage
     of some portions of these park areas.  The disturbance
     should last between three to five years during construction.
     As precise shaft locations are not known at  this time,
     it is difficult to define to any greater extent the location
                           VII-19

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and amount of space that may be required  for  construction
related activities.
7.3  RESOURCES

     The financial and labor resources which will  be effected
by the construction and operation of TARP,  and, where ap-
plicable, the Des Plaines tunnel system, are discussed in
this section.
7.3.1  Financial Resources

     This section addresses the potential impact  of allo-
cating approximately $1.46 billion to  the funding of the
Tunnel Plan construction over the period 1976  to  1986.   The
alternative uses for these funds at the local,  State,  and
Federal levels are considered.  This section also addresses
the significant potential for the loss of approximately
$300 million of FWPCA funds to the State of Illinois which
could be precipitated by failure to implement  the Tunnel
Plan.  Table 111-13 on page 111-28 displays the allocation
of total costs among the three levels; local,  State, and
Federal.
     (1)  Metropolitan Sanitary District of  Greater Chicago
          (MSDGC)

         If the District's share of the Phase  I  tunnel  con-
    struction cost, $240.0 million, was not  applied to  the
    "TARP tunnel systems, the District could  finance fnstream""
    aeration to the waterway system receiving  plant effluents
    from the Calumet, North-Side, and West-Southwest Treat-
    ment facilities and expand the treatment plants at  the
    Calumet and W-SW facilities.1  These two components of  the
    MSDGC's Flood and Pollution Control plan have an estimated
    construction cost (in 1975"dollars) in excess of $1.1 billion,
    From a broader perspective, project alternatives can
    be  addressed in context of the total budget  of  Chicago.
    Data supplied by the MSDGC indicate that the city's


     These projects follow  the tunnels in the District's priority
     scheme,  as stated in the Facilities Planning Study MSDGC Over-
     view Report.
                           VII-20

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FY 1976'budget consists of appropriations totaling
$1.15 billion.  The major categories  of appropriation
include:

           Public safety                   369 million

           Health                           41 million

          Environmental

                Water                      102 million
                Sewer and waste disposal   97 million

          Transportation                  221 million

          Housing and community
          improvement                      39 million

          Human development, recreation,
          and culture                      33 million

          Economic satisfaction  and
          consumer protection              23 million.

     In view of the multiplicity of  the city's needs
and the complexity of the budget formulation proces's,
it is difficult to assess realistically the potential
alternative  uses of the $240.0 million  (average of
$18.5 million per year) of district  funds targeted  for the
Phase I tunnel systems.1  On a relative size basis, however,
the average  annual dollar volume is  significant in  com-
parison with several of the major budget appropriations.
In terms of  tax rate effect, however,  the funding of
the TARP will increase the construction portion
of the MSDGC tax rate from $.118/$100  of assessed   ~
valuation to only approximately  $.120/$100 in 1985.
This increase^is relatively small in  comparison to  the
overall city of Chicago rate'  ($8.557/$100'assessed
 In terms of population, Chicago represents approximately two-thirds
 of the MSDGC.  In terms of assessed valuation, Standard and Poor's
 Municipal Bond Selector, December 31, 1975, indicates that Chicago
 comprises approximately 61 percent of the District.
 In FY 1975, the MSDGC's tax rate was 40.05
-------
valuation) and other tax rate figures such as:

                              Tax Per $100 Assessed
                                      Value
Board of Education                   $3.47

City General Fund
(fire, police, health, etc.)         $2.929

Chicago Park District                $ .774

Junior College Funding               $ .268

County Government Services           $ .65

Forest Preserve District             $ .096
In summary, it does not appear that the MSDGC's portion
of the TARP funding would cause any significant reallo-
cation of resources at the local level.
 (2)  State of Illinois

     At the State level, the alternative use of the
 $300 million currently targeted for the Tunnel Plan
 is funding of the MSDGC instream aeration project
 and the expansion of the Calumet and West-Southwest
 Treatment facilities.  These funds, however, would be
 obligated later than the FY 1976-77 time frame because
 the development of detailed plans for these facilities
 will not be completed until FY 1979 and, therefore,
 the proposed facilities will not be eligible for con-
 struction funding until FY 1979-80, according to recent
 estimates supplied by the MSDGC.  The non-MSDGC alter-
 native uses for the State funds include some 400 projects
 (approved by EPA for FWPCA funding)  on the Illinois
 prioritized list of some 1,173 water pollution control
projects.  It must be emphasized, however, that tradi-
 tionally half of the State of Illinois funds have been
 allocated to the MSDGC.  The current portion of funds
 (available from the State)  targeted for the MSDGC
 for TARP will not cause any significant or dis-
cernable disallocation of resources.
                      VII-22

-------
 (3)  Federal

     At  the Federal level, the question of alternative
 uses of  the FWPCA funds targeted for TARP is more  com-
 plex and has  very serious ramifications.  If the
 Plan is  not implemented, there is a very high proba-
 bility that approximately 90 percent of the current
 $323.6 million  targeted for the MSDGC will be used
 for other  projects.

     The potential redirection of these funds stems
 from the fact that the Calumet Sewage Treatment facility
 expansion  project, while high enough in the priority
 list for FWPCA  funds, will not meet the September  30,
 1977 deadline for Step 3 funding eligibility.   The
 Step 2 grants were obligated in May and June of  1975,
 and the  construction design and specifications  neces-
 sary for Step 3 funding are currently scheduled  to be
 completed  in  January of 1979.^  Step 3 funding  for
 these two  treatment facilities is estimated at  $261
 million.  Assuming this project did not qualify in
 time for existing FWPCA funds, it is estimated  that
 only approximately 10 percent of the $323.6 million
 could alternatively be allocated to other MSDGC
 prioritized pollution control projects.

     In  terms of  a statewide reallocation of the FWPCA
funds,  Illinois EPA has  indicated  a  very low probability
that any of the funds  could be obligated to non-MSDGC
projects before the September 30,  1977  deadline.  Ac-
cording  to recent estimates by the Illinois EPA, some
31 non-MSDGC projects  are in jeopardy of not being ready
by September 30,  1977  for Step 3 FWPCA funding.   Fail-
ure to meet the September deadline would mean that the
State of Illinois would  have to request a reallocation
of $165 million of Federal funds currently targeted for
these projects.   This  request,  therefore,  requires a
comparable allocation  of FY 1977  funds  to initiate
Step 3 funding.
 Construction design and specifications required for Step 3 fund-
 ing for the West-Southwest Treatment facilities are scheduled to
 be completed December 1979.

 These funds would be employed specifically to provide treatment
 capacity to provide for nutrient removal by nitrification and to
 provide plant capacity for tertiary level of treatment by fil-
 tration.
                       VII-23

-------
          According to Region V EPA, any funds not obligated
     within the appropriate deadline (September 30, 1977) would
     probably be reallocated by EPA headquarters among the
     other states according to the current allocation formula.
     These funds would thus be apportioned among projects
     (within these states) which are "next in line" in
     terms of State/EPA priority.

          In terms of non-FWPCA alternatives for the funds,
     the question is as complex as the Federal budgeting
     process itself; at this time in the political process,
     however, it is possible that any unobligated funds
     would not be reassigned but rather indirectly passed
     back to the tax-payers via an extension, beyond June
     30, 1976, of the current tax cuts and/or a further re-
     duction in the tax liabilities of businesses and in-
     dividuals.
7.3.2  Labor Resources

     Effects on the labor force in the Chicago area due to
construction of the Des Plaines system should be slight.
As shown in Section 7.1.3, the job generation in any
one year will probably not exceed 550.  Unemployment
within the construction field in the Chicago metropolitan
area for 1972 averaged a total of 5,910 out of an approxi-
mated labor supply of 114,000 persons.  Unofficial esti-
mates of the construction labor force in the Chicago metro-
politan area for 1975 were 119,000 persons with an unemploy-
ment rate approaching ten percent^yielding a labor pool of
11,900.  Less than one percent of the construction labor
force would be involved in the Des Plaines project.  There-
fore, there should be no strain upon the labor force supply
with respect to other construction projects.
7.4  TRANSPORTATION

     Construction of the proposed project would generate
additional truck and other vehicle traffic, causing short-
term traffic disruption in some areas.  Other transporta-
tion resources are not likely to be affected by project con-
struction.  Traffic impacts would occur near the construc-
tion and drop shaft sites and along the routes used by con-
struction-related vehicles.
                           VII-24

-------
     The traffic generated by construction  activities pri-
marily includes workers' commuting  trips, as  well  as truck
trips for rock and spoil disposal.  The  number  of  trips
generated at the construction and drop shaft  sites are dis-
cussed below.
7.4.1  Construction Shaft

     An estimated 18 persons per  shift would be required
for tunnel excavation.  Since there would be three shifts
per day, assuming an occupancy  rate of one person per car,
the daily number of workers' trips to and from a shaft would
be about 54.  In addition, about  three to five trucks per
hour would be transporting rock and spoil material from the
construction shaft to the disposal sites.  Thus, the average
number of daily trips generated at a construction shaft
would range from 125 to 175.  While workers' trip routes
would vary, truck routes would  be well-planned and con-
stant.  The most likely truck routes to  the disposal sites
are shown in Figure VI-4 in Section 6.2.4.  It is estimated
that construction activities at a construction shaft site
would last from 3 to 6 years, 312 days a year and 24 hours
a day.
7.4.2  Drop Shafts

     Assuming ten persons  per  shift would be working at a
drop shaft site  for  one  shift  per day,  and assuming an oc-
cupancy rate of  one  person per car, the daily number of
workers' trips to and  from the shaft site would be ten.

     No rock would be  disposed of from drop shaft sites.
However, an initial  layer  of soil would have to be excavated
and disposed of.  Depending on the drop shaft size, the esti-
mated volume of  excavated  soil from one shaft would range
from 4.5 to 315  cubic  yards.1   Assuming a truck capacity of
13 cubic yards,  the  total  number of trips generated would
range from 1 to  25 for the entire excavation of a drop shaft,
The construction at  a  drop shaft site is expected to last
for about three  months,  but the excavation would probably
last only a few  weeks.  Assuming two weeks for the excava-
tion, the daily  number of  truck trips would be less than
three.
      Based on the smallest drop shaft diameter of 3.5 feet and the
      largest of 17 feet, and assuming 25 feet of soil cover,  the loose
      excavated soil is conservatively assumed to occupy a 50 percent
      greater volume than its in-place volume.
                            VII-25

-------
     In addition to the above estimated trips, there would
be truck trips for transporting construction equipment and
material.  These trips would generally occur at the begin-
ning and the end of the construction period.  The largest
number of such trips would result from trucks transporting
concrete for lining tunnels to construction shaft sites.
This would add approximately one trip per hour to the above
estimates.

     Comparison of the total daily number of trips, as esti-
mated above, with the normal traffic volume on affected roads
given in Section 3.4, indicates that impact of the additional
construction-related traffic on the traffic flow would be
insignificant.  During the peak construction year, in 1980,
when all three tunnel systems would be under construction,
the estimated total number of construction-related trips
would be approximately 2,000 per day, including 650 truck
trips.  These trips would be scattered over many routes,
however, and would have negligible impact on the existing
traffic flow.
7.5  MAJOR PROJECTS AND PROGRAMS

     The effects of the proposed surface and subsurface con-
struction on other major projects and programs in the area
would be negligible.  Major projects and programs associated
with the communities in the Des Plaines system project area
include:  street improvement, acquisition of a public energy
corridor, public buildings, and residential land development.


7.5.1  Transit Improvements

     While currently available maps showing the alignment of
proposed CTA subway improvements do not depict the final routes
design, any potential interferences of the proposed Des Plaines
system with the routes are not expected to present any poten-
tial conflicts.
7.5.2  Streets and Expressway Improvements

     All proposed shafts would be outside the proposed align-
ments of all road improvements.  No significant interference
to these road improvements is expected from construction of
the Des Plaines Tunnel system.
                           VII-26

-------
7-5.3  Public Acquisition of Energy-Utility Corridor

     During shaft construction along the Des Plaines River
and Salt Creek,  construction contractors would be required
under contracts  with the MSDGC to survey all access routes
to determine whether any pipeline crossings would need struc-
tural reinforcement prior to use.  The contractors would also
be required to make the necessary reinforcements.  Therefore,
no interference  with pipeline operation is expected.  More-
over, the amount of land consumed by the Des Plaines system
shafts in the proposed energy corridor is minor compared to
the area of the  corridor, and the shaft locations would not
preclude further utility development of the corridor.
7.6  COMMITMENT OF RESOURCES

     Construction of the proposed project would require
about 450,000 cubic yards of concrete and undetermined quan-
tities of other construction materials.  Construction vehicles
and equipment, as well as vehicles used by construction
workers would consume approximately 186,000 gallons of gaso-
line and 100,000 gallons of diesel fuel during project con-
struction.

     Electrical power needed for constructing the TARP con-
veyance tunnels will be purchased rather than generated on
site.  All underground construction activities will rely
heavily on electricity for power generation, whereas sur-
face construction will use predominantly internal combustion
engines.  Tunneling machines or moles will be the principal
consumers of electrical power, and they will account for
much of the energy used in this project.  The amount of
power which may be consumed during construction is expected
to be less than one percent of total energy consumed in the
region.  The demand that this would place on the metropoli-
tan power grid depends on the number of tunnels being con-
structed at the same time, and the extent of other construc-
tion operations that are underway.  Each tunnel system is
expected to consume a maximum of two to five Megawatts of
electrical power (MWe).  Assuming a worst case situation of
all three tunnel systems being constructed at the same time,
and coal is used to generate a maximum amount of 15
Megawatts (5 MWe per system), approximately 70,000 tons
of coal will be consumed during each year of construction.

-------
This estimate is based on a 8,500 Btu/lb heating value-
20 percent  ash coal resource.   This consumption rate
represents  approximately  0.06  percent of the total coal
production  rate for the Illinois, Indiana,  western Kentucky,
and Michigan regions in 1969. ^
     "Potential Pollutants in Fossil Fuels,"  Esso Research and
     Engineering Company, Report prepared for the U.S. EPA, Office
     of Research and Monitoring, June 1973.
                             VII-28

-------
VIII.  EFFECTS OF OPERATION ON THE
           NATURAL ENVIRONMENT

-------
         VIII.   EFFECTS OF OPERATION ON THE
                    NATURAL ENVIRONMENT
     The significant effects of implementing TARP on the
natural environmental features of the Chicago metropolitan
area are discussed in this chapter and presented in five
sections:

          Water Resources
          Land Resources
          Atmospheric Resources
          Biological Resources
          Commitment of Natural Resources.
8.1  WATER RESOURCES

     The operation of the proposed tunnel system will have
a significant beneficial effect on the water resources of
the Chicago area.  Water quality conditions the past 20 years
have been poor, and aquatic life has dwindled to only
pollution-tolerant species.  Implementation of the tunnel
system will improve conditions so that a wider diversity of
aquatic life can be reestablished and existing aquatic life
can proliferate.  This section describes the impact of tun-
nel operation on surface water and groundwater supplies of
the affected area, as well as on wastewater and water man-
agement programs.  This discussion addresses the following
topics:

          Surface water quality and use as a resource
          Groundwater quality
          Impact on wastewater
          Interaction with other water management programs.
8.1,1  Surface Water

     The deep tunnel system proposed by the MSDGC will affect
surface water resources of the Chicago area in a variety of
ways.  Discussion of the impacts will follow the structure
of Chapter II; the description of the existing natural en-
vironment.
                           VIII-1

-------
 (1)  Water Quality

     Completion of the Mainstream, Calumet,  and  Lower
Des Plaines tunnel systems will reduce  spills to area
waterways, caused by combined-sewer overflows, from
approximately 100 occasions per year to about 10 occa-
sions per year.  The tunnel systems will capture for
treatment approximately 51 percent of the  annual volume
of overflow from combined sewers, thus  reducing  dis-
charges to area waterways from the present level of
113,500 acre-feet per year to a level of 55,800  acre-
feet per year.  Because the tunnel systems will  capture
the most heavily polluted portion of the overflows, the
percent reduction in the pollutant load in general will
exceed the percent reduction in overflow volume.  After
treatment, the amount of biological oxygen demand (BOD)
released to the waterways is expected to be reduced by
about 78 percent  (net) from present releases (approxi-
mately 38,700,000 Ibs/yr to roughly 8,500,000 Ibs/yr).
Discharges of suspended solids will drop from a  current
level of about 180,500,000 Ibs/yr to roughly 45,125,000
Ibs/yr (a net reduction of about 75 percent).  Currently,
overflows from the combined sewers occur 17.4 percent
of the time, releasing, untreated, the  equivalent of
8.7 percent of the yearly average dry weather flow
to area waterways.^  Implementation of  the tunnel
system alone will limit overflow episodes  to approx-
imately 1.5 percent of the time, reducing  releases
of untreated sewage to less than 2 percent of the
yearly average dry weather flows.  The  statistics on
pollutant reduction cited above and their  sources are
summarized in Table VIII-1.

     By reducing the number of yearly combined-sewer
overflows from 100 to 10, a significant result will
be that the average duration of nonoverflow  periods
will be increased from the current 3.1 days  to 24 days.
This means that the quality of the waterways will be
governed, in general, by dry weather flow  conditions.
Dry weather flow conditions,  in turn,  are  strongly
influenced by effluent discharges from  area  treatment
plants and by BOD released through the  accumulated
benthal deposits.

     Presently, under dry weather flow  conditions,
water quality along large sections of the  area's
three primary water systems fails to meet  minimum
Illinois standards for restricted waters.   This
situation is particularly critical during  the hot
Hearing on the Proposed Chicago Tunnel and Reservoir Plan, Chicago,
Illinois, March 28, 1974.
                     VIII-2

-------
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                             VIII-4

-------
summer months, when water levels are at their lowest,
pollutants appear more concentrated, and the rates
of decomposition of organic materials in the waters
are at their highest.  The figures presented in
Table VIII-2 document the severity of the problem.

     A major cause of this problem is the poor
quality of the effluents from the three major waste-
water treatment plants of the region, the Calumet,
North-Side and West-Southwest sewage treatment plants.
Because of the outflows from these plants area
waterways are not expected to meet the restricted
use standards of Illinois without additional measures.

     Table II-8 shows the effectiveness of ammonia
removal at these treatment plants.  Largely because
of the high ammonia levels, it is not likely that
the state water quality standards will be met, even
with the tunnel systems, unless the treatment processes
are upgraded to some form of tertiary-level wastewater
treatment.

     In Chapter II of this report, a simulation of
dissolved oxygen  (DO) concentration was presented
to illustrate the overall poor quality of the waters
in this region.  Models of the waterways along the
Mainstream and Calumet systems were used to demon-
strate existing conditions.  Unfortunately, water
quality models of the Des Plaines River, currently
being developed under the Chicago area "208" effort,
were not  available for this report.

     In the EISs prepared by USEPA for those two
sections  of TARP, further DO simulations were used
to show the effects which tunnel operation would have
upon the  overall water quality of the area.  In
general,  the  simulations showed that an improvement
in DO concentrations averaging 1.7 mg/1 above
existing  conditions can be expected over the 80 miles
of waterway which were modeled.  However, the DO
standard  of the 4 mg/1 would still not be met over
some 70 percent of those waterways during dry weather
flow conditions.

     The  circumstances surrounding the Des Plaines
River system  are  somewhat different.  In Cook County,
the Des Plaines River winds through a highly urbanized,
primarily residential area.  Due to its location, the
river is  the  focal point of a great deal of recreational
                      VIII-5

-------
activity.  As a result, the pollutant concentrations
in the Des Plaines River are not as high or as severe
as they are in other major area waterways.  However,
for the same reason, the standards set for the Des
Plaines River are higher.  Characteristic pollutant
levels are shown in Table A-3.  These can be compared
with the corresponding levels in the waters of the
Mainstream and Calumet surface water systems, displayed
in Tables A-l and A-2 respectively.

     In the MSDGC report from which Tables A-l
through A-3 were excerptedl the principal water quality
problems along the Des Plaines River were identified
as suspended solids (SS) and fecal coliform concentra-
tions.  In contrast with the other major area water-
ways, dissolved oxygen  (DO), biological oxygen
demand (BOD) and ammonia (NH3) do not appear to be a
problem.  For this reason, instream aeration
stations planned for the other major waterways are
not likely to be required along the Des Plaines River.

     In summary, implementation of Phase I tunnels
will limit combined-sewer overflows to about 10
occasions per year.  Dry weather flow conditions will
then be the influencing factor in water quality in
the area.  Under such conditions, Illinois Standards
for Secondary Contact and Indigenous Aquatic Life
will not be met for DO and probably not for ammonia.
For these reasons, implementation of the Phase I
tunnels will not enable an upgrading in water uses
along large reaches of the major Chicago area water-
ways.  Rather it is clear that other programs for
pollution control must also be undertaken to attain
state standards on these river systems.  Other
programs being considered toward this end are:
upgrading of existing treatment plants, use of instream
aeration, and implementation of TARP Phase II.

     Along the Des Plaines River system TARP Phase I
is expected to enhance the recreational potential of
the waterway although compliance with SS and fecal
coliform standards is not anticipated until the
storage reservoirs become operational.  Work being
conducted by the Northern Illinois Planning Commission
     Appendix "C" of "Facilities Planning Study—MSDGC Overview
     Report," Second Revision, January 1975.
                     VIII-6

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(NIPC) under section 208 of the 1972 Water Pollution
Control Act Amendments will provide the basis upon
which to judge what additional steps, if any, will be
required to maintain and enhance water quality along
the Des Plaines River.

(2)  Water Quantity

    - Implementation of Phase I of TARP is not expected
to have a significant impact on annual flow rates and
water levels along the major river systems.  The tunnels
themselves are too limited in capacity to reduce notice-
ably the flood stages attained during the largest area
storms.  Flooding will still occur at nearly the same
existing frequency until the storage reservoirs are im-
plemented or the storage capacity is increased.
 (3)  Flow Regulation

     Capture of 51 percent of the combined-sewer over-
 flow volume with subsequent treatment and release to
 area waterways will have some impact on flow regulation,
 Operation of the tunnel system is expected to
 increase the average flow of water from the West-
 Southwest and Calumet plants by about 13 percent
 and 9 percent, respectively.  This modest increase
 will allow a smoothing out of flow rates in the
 Mainstream and Calumet River systems except for
 those occasions when large storms occur.  Operation
 of Phase I tunnels will have virtually no effect on
 the regulation of Des Plaines River flow since
 captured overflows will be treated at West-Southwest
 STW and released to the Sanitary and Ship Canal.  In
 short, the effect of tunnel operation on flow regula-
 tion throughout the Chicago area is expected to be
 minor.
 (4)  Domestic Water Supply

     The capture, treatment, and release of combined-
 sewer overflows is expected to have little, if any,
 impact upon domestic water supplies.  Plant effluent
 may eventually be upgraded to the point where it can
 substitute for a portion of that direct diversion from
 Lake Michigan used for maintenance of water quality.
 Until then, it is unlikely that the additional flows
 provided by TARP Phase I will enable the reallocation
 of high quality Lake Michigan water for domestic uses.
                     VIII-7

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     (5)   Benthai Deposits

          Implementation of the tunnel system will reduce
     releases of suspended solids to the waterways by about
     75 percent.1  It is expected that only a thin layer of
     sludge will be deposited on the river bottom after an
     overflow event once the tunnels have been placed in
     operation.  Because of this, the number of instances
     in which anaerobic decomposition occurs should be re-
     duced significantly.

          A significant reduction in benthic oxygen demand
     is predicted as a result of Phase I TARP.  The tunnel
     will capture all but the largest overflows, expanding
     the average duration of nonoverflow conditions from
     3.1 to 24 days.  Because of this, benthic oxygen de-
     mand will be reduced to about 20 percent of current
     levels.2  Dredging of existing sludge deposits from
     the waterways should further reduce the oxygen demand
     from organic sediment.


8.1.2  Groundwater

     The operation of the tunnel system and associated sub-
systems is expected to have two types of effects on the
natural environment.  Wastewaters conveyed by the system
may have an impact on groundwater resources caused by ex-
filtration.  Conversely, these resources may have an impact
on the tunnels because of groundwater infiltration.

     Although concrete linings and rock grouting will be
used to control infiltration and exfiltration  (see Section
5.1.2 of Chapter V), no combination of lining and grouting
can completely eliminate the inflow and outflow of water
between the tunnel and the surrounding rock.  Should the
grouting program fail, infiltration or exfiltration will most
likely occur and will cause a significant impact on tunnel
operations.  The inflow or outflow rates are expected to be
at the tunnel maximum level, as indicated in Section 6.1.2
and illustrated in Figures VI-1, VI-2, and VI-3.  The extent
     Westfall, D.E., Keifer and Associates, Memorandum to MSDGC,
     February 3,  1976.

     Ibid.
                         VIII-8

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of grouting failures,  however,  can be monitored by:   routine
and frequent tunnel inspections, water level fluctuations in
observations wells, and chemical analysis of the observation
well water.

     Assuming that the number of grouting failures are kept
to a minimum, the impacts of groundwater infiltration and
wastewater exfiltration during operation of the tunnel sys-
tem are not expected to be significant.  The effects of
these impacts which are unique to infiltration and exfiltra-
tion, are discussed in the following sections.
     (1)   Infiltration

          During dry weather conditions, the pressure inside
     the tunnel will generally be low because of the nearly
     dry tunnel conditions.  During normal storm events, the
     tunnels will be partially full, and the pressure will
     still be lower than the groundwater inflow pressure.
     Therefore, when the tunnels are dry or only partially
     full, groundwater infiltration will take place.  If the
     tunnel is grouted according to specifications, inflow
     is not expected to exceed 0.05 MGD/mile.  For the Calumet
     tunnels, groundwater infiltration may be as low as
     0.01 MGD/mile.  Although the infiltration rate to the
     tunnel is small, the pressure will still be high enough
     to prevent exfiltration of wastewater from the tunrel
     into the aquifer.

          As revealed in Chapter V, the grouting program is
     designed to limit overall infiltration to 0.05 MGD/mile
     or less.  To achieve a rate lower than this, chemical
     and epoxy grouts may be required in addition to cement
     grouts.  This requirement is dependent on nature and
     density of fracturing and on seepage or infiltration
     conditions encountered during construction which dictate
     what grouting method should be employed.  The stability
     of any chemical grouts employed will have to be
     assured.

          The results of tests conducted in two tunnels
     completed to date confirm that the grouting program is
                          VIII-9

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effectively limiting groundwater infiltration  to  less
than half of the figure of 500 gallons per  day per
inch of tunnel diameter per mile considered acceptable
for sewer performance.  If groundwater infiltration  is
controlled by the grouting program in Phase I  tunnels
as well as has been done in the two demonstration tun-
nels, then the effects on groundwater due to infiltra-
tion would be even less than is stated in this EIS.
(2)  Exfiltration

     During major storm events, the hydraulic  or  outward
pressure in the tunnel may exceed the  inward pressure of
the aquifer.  Exfiltration will then occur  until  tunnel
pressure and aquifer pressure  achieve  equilibrium.
This would result in adverse effects on groundwater
quality in the vicinity of the tunnel,  and  would  neces-
sitate an aquifer protection system.   Preservation of
the aquifer can be achieved by establishing or preserv-
ing two physical conditions throughout the  project
area:

          Maintenance of a high piezometric level with-
          in the aquifer in relation to hydraulic grade
          levels in tunnels and shafts by a system of
          recharge wells

          Limitation of exfiltration as well as infil-
          tration by a combination of  grouting and
          tunnel lining, as discussed  previously.

     Although  data was not  available to indicate  the ex-
pected maximum tunnel pressure during  a simulated flood
condition,  studies have  identified  general  areas  in which
aquifer recharge will be necessary  to  sustain  poten-
tiometric levels and thus to avoid  exfiltration.^
Figure VTII-7  shows areas which may  require installa-
tion of recharge wells.  These areas correspond to
existing or imminent low potentiometric surface areas.
The need for future recharge wells was based on pro-
jected water level declines.   The recharge  system, if
required, would consist of wells  spaced approximately
Harza Engineering Company, "Development of a Flood and Pollution
Control Plan for the Chicagoland Area;  Geology and Water Supply,"
Technical Report, Part 4, MSDGC, 1972.
                     VIII-10

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                                               FIGURE VIII-7
                                             Aquifer  Protection
                                                    Needs 1
   ; COOK COUNTY r-t
LEGEND:
    AREAS IN WHICH INITIAL RECHARGE WELL INSTALLATION
    IS NECESSARY

    AREAS IN WHICH FUTURE RECHARGE WELL INSTALLATION
    MAY BE NECESSARY
    HEC,  1972
                                  VIII-11

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     1,000 feet apart.   The system is designed to allow a
     water injection rate of 100 gpm which would result in
     an equivalent recharge amount of 0.73 MGD per mile of
     tunnel.  Due to the variability of the aquifer, addi-
     tional testing will be necessary during construction
     to delineate specific locations for recharge wells
     and to determine appropriate injection rates.

          According to present plans, the proposed tunnel
     system will be situated beneath existing potable water
     main systems at a minimum vertical distance of 70 feet.
     In order to determine the potential for pollution of
     the potable water from exfiltration of the combined
     sewage, a "worst case" analysis was performed.   This
     analysis was based on the following assumptions:

               The sewage tunnel is unlined, and only major
               open joints have been grouted.

               Pressure head in the sewage tunnel is the
               same as at land surface.

               Ratio of horizontal to vertical permeabilities
               is one, Kh/Kv=l/  and permeability rate is
               0.001 ft/min.

               The water main is empty.

               The concrete lining of the water main is
               damaged to the extent that it does not func-
               tion as a seepage boundary.

          The analysis indicated that even under such criti-
     cal and unlikely circumstances, it would take approxi-
     mately 280 days for the exfiltrated seepage to reach
     the water main, and the rate of seepage in the main
     would be about 0.07 gpm per foot of water main line
     affected (or 0.5 MGD/mile).

          It is extremely unlikely that this situation will
     occur.  Based on the projected rate of flow of the sew-
     age effluent, there would be sufficient time to imple-
     ment mitigative measures in the event exfiltration
     occurs, providing observation wells are installed.
1    HEC, 1972.

2    Ibid.
                         VIII-12

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          A "worst case" situation would necessitate the
     emptying of the water main for repairs to damaged  lining.
     Monitoring efforts (i.e., water level and water quality
     movements) in nearby observation wells will reveal any
     adverse or potentially adverse changes before they could
     become manifest in non-test wells located farther  away.
     These observation wells should be located along the
     entire length of the tunnel route.  Figure VIII-8  shows
     the locations of existing observation wells as revealed
     in a 1975 report by HEC.
     In view of the heterogeneous nature of the aquifer sys-
tem, the observations and conclusions presented herein should
be considered as estimates or relative assessments.  The dis-
tribution of observation wells along the Des Plaines Tunnel
system appears inadequate for effective monitoring.   In addi-
tion, the potentiometric surfaces and tunnel pressures of  this
system will have to be more  fully defined  to adequately calcu-
late exfiltration potential  and  to design  the  proper  exfiltra-
tion control systems.


8.1.3  Wastewater

     Treatment of captured overflows from  the  combined sewers
is the ultimate goal of the  proposed deep  tunnel  system.
The dewatering of intercepted flows from the tunnels  is de-
signed to be completed within about 2.5 days to avoid the
possibility of septicity in  the  tunnels.   Implementation of
the tunnel system will increase  dry weather flows from the
West-Southwest and Calumet plants by roughly 13 percent and
9 percent, respectively.^  Increased flows through these
two plants and changes in selected effluent characteristics
relative to 1973 levels are  shown in Table VIII-4.
     Westfall, D.E., Keifer and Associates, Memorandum to MSDGC,
     February 3,  1976.
                          VIII-13

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                                     FIGURE VIII-8
                             General Location of Existing
                                   Observation Wells
r
    I      nrXr-
  -J   	\ff   *
                       VIII-14

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                          Table VIII-4
               Comparison of Anticipated Effluent
            Flows and Characteristics Resulting  From
           Phase I Tunnel Dewatering With 1973 Average
                      Operating Parameters^

Flow (cfs)
DO (rag/1)
BOD (mg/1)
NH3 (mg/1)
North-Side STP
Phase I (1973)
505 (505)
7 (7)
10 (10)
5 (5)
West-Southwest STP
Phase I (1973)
1460 (1340)
7 (7)
8 (7)
7 (7)
Calumet STP
Phase I (1973)
366 (325)
7 (7)
20 (15)
18 (18)
    Westfall, D.E., Keifer and Associates, Memorandum to MSDGC, February 3, 1976.

   As is evident from the table, the effect of  Phase  I tunnel
   dewatering operations on treatment plant effluent  quality
   is not expected to be significant.  The likely  dilution of
   intercepted flows and the modest increases in flow to the
   treatment plants from dewatering form the basis for this
   finding.

        Effluent flows and chemical characteristics are indi-
   cated in  Table VIII-5, assuming addition of  the storage res-
   ervoirs and expansion and upgrading of the MSDGC's large plants
   to provide tertiary treatment including nitrification of ammonia.

                          Table VIII-5
                   Effluent Flows and Chemical
                 Characteristics Resulting From            ^
     Addition of Reservoirs and Upgrading of MSDGC Plants

Flow (cfs)
DO (mg/1)
BOD (mg/1)
NH3 (mg/1)
North-Side STP
TARP (Upgrading)
505 (505)
7 (7)
10 (8)
5 (2.5)*
(4.0)**
West-Southwest STP
TARP (Upgrading)
1587 (1587)
7 (7)
8 (8)
7 (2.5)*
(4.0)**
Calumet STP
TARP (Upgrading)
391 (391)
7 (7)
20 (8)
18 (2.5)*
(4.0)**
* Summer months.
** Winter months.
Irons, J., MSDGC, Personal Communication, February 10,  1976.
                             VIII-15

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     Ammonia concentrations of 2.5 mg/1 (summer)  and 4.0 mg/1
(winter)  for the upgraded plants represent the minimum level
that must be attained by December 31, 1977, to meet Illinois
Effluent Discharge standards for plants treating in excess
of 50,000 population equivalents of load.   In addition,
under these standards, BOD levels from MSDGC plants must be
limited to no more than 10 mg/1 by December 31, 1977.  The
projected improvement in BOD levels beyond the mandated
limit due to plant upgrading is a result of MSDGC's companion
effort to meet DO standards in the waterways by limiting
BOD releases from MSDGC treatment plants.   Currently, Illinois
has no BOD standards specifically for waterways and the
limitation that must be met is the effluent discharge standard,

     At this time, information on the design and operation of
the reservoir storage systems is insufficient to enable a
determination of the effect of variable dewatering rates on
the quality of treatment plant effluent.

8.1.4  Water Management Programs

     Improvements in water quality resulting from operation
of the tunnel system are, in general, consistent with the
aims of other area water management programs.  The tunnel
system, in conjunction with a water storage system, is
widely recognized in virtually all area plans as a necessary
component to control pollution and flooding problems in
the Chicago area.  Although the tunnels alone would not at-
tain fully the goals of the various programs identified in
Section 2.1.4, operation of the tunnels without the reser-
voirs would enable pollution control aims to be at least
partially accomplished.

     A decision to construct the tunnel system prior to the
completion of the 208 Planning Program would certainly re-
duce the options open to the 208 planning agency  (Northern
Illinois Planning Commission) in developing an areawide waste
treatment management plan.  With the commitment to a signi-
ficant component of the TARP system, the potential utility
and impact of the waterway monitoring and modeling to be
                          VIII-16

-------
undertaken as part of the 208 program will necessarily be
reduced.  However, the 208 Planning Program is still ex-
pected to provide significant data affecting the design and
implementation of other components of the TARP project, in-
cluding reservoir storage of combined-sewer overflows, up-
grading and expansion of area treatment plants, and the use
of instream aeration.

     No major conflicts could be identified between imple-
mentation of the tunnel system and other water management
programs in the Chicago area.
8.2  LAND RESOURCES

     The effects on land resources of implementing TARP are
discussed in this section of the EIS.  The assessment focuses
mainly on the Des Plaines Tunnel system and is presented
under the following land resource categories:

          Flood-Prone Areas
          Geology and Seismicity
          Land Disposal of Sludge.
8.2.1  Flood-Prone Areas

     The flood-prone areas within the MSDGC combined-
sewer service area are expected to be beneficially affected
as a result of Des Plaines Tunnel system operation.  The
effect will be very small, however, since the combined-
storage capacity of the Calumet Tunnels is only 1,692 ac-ft,
which is equivalent to approximately 0.4 inches of runoff
water.  The drainage basins and areas susceptible to
overbank flooding associated with the Des Plaines Tunnel
route have been described in Section 2.2, Land Resources,
of this EIS.  Although flood abatement as well as over-
flow relief can be expected within certain portions of
these drainage basins and flood-prone areas, the amount
will be insignificant unless a larger storage system is
incorporated as part of the tunnel plan.  For the Des
Plaines system, there will be 89 overflow relief points
and 55 drop shafts for collecting runoff wastewaters.
Most of these relief points and drop shafts will be
located within flood-prone areas.  Table VIII-6 presents
the number of drop shafts and relief points for all the
Des Plaines Tunnel segments as compared to all the TARP
systems combined.  This table provides an overview of the
incremental, beneficial effects which the Des Plaines
Tunnel system is expected to have on the MSDGC flood-
prone areas.
                           VIIl-17

-------
overflow relief points and  55  drop  shafts  for collecting
runoff wastewaters.  Most of these  relief  points and drop
shafts will be located within  flood-prone  areas.  Table VIII-6
presents the number of drop shafts  and  relief points for all
the Des Plaines Tunnel segments  as  compared to all the TARP
systems combined.  This table  provides  an  overview of the
incremental, beneficial effects  which the  Des Plaines Tunnel
system is expected to have  on  the MSDGC flood-prone areas.

