PROCEEDINGS
VOLUME 5
Conference
In the matter of Pollution of
the Interstate Waters of the
Grand Calumet River, Little
Calumet River, Calumet River,
Wolf Lake, Lake Michigan
and theirTributaries
                          MARCH 2-9,1965
   DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE

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      UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT

                OF

    HEALTH, EDUCATION,  and  WELFARE


                ****


Conference in the matter of pollution of

the interstate waters of the Grand Calumet

River, Little Calumet River,  Calumet  River,

Lake Michigan, Wolf Lake and their tribu-

taries (Indiana-Illinois).



                 ****

    MR. MURRAY STEIN, Chairman



                 ****
                   McCormick Place
                   Room 11
                   9:30 o'clock a.m.
                   March 9, 1965
                   Chicago, Illinois

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CONFEREES:
     MR. H.  W.  POSTON,

          Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,
          U.S.  Public Health Service,  Diyision of
          Water Supply & Pollution Control,
          Regional Program Director, Illinois

     MR. BLUCHER A.  POOLE, Technical Secretary,  and
     MR. PERRY MILLER,

          Stream Pollution Control Board,
          State Board of Health,  Indiana.

     MR. CLARENCE W.  KLASSEN,  Technical Secretary,  and
     MR. RICHARD NELLE,

          State Sanitary Water Board,  Department
          of Public  Health,  Illinois.

     MR. FRANK W.  CHESROW,  President,  and
     MR. GEORGE A. LANE,

          The Metropolitan Sanitary District
          of Greater Chicago,  Illinois.

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INDEX
STATEMENTS :
MR. FRANK W. CHESROW, President, Metropolitan
Sanitary District of Greater Chicago
(continued on page 1479)
MR. VINTON W. BACON, General Superintendent,
The Metropolitan Sanitary District of
Greater Chicago
CONCLUDING STATEMENT, Chairman Stein

REPORTS, LETTERS, COMMUNICATIONS, ETC.
THE INDUSTRIAL WASTE ORDINANCE OF THE
METROPOLITAN SANITARY DISTRICT OF
GREATER CHICAGO

ORDINANCE FOR THE CONTROL AND ABATEMENT OF
POLLUTION OF WATER WITHIN THE SANITARY
DISTRICT OF CHICAGO

BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH of MR. VINTON W. BACOM,
General Superintendent, The Metropolitan
Sanitary District of Greater Chicago
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH of MR. GEORGE A. LANE,
Chief Attorney, The Metropolitan Sanitary
District of Greater Chicago
1452
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1569

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BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH of COL. FRANK W. CHESROW,
President, The Metropolitan Sanitary District
of Greater Chicago 1485
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH of DR. A. JOEL KAPLOVSKY,
Director of Laboratories and Research and
Development


1487

LIST OF CONFEREES IS INCLUDED AT END OF TRANSCRIPT


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           CHAIRMAN STEIN:  May we reconvene?
                                                       1453
                     May we reconvene for what I hope will be the
  3 |  last  day of this  Conference.



                     The tentative  schedule is as follows:



                     We will hear from the Sanitary District first.



  6 |  At  the  conclusion of that,  the  conferees will recess  for about



  7 |  an  hour.  At that time,  we  will reconvene the Conference and
      hopefully have an announcement to make on conclusions and
      recommendations.
                     You can appreciate that the time conferees
 11 I will have  for  this  recess  will  have  to  be  flexible,  but if we



 12   don't  do that  now,  there will be  an  announcement  later.
                     I confidently expect that we should be able to



      keep to the schedule.  Then we should be able to release you.
 IS I  Even if we have  to  stay a  bit  late  for lunch,  we  should be



 16 I  through before lunch.
                     With that, we will call on Colonel Chesrow
      for the Sanitary District.
19 I                  Colonel  Chesrow.
           MR.  FRANK W.  CHESROW:  Thank you, Mr. Stein.
                     My name is Frank Chesrow, President of the



22 |   Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago.

   I

23 I                  First, I would like to take this opportunity



24 |   to  commend  our Mayor Daley,  Senator Douglas,  and the
   II


25    Illinois  Congressmen for their vision and determination to

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      join us in our fight to protect Lake Michigan.  It is a God-
      given resource which is ours to enjoy and not desecrate.
                In ray capacity as co-conferee appointed by the
      Governor of the State of Illinois,  it gives me great pleasure
      to add ray welcome on behalf of our  Board to this Conference
  6 I  of the representatives of the Peceral Government,  the
      representatives of the  State of Indiana, and my co-conferees
23
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 from the State of Illinois.
           The Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater
 Chicago whom I have the honor to represent at this Conference
 was one of the first Governmental agencies in the Country
 and in the world to recognize the close and intimate relatien
 which exists between the purity of water resources and the
 health and well-being of the community.
           Since the representatives of the Metropolitan San-
 itary District of Greater Chicago,  from its inception in 1889,
 have  been elected by the people,they are responsive to the
 needs of the people  and concerned with the desire of the
 19 I  population to obtain water supplies in potable form.  Thus,
it became one  of  the  early and  principal  goals  of the
District to assure to the  people  living in this vast  metropoli
22 I  tan and surrounding area of the purity of the water supplies.
To the achievement of that objective, the Metropolitan
Sanitary District of Greater Chicago has devoted all  its
energies, faithfully and persistently.  Its efforts in  that

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respect have  brought  it praise and admiration from the
four  corners  of the earth.
           In  pursuance of  its objectives and declared policies
the Metropolitan Sanitary  District of Greater Chicago has
endeavored to keep the streams, rivers, and water resources
under its  jurisdiction as  clean as possible.  Obviously, we
are vitally interested in  the purity and clarity of the
waters of Lake Michigan which is, so to speak, the life blood
of the people living  on its shores.
          Since the waters of the Lake are only partially
within the District's jurisdiction, it is clear that the
District cannot control the pollution which emanates from
sources beyond the District's jurisdiction and tend to
contaminate the Lake; the  District, therefore, welcomes and
endorses all  efforts  of the Federal Government which are
aimed at the  prevention and curbing of water pollution
originating from sources osutside the control of the Metro-
politan Sanitary District  of Greater Chicago.  Hie District
will  in that  respect  eagerly seek to cooperate with the
Federal Government.
          As  far as the waters and the territory under the
District's jurisdiction are concerned, I can say with
justifiable pride that the District has performed an
outstanding job in curbing and controlling water pollution.
Its efforts in that field have found world-wide acclaim and

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     have  been studied and  copied  by people  from  all  civilized

     nations,  as  is  attested  to  by the  fact  that  numerous

     delegations  from this  country as well as  foreign lands for

  4  I many  years have visited  the District in order to acquaint

  5  | themselves with its methods,  facilities,  and operations.

     Hence it  is  understandable  why the accomplishments of

     the District in the field of  sewage disposal and water

  8 | pollution  control were recognized as outstanding by the

     American Association of  Civil  Engineers by naming the

     District's operations as far  back as 1955 as "One of the
     Seven Wonders of American Engineering."
12 I            I shall not list here in detail the great

13 I  contributions of the District to the development of new

14 I  methods and techniques regarding sewage disposal and water

15 i  pollution control.  It suffices in that respect to point

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      out  we pioneered in 1958 the recently installed Zimmermann

      sewage treatment plant,  demonstrating again that the
 18   .Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago is exploring

 19   and  leading  in the  field,  and far ahead of other governmental

 20 8  agencies performing similar tasks.

 21 |             I  would be, however, remiss in my duties were I

 22 I  not  to mention in that  connection the District's Industrial

23 8  Waste Ordinance passed  in  the Summer  of 19&2,  and I wish to

24 I  present a  copy for  the  record to  the  conferees.

25 I             CHAIRMAN  STEIN:   This will  be included in the

  I  record without objection.

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                                                        1457
                     THE INDUSTRIAL WASTE ORDINANCE OF THE

                          METROPOLITAN SANITARY DISTRICT

                              OP GREATER CHICAGO

                To provide for the Control of Discharge of

      Industrial Wastes  into the Sewers,  Water Courses or Natural

      Outlets  within the Boundaries of The Metropolitan Sanitary

      District of Greater Chicago,  to  be known as  THE INDUSTRIAL

  8    WASTE  ORDINANCE.

  9              BE IT ORDAINED BY THE  BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF  THE

 10    METROPOLITAN SANITARY DISTRICT OF GREATER CHICAGO:

 11              GENERAL  PURPOSE:  The  general purpose of these

 12    rules  and regulations,  prepared  to be enforced by the Board

 13    of Trustees of The Metropolitan  Sanitary District of  Greater

 14    Chicago,  is to provide The Metropolitan Sanitary District  of

 IS    Greater  Chicago with control  over the quantity and quality

 16    of industrial  waste admitted  to  the sewage works, water

 17    courses  or natural outlets within the boundaries of The

 18    Metropolitan  Sanitary District of Greater Chicago.

 19                             SECTION I

 20              ARTICLE  I - AUTHORITY  AND INTENT

 21              The  intent and authority for this  ordinance is

 22   provided  in Chapter 42  Paragraphs 323 and 325 to 326-bb

23    inclusive  of the Illinois  Revised Statutes wherein the

24   Board of  Trustees  of The Metropolitan Sanitary District  of

25   Greater  Chicago are empowered to  regulate the discharge  of

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      waste matter into sewers connected with the sewers or works

      of The Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago

      and prevent pollution of water supplies.

  4             ARTICLE II - DEFINITIONS

  S             Unless the context specifically indicates other*-

  6   itfise,  the meaning of the terms used in this ordinance shall

      be as  follows:

                (a)   The Board of Trustees shall mean the body of

      elected  Trustees charged with the  administration of the

 10 ||  affairs  of the  Metropolitan Sanitary District  of Greater

 u |j  Chicago.

 12 it            (b)   Chief Engineer shall mean the Chief Engineer

 13 jj  of The Metropolitan Sanitary  District  of Greater Chicago,  or

 14 II  his authorized  agent  or  representative.

 15              (c)   Combined  sewer shall mean a sewer receiving

 16 u   both surface runoff and  sewage.

 17 I]             (d)   Garbage shall  mean  solid  wastes  from the

     preparation, cooking  and dispensing of food, and from the

     handling, storage or  sale of  meat,  fish,  fowl,  fruit,  or
     vegetables and condemned food.
   n
21 |            (e)  Ground or comminuted garbage shall mean
wastes from the preparation,  cooking and dispensing  of foods

that has been comminuted to such a degree  that  all particles

will be carried freely in suspension under conditions  normally

prevailing in public sewers,  with no particle greater  than

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                                                      1459




      one-half  inch in any dimension.



                (f)  Industrial  wastes shall mean the  solids,



      liquid  or gaseous wastes resulting  from any industrial,



      manufacturing,  trade or business process or from the



      development,  recovery or processing of natural resources.



                (g)  Intercepting sewer shall mean any sewer built



      or acquired by The Metropolitan  Sanitary  District  of  Greater



      Chicago for the purpose of receiving sewage or combined



 9    sewage  and storm flow from one or more local sewers.



 10              (h)  The Metropolitan  Sanitary District of Greater



 11    Chicago shall mean the municipal corporation organized and



 12    existing  under the laws of the State of Illinois enacted



 13    by the Illinois  State Legislature July 1,  1889, entitled



 14    "An Act to Create Sanitary Districts and to Remove  Obstruct-



 15    ions in the Des Plaines and Illinois Hivers", as amended,




 16    and shall  hereafter be referred  to  as the Sanitary  District.



 17              (i)   Natural outlet shall mean any outlet into  a



 18    watercourse,  pond,  ditch,  lake,  or  other body of surface



 19    water.



20              (j)   Person shall mean any individual, firm,



21  i   company, municipality,  association,  society,  corporation




22    or group.



23               (k)   The  term "Pollution'1 shall be as  defined in




24     Sec.  326 bb of  Chap.  42 of 111.  Hivised Statute  and shall




25    mean the discharge  or deposit in or upon such waters of

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 sewage, industrial wastes, or other wastes containing
 soluble or insoluble solids of organic or inorganic nature
 which may deplete the dissolved oxygen content of such waters
 contribute settleable solids that may form sludge deposits,
 contain oil, grease, or floating solids which may cause
 unsightly appearance on the surface of such waters,  or
 contain soluble materials detrimental to aquatic life, all
 beyond the content of such like substances present in an
 equal volume of the effluent  discharged from the sewage
 treatment  works of the  Sanitary District into similar
 receiving  waters.
 12             (l)  Sewage shall mean a combination of water
 13   carried wastes from residences, business buildings, institu-
 14   tions, and industrial establishments, together with such
ground,  surface  and  stormwaters  as may  be  present.
           (m)  Sewage  Treatment  Works shall  mean  the  arrange-
17 I  ment of devices and structures for treating sewage and
industrial wastes.
          (n)  Sewage Works  shall mean all  facilities  for
collecting, pumping, treating and disposing of sewage  and
industrial wastes.
22  I            (o)   Sewer shall mean a pipe or conduit for  •
carrying sewage or other waste liquids.
          (p) Sewerage system shall mean the network of
25   sewers and appurtenances  for collection,  transportation,  and

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                                                          1461
      pumping of sewage and industrial wastes.
                (q)  Storm sewer shall mean a pipe or conduit
      which carries storm,  surface water and drainage but  excludes
      sewage and industrial wastes.   It may, however, carry
      cooling waters and unpolluted  waters.
                (r)  The term toxic substances shall mean  any
      substance  which when  discharged to the sewer system  in
      sufficient quantities will interfere  with any sewage treat-
      ment  process,  or will constitute a hazard to human beings
 10    or  animals,  or will inhibit aquatic life  or create a hazard
 11    to  recreation in the  receiving waters  of the effluent from
 12    the sewage treatment  works of  the Sanitary District.
 13              (s)  The term "Waters" shall mean all waters of
 14    any river,  stream,  water course,  pond, or lake wholly or
 15    partly within the territorial  boundaries  of the Sanitary
 16    District.
 17              (t)   Water-course shall mean any channel,  natural
 18    or  artificial,  whether lined or unlined,  for drainage of
 19    storm water,  ground water or clean water.
 20              ARTICLE III - ADMISSION OF  INDUSTRIAL WASTES INTO
 21    THE SEWAGE WORKS OF THE METROPOLITAN  SANITARY DISTRICT OF
 22    GREATER CHICAGO.
 23              Paragraph 1.
 24              On  or after the effective date  of this Ordinance,
25    it diall  be  the  policy of the Sanitary  District that  no

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     sewerage  system,  v;hich  is  planned  or  designed  to discharge
     into  any  of  the  aforesaid  waters any  industrial waste or
     other wastes that will  cause  the pollution of  such waters,
     may be installed  unless a  written  permit for such sewerage
     system has been  granted by the Board  of Trustees, and no
     changes,  additions, or  extensions  to  any existing sewerage
     system shall be made in any municipal corporation having a
  8 II population of less than 500,000 until plans for such changes,
  9   additions or extensions have been  submitted to and a written
 10   permit obtained from the Board of  Trustees; it shall be the
 11   policy of the Sanitary District to admit to its sewage
 12   works     those types and quanitites of industrial waste that
 13   are not harmful or damaging to the structures,  processes or
 14   operations of the sewage works and are not specifically pro-
 15   hibited by this ordinance,  and it shall be the  policy of the
     Sanitary District to prohibit discharge of industrial wastes,
     which will cause pollution, directly into the waters, water
18 I  course or natural outlets within the boundaries of the
19 I  Sanitary District.
               Paragraph 2.
               V/henever necessary, in the opinion of the Board of
22  II  Trustees,  the owner,  operator or tenant of any industrial
23  I  plant or other establishment discharging or proposing to
24  §  discharge  industrial  wastes into any waters, sewer, water
25    course or  natural outlet in the Sanitary District, at such

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owner's,  operator's, or tenant's expense, shall provide
such preliminary treatment or handling facilities as may
be necessary to:
           (a)  Reduce or modify the objectional character-
istic or  constituents of such industrial wastes to meet the
limits or  conditions provided for in Paragraph 3 hereof,
and to comply with the pollution restrictions as indicated
in the above definition of pollution.
           (b)  Control the quantities and rates of discharge
of such industrial wastes over a twenty-four (24) hour day
and a seven (7) day week to prevent surge discharges which
may place  an unreasonable burden upon the Sewage works of the
Sanitary District.
           Before any permit for the construction of preliminary
treatment  or handling facilities will be issued, plans, speci-
fications  and other pertinent data or Information relating
to the proposed preliminary treatment or handling facilties
shall be submitted by the industry for the approval of the
Board of Trustees, and no permit shall be issued and no
Construction of such facilities shall be commenced without
the prior  written approval of the Board of Trustees.  No
substantial alteration or addition to or in the sewer system
or preliminary treatment or handling facilities shall be
made without the prior written approval of the Board of
Trustees.

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           Pai^agraph  3  -  Prohibited  Wastes.

           Except  as  otherwise provided  by the Board of
    11
   3   Trustees  pursuant  to  the  provisions  hereof,  no person  shall


   4   discharge or  cause  to be  discharged  the  following described


   5 I wastes  or v/aters into any sewer,  water course, natural outlet


      or v/aters within the  Sanitary District.


                (a)   Water  or wastes  containing more than  100 parts
  8
per million (833 pounds per million gallons) of fats, oils, or
  9  greases if such water or wastes are, in the opinion of the

 10  Board of Trustees, sufficient  (l) to interfere with the bio-

 11  logical processes of a sewage treatment plant; (3) interfere

 12  with the proper operation of the sewage works; (3) cause

 13  obstruction to flow in sewers; (4) cause pollution as herein

 14  defined.

 15            (b)  Liquids, solids, or gases which by reason of

 IS   their nature  or quantity are sufficient to cause fire or

 17   explosion  or  be injurious in any other way to the sewage works

 18   structures  or to the  operation of the sewage works.

 19             (c)  Noxious or malodorous liquids,  gases or sub-

 20   stances  which either  singly or by interaction with other

 21    wastes are  sufficient  to  create a public nuisance or hazard
   I
 22    to  life  or  are sufficient  to prevent entry into the sewers

23    for their maintenance  and  repair.

24             ((i)   Water or wastes  having a pH lower  than 4.5  or

25  I higher than 10.0 or having  corrosive  properties sufficient to

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      cause damage  or hazards  to  structures, equipment,  or personnel


      of  the  sewage works  or of interfering with  the proper oper-


      ation of the  sewerage system  or  sewage treatment works.


                (e) Water or  wastes  containing toxic substances in


      quantities which are  sufficient  to interfere with  the bio-


      logical processes of  the sewage  treatment works.


  7 |            (f) Garbage that has  not  been ground or comminuted

    I
  g   to  such a degree that all particles  will be carried freely


  9   in  suspension under  conditions normally prevailing in public


 10   sewers, with  no particle greater than one-half inch in any


 H    dimension.


 12              (g)  Radio-active wastes unless they comply with


 13    the Atomic Energy Commission  Act of  1954 (68 Stat. 919 as
amended and part 20, Sub-Part D - Waste Disposal, Section


-0.303, of the Regulations issued by the Atomic Energy


Commission or amendments thereto.)


          (h)  Solid or viscous wastes which cause obstruction
 18   to the flow in sewers or other interference with the proper


 19   operation of the sewerage system or sewage treatment works,


 20   such as grease, uncomminuted garbage, animal guts or tissues,
   H

 2i   paunch, manure, bone, hair, hides, fleshings, entrails,


 22 I  feathers, sand, cinders, ashes, spent lime, stone or marble


 23   dust, metal, glass, straw, shavings, grass clippings, rags,


 24   spent grain, waste paper, wood, plastic, gas tar, asphalt
   H

25   residues, residues from refining or processing of fuel or

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     lubricating oils, gasoline, naphtha, and similar substances.


               (i)  Liquids or vapors having a temperature higher


     than 150 degrees F.  at the point of entrance into a public


     sewer.


               Paragraph  b.


               Wherever possible clean waters from air conditioning
  7  I cooling or condensing systems or from swimming pools or clean

    I
     waters resulting from pretreatment of industrial wastes shall
  9
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    be discharged  to a  storm sewer,  combined  sewer  or natural
    outlet approved by the  Sanitary  District.


11              Paragraph 5.


12              Any person discharging industrial wastes  into a


13   sewer shall construct and maintain a suitable control manhole


14   or manholes downstream  from any  such place of discharge to


15 I permit observation, measurement  and sampling of such wastes
 16



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    by the Sanitary  District.  Where no manhole has been


    constructed or can be constructed, as in the case of some


    existing industries, the control manhole shall be considered


    to be the nearest downstream manhole in the public sewer to


    the point at which the building sewer is connected.


              Paragraph 6.


              The Sanitary District shall have the right to enter


    and set  up,  on company property, such devices necessary to


   conduct a gauging and sampling operation after first giving
25 I ten days' advance notice of  its  intention  so  to do.   While

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                                                    146?
performing the work the Sanitary District shall observe all
Safety Rules applicable to the premises, established by the
company and the company shall be held harmless for injury
or death to the Sanitary District employees and the Sanitary
District shall indemnify the company against loss or damage
to its property by Sanitary  District employees, and shall
also indemnify the company to cover liability claims and
demands for personal injury and property damage asserted
against the company which grow out of the gauging and sampling
operations or other work of the Sanitary District employees.
          Paragraph 7.
          All analyses to determine the strength and
character of industrial wastes shall be made in accordance
with the latest edition of "Standard Methods for the Examina-
tion of Water and Sewage" prepared and published jointly by
the American Public Health Association, American Water Works
Association, and the Water Pollution Control Federation.
Strength, character and quantity of wastes shall be based on
composite samples taken over a 2^--hour or longer period from
the flow from all plant outlets discharging into a single
public sewer.
          Paragraph 8.
          Application for permission to connect an industrial
waste sewer to any sewer in the Sanitary District or to dis-
charge to any waters, water course or channel within the

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                                                         1468        I
      Sanitary District shall be made on the standard form obtainable

      from the Chief Engineer, The Metropolitan Sanitary District

   3 | of Greater Chicago, 100 East Erie Street, Chicago 11, Illinois.

   4 I           Paragraph 9.

   5 |           The Board of Trustees, pursuant to the aforesaid

   6 & statute, designates and appoints the Chief Engineer of the
     I
      Sanitary  District  or a designate of the Chief Engineer to

      act  as  its representative in matters affecting the ordinance.

   9   The  Chief Engineer  shall be empowered to recommend to the

      Board of Trustees,  standards from time to time,  as the case

      may  be,  and  to recommend what constitutes an improper dis-

 12   charge  of industrial  wastes or  other wastes into the

      sewers,  the  channel system or the  treatment plants of the

      Sanitary District.

 15             ARTICLE IV  - INTERPRETATION OF ORDINANCE

 16             Industrial  Wastes  as  used  in the  Ordinance shall

 17  mean both  "Industrial  Wastes" and  ''Other  Wastes, "  The  term
    I
 18 I "Other Wastes" is included  in order  to  correspond  with
    I
 lg  I language of the statute.
   I
 2Q             ARTICLE V — ENFORCEMENT

 21              Paragraph 1  - Order to Discontinue Discharge-Notice-

 22  | Hearing

 23              Whenever the Board of Trustees shall determine  that

 24    sewage or industrial wastes or other wastes are being dis-
   I
25    charged  into any of  the said waters, water courses or sewers

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                                                       1469



     of the Sanitary District, and when, in the opinion of the



     Board of Trustees, such discharge pollutes the waters, water



     courses or interferes with the operation of the sewerage



     system of the Sanitary District,  such Board of Trustees



     may order whomever causes such discharge to show cause before



     such Board why such discharge should not be discontinued.  A



     notice shall be served on the offending party directing him



     or it to show cause before the Chief Engineer, acting for



     the Board of Trustees, why an order should not be made



 10   directing the discontinuance'of such discharge.  Said notice



 11 I!  shall specify the time and place  where a hearing will be held



 12 I  and notice of the hearing shall be served personally or by



 13   registered mail at least ten (10) days before said hearings;
 14




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and in the case of a municipality or a corporation such



service shall be upon an officer thereof.  The Chief



Engineer, acting for the Board of Trustees, may take evidence



with reference to said matter and the Board of Trustees, after




reviewing such evidence may issue an order by the Chief




Engineer to the party responsible for such discharge, direct-



ing that within a specified period of time thereafter such




discharge be discontinued unless adequate treatment works




shall have been installed or existing adequate treatment



works be properly operated or unless the sewers through which




such discharge is made are connected to a system of inter-




cepting sewers to sewage treatment works of the Sanitary

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  4
  5
 District as directed by the Board of Trustees.  The fore-



 going procedure shall be applicable to the provisions of



 Paragraphs 2 and 3 of Article III hereof.



           Paragraph 2.  Revocation, modification of permit.



           Any permit authorized and issued under the pro-
     visions of this  Act may, when necessary, in the opinion of



     the Board of Trustees as recommended by its Chief Engineer to



     prevent pollution of the waters, water courses or to prevent



     interference with the operation of the sewerage system of



 10 II the Sanitary District, be revoked or modified by such Board



 ll   of Trustees on recommendation of the Chief Engineer, after



 12   investigation, notice and hearing as provided in Paragraph



 13   1 of this article.



 14             Paragraph 3-  Violation of Order to be Considered
 15





 16





 17





 18





 19





 20





 21





 22





 23





 24
 Nuisance.
           If any person,  firm,  association or corporation dis-
 charges  sewage  or industrial  wastes  or other wastes into the



 aforesaid  waters,  water courses  or sewerage  system contrary to




 the orders of the  Board of  Trustees,  the  Board  of Trustees




 may commence action  in  the  Circuit or Superior  Court in  and




 for the  County  in  which said  Sanitary District  is located or




 in which County the  Sanitary  District operates  facilities,




 for the  purpose of having such discharge  stopped  either  by




mandamus or injunction.
25              It  shall  thereupon  be  the  duty of the court to

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specify a time, not exceeding twenty  (20) days after the


service of the copy of the petition, in which the party


complained of must answer the petition, and in the meantime,


said party must be restrained.  In case of default in answer


or after answer, the court shall immediately Inquire into

                   *
the facts and circumstances of the case and enter an appro--


priate judgment order In respect to the matters compfeined of.


An appeal may be taken from such final judgment in the same


manner and with the same effect as appeals are taken from


judgments of the Circuit or Superior Court in other actions


for mandamus or injunction.


          Paragraph 4.  Penalties.


          Whoever violates any provisions of this Act and


fails to comply with an order of the Board of Trustees in


accordance with the provisions of this act, shall be fined


not more than one-hundred dollars ($100).  Each day's


continuance of such violation and failure shall constitute


a separate offense.  The penalties provided in this section


shall be recoverable by the Board of Trustees upon Its


suit, as debts are recoverable at law.

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  1
  2
                                                         1471
                               SECTION 2
                This ordinance shall  be in force  from and  after its
     passage and publication within ten (10)  days in a daily news-


     paper of general circulation within The  Metropolitan Sanitary


  5 | District of Greater Chicago.

   I
  6             Approved:


  7             Frank V/.  Chesrow


  8 I            President,  Board of Trustees of the Metropolitan


  9   Sanitary District of  Greater Chicago.


 10             June  28,  1962.


 11             Attest:


 12             Harry E.  Eaton,  Clerk


 13             Approved  as to form and  legality:


 14 I            John  A. Ricker,  Senior Assistant Attorney


 15 I            L. J.  Fenlon, Principal  Assistant  Attorney


 16 I            George A. Lane,  Attorney
17
18
               Approved as to Engineering:
               E. Hurwitz, Director of Laboratories


 19 |            N. E. Anderson, Assistant Chief Engineer


 20 [            B. A. Scheldt, Chief Engineer

   I
 21 B            Paul B.  Marner, Acting General Superintendent


 22 I       MR. CHESROW:   Also, I have an ordinance for the control
   I

23   and abatement of pollution of water within the Sanitary

   |
24 I  District of Chicago,  adopted by its Board of Trustees on


25   July 11, 1946.

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                                                  1472
      CHAIRMAN STEIN:   This will be included in the record
without  objection.
      MR.  CHESROW:  Thank you.
           ORDINANCE FOR THE  CONTROL  AND ABATEMENT OF POLLUTION
OF WATER WITHIN  THE SANITARY DISTRICT OF CHICAGO, Adopted by
its Board  of  Trustees, July  11, 19^6.
           BE  IT  ORDAINED BY  THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE
SANITARY DISTRICT OF CHICAGO
           Section 1.   Definitions.   For the purpose of this
ordinance, the following definitions shall obtain:
           District:  The Sanitary District of Chicago, a muni-
cipal corporation, organized and existing under the laws of
the State  of  Illinois.
           Board  of Trustees:  The Board of Trustees of The
Sanitary District of Chicago.
           Chief  Engineer:  The Chief Engineer of The Sanitary
District of Chicago or any authorized member of his staff.
           V/aters:  All waters of any river, stream, water-
course, pond, or lake wholly or partly within the territorial
boundaries of the District.
           Sewage:  All water-carried human wastes from resi-
dences, buildings, industrial establishments,  institutions, or
other places in which such wastes are produced, together with
such ground, surface, storm, or other water as may be present.
           Industrial Wastes:  All solids,  liquids, or gaseous

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                                                      U73


     wastes,  resulting from any industrial or manufacturing


  2  operation or process,  or from the development  of any natural
  3   resource.
  4
               Other Wastes:   All decayed wood,  sawdust,  shavings,
  5   bark,  lime,  refuse,  ashes,  garbage,  offal,  oil,  tar,  chemicals,


     and all other substances  except  sewage  and  industrial  wastes.


  7 I           Pollution:   The discharge  or deposit  in or  upon  such


  8   waters of  sewage,  industrial  -wastes, or other wastes  containing


  9   soluble  or insoluble  solids,  of organic or  inorganic  nature


 10   which  may  deplete  the  dissolved oxygen content of such waters,


 11   contribute settleable  solids  that may  form  sludge  deposits,


 12   contain  oil, grease,  or  floating solids  which may cause un-


 13   sightly  appearances on the  surface of  such  v/aters, or contain


 14 1  soluble  materials detrimental to aquatic life, all beyond the


 15 1  content  of such like substances  present  in  an equal volume of


 16  the effluent discharged  from the sewage  treatment  works of the


 17  District.
18



19
               Person:   Any and all  persons,  natural,  or artificial


    including  any  individuals,  firm or association, and any

   J

20 1 municipal  or private  corporation organized  or  existing  under

   I

21 1 the laws of this or any other state or country.


22 I            Section  2.   Permit Required for Installation  or
   |

23  Change in  Sewerage System.  No  sewerage  system which is


24  planned or designed to  discharge  into any of the  aforesaid


25  waters, sewage, industrial wastes,  or other wastes  which  may

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 cause  the pollution of  such waters within the District, shall




 be  installed  unless a written permit for such sewerage




 system has been granted by the Board of Trustees.  No changes,




 additions, or extensions to any existing sewerage systems dis-




 charging into any of the aforesaid waters, including changes




 or  additions  to or extensions of the method  of treating




 or  disposing  of the sewage, industrial wastes, or other




 wastes, shall be made until plans for such changes, additions,




 or  extensions shall have been submitted to and a written




 permit obtained from the Board of Trustees.




          Provided, however, that no permit  shall be required




 within any municipality for any connections, changes or addi-




 tions  to or extensions of existing sewerage  systems that




 receive or may receive only domestic or sanitary sewage from




 a building housing or occupied by fifteen or less human




 beings.




          Section 3.  Plans and Specifications to be Submitted




Before Permit  Issued.  Plans and specifications for any such




 sewerage system shall be submitted to the Chief Engineer befor£




 a written permit may be issued, and the construction of any




 sewerage system shall be in accordance with  said plans and




 specifications.  In case it shall be necessary or desirable




 to make material changes in such plans or specifications,




 revised plans  or specifications, together with the reason for




 the proposed  changes, shall be submitted to  the Chief

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                                                        1475
      Engineer for a  supplemental  written permit.

                Section 4.   May Kequire  Ov:ner  of Sewerage System

      to  Submit  Plans.   The  Chief  Engineer may require any owner of

      a sewerage  system discharging  into any of the aforesaid

      waters to file  with him a complete plan  of the whole or of

  6 II  any part of  such  system and  any other information ana records
    I
      concerning the  installation  and operation of such system.

               Section  5-   Order  to Discontinue Discharge-Notice-

  g I Hearing,  ./henever the Chief Engineer shall determine that

     sewage or industrial wastes or other wastes are being dls-

     charged into any of the said waters and when, in the opinion

 12   of the Chief Engineer, such discharge causes pollution of

     said water, the Chief Engineer may order whosoever causes

 14   such discharge to show cause why such discharge should not
 IS

 16

 17
 18
    be discontinued.   A  notice  shall  be  served  by  the  Chief

    Engineer on  the offending person  directing  such  person to

    show  cause before  the  Chief Engineer why  an order  should not
    be made directing the discontinuance of  such discharge.

    Such notice shall specify the time and place where a hearing

20 ,| will be held by the Chief Engineer, and  notice of such hearing

21
22

23

24

25
shall be served personally or by registered mail at least ten

(10) days before said hearing; and in the case of a municipal-

ity or a corporation such service shall be upon an officer

thereof.  The Chief Engineer may conduct the hearing and take

evidence with reference to said matter and shall thereafter

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                                               1476
transmit a report of said evidence and hearing, together
with his recommendations, for review to the Board of Trustees,
After reviewing such report, the Board of Trustees may issue
an order to the person responsible for such discharge,
directing that within a specified period of time there-
after such discharge shall cease and discontinue unless ade-
quate treatment works shall have been installed or existing
adequate treatment works be properly operated, or unless the
sewers through which such discharge is made are connected to
a system of intercepting sewers and sewage treatment works of
the District.
          Section 6.  Revocation, Modification of Permit.  Any
permit authorized and issued under this Ordinance may, when
necessary in the opinion of the Board of Trustees to prevent
pollution of such waters, be revoked or modified by the
Board of Trustees after investigation, notice, and hearing,
as provided in Section 5 of this ordinance.
          Section 7.  Violation of Order to be Considered
Nuisance.  If any person discharges sewage or Industrial
wastes or other wastes into the aforesaid waters contrary
to the orders of the Board of Trustees, the Board of Trustees
may commence appropriate proceedings in the Circuit or
Superior Courts of Cook County for the purpose of having
such discharge enjoined and abating the pollution of such
waters.

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 17
 18
20
21
                Section 8.  Duties of Chief Engineer.  The Board of

      Trustees hereby designates the Chief Engineer as its represent

      ative officer to:

   4 II           (a)  receive,  examine,  and review plans and other

   5 § data relative to any sewerage systems for which written

      permits  are  required;

                (b)  issue permits for the installation of sewerage

  8 II  systems  or changes,  additions, or extensions  in any  existing

  9   sewerage systems  of  any proposed changes  in plans or spec-

 10   ifications covered by permits  previously  issued;

 11              (c)  require  owners  of sewerage systems to

 12    submit plans;

 13             (d)   conduct  the hearing  and take the evidence pro-

 14    vided for in  Section ^  hereof, and  transmit a  report  of said

 15    evidence and  hearing, together with his recommendations for

 16    review to the Board of  Trustees  for action  thereon;
           (e)  determine what discharge or deposit of  sewage,

industrial wastes, or other wastes, constitutes pollution
 19 9  as herein defined, and establish standards whereby and
wherefrom, as far as reasonably practicable, it can be

ascertained and determined whether such discharge or deposit
22 I  constitutes pollution as herein defined:
   I
23 I            (f)  perform all other duties and exercise all

24 I  other powers required of him and granted under this

25   ordinance.

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                                                        1478



               Section 9-   Right  to  Appeal  or Amend  Ordinance.



     The District  reserves  the  right at  any time and  from time to



     time  to  repeal  or amend  this ordinance or any provisions



     thereof;  and  all  permits are issued subject to  such right.



               Section 10.  Penalties.   Whoever violates any



     provision of  this ordinance,  or any amendment hereafter



     adopted,  or fails to comply  with an order of the Board  of



     Trustees  in accordance with  the provisions of this ordinance,



     shall be  fined  one hundred dollars  ($100.00).   Each day's



 10   continuance of  such violation or failure shall  constitute



     a  separate offense.  The Attorney for  the District shall take



 12   such action as  he may  deem necessary to enforce  collection



 13   and payment of  all penalties, to restrain violations of, and



 14   to compel compliance with, the  provisions of this ordinance.



 15             Section 11.  Effect of Court Decisions.   If  the




 16   provisions of any section  of this ordinance shall be declared




 17   unconstitutional  or invalid  by  the  final decision of any




 18   court of  competent jurisdiction, the provisions  of the  remain-




 19   ing paragraphs  shall nevertheless continue in full force




 20   and effect.



 21             Section 12.  This  ordinance  shall be  in force from




 22   and after its passage.



23             Approved:



24             James M.  Whalen, President,  Board of  Trustees of




25   the Sanitary  District  of Chicago.

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   1
                                                       1479
July 11,
   2 I           Approved as to Form and Legality:

   3 |           James V. Sallemi,  Special Attorney.

   4 I           Ernest Buehler, Attorney

   5 I           Mr.  Colianni moved the passage of the Ordinance.
     I
   6 I           On roll call the motion was carried  by the

   7 following  vote:

   8             Yeas  - Messrs.  Baran,  Colianni,  Friedman,  Kelley,

   9  Maciejewski, Polodna,  Touhy  and  Whalen - Eight.
    ft
  10             Nays  - None.

  11             Ordinance  adopted  by the Board of Trustees of the

  12  Sanitary District  of Chicago  on  July  11,  1946.   Reprinted from

  13  Proceedings, July  11,  1946, pp.  1151-1152.   Based on an Act

  14  to add Section 7bb to  :1An  Act  to  create  Sanitary Districts and

 15 I to remove obstructions in  the  Des  Plaines and  Illinois  Rivers,
                                       it
 16 | approved May 20, 1889, as  amended.

 17 I      MR. CHESROW:  Thank you.

 18 I           The Industrial Waste Ordinance passed  in the  summer

 19 | of 1962 declares as one of its principal concerns the pro-

 20 | hibition of the discharge  "of industrial wastes, which  will

 21   cause pollution, directly into the waters, water courses or

 22   natural outlets within the boundaries of the Sanitary District

 23 |  (Art. Ill,  Para. l).

 24 I            The District sees to it that the Ordinance is
   I
25   vigorously enforced,  first, by attempting to get the volun-

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 10
14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25
                                                  1480
tary  cooperation  of  the  party  charged with violating  the
Ordinance  in  removing  the harmful  condition, and,  if  such
efforts  fail,  by  forcefully  utilizing the sanctions pro-
vided by the  Ordinance against  the offending party.   The
effect of  the  Ordinance  upon the reduction of water pollution
has been highly successful.
           The  District does  not rest on  its laurels.   The
increase in population,  coupled with the vast expansion of
industrial works  and services,  and the tremendous  strides
made  in  the discovery  and development of new scientific
 11   methods and techniques confront the District with new
 12   challenges every day.
 13             The District meets these challenges.
          Among other things,  it  conducts a  vast  and
intensive research program, including assistance  from great
universities in the Middle West,  and, by the way,  is in  the
process of improving and expanding its research facilities,
through its current building program of what will  be the
country's most modern laboratory  facilities, at the cost of
a million and a half dollars.
          Yet, all these facilities and methods would be
indeed futile, if the District did not possess the proper
brain power to run these facilities.  It is  no exaggeration
that the men heading the District's various  operations and
departments are recognized and renowned authorities in their

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      field.


                Thus,  the General Superintendent,  Mr.  Vinton W.


      Bacon,  has been  formerly the chief executive officer of the


      California State Water Pollution Control  Board,  certainly  a


  5 II  man intimately acquainted with water  pollution problems.


  6   The Director of  Laboratories,  Dr.  A.  Joel Kaplovsky,  who came

    I!
  7 I  to  the  District  on  the recommendation of  Mr.  Bacon holds


  8 fl  a Ph.D. degree in sanitary engineering; before his coming  to


  9   the  District, he served  as  Director of the Delaware  Water


 10    Pollution  Commission,  again, a man familiar  with water


 11   pollution  questions.


 12              I  could go on  and  name the  other outstanding


 13   experts of the District whom I have asked to  join me at


 14   this conference,  so that they may, when the opportunity


 15   arises,  answer any pertinent questions and give us the


 15 U benefit of their expert knowledge.  I have prepared for each


 17   of them a short statement listing their qualifications,


 18   and  I herewith ask respectfully that these statements be


 19 I included in the record of the proceedings of this conference.


 20 1      CHAIRMAN STEIN:  Without objection,  they will appear


 2i  at this  point.


 22        MR. CHESROW:  Mr.  Vinton W. Bacon, the General Superin-


 23  tendent  of  the Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater


 24 | Chicago, was selected to his present  position by a citizens1


25 [| committee after a nationwide search.   He  received his degree

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                                                  1432




 in civil  engineering  with honors  from the  University of



 California  in 19^0, ranking  first in  a class  of  over one



 hundred graduating  students.   He  belonged  to  the following



 college honorary  societies:   Tau  Beta Pi,  National engineering



 honor  society;  Chi  Epsilon,  National  civil engineering



 society,  and  Sigma  Xi,  National scientific society, of



 which  he  is an  associate  member.




          After his graduation., Bacon became  a junior



 engineer  on a sewage  disposal  survey  projecting  the future



 physical  and  financial  load  of handling the domestic sewage



 and industrial  wastes from the burgeoning  population and



 booming factories of  the  San  Francisco East Bay  area.



          Next, as  assistant  engineer and  then engineer of



 the Los Angeles County  Sanitation Districts,  he  designed




 extensions to sewage  treatment plants and  trunk  sewers and



 conducted cost  studies  and analyses of the county's treat-




 ment plant operations.



          During World  War II, as a lieutenant and later



 captain attached to the United States  Public  Health Service,




he served as  a  senior sanitary engineer inspecting water




 supplies and  sewerage systems.  V.'hile  in the  army he organ-



 ized and directed a typhus fever  control project in San




 Antonio, Texas.



          Following the war, he directed the  work which led




 to the organization of  the big Orange  County, California,

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 10
 11
 13
 14
 15
 16
 17
18
19
20
21
22
23
      sewage  and  waste  disposal  system and  then moved  to Berkeley,
      California,  to head  a  sanitary  engineering  research project
      for  the University of  California which  looked  into all
      technical aspects of the disposal of  garbage,  sewage and
      industrial  wastes.
               From this  position he moved on to the  California
      State Water  Pollution  Control Board,  to become the executive
      officer of that agency.  He served in that  position from
      April 1950 to October  1956, developing details of state-wide
     policies for the control of water pollution.   In November
     1956, he accepted a  call to Tacoma,  Washington, to serve as
 12   the Executive Secretary of the Northwest Pulp and Paper
     Association.  In that capacity he developed, among other
     things, research programs on pulp and paper processes,
     waste treatment methods, and the influence of wastes on
     fishery resources.  He remained with the Association until
     his appointment as General Superintendent of the Metropolitan
     Sanitary District of Greater Chicago in 1962.
               Mr. Vinton Bacon holds licenses as a registered
     professional engineer in California, Oregon, Illinois and
     Washington.   He is a fellow of the American Society of
     Civil  Engineers,  a member of the Water Pollution Control
     Federation in the Pacific Northwest chapter, of the American
24 ||  slater  Works  Association,  the Technical Association of the
  II
25 I  Pup and  Paper Industry,  Air Pollution Control Association and

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     has been a diplomat of the American Academy of Sanitary



     Engineers since the formation of that organization in 1956.



               The American Society of Civil Engineers honored



     him with its Research Prize in 1956, "in recognition of an



     outstanding contribution to the art of waste water reclam-



     ation."  He was the fourth man to receive this award.



               George A. Lane is the Chief Attorney for The



     Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago, a position



     he has occupied since January 1, 1959.



 10             During his encumbancy in this position, he had



 11   charge of much important litigation, including the Lake



 12   Diversion Case pending in the Supreme Court of the United



 13   States before Special Master Albert B. Maris, the suit in



 14   the U.S.  District Court against General Electric, Westing-



 IS   house and others for damages for overpayment on electrical



 16   equipment bought by the District and numerous other suits




 17   in the Circuit and Appellate Courts and the Supreme Court



 18   of the State of Illinois; also numerous suits in the U.S.




 19   District  Court and before the various Commissions, both




20   State and Federal.




21             His work in connection with the Lake Diversion



22   litigation and the legal aspects of the New Zimmermann




23   Process makes him an outstanding authority on the matter




24   of Water  Pollution and its correction.




25             Mr. Lane has been practicing before the Illinois

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16
17
                                                      1485



      Bar since 1928 and the United States Supreme Court since 1959



      He received his J.D. Degree in 1928 and a B.A.  Degree in 1925



      from Loyola University of Chicago and has been approved by



   4 | committees of the Chicago Bar Association as qualified for a



   5 I position of Judge of the Circuit Court of Cook County.  He is



      a member of the Chicago Bar Association,  the Illinois State



      Bar Association and numerous other policital,  civic and



  8 I  religious organizations.




  9             Colonel Frank W. Chesrow, President of the



 10   Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago,  has held



 II   that position since December of 1958.   Prior to that time,  he



 12   served  as a  Trustee of the District for twelve  years,  having



 13   thus acquired a working knowledge of the  sewage and water




 14    pollution problems  which  beset a modem large metropolitan



 15    area.