                       Table VIII-6
         Comparison of Des  Plaines  Tunnel  Segments
            to All TARP Systems  - Drop  Shafts
              and Overflow  Relief Points

                                    All          Percent (%)
  Component        Des  Plaines   Systems*        of Total**

Drop Shafts            55           341             13.2

Overflow Relief                     644             13.8
Points
*    Mainstream, Calumet, and Lower Des Plaines.
**    Fraction of Des Plaines with_respect to total for all systems,
8.2.2  Geology and Seismicity

     Many of the geologic constraints  placed on the construc-
tion procedures  (Chapter 6.2.2)  are  also  applicable to the
long-term operation of the tunnel  systems.   Remedial mea-
sures taken to decrease the  geologic impact during the
construction phases will further add to the long-term sta-
bility of the systems operations.  The impact of operations
on the gross subsurface geologic and seismic characteris-
tics of the Chicago region is  considered  to be negligible.
Some impact of operations within a localized or restricted
geologic area can be expected,  and this impact could have a
further impact on the operation of the system.
     Bauer Engineering, Inc., November 1973,
                          VIII-18

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     The interplay of operations and geologic or  seismic
conditions is directly dependent upon a number  of physical
aspects of the various strata, or geologic structures,  to
be traversed by the tunnels and associated systems.   These
geologic constraints, discussed in detail in Chapters 2.2.3
and 6.2.2, consist of the engineering properties  of  the
rocks, rock structure variability, bedding attitude,  and
geologic structures such as faults, folds, and  joints with-
in each rock unit.  Awareness of specific problems posed  by
these geologic constraints and remedial measures  taken to
secure short-term stability during the construction  phase
of the project should be sufficient to ensure the long-term
(operational) stability of the system.
     (1)  Geologic Effects

          A number of geologic conditions would  appear to
     have a unique impact on long-term  operation of the
     tunnels and associated systems.  These  conditions do
     not necessarily pose a problem during the construction
     phase.  Among these constraints are:  stress changes
     induced by system operation or by  progressive yielding
     of the rocks with time, the erosive or  corrosive  effects
     on the rocks of waste materials and flood waters  carried
     by the tunnels, weathering or corrosive effects at
     joints or fracture zones with time, the erosive effects
     of rock falls moved along the length of the tunnels
     during periods of flooding, and the effects of a  seis-
     mic event or earthquake on the tunnel and related
     features.

          The degree of maintenance required will be a
     direct function of the long-term effectiveness of the
     rock anchoring system applied to certain segments of
     the tunnels.1  Although the anchoring system can  be
     Harza Engineering Company (HEC), Geotechnical Design Report,
     "Tunnel and Reservoir Plan Mainstream Tunnel System," MSDGC,
     Chicago, Illinois, 1975.
                          VIII-19

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relied on during tunnel excavation,  tunnel operation
and a progressive yielding  over  time resulting from
stress relief will induce stress  changes  in the vici-
nity of the tunnel periphery,  and the long-term relia-
bility of the anchoring system will  diminish.   In these
instances, rock falls would be expected,  and these
falls would require clean-up,  rebolting,  regrouting,
and patching of the rock fall  zones.   The frequency
of these occurrences can become  so great  that  future
lining of the tunnel could  be  warranted even after
start-up of operation.  This provision should  not be
discounted.  In this sense, operation of  unlined tun-
nel segments should be regarded by the MSDGC as an
"experimental," pilot venture.  Most of the Des
Plaines Tunnel system will  be  unlined and the  rock
fall impact could be significant  during the operation
of this system.

     The materials carried  by  the tunnel  systems may
have an erosive or corrosive effect  upon  the rocks.
Wetting and drying laboratory  tests  have  indicated
that almost all the rocks  (with the  exception  of shale)
have a low chemical reactivity with  sewage.-'-  However,
the rocks may be highly reactive  to  certain industrial
wastes expected to enter the tunnels and  the long-term
effects will not be known until  further tests  are con-
ducted .

     It appears probable that  for an unlined and unsup-
ported tunnel, over a period of  time,  the thin shale
partings and interbeds found in  the  Interreef  facies
of the Racine, in the Markgraf and Brandon Bridge mem-
bers of the Joliet and in the  Kankakee dolomites will
be subject to deterioration.   Deterioration would be
especially rapid when the shale  interbeds are  subjected
to alternate wetting and drying.   Wherever a shaley
parting or interbed occurs  near  the  crown of a moled
tunnel, it will act as a weak  plane  to which the crown
portion will tend to break  back with time, forming a
flat roof.  Structural weakening  and fallout from the
Harza Engineering Company (HEC), Geotechnical Design Report,
"Tunnel and Reservoir Plan Mainstream Tunnel System," MSDGC,
Chicago, Illinois, 1975.
                     VIII-20

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rock surrounding the tunnels would  also be expected
with time wheiaver closely spaced shale partings and
joints intersect.1

     Rock falls would cause a  decrease in the hydrau-
lic efficiency of the tunnel.   Further, irregularities
in tunnel shape caused by a rock  fall  will be subject
to more concentrated attack by erosional forces asso-
ciated with flowing water.  Hence,  the tunnel condi-
tion could worsen rapidly in the  absence of remedial
measures.  Moreover, the fallen rock could damage
downstream tunnel sections as  it  is transported by the
flowing waters.  Additionally, since the diameter of
the proposed tunnels will be greater than the approxi-
mately 17-foot diameter of existing tunnels, the crown
areas of the proposed tunnels  will  be somewhat less
stable.
 (2)  Seismic Effects

     The  seismicity of the Chicago area has been des-
 cribed  in detail  in Chapter 2.2.4 and the construction
 phase-seismicity  interrelations have been discussed in
 Chapter 6.2.3.  The recurrence rate for an MMI VIII
 earthquake  is  about once for every 100 years and the
 last VIII earthquake  was in 1909.  This recurrence
rate is well within the  30-to-40 year funding life span
of the  tunnel  system.

     A  local earthquake can be generated by small (a
 few centimeters)  movements on a fault.  If the causa-
 tive fault  intersects the tunnel system, the minor
 dislocation may offset the tunnel alignment.  This may
 alter the tunnel  support systems as well as destroy
 the integrity  of  the  nonstructural tunnel lining, thus
 exposing  the surrounding rocks, especially shales, to
 deterioration.  Rock  fall in the vicinity of such a
 dislocation may be extensive, especially along joints
 or other  fractures in unlined tunnels.

     The  impact from  earthquakes generated by faults
 at some distance  from the tunnel and associated systems
 is expected to be slight.  Rock falls can be expected
Harza Engineering Company  (HEC), "Evaluation of Geology and
Groundwater Conditions in  Lawrence Avenue Tunnel, Calumet Inter-
cepting Sewer 18E, Extension A. Southwest Intercepting Sewer 13A,"
Chicago, Illinois, 23 p.,  1972 a.
                      VIII-21

-------
     along some pre-existing jc..nts or fracture zones.
     General rock fall, unrel. ted to existing breaks and
     the formation of new cracks is unlikely in light of
     the particle velocities required to cause breakage
     compared to the peak vertical velocities for all but
     the largest earthquakes (MMI VIII).
8.2.3  Sludge Waste

     Sludge solids from combined-sewer overflows will be
captured by the Des Plaines Tunnel system operation.  Sluoge
from this system will be processed at the West-Southwest
Treatment Plant and then will be disposed of in a variety
of ways.

     The MSDGC estimates that sludge generation from the
Mainstream and Des Plaines systems will increase the sludge
load of the West-Southwest plant by 70 to 100 tons per  clay
(tpd),  or by about 15 percent over the current sludge-
handling rate.  Ultimate disposal of the sludge solids  i-j
expected to be as follows:

                                          1973 Sludge
                         Sludge Pro-      Disposal Rate
                         duction From     From Calumet
     Disposal Method     Tunnels  (tpd)*   Plant  (tpd)

                                44              208

                                13              100

                                 9              100

                                34              200
                               100               608

The disposal impact of the increment of sludge producted
by the Des Plaines system upon sludge handling and disposax
practices at the West-Southwest plant is not expected  to
be significant.
     Mainstream and Lower Des Plaines  Systems.
                           VIII-22

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8.3  ATMOSPHERIC  RESOURCES

     The impact of  tunnel operation on atmospheric  resources
is discussed in the following sections:

          Air Quality
          Odor
          Aerosols
          Noise.
8.3.1  Air Quality

     Operation of the proposed tunnel system  is  not likely
to have any direct  effects on the ambient air quality.
However, there may  be an indirect impact on air  quality be-
cause of the use of electrical power to operate  the tunnel
dewatering pumps.   If the required electricity is generated
in a fossil fuel power plant, the pumps would require addi-
tional fuel to be burned, causing emission of air pollu-
tants at the power  plant site.

     The entire tunnel system would require about 107.1
million kilowatt hours (kWh)  per year to operate the pumps
and aerators1, of which about 12.6 million kWh would be
required by the Des Plaines system.2

     If the energy  for the entire system is purchased from
the Commonwealth Edison system, it would amount  to approxi-
mately 0.03 percent of the utility's net energy  generation
in 1980-*.  The relatively small amount of additional fuel
required to supply  this energy is not likely  to  have signi-
ficant adverse effect on the  region's air quality.
     Bauer Engineering,  Inc.,  "Environmental Impact Statement,"
     Preliminary Draft,  prepared for the MSDGC, November 1973.

     Environmental Assessment Statement for Des Plaines Tunnel System,
     MSDGC with assistance from Bauer Engineering, Inc., June 1976.

     Op.  cit., Bauer Engineering, Inc., November 1973.
                          VIII-23

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     Instead of purchasing it fr^.m a utility, the required
power may be generated using c;as turbines.  The turbines
could be owned and operated by the MSDGC, however, such
operation would not be economical based on the present high
cost of fuel oil.  Therefore, the use of gas turbines is
unlikely to be the choice for the proposed project.  Hence,
the air quality impact of gas turbine operation has not been
evaluated.
8.3.2  Odor

     If combined-sewer overflows are stored in the tunnels
for a long period of time, anaerobic conditions may develop,
resulting in odor generation.  Typically 3 to 10 days of
storage are required for anaerobic conditions to develop.
The tunnels are planned to be dewatered within 2 days of
receiving combined-sewer overflows, thus eliminating the
possibility of anaerobic conditions developing.  Therefore,
no odors should be generated during the storage of combined-
sewer overflows.

     If the tunnels are used to transport dry weather flows,
the drop shafts would provide ample ventilation to maintain
aerobic conditions and prevent generation of odor.
8.3.3  Aerosols

     Aerosols are fine airborne liquid particles.  These
may be produced in the drop shafts when the wastewater falls
at high velocity.  If not properly controlled, these aero-
sols, made of polluted water, may escape into the atmosphere
through the drop shaft opening.  Since pathogenic organisms
are present in the raw sewage flowing down the drop shaft,
the aerosols would present a potential health hazard to
nearby residents.  The proposed drop shafts are designed to
prevent the escape of aerosols into the atmosphere.  There-
fore, no adverse impacts are expected from them.
8.3.4  Noise

     Potential sources of noise during the tunnel operation
include dewatering pumps and water falling down the drop
shafts.  The pumps will be located from 250 to 300 feet un-
derground and noise from them is not expected to be heard
at the surface.  The water falling down the drop shafts
will be aerated to cushion its impact.  Thus, the noise will
                          VIII-24

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be minimized and will not cause  significant adverse impacts.
The velocity of the air leaving  the drop  shafts  will be con-
trolled so that no whistling sound will be  produced.
8.4  BIOLOGICAL RESOURCES

     Operation of the Des Plaines  Tunnel system and subsystems
is not expected to have a negative effect on the natural
vegetation, terrestrial and aquatic life,  and avian life of
the forest preserves in the project area.   Surface struc-
tures, such as drop shafts and  access  shafts, will require
a small amount of space  (less than 150 square feet of area).
Although several drop shafts will  be located on lands owned
by the Forest Preserve District,  the effects will be bene-
ficial rather than negative since  the purpose of the drop
shafts is to relieve flooding and  remove point and nonpoint
sources of pollution.


8.5  COMMITMENT OF RESOURCES

     Operation of the Des Plaines  Tunnel conveyance system,
will involve the yearly consumption of roughly 18  Megawatts
of electric power*  Assuming that  coal will be burned to
generate this amount of electricity,  an estimate of the quan-
tity of coal which will be consumed would be approximately
84,000 tons per year.  This estimate is based on a heating
value for coal of 8,500 Btu/lb  and an  ash content  for coal
of 20 percent.  More typical values for coal produced in the
Illinois region would be roughly 14,000 Btu/lb and 10 per-
cent ash.   Thus, the consumption  of 84,000 tons of coal per
year is a worst-case estimate.  The total amount of coal pro-
duced in the Illinois region (Illinois,  Indiana, western
Kentucky and Michigan)  in 1969  was 131,000,000 tons.3   Gen-
eration of 75 Megawatts of electricity for tunnel  operation
would therefore involve consumption of about 0.06  percent
of the total regional production of coal in 1969.   For this
reason, generation of electricity  for  tunnel operation is
not expected to have a significant impact on area  energy
resources.
     MSDGC, November 1973.

     "Potential Pollutants in Fossil Fuels,"" Esso Research and
     Engineering Company, Report prepared for U.S. EPA,  Office
     of Research and Monitoring, June 1973."

     Op. cit.
                           VIII-25

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IX.  EFFECTS OF OPERATION ON THE
        MAN-MADE ENVIRONMENT

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          IX.  EFFECTS OF OPERATION ON THE
                  MAN-MADE ENVIRONMENT
     The effects of operation of the Des Plains  tunnel
system on the man-made environment are described in  the
following sections:

          Socioeconomic
          Land Use
          Financial Resources
          Transportation
          Other Projects and Programs
          Commitment of Resources.
9.1  SOCIOECONQMIC

     The socioeconomic effects of operation  on  the man-made
environment are divided here into two  sections:  operation-
related income and operation-related employment.   They are
discussed below.
9.1.1  Operation-Related Income

     Operation and maintenance of  the  Des  Plaines  tunnel
system have been estimated as generating approximately
$1.2 million per year in salaries  and  wages.-*-   The
maintenance and operation program  is for each  phase of  the
Des Plaines system as well as the  pumping  station.  This
estimate assumes approximately 88  persons  at an average
annual salary of $13,840.
9.1.2  Operation-Related Employment

     Operation and maintenance  of  the  Des  Plaines tunnel
system are estimated to require 88 persons on a full-
time basis.   There should be no difficulty in filling
these positions from the available labor supply.
     MSDGC,  "Facilities Planning Study - Central Facility Area,"
     Revised, January 1975.

     Ibid.
                           IX-1

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9.2  LAND USE

     The operation of the Des Plaines tunnel system would
have only slight impact on land use including permanent
consumption of small amounts of industrial, commercial
and open space land of varying value, some reduction of
riverbank flooding, required coordination of planned
public facilities with shaft surface structures, and
consumption of land for sludge disposal.  These possible
impacts are discussed in the following sections:

          Alternations Near Surface Structures
          Sensitive Resource Areas
          Sludge Disposal.
9.2.1  Alterations Near Surface Structures

     The five construction shaft sites combined will
consume 28.2 acres of property, resulting in the permanent
use of these sites for environmental protection.
Environmental protection use would be compatible with
surrounding land uses.  The drop shafts and access shafts
would each consume a portion of land measuring about 25
feet by 25 feet, or 625 square feet.  The most common
location of drop shafts and access shafts would be in
open areas due to the high level of Forest Preserve lands
along the Des Plaines system route.  Other locations are
adjacent to industrial and commercial areas.  The
remaining locations of drop shafts are along waterways or
street edges.  Even in the most intensively used commercial
or industrial areas, this reallocation would probably only
slightly interfere with operation and would not force any
changes in use of industrial property.

     None of these land uses would be affected by
system operation because the surface structure of each drop
shaft can bear the loads of traffic and materials handling.
Access to a drop shaft would be required so infrequently
that it would cause no substantial interference with the
surrounding land use.  Therefore, the operation of the
system can be regarded as compatible with land use near
surface structures.
9.2.2  Sensitive Resource Areas

     The cultural and recreation areas identified in Chapter
III as sensitive resource areas, are not expected to ex-
perience any significant effects from the operation and main-
tenance functions related to the Des Plaines tunnel .«- -
                             IX-2

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Forest perserves and park areas are also not expected to be
affected, providing the areas are returned to their original
state or revegetated after construction.

     To some degree, the Des Plaines tunnel system may help
to alleviate the frequency of riverbank flooding and thereby
could contribute to the feasibility of opening up privately
owned lands to broader development.  However, insufficient
data exists at the writing of this statement to determine
just how much the system would alleviate the frequency of
flooding.  It can only be said that the quality of land
along the riverbanks along the tunnel may be enhanced by
such reduction in flooding and that the enhancement could
stimulate land use change.

     The potential for land use change is similar for prime
areas; from vacant or underutilized land to landscaped open
space with pedestrian access.  Industrial areas may also
be encouraged to upgrade their facilities and waterway
edges providing a more attractive environment.
9.2.3  Sludge Disposal

     The disposal of sludge resulting  from  flows  to  the
West-Southwest Sewage Treatment Works  from  the  Des Plaines
tunnel system would require no new  sludge disposal sites.
The following existing sites would  receive  the  sludge  as
divided below:

          MSDGC Fulton County landspreading
          operation	44%

          NuEarth Program  (end use  by  consumer).  ....  10%

          Wholesaling to broker  (end use by
          consumer).	34%

          Landfilling at sanitary landfills 	  12%

                                                 Total   100%

     Thus, about 22 percent of the  sludge would go to  the Nu-
Earth Program and landfilling, and  would remain in the
metropolitan area.  The consequence, for land use, would
be consumption of some sludge disposal capacity at a rate
somewhat greater than that under existing conditions.

1   Value is Imhoff sludge only.  Program can be expanded to  accept
    TARP sludge.
                           IX 3

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The increase in the rate of cons'unption of sludge disposal
lands is balanced directly by che resultant decrease in
the rate of solids deposited in the waterways.  Since
these solids would utimately be dredged from the waterways
and disposed of en land, the Des Plaines tunnel system
would effect no change in the quantity of land used for
sludge disposal.
9.3  FINANCIAL RESOURCES

     This section addresses the potential economic impacts
from the annual costs of operations and maintenance of
TARP - Phase I (estimated at $13.6 million for all three
tunnel systems).   It addresses the impact of these costs
on the household, commercial, and industrial sectors of
the MSDGC.  Economic impact is assessed in terms of its
effects on the tax rate structure and the manner in which
operations and maintenance costs are financed.

     The current method for financing operations and mainte-
nance costs of treatment facilities is an ad valorem tax.
The MSDGC is authorized to levy an ad valorem tax for the
District's operations and maintenance functions in an
amount not to exceed $.37 per $100 of assessed valuation.
The MSDGC's total tax levy for 1975 of $.04005 per $100
of assessed valuation included a $.02523 per $100 of
assessed valuation rate for operations and maintenance and
a $.01175 per $100 of assessed valuation rate for
construction.  In addition to the ad valorem tax, industrial
discharges are subject to an MSDGC user charge imposed
through the adoption of an "Industrial Waste Surchage
Ordinance" by the MSDGC Board of Trustees, December 10,
1970.

     In view of the requirement for a user charge system
under PL 92-500 and the authority of the State of Illinois
to impose one, the potential economic effects of financing
additional annual operations and maintenance costs of $13.6
million must be addressed on the basis of a user charge
method of financing as well as an ad valorem tax method.

     Table IX-1 illustrates the impact on the MSDGC tax rate
of the annual operations and maintenance cost associated
with TARP - Phase I (the portion applicable to the Des Plaines
tunnel system is $2.46 million annually).  The projected
incremental impact in FY 2000 is $.0956 per $100 of assessed
valuation.  Thus the MSDGC tax rate would increase to $0.7043
per $100 of assessed valuation in the year 1980 and drop to
$0.3872 in 1986 from the 1975 rate of $0.4005 per $100 of
assessed valuation due to tunnel construction and operation.
                           IX-4

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     For illustration purposes,  the total ad valorem property
tax for a $50,000 home  is  computed for 1981  (peak construc-
tion year), 1986  (end construction year), and 2000.  The  total
ad valorem tax includes the tax  rate attributable to operations
and maintenance  (Table  IX-1),  the tax rate attributable to con-
struction for the Phase I  period (Table 111-12).  In 1981 the
homeowner's total ad valorem property tax would be  $336.55;
in 1986, it would amount to $193.60; and in 2000, it would
reach $250.70.  Without the Des  Plaines tunnel system, the
homeowner would only pay a total ad valorem property tax  of
$171.20 (1976).  These  estimates apply only to the  Phase  I
tunnels; implementation of other TARP components will  result
in additional increases in the tax rate.
                        Table  IX-1
        1976 Estimate of  the Change in Property Tax
    Rate Attributable to  the Operations and Maintenance
           Costs Associated with TARP - Phase I
Fiscal
Year
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
2000
Tax Base
($ billion)
24.06
25.61
27.04
28.66
30.38
32.20
34.13
36.18
38.35
40.65
43.09
97.43
TARP Phase- I
Annual O&M2
($ million)
14.69
15.86
17.13
18.50
19.98
21.58
23.31
25.17
27.19
29 .'36
31.71
93.14
Annual Adjustment to
MSDGC Tax Rate
(
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     Economic impacts of operations and maintenance funding
on a user charge basis as oppo.-ad to an ad valorem tax basis
cannot be quantitatively addressed at this time.Region V
EPA has awarded two grants to the MSDGC for the development
of a user charge system to comply with the requirements of
PL 92-500; however, the contractor has not yet made a defi-
nitive set of recommendations to the District concerning a
viable user charge system.  Historical experience indicates
that the final user charge system will probably be based on
water usage with several categories of user charge schedules.
Tentative indications from the MSDGC suggest that the rela-
tive proportions of annual operations and maintenance costs
currently financed by households as opposed to commercial and
industrial users will be significantly shifted when the
change from an ad valorem tax basis to user charge financing
basis takes place.  Under the current scheme  (ad valorem tax),
all property owners and properties pay the same MSDGC tax
rate; however, assessments are divided into five major cate-
gories which include:

          Vacant land - assessed at 22 percent of market
          value

          Single family property - assessed at 22 percent of
          market value

          Rental income property - assessed at 33 percent of
          market value

          Commercial, industrial property - assessed at
          40 percent of market value

          Miscellaneous property - assessed at 30 percent of
          market value.

Thus, industrial and commercial properties pay almost double
the rate of households.  The ultimate user charge system
selected will very likely result in household/residential
users paying a higher user charge  (per gallon of water) than
industrial and commercial users.  Thus, the total portion of
annual operating and maintenance costs financed by households
will increase under a user charge system.  In view of the
relatively modest size of the operation and maintenance costs
associated with TARP - Phase I, it is extremely unlikely that
the additional cost burden (resulting from TARP - Phase I)
shouldered by households under a user charge system would
cause any significant impacts on household liquidable income.
In terms of positive economic benefits, the user charge sys-
tem will provide the financial incentive for water conserva-
                          IX-6

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tion and will slightly relieve the disincentive which ad
valorem taxation presents to industrial and commercial ex-
pansion within the District.


9.4  TRANSPORTATION

     Potential impacts of the proposed Des Plaines tunnel
system operation include: flood control on local streets,
and flow regulation and sedimentation prevention in local
waterways.  However, the impacts of the tunnels alone,
without the reservoirs, would not be significant.

     Although the Des Plaines tunnel system would capture over-
flows from small storms, it would not prevent overflows from
major storms.  Since flooding of local streets occurs only
during major storms, the tunnels would have an insignificant
effect on preventing traffic disruption during floods.
Flooding along the Des Plaines river primarily occurs on
Forest Preserve roads and some sedimentation could occur.

     The Des Plaines tunnel system is expected to capture
approximately 75 percent of suspended solids from the
combined-sewer overflows.  Normally, these solids enter the
waterways, and most of them eventually settle to the bottom.
Continued discharge of suspended solids to the waterways
would increase bottom deposits and decrease water depth.
The Corps of Engineers is responsible for dredging the
waterways to maintain adequate water depth for navigation,
and control of suspended solids by the Des Plaines tunnel
system would slow down the sedimentation rate and help
reduce dredging frequency.  However, the present depth
of the waterways is more than adequate, and frequent
dredging is not required.  Therefore, the potential benefit
of reduced dredging frequency as a result of the Des Plaines
tunnel system would not be significant.


9.5  MAJOR PROJECTS AND PROGRAMS
     The only aspects of the operation of the Des Plaines
tunnel system which could possibly interfere with other
projects and programs are inspection and maintenance of
the shafts and tunnels.  However, the frequency of such
inspection and maintenance trips is too small to have any
noticeable effect on future major projects and programs.
                          IX-7

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9.6  COMMITMENT OF RESOURCES

     The major electrical powe c consumer during the opera-
tional phase of TARP will be the pumping stations which pump
wastewater from the tunnels to the reservoirs and from the
reservoirs to the treatment plants.  Approximately 100 mil-
lion kilowatt hours per year is expected to be consumed in
operating the eight 300-cfs and four 50-cfs pumps at the
TARP planned reservoirs.  In addition/ the 150-horsepower
aerators to be installed at the main reservoir will use
approximately eight million kilowatt hours per year.

     Peak power consumption, during TARP operation in 1980,
is expected to be about one-half of one percent of peak re-
quirements for the entire area in 1980.  Pumping operations
at the main reservoir will be the major cause contributing
to the greatest peak load.  Assuming the pumps at the reser-
voir operate at their rated capacity of 2,400 cfs, about
75 megawatts of electrical power will be consumed during
peak load periods for an average year.
                           IX-8

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X.  UNAVOIDABLE ADVERSE IMPACTS AND
          MITIGATIVE PLEASURES

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          X.  UNAVOIDABLE ADVERSE IMPACTS AND
                    MITIGATIVE MEASURES
     Impacts on the natural and man-made environments are
considered adverse if they cause a significant change or
stress in areas such as natural and socioeconomic resources.
These adverse changes or stresses would cause the applicable
medium to be less safe, healthy, abundant, aesthetically or
culturally.pleasing, or productive.  The degree of adversity
is usually measured on a case-by-case basis and focuses on
the critical environmental issues that are relevant to the
applicable geographic area.
10.1 NATURAL ENVIRONMENT

     This section of the EIS addresses the unavoidable ad-
verse impacts of the TARP conveyance tunnels on the natural
environment of the Chicago metropolitan area.  In addition,
possible measures to mitigate these impacts are described.
Many of these measures will be implemented by 'the MSDGC or MSDGC
contractors as indicated in Appendices H and I.  The assess-
ment of impacts, as well as descriptions of mitigative mea-
sures, are presented in terms of the following topics:

          Water  Resources
          Land Resources
          Atmospheric  Resources
          Mitigative Measures.


10.1.1  Water Resources

     The unavoidable impacts on water  resources  associated
with the TARP project  area  are expected to  include  altera-
tion of both surface water  and groundwater  quality.  A dis-
cussion of these impacts is presented  in the following sec-
tions.


      (1)  Water  Quality

          Construction runoff will  further  degrade  surface
     water quality, as well as increase existing sewer sys-
     tem loadings in the Des Plc.ines Tunnel system.  Surface
                             X-l

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 construction activities,  such as  excavating and stock-
 piling,  introduce the potential  for sedimentation or
 siltation  of waterways ard  additional  sedimentation
 loading  of existing  sewer systems,  especially  in areas
 which have high soil erosion characteristics.   For the
 Des  Plaines Tunnel system,  most of  the 55  drop shafts,
 10 access  shafts,  and 5 construction shafts will be  lo-
 cated along the tunnel route in paved, cemented,  or
 otherwise  impervious areas.   Runoff carrying sediment
 from spoil material  stockpiles and  excavated areas po-
 tentially  can enter  the Des  Plaines River  and  the exist-
 ing  sewers.   This  effect, however,  is  expected to be
 short-term.

      Silt  and other  pollutants present in  effluents  re-
 sulting  from tunnel  dewatering operations  have a short-
 term adverse impact  on water quality if the effluent is
 discharged directly  into  surface  water systems.   The
 Des  Plaines  tunnels  are expected  to yield  a maximum  total
 flow of  approximately 3.7 MGD resulting from ground-
 water infiltration.   If the  infiltrated water  is pumped
 out  of the  tunnel  segment and discharged directly into
 the  Des  Plaines  River,  water quality will  temporarily
 be worse than under  existing conditions.
(2)   Groundwater

     Infiltration of groundwater from the upper aquifer
into the tunnels will have a short-term adverse impact on
the piezometric or hydraulic pressure of the aquifer, and
a grouting program will be incorporated in the construc-
tion phase of the TARP tunnel systems to mitigate this
effect.  Without the grouting program, groundwater in-
filtration rates can be as high as 1.4 MGD per mile of
tunnel, with the average infiltration rate of ground-
water for the Des Plaines tunnels approximately 0.7 MGD
per mile of tunnel.  These rates are sufficient to
reduce the upper aquifer pressure to an undesirable
low level.  To monitor grouting integrity during tun-
nel operation, the MSDGC should install a number of
observation wells  spaced at appropriate intervals along
the tunnel route.  The monitoring program provides a means
to determine the extent of infiltration early so that
appropriate mitigative measures can be applied.

     Exfiltration of wastewater, as it is conveyed by the
tunnel system, may have a long-term effect on groundwater
                       X-2

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    quality.  Th3 magnitude of the impact depends on how
    long the grouting program maintains its integrity during
    operation of the system.  As indicated for infiltration,
    a tunnel grouting program will be incorporated and grout-
    ing integrity will need to be monitored.  Although infil-
    tration is expected to occur more often than exfiltration,
    exfiltration can become a serious problem when conveyance
    tunnels are nearly full.  At this time, tunnel pressures
    will exceed inflow pressures and exfiltration will result.
    Pollutants present in the tunnel wastewaters, such as
    hazardous metals and coliform bacteria, may seep into the
    upper aquifer and degrade groundwater quality.  To main-
    tain surveillance and to enable timely application of re-
    medial measures, observation or test wells should be in-
    stalled, spaced appropriately along the Des Plaines
    tunnel route.

          Although tunnel dewatering will  be necessary dur-
     ing construction,  the amount of water to be  disposed
     of is not expected to cause any adverse impact on the water
     system for receiving this effluent.   The effluent re-
     sulting from dewatering operations could be  disposed
     of in one of several ways:

               By discharge to existing waterways
               By discharge to existing combined-sewer systems ~
               By injection into the upper aquifer.

     Although injection of the effluent into wells would serve
     to retain the groundwater in the study area,  an exten-
     sive and costly recharge program would be required.

          Regardless of which method is used,  disposal will be
     preceded by effluent turbidity treatment to  reduce sus-
     pended solid levels.  This will be accomplished by re-
     taining sediments  in settling basins  for a time suffi-
     cient to allow the sediments to settle.   The quality of
     the effluent will  be analyzed prior to discharge to de-
     termine if additional treatment is needed.
10.1.2  Land Resources

     The Des Plaines tunnels are not expected to have an
adverse effect on the land-related environment of the area.
These features, such as the geologic and seismic character-
istics of the environment, however, may affect tunnel con-
struction and operation with varying degrees of severity.
Descriptions of these impacts as well as discussions of
their magnitude are presented in the following sections.
                            X-3

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 (1)  Geology

     Rockfall or partings m.y result when the Des Plaines
Tunnel system tunneling operations enter shale formations
or thin rock be5s.  During both construction and opera-
tion phases of the system, unstable conveyance tunnel con-
ditions will prevail in these formations and beds.  Sta-
bilizing measures therefore will be incorporated and in-
clude such measures as rock bolting for short-term sta-
bility and concrete lining for long-term stability against
shale partings.

     Unstable conditions are caused by shale deteriora-
tion, which may occur in certain portions of the TARP
tunnel systems.  To show how adverse this condition
can be, serious problems involving deterioration of
shale have been encountered during underground natural
gas exploration efforts conducted in northern Illinois.
Contact of the shale with water or moist air appears
to cause deterioration.  Attempts to stabilize the beds
and to seal the shale have largely failed in those
projects for which reports are available.  In a mined
underground gas storage reservoir near Kankakee, Illinois,
various methods were employed to stabilize the Brainard
shale including rock bolts, timber shoring and wire mesh.
The methods met with little success and deterioration
continued after the supports were installed.  The shale
absorbed water around and above the rock bolts and shor-
ings, and support from these elements was lost as ravel-
ing of the rock continued.

     Similarly, attempts to use gunite to prevent or
retard deterioration of the shale were unsuccessful.
The small amount of water in the gunite appeared to
cause the shale surface to soften so that the gunite
spalled.   Raveling of the shale at the Kankakee facil-
ity progressed so far that the openings were greatly
enlarged, and the horizontal area of the pillars was
reduced.   Because of reduced bearing capacity, the
pillars failed and caused further roof collapse.

     Based on the problems encountered in this gas ex-
ploration effort, shale deterioration can be expected
when tunnel systems are aligned within formations con-
taining this rock material.  Appropriate measures to
mitigate these problems will be incorporated during con-
struction of the TARP tunnels as necessary.
                        X-4

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         Rockfall may occur when tunnel construction activ-
     ities enter  fault zones, rock folds, or  joints  in which
     rock formations are weak and supportive  characteristics
     are poor.  Structural  support or remedial measures  will
     be installed by the MSDGC contractor to  stabilize tunnel
     conditions.  This effect is expected to  occur during  the
     construction phase only and, therefore,  is considered
     short-term.
     (2)   Seismicity

          The Des  Plaines  conveyance  tunnels  will  intersect
     several  joints  and  one  identifiable  fold along their route
     and  will also traverse  minor  fault  zones.   These geologic
     features are  susceptible  to earth movement, and seismic
     events of significant magnitude  will result in a shearing
     or opening-closing  movement.   Tunnel alignment, concrete
     lining,  and all stabilization measures may be altered
     when these events occur,  and  an  extensive tunnel in-
     spection and  maintenance  program will be required.

          Although stabilization measures such as  rock bolt-
     ing, grouting,  and  tunnel lining may have a tendency
     to reduce the impacts,  the measures  are  not expected to
     eliminate them  entirely.
10.1.3  Atmospheric Resources

     Unavoidable impacts on the atmospheric resources of the
Chicago area are expected as a result of TARP tunnel system
construction activities.  The impacts will be short-term,
however, and can be mitigated by applying one or more avail-
able measures.  Potential air pollution and noise resulting
from construction are discussed below.
     (1)   Air Quality

          Chicago is in an air quality maintenance area  (AQMA)
     and overall air quality standards have been violated
     frequently.  During worst case conditions  (i.e., low
     wind speed and temperature inversion) hydrocarbon and
     nitrous oxide, as well as particulate standards were
     exceeded, and such instances have been frequent.  With
     respect to air quality impacts related to the TARP tun-
     nels, a short-term impact is expected during the con-
     struction phase.  Gaseous emissions from construction
                            X-5

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     vehicles and equipment with combustion engines will in-
     crease pollutant levels and T'.egrade air quality further.
     Particulate content of the air during excavation activ-
     ities is also expected to increase during this period.
     These particulate emissions will occur mostly in the
     vicinity of the construction shafts where rock and spoil
     are loaded into trucks by hoppers.
     (2)   Noise

          Noise produced during the construction phase of
     TARP may affect the environment in the vicinity of con-
     struction and drop shaft sites and along the routes used
     by trucks transporting rock and spoil material to the
     disposal sites.  For the Des Plaines Tunnel system, how-
     ever, most of construction and drop shaft sites will be
     located in open space, commercial, or residential areas,
     and the impact of noise at these sites is not likely to
     be great.  Similarly, noise impact along the routes
     used by rock and spoil disposal trucks would not be
     significant.  The number of truck trips expected will
     most likely be small compared to the existing traffic
     volume on the planned truck routes to the disposal sites
10.1.4  Mitigative Measures

     For each impact assessment described in the previous
sections,  several possible mitigating measures are available,
some of which will be applied by the MSDGC contractors.  This
section describes the typical, possible mitigative measures
and presents them under the appropriate impact category.
     (1)   Surface Water Quality

          To prevent soil from washing into waterways and
     sewers, a berm (trench or ridge)  will be constructed
     around sites that are susceptible to runoff.  A berm
     will also be constructed around stockpiles of spoil
     material to minimize the potential for runoff and sedi-
     mentation.

          Effluents from tunnel dewatering operations should
     be pumped to wastewater facilities for treatment prior
     to discharge into waterways.  The amount to be treated
     is small and the added load to the applicable treatment
     plant is considered insignificant.
                            X-6

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(2)   Groundwater Quality

     To detect any adverse water quality or quantity
changes in the vicinity of the TARP Tunnel systems, ob-
servation wells will be constructed along the entire
tunnel alignment.  These wells will be installed at
approximately one-half to three-quarter mile intervals.
The minimum offset distance from the edge of the tunnel
is approximately 30 feet to ensure that the well will be
outside the grouted area.  An adequate number of appro-
priately spaced observation wells have been installed
along the Mainstream Tunnel route.  However, for the
Lower Des Plaines and Calumet Tunnel routes, additional
wells need to be installed for monitoring purposes and
spaced as specified above.

     The MSDGC is not planning to monitor groundwater
quality along the Des Plaines system.  A routine program
should be implemented in order to determine whether ex-
filtration or infiltration is occurring.  The wells and
the tunnel should be equipped with continuing water level
recorders so that aquifer pressure can be correlated with
tunnel pressure.  In addition, the wells need to be sam-
pled both weekly and after major storm events.  The
groundwater sampled should be analyzed for the follow-
ing constituents on a weekly basis  (minimum program):

          NH3  (as N)                *
          Toral Bacteria Plate Count      ^
          Conductivity  (or calculated^TDS)
          TOC  (Total Organic Carbon).

     This monitoring program will provide sufficient
data to detect any alterations in groundwater condi-
tions  (infiltration or exfiltration) and, thus to  en-
able mitigation of any adverse effects.  Modification
of the well spacing criteria may be necessary as the
heterogeneity of the rock material changes.  This  will
be dependent upon actual conditions prevalent at the
time of construction and operation.

     While large quantities of exfiltration are not likely,
exfiltration is not impossible, particularly if seismic
incidents damage tunnel  linings.  To evaluate the  effects
on aquifer water quality as well as water level fluc-
tuations, sampling will need to be performed for param-
eters  and at locations, depths and times to be deter-
mined  by agreement between the MSDGC, the Illinois EPA,
Analyzed weekly (all other biweekly).
                       X-7

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and the U.S. EPA.  These monitoring design criteria will
become conditions written inco permits for construction
and operation of the tunnels.  In addition, the require-
ment for water quality monitoring will be a part of the
special conditions for all grants made to the MSDGC for
the Mainstream Tunnel system.

     By monitoring the observation wells on a regular
basis, potential for infiltration of groundwater into
the tunnel system will be detected before it occurs.
The primary measure used to prevent excessive ground-
water inflow is the grouting program.  Therefore, the
grouting program must be extensive, and effective enough
during the construction phase to limit the infiltration
to a maximum allowable daily rate of 500 gal./in. diam./
mile of tunnel.  In addition, grouting integrity will be
maintained throughout the operational phase of the tunnel
Grouting will be done at maximum pressures to ensure
that each grout hole is properly filled.  This will
prevent groundwater from reestablishing seepage paths
toward the tunnel.  Precautionary measures will be taken
during grouting to avoid plugging of observation wells,
and precise records of grouting will be kept for future
reference.  In unlined tunnels, any future rock falls
will affect the integrity of the grout applied during
construction.  Should these rock falls occur in zones
where extensive grouting was done, infiltration/ex-
filtration problems may become critical.  Precise grout-
ing records will assist in ascertaining such problems.
(3)  Geology

     Rock bolting, grouting, and tunnel lining will be
the measures applied to prevent slaking and shale part-
ing.  Concrete tunnel lining appears to be the best de-
terrent procedure for reducing shale deterioration and
will be used in most of the TARP tunnels where alignment
will be on shale formations.  Tunnel alignment of the
Des Plaines system will be predominately in stable dolo-
mite formations and most of the system will be unlined.

     A few published reports indicate that, for limited
excavating operations, slaking of shale units can be
controlled and even prevented by conditioning the ven-
tilating air circulated through the underground chambers.
Temperature must be maintained within a very narrow range
and relative humidity must be high.  While this procedure
will be of great general assistance during construction, its
effectiveness is not considered to be sufficiently proven
for it to comprise a totally reliable scheme in itself.
                       X-8

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     Drop and access shafts will be concrete lined, and
surface reservoir excavations will use the adequate con-
trol procedures common to construction or quarrying in-
dustries.  Stable ground slopes for soil and rocks will
be maintained during the construction period.

     The need for rock reinforcement and support in the
tunnel will be determined when actual conditions are
established during tunnel excavation.  Installation of
more support or reinforcement than is needed could re-
sult when design and installation of rock reinforcement
systems are specified prior to construction.  If the de-
sign specifications for rock support and reinforcement
are established prior to construction; they should only
be used as an estimating procedure.
 (4)  Air Quality

     Although air pollutant emissions from construction-
related vehicles and equipment cannot be avoided, pre-
ventive maintenance done on a regular basis will reduce
the emissions, as well as prevent exhaust-related odors.

     Fugitive dust emissions, which will also occur at
construction sites,will "be minimized by following accep-
table construction practices.  For example, excessive
dust emissions will be avoided by closing the bottom of
the loading hopper before emptying rock and spoil from
a muck cart into a disposal truck.  After the muck cart
is completely unloaded, the hopper gate will then be
opened to let the rock and spoil material fall gradually
into the truck.  Spraying the excavated material with
water would further reduce dust emissions.  Roads at
construction sites should be paved or frequently wetted
to minimize dust.
 (5)  Noise

     Noise from construction vehicles and equipment can
be minimized by using the new construction equipment
and trucks which have lower emission levels and by
operating them in accordance with the municipal noise
ordinance.

     Exhaust noise will be reduced by installing effi-
cient exhaust silencers or mufflers and by erecting
enclosures around the equipment.  Erecting plywood
                       X-9

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     enclosures around air compressors or a soundproof shed
     around exhaust fans could substantially reduce their
     noise levels.  Noise causeo by rock blasting can be
     minimized by using heavy mats on the surface above the
     blasting area x.o absorb the associated shock waves.

          Overall, the impact of noise on a community can be
     minimized in several ways:

               Explain project benefits and mitigating mea-
               sures practiced by the applicant to the af-
               fected community in public workshops and semi-
               nars .

               Notify residents in the vicinity of construc-
               tion and drop shaft sites prior to a blasting
               operation.  Explain duration and possible ef-
               fects of blasting by leaflets distribution,
               signs, and public announcements.

               Restrict construction activities to daylight
               hours in sensitive public and residential areas,
10.2 MAN-MADE ENVIRONMENT

     TARP is expected to result in some unavoidable short-
term impacts on the man-made environment.  However, the de-
gree of adversity will change as local environmental condi-
tions change and will vary widely during both construction
and operation periods of TARP.  The following sections assess
the potential impacts in general and describe the possible
mitigative measures which can be applied.


10.2.1  Spcioeconomic

     The unavoidable adverse impacts on the socioeconomic
environment that will result from the construction and opera-
tion of the Des Plaines Tunnel system are described generally
below.
     (1)  Light Glare

          Construction schedules anticipate three shifts of
     labor on the tunneling efforts.  This will require
                            X-10

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bright night sighting in construction shafts and drop
shaft areas.  This lighting may produce glare which
will be annoying to the surrounding community, particu-
larly in residential neighborhoods.
(2)  Waste Spillage and Dispersion

     The spillage of debris from trucks transporting
waste from the construction sites to rock quarries or
designated disposal sites will cause an adverse aethes-
tic impact on the communities adjacent to the truck
route.  In addition, during wet weather conditions, the
debris could enter sewer systems and nearby properties.
Transport of debris and construction materials to and
from the construction access points will also create
noise and vibration annoyances, as well as add to traf-
fic volumes.
 (3)  Traffic Congestion

     While some locations of potential conflict be-
tween construction activity and traffic flow have been
identified, the adverse impacts are likely to be short-
term and relatively insignificant.  During construction
of sewer connections, drop shafts, and collecting struc-
tures, local traffic may have to be rerouted or may have
to cross temporary planking or plates in areas where
surface excavations are in progress.  The extent of
this impact can be measured by traffic volume.  As
stated in previous sections of this EIS average traffic
volumes presently range from 6,000 to 44,000 vehicles
per day on several of the major thoroughfares associated
with the Des Plaines Tunnel system.

     Traffic disruption will most likely occur in high-
density areas of each community where construction activity
is on or near public rights-of-way.  Sidewalks and traf-
fic lanes may be temporarily eliminated or blocked to
provide enough room for erection of safety barricades
and storage areas.
 (4)  Worker Safety

     Tunnel construction projects will inevitably in-
volve injuries, disabilities, and perhaps fatalities
as a direct result of construction activity.  For the
                      X-ll

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     Des Plaines tunnel construction the frequency rate  should
     not be adverse when compar^u to any other construction
     project of similar type rnd magnitude.  The potential
     number of disabling work injuries and  fatal or permanent,
     disabilities can be a minimum of 84 and I, respectively.
10.2.2  Land Use

     The construction and operation of the Des Plaines Tunnel
system is not expected to affect existing land use patterns
or future land use plans established for historical,  cul-
tural, archeological, and recreational purposes.  Land being
used for public thoroughfares, however, will be affected
during construction of drop shafts, connecting lines, and
collecting structures.  The impact is expected to be  short-
term and reversible if the thoroughfares are returned to
their original condition.  The major thoroughfares, which
may be affected by the Calumet Tunnel system shaft con-
struction are as follows:

          Des Plaines River Road at Belmont Avenue
          Des Plaines River Road at Grand Avenue
          Des Plaines River Road near Herrick Avenue
          Lake Street near Des Plaines Avenue
          Roosevelt Road at 19th Avenue
          Roosevelt Road at 14th Avenue
          Roosevelt Road at 9th Avenue
          Roosevelt Road at Pusheck Road
          Chicago Avenue near Des Plaines River.
10.2.3  Financial and Labor Resources

     Neither the construction or implementation of TARP  is
expected to have an adverse impact on present and projected
financial and labor resources.
10.2.4   Transportation

     Trucks and automobiles associated with TARP construc-
tion activities may have an adverse short-term effect on
normal traffic patterns in certain portions of the Chicago
area.

     Additional vehicular traffic will be generated  in  the
vicinity of construction sites.  Up to 90 trucks and 54
     National Safety Council,  "Accident Facts," Chicago, Illinois Office,
     1975 edition.
                            X-12

-------
other vehicles (i.e., automobiles, jeeps, etc.) per day
would visit each construction shaft site 24 hours a day, 312
days a year, for a period ranging from three to six years.
Traffic at drop shaft sites, however,  is expected to be much
less:  up to a total of 25 trucks over a period of three
months and 10 other vehicles per day during the same period.


10.2.5  Major Projects and Programs

      The proposed drop shaft, construction shaft, and
pumping station locations of the Des Plaines Tunnel system are
not expected to result in short- and long-term adverse impacts
on the communities' projects and programs.
10.2.6  Mitigative Measures

     Many measures and alternatives are available to miti-
gate the adverse impacts on the man-made environment.  Ex-
amples of possible measures which can be used to reduce the
impact are described in this section.  Some of these measures
will be applied by the MSDGC or MSDGC contractors.
     (1)   Light Glare

          Proper positioning of light fixtures can minimize
     glare which would affect the surrounding community.
     The bright lighting, however, can serve a useful pur-
     pose in commercial areas as a crime deterrent.  High
     intensity lighting has been used successfully by many
     cities as a crime deterrent in high-crime-rate districts
     (2)  Waste Spillage and Dispersion

          Excessive solid waste spillage resulting from load-
     ing disposal trucks within the construction site will be
     minimized.  Trucks will not be overloaded ancL the waste
     material will be dampened as necessary to prevent fugi-
     tive dust emissions.  Mud and grime from truck wheels
     will be removed at wheel washes at all truck exits to
     prevent the spread of these materials to the surround-
     ing neighborhood streets.

          As indicated in the MSDGC's General Specifications
     for sewer construction contracts (see Appendix I), the
     contractor is responsible for cleanup and restoration to
     preconstruction condition of the construction site and
     areas affected.  During the construction phase, the con-
                            X-13

-------
tractor is responsible for maintaining the construction
sites to ensure they are fre>o from debris and spoil
material and is also responsible for keeping equipment
in orderly storage areas with minimum disruption to
public activities.
 (3)  Traffic Congestion

     Public traffic flow will be given priority, par-
ticularly emergency and public service vehicles.  Care-
ful routing and scheduling of trucks hauling equipment
and debris will be done to avoid peak travel periods:
7:00 to 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 to 6:30 p.m.  Appropriate
visible and audible warning systems for construction
points of activity will be installed and an overall
traffic control plan employed by the contractor.  This
plan will be monitored and updated as necessary with
contingent routes and strategies to accommodate changes
in traffic and special events (parades, holidays, street
closings, bridge and light malfunctions, etc.).  Local
jurisdictions should be alerted and approvals should
be obtained for planned truck routes and traffic con-
trol plans.
 (4)  Worker Safety

     Strict adherence to all safety regulations and
employee training programs serve as the most effective
means to minimize or prevent injuries to tunnel con-
struction and operation employees.  Safety specifications
established by the MSDGC are presented in Appendix H.
(5)  Land Use Alterations

     Land owners (private, industrial, and commercial)
should be contacted well before construction begins in
their respective property areas.  The owners should be
informed of plans such as proposed shaft locations,
truck traffic routes, access requirements, and possible
impacts.  Other measures which will be used to prevent
or mitigate the expected impacts on the man-made envi-
ronment include the fact that:

          Public thoroughfares excavated for installa-
          tion of connecting pipes, collecting struc-
          tures, and shafts will be repaved or rebuilt
          to their original condition.
                      X-14

-------
          The  MSDGC will notify the State of Illinois
          Historic Preservation officer to obtain appro-
          priate approval of shaft locations prior to
          construction.   Once approval has been obtained
          procedures will be established for halting
          shaft construction temporarily in the event
          important artifacts are found or uncovered.

          Excavation workers should be informed of
          potential value of finds and trained in the
          rudiments of identifying and preserving arti-
          facts if the Preservation officer or desig-
          nated representative cannot be present during
          construction of a particular shaft.
C6)   Transportation

     Although the number of truck trips during the peak
construction period is expected to be a small fraction
of the total traffic volume on most truck routes, these
routes will be selected on the basis of the least im-
pacts.  The planned truck routes will avoid residential
areas and other sensitive areas (i.e., hospitals,
libraries), as well as congested streets, especially
during rush hours.  If feasible, railroad hopper cars
can also be used along with trucks to transport rocks
and spoil material to disposal sites since several
construction shafts are near railroad yards with load-
ing facilities.
                       X-15

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            XI.   CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
     The following is a summary of the principle conclusions
of the Draft EIS,  c.s well as recommended and suggested miti-
gative measures.

     1.  Implementation of the Lower Des Plaines System will
significantly reduce the pollutant load in the Chicago water-
ways.  These loadings will be reduced further with the imple-
mentation of the Mainstream and Calumet Tunnel systems.
Water quality will be enhanced further with the upgrading of
MSDGC's treatment facilities and the construction of the flood
control aspects of the Tunnel and Reservoir Plan.

     2.  The rock spoil excavated from the Phase I tunnels is
not expected to be marketable.  Evaluation of various disposal
alternatives leads to the conclusion that adequate environ-
mentally acceptable landfill sites are available to handle
the volume of rock which will be generated by the Phase I
tunnels under consideration.  We will rely on existing local,
state, and Federal regulations to insure that disposal takes
place in an acceptable manner.  Additionally the MSDGC will
be required to inform USEPA of their spoil disposal program
as it is developed through discussion with the Contractor.
This will be a condition of any grant awarded to the MSDGC
for the Lower Des Plaines Tunnel System.

     3.  Although an effective grouting program is proposed,
it must be sufficiently flexible to respond to the actual
conditions encountered during construction.  Should the
grouting not be sufficient, additional infiltration could
adversely affect the hydraulic pressure of the upper aquifer.
Additionally, under surcharged conditions, exfiltration
will occur, resulting in adverse impacts on the groundwater
quality of the upper aquifer. Observation wells to monitor
grouting integrity during operation are necessary along
the entire tunnel alignment. If pollutants are detected
in the observation wells, additional mitigative measures
must be implemented to protect the upper aquifer, including
a groundwater recharge system. Chapter X discusses particular
aspects of the monitoring program, which will be developed
in conjunction with the MSDGC, IEPA and USEPA. This monitoring
program will also be a grant condition.

     4.  Since the majority of the construction shafts and
drop shafts are in close proximity to area waterways, runoff
from these sites could adversely affect water quality. Berms
will be constructed around stockpiles of construction materials
and spoil materials to preclude runoff into the waterways.
                            XI-1

-------
     5.   It is presently proposed that water  pumped from the
tunnels  during construction be discharged directly to the
waterways after a period of settling.   Since  the possibility
of silt  and other pollutants still exists after settling, it
is recommended that these dewatering flows be discharged to
MSDGC's  intercepting system for treatment, except during
periods  of combined sewer overflows.  This will be a condition
of any grant awarded for the Lower Des Plaines Tunnel System.

     6.   Although no known historic, architectural, or arch-
aeological resources will be affected by the  proposed project,
the possibility of finding archaeological resources must be
investigated by the MSDGC.  This must be accomplished by
contacting the State Historic Preservation Officer.

     7.   Conformance with applicable regulation of the Occupa-
tional Health and Safety Administration, U.S. Department of
Labor, and the Bureau of Mines, U.S. Department of the Interior
is essential for safety of construction workers.

     8.   Significant earthquake events could  adversely affect
tunnel alignment and tunnel lining.  Smaller  earth movements
could also affect the lining and grouting of  the tunnels. It
is, therefore, essential that MSDGC's inspection and main-
tenance program be extensive enough to insure efficient
operation of the system.

     9.   There exists a wide range of potential adverse impacts
which could develop during construction.  This includes blasting,
waste spillage, traffic congestion, light glare, and fugitive
dust at construction and disposal sites.  While these effects
could be considered insignificant any measures taken to reduce
their impact would aid in public acceptability of the project.
These suggested mitigative measures are discussed in Chapter X.
                             XI-2

-------
         APPENDIX A




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(ppm)
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-------
                                 Table A-6
      Chemical,  Physical,  and  Biological Analyses of
                       Water From Test Wellsl


Constituent^

I.




II.








III.





IV.






V.









VI.




Date Sample Collected
General Data
pH?/
Color^/
Turbidity4/
Ccnductivi ty V
TonperatureS/
Cations - Heavy metal ions
Iron (Fe) - total dissolved7/
Iron (Fe) - total
Manganese (Mn) - total
Oircauum (Cr) - total
Chromium (Cr) ' hexavalent
Copper (Cu)
Lead (Pb)
Mercury (Hg)l'
Cations - Alkali earths and metals
Calcium (Ca)
Magnesium (Mg)
Sodium (Nc)
Potassium (k)
ftmrrnn Nitrogen (NH4)
Anions
Sulfate (S04)
Chloride (Cl)
Nitrite (NO*)
Nitrate ((03)
Nitrogen (N) - total dissolved
Orthophosphate (P04)
Phosphorus as P04
Cyanides as CM
Organic, noniomc, and
*^lm^j>f^ values
Phenolic material a* CgH^QH
Surfactants
Total suspended solids (TSS)
Total dissolved solids (TC6)
Volatile suspended solids (VSS)
Hardness as CaG03 * total
Alkalinity as CaCCH
Saturation index±2/
Biochemical
Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BCO)
Chemical Oxygen Demand (OX))
Sulfides (H2S)
Total Colif ormi*'
Fecal Coliformii/
Fecal Streptococci^?/
NH Side of
MeCcok Quarry
11/1/7*

7.8
10
920
53.5

0.2
0.3
-
-
-
-
-.
-

148
70
35
4
-

245
62
-
1
-
~



_
-
.
924
-
659
377
* 0.4

-
-
1
1


9/13/74

7.7
1167
600
4190
56

3.5
18
-
-
-
-
-
-

135
130
633
233
96

87.25
558
-
-
217.21
I'.l*/



.
7.13
-
2656
-
878
1935
* 1.0

-
695
_
-
ME Side of

9/19/74

8.1
2500
40
4990
57.5

1.87
2.11
0.10
0.02
0.02
0.138
0.27
0.5

158
90.9
569
178
224

76.0
510
0.125
0.625
242
2.16
2.36i/
0.04


0.004
1.26
5
2788
2
582
2078
+ 1.5

16
595
0.39
20,000
10
10
McCcotc Quarry

9/20/74

7.6
2500
40.5
4000
56

1.80
2.00
0.09
0.02
0.02
0.034
0.08
0.5

156
95.5
569
178
155

86.0
504
0.150
0.600
222.7
2.03
2.221/
0.038


0.006
1.14
12
2730
2
590
2033
+ 1.0 +

35
542
0.24
20,000 19
10
10
1 Mi. South of
Thornton Quarry
9/21/74

7.6
3000
45
4000
56

1.55
1.60
0.06
0.02
0.02
0.034
0.19
0.5

167
95.5
534
194
157

80
496
0.150
0.600
217.6
1.90
2.46?/
0.032


0.005
1.20
9
2664
3
572
2010
1.0

23
527
0.32
,000
10
10
9/5/74

8.5
11
73
560
54

0.5
6
-
-
-
-
-
-

80
10
135
6
0.5

40
18
-
0.08
1.0
1
1



-
0.04
-
451
-
242
260
* 0.8

-
16
_
-
1/2 Mi. West of
Thornton Quarry
10/4/74

8.25
4.0
1100
53.5

0.2
0.2
-
-
-
-
-
-

202
80
18.2
12.1
"

220
39
-
0.3
-
_



-
-
-
937
-
834. 1
377
+ 1.0

-
-
-
-
SE Comer of
McCook Quarry
11/10/74

7.8
23
1290
53

0.2
0.6
-
-
-
-
-
-

185
110
76
13
~

400
120
-
1
-
_



-
-
-
1420
-
916
422
+ 0.6

-'
-
1
1

All values are reported as mg/1 except as otherwise noted
pH units
Pt - Co unit*
J T units
umhos 9 2S°C
                                             £/ Filtered through 0.45 membrande filter.
                                             |/ Values reported as ppb
                                             •*/ Values reported in mg/1 as P
                                            1°/ Assume Tamp. - 55*F
                                            -U-y values reported as organisras/lOOml.
HEC,  1975.
                                  A-10

-------
                                             FIGURE A-l
                                    Location of  Sampling Sites
                                   for  Waterway  Bottom  Deposits^
r
         The  MSDGC, Environmental Assessment Statement  for Mainstream Tunnel
         System, Damen Avenue to Addison Street, August 1975. p. v-40.
                                   A-ll

-------
                                           KEY  TO FIGURE  A-2
                                      The Metropolitan Sanitary
                                     District  of Greater Chicago
R-X = Treated Runoff Plants
D-x = Domestic Waste Plants
I-X = Industrial Waste  t-lants  ( > 10,000 gpd)
Map Codes                          Description of Plants

   R-l                  FISHER BODY DIVISION
                        79th  Street & Willow Springs Road
                        Willow Springs
                        (Settling  lagoons with oil separation)

   R-2                  INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER
                        10400 W. North Avenue, Melrose Park
                        (Oil  separation, aeration, filtration)

   R-3                  MATERIAL SERVICE CORP. YARD #19
                        47th  Street & Plainfield
                        McCook
                        (Oil  separation)

   R-4                  NORTH AMERICAN CAR CO.
                        Off Old Sag Road
                        Lemont
                        (Oil  separation)

   R-5                  O'HARE INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT
                        (Oil  separation systems and aeration)

   R-6                  FRITZ CARTAGE
                        138th & Ashland Avenue
                        Riverdale

   R-7                  REYNOLDS METALS
                        1st Avenue S 49th Street
                        McCook

   D-l                  CAR CARRIERS CORP.
                        13101 S. Torrence Avenue
                        Chicago
                        (Activated sludge and sand filter)

   D-2                  CECO  FABRICATING CORP.
                        Ceco  Street
                        Romeoville, Illinois
                        (Activated sludge)

   D-3                  ELK GROVE  MOBILE HOMES
                        941 W.  Higgins Road
                        Elk Grove  Village
                        (Activated sludge and sand filter)
                                A-12

-------
                                                 KEY TO  FIGURE A-2
                                                      Continued


Map Codes                           Description of  Plants

   D-4                  FRANCISCAN SISTERS
                        1210 Main Street
                        Lemont,  111inoi s
                        (Activated sludge system)

   D-5                  HOLY FAMILY VILLA
                        123rd Street & Will Cook Road
                        Lemont
                        (Imhoff tank, sand filter and polishing pond)

   D-6                  HOLY SPIRIT CONVENT
                        Waukegan S Willow Road
                        Northbrook
                        (Imhoff tank and sand filter)

   D-7                  J.P. KENNEDY SCHOOL
                        123rd Street S Wolf Road
                        Palos Park
                        (Imhoff tank and sand filter)

   D-8                  LEHMAN TRAILER PARK
                        500 W. Touhy Avenue
                        Bensenville
                        (Activated sludge)

   D-9                  LEMONT MANUFACTURING CO.
                        Ceco Street S Stephens Street
                        Lemont
                        (Activated sludge)

   D-10                 MATTERHORN SUPPER CLUB
                        123rd & Rt. 45
                        Palos Park
                        (Aeration, oxidation pond,  sand filter)

   D-ll                 MOUNT ASSISSI ACADEMY
                        1602 Main Street
                        Lemont
                        (Oxidation pond)

   D-12                 OASIS MOBILE HOMES
                        7500 N. Elmhurst Road
                        Bensenville
                        (Activated sludge)

   D-13                 PARADISE TRAILER COURT
                        Rt. 83 & Rt. 30
                        Chicago Heights
                        (Activated sludge)
                                 A-13

-------
                                                 KEY TO  FIGURE A-2
                                                      Continued
Map Codes                           Description of  Plants

   D-14                 PLEASANTDALE SCHOOL
                        75th Street & Wolf Road
                        Pleasantdale
                        (Trickling filter unit)

   D-15                 ST.  VICENT DePAUL SEMINARY
                        127th & Rt. 171
                        Lemont
                        (Imhoff tanks, oxidation pond)

   D-16                 SPRING LAKES MOBILE HOMES
                        100  First Street
                        Bartlett
                        (Activated sludge)

   D-17                 STANDARD OIL (O'HARE TERMINAL)
                        2201 S. Elmhurst Road
                        Des  Plaines
                        (Activated sludge and filtration)

   D-18                 TOUHY MOBILE HOMES, INC.
                        400  W, Touhy Avenue
                        Des  Plaines
                        (Activated sludge)

   D-19                 TRAILER RANCH, INC.
                        573  S. Milwaukee Avenue
                        Wheeling
                        (Activated sludge)

   D-20                 VILLA WEST SUBDIVISION
                        135th Street & 86th Avenue
                        Orland Park
                        (Activated sludge)

   D-21                 COG  HILL COUNTRY CLUB
                        119th & Archer
                        Lemont

   1-1                  CLOW CORPORATION
                        1050 E. Irving Park Road
                        Bensenville,  Illinois
                        (Holding pond with oil separation)

   1-2                  COMMONWEALTH EDISON,  CALUMET
                        3200 E. 100th Street
                        Chicago
                        (Settling basins)
                                 A-14

-------
                                                 KEY TO  FIGURE A-2
                                                      Continued
Map Codes                           Description of Plants

   1-3                  COMMONWEALTH EDISON,  CRAWFORD
                        3501 S.  Pulaski
                        Chicago
                        (Settling tanks and filtration)

   1-4                  COMMONWEALTH EDISON,  FISK
                        1111 W.  Cermak
                        Chicago
                        (Settling pits)
   1-5                  COMMONWEALTH EDISON,  RIDGELAND
                        4300 S.  Ridgeland
                        Stickney, Illinois  60405
                        (Settling pit and filtration)
   1-6                  COMMONWEALTH EDISON,  ROMEOVILLE
                        135th Street & C.S.S. Canal
                        Romeoville
                        (Settling ponds and filtration)
   1-7                  ELECTRO-MOTIVE DIVISION, GENERAL MOTORS
                        9301 W.  55th Street
                        McCook
                        (Oil retention pond and separator with overflow)
   1-8                  INTERLAKE STEEL, CHICAGO PLANT
                        10730 S. Burley Avenue
                        Chicago
                        (Chemical precipitation with total recycle)
   1-9                  INTERLAKE STEEL, RIVERDALE
                        135th Street & Perry
                        Riverdale
                        (Settling and sand filters)
   1-10                 LEMONT MANUFACTURING
                        Ceco Street & Stephens Street
                        Lemont
                        (Settling tanks and filtration)

   1-11                 REPUBLIC STEEL CORP.  (CHICAGO DIST.)
                        116th Street & Burley Avenue
                        Chicago
                        (Chemical flocculation & settling with filtration)

   1-12                 REYNOLDS METALS
                        1st Avenue & 49th Street
                        Brookfield
                        (Chemical flocculation and clarification)
                                 A-15

-------
                                                  KEY TO  FIGURE A-2
                                                       Continued
Map Codes                           Description of Plants

   1-13                 UNION 76  OIL REFINERY
                        135th Street and  New Avenue
                        Romeoville
                        (Activated  sludge,  oxidation ponds)
   1-14                 UNITED STATES STEEL CORP.
                        3426 E. 89th Street
                        Chicago
                        (Oil separation chemical flocculation with clari-
                        fication  and filtration)
   1-15                 WISCONSIN STEEL CORP.
                        106th Street and  Torrence Avenue
                        Chicago
                        (Solids,  oil and  cyanide oxidation systems)
   1-16                 WILLIE BROS.,  CO.,  INC.
                        4930 W. 159th Street
                        Oak  Forest
   1-17                 COMMONWEALTH EDISON, STATE LINE GENERATOR
                                A-16

-------
                                          FIGURE  A-2
                                  Industrial and Privately-
                                   Owned Treatment Plants
                                  Within the MSDGC Service
                                              Areal
                                                            LAKE MICHIGAN
                BUFFALO CK.
       • D19

WHEELING OR.\
LEDGEND:

 R - DOMESTIC WASTE PLANTS

  I = INDUSTRIAL WASTE PLANTS

 0 = TREATED RUNOFF PLANTS

   EXISTING TREATMENT PLANT

   PROPOSED TREATMENT PLANT
                                                CAL. UNION DRAIN

                                                       5?r!
                MIDLOTHIAN

                     £*•
  Industrial Waste Loadings and  Industrial and Private Treatment Plant
  Locations, Appendix B of "Facilities  Planning Study - MSDGC Overview
  Report," ."Revised, Jan. 1975.
                              A-17

-------
       APPENDIX B

STRATIGRAPHY DESCRIPTION
        FOR THE
      CHICAGO AREA

-------
                        APPENDIX B

      STRATIGRAPHY DESCRIPTION FOR THE CHICAGO AREA
1.1  QUATERNARY SYSTEM

     The Quaternary System comprises all rocks and sediments
younger than the Tertiary.  The Pleistocene deposits  underlie
the surficial soils and any artificial fill materials  in
the project area.  These materials are almost entirely Wis-
consinan in age and are generally divided into five substages:
(1) The Altonian, which includes till and outwash buried by
younger drift and found mainly in the northwestern part of
the area;  (2)  the Farmdalian, which includes local deposits
of peat, organic silts, and lake deposits;  (3)   the Wood-
fordian, which includes most of the Wisconsinan  till,  out-
wash, and lake deposits in the area; (4)  the Twocreekan,
which includes local lake and swamp deposits in  the Lake
Chicago sediments; and  (5)  the Valderan, which  includes lake
deposits in a small part of the Lake Chicago plain and part
of the youngest sand and gravel deposits in the  Des Plaines
and Illinois Valleys.

     The Altonian substage has but one subdivision; the
Winnebago formation.  The Winnebago consists of  silty  and
sandy tills, and a silt member with peat.  It is found to
the northwest and west of Chicago.  The Farmdalian substage
consists of the Robein silt which has been encountered in
borings in the northwestern part of the area.

     Sediments of the Woodfordian substage or of Woodfordian-
Valderan age comprise the vast majority of sediments  in the
Chicago area.  Because of the complexity of glacial sedi-
mentation, the deposits of the Woodfordian glaciers are also
classified into morphostratigraphic units called drifts.
Each drift or moraine contains parts of all of the Woodford-
ian formations.  There are 27 named moraines and at least
19 stands of ice front are required to account for the
Chicago moraines.

     The Wedron formation of Woodfordian age averages  100
feet thick throughout the area but may be as thick as  300
feet.  There are five till members that range from sandy
and silty tills to clay tills and all have particles  the
size of pebbles, cobbles, and boulders.  The tills also
contain beds of waterlaid sand, gravel, or silt.
 Willman,  H.B.,  "Summary of the Geology of the Chicago Area", Illinois
State Geological Survey, Circular 460, 1971.
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     The most important of the morphostratigraphic moraines
of Woodfordian age are the Valparaiso drifts, Tinley drifts,
and the Lake Border moraines,  lae Valparaiso drifts are
clayey, silty, and sandy tills with intermixed gravel and
sand deposits.  The Tinley drift is large clayey till with
interbedded silts and clays.  The Lake Border drifts are
clayey tills with some fine sandy gravels.

     Several Woodfordian age formations continued to be
deposited during Twocreekan and Valderan time.  The promin-
ent units are the Henry formation and the Equality formation,
The Henry formation is predominately sand and gravel with
local beds of silt and till.  The Equality formation is com-
posed of silt, sand, gravel, and clay deposits that accumu-
lated in glacial lakes.  Much of the eastern section of the
Chicago area is surfaced with Equality sediments.

     A number of Wisconsinan sediments are found as small
deposits throughout the region and include the Richland
loess, Parkland sand, the Grayslake peat, and floodplain
deposits collectively called the Cahokia Alluvium.

     Natural gas has been encountered on rare occasions in
the glacial drift during drilling operations in the Chicago
area.  One soil-boring for a building foundation encountered
a gas flow which is reported to have continued for 24 hours.
No gas was found in any holes drilled during the 1968, 1971,
or 1974 exploration programs.
2.1  PALEOZOIC

          Silurian.   The Silurian forms the bedrock surface
          in much of the Chicago region.  The Silurian pre-
          sent in the area falls into the Niagaran and Alex-
          andrian series.  The uppermost Cayugan series is
          not present.

          Niagaran series.  The Niagaran series is composed
          of four formations;  the Racine, Sugar Run, Waukesha,
          and Joliet.

          Racine formation.   The Racine formation, the young-
          est, most lithologically variable, and stratigraph-
          ically highest of the bedrock formations of the
          Chicago area (except for some rocks in the Des
          Plaines disturbance), consists of dolomite with
          some chert.  North and west of Chicago the thick-
          ness of the formation thins to zero feet.  Drill
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hole data indicate that the thickness increases
toward the south and east, reaching 70 feet in
Wilmette, 213 feet at Roosevelt Road and Lake Shore
Drive, and a maximum of about 360 feet in the
Thornton area.  The thickness of the formation, as
found in drill holes, ranges from zero to 358 feet
with the thickness in the majority of holes rang-
ing from 100 to 175 feet.

The lithologic variability of the Racine dolomite
can be traced to its origin.  During its deposi-
tion, the Chicago area was occupied by a large com-
plex of coral reefs, which were as large as several
miles in diameter.  Three varieties, or facies, of
the Racine are recognized in the area:  the reef,
reef-flank, and interreef facies.  Some zones
within the Racine display thin alternating layers
of both the reef and interreef facies within a
short vertical distance.

Reef.  This facies is a light to medium gray, ex-
ceptionally pure  (non-argillaceous), massive,
porous, medium to coarsely crystalline dolomite.
Petrographic analyses show the crystals to be
interlocking and from 0.1 to 0.2 mm in size.

Irregularly shaped vugs, to a 0.25 foot maximum
dimension, are abundant in the reef facies.  Most
of the vugs are unlined, but a few are lined with
secondary calcite, pyrite, or quartz.  A black
asphaltic residue is found locally in the upper-
most part of the formation.

Reef facies constituted approximately 66 percent
of the Racine drilled along the Mainstream Tunnel
System, and it constituted the basal portion of
the Racine formation in all but three holes drilled
during the subsurface exploration programs.  Wide-
spread and relatively thick sections of interreef
rock are found, overlying the basal reef in some
areas.

Reef-flank.  The reef-flank deposits are transi-
tional between the massive reef facies and the
thinner and finer grained beds of the interreef
facies.  The reef-flank facies is found on the
margins of some of the larger reefs and is char-
acterized by beds that dip as much as 45 degrees
away  from the central reef core.  Dipping beds
crop out and also occurred in cores in the Thornton
and the McCook areas.
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Interreef.  This variety of the Racine formation
is composed of argillaceous, silty dolomite.  Lo-
cally, it contains che.-t in the form of scattered,
porous nodules and as thin beds.  Sporadic thin
partings end lenses of green shale also occur.

Rock  in the Racine, as seen in the cores, is gen-
erally fresh.  In a few holes, however, the upper
few feet of rock is weathered.  The weathered
zone  is generally limited to the upper 10 feet,
but locally extends to a depth of 20 feet.  Stain-
ing on joint surfaces occurs in a few holes to
greater depths.  Weathered zones of a foot to a
few feet in thickness occur at depth in a few
holes.

Core  recovery is usually very high in the Racine,
on the order of 95 to 100 percent, and the Rock
Quality Designation (RQD) is uaually higher than
85 percent.  Core recovery and RQD are both re-
duced at the bedrock surface where the rock is
weathered and closely fractured.

Sugar run formation.  In 1973 the Illinois State
Geological Survey designated a well-bedded dolo-
mite  comprising the basal 25 feet of the Racine
formation as the Sugar Run formation.  The unit
is lithologically similar to many interreef de-
posits, and although readily observed in outcrop
in the Chicago area, it is difficult to identify
in cores, and may be locally absent.

Waukesha formation.  The Waukesha formation is a
slightly silty, de~nse to finely vuggy, fine
grained dolomite that occurs in smooth surfaced
beds  that commonly are 2 to 8 inches thick but are
locally as much as 3 feet thick.  It is light
brownish gray and weathers brown.  It is exposed
at Joliet,  in the Des Plaines River bluffs north-
ward  from Joliet and in deep quarries at Elmhurst
and Hillside.   The formation is 20 to 30 feet
thick in the outcrop areas, but it is locally miss-
ing in the subsurface in the eastern part of the
area.   The Waukesha formation was not recognized
in exploratory holes drilled for the tunnel
excavations.
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Joliet formation.  The Joliet Dolomite is 40 to
60 feet thick and has 3 distinct units; the Romeo
member, Markgraf member, and Brandon Bridge mem-
ber.

     Romeo member.  The Romeo member is a persist-
     ent, fairly uniform, pure, white to cream,
     very dense, very fine grained dolomite, gen-
     erally about 14 feet thick, that underlies
     the Racine Dolomite and grades downward into
     the Markgraf member.  In exposures the Romeo
     member is locally mottled pink and exhibits
     poorly developed thick bedding.  The forma-
     tion provides a distinctive stratigraphic
     marker which is especially useful in determin-
     ing possible displacement along faults.

     The Romeo, found in tunnels and drill holes,
     is uniformly fresh rock.  Core recovery is
     commonly 100 percent and RQD is usually 95
     percent or higher.

     Markgraf member.  The Markgraf member is a
     widespread, distinctively light bluish gray
     dolomitic unit that underlies the Romeo mem-
     ber.  The upper contact is defined as the up-
     permost cluster of shale partings.  The mini-
     mum thickness is 9 feet;, the maximum is 51
     feet; and the average is 23 feet.