                Colonel  Chesrow is a graduate of Valparaiso
     University  (Ph.C.) and of the U. S. Army School  of Sanitary
 18   Engineering.  He brought to his position on the board of




 19   trustees of the Sanitary District many years of experience




 20 U  with sanitation problems.  From 1932 to 1942, as a member of




 21 I  the Army Reserve, he was a sanitary engineer and instructor




 22 I  and consultant on industrial wastes, water supply and sewage




 23 I  disposal.  He want into active military duty in June




 24




25
              In 19^3, he organized and trained the personnel of




    the Il8th Station Hospital, the first station hospital to be

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14
15
16
17
18
    set ip by the  American  forces  in  Europe  during  World  War  II.



    This hospital  played a  leading role under  Colonel  Chesrow's



    supervision, as  Administrative Officer,  in combating a typhus



    epidemic  in Naples,  Italy,  from October  1943 through 1944,



    caused  by the  destruction of sewage and  water facilities.



    During  that period,  temporary  sanitary and water facilities



    were set  up under  Colonel Chesrow's direction and  other



    health  measures  instituted  with such  success that  not  one



    member  of the  armed  forces  became afflicted  with typhus.



10            Continuing in his capacity  as  a  military



11  sanitation  engineer,  he supervised numerous  sanitary



12  installations  for  troops and civilians in  war torn areas



13  and eventually moved into the  General Staff  Command where
    he  served  as  consultant on Sanitary Engineering in Military




    Government.



               As  a result of these achievements,  Colonel Chesrow



    received more  th^n thirty decorations from the American,
    French  and  Italian governments  and  the Vatican which




    recognized  Colonel Chesrow with one of its most coveted




    appointments  as  Papal  Chamberlain - in recognition of this



    outstanding war  record and humanitarian efforts in behalf




22 1 of civilians.



              With this wealth of background,  he came to the




    Sanitary District  as a Trustee  in 1948.   Since that time, he




    has introduced and participated in  the inauguration of many

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 10
 11
 12
 16


 17


 IS


 19


 20


 21


 22


 23


 24


25
      innovations in sewage treatment.  Among these, was the first

      pilot plant for the wet air oxidation for the disposal of

      sewage sludge waste in a large metropolitan area.  This

      plant is one of the many significant contributions to the

      science of sewage disposal that has made the Sanitary

      District recognized throughout the world and described by

      Surgeon General Luther L.  Terry as recently as last December

  8  II  as,  "one of the best,  most efficient,  and most superbly

  9    maintained waste treatment plants in the world."
               Mr. Philip Furlong, Chief of the Maintenance and

     Operation Department of The Metropolitan Sanitary District
     of Greater Chicago has held this position for the last
   I!
13    fifteen years.

14              A resume of the educational and experience

15    background of A.  Joel Kaplovsky, Ph.D.,  Director of Labora-
     tories  and  Research and Development.

              1.   Present position is Director of Laboratories ana

    •Research and Development for The  Metropolitan Sanitary Distric

     of Greater  Chicago  since July 1,  1963-

              2.   Director of the Water  Pollution Commission,

    State of Delaware.   Directed Water Pollution  Commission

    activities  from January,  1950 to  July,  1963*  including

    administration, operations and  research phases.   In

    addition, Alternate  State  Coordinator of Delaware with

    respect to  the Corps of  Engineers  Water Resources Survey of

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                                                      1488
     the Delaware Valley, Co-Author of Delaware's intrastate Water
  2 | Resources Survey (Now Appendix 0 of Corps of Engineers
     Delaware Kiver Report).
               3.  Received B.S. Degree in 1940 at Rutgers
     University, majoring in Chemistry and minoring in Sanitation.
               4.  Received M.S. Degree, majoring in Sanitation
     and minoring in Bacteriology and Microbial Physiology.
 8
IS
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
               5.  Received Ph.D. Degree at Rutgers University,
 9   majoring in Sanitary Engineering and minoring in Limnology.
 10             6.  Member of the Society of Sigma Xi (Research
 H   Society).
 12             7-  Completed three Radiological Health Training
 13   Courses.
 14             8.  Superintendent of Waste Treatment Plant, Upper
     New York State.
               9.  Served as an officer in the Sanitary Corps,
     U.S.  Army,  in the Philippines and Korea.
              10.  Licensed Professional Engineer in the State of
     Illinois,  Delaware,  Pennsylvania and Maryland.
              11.   Member of American Academy of Sanitary
     Engineers.
              12.   Consultant to the Public Health Service.
              13.   Recipient of A.  S.  Bedell Award for outstanding
    personal  service  in the sewage-and industrial wastes field.
25 jj           14.   Member,  Delaware Air Pollution Authority,
    1957-1963.

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                                                       1489

               15.  Water Quality Committee Member of Incodel from

     1950 to 1962.

               16.  Chairman,  Short Course School for Water and

     Waste Plant Operator,  1950-1957.

               17.  Past President, Maryland-Delaware Water and

     Sewage Association.

               18.  Member,  Governor's Delaware  Water Resources

  8 I! Study Committee,  195^-1960.

  9             19.  Member,  Governor's Ad  Hoc  Water Resources Com-

 10 Imittee from 1961  -  1963.

 11             20.  Member,  Delaware Chamber of  Commerce Water

 12  Quality Committee.

 13             21.   Author of 40  technical  and 10 non-technical

    publications  in the field of water and  waste.
14


15


16


17


18


19
              Don R. Brown, Engineer of Waterways Control,

    The Metropolitan Smitary District of Greater Chicago.

              1925 - B.S., Civil Engineering, University of

    Nebraska.   Licensed Professional Engineer in Illinois.

              1926 —Employed by The Metropolitan Sanitary
20 I District of Greater Chicago; assigned to Hydraulic Section,
   I
21 9 (later named Waterways Control Section).

22            1932 - L.L.B., Kent College of Law.

23            Licensed to practice law in Illinois after having

24 | successfully passed the bar examination.

25 J           1954 - Engineer of Waterways Control, The Metro-


    politan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago.

-------
                                                 1490



           Responsible  for the  operation  of  seventy-one  (71)




miles of  Canal System, and  the  controlling  structures influ-




encing same.




           I v/ould like  at  this  time  to  introduce  the gentlemen




from the  District v/ho  have  joined me at  this  conference, and




as I call  their name,  I ask each of them to stand up:




           Trustee John B. Brandt, Purchasing.




           Trustee John E. Egan, Chairman, Committee on




     Real  Estate.




           Trustee Vincent D. Garrity.




           Trustee Valentine Janicki, Chairman, Committee




     on Flood Control  Damage after  Storm.




           Trustee Marshall  Korshak, Chairman, Judiciary




     Committee.




           Trustee Nicholas  J.  Melas, Chairman, Public




     Health and V/elfare.




           Trustee Earl E. Strayhorn, Chairman, Committee on




     Lake  Diversion, Pension,  Personnel  Relations, and  Civil




     Service.




           Mr. Vinton W. Bacon




           Our Attorney, our Chief Attorney, Mr.  George  A.




Lane,  v/ho  is here on my left is the Chief Attorney for  The




Metropolitan Sanitary  District  of Greater Chicago, a position




he has occupied since January 1, 1959-

                          of

           Mr. Lane drafter  our  Industrial Waste  Ordinance.
                          A

-------
                                                         1^91


   l 1 His work in connection with the Lake Diversion litigation and



   2 | the legal aspects of the New Zimmertnann Process make him an


                 '
   3 1 outstanding authority on the matter of the legal aspects of
    I


   4  water pollution and its corrections.



   5 |           Mr.  Joe KaplovsKy is presently employed as Director



     of Laboratories and Research and Development for the Metro-



     politan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago since July 1,



  0 | 19D3,  having received his B.S. and  Ph.D.  Degrees at Rutgers.



  9            Dr.  Kaplovsky served as Director of the Water



 10  Pollution Commission in the State of Delaware, was Super-



 11  intendent of "Waste Treatment Plant in Upper New York, an



 12  Officer in the Sanitary Corps of the United States Army,



 13  served in the  Philippines and Korea.



 14             He is a consultant to the Public Health Service,



 is   recipient of the A.  S.  Bedell Award for outstanding personal



 16   service in the sewage and industrial wastes field; he is a



 17  member of the  Delaware  Air Pollution Authority,  he is the



 18  past president of the Maryland-Delaware Water and Sewage
   ||


 19  Association and also the Governor's Delaware Water Resources



 20 I study  Committee.

   II

 21            Dr.  Kaplovsky,  I might add,  is the author of some



 22  40  technical papers  in  the field of water  and wastes.



 23            Our  engineer  of water control, Don R.  Brown,  has



 24  a B.S.  in Civil Engineering and is  a graduate of law from
   If


25   the Kent  College.

-------
                                                     1492



          Mr. Brown has been with the District for 39 years,




and is presently employed as Chief Engineer of Water Control.




          He is responsible for the operation of seventy-one



miles of canal system and the controlling structure influencing



same.




          Our Chief of Maintenance and Operation, Philip



Furlong, came to us from the United States Navy.



          He is presently holding the position of Chief of



Maintenance and Operation of the District.  He has been with



us for the past fifteen years.




          One of the plants that he is in charge of is the



Calumet Plant that has come under question here.



          V/e have Mr. Norval E.Anderson who came to the



District in 1920, after having graduated from the University




of Illinois.



          He is now with us.  He has be.en Assistant Chief




Engineer at the District and upon retirement of our Chief




Engineer, he was acting Chief.



          Mr. Anderson is presently being retained as a




consulting engineer.



          Before calling on our General Superintendent, Mr.




Bacon, I wish to again emphasize that it is the will and




desire of The Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater




Chicago to cooperate with the Federal Government and State




and other governmental agencies in ridding the waters of Lake

-------
 8





 9





 10




 11





 12





 13





 14





 15





 16




 17





 18





 19





 20





 21
                                                   1493



 Michigan of any pollution; at the same time,  I would like



 to assure this conference and the people living within



 The District's boundaries of the District's continued



 determination to curb and to eliminate water pollution



 within the territory under its jurisdiction.



           Proof of the quality of our operation and  our



 desire to cooperate is best emphasized by public opinion



 expressed by two outstanding authorities.



           One was early In 19^2, Mr.  Gordon E.  McCallum,



 Chief of the Division of Water Supply and Pollution  Control



 of the United States Public Health Service.



           Mr. McCallum said,  and I quote,  "I  think certainly



 since we have been working on the survey,  the operation  of



 the Sanitary District Treatment Works has  been efficient.



 There have been charges that  it has not been,  but our observa-



 tions have not so indicated.   It is efficiently operated."



           Just recently,  last December 1964,  Dr.  Luther



 Terry of the United States Public Health Service  appeared



 in Chicago and gave a talk at the Executive Club.



           I would like to  quote from  his talk just in brief.



           "Today  Chicago has  one of the best, most efficient,
22  I nor/.; efficiently maintained waste treatment plants in the
23
24
25
world.  This modern complex of facilities treats the waste



of five million people and thousands of industries every day.



The modern treatment methods remove approximately 90 percent of

-------
                                                  1494



all organic wastes."



          Now, I would like to present our General Superinten-



dent, Mr. Vinton W. Bacon, the General Superintendant of



the Metropolitan Sanitary District, who is an outstanding



authority in sanitary engineering  and water pollution.



          He received his degree in Civil Engineering with



honors from the University of California in 1940 and is a



member of many honorary and scientific societies.



          During World War II, he was a Captain attached to



the United States Public Health Service as a senior sanitary



engineer.  He was Chief Executive Officer of the California



State Water Pollution Control Board and later Executive



Secretary of the Northwest Pulp and Paper Association, where



he remained until his appointment as General Superintendent



of the District on October 22, 1962.



          Among the many honors he received is one for his



contribution to waste water reclamation by the American



Society of Civil Engineers who honored him with its research



prize in 195&.



          Mr. Vinton Bacon.



     MR. BACON:  Mr. Chairman, conferees, ladies and



gentlemen:



          My name is Vinton W. Bacon.   I am General



Superintendent of The Metropolitan Sanitary District of



Greater Chicago, on whose behalf I am speaking today.

-------
               The ultimate goal as far as The Metropolitan



     Sanitary District of Greater Chicago is concerned is to keep



     Lake Michigan as clean and free of pollution as possible.



     In doing so, it is also the goal of the District to improve



     the quality of the water in the drainage ways which were



     built to divert wastes away from the Lake.   To these ends,



     Illinois and its agencies welcome this conference and record



     their desire to cooperate in every way.



               Since one of the purposes of this  conference is  to



 10   gain and understand factual information on sources of wastes



 11   and their ultimate disposal,  Figure 1 was prepared,  utilizing



 12   the data on Table VI-2,  VI-5 and VI-6 of the "Report on



 13   Pollution of the Waters  of the Grand Calumet River,  Little



 14   Calumet  River,  Calumet River,  lake Michigan, Ttfolf Lake and



 is   Their Tributaries,  Illinois - Indiana," dated  February 1965,



 16   by the U.  S.  Public Health Service.     (See  Page 1495)



 17             Figure I compares waste loads at the source,  that



 18   is.,  the  point of outfall or discharge for six  parameters of



 19   pollution;  population equivalent based on organic load as



20   measured by BOD (biochemical  oxygen demand), ammonia



21   nitrogen,  total nitrogen,  phenollcs,  cyanide,  and oil.



22            The sources are  divided into three areas of origin:



23   Indiana  (as shown at the bottom of each bar  graph,  and in



24   brown on the  colored slide);  the Metropolitan  Sanitary



25  District of Greater Chicago (as shown in the middle  of each

-------
     WASTE
                     Figure   1.
                  LOADS   AT
                SOURCE
  ILL.
 30,400
 M. S. D.
 27,300
  I NO.

998,165
             90
            1.790
             42,066
                        860
                       54,479
                                   1,330
                                   4,781
                                                60
                                               2,890
                                                          9,350
                                                         107,890
B.O. D.
 Population
 Equivalent
          AMMONIA
          NITROGEN
  TOTAL
NITROGEN
                   Industrial  Wastes

NOTE:BARS DRAWN TO DIFFERENT  SCALES
PHENOLICS

Pounds per  Day
CYANIDE
OIL
                                                                    -Pr
                                                                    VO
                                                                    Ui

-------
 9

 10

 11

 12

 13

 14

 15

 16

 17

 18

 19

 20

 21

 22
25
                                                      1496
     bar graph and in orange color on the slides);  and the State
     of Illinois — other than the area within the  Sanitary
     District (shown at the top of each bar graph and in green on
     the colored slide).
               Within the individual  bar graphs,  the  quantities
     are as near to scale as it was possible to achieve.,  but the
     bar graphs are drawn to different scales.  The tabular
     values from which these were  drawn,  as well  as the  next two
     figures,  are given in Exhibit I,  attached to this statement.
               Based on the pollution parameter population equiv-
     alent,  the Sanitary District's maximum load  to Lake  Michigan,
     if all  the wastes originating in the District  were  to reach
     the Lake,  would be 127,300 out of a  total  of 1,155,865
     population equivalent or only 11.0 percent of  the waste load
     at the  source.
              The Sanitary Board represents only  4.1  percent of
     the ammonia nitrogen load at  the  source,  1.5 percent of total
    nitrogen,  21.8  percent of phenolics, 2.0 percent  of cyanides,
    and 7.9 percent of the oil.
              The contributions from  the State of  Illinois area
    outside of  the  Sanitary District  are even  smaller according
    to the data in the Public Health Service Report.
23 |           Now, I am going to extemporize for Just a couple
24 | of minutes.
              If you will turn to Exhibit I and I think generally,
    all of you have a copy of the Exhibit and I know the conferees
    have.                          (See  Page 1497)

-------
                         P»'s4nc^ of C vector.. OA{C.C^O'  -_.  .l
                                              ''
                                                                               ...VbUo4(oiv
                                                                   •     i
                              L U/A5T£   LOADS  To  LAKE
        G
J_"To T A- «-
_; ___ LOAD ..

  "OF
 .REACH tH 6  ..
             l.n.-r..HSD.
             Tl/.. - Ofher
             IU. -
               T((/v» •>•*
                                 \MIiOS-
                                         ToTAU
                           .7.W
                                         in*
1,
   II
1,0*16
        TOTAL.
0)
                                                                               60
{,0

to
                                                                                o.
                                                                                O
                                                                                  Oiu
                                                                                   .10/2-SO
                                                                                  \(9
                                                                                      109
                                                                              , us
    \SS«(m«yiq  Bcirri'fir Pom i'h
   J>U6 ^o record \ow \-Aktt  levMs,  C«/rmtf
    dry u/ctf/hfir.  T/ite u/»V/
                                         mei placed fa  ex
-------
 1
 2
 3
 4
 5
 6
 7             Basically,  this is as stated,  waste loads to
 8   Lake Michigan.
 9
10
11   just  seen and  these  figures  are  from the  Public  Health
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
                                                    1498
           It is on page 11 and I will wait until you  find
 it.
           It is a table in long-hand.
           Now,  these are computations by Norvai£, Anderson*
 upon which the  chart that was shown was based and upon which
 the next two figures will be based.
           The first horizontal  block you will  notice is  the
 total  load from the various sources.  That is  what you have
Service  document.
          Now,  the next  horizontal  block,  labeled  on the  left,
"The Portion  of Load  Reaching  Lake  Michigan."
          This  is after  we  are going  to make some  deductions
as we will explain as we go along.
          Then,  the third figure will be after deductions
have been made  to allow  for the normal lake levels as shown
in the third  horizontal  grouping* and the  deduction for the
closing  of the  O'Brien Lock under certain  conditions which is
the fourth horizontal grouping.
          Now,  this table is backed up by  computations,
Gentlemen.   If  you wish  details, we can furnish that to you if
you find that it would help  in  your deliberations.
          I might emphasize  that some of the figures that we

-------
                                                 1499
used would not agree precisely with some of the figures  in
your report.  We are in the same ball park.  We are in the
same realm of significant figures and we wouldn't quarrel  with
them although we probably In some instances have more de-
tailed information.
          The point is, we are starting with your figures
from your report and we will make adjustments due to
deductions that we think are Justified.
          Now, if you will turn to page 2, I am going to do
this in order to save you from having to come back.
          On the next page, this is an estimate of the  time
of reversal of the Calumet River during dry weather conditions
due to drop in level of Lake Michigan.  (Exhibit 2)  (See
Page 1500)
          I simply want you to note this exhibit so I don't
have to ask you to turn to it again.
          This is the computation made by our Water Waste
Control Engineer, Mr. Don Brown, where we are trying to
figure the best we can how many reversals we have due to low
lake levels.
          Now, if you will turn to the next page, Exhibit 3,
you will notice Exhibit 3 is four pages long.   (See Pages
1501 & ff)
          In Exhibit 3 we list the sixteen industries we
will be talking about in the body of the statement.  But,

-------
   ESTIMATED TIME OF REVERSAL OF CALUMET RIVER DURING DRY WEATHER CONDITIONS DUE TO DROP IN LEVEL OF LAKE MICHIGAN
                     1960
                             1961
                            1962
                            1963
             1964
MONTH
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
HOURS
92
138
189
57
34
38
16
49
102
152
148
147
PER CENT
12.4
19.8
25.4
7.9
4.6
5.3
2.2
6.6
14.2
20.4
20.6
19.8
HOURS
48
29
30
19
30
13
6
6
22
40
45
34
PER CENT
6.5
4.3
4.0
2.6
4.0
1.8
0.8
0.8
3.1
5.4
6.3
4.6
HOURS
60
10
2
19
0
5
4
2
22
38
32
55
PER CENT
8.1
1.5
0.3
2.6
0
0.7
0.5
0.3
3.1
5.1
4.4
7.4
HOURS
121
146
58
83
74
30
30
102
66
75
111
94
PER CENT
16.3
21.7
7.8
11.5
10.0
4.2
4.0
13.7
9.2
10.1
15.4
12.6
HOURS PER CENT
85
127
100.5
47
17
1.5
17.5
31
12.5
12.5
55.5
97
11.4
18.3
13.5
6.5
2.3
0.2
2.4
4.2
1.7
1.7
7.7
13.0
YEAR
1162 hrs.  13.2%
322 hrs.  3.7%
249 hrs.  2.8%
                                                                                      990 hrs.  11.4%
         604 hrs.   6.9% g  £'
                        H  O
Average, 5 years = 7.6%

-------
THE METROPOLITAN SANITARY DISTRICT OF GREATER CHICAGO



               CALUMET WATERWAY SYSTEM


              INDUSTRIAL  PLANT SUMMARY
Company
U.S. Steel
Company




General
Mills



Wisconsin
Steel Co.









Inter lake
Iron Co





Waterway
Lake Michigan
and Calumet
River



Calumet River




Calumet River










Calumet River






(mgd)
Volume of
Discharge
498





0.03




100










25






Ibs/day
BOD
Initial






1,500















3,000






BOD
Final






























BOD
Reduction



























-1-

PE
Reduction





























Present Treatment
2 thickeners for flue
dust. Equipment for
pickle liquor treat-
ment. 17 scale pits.
Oil skimmer. Domestic
waste to sewer
Domestic wastes to
sewer



1 thickener for
Susp. solids
removal. Scale pits.
Oil separator.
$600,000 waste treat-
ment and recircula-
tion system installed
within past 2 years
Domestic wastes to
sewer

2 thickeners. Closed
coke quency system.
Light oil separator.
Domestic waste to
sewer


Status
Preliminary
survey conducted.
Arrangements made
for immediate
technical study

Conducted technical
study in Nov 1964.
Notified of viola-
tion. Under orders
to correct.
Conducted technical
study in Feb 1965.
presently evaluating
samples collected.


tn
R
R
rt
w
Technical study
initiated Nov.
1964. Presently
evaluating data
collected

Continued
                                                                                              VJl
                                                                                              o
                                                                                              H

-------
Company
Republic
Steel Co









Car gill Inc








General
Chemical




Ford Motor
Company










Waterway
Calumet River










Calumet River








Ca lumet River





Calumet River











(mgd)
Volume of
Discharge
85










0.06








4.0





0.5












BOD
nitial











2,500














500











Lbs/day
BOD
Final











700


























BOD
Reduction











11,800

























-2-
PE
Reduction











70,800


























Present Treatment
2 thickeners. Scale
pits. Closed coke
quench water system
Oil separators.
Acid neutralize. -
Domestic wastes to
sewer. Since 1958
2.5 million dollars
spent and $700,000
proposed for near
future .
New treatment
system placed in
operation in Feb.
1965. Oil removal,
plus anaerobic-aero-
bic digestion. Also
Acid neutralization.
$50,000 spent for
new facilities
None. Domestic
wastes to city
sewer.



Treatment systems for
chroma te and paint
wastes placed in
operation in Dec
1964. New sewer in-
stalled in late '64
taking portion of
waste load out of
river. Spent $64,000
on revisions.


Status
Preliminary info.
obtained. .Scheduled
for formal technical
study immediately.







Initiated technical
study in 1963. See
info on "Present
Treatment".





Technical studies
in 1963 and 1964
showed acceptable
wastes. Additional
evaluation to be
made in 1965.
Technical studies
in 1963 and 1964. "
see "Present H
Treatment". H

u
o
O
3
ct
••
Q.
*-'
H
Ul
O

-------
Company
Bulk
Terminals


Catalin
Corp



Spencer
Chemical
Company



Acme Steel
Company







Chicago
Brick Co



Libby,
McNeill &
Libby


Waterway
Calumet River



Little
Calumet



Little
Calumet




Little
Calumet







Little
Calumet



Little




(mgd)
Volume of
Discharge
0.04



1.7





1.5




48








0.2




0.38




Ibs/day
BOD
Cnitial
40



950










2,000
(est)







670




3,600




BOD
Final





























0




BOD
Deduction





























3,600



-3-
PE
Reduction





























21,600




Present Treatment
None



None





In-plant control
only.



Clarifier. Scale
pits. Oil
separators






None




New sewer in-
stalled in
1964


Status . ij
Technical study in
Nov 1964. Notified
of violation. Under
orders to correct
Technical study
in 1964. Notified
of violation and
under orders to
correct

Technical studies
in 1963 and 1964
Plant approved
after minor
corrections made
Technical studies
in 1963. Engineer-
ing studies on do-
mestic waste com-
pleted. Presently
obtaining bids on
sewers for domestic
wastes.
w
Technical study in Kj
1964. Notified of g
violation and under £}
orders to correct. o>
O
Technical study in §
1963. No longer ct
discharging wastes £
to waterways • ,
I

VJ1
O
U>

-------

Company
United
Chemical

Swift & Co

Waterway
Grand
Calumet

Grand
Calumet
GRAND TOTAL

(mgd)
Volume of
Discharge
0.44

0.02
764.870

BOD
Initial
5,900


30,660
Ibs/day
BOD
Final
0


700
BOD
Reduction
5,900


21,300
PE
Reduction
35,400


127,800

Present Treatment Status
Grease separator. Technical study in
1964. Under orders
to prevent all dis-
charges to river,
Will complete $400,000
system in 1965
Evaporation Pond. Keeping under
No normal discharge surveillance.
to river

RGD - 3/3/65
                                                           -4-
M
Ul
O

-------
                                                  1505



again, I must emphasize that I am calling this to your



attention now so that we don't have to come back to this



exhibit again.



          We have, as you will see, listed company, waterway,



volume of discharge, BOD initial, BOD final, BOD reduction



and so forth and we give a statement as to the present



treatment and present status for each industry.



          So, now if you will return with me back to page 2



of the text, we will not have to go back to the Exhibits



again.



          I will read, beginning at the next to the last



paragraph, but, as has been repeatedly testified at this



conference, all of the wastes generated within the Sanitary



District do not reach the Lake but are carried away from



the Lake by withdrawals through the Calumet-Sag Channel.



This is the basic purpose of the Cal-Sag Channel.  It is



only when the Calumet River reverses and flows toward the



Lake that effluents discharged into Calumet River and



tributaries reach the Lake.



          The Calumet River reverses when an offshore wind



drops the Lake by as little as 0.3 foot.  Using the records



of the gauging station at the mouth of the Calumet River,



reversals are indicated by a drop in level exceeding the



drop between the mouth and the Blue Island Controlling



Works.  The number of hours of reversal of the Calumet River

-------
                                                      1505-A



     during dry-weather conditions was estimated and is shown



     in Exhibit 2 for the five-year period, 1960-1964.   It



     summarizes as follows:



               For the year I960, the number of hours of reversal



     were 1,162 or 13.2 percent of the total time.



 6             For 196l, 322 hours or 3.7 percent of the time.



 7             For 1962, 249 hours or 2.8 percent of the time.



 8             1963,  990 hours of reversal, or a total  percent  of



 9   the time of 11.4 for percentage of the total time.



 10             In 1964,  604 hours or 6.9 percent of the time it



 11   was in reversal.



 12             And the average for this five year period is 7.6



 13   percent.



 14             In a subsequent computation, 7 percent will be used,



 15   but this  can be  practically eliminated with the operation  of



 16   the O'Brien Lock.   However,  that part of the river between



 17   O'Brien Lock and the mouth of the Calumet River will  continue



 18   to  reverse under low lake level conditions.



 19             Reversals of flow also take place when the  River



 20   system is in flood.   At a maximum,  this would  occur 5



 21    percent of the time,  and will be practically eliminated with



 22   the operation of O'Brien Lock.



 23              Thus,  without the  operation of O'Brien Lock, it



 24    can be estimated, conservatively,  that reversal  of  flow



25    occurs on the  average,  12 percent or  less  of the total time.

-------
                                                  1506




This means that 88 percent of the waste load generated at



the source in the Sanitary District and discharged to the



Calumet system is carried away from the Lake through the



Gal-Sag Channel.



          Figure 2 shows the resulting waste loads to Lake



Michigan.  The color, position, and scale for the three areas



of the source remain the same as we had in Figure 1.  (See



Page 1507)



          For the population equivalent as measured by BOD,



the Sanitary District contribution is 15,272 out of a total



of 995*383 or 1.5 percent of the wastes reaching the Lake.



          The Sanitary District wastes reaching the Lake



represent only 2.5 percent for ammonia nitrogen, 1.6 percent



for total nigrogen, 7.4 percent for phenolics, 2.0 for cyanide



and 6.8 percent for oil.  Although these are still waters



which the District would like to keep completely out of the



Lake, it is apparent that the quantities are very small



in the total picture.



          But there are means immediately available for



preventing much of the reversal caused by the low lake



levels - the closing of O'Brien Lock when a reversal is



imminent due to a sudden further drop in level.



          As Colonel John C. Mattina, District Engineer, U.S.



Army Engineer District, Chicago, testified at this conference,



O'Brien Lock has been closed for pollution control purposes

-------
                     Figure   2.
WASTE    LOAD   TO   LAKE  MICHIGAN
 3,6,47
 15,272
976,464
    II
            1,086
            42,066
              860
                       54,479
                                   380
                                  4,781
                                              60
                                             2,890
                                                         108
                                                        7,890
                                              107,890
B. 0. D.
Population
Equivalent
AMMONIA
NITROGEN
PHENOLICS   CYANIDE
                      TOTAL
                     NITROGEN
                    industrial Wastes — Pounds per Day

NOTE: BARS  DRAWN TO DIFFERENT SCALES
OIL
                                                                 o
                                                                 -j

-------
                                                  1508




on 12 occasions since January 17, 19&5, at the Sanitary



District's request.  Further, he stated it would be closed



in the future for this purpose at the request of the district.



          Now, Exhibit 1, which I showed you earlier,  shows



the further deductions in waste discharges from the Metropolit



an Sanitary District that will come about through the con-



sistent operation of O'Brien Lock, as the Corps of Engineers



has offered, and the return of normal lake levels, which is



a reasonable expectancy.



          Applying these further deductions to Figure 2,



Figure 3 (See Page 1509) is the result showing the waste



load to Lake Michigan with normal lake level and O'Brien



Lock in operation.  The quantities discharged with these



further Improvements are so small that the Sanitary



District contributions and the State of Illinois contri-



butions are now grouped together and shown in green.



          Going back to the bar graph on the left, the BOD



load of 22 population equivalent is infinitesimal.  The



remaining load is essentially from the direct discharges



to Lake Michigan from the South Works of U. S. Steel



Corporation.



          Now we have demonstrated what a very small portion



of the waste load to Lake Michigan originates in the Sanitary



District.  Although small, the remaining industrial load



must be abated to the fullest extent possible.

-------
                   Figure 3.
WASTE  LOAD  TO   LAKE    MICHIGAN
(NORMAL  LAKE LEVEL  8  O'BRIEN  LOCK)
  22
 973,505
                      860
            981
           42,066
54,479
                                250
                                4,781
                                           60
                                          2,890
                                                   7,701
                                                   107,890
 B. 0. D.
 Population
 Equivalent
        PHENOLICS  CYANIDE
AMMONIA    TOTAL
NITROGEN   NITROGEN
         Industrial Wastes — Pounds per Day
 NOTE: BARS DRAWN TO  DIFFERENT  SCALES
OIL
                                                           O
                                                           vo

-------
                                                   1510

          In July of 1962, the Board of Trustees of the

Sanitary District enacted an industrial waste ordinance

applicable to all of the District, except Chicago.   It was

developed in cooperation with the Chicago Association of

Commerce and Industry and with individual industrial firms.

          Chicago has in draft form an almost identical

ordinance, and it is reasonable to expect its adoption.

          As a part of the expanded industrial waste program,

laboratory facilities have been increased including the

purchase of a better and faster boat and floating laboratory,

and personnel in the industrial waste control section has

been increased.

          Highlights of this program in the area under

consideration are:
                                      (See Page 1511)
          1)  Sixteen industry plant surveys, located as

shown on this Figure 4, have been either completed or are

in the process.  This includes all of the major plants and

dischargers as follows, and our pointer will show them as

best he can:

              U. S. Steel Company

              General Mills

              Wisconsin Steel Company

              Interlake Iron Company

              Republic Steel Company

              Cargill, Inc.

-------
                                                                      1511
                          FIGURE 4.
                               V  UNITED  STATES
       CAU'MKT .\xii INDIANA
           JLMMJOItS
                   STEEL CORP
INT. HARVESTER CO.
       STEEL ^WKS.
        ••'•i-    \\
                                               INTERLAKE  IRON
                        INTERLAKE
                             -IRON
                            REPUBLIC  STEE   CORP
                                   •-          •
    >c>'   /-•
 ^^    •  -   '--::7-
          ..:---:-. | ->-••<
       3 TERMINALS
         :CARGILL
                                                , CHEICAL C<
                       •  -----               .
                       •   "-"--•••;..-..   \\-  \;-" •  -.r-"\\".  ~«sr.'-  •-.-.--V~A
                             -  v  ,vs  \vl'r._5:u>;k  [•'••"-- '••-"
                       \GO BRickicdU^^-^:kii -;.'».v^v,
                                 '         -^    -        •      '
\   '  SPENCER CHEMICAL COT^i^AUN ., CME,

-------
                                                     1512



               General Chemical Company



               Ford Motor Company



               Bulk Terminals



               Catalin Corp.



               Spencer Chemical Company



               Acme Steel Company



               Chicago Brick Company



               Libby McNeil & Libby Company



               United Chemical Company



               Swift and Company



           We state here on the prepared statement that more



 detail on these surveys is given in Exhibit 3 which I  have



 shown you already.



           Within the last two years, three of the industries



 have reduced their BOD load from 22,000 pounds per day to



 only 700, a reduction of 97 percent.  These companies  are



 Cargill, United Chemical, and Libby McNeil & Libby.



           The domestic sewage from all of the steel mills



 is discharged to the Metropolitan Sanitary District



 sewerage system with the exception of one mill.  However,



 this mill is in the process of obtaining bids for installa-



 tion of new sewers in the immediate future.  Thus, they are



 not responsible for any bacterial pollution, with the  one



exception noted.



           The Public Health Service Report stated:

-------
  1
 2
 3
 4
 5
 6
                                              1513

         "Of particular significance, it (meaning

the Calumet Sewage Treatment Plant) treats coking


wastes from the steel plants located along the Calumet

River in Chicago so that phenolic and other con-


stituents of these wastes receive secondary treatment."

     Now, actual conditions are not quite this complete,
    as much as we would hope  so.  These are a few remaining coke


    oven operations which  result in phenolic discharges.  But


    changes in process and installation of new recovery systems


 10  have markedly reduced  the phenolic discharges in the last


    few years.


 12            Three plants, Chicago Brick Company, Ford ^fc>tor


 13  Company and Bulk Terminals, with a population equb/alent of


 14  7*260 will provide correction in 19^5-  Due to the extensive


 15  operations of some of the remaining plants, longer periods


 18  for correction will be required.


 17 1           Because they represent a considerable portion of
   ti
 18 I the industrial complex of the Calumet Area, the general


 19 1 accomplishments of the steel mills deserve special
   I

 20 1 pictorialization.


 21            This Figure (No. 5) shows a part of their waste


 22  control programs, Scale recovery pits are utilized to prevent


23 I tiny particles of mill scale from being discharged into the
   I

24 1 adjacent waterways.            (See Page 151*0


25            This picture shows the scale recovery pit for a

-------
Figure 5: As part of their waste control programs, scale recovery pits are utilized to prevent tiny particles of mill
scale from being discharged into the adjacent waterways. In the photo above showing the scale  recovery pit for
a plant's blooming mill, the stream of water carrying the mill scale may be seen near  the middle of the far end of
the pit. The scale settles to the bottom of the pit and is removed periodically along with oil which has risen to
the surface of the water. The baffles in the foreground have been installed since the pit was put in operation to
increase the pit's scale and oil recovery efficiency.
VJl
M
•pr

-------
  9
 15


 16


 17



 18



 19


 20



 21



 22
                                                          1515


     plant's  blooming mill. The stream of water carrying the mill


  2 | scale may be  seen near the middle of the far end of the pit.


               The scale  settles  to  the bottom of the pit and is


     removed  periodically along with oil which has risen to the


     surface  of the water.


               The  baffles in the foreground have been installed


     since the pit was put in operation to increase the pit's


     scale and oil recovery efficiency.
    utilized only for its waste control benefits.
                                       (See  Page  1517)
23
24
25
               (Figure 6)  As part of the steel company's waste
 10   control programs, large settling basins, such as this one,


 11   are used to remove blast furnace dust from water being dis-


 12   charged into the waterway.    (See Page 1516)


 13             Flue dust, which consists of fine iron oxide


 14   particles produced in the blast furnace, is pumped into the
     settling  basin,  called a thickener.   The  tiny particles of


     iron  oxide  settle  to the bottom of the  basin in a thick


     sludge, and the  cleaned water is returned to the waterway.


              The  accumulated flue dust  is  removed from the


     thickener,  dried and eventually recharged back into the


     blast furnace.  Because of the high  cost  of  producing  raw


    material  for the blast  furnace in  this  way,  this process  is
           (Figure 7)   In the  coke-making process,  coal  is


carbonized to remove coal tars and gases, which, in turn, are


processed through various units and recovered as by-products

-------
Figure 6: As part of the steel company's waste control programs,  large settling basins (such as the above) are used
to remove blast furnace flue dust from water being discharged into the waterway. Flue dust, which consists of fine
iron oxide particles produced in the blast furnace, is pumped into the settling basin, called a thickener. The tiny
particles of iron oxide settle to the bottom  of the basin in a thick sludge, and the cleaned water is returned to the
waterway.  The accumulated flue dust is removed from the thickener,  dried and eventually recharged back into the
blast  furnace. Because of the high cost of  producing raw material for the blast furnace in this way, this process is
utilized only for its waste control benefits.
Ui

-------
                                                                               1517
Figure 7: In the coke-making process, coal is carbonized to remove coal tars and gases,which,
in turn, are processed through various units and recovered as by-products at a steel plant. As
part of the waste control program at one of the steel mills on the Calumet River, the large tanks
in the center of the photo above  are used to recover phenols produced in the coke-making  pro-
cess and prevent them from being discharged into the waterway. Waste water from the plant's
by-product recovery operations is then used to quench the coke when it is removed from the
coke ovens. The plant's closed quench system thus eliminates the need to use water directly
from the river.

-------
                                                   1518
at  a  steel plant.
          As  part  of  the waste  control program at one of the
steel mills on the Calumet River, the large tanks in the
center of the photo are used to recover phenols produced in
the coke-making process and prevent them from being dis-
charged into  the waterway.  Waste water from these units is
then discharged into  the waterway.  Waste water from these
units is then discharged to the District's sewer system for
secondary treatment at the sewage treatment works.  Waste
water from the plant's by-product recovery operations is also
connected to  the sanitary sewer system.
          Although these photos were taken from one company,
Republic Steel, they  are typical of what is being done by
the five companies along the Calumet system.
         (Figure 8)   Molten slag from U.S. Steel's South
Works blast furnaces  becomes a fluffy white material about
the consistency of popcorn when quenched in water-filled pits.
Almost all of it settles.    (See Page 1519)
          However, some of it floats.  Particles that escape
over the weir of the  pits are trapped by rotary screens en-
cased in rectangular  boxes below the weir.  South Works
engineers designed these screens to intercept the popcorn
slag particles before they escape.
          South Works has not been able to maintain a hundred
percent performance all of the time, since the abrasive edges

-------
                                                                                                               U1
                                                                                                               M
                                                                                                               VO
Figure 8: Rotary screens housed in these rectangular boxes trap the slag particles that escape over the weir with the
quenching water. Abrasion of the slag particles however, keeps the screen "down for repair" part of the  time.  Plant
engineers are working on this problem and hope to effect a substantial improvement in the efficiency of the screens.

-------
                                                       1520
     of the slag particles severely damage the screens and have
     kept them down for repairs a minor part of the time.  It is
     during these infrequent periods that the unwanted popcorn
     slag escapes.
               Corrective measures are being taken which we are
     satisfied will bring the popcorn slag problem under control.
     Let me point out, however, that this discharge isn't toxic or
     a danger to health although it certainly could be a nuisance
 9   and aesthetically objectionable.
 10             (Figure 9)  Dust laden water from the blast furnace
 11   gas cleaner flows to these twin 160 foot diameter clarifiers
 12   where the dust settles out in the form of sludge before it
 13   can reach the Lake.    (See Page 1521)
 14             The last two photographs were from U. S. Steel's
 15   South Works although they, too, are typical of facilities
 16   being used by other steel companies.
 17             One steel company has converted over 60 percent of
 18   its acid pickling process to cleaning of steel by shot
 19   blasting or grit cleaning, thus eliminating this proportion
20   of spent pickle liquor.  These Installations are typical of
21    new process operations to eliminate or reduce waste dis-
22    charges.
23              Within the past two years, Wisconsin Steel Company,
24    Division of International Harvester Company, has installed
25    and placed in operation a $600,000 waste treatment and

-------
                                                                                                                  M
                                                                                                                  U1
Figure 9: Dust laden water from the blast turnace gas cleaner tlows to these twin 160 foot diameter clarifiers where
the dust settles out in the form of sludge before it can reach the Lake.

-------
                                                   1522



 recirculation  system.   This has reduced the volume of wastes



 discharged,  besides  improving  the over-all quality of the



 effluent.



      Republic  Steel  Company is currently placing a similar



 system  in operation  for part of its water usage.



          Within  the last month, a new complex industrial



 waste plant  went  into  service at Cargill, Inc.  This system,



 costing $50,000 includes acid neutralization, oil removal and



 BOD reduction  by  use of anaerobic-aerobic digestion ponds.




          Final checks are being made on new waste treatment



 facilities at  Ford Motor Company.  The systems costing



 $64,000, involve  reduction of hexavalent chromium and treat-



 ment  of paint  wastes.




          Acme Steel Company has completed the engineering



 work  on the  installation of new sewers to remove all domestic




 wastes  from  the waterway.  They are currently obtaining con-




 tractors' bids in the  work which is expected to be completed




 in 1966.



          United  Chemical will install a new $400,000 process




 and waste system  which will insure maximum effluent quality.




          Just recently, U.S. Steel Company has made arrange-




ments for a  joint technical study with the Sanitary District




 of its  waste discharges.



          In closing this section on industrial wastes, I




want to make one  point  very clear.

-------
                                                      1523




  1 I            The Sanitary District, under its basic enabling



  2 f  legislation,  and under its Industrial Waste Ordinance,  is



      responsible for regulating and controlling all industrial



      discharges.  This is  why we have spoken today on behalf of all




      the  members of the District in this  study area.   Responsibilit



      for  any  shortcomings  must rest at the feet of the Sanitary



      District,  for we are  the ones  to call the tune.   But, as




      has  been vividly demonstrated,  the waste  loads reaching the
  9
 14




 15
 16




 17




 18




 19




 20




 21




 22




 23




 24




25
     Lake from the District are quite  small  indeed.
10             Now,  let me  summarize  the  position of the  Metro-



11   politan Sanitary District  of Greater Chicago, as  far as  this




12   conference is concerned:



13             First of all, Lake Michigan should be kept as  clean




    and free of pollution  as possible.   To that  end,  the District



    welcomes these hearings and records  its desire  to cooperate
    in every possible way.




              Second, the  contribution of wastes to Lake Michigan




    from within the Metropolitan Sanitary District is very small




    in relation to the total waste load reaching the Lake.



              Third, the contributions will be further reduced




    through abatement of industrial discharges and through




    closing of O'Brien Lock to prevent many of the reversals of




    the Calumet River.



              Fourth, within the limits of available resources,




    the Sanitary District will continue to improve and upgrade

-------
                                                         1524
     the quality of its sewage treatment plant effluents and,
     thus, the quality of water in the Calumet River and Cal-Sag
     Channel system including disinfection of plant effluents
     when water uses so dictate.
               Contrary to the statement of one witness that no
     plans have been made to chlorinate the effluent from the
     Calumet Sewage Treatment Plant, the District's five-year
     plan includes financing and construction sometime within this
 9   period.
 10             Fifth, the location of the dam on the Grand Calumet
 11   River near Hammond, Indiana, is a question for decision out-
 12   side of this conference.  It necessarily involves considera-
 13   tion of the degree of treatment afforded by the City of
 14   Hammond, the degree of treatment afforded industrial wastes,
 15   and the anticipated frequency and severity of accidental
 16   waste spills.
 17             On behalf of the Board of Trustees of the Sanitary
 18   District, I wish to thank you for the opportunity to appear
 19   before you.
20        CHAIRMAN STEIN:  Now, are there any comments or question
21    from the conferees?
22             Mr. Poole?
23         MR. POOLE:  Your figures, Mr. Bacon, on flow reversal
24    estimate an average of 12 percent a year.
25              How do you reconcile those with the report of the

-------
 10


 11



 12


 13


 14


 15


 16


 17



 18



 19


 20



 21


 22
                                                    1525


 Chicago Water Department and the maps that were in back of     j


 the Chicago Water Department and I believe were based on their {
                                                                i

 weekly or bi-weekly observations from collected samples?       ;


           I am looking now at 1959 and I960, they show 49      J


 percent.  1961 shows 46 percent, '62 shows 43 percent,'63,


 40 percent and '64, 38 percent.