     The member consists of an upper zone which
     is fine-grained and dense and which contains
     a few thin clustered shale partings and soft,
     porous chert nodules; a middle argillaceous
     zone; and a silty lower zone in which closely
     spaced dolomitic shale laminae become in-
     creasingly common.  The shale partings do
     not appear to slake badly.  In addition to
     interlocking dolomite grains averaging 0.04
     mm in diameter, petrographic analyses report
     thin, opague streaks or organic matter.

     The Markgraf, found in tunnels and drill holes,
     is uniformly fresh rock.  Core recovery is
     commonly 100 percent and RQD is usually 95
     percent or higher.
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     Brandon bridge member.  The Brandon Bridge
     member is absent in most of the Chicago area.

Alexandrian series.  The Alexandrian Series is
composed of two formations; the Kankakee and the
Edgewood.

     Kankakee formation.  The general character-
     istic feature of the Kankakee formation is
     wavy beds of fine-to-medium grained, greenish-
     gray, locally pinkish, dolomite layers, one
     to three inches thick.  The bedding is often
     separated by numerous thin wavy partings of
     green shale.  The upper contact is marked by
     a thin lamina of bright green shale which
     occurs on a distinctive smooth, but deeply
     pitted, surface.

     Four zones of slightly differing lithologies
     have been identified within the Kankakee
     formation in the literature.  These zones have
     been named the Plaines, Troutman, Offerman,
     and Drummond members of the Kankakee formation.

     The uppermost zone, the Plaines member, is a
     distinctive, porous, pure, white dolomite
     unit.  Its thickness is two to three feet.
     The thickest zone of the Kankakee, underly-
     ing the Plaines member and comprising over
     half of the formation, is the Troutman mem-
     ber.   Its description fits the generalized
     description of the Kankakee, greenish to pink-
     ish gray dolomite containing wavy green shale
     partings.  A few sporadic chert nodules occur
     in this unit.

     A thin zone, only a few feet thick, of slight-
     ly argillaceous, thin bedded dolomite com-
     prises the Offerman member.  The basal unit,
     the Drummond member, is a thicker-bedded,
     fossiliferous dolomite which contains thin
     shale partings, scattered glauconite, and
     rounded quartz grains.

     The shale partings of the Plaines and Drum-
     mond members, usually one-eighth inch thick
     (but up to one-half inch thick) and one inch
     apart have shown signs of deterioration in
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cores exposed to the atmosphere.  All labora-
tory tests were performed on freshly waxed
samples so that shale deterioration prior to
testing was prevented.

The Kankakee dolomite, as found throughout
the Chicago area, usually has a thickness of
35 to 45 feet, but was found to range in drill
holes from 10 to 79 feet.  The contact with
the underlying Edgewood formation is conform-
able.  The Kankakee, found in drill holes, is
uniformly fresh rock.  Core recovery is gen-
erally in the 95 to 100 percent range and RQD
is commonly above 95 percent.  The RQD values
are slightly more variable than in the over-
lying units, however, and scattered values in
the 53 to 75 percent range are reported.

Edgewood formation.  The Edgewood formation
is the oldest unit of the Silurian system.
Its thicknes range varies widely because it
was deposited on the underlying erosional sur-
face developed on the top of the Maquoketa
group  (generally the Brainard Shale).  The
thickness ranges from about 10 feet, where
the Brainard was little eroded, to over 100
feet, where the Brainard was deeply eroded.

The Edgewood is a light gray to gray and fine-
to-medium grained dolomite slightly argill-
aceous in the upper 30 feet but very cherty.
Its upper contact is marked by the first
chert nodule below the top of the Kankakee
formation.  The chert occurs in the form of
interbeds and nodules to 0.3 foot thick at
an average spacing of one foot.  The chert
is white, soft, and porous.

The lower portion of the Edgewood may be
divided into an argillaceous, slightly cherty
colomite unit underlain by a very argillaceous,
noncherty dolomite unit.  The chert nodules
decrease in frequency and size with depth,
but become harder.  Conversely, the argil-
laceous content and frequency and thickness
of shale and dolomite shale partings in-
crease with depth through the formation.  The
base is marked by laminated, crinkled beds.
Where  the Edgewood formation is very thick
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     the lowest beds consist of dolomitic shale
     with a basal layer of dolomitic siltstone,
     and containing br wiish-black pebbles in
     a dolomitic shale matrix.

     It has been proposed that the formation be
     divided into two parts, each of which is to
     be elevated to the rank of formation.  The
     upper, very cherty unit, described in the
     first paragraphs of the Edgewood description,
     would be called the Elwood formation, and the
     lower argillaceous, slightly cherty unit,
     described in the second paragraph, would be
     called the Wilhelmi formation.  The Wilhelmi
     formation would then be divided into two
     members; the Birds member, an argillaceous
     and slightly cherty dolomite overly the non-
     cherty Schweizer member, a very argillaceous
     dolomite to dolomitic shale.

     The Edgewood found in drill holes is uniform-
     ly fresh rock.  Core recovery is generally in
     the 95 to 100 percent range and RQD is com-
     monly above 95 percent.  A few RQDs in the
     80 to 90 percent range and an occasional
     RQD of 59 to 80 percent is reported.

Ordovician.  The Ordovician is subdivided into
3 series; the Canadian, Champlainian, and the Cin-
cinnatian.  These series, in turn, are subdivided
into groups.  The Middle Ordovician Champlainian
series has three groups; the Galena, Platteville,
and Ancelli; while the Canadian series has one
group, the Prairie du Chien; and the upper Ordo-
vician Cincinnatian has one group, the Maquoketa.
Only the Maquoketa group falls within the range
of the drop shafts and tunnels.

Cincinnatian.  The upper Ordovician is predomin-
ately gray and green shale, but includes brown,
red, and black shales.  It has a persistent lime-
stone formation in the middle and hematite oolites
at the top.

Maquoketa group.  The Maquoketa group consists
of four formations; the Neda formation, Brainard
shale, Fort Atkinson, and the Scales Shale.

     Neda formation.  The Neda formation, the
     uppermost formation of the Maquoketa group
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is an iron-oxide-bearing, brick red shale,
zero to 15 feet thick (5 feet average) of
restricted distribution.  It is found only
where the Brainard formation is very thick.
Much of the Neda was probably removed by pre-
Edgewood erosion.

Characteristics of the Neda formation, other
than color, are similar to those of the
underlying Brainard Shale.

Brainard formation.  The Brainard formation
is a dark greenish gray, thin bedded, fossil-
iferous, silty claystone to shale with inter-
bedded dolomite.  The upper contact is sharp.

As a result of pre-Edgewood erosion, as de-
scribed previously, the Brainard Shale varies
in thickness from one to 136 feet depending
on the configuration of the Brainard-Edge-
wood unconformity.  In many holes the forma-
tion is less than 50 feet thick.  It is local-
ly absent.

In general, the Brainard is lithologically
uniform.  Interbedded dolomite occurs as
3-inch-thick layers spaced about one foot
apart; generally more numerous where the
Brainard is thin.  Petrographic analyses re-
port 90 percent clay and 10 percent scattered
dolomite grains 0.01 to 0.02 mm in size, with
scattered clusters of pyrite.  X-ray analyses
indicate 3 parts  illite clay to one part
chlorite intermixed with dolomite.

The Brainard, found in drill holes, is uni-
formly fresh rock.  Core recovery is gener-
ally above 90 percent and RQD is commonly
over 80 percent.

Fort Atkinson formation.  The Fort Atkinson
varies considerably in composition.  It con-
sists of gray,  fossiliferous, shaly lime-
stone; tan and  pink, crinoidal coarsely
crystalline limestone overlying fine grained
dolomite; and mostly fine grained limestone
with shale partings.  In borings in the Chi-
cago area, it is  a very hard, brownish-gray
medium grained,  fossiliferous dolomite with
             B-9

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some shale beds.  It varies in thickness from
6 feet to 40 feet, averaging 17 feet.

Petrographic analysis reported granular inter-
locking grains of dolomite, 0.02 to 0.4 mm in
size elongated paralled to bedding, and fossil
fragments.

Scales Shale.  The Scales Shale is largely
gray shale, but the lower part is locally
dark brown to nearly black in the southern
part of the area.  Much of the shale is dolo-
mite.  Thin beds with small black phosphatic
nodules and small pyrite fossils occur near
the base and locally near the top.  As ob-
served in borings, this formation is a soft,
dark gray, very uniform thin-bedded shale,
averaging 100 feet in thickness.

Petrographic and x-ray analyses show 5 to 10
percent scattered dolomite grains in a matrix
of clay that is three parts illite to one
part chlorite.  Disseminated pyrite is also
present.
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         APPENDIX C

DESCRIPTION OF FAULTS LOCATED
     IN THE CHICAGO AREA

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                        APPENDIX C

    DESCRIPTION OF FAULTS LOCATED  IN THE CHICAGO AREA
1.1  FAULT CHARACTERISTICS

     By definition, a fault is a fracture along which dis-
placement has occurred.  In the three recently completed
tunnels, much of the fault displacement was seen to be hori-
zontal, or strike-slip, as shown by slikensided fault sur-
face (scratched surfaces showing the direction of movement).
As there is no vertical movement along a strike-slip fault
and as joint and fault fillings are very similar, it is
likely that some faults were mapped as joints.

     As bedding is horizontal or very gently inclined, and
as the fault movement appears to have been largely strike-
slip (horizontal), substantial horizontal movement is
required to produce a vertical displacement of as little
as one foot.  Since the identification of faults in flat-
lying strata, by means of seismic surveys or core drilling,
depends primarily on observations of vertical displacement
of beds, strike-slip faulting, prevalent in the Chicago
area, would be expected to be undetected by these methods,
unless core drilling disclosed a zone of disturbed rock
attributable to faulting.

     The fault surfaces are generally slickensided and
often have fluted or washboard structure.  All striations
noted were horizontal or near-horizontal.  The faults are
invariably filled with grey, black or green clay and lesser
amounts of breccia.  Fault widths are largely in the range
of a fraction of an inch to 2 or 3 inches, however, a few
of the faults obtain locally a width of 6 inches, and a
maximum width of 12 inches was noted on a fault in the
Southwest Tunnel.   Apparent stratigraphic offsets vary
normally from a fraction of an inch to 6 inches, and reach
a maximum of 8 inches.
2.1  SURVEY RESULTS

     Most of the fault dips in the Chicago area were found
to be vertical or near-vertical.  A few of them varied from
the vertical by as much as 15 degrees.  The seismic survey
delineated 30 faults in the area surveyed, omitting the Des
Plaines disturbance and its boundary faults.
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     In the area north of Irving Park Road, along the North
Shore Channel, and along the Nortln Branch of the Chicago
River, only one seismically mapped fault was actually crossed
by the line of explorations.  Displacement at this fault was
indicated to be onl^  about 10 feet.  The eastern end of
another fault came within 1,000 feet of the North Branch
section.   Although slight undulations were interpreted from
the core borings in the beds in the areas of these two
faults, they are no greater than in other areas along the
North Branch where no faults were mapped.  Furthermore, the
rock in the holes drilled to explore these faults revealed
no disturbance.  Although no fault at this location has
been shown, a fault having predominantly horizontal move-
ment and little vertical displacement cannot be excluded.

     One fault was mapped by the seismic survey as crossing
the Chicago River between Polk and Harrison Streets.  A
group of holes were drilled to confirm the existence, nat-
ure, and extent of any fault at this location.  The drilling
confirmed the fault,  and indicates a displacement of 25
feet on the top of the Galena between Taylor Street and
Roosevelt Road.  The southern side was found to be lower.
It appears now that the zone of possible fault disturbance
is limited in extent.

     There is a disturbed and faulted zone in the area be-
tween Chicago Avenue and Lake Street.  No fault was mapped
in this area by the seismic survey.  Nevertheless, drilling
in this area encountered extensive lengths of hole in rock
that was closely fractured, fragmental, and gouged.  Joints
showing slickensides were also common.  In one drill hole
the Maquoketa shales were sheared and showed signs of re-
molding.

     To further delineate this zone of disturbance, two
additional holes were drilled.  One drill hole contained
considerable sections of fragmental core and had a Galena
top 30 feet higher than that in the hole, 1,300 feet to
the south.  A core loss, perhaps due to poor quality rock,
of 13 feet was reported in the latter boring.  The dis-
placement of beds in this area would seem to indicate a
fault or fault zone between these holes.  It is possible
that an additional fault of lesser displacement could
occur between Randolph and Ohio Streets.  It is in this
area where a proposed short feeder tunnel intersects the
main tunnel.

     Additional evidence of faulting in this area is found
in reports of the Des Plaines Street and Chicago Avenue
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Tunnels.  The former, excavated in 1938, encountered a zone
with clay slips or faults carrying large quantities of water.
The main fault was reported as nearly vertical with a
northeast-southwest orientation.  This broken zone is loca-
ted south of Erie Street at the tunnel elevation of approxi-
mately -160 CCD (Chicago City Datum).  Clay slips which were
very wet and which required timbering were also described
in the Des Plaines Street Tunnel report.

     Seepage in the Chicago Avenue Tunnel, driven in 1930,
was reported to have increased greatly when the tunnel
reached distances of 600 feet east and west of a shaft at
the Chicago River.  At that point two 300 gpm pumps were
required to control the leakage.  One pump was operated
16 hours per day, six days per week and the other pumped
about 24 hours per week.

     In another reach of the Chicago Avenue Tunnel, numerous
faults were mapped and were reported to form a graben 820
feet wide, extending east and west of a shaft at the Lake
Shore.  The faults in this area are nearly vertical and
contain clay filled, brecciated zones up to three feet wide.
Displacements greater than 13 feet are reported in six
faults, two of which had displacements of 36 and 48 feet.
These faults were very troublesome to tunneling, because
of large water inflows and a need for support of the roof
rocks.  Joints showing solutioning and filled with clay
pockets up to 100 feet wide were reported.  Some of these
required timbering and one necessitated the use of concrete
lining.

     The faulting, close jointing, and disturbance observed
in the  1971 exploration program, in the Des Plaines Street
Tunnel, and in the two reaches of the Chicago Avenue Tunnel
are very likely interrelated.  A more detailed evaluation
of the  areal and vertical extent of the zone, the magnitude
of the  displacement, brecciation, leakage, and solution
phenomena will require further drilling in the design phase.

     Seven faults crossing the line along the tunnel, along
the Des Plaines River, and south of the Des Plaines complex
were mapped by the seismic survey.  Subsequent drilling has
not confirmed the presence of three of these faults.

     Of the remaining four faults, three have been substan-
tiated  by the 1971 explorations.  These have apparent dis-
placements of 25 feet, 50 feet, and 10 feet.  Displacement
of the  fourth fault was measured at 20 feet in the drilling.
However, no fault of such large displacement was observed
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in the Southwest Intercepting Sewer 13A Tunnel, which crosses
this same seismically mapped fault.

     Rock in the vicinity of the 25 foot and 10 foot faults
displayed unusually severe fracturing or gouge.  In particu-
lar, one boring north of the 25 foot fault followed for 20
feet a joint filled with clay and broken pieces of dolomite.
In some cases, the joint filling was wider than the core
diameter.  A core loss of eight feet was also reported in
this hole, and slickensided joint surfaces were found in
another drill hole south of the fault.  A core sample from
a boring north of 10 foot fault contained gouged sections
and the Platteville section was closely fractured.
3.1  FAULTS AFFECTING TARP

     Two feeder tunnels, which will intersect the proposed
Tunnel from the west, may cut by a 50 foot fault, based on
the seismic survey.  This fault may cross the more northern
of the feeder tunnels and a 20 foot fault may cross the
southern tunnel.

     Data mapped by the seismic survey on the geologic
structure and on faulting in the Lake Calumet area has not
been substantiated by drilling.  In this area ten faults
were mapped by the seismic method.  All of these are shown
in the area east of the Calumet Tunnel.  No faults were
mapped along the tunnel alignment from the Calumet Tunnel
northwest to the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal.

     The proposed tunnel may cross one fault having a dis-
placement of 20 to 30 feet, and another fault with a dis-
placement of about 30 feet.  The tunnel is c'ose a fault
of-unknown displacement near its intersection with the 30
foot fault.

     The Calumet River branch of the tunnel may cross five
east-west trending faults.  These faults, located from south
to north, have a displacement of about 20 to 25 feet.  The
short feeder tunnel which intersects this tunnel segment fol-
lows or closely parallels a 20-to-25 foot fault throughout
the length of the tunnel.

     The Little Calumet River branch of the system parallels
one fault for a considerable distance and may cross another
fault as well, depending on the exact location of the tunnel,
The displacement on the former fault ranges from a few feet
to about 30 feet and the latter is about 20 feet.
                           C-4

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      APPENDIX  D




AIR QUALITY STANDARDS

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                        APPENDIX D
                  AIR QUALITY STANDARDS
     Air quality is measured in terms of time-averaged
pollutant concentrations in the air, usually at ground
level, where people and property are most often exposed to
the pollutants.  For various substances which have been
identified as air pollutants, air quality standards for
them have been set at the Federal and state levels.

     The air quality standards can be divided into the
following classes:

          Ambient air quality standards
          Nondegradation criteria
          Standards for hazardous air pollutants
          Occupational Safety and Health Act regulations.

     The first two classes of standards apply to pollutant
concentrations in the outdoor air, whereas the third, stan-
dards for hazardous air pollutants, applies to the emission
of such pollutants.  These standards are discussed below.
The fourth class, the Occupational Safety and Health Act
regulations, apply to pollutant concentrations inside indus-
trial plants and other job areas where workers are likely
to be exposed to pollutants.  Therefore, they are not dis-
cussed here.
1.1  AMBIENT AIR QUALITY STANDARDS

     Pursuant to the Clean Air Act of 1970, the U.S. EPA
has established national ambient air quality standards for
six pollutants:  sulfur dioxide, particulate matter, carbon
monoxide, hydrocarbons, nitrogen dioxide, and photochemical
oxidants.  These standards are shown in Table D-l.  They
consist of both primary standards, which are intended to
protect public health, and secondary standards, which are
intended to protect public welfare, including protection
against damage to property and vegetation, and aesthetic
damage.

     The State of Illinois has also established ambient air
quality standards.   The state particulate standards are the
same as the Federal standards.  However, for carbon monoxide,
oxidants, hydrocarbons, and nitrogen dioxide, the state has
only one set of standards equivalent to the Federal secondary
standards.
                            D-l

-------
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2.1  NONDEGRADATxQN CRITERIA

     The intent of the nondegradation criteria,  established
in December 1974, is to prevent significant  deterioration of
air quality in areas with currently clean  air.   These cri-
teria apply to increments in the existing  ambient concentra-
tion of particulate matter and of  sulfur dioxide.

     Three classes with different  allowable  increments in
the above concentrations have been established:   Class I
represents the cleanest areas in which  a small  increment
may cause significant deterioration, Class II represents
the areas in which an increment associated with moderate
urban growth may not significantly affect  the air quality,
and Class III represents the highly developed urban areas
in which degradation of air quality up  to  the national
ambient air quality standards may  not be considered signi-
ficant.  Table D-2 summarizes the  nondegradation criteria.

                           Table  D-2
              Significant Deterioration Criteria
Pollutant

Particulate matter
Annual geometric mean
24-hour maximum
Sulfur dioxide
Annual arithmetic mean
2 4 -hour maximum
3-hour maximum
Allowable
Class I
Mg/m3
5
10
2
5
25
Increments
Class II
*ig/m3
10
30
15
100
700
               For Class III, the above concentrations could increase
           until the air quality degrades up to the national ambient
           standards.

     Initially,  all areas  in  the  U.S. were designated as
Class II, but  the states have the option of reclassifying
any area to  suit local  community  needs.  Illinois has not
reclassified any areas  in  the state.
3.1  HAZARDOUS  AIR POLLUTANTS

     Those  air  pollutants with no applicable ambient air
quality  standards  are included in the hazardous air pollu-
tant category.   The EPA has also established emission
standards for such pollutants.  At present, asbestos, beryl-
lium,  and mercury  are designated as hazardous air pollutants,
The EPA  has the authority to include other substances in
this category if they are found to pose a threat to public
health and  welfare.
                             D-3

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        APPENDIX E




NOISE:  UNITS AND STANDARDS

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                        APPENDIX E
                NOISE:  UNITS AND STANDARDS
1.1  NOISE UNITS

     Noise is often defined as unwanted sound.  A complete
noise description includes magnitude, frequency distribu-
tion, direction of propagation, variation with time, and
operating conditions of the noise generator.

     Urban noise is a mixture of sounds produced by a variety
of sources including vehicles, industrial plants, construc-
tion activity, sirens, appliances, power equipment, and con-
versation.  Although noise is generally uniform in all direc-
tions, it varies in magnitude and frequency with time.  It
is possible to describe urban noise in terms of its magni-
tude for each frequency and at each instant.  However, such
description would be too voluminous and difficult to compare
with other noise.  Various noise units have been developed to
describe urban noise in terms of a single number, which can
account for its magnitude, frequency, and duration.  This
section describes the basic unit of noise:  the decibel  CdB),
the A-weighted decibel  (dBA), and the day-night sound level
1.1.1  Decibel  (dB)

     The magnitude of noise is generally measured by its
sound pressure level referred to a standard pressure level.
The reference pressure level is generally taken to be 0.0002
microbar, which is the threshold of audible sound.  Because
of the vast range of sound pressure levels that can be heard
by the human ear, noise is expressed in terms of a logarithm
of the ratio of measured to standard sound pressure levels.
The resulting unit is termed as decibel (dB).  Thus, dB =
20 login  /P*, where P = measured sound pressure; P* =
reference sound pressure, generally taken to be 0.0002
microbar  (2 x 10"^ Newton/m^).
 1.1.2  A-Weighted  Sound  Pressure Level  (dBA)

     Human response to noise varies with noise frequency.
 The response is approximately constant  for frequencies between
 500 and 10,000 Hz, but drops off sharply below 100 Hz and
 above 20,000 Hz.   To account for this variation in human noise
                            E-l

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response, the measured noise signrl is weighted,  giving less
importance to the  low and high frequencies  and more importance
to the midrange  frequencies.  'i'here are  several internationally
approved noise weighting scales designed for different purposes,
For community noise,  the A-scale is used, and the resulting
unit is called dBA.
1.1.3  Day-Night  Sound Level ( L , )

     Many attempts  have been made to describe the time-varying
noise in terms of a single index.  The U.S.  EPA has recommended
the day-night sound level (L^n) as an index  for community noise.
It is based on  the Equivalent Sound Level  (Leq) .   The Leq is
defined as "the constant sound level which if Blasted for the
actual total duration of the noise signal,  would  yield the
same value of energy average as the actual  sound  level over
the total duration of the noise."!

     The L(jn represents the average Leq over  24 hours, with a
10-dB nighttime weighting.  Mathematically, L^n is expressed
as follows: 2
          -  10
           where  L
                   ,
                   dn
                   n
^ A J.U v^    -r -^ ^ j.w  --          /

 weighted noise level for  24-hour
 period
 average of hourly Leq's between 7 a.m.
 and 10 p.m.
 average of hourly Leq's between 10 p.m.
 and 7 a.m.
2.1  NOISE STANDARDS

     Various Federal,  state, and local governmental agencies
have established noise control regulations  and  guidelines.
     Bolt, Beranek & Newman Inc., Noise in the Urban Environment,  for
     city of Chicago, Department of Environmental Control, November
     1970.
     Information on Levels of Environmental Noise Requisite To Protect
     Public Health and Welfare With an Adequate Margin of Safety, U.S.
     Environmental Protection Agency, Report 550/9-74-004, March 1974.
                             E-2

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At the Federal level, the Department  of  Housing and Urban
Development  (HUD), the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA),
the Occupational Safety and Health  Administration (OSHA), and
the EPA have noise standards or  guidelines in effect.  The
State of Illinois and the city of Chicago also have established
noise control regulations. These standards and guidelines are
discussed below.
2.1.1  EPA Guidelines

     In response  to  the  Noise Control Act of 1972, the EPA
identified long-term noise levels considered necessary to
protect the public health and welfare with an adequate margin
of safety.  These identified noise levels do not represent
EPA standards,  but are considered necessary by the EPA both
to protect the  most  sensitive segment of public from any
measurable hearing loss  and to minimize feelings of annoyance,
both with an  adequate margin of safety.  The EPA findings
are given in  terms of Leq over 24 hours; Table E-l shows
the EPA findings  in  terms of Lan.  The conversion factor is
shown  at the  bottom  of the table.

                          Table E-l
    Summary of  Noise Levels Identified as Requisite To
          Protect Public Health and Welfare With
                an Adequate Margin of Safety!
Effect
Hearing Loss
Outdoor activity
interference and
annoyance
Indoor activity
interference and
annoyance
Level
Ldn < 74 dB
Ldn < 55 dB
Ldn < 59 dB
Ldn < 45 dB
Ldn < 49 dB
Area
All areas
Outdoors in residential areas
and farms and other outdoor
areas where people spend widely
varying amounts of time and
other places in which quiet is
a basis for use.
Outdoor areas where people spend
limited amounts of time, such as
school yards, playgrounds, etc.
Indoor residential areas.
Other indoor areas with human
activities such as schools, etc.
    NOTE: All Lgg values converted to L. for ease of comparison (L,  equals
        Leq (24)  + 4 dB) .                           dn
       U.S. EPA, March 1974.
                              E-3

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2.1.2  HUD Noise Criteria

     The Noise Abatement and control Standards established
by HUD are intended to remove uncontrollable noise sources
from residential and other noise-sensitive areas and to
prohibit HUD support for new construction on sites having
unacceptable noise exposure.  The HUD noise criteria for
funding new residential construction are given in terms of
Noise Exposure Forecast (NEF) values.  The NEF values can
be converted into L(jn by using the equation, L^n = NWF + 35 dB,
The criteria in terms of L(jn are as follows:
Noise Levels, L^n
Less than 65 dB
65 to 75 dB
More than 75 dB
HUD Policy
Acceptable
Discretionary
Unacceptable
2.1.3_ FHWA Noise Standards

     The FHWA of the Department of Transportation has estab-
lished noise standards and procedures to be used in highway
planning and design.  These standards have been established
in terms of the L]_Q values, which represent the noise level
in dBA-exceeded 10 percent" of the time.  The FHWA standards
are summarized in Table E-2.
                        Table E-2
                  FHWA Noise Standards
Land Use Type
Parks and areas re-
quiring special quali-
ties of serenity and
quite
Residential, business
and commercial
Uses other than those
mentioned above
Design Noise, Level, L]_Q
60 dBA
70 dBA
55 dBA
75 dBA
(Exterior)
(Exterior)
(Interior)
(Exterior)
                           E-4

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2.1.4  OSHA Noise Regulations

     OSHA, of the Department of Labor,  has  established
noise standards to protect the health and safety of in-
dustrial workers.  According to OSHA standards,  a worker
may not be exposed to noise levels  greater  than  90 dBA
for eight hours per day.  For shorter durations, exposure
to higher noise levels is allowed as follows:
      Duration Per Day              Sound  Level
           (Hours)	                 (dBA)

             8                          90
             6                          92
             4                          95
             3                          97
             2                          100
             1.5                        102
             1                          105
             0.5                        110
        0.25 or less                    115


The EPA has recommended  a  limit  of 85 dBA for eight-hour
exposure with higher  limits  for  shorter durations.
2.1.5  State of  Illinois  Noise  Standards

     The Illinois noise standards  apply to noise levels
measured beyond  25  feet from a  property-line noise-source.
The standards vary  with types of land use, which are divided
into three classes:  A, B,  and  C.   The standards depend
not only on the  class  in  which  the noise level is measured,
but also on the  class  in  which  the noise source is located.
For example, a noise source located in Class C may emit
higher noise to  an  adjacent Class  B area than Class A area.

     The Illinois noise standards  are given in terms of
octave band sound pressure  levels  and can be found in the
Environment Reporter.!
     Illinois  Noise Pollution Regulations, Environment Reporter, Noise
     Control Regulations, October 1975, p. 81:4921.
                              E-5

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2.1.6  City of Chicago Noise Standards1

    The city of Chicago promulgated  a  comprehensive noise
control ordinance in July 1971.  This  ordinance established
limits on noise from motor vehicles, construction equipment,
power tools and equipment, and recreational  vehicles sold,
as well as operated in the city of Chicago.   Standards for
noise from buildings were also established.

    The maximum allowable noise levels measured at 50 feet
from new construction vehicles and equipment sold in Chicago
are shown in the following table.
 Manufacture Date
                               Noise  Limit (dBA)
     Vehicles
  (8,000 Ibs. or
more gross weight)
Construction
 Equipment*
After Jan. 1, 1968
After Jan. 1, 1972
After Jan. 1, 1973
After Jan. 1, 1975
After Jan. 1, 1980
        88
        88
        86
        84
        75
     N/A
      86
      84
      80
      75
    Does not include pile drivers.
    The noise responsibility does not  end with manufacturers.
The user must maintain the product  so  that it will not emit
more noise than the manufacturer intended.   For vehicles with
gross weight 8,000 Ibs. or more, the following noise restric-
tions apply during operation:
Date
Before Jan. 1, 1973
After Jan. 1, 1973
Noise Limit (dBA) at 50 feet
For Posted Speed Limits
35 mph or Less
88
86
Over 35 mph
90
90
    City of Chicago Noise Ordinance,  Chapter 17 of the Municipal Code
    of Chicago, as amended in 1971.
                            E-6

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     The noise ordinance also prohibits use of noisy con-
struction equipment in residential areas between 9:30 p.m.
and 8:30 a.m. except for work on public improvements and
work for public service utilities.

     In the case of noise from buildings, the restrictions
apply to noise levels measured at the property line or at
the boundary of zoning district as follows:
Type of Land Use
Residential
Commercial
Industrial
Location of
Noise Measured
Property Line
Property Line
Zoning District
Boundary
Noise Limit (dBA)
55
62
58 to 66
                             E-7

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                    APPENDIX F

     SOCIOECONOMIC DATA BY COMMUNITY FOR THE
MAINSTREAM, CALUMET, AND DBS PLAINES TUNNEL SYSTEMS

-------
APPENDIX F
SOCIOECONOMIC DATA BY COMMUNITY FOR THE
MAINSTREAM,
CALUMET, AND DES
PLAINES TUNNEL
SYSTEMS
SOCIOECONOMIC DATA - MAINSTREAM AREA COMMUNITIES
Community
Bedford Park
Bellwood
Bensenville
Berkeley
Berwyn
Bridgeview
Broadview
Brookfield
Burr Ridge
Chicago
Cicero
Countryside
Des Plaines
Elmwood Park
Evanston
Forest Park
Forest View
Franklin Park
Glencoe
Glenview
Golf
Harwood Heights
Hillside
Hinsdale
Hodgkins
Hometown
1970 Population
583
22,096
12,956
6,152
52,502
12,522
9,623
20,284
1,637
3,369,357
67,058
2,864
57,239
26,160
80,113
15,472
927
20,348
10,675
24,880
474
9,060
8,888
215,918
2,270
6,729
Percent Change
From 1960
-20.9
6.6
41.7
6.2
-3.2
70.7
12.1
-0.7
447.5
-5.1
-3.0
-
64.1
9.6
1.0
7.1
-11.0
11.1
1.9
37.2
15.9
59.3
14.0
23.8
101.6
-10.0
Median Family
Income-1970
-
13,008
13,394
13,708
11,836
11,910
12,553
12,993
-
10,242
11,265
12,976
14,056
13,028
13,932
11,941
-
12,833
29,565
19,137
-
13,208
14,079
19,185
-
11,118
    F-l

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SOCIOECONOMIC DATA - MAINSTREAM AREA COMMUNITIES'1
                    Continu9d
                             Percent Change   Median Family
Community
Indian Head Park
Justice
Kenilworth
LaGrange
LaGrange Park
Lincolnwood
Lyons
Maywood
McCook
Melrose Park
Morton Grove
Niles
Norridge
Northbrook
Northfield
Northlake
North Riverside
Oak Park
Park Ridge
River Forest
River Grove
Riverside
Rosemont
Schiller Park
Stickney
Stone Park
Summit
Westchester
Western Springs
1970 Population
473
9,473
2,980
17,814
15,459
12,929
11,124
29,109
333
22,716
26,369
31,432
17,020
27,297
5,010
14,212
8,097
62,511
42,614
13,402
11,465
10,432
4,360
12,712
6,601
4,429
11,569
20,033
13,029
From 1960
22.9
238.0
0.7
16.5
12.1
10.1
12.0
6.5
-24.5
1.9
38.4
54.1
20.8
134.6
25.1
15.4
1.4
2.3
30.5
5.6
35.5
7.0
345.8
123.5
5.8
45.8
11.5
10.7
20.2
Income-1970
-
11,745
34,573
16,552
15,237
21,365
11,998
11,573
-
12,121
16,488
14,159
13,996
19,994
21,268
12,561
13,219
12,949
17,472
21,236
12,480
16,389
12,824
12,695
12,060
12,013
10,281
15,812
19,502
                      F-2

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        SOCIOECONOMIC DATA -  MAINSTREAM AREA COMMUNITIES1
                            Continued

                                      Percent Change   Median Family
    Community       1970  Population      From 1960       Income-1970
Willow Springs          3,318                41.3           12,713
Wilmette              32,134                13.7           21,809
Winnetka              13,998                 4.7           28,782
Skokie                68,322                15.1           16,423
     Suburban Fact Book -  1973,  Northeastern Illinois Planning Commission.
                                F-3

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    Community
Alsip
Blue Island
Burnham
Calumet City
Calumet Park
Chicago
Dixmoor
Dolton
Evergreen Park
Harvey
Lansing
Markham
Oak Lawn
Phoenix
Posen
Riverdale
Robbins
South Holland
          SOCIOECONOMIC DATA - CALUMET AREA COMMUNITIES1

                                      Percent Change   Median Family
1970 Population
11,141
22,958
3,634
33,107
10,069
3,369,357
4,735
25,937
25,921
34,636
25,805
15,987
60,305
3,596
5,498
15,806
9,641
23,931
From 1960
195.5
17.0
46.7
32.4
19.2
-5.1
53.9
38.4
7.2
19.1
42.6
36.6
119.5
-14.4
21.7
31.6
28.4
129.8
Income-1970
12,687
11,470
11,262
11,823
12,546
10,242
10,565
13,282
13,903
11,035
13,069
12,045
13,824
9,800
11,866
12,520
8,192
14,495
    Suburban Fact Book - 1973, Northeastern Illinois Planning Commission.
                               F-4

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     SOCIOECONOMIC DATA - DBS PLAINES AREA  COMMUNITIES1
Community
Broadview
Brookf ield
Des Plaines
Elmwood Park
Forest Park
Franklin Park
LaGrange
LaGrange Park
Lyons
May wood
McCook
Melrose Park
North Riverside
Park Ridge
River Forest
River Grove
Riverside
Rosemont
Schiller Park
Western Springs
1970 Population
9,623
20,284
57,239
26,160
15,472
20,348
17,814
15,459
11,124
29,019
333
22,716
8,097
42,614
13,402
11,465
10,432
4,825
12,712
13,029
Percent Change
From 1960
12.1
-0.7
64.1
9.6
7.1
11.1
16.5
12.1
12.0
6.5
-24.5
1.9
1.4
30.5
5.6
35.5
7.0
345.8
123.5
20.2
Median Family
Income-1970
12,553
12,993
14,056
13,028
11,941
12,833
16,552
15,237
11,998
11,573
-
12,121
13,219
13,472
21,236
12,480
16,389
12,824
12,695
19,502
Suburban Fact Book - 1973,  Northeastern  Illinois Planning Commission.
                              F-5

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                   APPENDIX G




CHRONOLOGY OF IMPORTANT EVENTS - 1954 THROUGH 1975

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                              APPENDIX G

          CHRONOLOGY OF IMPORTANT EVENTS - 1954 THROUGH 1975
Year   Month
1954
1958   August
1959   February
1960   March
1961
Description of Events

Leffler Plan proposed
(Alternative K*).

Meissner Plan proposed
(Alternative L).
Ramey-Williams Channel
Improvement Plan pro-
posed  (Alternative M).
       Reports Issued
Meissner, John F., "Flood
Control - A Report for the
Metropolitan Sanitary
District," Engineers, Inc.

Ramey, H.P., "Floods in
the Chicago Area," A Report
for the MSDGC.

McCarthy, R.L.,  "Supplement
to Proposed Flood Control
Project for the  MSDGC."

State of Illinois, "Report
on Plan for Flood Control
and Drainage Development,
Des Plaines River, Cook,
Lake and DuPage  Counties,"
Dept. of Public  Works and
Buildings.
1964
Original Deep Tunnel
Plan with Mined and
Surface Storage in
the Calumet Area
                   proposed
                   A).
          (Alternative
                   Metropolitan  Sanitary
                   District of Greater
                   Chicago Flood Control
                   Studies resulted  in
                   proposed plan
                    (Alternative  P).
                                           Appendix  G.
            Flood Control Coordinating Committee designations.
                                  G-l

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       Month
1966
       May
       October
1967   January
       November
Description of Events

Flood Control Coordi-
nating Committee
(FCCC) formed and
members appointed by
Governor of Illinois.

Commenced investigations
on mining machines
(MSDGC).
       Reports Issued
Original Chicago
Underflow Plan for
Flood and Pollution
Control proposed
(city of Chicago).

The FCCC appointed
members for a tech-
nical advisory
committee (TAG).

Lawrence Avenue under-
flow sewer system con-
struction commenced
(city of Chicago).

MSDGC initiated feasi-
bility studies on
Chicago tunnel plans.

Drilling and testing
of deep aquifer test
and specific capacity
wells commenced  (MSDGC)
Harza Engineering Co.
and Bauer Engineering, Inc.,
"A Deep Tunnel Plan for the
Chicagoland Area," A Report
for the MSDGC.

Harza Engineering Co.
"Appraisal Report on Storm
Drainage by Alternative
Open-cut and Tunnel Sewers
for the Eastwood Wilson
Auxiliary Outlet Sewer
System," report for
Department of Public Works.

City of Chicago, "The
Chicago Underflow Plan for
Flood and Pollution Control,"
Dept. of Public Works,
Bureau of Engineering.
                                 G-2

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Year   Month

1967   November
       (Continued)
            Description of Events

            Seismic survey of 5
            locations commenced
            to determine effi-
            cacy of vibrosis
            (MSDGC).

            Drilling and testing
            of 36 shallow and
            deep holes commenced
            to determine general
            subsurface conditions
            (MSDGC).
       Reports Issued
1968
February
1968   May
            Seismic survey com-
            pleted
Harza Engineering Co.
and Bauer Engineering,
Inc., "Pollution and
Flood Control: A Program
for Chicagoland," a report
for the MSDGC.

Seismograph Service Corp.,
"Reports on a Vibrosis
Survey, Chicagoland Deep
Tunnel Plan for Pollution
and Flood Control, Phases
I-III Mobilization and
Reconnaissance," for the
MSDGC.
       May
       July
                                    Harza Engineering Co.,  and
                                    Bauer Engineering, Inc.,
                                    "Chicagoland Deep Tunnel
                                    System for Pollution and
                                    Flood Control - First
                                    Construction Zone Definite
                                    Project Report," for the
                                    MSDGC.

                                    McCarthy, R.L., "The Metro-
                                    politan Sanitary District
                                    of Greater Chicago Flood
                                    Control Report."
                                 G-3

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       Month

       July
       (Continued)
Description of Events
       September
Composite Plan
proposed (Alternative
E).
1968   November
       November
       November
State of Illinois,
Division of Waterways
Plan proposed
(Alternative D).

Drilling and testing
completed.
                   Deep Tunnel Plan with
                   Pumped Storage Power
                   proposed (Alternative
                   V
                   City of Chicago Under-
                   flow Plan revised.

                   Sheaffer Plan proposed
                   (Alternative N).
       Reports Issued

Harza Engineering Co. and
Bauer Engineering, Inc.,
"Chicagoland Deep Tunnel
System for Pollution and
Flood Control - First
Construction Zone Definite
Project Report Appendices."

City of Chicago, "Composite
Drainage Plan of the
Chicago Area," Dept. of
Public Works for the TAG.

Harza Engineering Co. and
Bauer Engineering, Inc.
"Design, Construction, and
Financing Schedule for the
Composite Drainage, Flood
and Pollution Control Plan
for the Combined Sewer
Portion of the Metropolitan
Sanitary District of
Greater Chicago."

State of Illinois, "Chicago
Drainage Plan," Dept. of
Public Works and Buildings.
Seismograph Service Corp.,
"Report on Borehole Logging
Services,  Chicagoland Deep
Tunnel System for Pollution
and Flood Control," for the
MSDGC.
                                 G-4

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       Month

       November
       (Continued)
1969   January
       January
       February
Description of Events

Deep Tunnel Plan with
Mined and Surface Storage
in the Calumet and Stick-
ney Areas proposed
(Alternative B).

Deep Tunnel Plan
(Calumet, Stickney
Storage) with Pumped
Storage proposed
(Alternative B .)

Deep Tunnel Plan with Mined
and Surface Storage in the
Calumet, West-Southwest
and North-side Sewage Treat-
ment Plant Areas proposed
(Alternative C).

Deep Tunnel Plan  (Storage
in Three Locations) with
Pumped Storage Power Pro-
posed  (Alternative C ).

Report on effects of deep
tunnel storage upon MSDGC's
sewage treatment capacity
presented to MSDGC.
  Reports Issued
Bauer Engineering, Inc.,
"The Effect of Deep
Tunnel Storage upon
District Sewage Treat-
ment Capacity."

Anderson, A.G., and
Dahlin, W.Q.,  "Project
Report No. 100 - Supple-
ment No. 1 - Effect of
Air and Detergents on
Flow Pattern." University
of Minnesota.

Harza Engineering Co.,
and Bauer Engineering,
Inc., "Report on the
Impact of the Deep
Tunnel Plan on the Water
Resources of Northeast
Illinois," for the MSDGC.
                                 G-5

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Year   Month
1969   April
Description of Events
       July
       September
1969   October
1970   May
       June
Chicago Underflow Plan-
Lockport proposed
(Alternative F).
     Reports Issued

Koelzer, V.A. ,  Bauer, W.J.,
and Dalton, F.E., "The
Chicago Area Deep Tunnel
Project - A Use of the
Underground Storage Re-
source ," JWPCF.

Bauer Engineering, Inc.,
"The Role of Storage in
Sewage Treatment Plant
Design," for the MSDGC.

City of Chicago, "Combined
Underflow-Storage Plan  for
Pollution and Flood Control
in the Chicago Metropolitan
Area," Dept. of Public Works.

Papadopulos, I.S., Larsen,
W.R., and Neil, F.C., "Ground-
water Studies - Chicagoland
Deep Tunnel System," Ground-
water Journal,  Vol. 7, No. 5.

State of Illinois, city of
Chicago, MSDGC, "Underflow
Plan for Pollution and Flood
Control in the Chicago
Metropolitan Area."
Chicago Underflow
Plan - Single Quarry
proposed (Alternative
G) .

Chicago Underflow
Plan - Two Quarries
proposed
(Alternative H).

Chicago Underflow Plan-
Three Quarries proposed
(Alternative J).

Four Storage Plan
proposed (Alternative Q).
                                 G-6

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       Month

       June
       (Continued)
Description of Events

Four Storage Plan with
Pumped Storage Power
proposed (Alternative Q ) ,

McCook, Calumet, and
O'Hare Storage Plan
proposed (Alternative R).

McCook, Calumet, and
O'Hare Storage Plan with
Pumped Storage Power pro-
     Reports Issued
                   posed
      (Alternative R ).
       November
Chicago Underflow Plan,
McCook and O'Hare Storage
proposed  (Alternative S).

The FCCC reactivated.
1971   January
       February
       April
                   Work program prepared for
                   development of a flood and
                   pollution control plan.

                   Additional subsurface analysis
                   initiated.
Separate System of
Sanitary Sewers
proposed and evaluat-
ed  (Alternative T).
DeLeuw, Gather, and Co.,
"Southwest Side Intercepting
Sewer 13A, Report of Tunnel
Inspection Performed, November
1970," for the MSDGC.

Metcalf & Eddy, "Application
of Storm Water Management
Model to Selected Chicago
Drainage Areas - Phase I,"
report to city of Chicago,
Dept. of Public Works.

City of Chicago, "Estimate
of Cost To Provide a
Separate System of Sanitary
Sewers for the city of Chicago,"
Dept. of Public Works.
                                 G-7

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Year   Month
1971   May
       May
Description of Events

The Technical Advisory
Committee re-estaolish-
ed.
Reports Issued
       September
       September
       October
       October
1972
Tunnel and Reservoir
Plan  (TARP) proposed.
       January


       August
                        MSDGC, "Position Paper
                        Concerning Combined Sewer
                        Overflows."

                        Consoer, Townsend and
                        Associates, "Chicagoland
                        Flood and Pollution
                        Control Program Second
                        Interim Report on Treat-
                        ment to the city of
                        Chicago," a report for
                        the MSDGC.

                        Harza Engineering Co.,
                        "Chicagoland Flood Control
                        and Pollution Abatement
                        Program, Interim Report,
                        Geology and Related
                        Studies."

                        Bauer Engineering, Inc.,
                        "Final Report - Drop Shaft
                        Investigation for Crosstown
                        Expressway (1-494)."

                        Harza Engineering Co.,
                        "Evaluation of Geology
                        and Groundwater Conditions
                        in Lawrence Avenue Tunnel.
                        Calumet Intercepting Sewer
                        18E, Extension A, South-
                        west Intercepting Sewer
                        13A."
                        MSDGC, "Evaluation of
                        Alternative Systems."

                        MSDGC, "Summary of Technical
                        Reports."
                                 G-8

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Year   Month
Description of Events
Reports Issued
1972   August
       October


       November
       December
1973   July
Additional boring tests Seismograph Service Corp.,
completed.              "Borehole Logging Report
                        for North-Side Rock Tunnel
                        Project."
TARP adopted by FCCC
Board.
                        DeLeuw, Gather, and Co.,
                        "Preliminary Plans for
                        O'Hare Collection Facility,"
                        conventional intercepting
                        sewers and TARP.

                        MSDGC, "Technical Reports -
                       "Development of a Flood
                        Control Plan for the Chicago-
                        land Area," Part I - Data
                        Collection; Part II -
                        Computer Simulations Programs;
                        Part III - Treatment;
                        Part IV - Geology and Water
                        Supply; Part V - Alternative
                        Systems; Part VI - Power
                        Generation; Part VII -
                        Benefit-Cost-Financing-
                        Scheduling.
Issued "Environ-
mental Assessment"
and "Environmental
Impact Statement" for
TARP for Corps, of
Engineers  (MSDGC).

Preliminary plans and
designs for Upper Des
Plaines system and
O'Hare collection
facility prepared
(MSDGC).

Hydraulic model studies
of drop shafts and
collecting structures,
computer services, re-
finement of TARP, and
preliminary designs of
drop shafts initiated
(MSDGC).
                                  G-9

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Year   Month
Description of Event's
Reports Issued
1973   July
       (Continued)
1974   April
       March-
       September
1975   January
       July
Preliminary planj for
second phase Calumet
tunnals, administration
of subsurface exploration,
and preparation of geo-
technical design report
for Calumet system
initiated  (MSDGC).

Preparation of geo-
technical design for
Mainstream tunnels and
two reservoirs initiated
(MSDGC).

Mapping of Mainstream,
Calumet and Lower Des
Plaines systems commenced
(MSDGC).

Subsurface exploration of
Lower Des Plaines, Calumet,
Upper Des Plaines, Mainstream
and reservoir systems
commenced  (MSDGC).

Reservoir sites proposed for
O'Hare and Calumet areas
(MSDGC).

Drop shaft modeling studies  Anderson, A.G. and
completed and reports issued Dahlin, W.Q., Status
(University of Minnesota).   Reports No. 1 through
                             6, for the city of
                             Chicago.
Drop shaft modeling
study completed
(University of Minnesota).
Anderson, A.G. and
Dahlin, W.Q., "Model
Studies of Drop Shafts,
Final Report,"
University of
Minnesota, for the city
of Chicago.
Hearings conducted by MSDGC
pertaining to EPA con-
struction grant for
tunnels and shafts of
Addison to Wilmette and
O'Hare systems.
                                 G-10

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Year   Month       Description of Events        Reports Issued

1975   September   Hearings conducted by
                   Illinois EPA for design
                   grants of all first phase
                   tunnel systems.

       November    Public hearing conducted by
                   U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
                                 G-ll

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                 APPENDIX H

       METROPOLITAN SANITARY DISTRICT
             OF GREATER CHICAGO

GENERAL SPECIFICATIONS—CONSTRUCTION CONTRACTS

-------
March 1974

                                       INDEX

                THE METROPOLITAN SANITARY DISTRICT OF GREATER CHICAGO
                               GENERAL SPECIFICATIONS
                               (CONSTRUCTION CONTRACTS)


SECTION                                     TITLE                                   PAGE

    1          Definitions  	    GS-1
    2          Powers of the Engineer	    GS-1
    3          Contractor's Plans, Data & Samples  	    GS-2
    4          Approval of Contractor's Plans	    GS-2
    5          Additional Sanitary District Plans	    GS-3
    6          Checking Plans  	    GS-3
    7          Keeping Plans & Specifications on the Work	    GS-3
    8          Lines & Grades	    GS4
    9          Inspection & Testing of Materials & Equipment 	    GS4
   10          Inspections & Tests of Workmanship	    GS-5
   11          Measurement for Payment	    GS-6
   12          Intent of Plans & Specification	    GS-6
   13          Ground Surface & Underground Conditions	    GS-6
   14          Existing & Future Structures  	    GS-7
   15          Space for Material, Equipment & Plant	'	    GS-7
   16          Cleaning Work Sites  	    GS-8
   17          Provisions for Delivery at Site	    GS-8
   18          Procedure & Methods  	    GS-8
   19          Handling Water at Treatment Plant Sites	    GS-9
   20          Openings, Cutting & Fitting	    GS-9
   21          Water, Power & Sanitary District Equipment	   GS-10
   22          Safety	   GS-10
   23          As-Built Drawings	   GS-12
   24          Open Burning	   GS-12
   25          Equipment Manuals	   GS-12
   26          Posting of Project Signs	   GS-12
   27          Operating Personnel Training  	   GS-12
   28          Proprietary Designations	   GS-13
   29          Fire or Other Emergency	   GS-13
                                           H-l

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March 1974
                     THE METROPOLITAN SANITARY DISTRICT OF GREATER CHICAGO
                                 GENERAL SPECIFICATIONS
                                   (CONSTRUCTION CONTRACTS)
Definitions.
 (1)   Whenever the following terms in quota-
tions  appear in  the contract  documents, they
shall be interpreted as follows:
                   " or "District" - The Me-
  "Sanitary District
tropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago,
party of the first part.
  "Contractor" spelled  with  a capital "C" -
The Contractor under this contract, party of the
second part.
  "Chief Engineer" or "Engineer" - The Chief
Engineer  or   Acting  Chief  Engineer  of  The
Metropolitan  Sanitary District of Greater Chica-
go, or any other Engineer designated by him.
  The Purchasing Agent is the duly authorized
Officer  of the District,  carrying out the func-
tions assigned to him  by the Purchasing Act (111.
Rev. Stat.  1963, Ch.  42, Sec. 11.1-11.23) and
the Board of Trustees.
  "He", "him", "his", "it" or "it's" designating
the  "Contractor"  — The individual,  firm  or
corporation awarded the contract for the work
hereunder.
  "The work" - The  work  to be performed
hereunder, including  all material,  labor, tools
and all  appliances and appurtenances necessary
to perform and complete everything specified or
implied in the contract or shown on  the plans
and specifications furnished  by the Sanitary
District, and  the additional  plans  and  infor-
mation  furnished  by  the  Contractor under
Section (3), in full compliance with all the terms
and conditions hereof.
  "Site" — The location described in the Agree-
ment where the work under this contract is to
be performed.
  "Plans"  —  The contract  plans listed in the
Agreement and the Additional plans, prints and
drawings furnished by the Contractor in accor-
dance with the requirements of Section (3).
  "Written Order" — A written order signed by
the Chief  Engineer of  the  Sanitary  District, a
duly  appointed Acting  Chief Engineer or  an
Assistant  Chief  Engineer  designated by said
Chief Engineer, mailed to the Contractor  at the
address designated  in  his proposal or to such
other address  as  he may designate in writing as
his official place of business.

  "Or equal" or  "or equal thereto" - Wherever
a particular process, material,  device, detail or
part is specified herein followed by these words
or  by similar or equivalent expressions, such
words or expressions  shall  be understood  to
mean and permit the use of  another process,
material, device, detail or part that the Engineer
shall  determine  is fully equal  in suitability,
quality, durability and  in all other respects, to
the  process,  material,  device, detail  or part
herein specified for such use and shall approve
for  such use in the work hereunder.
  "Designated",  "ordered",  "permitted", "ap-
proved"  -  These  words or others  of  similar
import, unless specifically  modified, shall  be
taken to  mean, designated,  ordered, permitted
or approved by the Engineer.
                                                 Powers of the Engineer.
                                                    (2)   It  is covenanted and  agreed that the
                                                 Chief  Engineer  and  his  properly  authorized
                                                 agents shall measure and calculate the quantities
                                                 and  amounts  of the  several  kinds  of  work
                                                 performed under this  contract and  on whose
                                                 inspection all work shall be accepted or con-
                                                 demned. The Chief Engineer, or other Engineer
                                                 designated by  him, shall  have full  power  to
                                                 reject  or condemn  all  materials  furnished  or
                                                 work performed under this contract, which in
                                                 his opinion  do not conform to the  terms and
                                                 conditions herein expressed.

                                                    To prevent all disputes and litigations, it is
                                                 further agreed  by and between  the Sanitary
                                                 District and  the Contractor  that  the Engineer
                                                 shall in all cases  decide every question of an
                                                 engineering character which may arise relative to
                                                 the execution of the work under fhis contract.
                                            H-2

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on the part of the Contractor, and his decision
shall  be  final  and  conclusive ;n both parties
hereto; and such decision, in case any question
may arise, shall be a condition precedent to the
right of the Contractor to receive any money or
compensation for anything done or furnished
under this contract.

Contractor's Plans, Data and Samples.

  (3)  Within  thirty days after  the  approval
of the bond of the Contractor  by the Board
of Trustees of the Sanitary District, the Contrac-
tor shall submit to  the Engineer for approval,
plans in  duplicate of the equipment, material
and apparatus included under this contract and
the foundations for  same (other  than those for
which details are given  in the  plans attached
hereto by the Sanitary District), as listed under
the Detail Specifications, together with all other
information in such detail as may be necessary
to  permit  the  Engineer to  inform  himself
whether  the same will comply with the specifi-
cations, and to  determine the character of the
various   equipment,  material  and  apparatus
which the Contractor proposes to use. The time
for submitting  Contractor's  plans may  be ex-
tended by the Engineer at his discretion, if in his
opinion  such  extension  will  not delay the
progress of work under the contract.

   All such  plans shall be of sizes to be desig-
nated or approved by the Engineer and shall be
clearly identified by item number, if any, and
location of the equipment, material and appara-
tus in  the work.  The  general  character and
arrangement of the shop and working plans shall
be subject  to the approval of the Engineer and
before commencing such plans the Contractor, if
requested,  shall confer with  the Engineer re-x
garding  the character, scale, arrangement, and
completeness  of such plans.  The detailed shop
plans shall  give views, dimensions, instructions
and references so that duplicate parts for repairs
can be ordered  and  made from the drawings at
any  time  in the  future. The  assembly and
working  plans shall show necessary details, and
plans and  elevations  with dimensions, instruc-
tion and references  for proper erection, instal-
lation and adjustment of the equipment.
   The Contractor shall furnish to the Engineer a
tabulated list of the minor equipment for which
plans may  not be required, showing the name of
the manufacturer and the catalog number and
type of equipment proposed, together with such
dimensions,  specifications,  samples, or  other
data, as  may be required to  permit intelligent
judgment of the acceptability of the same.
   Machinery, equipment, accessories or parts to
be furnished under  this contract must  be of
current manufacture  unless otherwise specified.
Such  material, whose manufacture has  been
discontinued or is scheduled to be discontinued
within the life of the contract or duration of the
maintenance bond, will not be accepted unless
otherwise specified.
  The contractor  shall upon  request furnish a
certified  statement from the manufacturer that
any  equipment, accessories  or parts being  fur-
nished under  the  contract  are in current pro-
duction and  that  there are  no present or near
future plans  to discontinue production of the
item or items in question.

Approval of Contractor's Plans.
   (4)  The  plans submitted by the Contractor
for approval, as specified in Section (3), will be
examined by the  Engineer  and it  is understood
by the Contractor in submitting the plans, that a
reasonable amount of time  will be necessary for
their examination by the Engineer  before they
can be approved  by him  or returned for  cor-
rection.

   "All plans  requiring structural design sub-
mitted by the Contactor shall be accompanied
by the calculations for the work or design and
shall  be stamped by  a  registered structural
engineer having a  license to practice in the State
of Illinois."


   Unless otherwise  instructed, the  Contractor
shall submit  to the  Engineer for examination
three prints of each plan, and, as  far as possible,
all plans of any particular part of the structures
or equipment, and of parts connected therewith,
shall be  submitted at the same time. After the
plans  have been examined  as above mentioned,
one print of each plan will be returned to the
Contractor  by the Engineer with his approval
thereon, or marked with notations or corrections
and changes that may be required. All plans not
approved by the  Engineer  shall be corrected or
revised by the Contractor  as the  Engineer  shall
direct and shall be resubmitted in the same rou-
tine as before.  No orders for any work, materials,
or equipment shown on any plans shall be given
by  the Contractor without the written consent
of the Engineer.
                                            H-3

-------
  No orders for any  work, materials or equip-
ment shown  on  any  plans  shall be given by
the Contractor without the written  consent of
the Engineer prior to the time when such plans
or equipment have been  approved  by him as
specified.  Prior  to the approval  of any  such
plans, any work which the Contractor  may do
on the structures or equipment covered by the
same shall  be at his  own  risk, as the Sanitary
District will not be responsible for any  expense
incurred  by the Contractor  in  changing struc-
tures or equipment to make the same conform
to the plans as finally approved. No alterations
of any plans shall be made  by the  Contractor
after they  have been  approved except  by the
written consent of the Engineer.
   The Contractor shall  furnish  the  Sanitary
District,  as requested, and  without extra charge
therefor, such number of complete sets of prints
of all plans, as approved,  as the Engineer shall
request and in general not less than eight, for
office files and for use in the field. Erection
plans shall have all match marks shown  thereon.
   After  the  work  has been  completed, the
tracings  of all  plans  for  any  and all  work
hereunder, made by or for the Contractor, shall
be corrected by him so as to show all work as
actually completed.
   Prior to the issuance by the Chief Engineer of
the  final certificate specified  in Article 35 of the
General Conditions, the Contractor shall furnish
to the Engineer, record prints,  in duplicate on
linen, of such drawings as have been submitted
by the Contractor as specified in Section (3), as
he may request.
   Upon approval of the plans, lists, samples and
other data  submitted  by the Contractor, the
same shall become a part  of this contract, and
the  equipment furnished shall be in conformity
with the same; provided,  that the  approval of
the  above  plans, lists, specifications, samples or
other data shall in no way release the Contractor
from his responsibility for  the  proper design,
installation and performance of any material or
equipment, or from his liability to  replace the
same should it prove defective.

Additional Sanitary District Plans.

   (5) The Sanitary District  will, for conditions
noted in the Detail Specifications, prepare work-
ing  plans supplementary to the plans previously
listed herein, showing such additional and  revis-
ed details for construction purposes not shown
on  the contract plans or which are shown as
typical only and require revision and additions
for construction purposes,  as  are required for
furnishing and erecting the structures and equip-
ment required under this contract. These work-
ing plans will be furnished to the Contractor by
the Sanitary District within a reasonable  time
after approval by  the Board of Trustees of the
Sanitary District of the bond of the  Contractor,
and  as required  from  time  to time  for the
prosecution of the work.
  The Contractor shall  advise the  Engineer in
writing sufficiently in advance of the time when
such  plans will be required  for  the orderly
progress  of various  portions  of the  work to
permit their preparation  and  shall make  no
claims for  damages  for  delays that may result
from his failure  to so notify the Engineer. These
plans will include such details as are not shown
on the contract  plans and which the Contractor
is not required to furnish, as specified in Section
(3).
Checking Plans.

  (6) The  Contractor  shall check  all plans
furnished by the Sanitary District  and by him-
self for dimensions, quantities and co-ordination
with other parts of the work under this contract,
and  shall notify the Engineer of  all  errors or
omissions which he  may discover by examining
and  checking the same.  He will not be allowed
to take advantage of any error  or  omission on
the plans, as full instructions will  be furnished
by the  Engineer should  such error or omission
be discovered, and the Contractor shall  carry out
such instructions as  if originally specified. The
work  is  to be made  complete  and  to  the
satisfaction  of  the  Engineer, notwithstanding
any  minor  omissions in the specifications or
plans.
Keeping Plans and Specifications on the Work.

   (7) The Contractor shall keep on hand at the
work for reference  a complete  copy of these
specifications and a complete set of all plans of
the work, and also copies of all plans furnished
by the Contractor, all revised plans furnished by
the Sanitary  District and all orders issued to the
Contractor by the Engineer  tha' -°'ate to the
work under this contract.
                                             H-4

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Lines and Grades.

  (8)    A surface  horizontal and vertical con-
trol  system as required  for  the  layout  of the
work under this contract shall be given  by the
Engineer. This horizontal  and vertical control
system must be verified  by the Contractor and
the Contractor will be entirely responsible for its
correctness. All other horizontal and vertical
control required for  the complete layout  and
performance of the work under  this contract
shall be done  by the Contractor at the Contrac-
tor's expense, and  approved  by  the Engineer.
The  Contractor must  verify and  will be  com-
pletely responsible for the correctness of all lines
and grades, including any given by the Engineer.

  In  tunnel construction, each  shaft shall be
"plumbed" (line and grade transferred from the
surface  into the tunnel section) by the  Con-
tractor,  and  approved by the Engineer. The
Contractor shall inform  the Engineer, a  reason-
able  time in advance, of  the times and places at
which he intends to do work.

   At the  Engineer's discretion, the  Engineer
will  make   occasional field  checks  of  control
work done by the  Contractor. The Contractor
shall  correct  any  mistakes due to errors or
omissions  at  his   own  cost  and expense as
ordered  by  the  Engineer.  Unless  otherwise
noted, all  elevations shown on  the  plans and
mentioned in  the specifications are  referred to
Chicago  City Datum (C.C.D.).  The  Sanitary
District  considers Chicago City Datum to  be at
Elevation  579.48  above  New York  Mean Sea
Level, USC&GS  1929 adjustment  (MSL-1929
adj).

Inspection and Testing of Materials and
   Equipment.

   (9)   All material  and  equipment  furnished
under this  contract  shall be subjected at all times
during manufacture, fabrication and erection to
such inspection and tests by the  Engineer or his
authorized representatives, as will give due assur-
ance that  the terms of the specifications are
being complied with in all respects. Such inspec-
tion and tests shall be performed at the points of
manufacture or fabrication, or in  the field, as are
herein specified therefor or as otherwise  desig-
nated  by  the Engineer. Where  inspections or
tests  are  to  be  made  at  the   point  of  the
manufacture or fabrication, the Contractor shall
in all cases give am pie notice to the Engineer to
permit  such inspection and tests to  be per-
formed before  painting is done and shipment is
made and shall  furnish to the Engineer copies, in
triplicate, of all mill orders and invoices covering
the same, to facilitate the identification of the
material inspected.
   All  inspecting and testing of materials fur-
nished under this contract will be performed by
the Engineer or his  duly authorized  inspection
engineers or inspection  bureaus without cost to
the Contractor unless otherwise expressly speci-
fied herein.
   When inspection of materials and  equipment
is authorized in writing by the Engineer, it shall
be the  sole responsibility  of  the  Contractor
hereunder to  keep the Engineer, or such duly
authorized  inspection  engineers or  inspection
bureaus, fully  informed as to when  and  where
the material or equipment is to be inspected.  All
approved subcontractors  shall be appropriately
advised of this requirement. If  any material or
equipment  is  shipped to  the site of the work
without authorized inspection, it may be subject
to rejection.   Any  additional expense  to  the
Sanitary District for inspection of such material
or equipment  at the site  of the work shall be
borne by the Contractor.

   All machining and preparation  of test sam-
ples,  required  by  the ASTM or other specifica-
tions  and cited as  standard for this contract,
shall  be  done  by the Contractor  at  his own
expense.

   All specifications of any society,  institute or
association  hereafter  referred  to  are hereby
made a  part  of  this  contract  the  same as if
written in full.

   The following societies, institutes and assoc-
iations will be hereinafter designated, by their
initials, as follows:

Name                             Designation
American Association of State Highway
   Officials	AASHO
American Institute of Electrical
   Engineers	AIEE
American Institute of Steel Construction . AISC
Air Moving and Conditioning Association,
   Inc	AMACA
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American Petroleum Institute  	API
American National Standards Association  ANSI
American Society of Mechanical
   Engineers	ASME
American Society for Testing Materials  . .ASTM
American Welding Society	EEI
American Water Works Association  .... AWWA
Edison Electric Institute	EEI
Standard  Specification for  Road and Bridge
Construction of the Department of Public Works
and Buildings, Division of Highways,
   State of Illinois	IDH
Illinois Environment Protectional Agency. IEPA
Insulated Power Cable Engineers
   Association	IPCEA
Metropolitan Sanitary District  of
   Greater Chicago	MSD
National Electrical Manufacturers:
   Association	NEMA
National Fire Protection Association ... .NFPA
Occupational Safety & Health
   Administration	OSHA
Steel Structures Painting Council	SSPC
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency   .USEPA

   Where reference  is made to standard specifi-
cations  of any of the  above societies,  institutes
or associations, these references  refer to  the
latest Standards and Tentative Standards of said
society, institute  or association in force on the
date when bids on this contract were received;
except that, if a revised specification is issued by
said  society,  institute or association before
completion  of a  part  of the  work affected by
said  specifications,   the  Contractor may,   if
approved by the Engineer, perform the part of
the work affected in accordance with the revised
specifications.  In  interpreting said  standard
specifications, the "Purchaser"  shall  be under-
stood to  mean the Sanitary  District,  and  the
"Manufacturer," the Contractor  hereunder of
any person or persons  or corporation furnishing
materials  for  or  performing  work under  this
contract.
   For any  material not covered  by the desig-
nated specification  of  some designated society,
institute or  association, appropriate methods of
testing and  inspection  to  be designated by the
Engineer shall be followed.
   All samples for  analysis and tests  shall be
taken in such manner  as to be truly representa-
tive of the entire  lot under test and shall not be
worked on in any way to alter the quality before
testing. Where expressly permitted  by the Engi-
^cer in the case of materials taken from stock or
for use  in minor parts,  certified  analysis  and
tests of the manufacturer, furnished in triplicate,
may be accepted in lieu of the tests prescribed
above. In case  the  records  of  physical  and
chemical tests of stock materials are not avail-
able  a reasonable  number  of tests shall  be
furnished to  the Engineer  free  of charge as
required  by the Engineer to satisfy himself as to
its quality.

   Inspection and tests of fabricated parts and
manufactured articles  shall  be made  by such
methods and at such times as  to insure compli-
ance  with the specifications in all respects. In-
spection of all metal  work shall be made before
painting.
  Should the preparation  of the material be at
far distant or inaccessible points, or should it be
divided into unreasonably small quantities, or
widely distributed to an unreasonable extent, or
should the  percentage  of  rejected material be
unreasonably large, the additional cost of extra
inspection resulting therefrom shall be borne by
the Contractor, the Engineer being sole judge of
what is to be deemed extra inspection.
  The Engineer or his authorized representative
shall  have  full  power  to reject  any and all
material  or equipment  which fails to  meet the
terms of the specifications and such material or
equipment shall be promptly removed from the
work   hereunder.  All  material  or equipment
which  develops  defects during  the life of the
contract, either before or after erection, shall be
removed and  replaced, notwithstanding that  it
may have passed the prescribed inspection and
tests.
Inspection and Tests of Workmanship.
   (10)   It is the intent, under this contract, to
secure high class workmanship in all respects and
that structures be  substantially  watertight.  By
substantially watertight is meant  concrete struc-
tures with  no appreciable leaks from cracks,
porous  places, holes, expansion or construction
joints, and metal structures or pipe lines with no
leaking   or  sweating  joints  or  leaks  through
defective pipe materials.
   Any  imperfect work tL.'  i,;uy be discovered
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before the final acceptance of the work shall be
corrected  immediately.  The  inspection of any
work  shall  not relieve the Contractor of any of
his  obligations to  perform proper and satisfac-
tory work,  as herein specified, and all work,
which, during its progress may become damaged
from any cause, or fails  for any reason to satisfy
the requirements of the specifications shall be
removed and replaced by good and satisfactory
work without extra charge therefor.
  The Contractor  shall  perform all tests which
are specified  under  the various items of  the
contract. Any changes  or repairs necessary to
put all work and  equipment  in  satisfactory
adjustment and operating condition (except for
changes of repairs of equipment furnished by
the Sanitary  District), whether due  to defective
material, design  or construction, shall be done
by  the Contractor at no additional  cost to the
Sanitary District. In  general, all mechanical and
electrically operated equipment furnished and
installed under the various items of the contract
shall be given such operating tests as are neces-
sary to demonstrate  that it is in satisfactory op-
erating condition and adjustment.
   The Contractor shall furnish all tools,  mate-
rials,  labor and equipment, except as otherwise
specified,  necessary  for performing all  tests
specified  under  this  section and  under  the
various items of the  contract and for making all
necessary repairs  and  adjustments  (except for
repairs and adjustments of equipment furnished
by the  Sanitary  District),  at  no  additional
expense to the Sanitary District other than that
specified to  be paid under the various unit  and
lump  sum prices  of the  contract.  Power for
testing  equipment  will be  furnished by  the
Sanitary District, to  the extent permitted by the
Engineer, if  Sanitary District power is available
at the site of the work.

 Measurement for Payment.

   (11)  When  unit prices  are  specified, all
 measurements of  quantities  for payment under
 the unit price item or items of this contract shall
 be made by the Engineer in the manner speci-
 fied,  and the price  or  prices paid shall include
 the furnishing,  delivering,  erecting  and  con-
 necting  up  of all tools, materials, equipment,
 apparatus  and appurtenances; the furnishing of
 all labor  and performance of all work required
 for the  installation;  and  all  plans, testing,
 painting, Contractor's bond, maintenance bonds
where required, and collateral work necessary to
complete  the work as specified in the Detail
Specifications. The cost of performing all work
specified  in  the  General  Specifications   and
General Conditions, shall be included in the unit
and/or lump  sum price  or prices specified in the
Agreement (unless  otherwise directly specified)
and no additional payment will be  made by the
Sanitary District  to  the  Contractor for  per-
forming  said specified  work. No "extra" or
"customery" allowances  for  payment will be
made under  any item,  unless directly specified
therein, and no additional payment for work
included under any item of this contract will be
made  under  other  items  unless directly  so
specified.
  Where payment  by scale weight is specified
under certain items, the Contractor shall provide
suitable weighing equipment which shall be kept
in accurate adjustment at all times. The weighing
of  all  material  shall  be  performed  by  the
Contractor in the presence and under the super-
vision of the Engineer  or his authorized repre-
sentative.

Intent of Specifications and Plans.

  (12)  The specifications  and plans are  in-
tended  to  cover the  complete installation. It is
not  the  intent  to  give  every  detail  in  the
specifications and  plans.  The  Sanitary District
will  not be responsible for the absence of any
detail  the  Contractor may require, or for any
special construction work, equipment, material
or labor which may  be found necessary as the
work progresses.  No  additional compensation
will  be allowed  the Contractor for  any such
special construction work,  equipment, material
or labor  which may be  found necessary for
performing or  completing any work hereunder
unless it can  be clearly shown, to  the satisfaction
of the Engineer, that such special construction
work, equipment,  material or labor is beyond
the  intent and  scope of the plans and specifi-
cations, or is not  included under the lump sum
or unit prices specified in the Agreement. If this
is shown,  the payment  for  such special  con-
struction  work, equipment,  material  or  labor
shall be made under Articles 7 and 8 of the
General Conditions, after the additional cost has
been agreed upon and a  written  order by the
Chief Engineer has been issued.
 Ground Surface and Underground Conditions.
   (13)  Where profiles of the  ground or cross
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sections showing typical elevations of the pre-
sent ground and of the finished surfaces of cuts
and fills adjacent  to the structures to be built
under  this  contract are shown  on  the  plans
hereto attached, the elevations are believed to be
reasonably correct but are not guaranteed to be
absolutely so, and together with any schedule of
quantities, are presented only  as  an approx-
imation. The Contractor shall satisfy himself,
however,  by actual examination  of  the site of
the work, as to the  existing elevations and the
amount of work required under this contract.
   Where test pits and borings have been dug
on the site of the work, the results supplied to
the District by the soils engineer may be given
on the plans or are in file in the Engineer's Of-
fice for the information of the contractor. The
District does not guarantee the accuracy or
correctness of this information. If the contrac-
tor desires any additional information relating
to the soils investigation,  he should contact
the soils consultant to obtain such informa-
tion.  The  District does  not guarantee  the
accuracy or correctness of any such informa-
tion supplied  by the soils consultant  to the
prospective bidder.  The  contractor   must
satisfy himself by making borings or test pits
or by such other methods as he may prefer to
determine the character, location and amounts
of water, peat, clay, sand, quick sand, gravel,
glacial drift, boulders, conglomerate,  rock,
gas and other material to be encountered and
work to be performed.

Existing and Future Structures.

   (14)   Various  underground,   and  overhead
utilities and  other structures are shown  on the
plans hereto attached. The location, material
and dimensions of such structures, where  given,
are believed to be reasonably correct, but do not
purport  to  be  absolutely so.  All known  struc-
tures  both  under and  above  ground,   either
existing  or  under construction, except  con-
tractors' plants, are plotted on  the  plans  and
profiles for the information of the Contractor or
are on file in the office of  the Chief Engineer,
but information so given is not to be construed
as a representation that  such  structures will be
found or encountered  as plotted, or that no
other such structures will be  found  or encoun-
tered. Other structures may  also be encountered
which may  be  built under existing or  future
contracts,  or by other parties,  which are  not
shown on the plans. All structures encountered
shall  be  protected  and  supported, and,  if
damaged,  repaired  by the Contractor without
Charge therefor to the  Sanitary District. The
Contractor shall arrange with the owners of said
structures for the shifting, temporary removal
and restoration and protection of  same where
necessary  for the prosecution of work under this
contract,  at no  additional  expense  to the Sani-
tary District except as otherwise specified here-
in.

   Where all or part of the site on which work is
to be performed has been utilized under former
contracts  for the storage  of Contractor's ma-
terials and for Contractor's temporary roadways
and tracks, the  Contractor shall make no claim
for extra  cost of his work due to encountering
debris or other obstructions resulting from such
use.

Space for Material, Equipment and Plant.