      MR. BACON:  Mr. Poole, we're well aware of this dis-


 crepancy or deficiency as you call it.


           In fact, I have had those figures and charts for


 some time,  too,  as was reported by the city.   Their visual


 observation is taken from bridges where  the samples were made.


 We believe  our figures are  considerably  more  accurate because


 they are based upon continuous  recording gauges.


           We have observed  many times that, depending upon


 wind conditions and,  by the  way,  the  prevailing wind  in the


 summer  time  is  from the south or southwesterly  direction,  I


 believe, which certainly  would  tend to set up an  apparent


 current  toward the  Lake,  while  the main  current might be


 the  other direction.


          We maintain this,  though, Mr.  Poole,  whether our
                                                         t

 figures are 12 percent  or theirs  of 46 percent, which is


 three times as great,  that really we  are  still  not much  in
   it
23  I the picture and we intend, as we are saying here, to improve
24
25
further, but we do believe our figures are accurate  at  the


present time.

-------
                                                   1526
     MR. GERSTEIN:  Can I make a comment?
     CHAIRMAN STEIN:  Mr. Gerstein.
     MR. GERSTEIN:  I think the two statements are
reconcilable.
          One represents an entire reversal of the river,
the other you could have a temporary reversal of the river
near the mouth whereas the rest of the river is going the
other direction and these are Just observations at the time,
and at times the river goes back and forth and may not have
much flow either way,
          But, at the time we collected our samples that
was the direction.
          I think that both statements are correct.
     MR. POOLE:  Where is your gauging station?
     MR. BACON:  Right at the mouth of the river — where is
the precise location, Mr. Brown?
     MR. BROWN:  The north side of the river, right at the —
approximately one-half mile from the mouth of the river,
right by it.
     MR. POOLE:  Same location where their observations were
made.
     MR. BROWN:  Same location where the government gauge is,
     MR. KLASSEN:  As a point of information, I think your

-------
   5
                                                     1527

   hydraulic engineer probably could help answer this:


             Is it within the realm of possibility that the


   surface currents would be in one direction and the main flow


   of the stream in another direction?


        MR. BACON:  Without a doubt, this can happen.
 10


 11


 12


 13


 14


 15


 16


 17
6 I           Now, those of us that have -- and I have to


   immodestly put myself in this category—made a lot of float


   tests, you use a bottle float, disk float, six foot float, or


   twenty foot float because you have currents in different


   directions and any wind ;vill set up a different current.


             I would like to point out to the conferees that


   certainly one of the benefits of a conference like this is


   that you try to put together your data and try to be — I
   mean -- point out your position.   You realize that some of


   your methods have not been as sophisticated and refined as


   they should  have been.


             We certainly want to know more about the direction
 18   of the flow in that river beginning very shortly, so, as a


 19   part of our control program, we can do a better job of keeping


 20 B  the river flowing in the direction we want it to.


 2i 1       CHAIRMAN STEIN:  Mr. Bacon, as I understand this, this


 22 §  is f°r clarification.


 23 &            The gauge you have really is the official one.   At

   |
24 §  one point in the  Division of Water Supply and Pollution
   H
25 I  Control -- as I understood this from the study our Department

-------
                                                       1528




     is doing in the Lake here — they have found that observations



     like that may or may not be reliable.   What they have



     developed was sort of a reversed Texas tower,  something that



     goes way down into the water at various levels to pick up



     the flows.




               Now, I appreciate Mr. Gerstein's and your



     statement on that.  But if there is a  problem here and knowing



     as much as  we do about the difficulty  of ascertaining flows



     in the Lake, I think this is an area that might be very well



 10   watched.




 11        MR.  BACON:  We are agreeing with  you, Mr. Stein. .This



 12   is an area  that is so controllable quickly there is no reason



 13   it should not be done, at least to know what direction the




 14   flow is going in.



 15        CHAIRMAN STEIN:  Yes.



 16        MR.  KLASSEN:   One other point, Mr. Bacon.



 17             There has been considerable  discussion regarding




 18   the closing of the O'Brien Lock.



 19            Referring to the map, assuming this O'Brien Lock




 20   was closed,  I think we have testimony  last week that Lever




 21   Brothers  discharges wastes into Wolf Lake.  Would it not be




 22   possible  with the  O'Brien Lock closed,  that waste discharged




23   by Lever  Brothers  into Wolf Lake would find itself into the




24   Calumet River and  then out into the Lake?



25        MR.  BACON: Yes,  they are the same as any of the other

-------
                                                        1529
      nine industries located along that area.
                I am not intimately familiar with the details  of
    I
  3 | operation, but you must remember that, if the Lake — this
      would be when the Lake dropped and when the reversal was
      uncontrollable,  you might be talking about a drop of 6 inches
      or a foot.
                So,  therefore,  you are talking about a quantity of
      water equal to a depth of about 6 inches or a foot.   The
      whole river isn't flowing out and another thing to keep  in
 10  I!  mind is  that most of the  industry — they first of all pump
 11
 12
 13
 14
 15
 16
 17
24
25
 their water out of the river,  putting their wastes back in
 so  you have a circulatory system.   It is not as if they are
 reaching out into the Lake,  bringing fresh water in,  polluting
 it,  putting it into the river  where it would all have to go
out.
     MR.  KLASSEN:   This is  the  particular reason I mentioned
Lever Brothers  — because,  I think they are taking their
 18   water from the Lake and putting it into Wolf Lake.  Therefore,
 19   it would not be recirculated.
 20        MR. BACON:  That is correct.
 21        MR. CHESROW:  We are talking about 12 percent, 46
 22 I  percent, regarding the reversal.
 23             How serious would it be if our figures were off,
say 200 percent?
     MR. BACON:  As I mentioned, there is validity to the

-------
                                                      1530




     type of observation that has been made by the city and  ours



     so, if it were 24 or 36 percent,  what I tried to portray



     here is that, although we are small in the total picture,  we



     believe in this area,  as far as the Lake is concerned — and,



     that's even that small portion is quite readily controllable



 6   if not practically completely controllable, if nature will



 7   just cooperate with us a little this coming summer.



 8        MR.  CHESROW:  Thank you.



 9        MR.  POOLE:  I have another question.



 10        CHAIRMAN STEIN:  Yes.



 11        MR.  POOLE:  Mr. Bacon,  on page 8 - you referred to



 12   Republic  putting in a  system for  recirculation for part of



 13   its water usage.  What happens to the rest of it?



 14        MR.  BACON:  Is there a  representative here?



 15             Do I have the right to  call upon the Director



 16   of Laboratories or upon a representative of the company?



 17             It is a detail beyond me, Mr. Poole.



 18        A VOICE:  Mr. Chairman  —



 19        CHAIRMAN STEIN:  I am afraid we are going to have  to



20   call  a halt.   If we were to  have  answers from the people



21    here,  this  would be fine. The District can call on all the



22   Industries  to make statements. We have decided not to.



23              As you know, the procedure here is Just for the



24    one making  the statement and the  conferees.



25         MR.  BACON:  May I then  have  the permission, Mr. Chairman,

-------
   3
                                                   1531


of getting the answer and entering it into the record at


this point to Mr. Poole.


     CHAIRMAN STEIN:  Yes.
   4 a      MR. BACON:  I will do that.


           MR. POOLE:  I have a question or two regarding the


      Republic Company.


                I was a  little frustrated or disappointed with the


      Health,  Education,  and  Welfare  table.   I  believe  it's VI -


      Vl-a, which indicates no population equivalent  from Republic


 10   and no ammonia  nitrogen and no  oil.


 11             The latter is the one that bothers me,  specifically


 12   in that  it  has  been my  observation  that it is practically im-


 13 1 possible to  operate a steel mill without  some oil getting


 14 I away and I  think my suspicions  were  confirmed,  as I remember,


 15 I by one of the photographs that  somebody introduced  which  did


 16  show oil in  the vicinity of the Republic  plant.
 17
         I wondered if you are in a position to clarify
 IB   that quandary that I am in?


 19        MR. BACON:  Well, I mentioned earlier in the statement,
   a

 20 |  in testimony,  that we do not necessarily agree with all

   I
 21 I  these figures  either.


 22 I            We feel there are some omissions on BOD and


 23   oil,  but we felt that it was proper since this was the basis


 24   of the calling for the conference,  to work from Table VI and


25   all its components.

-------
                                                 1532
           That's  why  we  drew upon  it,  too; but, we feel
 there  are  wastes  that are not  shown  here and they are wastes
 of  consequence which  we  have under surveillance and will have
 under  an abatement program where necessary.
     MR. POOLE:   I was a little concerned also, this goes
 back to — maybe  I should have asked these during the Health,
 Education,  and Welfare presentation, about pickle liquor
 from the steel milles, on the  Illinois  side in that I
 assumed 	 I may be  wrong,  but I  assumed you did not take
 pickle liquor into the MSD system  and  I wondered what was
 happening  to all  the  pickle  liquor from the Chicago steel
 mills.
     MR. BACON:   Mr.  Kaplovsky, he is  one of our team.
     MR. KAPLOVSKY:   These wastes  are  neutralized.  Like
 any mill in Indiana,  these are passed  back into the stream.
     MR. POOLE:   They are neutralized  before thay are put
 back?
     MR. KAPLOVSKY:   Yes, this was pointed out.
     MR. BACON:   May  I,  on this point,  now, this is an
 important point,  in connection with what Mr. Poole is saying
 in that the Table Via, the quantities  of industrial wastes,
whether it  is complete in every respect, we note, for
 Instance,  the conferees  in talking about the Sanitary
District,  nothing is  said about our 95th Street overflow
storm water pumping station.

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                                                       1532-A

           MR.  POSTON:   I am all  ready  to ask you something about

   2 | that.

   3 I      MR.  BACON:  Thank you.
    I
   4 I      MR.  POSTON:   I didn't  want you to feel left out.
  5
MR. BACON:  I would like to pass this out to the con-
     ferees  (indicating).  It is something we have done subsequent

     to the preparation of the statement, but again, we started

     out with the Public Health Service figures and made our

  9 [I adjustments thereto, but there is something that should be

 10  added into the record here, because you will recall, in

 11  Figure 3> we came down to a population equivalent of 22.

 12  (See Page 1533)

 13            Actually, that population equivalent would be —

 14  would have been zero, except we were subtracting slide rule

 15  quantities and it came out there were 22 left over.  Starting

 16   with the Public Health Service figures,  the subtraction

 17   theoretically should have ended up as zero.  You know that
   |
 18   isn't the case, because  we have a 95th Street storm water

 19   pumping  station.

 20 I            This table has been passed out to you and prepared

 21   by  our Norval   Anderson,  and,  Mr. Chairman,  may this be
   If
 22   entered  into  the  record  at  this point?  (See  Page 153*0

 23        CHAIRMAN STEIN:   Yes,  without objection,  it will be

 24 I  entered.

25         MR. BACON:   Storm pumpage  from our  95th  Street pumping

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WASTE   LOAD  TO  LAKE  MICHIGAN
                                     108

ILL.
3.647
PT/ frj ?r'i}77 •'^Z
15,272
M.S.D.
IND.
076, ^YANlUt OIL
V J
        (DOMESTIC  AND INDUSTRIAL WASTES — POUNDS PER DAY)
                                               VJ1
                                               (JJ
                                               U>

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                                          1534
TLc Vvu^/w^^^^^^-^^^x^u^ "L
                  >
       "T^TAL
               0,4-
                          , /
                o,/
6,7    o.i
                        •2-0


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 6
 7
 8
 9
 10
 11

 12
 13
 14
                                                     1535
station at the  Calumet River and you will see, for 6 years,
from  '59 to  '64, we have reported from the records of the
District, the total hours pumped in 1959, that pumping station
pumping storm water which had mixtures of domestic sewage in
it operated  100.3 hours.
          In I960, 36.5 hours.
          In 1961, 26.1 hours.
          In 1962,  9.7 hours.
          In 1963, ^7.2 hours, and
          In 1964,  6.7 hours.
          Those are the hours that the pumping plant operated
overflowing  into the Calumet River.
          Now, we have not correlated those pumping hours as
to whether the river was flowing toward the Cal-Sag or whether
 15  it was flowing lakewards, so this would be a part of the
 16  total determination.
 17            But, assuming that it all went lakeward, you will
 18  notice in the last column the five day BOD to the river in
 19  pounds and that's based upon a storm water concentration of—
 20  overflow or pumping of 60 parts per million, which is a
 21  rather generous allowance for storm water overflow.
 22            In other words, it is on the safe or conservative
 23  side.
 24            When you go to the mathematical computations shown
25  on the sheet, the population equivalent of the 95th Street

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                                                        1536

      pumping station is  about 2530  persons,  if all of it went to

      Lake.

          MR.  POOLE:  I  don't believe, Mr. Bacon, you can average

      situations like that; that is, where you got a storm water

      station that operates X  number of hours per year and where

  6 |  the experiences here have been that many of the difficulties

      are periodic in nature and caused by what normally would be
  8
  9
 10
 11
 12
 a slug effect.

      MR.  BACON:   That is correct,  Mr.  Poole.

      MR.  POOLE:   I don't believe you are  being  quite  kosher

 when you  come down to the end,  taking  the pound as discharged

 intermittently, whether it be through  the storm water pumping
   ii
 13 1 station or industries, and dividing that by 365 days.


 14 |      MR. BACON:  We recognize —
 15


 16


 17


 18


 19


 20


 21
     MR. POOLE:  As  far as the Water Department is concerned,

it doesn't work that way.

     MR. BACON:  Well, I think we on this side of the line

would agree, it is the slug effect we are worried about.

     CHAIRMAN STEIN:  Mr. Bacon, let's get back to that
point.
          I appreciate these figures from Norval E.
22 |  Anderson,  they probably are going to be very valuable,  but

23   how much of  this  do you want in?
24
          How about that stuff in the circle at the bottom
25   in the record?

         MR. BACON:   I  think that  is  his  computation —leave  that

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  2
  3
 10
 11
 12
 13
 14
 15
 16
 17
                                                    1537
out.
     CHAIRMAN STEIN:  O.K.
     MR. BACON:  Only those portions necessary to make it
clear, sir.
     CHAIRMAN STEIN:  Mr. Bacon, I do think that Mr. Poole
has raised a good point.  I think for purposes of the
record we can make that clear now, because I had that noted
for a point to mention later.  The same type of thing, it
seems to me, might apply on your graphs where you add 88
percent and then you average it, then you had a low lake
level.   The point is that 88 percent doesn't seem to me can
be equated with total pounds on a yearly average.  Eighty-
eight percent refers to 80 percent of the time.
          Now, assume these figures are correct and, if
we take the Water Works' figures, they would be much higher.
          If we are going to get — in other words, you
are getting the full pollution load if you are assuming
18  that, say, 12 percent of the time — this is not an average
19  and when we deal with slugs and point of time, let's suppose
20  the full pollution load comes out during the summer when
21  people are using it.  This is what we have to worry about.
22            The other point that is closely related to that
23  is the notion that we can assume normal lake levels.  The
24  difficulty is that the people on the Great Lakes here, as
25  those living on the shore of any other river or any other

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                                                       1538

      body of water,  have  to live with  certain extremes.  You

      just can't assume normal  lake levels, nor can we equate If

      we are  getting  a slug  of  pollution a portion of the time

      that this is always  innocuous.  The example we cften use, let1

      suppose you get a load of pollution coming into a swimming

      beach on say the first eleven days in August and not much

      pollution coming out in December, January or February.  If

     you  use  your average all year long, you are going to find the

 3   pollution is not too bad.  But, you have effectively destroyed

 10   the use  of that beach  for swimming.  I think, when we talk

 11   in terms of time analyses, we should really consider what

 12   we have  in mind.

 13        MR. BACON:  Mr.  Stein, if you will look at Exhibit 2,

 14   you will find although we eventually come to an average,

 15   we have given you,  by years,  by months,  the number of hours

 16   of reversal under the past conditions.   We can also show you

 17   with work sheets,  as  I offered  to you,  should you want them,

 18   it's  two hours  here,  four hours  there.   We have some reversal

 19   on 30 hours  duration  within the  months.   All of those figures

 20   are available and  all of us would  grant  that it is the

 21    slug  effect  that is the blow  that  really we  are interested

 22    in, in practically all  instances,  but we have told you that

 23    blow  is  not going to  be there because, in past  years,  we

 24    did not  have  O'Brien.
  I
25 «               Thanks  to a  cooperative arrangement  with the

-------
                                                        1539
     Corps of Engineers, they will close at any time we ask from
     here on in,  and the Lock will be in permanent operation as
     a navigational facility.
                   I think Colonel Mattina said,  beginning in 1965,
     so we have a protective  device here that  is  operable  and
     operating now and,  although the statement I  have here and
     the Colonel  said,  I think it was,  12 times -- Mr.  Brown,
     how many times have we closed the  Lock since the statement
     was made by  Colonel Mattina?
 10        MR. BROWN:  Three times, I think.
 11        MR. POOLE:  O'Brien does not  give complete protection
 I2   because there are  eight  or nine industries there between
 13   O'Brien and  the Lake.
 14        MR. BACON:  If you  have any long duration of flow
 15   toward  the Lake,  then  you will be  peeling off of that top
 16   and any industry pumping into it directly from the Lake
 17   will  have to spill  in  that direction,  yes, sir.
 18        MR. POOLE:  I  will  yield to my colleague.
 19        CHAIRMAN STEIN:   I  want to correct the  record here.
20                 I don't  have any doubt of what has been said,
21   but on  the question of the O'Brien Lock,  as  I recall  Colonel
22   Mattina's statement, we  did not have any  definite statement
23   from  him.
24                 I wonder if this would be used for navigation
25   because  he talked  in terms of it not being necessarily

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 11




 12




 13




 14




 15
      effective for navigation as long as you have the limitation



      of the Blue Island Lock and Colonel Mattina, as far as I



      understood his statement, very carefully did not indicate



      when this would be in full navigational operation.



                    The second point I have to make,  I appreciate



      this point of Colonel Mattina because we have the same one



      in our establishment, possibly you do,  too.




                    He was careful to indicate that he wasn't



      sure,  as  much as he  would love to  cooperate  and  do  this,  that




 10 (I  he  was  fully  staffed up  to run that Lock for water  quality
control purposes and I think, as I understood and I am




just trying to get this in place in the record.



     MR. BACON:  He stated, if I remember correctly, and we




can check this in the record, that there are staff to




operate it as a pollution control facility at our request,
 16   but they are not staffed to operate it as a navigational



 17   facility.



 18                 Now, there is something else that is extremely



 19   important and I don't want to see this O'Brien Lock minimized



 20   as a pollution control facility, because it is true, as has



 21   been brought out here, that we have nine some industries on



 22   the lake side of O'Brien Lock which continue to discharge



 23   when the Lock is closed.



 24 I                But,  from a bacterial point of view, the pro-



25   tection should be quite complete because our treatment plant

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 2
 3
 4
                                                   1541
at Calumet, which does not chlorinate is located —
     MR. POOLE:  But, the 95th —
     MR. BACON:  On the storm flow pumping station.
              Now, again, we pointed out the number of hours
    and the quantity of flow for the 95th Street pumping station.
                  One thing else that should be entered into the
    record is that in the long-range program and not so long-
    range either -- probably within a two or three year period or
    four at the most -- the 95th Street Pumping Station will be
 10  abandoned, with the construction of the Southeast Pumping
 H  Plant which would be located adjacent to O'Brien Lock and
 12  which will discharge either side of O'Brien Lock.  So in that
 13  case, most of the time, I would imagine, except severe storms,
 14  when the whole works has to be opened up, that the discharge
 15  would be on the landward side of O'Brien Lock to 95th Street,
 16  although sometime in the picture it is destined, and the
 17  design and plans are to replace it with the 95th Street --
 18  excuse me, with a Southeast Pumping Plant within a few years.
 19       MR.  POOLE:  I have one other question about Cargill sewage
20                As I remember the Health, Education, and
21  Welfare Report indicated they had a septic tank and I was
22  sort of intrigued when, by those computations of those you
    got down to an ultimate population equivalent of 22.
                  It is pretty good, I think from a computing
    standpoint I wondered what is happening to the Cargill sewage.

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                                                        1542
      You mentioned they have put their industrial waste plant into
      service, does it take care of the sewage,  also?
           MR. BACON:  Dr. Kaplovsky, do you have that answer
      ready?
           MR. KAPLOVSKY:   This CargUL plant reported  as having
  6 |  8500 population equivalent,  as I recall our examination,
      showed that  on the closer, it was composites that had about
      12,000 population equivalent and this plant had been
  9 I  completed and put into  operation and  it has an  aerobic and
 10   an  anaerobic system  as  you indicate in here.
 11                  Now, this is to the best of  my knowledge and
 12    includes total  waste load.
 13  I      MR.  POOLE:   That takes  the sewage also going to the
 14

 15

 16

 17

 18

 19

 20
22
23
24
25
 septic tank?
      DR.  KAPLOVSKY:   At the moment,  this is the best of
 my knowledge.
      MR.  BACON:   Well,  we will make  a check with the Chair-
 man's permission  and enter it into the record,  if that's
 not  correct.
      DR.  KAPLOVSKY:   I  might point out the  total employees
21 I  at this plant is 150 and it is not very large.
     MR. POOLE:  Still,  6 X  22  isn't  it?
     MR. BACON:  You understand, Mr.  Poole, you are  under-
scoring a point we wanted to make.  We started  with  the  PHS
figures and if the figure, the  initial figure didn't have
anything in it, and we know everything isn't in there,

-------
 then you are  going  to  end up  in some cases by the process



 of elimination,  if  they didn't have any BOD in the location



 to begin with, you  will end up with a zero.



               This  is  not in  criticism of those figures,



 because  we  feel  we  are in the same ball park, and by a very



 comfortable margin.



      MR.  POSTON:  What water quality criteria do you have for



 the  area  of your jurisdiction or what goals?



               What  do  you try to attain in terms of water



 quality?



      MR. BACON:  You must remember that the North Shore



 Channel  of the Sanitary and Ship Canal and Cal-Sag were built



 not  at that time as recreation and water waste or sources



 of drinking water,  they were built as a part of a drainage



 system.



              At one time they depended solely upon dilution



 for  treatment process, meaning they received raw wastes



 under the 1930 Decree  of the Supreme Court, by dilution



water was cut down  to  the extent we had to have built and



operate three secondary type treatment plants, based on the



activated sludge process.



              So, our  standard at the present time within



the District's secondary treatment equipment to the activated



sludge process for not only our three plants but for all of



the  — we have also I  think nine or ten smaller plants,

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                                                         1544

      then we have supervision or jurisdiction over seventy some

      institutional sewage treatment plants.   We require of all

      other plants chlorination in addition to the secondary

      treatment.

                    So,  our standard at the present time — I,

      without relating it  to receiving water,  Mr.  Boston,  would  be

      secondary treatment,  some with chlorination,  some  without.

           MR.  BOSTON:  Then you would expect  all  industries within
    j
  9   this  area to  provide  equivalent  facilities?

 10        MR.  BACON:  This is  our ultimate goal,  because  we were

 11   treating  all  discharges alike.   In due time,  we would  expect

 12   all of  them to get to the same level  of  treatment.

 13                If they cannot tie into our system,  to which

 14   of course we would provide  the treatment.

 15       MR.  POSTON:  Do  you  have a  particular requirement for

 16   beaches that you would want  to protect?   What kind of

 17   quality — I am  thinking  about Calumet Park Beach.

 18        MR. BACON:  Mr.   Poston, our goal is  to keep the wastes

 19   away from the beach and the two locations we have had  our

 20   last diversion into or bypassing into Lake Michigan  in 1961,

 2i I  at the- North Shore Channel at Wilmette, at the Chicago
22
23
24
25
River Locks.
              As we pointed  out,  here  we  regularly have
these reversals at the Calumet River, but  our goal  is,  as

we are stating here, to keep the pollution away  from

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  2
 3
     Lake Michigan.
MR. POSTON:  I am a little confused by the way we — -



MR. BACON:  We wouldn't set the bacteria standard,  I
     say, we probably look to others for help on that health



     matter.




          MR. POSTON:  In view of all of this closing and talk of



     closing of Calumet Park Beach, I wondered whether or not you



     had looked into any and were aware there were high coliform



     counts in that area?




 10        MR. BACON:  Yes, I heard this testimony and very




 11   dramatic and spectacular testimony.  It brought home the



 12   point very well, and this, of course, is one of the things




 13   that is stimulating us to do what we are doing not only in




 14   trying to keep our Calumet effluent out of that area and I




 15   might add,  I don't know what we are going to do about 95th



 16   Street in the meantime, meaning obsolescence and abandonment.



 17                 Certainly, if worse comes to worse, we, like




 18   all others  that operate combined sewerage systems are tying




 19   in  systems  of storm water overflow treatment.



 20                 In fact, we are getting quite anxious to get




 21   some money  from you for that.



 22        MR.  POSTON:  I am — when you talk in your recommendation




23   No.  5 that  the  location of the dam on Calumet River as being




24   outside  of  the  jurisdiction of this conference, when Hammond,




25   which is  a  town of some 140,000 people, 147,000 people with

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      discharge of some 30 million pounds of sewage a day, treated


      sewage, and normally this sewage goes directly west, would


      you point that out?


   4        MR. BACON:  Right, at that divide line.


   5        MR. POSTON:  That normally flows west.


   6                 No\7, the plan is to make that  flow to the east


      and this would put treated sewage back into  Lake Michigan and


   8   this is difficult for me to understand.


   9        MR. BACON:  Well,  now,  we have to be  real careful  and


 10 &  patient here because  you are asking us to  take one  block of


 11   sewage  from Indiana,  and,  if we say one  is all right, then


 12   we  could say more is  all right and  then, eventually, and


 13   we  all  know that  hydraulically,  this is  possible, all of


 14   those wastes could come through our system and this is


 15   something that  we  believe  it Is  under someone  else's


 16   jurisdiction and  it should be  completely handled  by that


 17   other jurisdiction.


 18                 As  I pointed out,  and maybe  you  didn't read


 19   between the lines, when you  talk about bringing more sewage


 20   into the Sanitary District's system,  if you are talking


 21   rationally as v;e do, you are then talking about do we need


 22   any more or any additional diversion water and the Sanitary


 23  |  District is not asking in its present case for any additional


 24  |  diversion  water.

   9
25  H                We will rest our case with what we have, what

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     we can do in improving our system.



                   This question you are raising about Hammond,



     it impinges exactly upon that case.



                   I would like to add  one other thing, our



     waterway control engineer, upon whom I rely and do rely, says



     that the bulk of the flow, the vast bulk of the flow is not



     westerly now, but in an easterly direction from that Hammond



     discharge.  Incidentally, it really is a local decision



     among Indiana, Illinois, the Sanitary District, if we can



 10   make a working arrangement with Hammond to put the dam so



 11   that its waste comes through our system.  That is why we say



 12   this is our decision.



 13                 If we don't take it  in our channel system,



 14   maybe Hammond will have to go to treatment with chlorination



 15   which is technically and economically feasible.  So, they



 16   are not being deprived of anything and I think we are, Mr.



 17   Poston.  I must have this record clear, completely consistent



 18   in this position that ia expressed here and it is completely



 19   consistent with our lake diversion testimony and position.



 20        MR. POSTON:  It was brought out by Indiana people that



 21   normally,  under normal lake levels, the flow was from the



 22   east  to the west.   The normal direction of the flow today,



23   during normal lake levels — I agree that the level of the



24   lake  which is very low now might have a tendency to let the



25   flow  go in this other direction.

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  9




 10




 11




 12




 13




 14




 15




 16




 17




 18




 19




 20




 21




 22




23




24




25
                                                   1548




      MR. BACON:  That little dam at Hammond will be sure



 to make it go easterly.




               I should add that the predictions and, with



 your permission, Mr. Chairman, I would like - and I think



 it would not only be of value, but of interest - to ask Mr.



 Brown to make a statement of what the anticipated lake levels




 are.



      CHAIRMAN STEIN:  You made the point.  I didn't know this




 was a straw man, but if you think your point is a valid one.



 We don't nave jurisdiction over that dam location.



               I don't know whoever said we did, or whether




 you think we  have  jurisdiction or not,  but we are sure not




 going to solve  it.



               I know you engineers love to talk about dams




 until the  cows  come  home.   But I suggest we might try to



 get  on,  because  if we get  into a discussion —




      MR. BACON:  You are right,  sir.




      CHAIRMAN STEIN:   I don't  know.




      MR. BACON:  There is  no place here we feel —




      CHAIRMAN STEIN:   Again, for the purpose of the  record,




 I  think on that  65 days you talked about,  the  Thomas O'Brien




 Lock  — I have Colonel Mattina's  statement,  he says  as




 expected that the barrier  dam, and I am not  making any




guesses as to locations, can be  completed  in fiscal  year




1966.  This means a normal calendar year,  talking 1967,

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 possibly  in  setting  up  in any future estimate for dams, this



 is  an  optimistic estimate and may be ahead.  But, according



 to  Colonel Mattina,  he  indicated that the construction of



 this would have to come first.  This will permit removal of



 the Blue  Island Lock and the operation of the Thomas J.



 O'Brien Lock and controlling works or full navigation —



     MR.  BACON:  Understand, we are not talking about naviga-



 tion.  We don't care.   We are talking about pollution control.



     CHAIRMAN  STEIN:  I know that.



     MR.  POSTON:  I  think Colonel Chesrow pointed out one



 of  the goals of the  Sanitary District is to keep the waters



 as  clean  and pure as possible, and protect the health of the



 people.



               I am sure that the District will do what is



 required  to  keep this water that way.



     MR.  BACON:  I think the record of the District in its



 total operation — we are not talking about —



     CHAIRMAN  STEIN:  Looking at Colonel Mattina's statement,



 he  also pointed out  that permits were issued by the Depart-



 ment of the  Army to  certain steel companies, permitting



 discharge and  disposition of flue dust and industrial solids



 in  the Calumet River and requiring payment of an annual



 amount of $25,000 for its removal.



               This payment is to be reduced as the companies



decrease the deposit of solids into navigable waters and you

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  8





  9





 10




 11





 12
                                                   1550




 outlined  the  industrial  waste  on  this in your program of —



 you  convinced  the Corps  of Engineers you decreased it, so that



 they decreased the rate.



     MR.  BACON:  Mr. Stein, you are a counsellor and I am not.



 I only know that in my experience in water pollution control



administration the local body  can have an overriding or a



more stringent or more demanding requirement than some other



element of government and the more demanding one controls.



               I believe, although we haven't progressed this




far,  if we need to make a more severe demand on the industry



for some removal that we have the right to do it under our




Industrial Waste Ordinance.
 13 |      CHAIRMAN STEIN:  I fully agree with you.




 14 I      MR- BACON:  I don't think they can give them a license



 15   to pollute if we have control and responsibility of all



 16   surface and underground waters.  I agree that something




 17   additional has to be done.



 18        CHAIRMAN STEIN:  That wasn't the thrust of the question.




 19        MR. BACON:  I am sorry.




 20        CHAIRMAN STEIN:  The point was that,  based on the



 2i   waste they are putting in,  the Corps was demanding $25>000




 22 fl  a  year.




23                 Now,  if we had a program of waste reduction,




24   presumably the Corps is  ready to  cut that  rate  from $25,000




     a  year to  something else.

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  4
 5
 6
 7
 10
 11
                                                   1551
              But, the point Is, you are going to have to
show the Corps of Engineers you are putting less of this
material in the river.
     MR. BACON:  I don't know the answer to that question, sir
     CHAIRMAN STEIN:  Thank you.
              Are there any other questions?
     MR. KLASSEN:  Purely to make the record as complete as
possible, last week the idea was advanced by, I believe,
one of the Indiana, industries of taking the wastes from
Indiana and, with sufficient diversion, flush them down
through Illinois.
 12                 Also,  I  believe  it  is a matter  of  record  that
 13  the Sanitary District  feels that  dilution, diversion of
 14  some Lake waters, is essential  to the operation  of your
 15  system and purely to afford you an opportunity to express a
 16  view, Mr. Bacon, and because we recognize your competency
 17  in this area,  do you desire to  put into the record any
 18  opinion as to  your feeling whether or not the Indiana situatio
 19  can be resolved with a similar  or increased diversion.
20       MR. BACON:  Well, if the  proper authorities set the
21  quality of water needed in Lake Michigan, which  quality
22  cannot be exceeded,  I mean, I  think we have known technical
23  and economically feasible methods and I think, if they  are
24  given water quality goals to be met, as any municipality,
25  they can be met.

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                                                         1552
                    I would say that if they were  to  go  in
     another direction  in  some  diversion system of theirs that
     they would have  to solve  the problem,  then have a  combination
     of the degree  of treatment and  any dilution water  available.
     But, I want to make it very, very clear as far as  the Sanitary
     District is concerned, our position is that we have Lake
     diversion cases, we have a system that is operating here, we
     are not asking for more diversion water.  We think we have
     the proper amounts and probably the minimum amount, and this
     is our case.
                   Vie would not want to mix, under any circum-
     stances, a question of wastes coming through our system and
     would dilution or diversion water be necessary.
          MR. KLASSEN:  Thank you.  I have one other point, Mr.
     Chairman.
                   Last week there was testimony, I believe by
 17   the Superintendent of Sewage Treatment Plant at Gary, that
 18   as  late as I960,  Gary had been building combined sewers and
 19   the city engineer at Hammond,  on the other hand, testified
 20   that progressively they were supplementing their combined
 21   sewer system with separate systems.
 22                 I wondered if you would care to put into the
 23   record the policy of the Sanitary District on this question
 24   of  expansion of the  sewer system to  combined or separate
25 I  plan?

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                                                         1553




  1        MR. BACON:  Well, as it pertains to the Calumet Region



     area under study, our policy has been and, although we are



  3   looking toward making it more definitive and sharpening up



  4   on it in the near future, we hope not to albw the extension



  5   of a combined sewerage system.




  6                 In other words, to effect separation as quickly



  7   as possible.  But, I think we feel that where a community


  8 II
   "is basically built up on a combined system, it is practically
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25
 9   impossible and not economical to make the separation just
by going out and saying,  "Tomorrow we  separate.  We get  the



money and go at it."



               We feel  that  the  way to  separate  those  sewers



is to take advantage of every renewal  project,  every  improve-



ment.



               lie are advocating that if you are in a



combined sewer area and a large subdivision goes in,  that



it develop on  a separate  system of the sanitary sewer and  the



storm sewer, even if those  two  pipes connect into a combined



sewer, because you have at  least effected that  kind of



separation.  Later on, when that bigger pipe, the one taking



the two is rebuilt or  enlarged,  you can affect  the further



separation.



               But, it  is  one of those  things that in  a built-



up area, it is almost  impossible, we feel,  and  uneconomical



and impossible by virtue of traffic and everything else  to go

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 in and convert a system.


               But, certainly, we feel you should have a


 policy of not allowing the extension of combined sewerage


 systems.   You should affect the separation every chance you


 get.


      CHAIRMAN STEIN:  Do you, in fact,  do that?  When they


 rip up a  street or something of that kind, do you do that


 if you can?


      MR.  BACON:  Mr. Stein, we are just at the present time,


 the Board is  working on this matter of  what to do,  how
 11 I stringent to be in the  combined,  versus the separation


 12 | program.


 13 I               Let me  say  --
      CHAIRMAN  STEIN:  Yes?


      MR. BACON:   I  see  you  raising  your  finger.


      CHAIRMAN  STEIN:  I realize  how difficult  this  is.


      MR. BACON:   Here is what you are  up against:   An area


on a  combined  sewerage  system, a developer  comes in and


logically want  to  keep the costs  down.  Since he is  close  to


a combined system,  it is mighty hard  to convince him he ought


to put in two  pipes, because it  is going to cost a  lot more
money.
              We have a highly developed area where they are
24  I  going to start putting in sewers and the argument will be,
   |

25     Everything else is combined, why can't we put in another

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                                                  1555
 300  acres  on  a  combined  system?'
              This  is  a  policy decision that  the  Board must
 make.   We  are operating  what  we think  is  the  general  prin-
 ciple  of the  State  Water Board, although  it is  outside oJ
 their  jurisdiction, where  we  do not allow the continuation
 of combined sewer installation.
     CHAIRMAN STEIN:   I  recognize  that, Mr. Bacon,  and I
 recognize  how difficult  the problem is.
              However, I know we have  had with  a  program
 like this  perhaps as much  experience in Washington, D.C.
 under  Dave Ault as  anybody.
              What  he  is trying to do  is  a/ery time  a  street
 gets ripped up for  paving  or  something of that  sort,  to see
 if he  can  come in there  with  a separation program,  absolutely
 not permitting any  new building without this.
              However, even under  those circumstances, it  is
 estimated  that it is going to take 100 years  for  them to
 complete it.  I think this is one  of the  most difficult
 problems in combined sewers we have in the older  major
 cities, because in  order to do the job all at once, if it
 could be done — and I guess  if you give  these  engineers enougfi
money,  they can do most  anything 	you rip the city  up so
you would  have to close  it to all  automobile  and  truck
 traffic for the next 15  years and  the  cure would  be worse
than the disease.

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 10
                                                      1556




                 But,  unless  we  get  some kind  of dramatic re-



   search breakthrough on  treating these wastes from  combined



   sewers we won't make much  progress.  There  really  has to be



   some program instituted.



                 Now,  I should say you have our full  sympathy



6 I and our full support in anything you possibly can  do on this.



        MR. KLASSEN:   Pine, I hope you will not leave any



   impression in this  area of the country that it is  going to



   take 100 years before the  pollution of the  Potomac is



   cleaned up.
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25
                 We had hoped that the Nations Capitol would



   embark on a program to do this much sooner.



        CHAIRMAN STEIN:  We are going to have that pollution



   cleaned up In the Potomac by 1966.  If you would adopt the



   same time schedule for Lake Michigan,  I think we could



   adjourn right now.



        MR.  BACON:   I would like to say another word about



   these combined sewers.



                 We certainly know that what you say is true.



   It  is Impossible within a hundred  years.   It is estimated —



   and  the figure was entered into the  Lake  Diversion testimony



   for  the City of  Chicago — to separate sewers  it would cost



   $2,200,000,000 and It would take many,  many years.



                 There are other things that might be done.   The



   certain key  points  anyway in  an overflow  system we might  try

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                                                  1557
a  short  time  or  shock treatment  of  some kind, chlorination
for  15 or  20  minute  settling  or  something - some  such method
might be used.   We have a  few critical points in  our system,
some in  this  area, I believe,  where this might be done.
              So, we certainly are  looking forward  to that
type of  storm water  overflow  treatment program in the near
future,  at least in  a few  spots.  I do not want to  bring
flood control systems into this, but actually in  our area,
the  question  of  stormwater combined sewers could  be solved
if we can get a  storage project  that we have in mind under
way  here.
              It is  in the very  far-out realm now,  but
nevertheless, we know that we  have a plan that would work
if we could afford it.
     CHAIRMAN STEIN:   I recognize that.
              By the  way,  Mr.Klassen, there is being finished
in Washington now a $75,000,000  interceptor sewer to handle
the  stormwater problem and this  is more expensive than the
plant.   We had to put that right along the banks  of the
Potomac  River ~ from Haynes  Point and the Blue Plains Plant
21  I up to Chain Bridge  	if you are  familiar  with the  area.
This was laying sewer and digging up some of the most
beautiful land in the District then covering it up again,
just to handle the stormwater problem.
              I think, as Mr. Bacon points out, we are  faced

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                                                        1558
     with the dereliction and the science of a century.  In order
     to handle that, we need heroic efforts and a lot of money.
     This is a problem that is so hard to solve, I think, that
     it is one that we are all going to have to work on very
  5 | closely together.
          MR. POSTON:  I see you are doing construction at the
     Calumet Sewage Treatment Plant.
                   What are your policies relative to by-passing
  9
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 15
 16
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 18
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20
21
22
23
24
25
 during this construction period?
               Are units of the plant taken out of operation?
 This  is always a problem in smaller plants.
               How do you handle it?
 13 8      MR. BACON:  We don't have to, because,  you see,  you are
 talking about  the  photograph you showed  the  other  day,  showing
 the  condition  of aerating Battery No.  C.   We have  A  and B
 running.  They run all  the time.   I don't  know if  we would
 have a  matter  of a few  hours of  cutting  over or  if so,  we
 ordinarily would make those  connections  without  any  loss of  —
 we don't ordinarily have  that as  a  problem,  Mr.  Poston.
               You  see,  we got multi-plants already.
     MR. POSTON:   I would like to ask  further  about  the
 individual effluent data.
               I noticed that you  didn't  give this  on specific
industries.  Would you  be willing to give  it to  the  Public
Health Service, the information on  individual  effluents from

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                                                       1559
     Industries relative to the amounts of waste?

          MR. BACON:  Well, we will not give out any information

     that has been given to us.  If it has been given to us in

     confidence or with the understanding that it not be released,

     we will refer you back to the parties concerned.
                   I think — may I comment on this a little
  7   further?
          CHAIRMAN STEIN:  Go right ahead.
  9 I      MR. BACON:  I think you are making a mountain out of a
 10 ti mole hill on this matter of release of data.
               I  think we  are  all working toward  the  same  goal
and we are playing the game fairly and  we are  not  embarrassing
one another, I have never found  a problem getting  industry
data.
               I  know  what happened here a few  days ago.   I
think we got everything we need.  Furthermore, what  we don't
need, we can go  out and pick  up  in the  waterway  ourselves if
we want to.
               I  mean,  after all,  we  know what's  in the water-
way.  I feel —  and I hope to leave  the impression in the
Sanitary District and with our dischargers  —  we are one  of
the co-conferees here; we can work out  this problem  as to
what we need to  work with and what data they give  us or
what they withhold.  But, certainly, to answer your  question,
we will not release data  other than  our own without  the

-------
                                                         1560


      permission of those furnishing it.



                    I say, I don't think there is any quarrel,  as



      I indicated —



           CHAIRMAN STEIN:  I would like to agree in large part to



      what  you said.  As  you know,  we both have  been working  in



      this  field for many, many years.  We have  had  these  enforce-
  6


      ment  conferences involving more than 700 industries. Until



      the last few,  and I wouldn't  say this is all the  steel  mills,
  O


      but until we  ran into a few of the steel companies,  we  never
  9
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25
 had this problem either.



               Now, as I understand this, our industrial



 waste expert,  who is here now, Mr. Hayse Black, says we



 need the data  and he needs it; for his evaluation.  As I



 understood Perry Miller of Indiana, he indicated he needed



 the data.



               I can see no way — I have no — all I am



 interested in  is getting water clean enough for a maximum



 number of  possible uses and taking into account all legitim—



 ate uses.   But if the  best engineering people  we have in the



 Public Health  Service,  state,  local or Federal,  and as you



 probably do feel you need  the  data,  I think if this is a



 prerequisite for our technical staff,  then  we  have to make



 provision  to get it.



     MR. BACON:   I think we  need  the  data.   I  don't think we



have had any problem.   Sometimes  we have  to arrange taking a

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                                                 1561



 sampling  and  testing probe a great deal in order to satisfy



 the wishes  of industry.  But we are not wanting for control



 data  and  I  hasten  to point out that, if we are talking about



 one thing we  want  to protect, namely; the receiving water



 when  it comes down to the final analysis, we wouldn*t care



 how they  treat their waste deposit — from tea cup to tea



 cup — as long as  they maintain the conditions.



      CHAIRMAN STEIN:  You are interested in the effluent?



      MR.  BACON:  We want effluent data because we can help



 an Industry in its design when it comes down to it.  If we



 are talking about what we are trying to protect, the



 receiving waters, we would set our standard on that basis.



      CHAIRMAN STEIN:  We can set it on both bases.



               The  point is, from a Federal point of view,



you know  there is a difference of opinion among the states.



 Some  like effluent standards, some like stream standards or



 criteria.   Some like a combination of the two.



               Prom the point of view of the Federal program,



this  is the question of local option as long as it protects



the water uses.



               We don't particularly care.  But our technical



people indicate to us that in order to carry this out this



is a matter of public waters and should be a matter of public



information.   I know in the operation of our program on a



National level, since these are our objectives, we have no

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                                                   1562
 basis for getting any information on a confidential basis.
 We have no use for it.
      MR. BACON:  You know, there is one point you haven't
 made here, that probably is the greatest argument.
               I will take your side for a moment.
               For having effluent knowledge, data on
 effluents, that is where your effluents overlap.  For
 regulatory purposes,  you very often have to know who is
 contributing what, because after they get mixed up in the
 receiving  water,  it is pretty tough to hold one company
 responsible for one discharge or one municipality responsible
 after the  wastes  are  co-mingled,  which very often happens.
               But, again, I think vie are talking about two
 different  methods  of  water pollution control either on the
 receiving  water or the effluents  and we will use both,  of
 course.
      CHAIRMAN STEIN:   I don't think that's been overlooked,
 Mr. Bacon.
               I think we both agree  this is our prime concern
You see, the problem  that we  have here  is,  if an industry
21  I  says it is doing a good Job and it isn't contributing to
pollution and doesn't put out the data, our job is not only
to find the damage at the point of use, but we have to pin-
point the source.
              In community after community, and I wouldn't

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                                                 1563



 say  the presentation here has been very much different,



 collectively, we know or everyone can see perhaps through



 the  back door, that we just might have a little problem.