   (15)   The  Contractor  shall have the use of
such  available areas on unoccupied and unused
property  of the Sanitary District adjacent to or
near  the  site of the  work,  for the  storage of
material  and  for  field erection of  plant and
equipment as are not needed for other structures
to be built under existing or future  contracts, or
for delivery  of material and equipment  under
existing or future  contracts, or for  other pur-
poses  of  the  Sanitary  District. All areas  on
Sanitary  District property shall be used  under
conditions to  be approved  by the Engineer, and
in no case will  the Contractor be permitted to
block access to other  parts of the  work  under
construction  or to the treatment  plant. The
Contractor shall submit drawings showing  the
proposed  layout of his plant to the  Engineer for
approval,  if required.  All other  necessary  or
additional storage facilities shall be  provided  by
the Contractor.
   When  considered necessary  and  ordered  by
the Engineer, the Contractor shall  immediately
remove or relocate any of his tracks, equipment,
buildings  or  other structures  which,  in  the
opinion of the  Engineer, constitute an obstruc-
tion or interfere with the proper carrying on of
any  other work, without  additional charge to
the Sanitary District.
   Where the Sanitary District has prepared areas
at the site of the work for use as parking spaces
for the Contractor's forces, the parking of  the
cars of the Contractor's forces in locations other
than in such parking areas w;"  ^ be permitted.
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Cleaning Work and Sites.

  (16)  The Contractor shall keep the site of
the work and  adjacent premises as free  from
material, debris and rubbish as is practicable and
shall remove from any portion of the site, if, in
the opinion  of  the  Engineer,  such material,
debris or rubbish interferes with the  operation
of  the  existing  plant or other contractors,
constitutes a nuisance, or is objectionable in any
way to the public. The Contractor further agrees
to remove all machinery, materials, implements,
barricades, staging, false-work, debris and rub-
bish connected  with  or caused by said  work
immediately upon the completion of the same
and to clean all structures and work constructed
under this contract  to the satisfaction of the
Engineer; regrade all areas which  have  been
rutted  or disturbed so that the  areas will drain
without  pockets; and to  leave the premises,
upon  completion of the contract, in at least as
good condition as when he entered upon them.
 Provisions for Delivery at Site.

   (17)  The Contractor shall  make his own
 arrangements for  delivery  of  materials  and
 equipment to the site, except as may be other-
 wise stated in the Agreement.

   Where  the Sanitary District has railroad con-
 nections serving the site, the Contractor will be
 permitted the use of such tracks  only to the
 extent that  it  does  not  interfere  with  the
 Sanitary  District's operations.  Any damage to
 plant  tracks due to the Contractor's  use other
 than normal wear shall be promptly corrected
 by repair or replacement to the satisfaction of
 the Engineer.
   The Contractor, subject to the approval of the
 Engineer, will be allowed a reasonable use of any
 existing roadways that are under the jurisdiction
 of the Sanitary  District. Any repairs or main-
 tenance made necessary by the Contractor's use
 of any such roads  shall  be done  by the Con-
 tractor without expense to the Sanitary District.
 The  Contractor's  use of  the   roads  shall be
 strictly in  conformity with  conditions to be
 prescribed by the Engineer and shall not inter-
 fere  with their use by the Sanitary District or
 other contractors. The Contractor shall so  con-
 duct  his  work  as to  keep  all  existing roads in
 continuous  service,  except  as   otherwise
 specified.
  The Contractor shall provide and maintain at
his own expense such other roadways or other
means to  obtain .access to the work as he may
require. Such  roadways  and  other  means  of
access may also be used by the Sanitary District
or other contractors  now or hereafter engaged
upon work on this site.
Procedure and Methods.

  (18)   The  attention  of the  Contractor is
particularly  called to the time alloyed for the
completion  of the  work  included  under  this
contract. To avoid delay in the  completion of
work hereunder, he shall submit the names of all
sub-contractors and suppliers  of material  and
equipment for approval within  10 days after the
date of approval  of his bond and shall place all
orders for material and equipment within 5 days
after receiving the approval of the Engineer. The
Contractor's attention is further called to the
fact that the Sanitary  District may take  over
certain parts of the work under this contract for
permanent operation as rapidly as completed in
advance  of  the completion of  the contract as a
whole.

  The Contractor shall determine the procedure
and methods and also  design and furnish all
temporary structures, sheeting,  bracing,  tools,
machinery,  implements and  other equipment
and plant  to be  employed  in performing the
work  hereunder,  and  shall promptly submit
layouts and schedules of his proposed methods
of  conducting the work to the Engineer for his
approval. The use of  inadequate  or  unsafe
procedures,  methods,  structures or equipment
will not be  permitted,  and  the Engineer  may
disapprove and reject any of same which seem to
him to be unsafe for the work  hereunder, or for
other work  being carried on in  the vicinity, or
for work which has been  completed or for the
public  or  for  any workmen,  engineers  and
inspectors employed thereon,  or that interferes
with the work of the Sanitary District or  other
contractors, or  that will  not provide for  the
completion  of the work  within the specified
time, or that is not in accordance with all the
requirements herein specified.

   The  Contractor shall employ and assign to
work on this contract only, a qualified technical
engineer, satisfactory  to the Chief Engineer of
the Sanitary District, to act as  contact man with
the Engineer.
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  Before  starting  construction,  the Contractor
shall submit his proposed order of procedure to
the Engineer for approval. The construction of
the various parts of the work shall be performed
in such sequence that interference with opera-
tions  of  the  Sanitary  District  or other  con-
tractors will be kept to a minimum.
  The acceptance  or approval of any order of
procedure,  methods, structures or equipment
submitted or employed by the Contractor  shall
not in any manner relieve the Contractor of any
responsibility  for the safety, maintenance and
repairs of any structure or work, or for construc-
tion,  maintenance  and safety  of   the  work
hereunder, or  from any liability whatsoever on
account of any procedure or methods employed
by  the  Contractor,  or due  to any  failure  or
movement of  any  structures or  equipment fur-
nished by him. When constructed, even though
in accordance  with the approval of the Engineer,
should  any structure or  equipment installed
hereunder   afterwards  prove  insufficient  in
strength or fail on account of poor workmanship
or any procedure  or methods employed by the
Contractor, such  failure shall in no  wise form
the basis  of any claim for extra compensation
for  delay, or for damages or expenses caused by
such  failure,  or  for  extension  of  time  for
completion  of this  contract, or  for material,
labor  or  equipment  required for repairing  or
rebuilding  such structure or equipment, or for
repairing or replacing any other work that may
be  damaged  in any way  by  the   failure  or
movement of any structure or equipment or by
any other  happening.

  The Contractor  shall, at  his  own expense,
provide any necessary temporary blocking, sup-
ports  or  protection for all  structures already
constructed or now hereafter  under construc-
tion,  with  which his work comes in contact, to
prevent injury to the same, and shall make good
at his own expense any damage done  by him to
any part  of said  structures or  their  appurten-
ances in  unloading  and installing any  of the
work, material, apparatus or equipment included
under  this  contract, or in removing plant  or
other property or in cleaning up.

  The Contractor  shall furnish such protection
as may be necessary against damage in any way
to the work,  material, apparatus or the equip-
ment  included under this  contract before and
after the same have been installed (including all
necessary  protection  for structures and equip-
ment which  may be  damaged  by winter condi-
tions), and shall be fully responsibile for such
equipment until its final acceptance.

Handling Water at Treatment Plant Sites.

   (19)   The Contractor shall make all arrange-
ments for  handling and  disposing of  water
entering  the work to  maintain safe, dry  and
satisfactory  working  conditions.  He  will  be
permitted a reasonable use  of  existing drainage
ditches and the drains and  appurtenances con-
structed under various items of this contract for
the disposal  of water  under  conditions satis-
factory  to the  Engineer, except as otherwise
specified. In  using  the  drainage ditches and
drains, the Contractor shall keep them free from
concrete, clay  or  other deleterious  substances,
and if such substances are allowed to enter the
drains, their use may be forbidden altogether by
the Engineer. The discharge  of  water containing
clay or  other  solid  matter into the drainage
system will under no  circumstances be allowed.
The Contractor shall be responsible for the care
of  all drains and  appurtenances  constructed
under this contract during its entire life, and just
prior  to  its completion, all drains  and  appur-
tenances  shall  be  thoroughly  cleaned  of all
debris, deposits or other substances which will
interfere  with  their  proper operation  and all
broken or damaged parts shall be replaced or
repaired without cost to the  Sanitary District.

Openings and Cutting and Fitting.

   (20)   The Contractor shall provide all open-
ings and  recesses in the concrete, brickwork and
other parts of the work,  that may be required
for any class or part of the work to be furnished
or performed hereunder, or  that are  ordered by
the Engineer. He shall  do  all  drilling, cutting,
fitting,  patching and finishing  that  may be
required  to make the various classes and kinds of
work  hereunder go together in a proper, work-
manlike and finished manner.

   All such work shall be performed with proper
and suitable tools in a workmanlike manner. No
cutting will be allowed except by the permission
of and subject to the direction or approval  of
the Engineer. Where holes are to be cut through
concrete  walls or floor slabs, a  core drill  or saw
shall be used to prevent spalling of the concrete.
   The Contractor shall cut all one- -'->«s required
for setting inserts in concre^ u,.  orick masonry
placed under other contracts. All cutting shall be
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confined closely within the limits required for
installing  the  inserts.  Any concrete or  brick
masonry removed  beyond the required limits
and any damage to existing structures or equip-
ment resulting from  the cutting of concrete or
brick masonry, shall be promptly  replaced or
repaired by the Contractor at his own expense in
such  a manner as ordered  by  the  Engineer.
Inserts shall be grouted  in, and the cutting shall
be done so that the grout can be thoroughly
bonded and keyed  to  the existing  structure.
Grout shall be so placed as to make watertight
joints and shall be neatly finished off flush with
the surface of the adjoining structure. Reinforce-
ment steel which may interfere with the setting
of inserts shall be removed from all openings cut
in the  concrete, unless otherwise  specified or
ordered.
  The cost of making all pipe connections to
work performed under  other  contracts shall be
included as part of the work under the appro-
priate unit and lump sum items of this contract
unless otherwise specified.

Water, Power and Sanitary District Equipment.

   (21)  The  Contractor shall arrange  for his
own  water  supply, which shall be of quality to
be  approved by the Engineer, free from con-
tamination.
   The  Contractor,  if  he so desires,  will be
permitted  to  use water from the Sanitary Dis-
trict  mains where it is available and does not
interfere with the work of the Sanitary District
or the requirements  of  other contractors on the
site. The Sanitary District, however, will not be
responsible for any interruption of service, or
possible inadequacy  of the  supply. The Con-
tractor will be required to pay for  the water so
used from  the Sanitary  District mains at the
current rate paid by the Sanitary District to the
various municipalities for purchase of water, and
shall, at  his  own  expense,  install  a  meter or
meters of approved type for the measurement of
the  water so used. He  will be required  to make
such temporary connections as  he may need,
subject to the approval of the Engineer, and to
restore all  existing  facilities  prior to the com-
 pletion of the work at  no additional expense to
 the Sanitary District.

   The Contractor  shall  arrange for  his own
supply of power.

   The Contractor will be permitted  the use,
without  charge, of  washrooms and  toilets  in
existing Sanitary District buildings, as approved
by the Engineer.

  The Contractor  will not be permitted to use
any  Sanitary  District equipment  or  facilities
except  in  case of emergency  or  as specified
herein. If such equipment or facilities are used in
case of emergency, the Chief Engineer shall first
give his permission and shall determine the cost
of such use.

  The cost for use of its facilities shall be paid
to  the  Sanitary  District  on  bills rendered
monthly.

Safety.

  (22)  The Contractor shall be responsible for
the safety of the Contractor's employees, Sani-
tary District personnel and all other personnel
at the site of the work. The Contractor  shall
have a competent safety engineer (s) on the job
at all times while  work is in progress. He  shall
be provided with  an appropriate office on the
job site to maintain and keep  available safety
records  and up-to-date copies of all pertinent
safety rules and  regulations.
  A resume of the qualifications of the Safety
Engineer  must be  submitted to  the District
and approved by the  Engineer prior to the
start of any field work. This resume shall in-
clude such items as;  experience, education,
special safety and first aid courses completed,
and safety conferences attended.

   The safety engineer shall:

   Be  completely familiar with  all  applicable
   health and safety requirements of all govern-
   ing legislation  and ensure  compliance with
   same.

   Schedule and   conduct  safety meetings and
   safety training  programs as required by Law.

   Post  all appropriate notices regarding safety
   and  health  regulations at  locations  which
   afford maximum  exposure to all personnel at
   the job site.

   Post  the name,  address  and  hours of the
   nearest medical doctor; name and address  of
   nearby  clinics  and hospitals,  and  the tele-
   phone  numbers  of the fire  and  police  de-
   partments.

   Post  appropriate instructions  and  warning

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  signs  in  regard  to  all hazardous  areas  or
  conditions.
  Have  proper safety and  rescue equipment
  adequately maintained and  readily available
  for any  contingency.  This  equipment shall
  include such  applicable items  as; proper fire
  extinguishers, first aid  kits,  safety ropes and
  harnesses,  stretchers,   life  savers,  oxygen
  breathing apparatus, resuscitators, gas  detec-
  tors, oxygen deficiency indicators,  explosi-
  meters, etc.

  Make inspections at least once daily to ensure
  that all machines, tools and  equipment are in
  a  safe operating  condition;  that  all  work
  methods are not dangerous; and that all work
  areas are free of hazards  and submit  to  the
  Engineer each day  a copy of  his findings on
  an inspection check list report form.

  Also  submit to the  Engineer copies  of all
  safety records along with all safety inspection
  reports   and  certifications  from  regulating
  agencies and insurance companies.

  The Contractor shall report to the Engineer
all accidents involving injury to personnel or
damage to equipment and structures. In addi-
tion,  the Contractor shall furnish to the En-
gineer a copy of all accident  or health hazard
reports prepared for OSHA.

  All personnel employed by the Contractor or
his  Subcontractors whenever  entering the  job
site, any  shaft, or  tunnel  headings  shall  be
required to  wear approved safety  hats.

  The Contractor shall comply with all require-
ments  relating  to  noise levels  as specified in
OSHA.
  When the work is  located on or  close to
roadways, the Contractor shall provide all neces-
sary traffic control for protection of the  travel-
ing  public.
  The Contractor  shall  comply  with the provi-
sions  of "State  of Illinois Manual  of  Uniform
Traffic  Control Devices"  or other  pertinent
governing regulations for traffic control.

  Where work  is  in  tunnel or for excavations
more than  10 feet  in depth, the Contractor shall
also provide the following safety equipment, all
subject to the approval of the Engineer:

  Adequate stretcher  units placed in convenient
  locations adjacent to the work:
  Oxygen deficiency indicators;
  Carbon monoxide testers;

  Hydrogen Sulphide detectors;
  Portable explosimeter for  the  detection of
  explosive gases such as methane;  petroleum,
  vapors, etc.

  An adequate number of U.S. Bureau of Mines
  approved  self rescuers  in all  areas  where
  employees might be trapped by smoke or gas.

  In  tunnel  work an additional  explosimeter
shall  be provided at the  heading at  all  times
which will continuously monitor  for the pre-
sence of explosive gases. This explosimeter shall
be  the  type  that  automatically provides both
visual and audible alarms.

  No employee will be allowed to work in areas
where concentrations of airborne contaminants
exceed  Federal  threshold  limits.  Respirators
shall not  be  substituted for environmental con-
trol  measures  and  shall be  used  only as pre-
scribed by OSHA.

  Internal combustion  engines  other  than
mobile  diesel powered equipment shall not be
used  underground. All mobile diesel  powered
equipment used underground shall be certified
by the Bureau of Mines as  prescribed in OSHA.

  All internal  combustion equipment shall be
operated in such a  manner  as to prevent any
health hazards to personnel from exhaust fumes.

  All haulage  equipment such as  hoists,  cages
and elevators operating in excavations and shafts
shall conform  to all requirements described in
OSHA.

  In addition to the safety requirements herein
set  forth, the Contractor shall comply with the
health and safety laws, rules and regulations of
federal,  state and  local governments, including
but not  limited to:

  Safety Rules — Metropolitan Sanitary District
  of Greater  Chicago, dated March 1, 1970 and
  as subsequently amended;

  The Illinois Health and Safety Act approved
  March  16, 1936,  together with all Amend-
  ments  thereto and  all  rules  and  standards
  implementing said Act;

  The Federal  Occupational  Safety and Health
  Act of  1970, which  includes "Safety  and
  Health  Regulations  for Construction", to-
                                           H-12

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  gether with all Amendments thereto and all
  rules and standards implementing said Act.

As-Built Drawings.

  (23)   Upon  completion of the  work under
this contract, the Contractor shall furnish to the
Sanitary District one complete  set of As-Built
drawings.

  The original  reproducible Contract Drawings
will be made available to the Contractor by the
Engineer upon which the Contractor shall make
the necessary additions and corrections to show
the As-Built conditions. The changes shall be
made by using opaque  black  ink  and standard
drafting  techniques. Each  drawing changed or
unchanged shall  bear the  notation AS-BUILT
near the title block and shall be signed as to its
correctness by the Contractor and submitted to
the Engineer for approval.

  The Contractor  shall include in  the  appro-
priate pay items of this contract, all engineering
and  drafting costs required to produce these
As-Built drawings.
Open Burning.

   (24)   The Contractor  shall not  dispose of
any material, debris or rubbish by open burning
on the site of the work or on any other site, and
shall comply with all rules and regulations of the
Illinois Pollution Control Board (IPCB) in effect
and as may be amended during the course of the
contract.
Equipment Manuals.

   (25)   In  addition to the requirements speci-
fied in Section (3) of the General Specifications,
the  Contractor  shall  provide  9 copies  of  an
Equipment Manual for all equipment furnished.
The Manual shall consist of bulletins, certified
manufacturers'  prints,  as-built  drawings  of
equipment,   and  other  pertinent  data  which
provide  all  information  necessary  to  install,
service, maintain, repair, and operate each piece
of equipment,  and  shall  include  parts lists,
service  and maintenance  instructions, and per-
formance data.

   The Manual must be submitted and approved
prior to the beginning of the Operation Test as
specified under Section (10) and of the Operat-
ing  Personnel Training as specified  in Section
(27) of the General Specifications. Only 2 copies
of the Manual will be required for purposes of
review by  the Engineer with 9 approved copies
to be  delivered  to the Engineer  prior to opera-
tion testing and personnel training.

  the Manuals shall be  bound  in vinyl multi-
ring  binders  bearing the  contract  title  and
number on the cover and in the  window on the
binder backbone. The inserts shall be  8W x 11"
in size, with any larger sized inserts folded to
8V£" x 11". The Manuals  must include an index
and  tabbed  sheets,  which  will  contain item
numbers and descriptions in sufficient detail for
easy reference to any particular  piece of equip-
ment included in the Manual.

Posting of Project Signs.

  (26)  Prior to the start of construction, the
Contractor shall erect two 4' x  8' signs on the
job site for public viewing at locations desig-
nated  by  the  Engineer.  These  signs  shall  be
erected in  accordance with regulations of the
USEPA and  IEPA for grant funded  projects.
These  signs will be furnished to  the Contractor
by the Sanitary District at storage locations on
District property.

  For each sign, the Contractor shall furnish
and  install (2)  6"  x  6"  x  14' long dense
structural grade Southern Pine mounting posts
which  are to be set 4 feet into the ground and 5
feet  apart  (center line  to  center  line). The
bottom of the signs shall be 6-feet above ground.
The Contractor shall also  furnish (4) 3/8" x 10"
long mounting bolts  with nuts and washers for
each sign.

  These signs shall be maintained by  the Con-
tractor for the duration of the contract. Upon
completion of this contract and acceptance by
the Sanitary District, the Contractor shall dis-
mantle the installed signs and deliver them to a
place  to be designated  by the  Engineer. All
material  furnished by the Contractor shall be-
come his property and the site shall  be restored
to its original condition.

Operating Personnel Training.

  (27)  It shall be  the  Contractor's  responsi-
bility  to furnish necessary training and instruc-
tion  to  make supervisory  and  operating  per-
sonnel completely familiar with the operation
and   maintenance  of all equipment  installed
under this contract. This training and  familiari-
                                              H-13

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zation shall include coordination of new with
existing control.

   Such time as is necessary shall be devoted to
this requirement and a log shall be kept up to
date  by  the  Contractor  of  such training  in-
cluding  date,  duration,   equipment  and/or
systems covered and party or parties conducting
and attending the instructions. When all Operat-
ing  Personnel Training is  completed  the Con-
tractor shall  submit the  certified  log  to the
Engineer.

Proprietary Designations.

   (28) When  proprietary specifications are used
in the contract  documents followed by an "or
equal" clause, they are intended to establish a
standard  of quality and not to inhibit the use of
products of other manufacture.

   Therefore,  all processes, materials,  devices,
details, or parts specified by proprietary name
shall be understood to mean and permit the use
of other  processes, materials, devices, details, or
parts that the Engineer shall determine  to  be
fully equal in  suitability, quality and durability
to  the processes, materials, devices,  or parts
herein specified. The Engineer shall be the sole
judge in determining equals of proprietary speci-
fications  and  his decision shall be final and
binding to both parties.

   The foregoing  shall be adhered to  unless
specifically noted to the contrary in the  Detail
Specifications.  Such  note will  refer  to this
section.

Fire or Other Emergency.
  (29)   In the event of fire or other emergency
occuring at or about the site of the work, the
Sanitary District, at its option, may summon
such  aid  as it deems necessary. The Sanitary
District reserves the right to pay any third party
for  emergency services  so rendered, and  the
Contractor shall  promptly reimburse the Sani-
tary District for  the amount of such payment.
No  liability on the part of the  Sanitary District
for  cause of damage shall be inferred as a result
of such aid being summoned, nor as a result of
payment  being  made  for  such aid, and  the
Contractor  hereby agrees  to  indemnify, keep
and save harmless the Sanitary District from all
claims, judgments, awards and  costs which may
in anywise come  against the Sanitary District by
reason of its summoning such aid and/or paying
charges therefor.  In the event that the Con-
tractor  summons emergency aid, the Sanitary
District,  at its option,  may pay any party for
emergency services rendered, and the Contractor
shall  promptly reimburse  the  Sanitary District
for  the amount of such payment. No liability on
the part of the Sanitary District shall be inferred
as a result of such payment being made, and the
Contractor  hereby agrees  to  indemnify, keep
and save harmless the Sanitary District from all
claims, judgment, awards and costs which may
in anywise come  against the Sanitary District by
reason  of its  paying  for  emergency  services
rendered.
                                           H-14

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          APPENDIX I

METROPOLITAN SANITARY DISTRICT
      OF GREATER CHICAGO

GENERAL SPECIFICATIONS—SEWERS

-------
                                          INDEX

                 THE METROPOLITAN SANITARY DISTRICT OF GREATER CHICAGO

                             GENERAL SPECIFICATIONS - SEWERS
 SECTION
                                  SUBJECT
  „>
  4
  5
  ft
  7
  8
  9
 10
 15
 16

 17
 18
 19
 20
 21
 ^T
 23
 24

 25
 26
' 27
 28
 29
 30

 31
 32

 33

 34
 35
 36
 37
 38
 39
 40
 41

 42
 43
 44
 45
 46
 47
 48
 49
 50
    • INTERFERENCE WITH OTHER CONTRACTORS
     EXAMINATION OF SITE
     LIMITS OF WORK
     LJNACQUIRED RIGHT-OF-WAY
     LINE PIPES ON TUNNEL CONSTRUCTION
     STRUCTURES ENCOUNTERED
     CARE OF STRUCTURES AND PROPERTY
     WATER PIPES
     PUMPING. BAILING AND CLEANING
     PLANT FOR TUNNEL CONSTRUCTION
     PLAN OF TUNNEL FROM A CENTRAL SHAFT
     PROTECTION OF STREETS AND TRAFFIC
     REPAIRING OF PAVED STREETS AND SIDEWALKS
     NEW PAVEMENTS, GUTTERS. CURBS AND WALKS
     HISTORICAL AND SCIENTIFIC SPECIMENS
     PLACING MATERIAL FURNISHED BY THE DISTRICT
EARTH EXCAVATION - TUNNEL
     Work Included - Tunnel
     Lighting and Ventilation in Tunnel
     Shafts
     Excavation in Tunnel
     Sheeting, Bracing and Lining in Tunnel
     Breasting
     Unauthorized Excavation in Tunnel
     Disposal of Excavated Material - Tunnel
EARTH EXCAVATION - OPEN CUT
     Work Included - Open Cut
     Excavation - Open Cut
     Sheeting, Bracing and Timbering
     Backfilling
     Disposal of Excavated Material
     Unauthorized Excavation
ROCK EXCAVATION IN OPEN CUT AND TUNNEL
     Description
     Blasting
SAND, GRAVEL OR LIMESTONE BACKFILL
     Description
PIPE SEWER
     Gasket Specifications
     Laying Concrete Pipe in Open Cut
     Pipe Grade for Sewer in Open Cut
     Pipe Grade in Tunnel and Jacking
     Setting Line and Grade
     Clay Sewer Pipe
     Concrete Sewer Pipe
     Backfill
IRON CASTINGS AND MISCELLANEOUS METALS
     Description
     Material and Workmanship
     Bolts and Nuts
     Inserts
     Cast Iron Pipe
RESTORATION WORK
TESTS
PLUMING AND BY PASSING
SIGNS
PAGE NO.

 GSS-1
 GSS-1
 GSS-I
 GSS-1
 GSS-2
 GSS-2
 GSS-3
 GSS-4
 GSS4
  GSS-5
  GSS-5
  GSS-5
  GSS-6
  GSS-6
  GSS-6

  GSS-6
  GSS-6
  GSS-7
  GSS-7
  GSS-7
  GSS-8
  GSS-8
  GSS-S

  GSS-8
  GSS-S
  GSS-8
  GSS-9
  GSS-9
  GSS-9

  GSS-9
  GSS-9

  GSS-10

  CSS- 10
  GSS-1 1
  CSS- 12
  CSS- 12
  GSS-1 2
  GSS-1 2
  GSS-12
  GSS-1 3

  GSS-1 3
  CSS- 14
  GSS-1 4
  CSS- 1 4
  GSS-1 4
  GSS-1 5
  GSS-1 5
  GSS-1 6
  GSS-1 6
                                           1-1

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                     THE METROPOLITAN SANITARY DISTRICT OF GREATER CHICAGO
                           GENERAL SPECIFICATIONS - SEWERS
(1) INTERFERENCE WITH OTHER
   CONTRACTORS
  The Contractor shall  so  conduct the work
that  there  shall be no interference with work
which  may be  in progress under contracts with
other contractors. In case of dispute between
the Contractor and other contractors employed
by  the Sanitary  District, the  decision  of the
Engineer shall be final and binding on both the
parties hereto.
  The Contractor shall at his own expense  re-
pair  any  damage to  machinery, equipment,
masonry,  buildings or other  property  of the
Sanitary District or other owners or work under
construction by other contractors occasioned by
the Contractor  in the execution of this contract.
The  disposal  of tools, material, machinery  and
other supplies and appurtenances during  storage
and  erection  on  the property  of  the Sanitary
District or other  owners  shall be subject to the
approval of the Engineer. The Contractor shall
assume  all responsibility  for  the security  and
safety  of everything  he may  have on the prop-
erty  of the Sanitary District or other owners.
(2) EXAMINATION OF SITE
  The Contractor is required to examine the site
of the work and adjacent premises, the means of
access to the site, and to make all necessary in-
vestigations  in  order to  inform  himself  thor-
oughly as to the character and magnitude of all
work  involved in the complete execution of this
contract; also as to the facilities for delivering,
handling and  installing the  construction  plant
and other equipment and the  conditions, and
the difficulties that may  be  encountered in the
performance  of the  work specified herein. No
plea of ignorance of conditions that exist or that
may hereafter exist, or of difficulties that will be
encountered in the execution of the work  here-
under, as a result of failure  to  make necessary
examinations  and  investigations,  will be ac-
cepted as a  sufficient excuse for  any failure or
omission on the part of the Contractor to fulfill
in every detail  all the requirements of this con-
tract,  or will be accepted as a basis for any claim
whatsoever for extra compensation or for an
extension of time to complete the contract.
(3) LIMITS OF WORK
   In order to  prevent interference between con-
tractors on adjoining sections, it is hereby agreed
that the occupation of the space and the perfor-
mance of work within a distance of fifty (50)
feet on either  end of  the limits herein specified
or shown on  the plans, shall  be  such as the
Engineer may  direct.  The Contractor  shall  per-
form  any  work  ordered by  the  Engineer in
writing, that is  included within a  distance of
fifty (50) feet beyond either end of said limits,
and such work shall become a part  of this con-
tract,  and the  Contractor shall  be paid for  said
work  performed by him at the unit prices herein
specified for each class  of work performed. In
the event  that the Contractor is ordered by the
Engineer,  in writing, he shall omit the doing of
any work designated  by  the Engineer which  is
included within a distance of fifty  (50) feet in
either direction, from  either of the end limits of
this contract,  and the Contractor shall  not be
paid  for any work omitted  and not performed
by him, or  for any anticipated  profits on work
omitted, and  the work  omitted may be  per-
formed by the Sanitary District or by any other
of its  Contractors. In any event, the Sanitary
District shall not  be liable to the Contractor for
any damages or extra  expenses for any decrease
in the work to be performed hereunder, or for
any expense that may result from any increase
of the quantities  of work, or from  the  perfor-
mance of any  work by the Contractor within a
distance of  fifty  (50) feet  beyond either  end
limit of this contract, in excess of the unit prices
herein specified for work actually  performed,
nor shall the Sanitary  District be liable for dam-
ages on account of the  occupation  by another
contractor of the space within a  distance of fifty
(50) feet inside of either of the end limits of this
contract.

(4) UN ACQUIRED RIGHT-OF-WAY
   All  of the permanent structures  to be con-
structed under this contract are located within
the limits of public streets and highways and in
right-of-way on  private  property which, if not
now  acquired, will have been acquired  by the
Sanitary District prior to the date of commence-
ment of construction.
   In case  the  Sanitary District  fails to acquire
any part of the right-of-way  included within the
                                           1-2

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limits of the work specified under this contract,
as shown on  the accompanying plans,  on or
before sixty (60)  days after the approval  of the
Contractor's bond, and if, in the opinion  of the
Engineer, such failure to acquire such part con-
stitutes or causes  a delay in the commencement
or prosecution  of all or any part  of the work
under this contract, then the time of completion
of the work to be performed under this contract
shall be extended for such period of time as the
Engineer may determine  that the work  under
contract  has been delayed  by such failure to
acquire the  same, and  such extension of time
shall begin at the time of completion as specified
in Article 23 of the General Conditions.  ,   -^

  If such  unacquired  right-of-way  is not  ac-
quired within nine (9) months after the approval
of said bond, then  this contract, insofar as it
relates to work to be  performed within the prop-
erty where said right-of-way is unacquired, shall
be null and void  at  the option of either party
hereto, and the Sanitary District shall  claim no
damages against  the Contractor for  not  per-
forming any work on right-of-way which is unac-
quired, nor shall the  Sanitary District be respon-
sible for or pay any  damages to the Contractor
by  reason of interference with his work due to
the fact that all of said right-of-way has not been
acquired, nor on  account of anticipated  profits
on work  of any kind not performed.
  The Contractor will  not  be allowed to  con-
struct  the  work  on  private property  until the
easement has been obtained.

(5)  LINE PIPES ON TUNNEL
   CONSTRUCTION
  The Contractor shall place line pipes along the
route of the work at such times and  places  as
directed  by the Engineer. The number of line
pipes to be placed shall be determined by the
length of the  tunnel. Installation is to be  at a
rate of  one (1)  line  pipe per one thousand
(J ,000) feet of tunnel on  a straight line and one
at each point of curvature and one at each point
of  tangency on  a curve,  all at locations desig-
nated  by the  Engineer.  The  size  of line pipes
shall be  determined  by the depth of the sewer
tunnel to be constructed. The size shall  be ten
(10) inches  finished  diameter  or smaller where
the invert  of the tunnel is  one hundred (100)
feet or less below  the top of ground and ten  (10)
inches finished diameter or  larger  where the
invert  of the tunnel  is  more than one hundred
(100)  feet below the  top of ground. The line
pipes shall be made of steel. Line pipes shall be
driven  or placed by other methods in a vertical
position from the surface of the ground to a
point inside the structures to be built under this
contract so  that a plumb bob can be threaded
through the pipe without contact with the pipe
at any  point. The top of each line pipe shall be
provided with a standard screw cap, drilled and
tapped for and furnished with a  I'/2 inch plug.
In addition, two (2) standard screw caps shall be
furnished for use in checking the line. Each of
the additional caps shall  have  holes  drilled at
locations ordered by the Engineer in order that a
     bob wire may be threaded through any of
the holes. If compressed air is used, each of the
additional caps shall be drilled and tapped for
and furnished with a 1/2 inch stopcock. The top
of each line pipe shall be capped at  all  times.
except  when  such  pipes  are  being  used for
checking the line. The Contractor shall obtain
any  permits necessary for this work and shall
repair  all  pavements  damaged. The line  pipes
shall be removed  for  a distance of at least five
(5) feet  below the  ground  surface when not
under pavement and at least two (2) feet below
the top of any pavement.  Where the  line pipes
project through the tunnel, the Contractor shall
cut off the pipes to the outside neat lines of the
tunnel  and  fill the opening  with concrete and
the balance of the pipe or the hole left by the
removal of the pipe sh;ill be filled with sluiced
sand before  the  surface  of the  ground is re-
stored.
(6) STRUCTURES ENCOUNTERED
   Various  underground, surface  and overhead
structures  are shown  on the plans hereto at-
tached. The  location  and dimensions of such
structures where given, are believed to be reason-
ably correct, but  do not purport  to  be abso-
lutely  so.  These structures  are plotted on  the
plans and  profiles for  the  information  of  the
Contractor, but information  so given is not to be
construed as a  representation or  assurance that
such structures will be found or encountered as
plotted or  that such information  is  complete or
accurate.
   The Contractor  therefore  shall  satisfy himself
by such means as he may deem proper as to the
location of all  structures that may be encoun-
tered in the construction of the work.
   The plans do  not show the location of under-
ground or overhead utilities serving the  prop-
                                            1-3

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erties adjacent to the sewer to be constructed,
nor highway drainage systems^ performance
  All  structures lor obstructions encountered
during the ^pee&dtmaa of the work under this
contract, whether  shown  on the plans or not,
shall be relocated or protected from injury by
the  Contractor, except as hereinafter provided.

(7)  CARE OF STRUCTURES AND PROPERTY
  All poles, trees, shrubbery  fences, pavements,
sewer, water, gas or other pipes, wires, conduits,
culverts, drainage ditches and munholes. tunnels,
tunnel shafts, buildings  and all  structures and
property along the  route of the sewer to be con-
structed  shall be supported and protected  from
injury  by the Contractor,  during the construc-
tion and until the completion of  sail sewer and
appurtenances. The Contractor shall he liable for
all damages  to such structures and property and
shall save and keep the Sanitary District harm-
less  from any  liability or  expense for  injuries,
damages or repairs to the same.
  In  open cut work,  wherever sewer,  gas and
electric pipes or conduits cross the sewer trench
wii':"uut cutting through the section of the sewer
to be built  under  this contract, the Contractor
shall support said pipes and  conduits  without
damage to them and without interrupting  their
use  during the progress of work under this con-
tract.
  Where said pipes or conduits cross the trench
cutting through  the section of the sewer to be
constructed  under this contract, the Contractor
shall notify  the private individuals, utility com-
pany,  city,  village  or township who owns the
pipes or  conduits in order to move or rearrange
them and shall cooperate with said utility com-
pany, city or village, or  township in preserving
service through said pipes or conduits, and all in
accordance  with the  provisions  of the  ordi-
nances, easements and permits of the contract
documents.
  The Contractor  shall  conduct  the  work so
that no  equipment, material or  debris will be
placed on or allowed to fall upon private  prop-
erty in the vicinity of the work unless  he  shall
have first obtained  the owner's written  consent
thereto and shall have shown his written  consent
to the Engineer.
  All streets, pavements, roadways, parking lots,
sidewalks, parkways and private  property  shall
be  thoroughly cleaned of all surplus materials.
earth, and rubbish placed thereon by the Con-
tractor, and such streets, pavements, sidewalks,
parkways and private property shall be restored
to as good condition as before the commence-
ment of the work. Where sod has been removed
or killed, new live sod shall be relaid as herein-
after  provided.   Where  the areas have  been
seeded, top soil  equal to that removed shall be
placed, fertilized, seeded and rolled to  the satis-
faction of the owner of the land, as hereinafter
provided. All trees, shrubs, and plants  damaged
shall be replaced at the proper season of the year
with  live growing stock of the same kind and
variety  of  reasonabk  MZB ordinarily  used  for
planting purposes.

  The Contractor shall make such  changes in
the location of  all electric power conduits and
cables ;md police and fire alarm electrical  wires
of the municipalities as may be rendered neces-
sary by the performance of the work  specified
under this contract.  Such changes shall be made
at the. places and in the manner  designated by
and  be subject  to  the approval  of the proper
municipal officials,  and the provisions of  the
ordinances,  easements and permits of the con-
tract documents.

  The Contractor shall arrange with all persons,
partnerships  or  corporations  for the support,
removal, relocation and/or maintenance of any
conduits, wires,  poles, pipes, gas  mains, cables,
or other structures  within  any  portion  of  the
streets, public alleys  and  highways  and ease-
ments to be occupied or used during the perfor-
mance of the work specified under this contract,
and shall do all work necessary for such support,
removal, relocation and/or  maintenance of such
conduits, wires,  poles, pipes, gas  mains, cables.
or other structures encountered, as may be ren-
dered necessary by  the  construction of said
intercepting sewer and appurtenances.

  The Contractor shall furnish all material and
supplies, plant,  staging and falsework,  machine-
ry,  tools and implements, vehicles, cars and rail-
road  tracks: in fact, all material and appliances
of every sort or  kind that may be necessary  for
the full and complete performance of this con-
tract, and shall furnish and maintain, subject to
the approval of  the Engineer, all necessary barri-
cades, and other protections, lights and  signs,
necessary for the proper protection of the pub-
lic.  The Contractor shall also furnish watchmen
not only to protect the public, but to protect all
materials, tools, machinery  and equipment and
all work performed by the  Contractor until said
                                            1-4

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work  has been  completed and accepted by the
Engineer.
  On all connection items, the Contractor shall
make a preliminary trench excavation to locate
the  existing sewers and other utilities before he
begins the  actual  work of excavation for the
connection  to be built at each location.