 Yet, everyone of the potential or alleged waste dischargers



 gets up and says it must be some one else, not us.  "We are



 providing wonderful treatment."



              Of course, they don't tell you what they are



 putting out, they tell you what they have done in construction



     MR. BACON:  Mr. Stein, rest assured you can have all



 of the data we have that belongs to us and we have lots of it.



     MR. KLASSEN:  Mr. Chairman, I was in the midst of this



 the other day.  I would Just like to comment on this point.



              So far as the Illinois Sanitary Water Board is



 concerned, this has never been a problem with industry.  We



get the information and work with them.



              You mentioned Mr. Black.  Mr. Black was trained



in Illinois and I don't believe that he ever had this



difficulty.



              I do want to offer, however, to industries a



practical suggestion that has been our experience.



              I know the argument is raised and sometimes



valldly that, by disclosing the material or the amounts of



the material in an effluent, their competitors might get



information concerning production and products that might



be detrimental to their own industry.

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                                                       1564

                    I will offer to the industry a real solution


      to this.  If you remove from your effluent all the material,


      then there is no way that your competitor could ever find


   4 I out what your product is.


   5 I      CHAIRMAN STEIN:  Are there any other further comments or


   B I questions?


   7 I               (No response.)


  8 I                If not, thank you very much, Mr. Bacon,for an


  g |  excellent  presentation.


 10 |       MR. BACON:   Thank you for the  opportunity to be with  you.
    §
 H I       MR. CHESROW:   Mr.  Chairman,  in closing,  I would like  to


 12 g  point out  that our  deliberations  of the last  few days

    1
 13 B  concerning the pollution  of the Southern  basin of Lake


 14 I  Michigan have offered a penetrating picture of the abuse

    B
 15 I  of one of  man's most  precious possessions; namely,  what might
 16
 17
well be a  limitless  source of  fresh water.  These  same


deliberations have conclusively revealed  that man  is bent
 18 I  on dissipating this God-given treasure and that unless we

   I
 19 B  take drastic action, the lake waters and beaches will be


 20 |  lost to us forever.


 21 I                We have learned that the people of Indiana,


 22 I  as well as those Inhabitants of Illinois, are equally
23



24
concerned over the future of this great body of water; that


officials representing these people are determined to put
25    an end to this desecration of one of nature's proudest

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                                                   1565
 possessions, and  the Inhuman obliteration by the poisoning
 of  our waterfowl,  fish and plant life.
               Now,  first, let  us consider who or what is
 responsible for this outrage that is proving so costly to
 us.
               Let me say at the outset that The Metropolitan
 Sanitary District  of Greater Chicago has been fighting
 pollution of Lake  Michigan for three-quarters of a century
 and has pioneered  many engineering feats ... resulting in
 many major victories in the war against contamination.  We
 have made outstanding progress up to the existing limits of
 the science of Sanitary Engineering, but, even this leaves
 much to be desired  .. and is still not sufficient.
               The  cities and towns bordering on the lake
 are not doing a good job !  State agencies are unable to cope
 satisfactorily with the issues because of the interstate
 problems involved, much as these agencies would want to meet
 their responsibilities.
               It  has been pointed out in this conference that
among the offenders are many large and distinguished Industrie^
 that have contributed much to  the development and welfare of
 this great area.   I am confident that their officials and
directors are men  of understanding and good will, and will
want to do as many have already done, join with us in meeting
our responsibility to our neighbors and to the generations

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  8
                                                1566
to  come.   Working together as a  team, without recrimination
and petty  bickering, we  can assure the residents of Illinois
and Indiana a plentiful  supply of pure water to which they
are entitled.
              The HEW and the supporting data from the
USPHS and  the other agencies is a conscientious approach,
long awaited.   It recognizes the population and industrial
factors and the complexity of the situation.  It recognizes
     also that the waters in question know no boundaries.
 10                 This conference has very pointedly borne out
 11   that the facts here a?e very real and very dangerous and that
 12   we are on the very brink of destroying our lake forever.
 13                 If we are to protect Lake Michigan, this God-
 14   given resource,  which is ours to enjoy and not destroy,
 15   immediate steps  must be taken to achieve this end,  and so I
 16   would ask:
 17                 (l)  That the Federal Government which called
 18   this conference  following a four year study,  immediately  take
 19   action to enforce compliance with antipollution controls
 20   under authority  granted to the  Department  of  HEW by Congress.
 21                 (p)  That the HEW "recommendations for
 22   corrective action needed"  to be  acted upon before adjourn-
 23  ment.   The residents  of this area have already waited  too
 24  long ..  they  are  tired  of  surveys,  studies  and conferences
25  and  want  action now  ..  not  after all  our waterfowl,  fish,

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                                                      156?



1   plant  life,  beaches  and, most  important of all, the source



2   of our drinking water  are  lost to us forever.



                  (3)   In  addition to the HEW recommendations,



    we should  recognize  that uniform standards setting up



    maximum limits of pollution are needed and must be established



    by Federal authority,  including regulatory controls of sewage



    treatment  plants to  curtail the discharge of untreated




    sewage  into  Lake Michigan  and  our waterways.



                  (4)  We  realize  that with all the means at our



    command, complete treatment is still insufficient; we have




    every  right  to expect  the  highest degree of secondary treat-



    ment of sewage, measuring  up to such standards as  the




    Federal Government may set forth for both private  industry



    and public agencies.



                 We have  no other choice at this time.  We




    must obtain  action now and we must obtain it through Federal



    channels by  enforcement through the Department of Health,




    Education, and Welfare.  The HEW recommendation that, ?all



    waste be disinfected before discharge," is personally a




    welcome  one, because it substantiates a second reommendation




    made by me in a paper  to the Board of Trustees of  the




    Metropolitan Sanitary  District of Greater Chicago  in 1952.  Th




    first was  on the need  for  an Industrial Waste Ordinance which




    I was glad to sign, as President, ten (10) years later, in




    July of 1962.

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                                                         1568
                   President Johnson recently asked us all,  "to
     organize for action and rebuild and reclaim the beauty  we
     inherited."
                   As President of the Metropolitan Sanitary
     District,  I will do everything within my power and  use  every
     means  to make sure  that we keep our Lake water free of
     pollution.
                   Ladies and gentlemen,  let  us  put aside petty
     differences  and  personal gain,  and  rebuild  and reclaim  our
     waters for  a more beautiful and more healthful tomorrow!
         CHAIRMAN STEIN:  Thank you,  Colonel Chesrow, for a
     very excellent statement.
                   Anything  that I  would  say  would  be  an
    anticlamatic  remark.
                   Are there any comments or  questions?
         MR. KLASSEN.   Not  on  this,  Mr.  Chairman,  but before
    we close, I want to ask one question.
         CHAIRMAN STEIN:  Does  that  complete the Sanitary District'
    presentation?
         MR. CHESROW:  Yes.
21        CHAIRMAN STEIN:  Thank you very much, Colonel.
22                 This was a certainly significant contribution
23   to the conference and I certainly appreciate it.
24                 Mr. Klassen?
25        MR. KLASSEN:  This merely, Mr. Chairman, in order that

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                                                        1569
     the conference record will show that some thought has been

     given to this, we have talked, pointed our fingers at

     industries and cities and about everything else, but we do

     know with the increase in shipping, that the problem of

     sanitary wastes and wastes from shipping such as oil, bilge,

     what-not, is and will continue to be a problem and I think

     that some place in the conference record, cognizance should

     be taken of this problem.

                   I think this is probably within the purview of

 10   the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare to come up

 11   with some active program in this area.

 12                 I want to interject this so it would not be

 13   overlooked;

 u        CHAIRMAN STEIN:  Well, I wish I could be as sure as you

 15   are.

 16                 I think Mr. Poole heard me make a speech on

 17   this  several months ago.   I wasn't so certain, was I?

 18        MR. POOLE:  No.

 19        CHAIRMAN STEIN:  We  have the right to do it.

 20                 With that,  I am sure the conferees will

 2i   consider that along with  the other problems discussed in

 22   the session that we are going to have.

23                 Now, we can expedite matters by trying to be

24   back here in an hour.   May I ask that the conferees stay in

25   the room.   You may be assured we are getting close to the

     time  to  adjourn.   But the people in the roomshould be

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                                                        1570
      leaving as soon as possible,  because  the  sooner you  get  out  —
  2 | and  this isn't  meant  as  an invitation to  push you  -   the
      sooner we can get  started  working.  We will  reconvene at
      12:35  with an announcement we hope.
  5                Thank you.
  6                (Whereupon the proceedings  in  the above
      entitled  matter  were  continued until  12:35 p.m.)
  8        CHAIRMAN STEIN:  May  we reconvene.
  g                 I  do think this conference  has been  one of the
 10   most successful  and this may be in spite  of or because we
 11   have been dealing  with one of the most complicated problems
 12   we have run into.   I think and I can look at the table here,
 13   most of the conferees have had at least 20 years experience
 14
 17
 18
19
2i
22
23
25
     each in this field
                   I don't want to identify any of them, but some
 18   of them have had considerably more and I think we, for years,
     have all known that this problem in the southern end of Lake
     Michigan that we have attempted to solve and get out of the
     way today was going to be one of our most challenging.
                   I think that we have to give full consideration
     and credit to the State agencies and the Sanitary District
     for their full cooperation and for the others participating
     in  the  conference—municipalities,  industries,  waterworks
24  I operators and  so  forth.
                   I  would  particularly like  to single  out

-------
                                                       1571
     Hy Gerstein's presentation because we here had an agency that
     was not a regulatory agency, charged by law to come up with
     a report giving us one of the most comprehensive, informative
     and deeply analytical reports that I have seen presented in
     the field of water pollution control, by any agency or any
     scientist, or whatever they may be and this has been most
     helpful.
                   I do think that the transcript of this
 9   conference,  when it becomes available, will no doubt be a
 10   very,  very bulky document.   But I do think it will be a
 11   repository for some excellent information.  As a matter of
 12   fact,  this may rank as one  of the best of the municipal,
 13   industrial symposia on record and I do think that we have
 14   made an enviable record of  putting together information and
 15   various views here.
 16                 I also must say and I would like to compliment
 17   the participants and the conferees for handling their time
 18   and that  of their invitees  and participants in the way
 19   they have.
20                 I think the percentage of the pertinent and
21   germane material presented  at this conference is probably
22   the highest  that I have ever seen and this, Indeed, is a
23   compliment.
24                 While the conference went a little wild and
25   was a  little long, I think, by and large, all of the material
     was germane,  pertinent and  to the point.

-------
10
11

12

13

14

15

16

17
                                                       1572
                    Now,  as you can appreciate,  the conferees have
      been discussing this  matter from time  to time as  the  state-
      ments came  in
                    There was a preliminary  meeting on  Saturday
      of  the  conferees  when some  ideas were  worked  out.
                    It  was  recognized  that most  of  the  information
      coming  from the Chicago Water  Works, from  the Federal
      Government  and  from Indiana was  in  them, and  the  picture
      was beginning to  emerge.   It was  obvious that we  would  have
      to wait, certainly  to hear  from  the Sanitary  District and
      representing itself and the  industry within its jurisdiction
      before  complete and definitive conclusions and recommendations
      could be made by  the  conferees.
                   By  this process, the  conferees  were able  to
     preliminarily assess their thoughts of a day  or two where
     these could mature and  they  could reflect on  them and suggest
     revisions.  We do have the benefit of the excellent presenta-
 18   tion of the Sanitary District of Mr. Chesrow and his staff
 19   and Vinton Bacon and arrived at conclusions and recommendation
 20                 I am pleased to report that the conclusions
 21   and recommendations of the conferees are unanimous and this
 22   was arrived at by a discussion and concensus.  No vote was
 23   ever needed.
 24                 I think the presentations were so excellent, the
25   type  of men we have as conferees and the professional dis-

-------
                                                    1573
 clpline that they have prevailed, so the conclusions and

 recommendations almost wrote themselves.

              The unanimous conclusions and recommendations

 of the conferees are as follows:

              1.  Interstate pollution endangering the

 health and welfare of persons in a state other than that

 where the discharges originate exists in the waters of the

 Grand Calumet River, Little Calumet River, Lake Michigan

 and their tributaries.

              Such pollution is subject to abatement under

 the Federal Water Pollution Control Act.

              2.  Sewage and industrial waste from sources

 in Indiana, the Little Calumet River area and Grand Calumet

 area and Indiana Harbor area, contribute to such interstate

pollution in Illinois.

              3.  There is no evidence of such interstate

pollution from discharges in the Burns Ditch area in Indiana.

              4.  Municipal and industrial waste from

sources in the Calumet area in Illinois contributes to such

interstate pollution in Indiana.

              5.  Cognizance is taken of the efforts in both

states to abate such interstate pollution, but action taken

to date is not adequate and such interstate pollution still

exists.

              6.  The nature of the delays in abating such

-------
 12
 13
 14
 15
 16
 17
                                                        1574

      interstate pollution include the complexity of the problem


      and the concentration of population and industry.


                    7.  To initiate a program of immediate remedial


      action to protect water quality in the  area for the  maximum


      number of legitimate uses,  the conferees will  use  as a guide


      for water quality at the Chicago Water  Works intakes the


      "Recommended Quality Criteria:  Goals Lake  Water at  Chicago


  8 I  Intakes," which  was  presented as an attachment  to  the findings

    |
  9   and  conclusions  and  recommendations presented  by the Depart-


 10   ment of Water and Sewers of the  City of Chicago  at this


 11    conference.
21
22
24
25
                   The conferees will use as a guide for bacterial


     water quality at bathing beaches covered by this conference


     the requirement that receiving water shall be considered


     unsuitable for bathing if the coliform concentration exceeds


     1000 per 100 milliliters.
                   8.  The conferees will establish a technical


18   committee as  soon as possible which will evaluate water


19 B  quality criteria and related matters in the area covered by

   I
20 B  the  conference and make  recommendations to the conferees
    within  six months  after the  issuance  of the  summary of the


    conference.
23 |                9.  The Indiana Stream Pollution Control
    Board, the Illinois Sanitary Water Board and  the  Metropolitan


    Sanitary District of Greater Chicago will  institute  immediate

-------
                                                   1575
action  in  their respective jurisdictions that all sewage re-
ceive at least secondary treatment plus adequate effluent
disinfection within one year after the issuance of the summary
of the  conference.
             10.  The  Indiana Stream Pollution Control Board,
the Illinois Sanitary  Water Board and the Metropolitan
Sanitary District of Greater Chicago will institute immediate
action  in  their respective jurisdictions to insure that
industries will institute housekeeping practices which will
minimize the discharge of wastes from industrial sources and
to insure  optimum operation of sewerage systems and sewage
treatment  facilities to minimize by-passing of sewage treat-
ment plants or other practices that result in the discharge of
untreated  or partially treated wastes and report on these
activities to the conferees within six months after the issu-
ance of the summary of this conference.
             11.  The  Indiana Stream Pollution Control Board,
the Illinois Sanitary Water Board, the Metropolitan Sanitary
District of Greater Chicago will undertake action to insure
that industrial plants discharging wastes into waters within
their respective Jurisdictions institute programs of sampling
their effluents to provide information about waste outputs
needed by these agencies in the carrying out of their
functions.
              Such information will be maintained in open

-------
 10




 11




 12




 13




 14




 15




 16




 17




 18




 19
                                                   1576



  files by  these agencies for those having a legitimate interest



  in the information and the agencies will report to the



  conferees on this activity within six months after the



 issuance of the summary of this conference.




               12.  The Indiana Stream Pollution Control



 Board,  the Illinois Sanitary Water Board, and the Metropolitan




 Sanitary District of Greater Chicago,  maintaining close



 liaison with the technical committee created by the conferees



 will develop a time schedule for the construction of




 necessary industrial waste treatment facilities.



               Such a schedule will be  submitted to the




 conferees  for their consideration within six months after




 the  issuance of the summary of this  conference.



               13.   The Thomas  J.  O'Brien Lock be placed in




 operation  to protect  water quality of  Lake  Michigan and




 prevent backflow  to the Lake.   This  should  be done as  soon




 as possible,  but  not  later than January  1,  1966.




               14.   Surveillance will be  the primary




 responsibility  of  the  Indiana  Stream  Pollution Control
20 D Board, the Illinois Sanitary Water Board, and the Metropolitan
21




22





23




24




25
Sanitary District of Greater Chicago.



              The Department of Health,  Education,  and



Welfare will make available a resident technical group and



visiting groups of experts which will assist the state



agencies and the Metropolitan Sanitary District of  Greater

-------
 1

 2

 3

 4

 5

 6

 7

 8

 9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17


18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25
                                                  1576-A

Chicago at such time as requested by them.

              15.  The conference may  be  reconvened  on the

call of the Chairman.  It is anticipated  that  the conference

will be reconvened in six months.

                   RECOMMENDED QUALITY CRITERIA GOALS

                      LAKE WATER AT CHICAGO  INTAKES
Parameter

Coliform per 100 ml.
Dissolved Oxygen ppm
Biological Oxygen
  Demand ppm
PH

Chlorides ppm
Color
Total Iron (Fe) ppm
Phenols ppm
ABS ppm
Total Dissolved
  Solids ppm
Ammonia Nitrogen ppm
Sulfate ppm
Acceptable Limits
Annual. Aygrage,

Less than 200
NOT less than 8
                      Permissible Limi
                      Not More Than 12
                      Days Per Year
                            2500
                      Not less than 5
Less than 1.5
Average 8.2
                      Maximum 3
                      Maximum 9
                      Minimum 7.5
{       8>           )Maximum 15
(Subject to readjust-}
(ment                )
Less than 5           Maximum 15
Less than 0.10        Maximum 0.2
Less than 0.001       Maximum .001
Less than 0.05        Maximum 0.15
      165
Less than 0.02
       30
                            185
                              0.05
                             50
   NOTE:  Miscellaneous trace contaminants to meet
          limits set by USPHS Drinking Water Standards.
                                                               ts

-------
                                                        1576-3

                     We have purposely omitted the parameter "odor


      threshold" number because of differences which exist in the


   3 | effectiveness of water treatments for removing various types


      of odors from the water.  It has been our experience that It


      is more difficult to reduce a "hydrocarbon" type odor of 6


      threshold intensity to an acceptable level, than an algae-


      type odor of 15 threshold intensity.


                     We are therefore, suggesting that natural
    ii

  9   algae odors  be  omitted from these parameters,  and set a


 10   maximum goal of a threshold odor number of  6 in  the intake


 II   water for odors produced  by industrial  waste pollution with


 12   the  particular  caution to be observed that  the odors  so


 13   caused  should always  be of such  nature  as to come within  the


 14   capacity  of  a conventional water treatment  plant  for  their


 15   removal.


 16 I                         *  * *


 17         CHAIRMAN STEIN:   This concludes the recommendations  and


 18   conclusions of  the conferees.


 19                   Do the  conferees  have anything to  say  or add


 20   at this point?
   Ii

 21                  The summary will  be issued in accordance with


 22   the law by the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare.


23                  I would like to thank you all for participa-


24 I  ting, coming.  I would like to thank the conferees.
   I

25                   To my mind we have taken a great step toward

-------
                                                      1576-c
     cleaning up pollution of our end of Lake Michigan and the

     tributaries thereto.

                    I think for all concerned,  states, Sanitary

     District and the Federal Government, this  indeed is a mile-

     stone in our respective pollution control  programs.

                    Thank you all for coming and the  first

     session of the conference stands adjourned.

 8 |                (V/hereupon the Conference was adjourned.)