(8) WATER PIPES
  Wherever, in  the performance of the work
specified under this contract, it  shall  be neces-
sary to remove, alter or repair water mains in the
streets, public alleys and highways of the munic-
ipalities, the Contractor  will arrange for the
removal, alteration  or repair  of such  water
mains, without  extra charge to the Sanitary Dis-
trict,  and in accordance with the rules, regula-
tions and ordinances of the municipalities, under
which this  work is performed,  subject to the
approval of the  proper municipal  officials.
  Wherever, in  the performance of the work
specified under this contract, it  shall  be neces-
sary to remove, cut off or damage water service
pipes in any  way, the Contractor shall alter,
repair or replace such water service pipes and
connect the same to the water mains and shall in
the meantime  install and maintain temporary
service  in  place  of that  interrupted,  without
extra charge to the Sanitary  District.  The Con-
tractor shall perform  all  work on water service
pipes in accordance with  the rules, regulations
and ordinances of the proper municipal officials.
  Wherever it has been necessary to alter, repair
or replace water maim or  service pipes, the Con-
tractor shall take adequate measures to disinfect
the new section in accordance with AWWA stan-
dards. All  work  performed by  the Contractor
shall have the approval for standards and quality
of the local public health agency having jurisdic-
tion  and  shall  be approved by them  before
placing the section in service.

(9) PUMPING, BAILING AND CLEANING
  The Contractor shall at all times during con-
struction provide and maintain ample means and
devices with which  to promptly remove and
properly dispose of all water or sewage entering
the tunnels, trenches,  or other parts of the work,
and keep said excavations as dry as possible until
the structures to be built  therein are completed.
All water  pumped or drained from  the work
shall be disposed of in a suitable manner without
damage to  adjacent property, or to sewers, pave-
ments,  electrical conduits,  or other work or
property. Until the acceptance of the work, the
Contractor shall, if so ordered by the Engineer,
keep the entire work pumped free of water and
sewage and before the acceptance of any part of
the work shall clean the  entire length of such
finished part of the work, to the satisfaction of
the Engineer.
  The Contractor shall  make provisions to dis-
pose  of all accumulated  surface water at the
site. The  Sanitary  District  does not and  will
not provide  an outlet  for  or  handle the  dis-
posal  of any such accumulated surface water.
  The Contractor shall  place and maintain any
temporary  dams, flumes, bulkheads, or other
structures,  necessary  to  prevent  water, from
adjacent sections  of  the  sewer or adjacent
structures,  from entering  the work  under  this
contract, and shall completely remove the same
when  ordered  by  the  Engineer where  emer-
gency  by-passing of  sewage is  required into
either  a receiving  ditch, waterway  or  storm
sewer,  the  Contractor shall  chlorinate  such
flows  as approved by the Engineer.
  All  expense incident to   or caused by  said
water conditions or by such interruption of the
work  shall  be included in  the unit or lump  sum
prices herein specified.
 (10) PLANT FOR  FUNNEL CONSTRUCTION
   Fireproof materials shall be used in all above
 ground tunnel  plant structures, within 100 feet
 of the shaft. On all shafts, steel bracing and tight
 wood lagging will be required. In the tunnel con-
 struction, steel  ribs and wood lagging will be per-
 mitted. The electrical service buildings may  be
 constructed  of eitner  wood,  steel   or other
 material which, in the opinion of the  Engineer,
 is acceptable.
   An adequate ventilation system shall  be pro-
 vided  to  properly ventilate  all  sections of the
 tunnel in a manner satisfactory to the Engineer.
   The Contractor shall have in operation in each
 heading at all  times an audible automatic gas
 alarm. The alarm shall  be Model  No.  700 J-W
 Sentinal,   Audible Combustible Gas  Alarm  as
 manufactured  by  Johnson  &  Williams,  Inc.,
 Mountain  View,  California, or  an   approved
 equal. In addition, the Contractor shall have  on
 the  job site approved  portable testing equip-
 ment  to  measure  for  carbon  monoxide and
 hydrogen sulphide gases and oxygen deficiency.
                                             1-5

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  Sanitary conveniences for the use of all per-
sons employed  on the  project shall  be con-
structed  and maintained by  the Contractor in
sufficient number  in accordance with the State
of Illinois Health and Safety Rules, and in such
manner, and at such places as shall be approved
by the Engineer.
  Hoisting in shafts may be done by means of a
crane upon written approval of the Engineer.
  Cranes  and  other gasoline or diesel  powered
equipment must be kept 20 feet away  from the
shaft with the exhaust at least 30 feet away in
order to  keep the  contaminated air away from
the shaft  area.  However, in the event  the Con-
tractor elects  to perform  construction  opera-
tions out of a  single central shaft, cages must be
used exclusively for hoisting men and  materials
during construction of the tunnels except during
the construction of the shaft. Hoisting equip-
ment shall be provided with all recognized safety
devices including landing dogs at  all  landings,
effective  devices to prevent over-winding, and
down speed regulators. Cages shall be of metal,
fitted to  metal guide bars  running from top to
bottom, safely  constructed and properly equip-
ped with strong metal covers, screens and auto-
matic devices  for  the  protection of  persons
riding in them.
  An emergency exit shall  be provided adjacent
to each  main shaft, in a manner satisfactory to
the Engineer.

(11)  PLAN OF  TUNNEL FROM A CENTRAL
     SHAFT
  If the  headings  exceed  1,000 lineal feet in
length, the Contractor  shall furnish a glass cov-
ered  steel  case  at  least  thirty (30) inches  by
forty  (40) inches  of a  type approved by the
Engineer and shall  mount the same in a conspic-
uous place near the top of shaft as soon as the
shaft is  constructed. The Contractor shall pre-
pare  a detailed plan on linen showing all parts of
the shafts, plant and tunnels in the vicinity of
the shafts and  keep this plan complete  and cor-
rect at all times, the Contractor shall keep this
plan displayed  in the above mentioned case.

(12)  PROTECTION OF STREETS AND
     TRAFFIC
  The Contractor  shall  make provisions, so far
as is practicable, at all cross streets and private
driveways for  the   free  passage of vehicles and
foot passengers  by bridge  or otherwise. Where
bridging is impracticable or unnecessary, in  the
opinion of the Engineer, the Contractor shall
make arrangements, satisfactory to the Engineer
and  the proper authorities, for the diversion of
traffic and shall  provide all  material and signs
and perform all work necessary for the construc-
tion  and maintenance of roadways and bridges
for the diversion  of traffic. Where openings are
made in or adjacent to any street, alley or public-
place,  the Contractor shall at his own expense,
furnish such   barricades,  fences,   lights  and
danger  signals, shall  provide such  watchmen.
and  shall  take such other precautionary mea-
sures as are necessary  for  the protection of
persons or property. All material excavated and
the materials or plant used  in the construction
of the work shall  be so  placed as to safeguard
the  work  and allow  free  access  to  all  fire
hydrants,  water valves, gas valves, manholes or
electric, telegraph  and  telephone  conduits, and
fire alarm and  police  call boxes in the vicinity.
After completion  of the  work the  Contractor
shall  remove all  equipment, falsework, build-
ings, temporary protections, barricades,  rubbish
and  unsightly  materials  that were created by
his operations, and shall leave the  work  area
and  the  adjacent  premises in  a  clean  and
orderly condition.

   The Contractor shall  comply with the provi-
sions of "State of Illinois, Manual of Uniform
Traffic Control Devices" and any regulations for
all traffic control devices erected on  Sanitary
District construction projects.
(13) REPAIRING OF  PAVED STREETS AND
     SIDEWALKS
  Roads or pavements, storm ditches, culverts,
gutters, curbs,  crosswalks  and sidewalks  de-
stroyed or damaged by the Contractor, either in
the construction of the work under this contract
or by the hauling and  storing of material other
than that  incidental to vehicular traffic on pub-
lic  streets and highways, shall  be  repaired  or
replaced by the Contractor without extra charge
therefor.
  If the destruction  or damage is due to settle-
ment caused by work in tunnel, the ground sur-
face shall  be brought to its original elevation and
the  pavement,  storm ditches,  culverts, gutter,
curb, crosswalk  or sidewalk shall be  replaced
immediately with new  material by the  Contrac-
tor.
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  If the destruction or damage is due to work in
open cut, immediately after the trench  or pits
have been refilled, the paving, storm ditches, cul-
verts, curb, gutter, crosswalk or sidewalk shall be
temporarily restored  and  maintained by the
Contractor, in as near the original condition as
possible,  using old materials at hand or such new
materials as are necessary to keep the street safe
for traffic, until it is  repaved or the  curbs, gut-
ters, crosswalks or sidewalks are reconstructed.
(14)  NEW PAVEMENTS, GUTTERS, CURBS
      AND WALKS
   The Contractor shall  obtain  the  consent of
the  Engineer and  the appropriate  Municipal.
County  or  State authority having jurisdiction
thereover,  before  constructing  the  permanent
pavements, gutters, curbs, crosswalks and side-
walks in place of those  destroyed or damaged.
The Contractor shall construct  the  new  pave-
ments, gutters, curbs,  crosswalks and sidewalks
in a careful and thorough manner of like charac-
ter to that destroyed or damaged,  or of such
other material as the Engineer shall  order, pro-
vided the use of such other materials will involve
no greater expense to the Contractor
   The use of old material removed from the
work shall be subject  to the inspection of the
Engineer, and any  material rejected  shall be
replaced with new material. Any deficiency shall
be supplied with new material ot approved qual-
ity. The  materials used and the manner in which
pavements, gutters, curbs, crosswalks and ^de-
walks are restored shall conform to the require-
ments and specifications of the municipality or
governmental agency under whose jurisdiction
the  work is  done, and shall be subject to the
approval of the Engineer. See Ordinances.  Ease-
ments and Permits from the State  ot" Illinois,
County of Cook. Municipalities and other gov-
ernmental agencies.

(15)  HISTORICAL AND SCIENTIFIC
      SPECIMENS
   The Contractor shall preserve and deliver to
the Engineer any specimens of historic or scien-
tific value  encountered in the work  as directed
by the Engineer

(16)  PLACING MATERIAL FURNISHED BY
      THE DISTRICT
   The Contractor shall  install in the work at
locations to  be indicated by the Engineer, any
materials not included in this contract, or herein
specified  to  be  installed  by the  Contractor,
which  may be necessary to complete the work.
All materials thus installed will be furnished at
the site of the work by the Sanitary District at
its own expense, but the  Contractor shall per-
form such extra work in accordance with Article
7 of the General Conditions, "Extra Work". The
Contractor shall  carefully  inspect all materials
furnished  by  the Sanitary  District at the time of
delivery, shall reject and  set aside all cracked,
broken or otherwise defective  pieces discovered
by him, and shall notify the Engineer in writing
of the  same within  twenty-four (24) hours after
the inspection.  The Contractor shall be respon-
sible for all materials furnished by the Sanitary
District, after they have passed the Contractor's
inspection as being sound, until they have been
accepted in the  completed work. Any cracked,
broken or otherwise defective  pieces discovered
after inspection  by the Contractor shall be re-
placed at his own expense.
      EARTH EXCAVATION-TUNNEL
(17) Work Included - Tunnel
   Earth excavation in tunnel shall include  the
loosening,  ioading, removing and disposing in
the specified manner of all materials, wet or dry,
necessary to be remo\ed for purposes of con-
struction,  the  furnishing,  placing and  main-
taining of all sheeting, bracing and lining,  the
pumping, bailing and cleaning, the protection of
existing structures and utilities from injury, the
protection and  repair of street surfaces and side-
waiks  and  all  incidental and collateral  work
necessury to complete the entire work as spec-
ified.

(18) Lighting and Ventilation in Tunnel
   All  tunnel work shall be lighted with a suffi-
cient number of electric lights to insure proper
work and inspection. A supply of fresh air suffi-
cient for the health, safety and efficiency of the
workmen and engineers shall be  provided at all
times  throughout  the length of the tunnel and
especially at the headings. Additional  lights and
ventilation  shall  be  provided   whenever  the
Engineer may direct.
                                              1-7

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(19) Shafts
   The Contractor shall make all arrangements
necessary  for  the  location, construction and
operation of the shafts.
   The Contractor shall so excavate  and support
the surrounding earth so that at no time is there
more than five feet, measured vertically, unsup-
ported by bracing as approved by the Engineer.
   In case the shaft is built outside the line of
ihe tunnel, the tunnel connecting the shaft with
the  line  of the  finished  work  shall  be con-
structed as provided in Section 7 of the General
Specifications-Sewers.
   The shaft shall be constructed of proper size
and  shape and in  no case be less than 12 feet in
diameter  and shall  be suitably equipped  to
allow the work to be carried on expeditiously.
   An approved ladder as shown  on  the plans in
a  separate well  lighted compartment shall  be
constructed in  each shaft so as  to  provide safe
entrance and exit. Suitable protection shall  be
installed at bottom of shaft to properly protect
the men.
   Hoisting in shafts may be done by means of a
crane as described in  Section 10 of the General
Specifications-Sewers.
   Upon the completion of the  work,  the Con-
tractor shall remove any concrete as directed by
the  Engineer, and shall completely backfill  all
shafts, drifts and tunnels not part of the finished
work.
   Backfilling shall be done as specified herein
under Sections 33 and 41 of the General Specifi-
cations-Sewers.

(20) Excavation In Tunnel
   The tunnel shall be excavated and trimmed to
such size  and shape as will allow the placing of
the  full masonry section  of the sewer to  the
specified tolerances of line and grade as shown
on the plans after all lining is in place.
   The Contractor shall so excavate the tunnel
and support the surrounding earth that no move-
ment of the earth over or adjacent  to the  work
shall occur at any time and at no time will there
be more than five feet, measured horizontally,
unsupported by  bracing  as approved by  the
Engineer.
   The Contractor shall use extreme care in exca-
vating and  trimming to  insure that  the full
masonry section will be placed within the speci-
fied tolerances of the correct lines and grades of
the finished structure.
   If steel bracing is used, the full masonry sec-
tion  shown on the  plans shall be placed inside
any indentations in  the body of the plates used
to support  the  earth.  Flanges  or shapes may
extend into the body of the masonry a distance
not to exceed two (2) inches. If wooden bracing
is  used,  no part  thereof shall extend  into  the
sewer section shown on the plans. No additional
payment  or  allowance of any  nature  will be
made for the use of steel  plates or shapes  for
supporting the earth.
   If permission is given the Contractor to exca-
vate  the  tunnel for  a specified distance without
immediately placing the concrete lining, the pro-
posed  method of  bracing  the tunnel  and  the
extra bracing  necessary shall be submitted  for
approval.
   In  case,  due to  unforeseen  conditions or
otherwise, any movement of the earth  over or
adjacent  to the work occurs, the Engineer may
order  any or all  work  under this  contract
stopped except that which assists in making the
work secure and in preventing further movement
of the ground over  or adjacent to the work. The
Contractor shall resume tunneling at the place at
which  movement of the earth over or adjacent
to the work  has occurred only when,  in  the
opinion of the Engineer, he has  taken all neces-
sary  precautions to  prevent further movement.
   The Engineer will keep a record of the eleva-
tion of all sewer, water and utility lines to detect
any  settlement of  or damage to such  utilities,
and  the  Contractor  shall  immediately  upon
verbal  notification  from the Engineer,  perform
such work or make such arrangements that will
restore any such damaged  utilities and will in-
sure against further  settlement or damage.
(21) Sheeting, Bracing And Lining In Tunnel
   The Contractor shall furnish, place and main-
tain all sheeting, bracing and lining required to
support the  sides,  floor and headings of the
excavation in tunnel.
   On  all  shafts, steel  bracing and tight wood
lagging will be required.  If  the sewer is con-
structed with or without the use of compressed
air, steel  ribs and  wood lagging  will  be  per-
mitted. Bracing in  place supporting the earth
shall  not  be removed except by permission of
the Engineer.
                                          1-8

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  A drawing showing the method and sizes of
lining and bracing proposed to be used shall be
submitted  to  and  approved by  the Engineer
before the  necessary materials or equipment  is
ordered by the Contractor.
  Special care shall be exercised  to  insure that
full bearing is obtained between the lining and
sheeting and the earth.
  If at any  time the method being used by the
Contractor  for supporting any material or struc-
ture in or  adjacent to any excavation is not
reasonably safe, in the opinion of the Engineer,
the Engineer may require and the Contractor
shall provide additional bracing and support nec-
essary  to furnish  the  added  degree of safety
required by the  Engineer. The Contractor shall
provide such added bracing and support by such
method approved  by the Engineer  as he may
elect to use, but the taking of such  added pre-
cautions shall  in no way relieve the Contractor
of his sole and final responsibility for the safety
of lives, work and structures.

(22) Breasting
  The Contractor shall  at all  times  keep  avail-
able near each heading sufficient breasting and
bracing to secure the heading .igainst soil  move-
ment.


(23) Unauthorized Excavation in Tunnel
  Wherever excavation is performed outside of
the specified outside dimensions of the masonry
section  to  allow the placing of the sheeting,
bracing or lining and whenever the Contractor is
allowed to excavate beyond the lines of the fin-
ished work  for his convenience, and whenever
material outside  of the specified outside dimen-
sions of the section, caves  or breaks into the
tunnel,  then the Contractor, without extra pay-
ment therefore, shall completely fill the remain-
ing space with concrete of the quality specified
for the  sewer section or such other material out-
side of the lines of the  finished work as the
Engineer shall order.

(24) Disposal of Excavated Material - Tunnel
   All excavated material, except that required
for backfilling in open  cut elsewhere on this
work, and, except as stated in Section 15, of the
General Specifications—Seweis. shall be removed
from the site of the work as soon as excavated
and shall be disposed of by the Contractor with-
out additional charge therefor.
EARTH EXCAVATION-OPEN CUT
   Sections 25  to  30 of the General  Specifica-
tions-Sewers, inclusive, apply to  the excava-
tions  for work in  open cut shafts,  pits or con-
nections or excavations necessitated by cave-in.
(25) Work Included - Open Cut
  Earth  excavation in  open cut shall  include
clearing the site of the work, the loosening, load-
ing,  removing  and disposing  in  the specified
manner all materials, wet or dry, necessary to be
removed for  purposes of construction;  the fur-
nishing, placing and maintaining of all sheeting,
bracing and  timbering;  the  pumping,  bailing,
fluming, cleaning,  and care of existing structures
and utilities;  the protection and repair of street
surfaces and  sidewalks;  backfilling and  all inci-
dental and collateral work necessary to complete
the entire work as specified.

(26) Excavation - Open Cut
  The excavation  between the lines of sheeting
shall be of sufficient  width  to permit the work
to be constructed  in the manner and of the size
specified.
  In  all  streets  improved  with any  type of
paving  the Contractor  shall,  unless  otherwise
ordered by the Engineer, so excavate, sheet and
brace the  trench or pits that the maximum hori-
zontal dimensions  of the trench or pit at the
surface of the ground shall not exceed the out-
side horizontal dimension of the structure plus
one-tentli (I/10) of the distance from the street
surface to the top of the masonry.
  Top soil shall be stripped off separately and
stored for replacement  of top surface over the
backfill.

(27) Sheeting, Bracing and Timbering
  The Contractor shall  furnish, place and main-
tain all sheeting, bracing and timbering required
to properly  support trenches and other excava-
tions  in open cut and to prevent all movement
of the soil, pavement, or utilities outside of the
trench or pit.  Sheeting, bracing and timbering
shall  be so placed as to allow the work to be
constructed to the lines and grades shown on the
plans and as ordered by the Engineer.
  All  sheeting in  contact with the concrete or
masonry  shall  be  cut  off  as  directed  by the
Engineer and left in place.
                                             1-9

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   If at any time the method being used by the
Contractor for supporting any material or struc-
ture in or adjacent to any excavation is not rea-
sonably safe in the opinion of the Engineer, the
Engineer may require and the Contractor shall
provide additional bracing and support necessary
to furnish  the added degree  of safety  required
by the Engineer. The Contractor shall provide
such added bracing and support by such method
approved by the Engineer as he may elect to use,
but the taking of such added precautions shall in
no way relieve the Contractor of his  sole and
final responsibility for the safety of lives,  work
and  structures.  The use of such additional
bracing and support  shall  be  without additional
cost to the Sanitary  District. The failure of the
Engineer to order the aforementioned additional
bracing shall in no way relieve the Contractor  of
his sole and final responsibility.

(28) Backfilling
   All backfilling of excavations in open cut on
paved  roads shall  be done as specified in Sec-
tions 33 and 41 of the General Specifications-
Sewers. All excavations in   open cut  shall  be
backfilled to the  line and grades shown on the
plans or to the ground  surface as found where
no lines or grades are shown on the plans. The
backfilling  shall  be done  as  compactly as pos-
sible, and the material shall  be well tamped  in
such a manner as to allow as little after-settle-
ment as possible.
   After the sewer or structure has been con-
structed and the concrete has hardened to the
satisfaction of the Engineer, the Contractor shall
backfill the trench in such  a manner that will
cause no damage to the sewer or structure by
the  shock  of falling earth   or otherwise. The
backfill shall be deposited in such a manner as  to
prevent eccentric loading and excessive stress on
the sewer or structure. Top soil stripped in exca-
vation  shall be replaced on top of the backfilled
material.
   All  backfilling  operations shall  be  accom-
plished as speedily as possible, the trench being
filled as soon as the  concrete is sufficiently set.
In streets and in other places when the Engineer
shall so order,  the backfilling shall not be left
unfinished  more than four hundred (400) feet
behind the  completed masonry or pipe work.
   Where existing structures have to be removed
and backfilled  or  where   additional  fill   or
mounds are placed around  manholes or sttuei
       top  soil  equal in depth to  that in sur-
rounding area shall be placed in the  backfilled
section  and fertilized, seeded and rolled to the
satisfaction of the owner of the land.
   All till slopes shall  be not steeper than 3 hori-
zontal to  I vertical, unless otherwise directed by
the Engineer.

(29) Disposal of Excavated Material
   All excavated material except that required
for backfilling in  open  cut, and  except  that
stated in  Section  15 of the General  Specifica-
tions  -Sewers shall be removed from the site of
the work  and shall be disposed of by the Con-
tractor without additional charge therefor.
   As far as  possible,  all  excavated  material,
except  that required tor backfill,  shall  be re-
moved from the site ol the work as soon as exca-
vated.

(30) Unauthorized Excavation
   Wherever excavation in open cut is performed
without authority, beyond the lines and grades
shown on the plans or as directed by the Engi-
neer,  the  Contractor  shall refill  without extra
payment  therefor, all such excavated space
beyond  such lines and grades with concrete or
other material as the Engineer may direct.
ROCK EXCAVATION IN OPEN CUT
AND TUNNEL

(31) Description   ,
   All rock excavation shall be performed by the
Contractor in accordance with  Sections 17 to
30, of the General Specifications-Sewers, inclu-
sive, as  far as they apply and supplemented by
the specifications for each excavation.

(32) Blasting
   Extreme care  shall be exercised in connection
with all blasting necessary under this contract.
Signals  of  danger  shall be given and  displayed
before the firing of any blasts;  and  the  Con-
tractor  shall  conform  his acts to and obey all
rules and regulations for the protection of life
and  property  that may  be required by law or
that may  be made from time to time by the
Engineer relative to the storing and handling of
explosives and the firing of blasts. Whenever it
becomes  necessary  to  blast in tunnel,  the
amount of air used  for ventilation shall be in-
creased  and the amount of explosive used at any
 Structures
                                           1-10

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one time shall be kept to a minimum and shall
be so placed as to minimize the amount of rock
breaking outside  of the lines  of  the finished
work. No blasting shall be done adjacent to any
part of the completed sewer or other structure
and the material surrounding or supporting the
same  shall not be damaged by blasting. In case
injury occurs  to any portion  of  the sewer or
other structure or to the material surrounding or
supporting same, due to explosions or blasting,
the Contractor, without extra payment therefor,
shall  rebuilt the sewer or other structures and
shall  replace  the  material surrounding or sup-
porting same, and shall furnish such material and
perform such  work or repairs and replacements
as the Engineer may order.
   The  Contractor  shall employ  only  experi-
enced  and  qualified  dynamite  workmen  to
handle all powder and caps. Only licensed dyna-
mite  workmen detailed to dynamite magazines
shall have access to these buildings.
   The Contractor shall comply with the provi-
sions of An  Act Regulating the  Manufacture,
Possession. Storage. Transportation, Use. Sale or
Gift of Explosives (Illinois Rev. St.  Ch. 93. Sec-
tion  143-156, approved July  12. 1939. and as
amended).  The  Contractor  shall  obtain  an
Explosives License  from the  Department  of
Mines and Minerals. State of Illinois, in compli-
ance  with  said Act.  and  submit  a reproduced
copy to the Engineer before proceeding with the
storage of dynamite on this contract.
   In addition, the Contractor shall comply with
all the provisions  relating tc explosives  of the
State of Illinois Health and Safety Act and all
requirements of authorities having jurisdiction in
the area.
   The Contractor agrees to  indemnify and save
 the Sanitary District harmless against all claims
 for damages  to real or personal property or for
 injuries to persons, or deaths caused in any man-
 ner whatsoever, by explosions, blasting, handling
 or storing of explosives for the work hereunder.
 SAND. GRAVEL OR LIMESTONE BACKFILL

 (33) Description
   All excavations under or adjacent to any type
 of pavement, including concrete, concrete base.
 bituminous, gravel or  crushed  stone, shall be
 backfilled as follows:
  Sand, gravel, limestone screenings or crushed
limestone backfill shall be used from the bottom
of the sewer trench or excavation up to a point
where the  distance to  the top of the natural
ground  surface equals  the distance  from  the
nearest edge of the sewer trench or excavation Jj
to the  pavement. Tim muU< giuvih linniituurX


giavti, It may contain material passing a No. 200 o>
mesh sieve  not to exceed ten percent by weight,
but  shall  contain no organic matter. Material
passing  a  No. 16 mesh sieve  shall not exceed
eighty-five  percent  by  weight.tEighty-five per-
cent of  the material shall pass the one inch sieve
and  shall  not contain stone  larger than four
inches.  Backfill shall not contain any  frozen '>r
cemented material.
   Sand and  gravel  material  shall be obtained
from an approved sand and gravel pit or lime-
stone screenings  or crushed limestone from an
approved material yard or quarry.
   Material removed from the excavated trench
will  not be allowed as backfill,  unless it is ap-
proved  by the Engineer as meeting the  above
specifications.
   Cinders will not be approved as backfill.

PIPE SEWER

(34) Gasket Specifications
   Gasket stock shall be a synthetic rubber com-
pound  in  which the  elastomer is  Neoprene,
exclusively. Said  compound shall contain not
less  than 50% by volume of Neoprene and shall
contain  no  factice. reclaimed  rubber or  any
deleterious substances.  The stock shall be ex-
trudeil  or  molded and cured in such a manner
that  any  cross-section will  be  dense,  homo-
geneous and  free from porosity, blisters, pitting
and  other  imperfections.  The  stock  shall be
extruded or molded with smooth surfaces to the
required diameter within a tolerance of ± 1/32"
at any  cross-section. The Compound shall meet
 the  following physical  requirements when tested
in   accordance   with  the appropriate  ASTM
standards.
 TEST REQUIREMENTS

   Tensile strength - 1 500 psi minimum, ASTM
 Test Standard D412.
                                           1-11

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  Elongation  at  Break  -  425%  minimum,
ASTM Test Standard D412.
  Shore  Durometer Type A-45 ± 5 for pipe
diameters less  than 90" (55± may be used for
pipe diameters over 90"), ASTM Test Standard
D2240.
  Compression Set — 20% maximum when com-
pressed 22 hours at  158° F. ASTM  Test Stan-
dard D395 Method B.
  Accelerated  Aging - 20% maximum tensile,
40%  maximum  elongation  deterioration,   15
points maximum increase in hardness, all  deter-
mined after oven aging, for 70 hours at 212° F.
ASTM Test Standard D573.
  Liquid  Immersion, Oil - 80% maximum vol-
ume change after immersion in ASTM Oil No. 3
for  70 hours at  212° F. ASTM Test Standard
D471. Test specimens  shall  have a height  or
thickness of 0.08" ±0.005". The test specimens
shall be circular discs cut from the gaskets. The
specimen  diameter  shall be that  of  the  cross-
section of the gasket.
  Liquid  Immersion  Water — 15%  maximum
volume change after immersion in water for 7
days  at  158°  F. ASTM Test Standard D471.
Test specimens shall have a height or thickness
of  0.08" ±0.005" (See note 4 under Section 7
of ASTM D471).  The test  specimens shall  be
circular discs cut  from the gaskets. The specimen
diameter  shall  be that of the cross-section of the
gasket.
  Ozone  Cracking — no visible  cracking at 2
times magnification  of  the  gasket  after 100
hours exposure in 3 ppm ozone concentration at
100° F. Testing and inspection to be on a gasket
loop mounted  to give approximately  20% elon-
gation.
  Durometer "A"  — Hardness increase after  48
hours at + 14° F. + 15 points maximum.
  The Contractor  shall  furnish certified copies
of laboratory  reports from  his gasket supplier
indicating conformance  with the above require-
ments for each shipment of gaskets. A minimum
of 2 tests for  each pipe diameter shall be per-
formed at the  Contractor's expense on gaskets
selected at random by the Engineer. Tests shall
be performed by an independent testing labora-
tory and shall  include all the tests listed above.

  Each  gasket  shall  be  permanently marked
with  the  manufacturer's  trademark  or name,
date  of  manufacture,  and the initials  of  the
Metropolitan Sanitary District. All gaskets shall
be stored in a cool place, preferably at 70° F. or
less and in  no  case shall the gasket for joints be
exposed to direct rays of the  sun for more than
72 hours.
  No more than two (2) vulcanized joints will
be permitted on any one gasket.


(35) Laying Concrete Pipe in Open Cut

(a) Excavation
  The trench  shall be  excavated in accordance
with the depths and widths shown on the plans.
Trench  widths in excess of those shown on the
plans will not be permitted.
  Steel or  wood sheeting shall be furnished and
installed as required and its use shall be deter-
mined by  the ground  conditions encountered,
easement agreements as specified or as directed
by the ENGINEER and as shown on the plans.
  Dewatering  operations sufficient to maintain
the water level at or below the surface of trench
bottom or  base  of the bedding course shall be
accomplished prior to placement of pipe or con-
crete, if not performed prior to excavation and
placing of the  bedding  as called for on the con-
tract plans. The dewatering operation, however
accomplished,  shall be carried out so that it does
not destroy or weaken the strength  of the soil
under or alongside the trench. The normal water
table shall be restored to its natural level in such
a manner as to not disturb the pipe and its foun:
dation.

(b) Laying  Pipe
  The concrete  pipe shall be laid to the lines
and grades shown on the plans.
  Where practicable, pipe shall be laid with the
bell or groove end at the advancing end of the
pipe.  Before laying, the joint surfaces shall be
clean and  free  of all  dirt and other  foreign
material. The gasket and the joint surfaces of the
pipe to  be  laid shall be lubricated and the gasket
properly placed  in the groove on the spigot or
tongue end. The pipe shall then be laid and pull-
ed firmly into position. Care shall be exercised
to see that the pipe is straight and level as the
spigot enters the bell. The position of the gasket
shall be checked with a feeler gauge to see that it
is properly positioned.
  If adjustment in the position of a length of
pipe  is required  after it has been laid or if the
gasket is found to be out of place, the length of
                                            1-12

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2 "
pipe shall be removed, cleaned and rejointed as
for a newly laid pipe.
  Concrete cradle as shown on  the plans shall
achieve a compressive strength of 2,000 pounds
per square inch prior to backfilling of the trench
over a level as shown on the plans above the top
of the  pipe. Backfill below a level as shown on
the plans above the top of pipe may take place
after  the  concrete has  achieved a sufficient
initial set so that no damage to the concrete will
occur when placing the  backfill.

(36J Pipe Grade for Sewer in Open Cut
  The  tolerance in the grade of installed rein-
forced  concrete  pipe  shall  comply with  the
following:
  The  invert of the sewer after the pipe is in
place shall be such that after flooding, the Hood
water will drain off so  that no remaining puddle
of water will be  deeper than 1/2" on  pipe 36
inches internal diameter or smaller, and 3/4" on
pipe larger  than  36 inches  internal diameter.
Any section of pipe that does not comply with
this requirement  shall  be replaced at the Con-
tractor's expense.


(37) Pipe Grade in Tunnel and Jacking
   The tolerance  in the grade of installed rein-
forced concrete  pipe  shall  comply with the
following:  Departure from established  grade -
   , Departure from established line - 3".
   The  return to established line  and grade shall
be at a rate no greater than 3" per 1 00'.
   Any pipe placed which does not comply with
this  requirement  shall  be replaced at the Con-
tractor's expense.

(38) Setting Line and Grade
   The Contractor is responsible  for setting line
and grade from the information  included in the
Plans and  Contract Documents, and in  accor-
dance with  Section 8  of the General Specifica-
tions  (Construction   Contracts,)  "Lines  and
Grades." No payment in addition to the price
bid for the respective  items will be allowed for
setting line and grade.
   The control  of vertical and horizontal align-
ments shall be accomplished by the use of a laser
beam instrument. The  Contractor shall comply
with the provisions of  "an Act to Require  Reg-
istration  of  Laser   Systems..."  Approved
August  11, 1967, by the  Illinois State Legisla-
ture  and shall submit to the Engineer a  repro-
duced copy of the acknowledgement of registra-
tion  from the  State  Department of  Public
Health.

(39)  Clay Sewer Pipe
  The  Contractor  shall furnish  and lay  clay
sewer pipe in accordance with the provisions for
concrete pipe. See Sections 35,36,37 and 38 of.
the General Specifications-Sewers and as shown
on the plans.
  All pipe and specials shall conform to Specifi-
cations ASTM C13 or ASTM C200, as shown on
the plans. Joints shall conform to ASTM Specifi-
cation C425, type 3.

(40)  Concrete Sewer Pipe
  All reinforced concrete circular pipe shall be
provided  with  bell  and spigot  or  tongue and
groove type joints for use  with rubber gaskets as
hereinafter specified. Excessive shrinkage  cracks
in the bell and spigot or tongue and groove ends
or excessive bleeding at form ends which expose
aggregates or create voids, or other defects or
damage to the end of the pipe which would pre-
vent making  a satisfactory joint, as determined
by the Engineer, shall be deemed reason  for re-
jection of the pipe. The pipe shall have  a pre-
formed groove  on the tongue or spigot face of
each pipe section to properly position and con-
fine  the rubber gaskets in the annular space.
   All reinforced concrete  pipe shall conform to
ASTM Specification C76. The pipe joints  shall
conform to ASTM Specification C361. All refer-
ence to a specific class of pipe and wall thickness
shall conform to the requirements of that speci-
fied  under ASTM Specification  C76. The  rein-
forcement steel  in the joint shall be tied to the
pipe  barrel steel  as called  for in  ASTM
C361.

   Gaskets for  concrete pipe shall conform to
"Gasket Specification", Section 34 of the  Gen-
eral  Specifications-Sewers. The gaskets shall be
circular in cross section and shall be of sufficient
cross-sectional area and volume so that when the
joint is assembled, the gasket will be compressed
to form a water-tight  seal. Gaskets shall be ex-
truded or molded and  cured in such a manner
that any cross-section  will  be  dense, homoge-
nous and free from porosity, blisters, pitting and
other imperfections. The gaskets shall be molded
or extruded to the tolerance as specified.
                                            1-13

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   Any  foreign material  which  adheres  to  the
pipe and  interferes  with  the  proper  seating of
the gasket shall be removed. No cracked, broken
or otherwise defective gaskets shall be used in
this work. As the work  progresses, the interior
of the pipe shall be cleaned of all dirt and all
other superfluous material.

   Lubricant  for  use wit i  the  gasket shall be
equal to the vegetable oil >oap as manufactured
by Davis Young Corp., Foil V/aync. Indiana, or
a  Bentonile Slurry  diluted lo a paste of con-
sistency satisfactory to the bngineer. No pttro-
leum product shall be used i* a lubricant.
   The Contractor shall  submit  to the Engineer
for approval, detailed drawings  of the pipe  and
pipe joint to be furnished and placed under this
contract, including the dimensions of the rubber
gasket and the joint in the assembled pipe posi-
tion.
   A tapered lifting hole in concrete pipe  36"
in diameter  and  larger   as  indicated on  the
plans,  if  used,  shall be  filled  with a fitted
precast  tapered  concrete  plug,  coated with
mastic  and driven  into  place  with wooden
mallet.  For concrete pipe placed in open  cut
the top of the  plug shall  be covered with
cement mortar and hand trowelled so as to
cover  at least an  area three inches greater than
the opening. No lifting holes shall be placed in
concrete pipe  less  than  36-inches in diameter.

   The  supplier of  reinforced  concrete sewer
pipe shall  submit for approval the design of pipe
sizes not listed in the tables of ASTM C76.  The
information submitted shall show wall thickness,
concrete strength, and the area, type, placement
and strength of the steel reinforcement and shall
meet  the  D-load strength test requirements as
called for in the ASTM tables.  .
   Reinforced  concrete sewer pipe delivered to
the job site shall be not  less than ten (10)  days
old from  date  of manufacture  and except for
closure pieces, shall be not less than 6-feet nor
more  than 12-feet long unless otherwise approv-
ed by the Engineer.
   On  each  reinforced concrete pipe manufac-
tured, the following items shall be clearly mark-
ed on  the interior surface of the pipe: (1)  class
and size of pipe; (2) Date of manufacture; (3)
Name or trademark of the Manufacturer.
   No  reinforced  concrete sewer pipe shall be
delivered to the job site  without the M.S.D. in-
spector's  stamp affixed   thereon,  and shall be
subject to re-inspection upon delivery to the job
site.

(41) Backfill
   In  location*, where the Permits,  Easements.
Ordinances or the Detail or the General Specifi-
cations require sand or other granular  backfill,
material shall be as specified in Section 33 of the
General Specification  Sewers.
   Where sand or other granular  backfill is not
required, regular  backfill  may be used. Regular
backfill shall  be  a uniformly divided  material
free from debris, stones  larger than  6", objec-
tionable organic matter and frozen materials and
must be capable of compacting to a dense, stable
backfill free of after-settlement.
   Backfilling, unless otherwise  specified,  shall
take place in accordance with Section 28 of the
General Specifications-Sewers or in  accordance
with  applicable easements, ordinances or per-
mits.  The  Contractor's  attention is  directed
particularly  to the  backfill requirements of the
State  Highway Permit.
   In  locations where it  is  not  specified  that
sheeting must be left in place, sheeting shall jje.
extracted.
   Sheeting shall be extracted where practicable
ahead of  the  backfilling  where  this  procedure
can progress without endangering the side of the
excavation and in such a  manner as to leave  no
voids  in  the space previously occupied by the
sheeting.
   Sheeting  extracted  after backfilling  shall  be
removed in such a manner as to preclude leaving
voids  in  the space previously occupied by the
sheeting and in such  a manner  as  to  be  con-
sistent with Sections 26 and 27  of the General
Specifications—Sewers.
IRON CASTINGS AND MISCELLANEOUS
METALS

(42) Description
  The Contractor shall furnish, deliver and place
iron castings,  including  manhole  frames  and
covers, and miscellaneous metal parts, and such
other iron  castings and  metal parts as are shown
on  the plans or as ordered by the Engineer. All
pieces  shall be plainly  marked with the piece
mark as  called for on the plans. Painting, if re-
quired, shall be performed as called  for in the
plans and specifications.
                                         1-14

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(43) Material and Workmanship
  All castings shall  be of tough, close-grained
gray iron, free from blowholes, shrinkage cracks
and cold shuts. They shall conform to a suitable
grade of the "Tentative Specifications for Gray
Iron Castings," ASTM A48. They shall be sound,
smooth,  clean and free from-blisters and  all de-
fects. All castings shall be made  by the cupola
process. No plugging of defective castings will be
permitted. Where malleable castings are required
they shall  be furnished and installed hereunder
and shall conform to  the "Standard Specifica-
tions for Cupola, Malleable Iron," ASTM A197.
  All  castings  shall  be  made  accurately to
dimensions shown and shall be placed, chipped,
filed or ground  where' marked or where  other-
wise necessary to  secure perfectly flat and true
surfaces. Allowance for shrinkage shall be made
in  the patterns  so that the specified thickness
shall not be reduced. Manhole  covers shall be
true and shall seat at all points. All drilling and
tapping shall be carefully and accurately  done.
  All  wrought-iron   parts  shall  be  made of
genuine wrought-iron conforming to the require-
ments  of  the  "Standard  Specifications  for
Refined  Wrought-iron Bars and  Wrought-iron
Plates," ASTM A189.
  Steel parts shall be open hearth medium steel
of quality  conforming to .the "Standard Specifi-
cations   for  Structural  Steel  for  Buildings,"
ASTM A36.
  All parts called  for on the plans as galvanized
shall be  coated  in accordance with "Zinc Coat-
ing on Standard Steel Shapes." ASTM A123. All
galvanized metals  whose  coatings are damaged
during shipment or installation, shall be touched
up  with MSDGC 117 Zinc rich primer paint.
  Bronze  bushings  shall  be  of  good quality
phosphor-bronze.   All  parts   called for as
chromium-nickel steel shall be made of a ferrous
alloy approved by the Engineer.
  The  Contractor shall  notify   the  Engineer
when castings and material parts  are ready for
inspection. See Section 9 of the General Specifi-
cations   (Construction Contracts), "Inspection
and Testing of Materials".

(44) Bolts and Nuts
  Stud,  tap and machine  bolts shall be of speci-
fied wrought-iron  or of specified structural steel
of  rivet quality  unless otherwise specified. In
general  square heads and hexagonal close fitting
nuts shall be used. All threads shall be clean cut
of the U.S. standard sizes.


(45) Inserts
   All inserts to be  imbedded in  the concrete
shall be  heavily  galvanized malleable castings
suitably normalized and of a type approved by
the Engineer.


(46) Cast  Iron Pipe
   All cast iron  pipe shall be furnished in accor-
dance with  ASA  Specification A21.6 orA21.8
with the type of joint as specified in  the Detail
Specifications and/or shown on the plans. Pipe
shall be furnished in  full  lengths except where
shown on the  plans in lesser  lengths or where
necessary  to make closure. Wall thickness desig-
nated by a class number shall  be based on ASA
Manual of Design A21.1.
   All fittings shall conform to ASA  Specifica-
tion A21.10 at the pressure rating as specified in
the Detail Specifications  and/or shown on the
plans. Where ASA A21.10 specification is  not
applicable,  the fittings shall  conform to ASA
B16.1 Specification.
 , All rubber gasket joints for  cast iron pipe and
fittings  shall conform to ASA  Specification
A21.ll.
   Fittings for pipes over  12 inches in diameter
shall be Class B.  Fittings for pipes 12 inches in
diameter or less shall be Class D.
   Wall pipes and wall sleeves shall be furnished
with intermediate wall collars and shall have end
types as shown on the plans and shall  be Class B
except where they extend beyond the outside
surface of the  wall in which case they shall be
Class D.
   Pipe and  fittings  shall  be furnished bitumi-
nous coated inside and outside unless otherwise
specified  in the   Detail  Specifications  and/or
shown on the plans.
   Cement linings specified in the Detail Specifi-
cations and/or shown on the plans shall conform
to  ASA  Specifications A21.4. Pipe  furnished
with cement lining shall be bituminous  coated
on the outside.
   Ductile Iron Pipe specified in the Detail Speci-
fications and/or shown on the plans  shall con-
form to  ASA Specification  A21.51 with  all
other requirements as listed above for cast iron
pipe, except for  wall thickness which shall be
                                             1-15

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designated  by  a class number  based  on ASA
Manual of Design A21.50.
(47) RESTORATION WORK
  The Contractor's attention is directed to Sec-
tion 7  of the General Specifications-Sewers,
Care of Structures and Property.

   Restoration  work  shall  follow construction
work as the work progresses ;md be completed
as soon as possible. Restoration work shall not
be delayed and shall be completed no later than
thirty (30) days after  sewer  or structure is in
place. Any testing or further inspection  neces-
sary for final completion and inspection of the
sewer or  structure shall not  be  cause for any
delay  of  restoration work  required under this
contract.  This provision for restoration shall in-
clude all public and private  property which was
affected by the Contractor's construction opera-
tions  Such final restoration that cannot be per-
formed within the  thirty  day  period due to
adverse weather conditions may, upon written
request, including a proposed  procedure  and
cime  schedule, be  performed as approved by the
Engineer.  Any delayed  restoration will be con-
tingent upon providing suitable  safe temporary
facilities without  inconvenience or nuisance in
the interim.

   The Contractor  shall maintain existing surface
and subsurface drainage conditions in all areas
along  the  line of  the work, including highway
ditches, storm sewers, culverts, natural terrain,
field tile systems, etc.

   Whenever  public  or  private property  is  so
damaged or  destroyed, the  Contractor shall at
his own expense, restore such property to a con-
dition equal to that existing before such damage
or injury  was done  by repairing rebuilding, or
replacing it as may be directed, or he shall other-
wise make good such damage or destruction in a
manner acceptable to the Engineer. If he fails to
do so the Engineer may, after the expiration of a
period of thirty (30) calendar days after  giving
him notice in writing, proceed to repair, rebuild,
or otherwise restore such  property  as may be
deemed necessary, and the cost thereof shall be
deducted from any compensation due, or which
may become due the Contractor under this Con-
tract.

  This provision  for  restoration  work   shall
apply to all Items listed  in the Proposal.
(48 (TESTS
  An infiltration test shall be made by the con-
tractor in the presence of the Engineer after the
first  one thousand linear feet or less of sewer is
completed, as ordered  by the Engineer.  Addi-
tional tests of the type  ordered by the Engineer
will  be  required for each succeeding  one thou-
sand linear feet  or less, as ordered by the Engi-
neer. A  final  test of the type ordered by the
Engineer will  be required prior to final accep-
tance of this contract. All  tests will be con-
ducted  in  a  manner to minimize  interference
with the contractor's work or progress. No addi-
tional pipe shall  be laid  until the infiltration test
on the section tested is satisfactory.

  Where the  depth of the ground water is not
sufficient to completely submerge the  section to
be tested,  an  exfiltration test shall be used in
place of an infiltration test when ordered by the
Engineer. The Contractor shall be allowed addi-
tional payment for exfiltration tests in addition
to the prices bid for sewer Items. The additional
payment shall be the actual cost of the work to
the Contractor  and shall be determined  on a
time and material basis for labor, material and
equipment.
  No additional payment for  infiltration tests in
addition to the prices bid for Sewer Items to be
tested as called  for in the Detail Specifications
will be allowed.
  Personnel for reading measuring devices will
be  furnished by  the Engineer,  but  all  other
labor, equipment, material and water, including
gauges and meters, will be furnished by the Con-
tractor.
  Infiltration tests will be made by measuring
the infiltrated flow  of  water over a measuring
weir set up in the invert of the sewer a known
distance from a limiting  point of infiltration. Ex-
filtration tests will be made by bulkheading the
section  to be tested  and admitting water to the
lower end  allowing  air to escape at the upper
end until the sewer is filled. The bulkheads must
then be  watertight and water  will  be added until
a level of water four feet above the crown of the
sewer in the  manhole at the upper end of the
section is attained. The  rate of flow required to
keep this required head will be the exfiltration.
All  tests will be carried on for a length of time
and at intervals as ordered by the Engineer.
  The infiltration or exfiltration shall not ex-
ceed 48-gallons  per day, per  inch  of  sewer
perimeter per mile of sewer, and no  individual
                                             1-16

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leak will be permitted that in the opinion of the
Engineer might  endanger the pipe-line or the
backfill around  it.  If the leakage exceeds the
maximum permitted, the contractor shall im-
mediately make all repairs and replacements that
in the opinion of the Engineer are necessary to
secure the required water-tightness.
   After all repairs are made to the satisfaction
of the Engineer, the Contractor shall again make
an infiltration or exfiltration test and this pro-
cedure will be repeated until  a satisfactory test is
made, if and when ordered by the Engineer. The
cost of any additional testing, as specified by the
Engineer,  will be  at the Contractor's expense
and at  no additional cost to the Sanitary Dis-
trict.
   The Sanitary District  shall not be responsible
for any damage to the  pipe lines or otherwise
due to testing.
(49) PLUMING AND BY PASSING
   Flumes and by-passes shall be designed with
sufficient capacity to carry the maximum storm
flow without restricting the flow in the existing
sewer. Plans and procedure shall be submitted to
the Chief Engineer for approval before proceed-
ing with the work.
(SO) SIGNS
         ^Construction Signs, if requested, will
              erected  and  removed  under a
                  it a location  or locations as
  The
his  own  to
the Engineer, of
  The cost of furnishinl
signs shall not  be  included 2?
sum price of the contract.
attach a tablet of
     signaled  by
          x 36".
                                                 1-17

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            APPENDIX J




WILDLIFE AND VEGETATION INVENTORIES

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                           APPENDIX J

             WILDLIFE VEGETATION INVENTORIES


P'iarq and_ Animal  Res on re c ?

Flood Plain Areas:

     The main stem  of the  Des  Plaines  Rivar begins in an area of

intensively cultivated agricultural  land  in Racine and Kenosha

Counties, Wisconsin.   At a point  about half-way through its approxi-

mately 17 mile course in Wisconsin,  the valley widens, the channel

is essentially unaltered,  and  the stream  becomes sluggish.  In  this

lower portion, extending from  State Highway 50 downstream to

Interstate 94, the  channel is  natural  and scenic,  and wildlife

habitat is considered good to  excellent.   From Interstate 94 down
                           *
to the Illinois-Wisconsin  stata line,  the valley continues to widen

and is comprised primarily of  various  types of wetlands with

excellent wildlife habitat. Two private  shooting preserves are

located in this area.

     Throughout Lake  County, Illinois, the valley varies from

1/4 mile to 1/2 mile  in width.  There  has been very little encroach-
                          *.          ,
ment of urban development  into the flood  plain.  Two notable

exceptions to this  have occurred  in the vicinity of Libertyville

and Half Day.  Approximately 1-mile upstream from Libertyville,

a residential development  named North  Libertyville Estates has  been

built in the flood  plain  on the east side of the river.  A-to-tar-of

                                              .  Downstream from
                                                          •
Highway 22, about 3/4 mile southeast of Half Day,  a  residential

development named Lincolnshire has been built partially  in  the

flood plain on the east side of the river.   Ar:^^i^£^^^-~^^^

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                                                 Appendix J(2)
-ai^~£-uL>ject ~o--f1ccdi;;g-^iL--tf,iir---K)Cclicn.   IiuiL'dicitely across the



 river  from Lincolnshire,  in  the west flood  plain area, a large



 resort hotel-recreation complex has just been  built.  This  involved



 blocking  and  diverting  Indian Creek straight east  into the  Des Plaines



 with the  hotel  being  built in the area south of the  Indian  Creek



 diversion channel  and between the old channel  and  the Des Plaines River.







     Flood plain  land use in the Lake County portion is quite varied



 consisting of woodland, pasture, cropland,  and other land "including



 numerous  wetlands.   The area also includes  five Lake County Forest



 Preserve  District properties which comprise 1,826  acres.  Numerous



 gravel  pits occupy terrace positions along  the stream valley-



 Woodland  includes cottonwood, ash, oak, willow, and  boxelder.



 Habitat is suitable for waterfowl, deer, upland game species



 including pheasants and squirrels, wading and  shorebirds, and songbirds,







     From the Lake~-Cook County  line downstream to  Highway 171 at



 Summit, the stream flows  through a highly urbanized  watershed.  Most



 of  the river  and adjacent flood plain  is owned by  the Cook  County



 Forest Preserve District  so  that woodlands  and some  wetlands have



 been preserved, and urban development  has generally  been  kept out



 of  the Des  Plaines River  flood  plain.   This greenbelt furnishes



 valuable habitat for many wildlife species.  In  addition  to the



 many bird species found  here,  a checklist of  animals occurring  in



 Cook County  Forest Preserve  lands  includes  16  species of  amphibians,



 22  species  of reptiles,  and  46  species  of mammal?;.  Locations  noted

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                                              Appendix J(3)








for large or  unusual  trees  and  for v/i Id flowers circ1:  Camp Fine Woor.: ,



Lake Avenue Woods,  Darn  No.  2 Woods,  Thatcher Woods, Che-Che-Pine-Que



Woods,  and Scheller Woods.







     From Highway 171 downstream to  Romeoville Road, the Des Plaines



River flows parallel  and adjacent to tha Chicago  Sanitary and Ship



Canal.   Some  of the flood plain is wooded but industrial development



detracts from its value as wildlife  habitat.  An  extensive  area  of



wetland habitat lies  between  Lemont  Road and Romeoville.  It  includes



Goose Lake and a portion of the "Sag Valley Site" which has been



recommended for public  acquisition and preservation as an open  space



area by the  Illinois  Nature Preserves Commission.







     The Wisconsin portion of the watershed has  several tributaries



in addition  to the main stem which are important as wildlife  habitat.



These tributaries include Salem Branch,  Brighton Creek,  Dutch Gap



Canal, and Upper and  Lower Pleasant Prairie Ditch. There are about



1,100 acres  of undrained marshy wetlands in stream valleys  and



flood plains  in addition to habitat .provided by streamside  herbaceous



and woody cover.  Most of this part of the watershed  is rural with



hdbitat suitable for deer, rabbits, squirrels,  raccoons,  foxes,



v/aterfowl, woodcock,  pheasants, hungarian partridge,  and many song-



birds.  This  is one of the areas in Wisconsin where the ring-necked



pheasant  is most abundant.

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                                                Appendix J(4)








     In Illinois the furthest u^treorr, tributary of major sig-



nificance is Mill Creek which outlets into the Des Plaines. River



just south of Kadsworth.  Its major tributaries include North Mill



Creek, wh-ich originates in Wisconsin as Dutch Gap Canal and Hastings



Creek which enters North Mill Creek at the upper end of Rasmussen



Lake.  North Mill Creek and Hastings Creek flow through areas



which are primarily agricultural.  Mill Creek, which originates



further south than the aforementioned tributaries is a mixture



of suburban housing, much of which is located around natura1! lakes,



and agricultural land.  Flood plain land use consists of cropland,  .



pasture, woodland and some idle land.  Stream banks are mostly  wooded



with boxelder, willow, -ash, elm, maple, and ash being the major species;



non-wooded sections are grass covered with some reed canary grass.



Habitat along North Mill Creek is especially valuable to such species



as ring-ie:'r'e<1 pheasant, bobwhite quail, muskrats,. mink, cottontail



rabbits, and songbirds.







     Bull CreeK, which originates northwest of Loch Lomond Lake near



Mundelein, enters the Des Plaines River about 2 miles north of



Libertyville.  The numerous lakes which comrpise the headwaters



are surrounded by housing developments, but the flood plain from



Butler Lake to the Des P'laines River is open, idle land interspersed



with urban areas and housing developments.  Streambanks are wooded



in some reaches with aspen, maple, willow, and ash.  Reed canary



grass and annual v/?eds comprise most of the herbaceous cover on



the non-wooded Streambanks.

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                                              Appendix  J(5)
     Indian Creek enters the  Des  PI dines  River  jusi  soutiicdst of

Half Day and about 1/4 mile downstream  from Highway  22.  Ai  this

point, the natural channel has  been  blocked and a  diversion  channel

approximately 1/3 mile in length  has been constructed.   This was done

in conjunction with a large resort hotel-recreation  complex  which
                        *
has recently been completed in  the Indian Creek-Des  Plaines  River

common flood plain area.  Indian  Creek  begins at Countryside Lake

and flows through numerous areas  of intermittent marsh,  cropland,

pasture, and idle land to Prairie Road  which is about 1  mile west

of Half Day.  In these reaches, the streambanks generally  have  good

woody cover consisting of willow, boxelder, cottonwood,  maple,  ash,

and wild grape.  Habitat for  waterfowl  and upland game is  generally  good

in this area.  From Prairie  Road  downstream through  Half Day,

Indian Creek flows through lawns, behind stores and  other business

buildings.  Although flowing  through an urban area,  there are  large

willows and oaks along  the banks  with an understory of grape,  box-

elder, and elderberry.  The wildlife value of this reach is restricted

principally "to songbirds.  Seavey Drainage Ditch, a major tributary,

begins in Mundelein and enters Indian Creek about 1  1/2 miles  west

of Half Day.  It flows  through cropland for most of its length
      /

but sowe" urban development is occurring north of Highway 60.  Reed

canary grass, giant ragwee'd and wild carrot provide some cover for

wildlife, primarily pheasants and songbirds.

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                                             Appendix  J(6)









     Aptekisic Creek is a small  trihuiciry which orujiikties  north-



east of Long Grove.  It flows through cropland  and pasture  to  a



point about 1/2 mile upstream from U.S.  Highway 45.   From there



downstream to the highway, the flood plain has  been used for resi-



dential development.  Streambank cover consists mainly of shrubs,



small trees and herbaceous vegetation in the upper reaches  and



willow and maple trees in the lower reaches.  Habitat along



Aptakisic. Creek is of value to such wildlife as pheasant and songbird;







     Buffalo Creek originates southeast of Lake Zurich and enters



the Des Plaines as Wheeling Drainage Ditch about 1 1/2 miles down-



stream from Wheeling.  From Lake Zurich to Long Grove, it is a small



tree-lined ditch passing through numerous wetlands which have been  •



drained or are being filled and used for housing developments.



Trees along the streambanks include mulberry, black walnut, cotton-



wood, and maple.  The area provides fair habitat for upland game



and songbirds.  From Long Grove to Wheeling, the stream flows througi



a rural area and the Village of Buffalo Grove.  It is lined with



large willow, cottonwood, boxelder, maple, and ash trees.  The



flood plain is in cropland and pasture except  in Buffalo Grove/



where residential development and a park are in the flood plain.



Habitat is suitable  for  upland game and songbirds.  As  it enters



Wheeling, Buffalo  Creek  changes to Wheeling Drainage Ditch and tha



natural channel, with  its many small meanders, becomes  a dredged



and  straightened ditch.   From the north edge of Wheeling to Wolf



Road,  the flood plain  is generally  in urban use,  w4££-e^-s~

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                                              Ai*)r-),gn'"' 1 V  .T ( "7
                                                                From
Wolf Road to the Des Plaines River, the flood plain is in cropland

or idle.  The entire reach is tree-lined with willow, cottonwood, and

boxelder, and has some herbaceous cover of reed canary grass, ragweed,

etc. which has habitat value primarily for songbirds.
     McDonald Creek is ajrf into-pmit-'bent stream which flows through

urban residential  areas throughout most of its approximately 4-mile

course to its outlet into the Des Plaines Rivar about 2 miles upstream

from Des Plaines.   It is tree-lined with willow, ash, boxelder, and

elm, forming a narrow greenbelt in an urban setting and furnishing

some habitat for songbirds..



     Wellers Creek is a stream which, in its natural condition,
              i
originated in Arlington Heights.  This upstream portion has now been

replaced by conduits and filled in down to Central Road in Mount Prospect

From there it flows through a residential area and the Mt. Prospect

Country Club which forms an attractive greenbelt and par«.  From

Elmhurst Road downstream, it is a combination of intermittent stretches

of open ditch and conduit passing through a highly urbanized area

and provides no open space or wildlife habitat.


                         -/,*.'•. '.'. if. /; ' a .<.'.
     Willow Creek is a/1  interna-trent  stream for most of  its  length

from Elk Grove Village east to  the  Des Plaines River at  Rosemont.

It flows between Highway 72 and the Northwest To 11 way  along  the

north side of O'Hare  International  Airport, draining tank farms,

industrial parks and  the northern portion of  the  airport.   It

provides little wildlife habitat.

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                                               Appendix  J(8)



                        y.'>  t.±.'-. ;.• S "-
     Crystal  Creek is 2/i intap;-,i-tteat stream which drains most of

the southern  portion of O'Hare International Airport and flows into

the Des Plaines River at Schiller Park.  It is entirely urban except

for the lower half mile which flows through forest preserve land.



     Silver Creek originates as Bensenville Ditch, which drains the

southwestern portion of Q.'Hare International Airport.  It flows

through residential and industrial areas in Franklin Park and

Melrose Park, where it flows into the Des Plaines River at Thatcher

Woods Forest Preserve.  It is a dirty, little ditch which furnishes

no open space or wildlife habitat.

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                                               Appendix J(9)

     Flag Creek begins in Hinsdale and  Western  Springs,  flowing
southward parallel to the Tri -State Roll way for about  3  miles.
Little wildlife habitat exists except for the tree  cover on  the
streambanks.  It borders Timber Trails  and Edgewood Valley Golf
and Country Clubs which along with adjacent residential  developments
provide some songbird habitat.  At both 79th and  83rd  Streets, the
flood plain is residential and the stream is tree-lined  and  attractive
except for the polluted appearance of the water.  At 91st Street
the flood plain is idle and wooded and  is surrounded by industrial
and residential development.  This part of the  flood plain  furnishes
habitat suitable for upland game species, furbearers,  and songbirds.
     Sawmill Creek, a?{ ifi^erwptfcent stream begins in Darien, about  .
] mile west of Highway 83, in a residential area.  It flows through
                                                         Argonne
a conduit for much of its upper length and flows through
National Laboratory Reservation and Forest Preserve land before
outletting into the Des Plaines River about 1 mile west of Highway 83.
The upper reaches provida essentially no wildlife habitat, but the
lower reaches through Argonne and the forest preserve is in woodland
and idle, furnishing habitat suitable For upland gaine species, fur-
bearers, and songbirds.

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                                               Appendix J(10)
5:; V.,-.YI Habitat and Fisheries:

     Information concerning fish and fish habitat  of the Des Ploines
River has come from the following four major sources:   Tichacek and
Wight,  1972; Strieker et al., 1972; Harry Wight,  Illinois Depart-
ment of Conscrvotion; and Vidal, 1369.

     Qes Plaines, Main Stem (Kenosha County).  Flows south through
     Paris Township to Section  1-6, Bristol Township, then-east to
     Section 18, Pleasant Prairie Township, and south  into Illinois.
     Managed in lower portion for northern pike and forage fishes.
     "Rough fish" are common in larger sections of the river.
     Almost all of the stream, prior to the entry  of the east  and
     center branches, is ditched and straightened.   Northern pike
     use much of the 851 acres of marsh adjacent  to the stream
     for spawning.  Marshes associated with the river  have been
     important duck hunting areas and winter cover for pheasants.

     Brighton Creek.  Flows south from community of Brighton to
     Section 6, Bristol Township, then east-northeast  to the
     main stem of the Des Plaines River.   Wetlands  along the stream
     have almost all been drained.  Management is  for  forage fish
     since the water level fluctuates extremely.   Some parts of.
     the stream are frequented by northern pike for spawning
     in early spring.

     Root River.  Flows south through the center of Paris Township
     and southeasterly to join the main stem west  of the Village
     of Pleasant Prairie.  Managed only for forage fish since
     it is intermittent near its source in dry years.   One impound-
     ment of less than one acre (Massie farm pond)  exists in
     Section 2 of Bristol Township.  There are no  remaining
     wetlands along the stream of value to fisheries.   Prior to
     the extensive drainage along this stream, much value was
     realized from the excellent duck hunting it offered.

     Kilbourne Creek.  Flows south.through the westernmost tier
     of sections in Somers and Pleasant Prairie Townships to
     join the main stem west of the Village of Pleasant Prairie.
     Managed for forage fish due to intermittency  and  irregularity
     of flow.  There are 76.5 acres of marshy wetland  along the
     stream.  In the spring northern pike use these areas for
     spawning.

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                                            Appendix J(ll)
Do;., PJainej^ JUver,  /_'o j n_ Stnm JLaku Counly).   The DCS  P] a i n •.-•.-
River is small  and  shallow with an aver age width of 60  feet;.
Boatir.y is mostly restricted to canoeing because of the
shal lov.'ness.   Average depth at 2 stations was 2.5 feet.
Ths bottom type is  primarily sand which is covered with silt
in some locations.   The river becomes increasingly polluted
as it moves southward although presence of pirate perch and
blackchin shiner indicate the river is not grossly polluted.
Pollution is  mainly from municipal and industrial sources.
Ths fish population is varied.  Twenty-five species of  fishes
were collected at 2 stations in Lake County.  The river re-
ceives only light fishing usage because of poor access.

North Mil 1 Creek.  The creek is a clear stream with a sand  and
rubble bottom.  It  is a continuation of Dutch Gap Canal and
flows through a farming area.' There is some pollution  from
cattle yards  and agricultural runoff.  This stream receives
light fishing pressure for panfish, carp and an occasional
largemouth bass.  Green sunfish and blunt-nose minnows  are
abundant.  Fishermen interviewed at 2 bridges said carp
were the fish most  commonly caught.

Hill Creek.  Receives drainaga  from a number of lakes most
of which have extensive housing developments.  The stream
Is polluted by septic drainage  and agricultural runoff.
The bottom type is primarily silt with gravel at the riffles.
Black bulIhead, yellow bullhead, green sunfish, golden
shiner, and pumpkinseed sunfish were collected during a
1971 stream survey.  Fishing pressure  is  light and access
is  limited to road bridges.

Bul1 Creek.  A small stream which has  a silt bottom.   It has
been dammed in three places  to  create  Lock  Lomond, St. Mary's
and Butler Lakes.  According  to the Lake  County Surface Water
Report,  this stream  receives  sewage effluent from  three sources.
The fish population  nas not  been  surveyed,  but  thu stream
receives  light fishing pressure.

Indian  Creek.  This  stream  drains a number  of  lakes  including
Diamond  Lake, Sylvan Lake and  Countryside Lake.  The watershed
?s  largely agricultural.  Pollution sources are  septic drainage,
agricultural  runoff  and sewage  treatment  plants.   The  bottom
type  is  muck or  silt,  and  the fishery  consists  of  panfish,
bullhead, and bass.  Blunt-nose minnows,  creek  chubs,  blue-
gills,  and carp  are  abundant.   Fishing pressure is light
and access is  from road bridges.

-------
                                              Appendix JC12)
S i 1 ver C reek.  Thi:> ;. trcoM bos 
-------
                                             Appendix J(13)
Se-ivey Dt'ain^uj'.' L) i i c h.   "lots diich dtcjin^ an jrc:>"i cvisi i:n:.
south of Kiiiidc 1 e i n .  Much of tiit wa ter i>h'jd is crop i anc
buL there ore numerous housing deve ]opr,>en ts .  Almost  tii!_
entire stream course has been channel i acjd.  The stre
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                                               Appendix J(.14)
Lake and Pond  Habitat  and  Fisher
     A total  of  123  lakes  and  ponds of 5 or more surface acres occur
in the Des Plaines River V.V. tershed, excluding Salt Creek.   Of these,
10 are in Wisconsin  and 113  are  in the Illinois portion.  Twelve
lakes, of which  4 are  in Wisconsin, are considered to provide good
wildlife habitat.  There are 68  lakes, providing approximately
3,120 acres of surface area  which are used for fishing.   Most notable
of these lakes are Benet/Shangrila and Paddock Lakes in  Wisconsin,
and Diamond,  Lake Saint Marys, Gages, Third, Fourth, and Sand Lakes
in Illinois.   Several  of these lakes have been recommended for
rehabilitation as the  result of  population surveys which revealed
drastic deterioration  of the lakes .fishery.
   '
Nature Preserves  and  Natural  Areas:

     The following  nature preserves and natural areas occur in the
Illinois portion  of the Des  Plaines River Watershed.

  K  Edward L. fryers on Nature  Preserve is 150 acres in size  and  is
   located  in Lake  County northwest of Riverwoods between Riverwoods
  Road, Daerfield  Road,  and the Des Plaines River.  It is  owned  by  the
  Lake  County Forest  Preserve  District.  Its major feature is an old
  growth forest  within the  Des Plaines River valley.  Tree species  incl'i
  white oak, black oak,  red oak,  sugar maple, white ash, bur oak, silvei
  maple, hackberry,  and  black  walnut.  The forest supports many  spring
  wildflowers including  large-flowered trillium.

  i/  Salt  Creek  Woods  Nature Preserve includes 245 acres in Sec. 32,
  T39N, R12E and is  owned by Cook County Forest Preserve District.
  Natural  features include  upland forest with bur oak, white oak, red
  oak,  and black oak with some basswood and hickory; and floodplain
  forest with silver maple,  elm and cottonwood.  Wildlife  species in-
  clude gray squirrels,  raccoons, and chipmunks.
  *"' Black  Partridge  Woods  Nature Preserve  is  an  80  acre  area in Sec.
  19, T37N,  R11S  owned  by Cook County  Forest Preserve  District.   It has
  river bluffs  and  ravines  with a mesic  forest  of sugar napla, bass-
  wood, red  oak,  white  oak,  bur oak, aim and ash.  There  is a spring-
  fed stream which  contains sculpins and other  fishes; free-flowing
  springs;  and  seep springs with skunk cabbage  and marsh  marigold.

    Antioch BOK  is located at  the Das Plaines  Watershed  boundary in
  Lake County,  Sections  14  and  15,  T46N,  RlOE.  The  Illinois Nature
  Preserves  Commission  h.-ss  recommended state acquisition  of 89 acres.
  The bog contains  nany  ferns  and is the only known  location in  Illi-
  nois of the Virginia  chain fern.  Woody vegetation includes tamarack,
  silver maple, poison  sumac,  winteruerry,  cnokeberry  and dogwood.

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                                           Appendix  J(15)
   Glenbrook North High School Prairie is located in Cook  County,
Sec. 16, T42N, R12E.  It is a 2-3 acre prairie which is being
preserved by Glenbrook North High School *  It contains  over 50
species of prairie plants including prairie dropseed, indian grass,
cord grass, and blue-joint grass.  It has been recommended for dedi-
cation as a nature preserve.

t,-  Santa Fe Prairie is located in Cook County in tha village limits
of Hodgkins and includes 10 acres along the Des Plaines River.  It.
is a floodplain prairie and is thought to be one of the finest prairies
remaining in the state.  All tha surrounding land has been filled and
is being developed for heavy industry.  It belongs to the  Santa Fe
Railway Company.

•/ Peacock Prairie is a 4 acre tract of virgin prairie  that has been
purchased by the University of Illinois.  It is typical of the black-
soil prairies of the Chicago Region.  The location is Sec. 11, T41N,
R12E.

   Wolr Road Prairie is an extremely good prairie of 40 acres in Sec.
30, T39N, RllE north of Beamis Woods Forest Preserve.  It  is divided
into many tracts of privaca ovmership.  It is one of the finest '
prairies in the state, contains a diversity .of habitats including
5-JLO acres of mesic prairie thought to be virgin, and harbors the
rare white-fringed orchid.
   ~    TV  ^        >5°° 3CreS' °f marSh 3nd 5louSh ^rround Deer
Ahnnr- ?nn    C°Unty' SeCti°nS 2> 10> n> 15, and 16, T46N, R10E.
About 600 acres are in the Des Plaines Watershed.  Much of the «rea
is leased by_a hunt club.  Several species of ducks and other bl"s
breed here, including the yellow-headed blackbird,  an uncover  "
species in Illinois.                                   '

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                                                Appendix J(16)
      The  foilowing  i.ature  prrservc::-. and nat-iirci! areas occur  in the
 V.'u.consin  portion of the Des  Plaines River Kalershed.

      University  of  Wisconsin-Parkside Marsh.  This is a 400  acre
 wetland of types 2, 4,  5,  and 6  owned by the University of Wisconsin.
 It is located in Section 36,  T2N,  R20E; Section 1, TIN, R20E; and
 Section 31,  T2N, R21E.   (See  No.  14 in list of Wisconsin wetlands,
 this report.)

      Benedict Prairie is located near the intersection of the Root River
 with the  Des Plaines River in Section 11, TIN, R21E.  It is  owned by the
 Nature Conservancy  and  is  managed by the University  of Wisconsin at
 Milwaukee.

      Only one such  area is known to exist in Lower Salt Creek Watershed.
 It is Bloomingdale  Grove Forest  Preserve, a 30 acre  near-virgin sugar
 maple forest located between  Bloomingdale and Roselle in DuPage County.
 It is considered the richest  tract of woods left  in  the county.  The
 herbaceous flora is rich and  contains many unusual species.  The
 Forest Preserve  District has  been approached on the  matter of dedi-
 cating the area  as  a nature preserve.

 Wetlands:                                                ~       '  -  :
                                                         •
      A total of  105 wetland areas comprising.more than 9,280 acres

 have been  identified in the Des  Plaines River Watershed.  These are

 distributed as follows:  (1)  Wisconsin portion -  23  wetland  areas -
 5£Vf
 0,4'30 acres; (2) Illinois  portion Des Plaines  - 77 wetland areas -
•*, yri'
 &r&96 acres; and (3) Lower Salt  Creek - __6 wetland areas - 200 acres.
                                               cfclA^f  '
 These wetland areas provide food and cover for 44e-F, pheasants, fur-

 bearers,  waterfowl, songbirds, shorebirds, and wading birds, The

 wetlands  include types 1-7, but  types 2-5 are  predominant.

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                                                 Appendix J(17)









Wildlife:



     There are 18 species of amphibians,  24  species of reptiles,



126 species of birds, and 41 species  of mammals which  are known



to exist or are likely to be found in the Des  Plaines River Watershed.



A listing of these species and their  preferred habitats  has been



prepared and is part of the supporting data  for this report.







     Waterfowl using migration corridors  that  pass  through the  area



include:  600,000 mallards; 35,000 baldpates;  25,000 pintails;



100,000 black ducks; 280,000 scaup; 117,000  ring-necked  ducks;



160,000 Canada geese; and 9,000 snow geese.  Pheasants,  furbearers,



watsrfowl, songbirds, shorebirds, and wading birds  are the roost common



wildlife species in existence.







     A total of 11 species of birds considered to be rare or  endangered



in Illinois are found in the watershed.  The watershed  is in  the  range



of, and contains habit important to, four species of amphibians which



are rare in Illinois.  These animals are listed as follows in the



Inventory of Fish and Wildlife Resources of the Des Plaines  River



Watershed along.with their  status  in Illinois  and preferred  habitats:

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                                              Appendix J (.18)
Black cro.vix.d night hr.;i •-;;, - i arc - ponds or sloughs
and swamps (weI, wnodeJ land).

American bittern - rare - ponds or sloughs and marshes
(not wooded).

Coopers h?.v/k - endangered - thicket, hedgerows, edges
of woods, brushy abandoned fields, and v:oods.

Red-shouldered hawk -  endangered - swamps (wet, wooded land),
thicket, hedgerows, edges of woods, brushy abandoned fields,
and woods.

Marsh hav/k - rare - marshes (not wooded), open fields, meadows,
pastures, thicket, hedgerows, edges of woods, brushy abandoned
fields, parks, cemeteries, farms, orchards, sand areas, and
hill prairies.

Upland sandpiper - endangered - open fields, meadows, pastures.

Barn""owl - rars" - open fields, meadows, pastures, parks,  -
cemeteries, farns, orchards, urban and suburban areas.

Long-eared owl - rare  - woods.

Short-eared owl - rare - marshes  (not v/ooded), open fields,
meadows, pastures, parks, cemeteries, farms, orchards.

Veery - rare - woods.

Brewer's blackbird - rare - open fields, meadows, pastures.

Blue-spotted salamander - rare -  swamps (wet, wooded land).

Four-toed salamander - rare - urban and suburban are'is.

Eastern v/oodfrog - rare - thicket, hedgerows, edges of woods,
brushy abandoned fields.

Western slender glass  lizard  - rare - bogs.
                                     U S GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1977—750-900

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