 9

 10

 11

 12

 13

 14
 16

 17

 18

 19

 20

 21

 22

23

24

25

-------
                                                                                 1577
 Lover End Lake Kichican Conference, Chicago, Illinois, March 2 » 9>
 Harold L. Adazs
 Plant J.fcmasur
 African 1'jJ.ze Products- Conpsny
 Koby, lnaiai.a

 Fred Ainslie
 U.S. Gypoua Conpoay
 101 South Waclter
 Chicago, Illinois

 S. L. Andslsan, M.D.
 Health Cc*23i53icasr
 Caicaao Sooni of li.-alth
 $U West Hubbsrd Street
 Chicago, Illinois

 Mrs.  Daniel C.  Anderson
 Water Tecourccs Chairsaa
 Lea&ue of Wo^;n Votcra of Illinoia
 67 £ast K-'.dison
 Ciiicajo, Illinoio

 Richard P.  Anderson
 Illinoio Council S&in & Scuta Divers
    £ South Comall
          Illinois
Korvol E. Anderson
ConcultiniJ  Engineer
Hstropolitan Sanitary District of
  Greater Chicago
200 Eact Ontario  Gtreat
Chicago, Illinois

Bayoond S.  Andorooa
General Manager
North Shore Sanitary  District
EahrijJijcr Road
WauJtefian, Illinois
Chris A
Sanitary i
Gary^ Indiana
52*;6 Van I5ure
Gory> Indiana
 G.  T.  Ap?leg?vta
 U.S. Coast Guard
 610 Couth Canal
        , Illinoia
 Jris^o Ash
 Senior
 IIIEII
          Illinoia
 Jerry Aahe
 Popcrter
 U-DBM Radio :?«va
       O,  Illinoia

P..  C.  Atkins
Tu clinical Superintendent
I.uPont
5215 Kennedy
     Chicago,  Indiana
3. R. AtldLnson
Kcpuulic Steel
Republic Building
Cicvciund, Ohio

Thomas Atohison
Cpcrntion Engineer
Fort Sheridan  Illinois U..S. Arsgr
luildin^ 119
Fort Chsridan, niinola

Er. Gerald D. Atlaa
Director of ^dical Services
        Poric District
  > Eist 14th Boulevard
Chica,io, Illinois

P.. J. Austin
Prccsas Coordinator
American Oil Cospany
Box. 710

-------
                                                                              1578
 Vinton Bacon
 General Superintendent
 Metropolitan Sanitary District of
   Creator Chicago
 100 Eaot Erie Strast
 Chicago, Illinois

 Carl H. Beechae
 Plumbing Inspector in Charge
   Water Contamination
 City of Chicago
 1000 East Ohio Street
 Chicago, Illinoio
 Eucene C.  Bailey
 Administrative h
 CorEonvcolth Llioon
 72 Vjot Adacs Street
 Chicago, Illinois

 Uilllaa Ball
 Editor
 TalEah Federal
 55^1 South Kedzie
          Illinoio
 Mrs.  Charles S.  Barrett
 League of "n'oaen  Voters
 5765  South Elaekstone
 Chicago,  Illinois
   ss R. Borrin^ton
Superintendent
City of Chesterton
8th & Wooulawn Avenue
Ciiecterton, Indiana
                       Disposal Plant
Tod Earrin^ton
Public Relations Representative
Citifea Service Oil Conpany
    300 Tulsa, Cklahoaa
Jgeeph S, Baun
Coordinator of Waste
Cities Service Oil Company
'BOX 719
East Chicaso, Indiana

L. A. Beaudin
Chief Operations Division
U.S. Arzsy Eii^incer District
219 South Dearborn
Chiuago, Illinois
                                             "Dr. W. J. Beecher
                                             director
                                             Chicago Aca0.e:sy of Sciences
                                             2001 Korth Clark Street
                                             Chicago, Illinois

                                             John J. Bennett
                                             Technics! Advisor
                                             Division of Vatervayc
                                             Stats of Illinois
                                             201 Uost Monroe Street
                                             Springfield, Illinois

                                             John J. Berado
                                             Ciiief Food Inspector
                                             Chics30 Board of Health

                                             Caica.30, Illinois

                                             G. S. Peter Screen
                                             Attorney
                                             la Eocuf, Lars 3» Lsry
                                             Cna Chacc ^^!nhattan Plaza
                                             I-Iev York, New York
       G. Bernoske, M.D.
Health Cossissioner
L'oks Ccnipanj' Health Department
Court House
Crcvn Point, Indiana

L. F. Eirkel
Stiff Engineer
Ew'pu'olic Steal Corporation
6G01 Erackcville Road
Cleveland, Ohio

C. A. Bishop
Director, Cheaical Engineer Division
U.S. Steel
525 William Ponn Place
Pittsburgh, Pc-nnsylvania

Charles H. Blackcan
Lite Paper
7717 Kew Jersey
         Indiana
                                                  e A. Elaine
                                             Sinclair Refining Corpany
                                             5500 Indianapolis Boulevard
                                             I-ict Chicaso, Indiana

-------
                                                                                1579
 Carl T. Blonsren
 Sanitary Engineer
 State Sanitary Water Board
 1919 West Tr^lor  Street
 Chicago, Illinois

 Kenneth Blunenschsin
 Trustee
 Lake Villa Illinois
 Cedar Avenue
 Lake "ilia, Illinois

 Eoylo J. BorcherB
 Chief Procedures  Section, DAP
 U.S. Public Health Service
 BIEW
 Washinjton, D. C.

 Carlos Borge
 City Engineer & Sanitary
   Corani33ioner
 2302 Purdue Drive
 East Chicago, Indiana

 Carl R.  Boutiliee
 Operating Superintendent
 City of Eofcart
 706 Front Street
 East
 Kro.  R.  Bouyu^e
 Vice  Presideat
 Wilnetto League of Wonen Votcra
 1120  Chestnut
 Vilnette, Illinois

 Robert J. Bovden
 Assistant Sanitary Ensineer
 U.S.  Pablic Esalth Service
 CMca^o,  Illinois

 Austin Boulc
 East  Calcaso Manufacturer's Association
 900 East Chicaso Avenue
 East  Chics£O, Indiana

 Hichael J. Brady
 Surveyor's Office
•fc-JM  County TntHp.n*.
 Crown Point,
 A. F. Braael
 Sanitary
 Water Condi tionins Products Coapany
 111 East IJain Streat
 Stf Charles, Illinois

 A. H. Brandt
 I-tinassr Indiana Health Engineers
 Eatalchea Steel
 Eethlshea, Pennsylvania

 Ponald E. Breuer
 Sinclair Eaflnlns Cczpany
 UlO Sibley Boulevcrd
 Earvsy,  Illinois

 Pate Bre«z
 Area iSana^er
 Kalco Chenical Ccapony
 6216 West 66th Place
 Chicago,  Illinois

 Mitchell Brodkin
 Chsaical Engineer
 Purex Corporation
 9333 Eoyo
 South Gate,  California

 Con R. Brovn
 Vatcrvays Control^ Engineer
 ?-i;tropolitan Scnitary  District of
  Greater Chicaso
 100 East  Erie  Street
 Chicago,  Illinois

 Robert V.  Bruss
 Area Sanitary  Engineer
 Federal flouslna Aclainiatratlon
 HS6;.T.7053 Joes Place
 I-£no3once trails, Wisconsin

 Ernst Buehler
Aooistant  Corporation  Counsel
 City of Chicago
133 Ebrth Wells Street
 Chicago, Illinois

-------
                                                                              1580
J.  E.  Burgess
Waster Ifeehanic
Burgess Kccton Manufecturins Coapany
737 Paytoa Street
Geneva, Illlnoia

John T. Burke
Product l-Sanaser
lialco  Cheraical Company
6216 Vest 66th Place
Chicago,  Illinois

A.  Bruce Burns
Plant  Kanager
Union  Carbide Corporation
P.O. Box 750
Whiting,  Indiana

John Conning
1628 Linden Road
Ecrasvood,  Illinois

Mrs. S. J.  Carlson,  Jr.
President
League of Worsen Voters of Porter
  County, Indiana
6 Shore Driver— Dune  Acrea
Chesterton, Indiana

Leonard Cannody
Attorney
International Harvester Ccrrpany
180 Korth Michisan Avenue
Chicago,  Illinois

Carl B. Carpenter
Partner
Bcsozze Carpenter &  Isnalzi
Consulting;  Engineers
7501 Indianapolis Boulevard
J. Poland Carr
Associate Editor
          s Kevs Eecoru
    North Kichic^m Avenue
Chicaso, Illinois
Villiaa F. Carroll
City Attorney
Crown Point Indiana
101 north Miin
Crovn Point, Indiana

l-!r3. Stephen Caruso
League of Vo— en Chaircan
206 liorth Elo
Prospect Heighto, Illinois

Charles Cashaon
Conoultins liisineer
Cl>-de E. Villiarus tt Associates
1902 Korth Sheridan
Couth Esnd, Indiana
       ziS 'CJtahan"-
       of Vtxticri Voters
1^627 Tcarborn
Dolton, Illinois

Todd A. Cayer
Sanitary Engineer
U.S. PH3, DHEv/
^33 V.'cct Van Buren Street
     so, Illinois
Xrs. Shirley Cayer
8li*9 Zxchar^e
Chica30, Illinois

Eugene Chaikon
Sr. Absiotant Sanitary Eh^inser
U.S. P23, DHCV
^33 West Van Buren Street
Chicago, Illinois

Joseph T. Chantigney
Chairean
Ccoi County Clean Streass
lliS23 Evers Street
Soltca, Illinois

Mrs. Joseph Chanti^ney, Secretary
Cook County Clean Streans
ltS23 Everse Street
Dolton, Illinois

-------
                                                                                1581
 Frank V. Cbesrov
 Metropolitan Sanitary District of
   Greater Chicago
 100 list Erie
          Illinois
 William Clements
 Reporter
 CoiC8£O Daily Kevs
 Chicago, Illinois

 A. J. Cochrane
 Assistant to Vlca President Operation*
 Younsstovn Sheet & Tube Cccpeny
 Chicago, Illinois

 Kra. J. Wcyne Cole
 Conservation Cnairmn
 Lake-Cook Chapter
 Illinois Audubon Society
 122U Konsaa Lone
 teerfield, Illinois

 J. B. Colenaa
 Attorney
 Clean Streoss Cocsaittee
 1703 Rorth River Drivo
 Aisonquin, Illinois
 KcHonry County

 Ztenald 7.  Collins
 Suporintandent Public Works
 Village of Lako Villa
 65 C-Ocir /.vtr.ua
 Lako Villa,  IllisoiA

 V.  J. Conaar
 Attorney
 DuPont Coapooy
 1003 tortoot Street
 Viliaiagton, Delaware

 Villlaa J« Convay
 Reporter
Asiociatdd Press
         Illir  \s
Qrovar V. Cook
CT.llef Biologist
U-3. Ri3 - 6LIRB?
1819 V. Bargains Reed
Chicago, Illinois
 Mrs. Q. V. Cook
 1*2 north Gtona
 LaGrac^e, Illinois

 Bernard Coppola
 U.S.A. Dispensary
 Fort Sfcariiian, Illinois

 John B. V. Corey
 Assistant Conr. Water Severs
 City of Chicago
 320 7%'ortb Clark Street
 Chicago, Illinois

 Harry 8. Cnsxsor
 Sales Macaaar
 Allied Chemical Cospany
 J»D1 Sector Street
 Daw York, Kcv York

 Lawrence R. Cross
 Manager Special Services
 Union Carbida Corporation
 6733 West 65tJ» street
 Chicago,  Illinois

 H.  rajani
 Group Leader,  Coagulation
 Kalco Cncricnl Coapany
 6216 Korta 66th Place
 Chicago,  Illinois

 Richard G. Balbke
 Coordinator of Industrial Kaote Control
 Hstrgpolitoa Sanitary District of
  Greater Chicago
 100  £ast  Eric
 Chicago,  Illinois

 Honorable Richard Daley
 Kiyor
 City of Chicago,  City
          Illinois
Robert W. Danlt
Youo^stovn Gbset & Tube Conpeny
East Cnica^o, Indiana
A. B,
Superintendent of Utilities
City of £a3 1 Gary
     Central Avenue
     Gory,

-------
                                                                                 1582
 Trcvy P. Davidaoa
 Special R. R. Representative
 E.  3. Thortisen & Company
 Box 265
 Lci:baruf Illinois
Arthur Couvas
 Rita
 Board J'cabcr
 Lako Count/ Strean dilution Council
 S.S. 7 - Box ^5
 Crown Paint, Ir.tllana

 Ecbert E-eJcnje
 Cirler gcuiitary Engineer
 Cools County lupartoeat
   Public ikalth
 32P South liood Street
 Chicago, Illinois
k'illiaa E.
          Inspector la
      of Ctica-20
5700  Veot Graca Street
Ciiica^o, Illinois
          ?.  Ecndel
Public P.vlatioas Diractcxr
Asssrliicn Oil Cospauy
910 South Michijjaa Avenue
Chicago,  Illinois
     H. Eccprcs
          Chicago
           53
          Illinois
John H. Dcvins
£* I. duPont
East Chicago,  Indiana
W. V.
Euparvisias En^Lneor
Caterpillar Tractor
H.G.O. Ploat
Pcorin, Illinois
John E* Uorockc
Superiisor rairy Inspector
Boartl of Health
5^ fc'eat ifiiLbard Street
Chicago, Illinois
City of
35^0 iiiet Cneltcaiton
         Illinois
£d*..-ard C.
City ilall
         Indiana
Stu-cnt
       H.S. Science Club
      Craaa
      Crest, Illinois

Carl ton M*
Central District Initiation Pleat
         Illinois
Jacob D. Eunclle
Pi-oject Director
t-Lr Resources Ctudy
U3 Illinoie Ifctropolitan /rca
  Planning Cc^iilEyion
1*00 Vest l-fcidison  Street
         Illinois
F.olsad J. Dundea
Gup^rvicin^ Inspector
Chicago Eu^ri or Hoalth
C633 north Caaric'oa Eoad
Ciiica^o, Illinois
       E. Pus tin
Stato Sacretory
Indiana llvisica, Izank Waltoa
2Z& St. Jcc Bcixlavard
Fort
      V. DaicrzanovsitL
Sanitary iixiir.scr
Cook County rcprvrtacat Public Health
32^ South Vood Strcat
      go,  Illinois

-------
                                                                               1583
 •;s--astet} Matrcpalitca Sacitery District
   of Greate
 H-nninj Ijclund, Chief
 I'::i*crcc.-:;i;at Section, Kujlc-n V
  i''JV, Public lijilta Service
  >3 Vast Via Lur^u Street
     -cico, Jlllnola
 Krc. H. V. FJ
 t£?l Oahvjxxi
 rcvncrs Grove, lillnoia

 A* Soal iil-na/iiar
 Pror^ssor
 Y:-;ip?^raico UrJ. varsity
 Valparaiso,
Project ili^acor
Koisc-r Es^i^yera Inc.
223 n.rtix Leslie Street
C-ilczijCj Zllinoifi
H.  R.  ^'ans
Vaot/j  2rcat.-icnt
P.O.  Box 5333
Tucson,  Ariaoaa.
Stat; i.':it«r Surrey
     ftioria laboratory
                          r- 717
Ace
£xecutiva S-crotary
Illir.ois Fcdiratioa of
ISIiB South Voct^ra
Blue Island,  liilnoio

Lloyd L. FulSt
Ccciciltaat
         iy tcps.rfc.-iat
            Uelavarc
                                                 Artiur C- Peanicj
                                                 Preaicent Illinois Eivicion
                                                 7ar.V-t V.alton LsiXjos of Aswrica
                                                 ik^Znt Sdbrcclte
                                                 Rlverdale,
                                                L-vrense J.  Fcnloa
                                                Special-Part Tir-jc I
                                                ILJW  Pollution Control
                                                      riirt:: Lory AVir:ro
                                                      ^o,  Illi::ois
                                                                         Counsel
                                                 Assistant to Vice Prtsi
                                                 U.S. Ettfel
                                                 SXJ South L?.3ane
                                                      ^o,  Illinois
                                                 R.  S. Fcr^a
                                                 Assistant Uircctcr Industrial
                                                 Republic Steel Corporation
                                                  2 S. Prospect 1?.W.
                                                 Cleveland, 0
-------
                                                                              1584
L. E. Foran
District 1'onascr
12D East Burli=3ton
LaGranje, IlUnoiB

I-!rs. F.03eyn Ford
Conservation Chaircaa
.Tilir.ois Federation Women's Club
Tcnica, Illinois

George Fort
Chairssm of Board
Kc-rrillville Conservancy District
63^+9 Broadway
Gory, Indiana
S. A* Foust
Engineer
Ur.ion Carbide
P.O. Box 750
Waiting,
Janes A. Fovler
Engineer
Sinclair Refining ConjGny
55^3 Indianapolis Bcu£ciEard
Eaat Chicago^ Indiana

Robert C. Fox
Attorney
Mobil Oil Conpany
723D Caldwell
Niles, Illinois

L. L. Traitor
Sales
Systems Engineering & Sales
223 Bovaer Avenu*
Fort Wayne, Indiana

John E. Frank
B^£ional Prosraa Director
F.aSiol03ical Health
Public Hualth Service
1*33 Wost Van Buren Street
Chicago, Illinois
John Franltell
Hajicnal Cental Consultant
public Health Servica
U53 Vest Van Burcn Street
         Illinoi*
W. C. Friedland
Assistant to Director Develojneit
Abbott Labs
Kortii Chicajjo, Illinois

W. G. Frost
Kanarjer Technical Services
GATX
131 South Wabaob, Avenue
Culca^o, Illinois
H. R, Frye
Supori.ntcsdent Vater
City of Svaaston
555 Lincoln Street
Evanston, in inoia
                       Severn
Philip Furlong
CMcf of Operations
Ketropolitan Sanitary District of
  Greater CMcaso
100 E^st Erie Street
         Illinois
H. B. Gaoet
Sanitary Engineer Director
U.S. PIIS - DHiy
433 Vest Van Burea Street
Chicago, 111 inoia

C. V. Gansz
Aagrican Petrolsusi Institute
6£k South Michigan
Chicago, Illinois

Lerraer Garter, Jr.
City EiJ^ineer
kQO Broadvay
City oT Gory
Gary, Indiana

-------
                                                                                  1585
 Dr. Eofcart S.  GCE
 Assistant Professor
 CivAl rnjinecrias
 norths tern U.iiveroity
 J?in2 Gaarrzui Avurais
        n,  1 11. In vis
       H. 0- retain
 Ciiisf Us tar  rJri^Ice
 Ecpai'tat-at of i-.'utor
 Civ o£ Ciiica^o
 fcc?03 Uiill
          Illinois
 Warren Gcra
 CciJfr^iiV illations I-iuirij
 Lover Erotiiers  Coz^u^*
 3;JO Ru-i; Avenu-a
 A. G. Gi
 City ^c^-iV^cr
 City of II-r£3i>ncX
 City ifell, 5>55 Colunat Avcnua
 liia^osd, Indiana

 Eoisrt L. Gicsel
 Chsir^is 01* lo.inl
 A£oX?ii Piatins, Inc.
 8S^ South Central
 Cfiicajs* Iliinoio
        B. Click
Acting Chief I^inscr
ISiion Ictnlt C«r Conrns
Hi Vast Jacl:soa
          Illinoia
!trs.  Gilbert Gooafrlend
Lsijae  of V.'CDSC Yotsrft
67 :^st Kidison
     GO;  lilinols
3. 3. Gordon
Civii Hr^in'-er V
City of Chicago
ruroau of V/atcr
I?oo;a ^^, City II
          Illinois
Arnold J.  Gmborac
Pav'lic Relations Director
.'irrw-riena i-'aize-Proclucts
iU.n_-ral i^ierronta & Eruption
1X-5 BitL^o K-xiU
    vjOvi,  Illinois
J. A. Greonblau
 ^0 vrc-3t Eriar Place
         Illinois
Frank B. Greenleaf
Flln Supervisor
U.G. Statl Corporation
2:3 Ccuta L?.CiUe iitrsot
C:»ica0-D, Iliinois

Jt.scpa B. Granchik
K^cr
City o
         Inuicca
         Oil C
         . Avenue
    Ifclvin L. Grie^i
    r. Dunes Indiana
      tunes,
       st £r»Drto:cs Club
       sieijai .-ive
       , lilincia

    r V. Grunov
     County Htaith
    a 1  T-OJC 3U9A
    t.'lc-in, lilinoie

-------
                                                                                1586
 Jc£u L. Guilloa
 Cuifcf Vaterway li^lncc
 Illinois Clvisicn V^tczvi
 2J1 Vest, i-ianroc Struct
           d, Illinois
 C.  Fred Cumiijjj
 Professor of C2 6 CLS
 Illinois Institute of Ttrciuicilc^,
          Illinois
 Dr. Greg Gatzcit
 &:-2tcr Scientific Advieor
 G-':i2ral African Transportation
   Cyrporallen
 P.O. lie:-. tS:>
Join B. Hall,  H.B.
Director
Cooi Cou:;V E«F^«"-«
222 Soutii v;coa Otr<2cjt
          Illinois
L'iiand D. itillcck
       wst acith Gtrest
     s.2('J> Illinois
i~;;:.:;io:i2JL Projraa Idrector
Livisioa &? ,Mr Pollution
?>:^iic h'-altli Service,  JV-._:ioa V
1*53 *-«- Vaa Torcn  Strcot
          Illir-ois
  Cour.uiJ. of Indian
              135D
Eos 3  I».  Kirb
Asaisio&t to Vies Prosident
lalrjiw, Stcol Cov^any
HiiOt Chicago, t.d
Charles C.  Itiroi&n
Cooli Cuunx^ (Jiccji G
£:-C6 rc«23  Strict
Gicr.vlev, Iliiuois
 ^^i Villa Illinois
 2<" Ir-^nrw ttxi /.v^.';uc
uilia villn, lilir.olo

 ola II.  ilarj
      r^a J.  iiiftij
i-ivieioa or Fis'-.^rJLus
lliinciS Ix^:a-tv.;c;i'c of
      102 Gcatc C.'fico
                                                rr. J. A.  ILvj-ja
C-i?JS6cr V.T.  iiivlic.}:
          y of ;.ac:il
             c-f i.^tui-
A:^a Avacr, ,'U.chijan

?. n. Ijavrilla
                                                U.3. CUiel Corpora t
                                                52;
                                                Cl-iies-jo, Illinois

-------
                                                                                  1587
  Jaoea P. Seortsy
  Graduate Stulc-nt
  rorthvactira University
  t&JO teat KaLford
  Giokie, TUir-oia
 Arnold ZJ.
 Vice President.
 Ecutli Lai^J County Stream
    ^Dilution Council
 £.H. -i'i  Bo* 120
 Crvwn Point, Indiana
 C. D. KoarJ
 Vies Presiuant
 African Liiiie -Products CoL^szy
 Bc/isy, Indiana

 rr. &lvard R.  Hercann
 Erofeoscr
 lioruivs stern  Utilvcrsity
 L27 lortrjouth
 Ilvanaton, Illinois
 Erueat G. licr
 Staff r;«--?ortsr
 Gary, Indiana

 »«'. F. Hevos
 Chicago Board of Hc-slth
 5^» Vest Hufcard C-truot
Profeaeor Fred K
Ztortcsor of Lav
iwtrcpolitan Sanitary District of
  Crtuitsr Ciiico^o
10 iTorth FranKlin
          Illinois
CKO F.  R.  liicicersoa, U3C7
Ciiief Bosua Mate
U.3. Ccast Gaard
610 Goatto
       , Illinois

Kiso Leslie
Starcot,
                              1100
U.3. Public Health Service
    Vcot Van Surea Street
         Illinois
                                                              Cirector or Paris
                                                       creation
                                 er.i Ei
                                                  S^  C^tL Avenue
                                           Eorratt
                               1;>.LJ Coutl: Micoi^yi Avar:ua
                                        II linoia
                               r.wbcrt A. iirschfield
                               ;» ?- -» j. ^ :**.*; »-, »,- »•
                               h«. **M* *^V- A. •• ^J*^,* •*» » *
                               Cc^^>:.viaith Zcisoa of Indiaca
                               72 \;^st Auaaa
                                        Illinois
                               Curt Itoci
                                        CJc.-sical C
                               3-tl Dist Cliio i;-trei
                                                iward C.  Holabiad, K.D.
                               Cliiaajo Eoard of E
                               "L'^iJ Is^a C-iore Drivo
                                        Illinois
                                               J. R.
                                               Cc-ntral Division
                              Cirrc-sa Colo
                              Ulcbaul D.  Eomait
                              Er.  F.
                                                                Ccrp-aratioa
                               2'i Cx>
                                        f  Oiio
                              23. D. Horton
                              Cosoral Attorney
                              U.S. Gteal
                              S33 Scuta LaSilla Ctrset
                              Ciics^o,  Illinois

-------
                                                                               1588
J. M.  Hovard
Assistant Oilef
        Stcrl
 3210 Vailing Street
 Laot Chicago, Indiana

 Irvia T.  Cvvo
 Insect &  Ixcdeat Control Officer
 Cbice^o B-ani of Sialth
 J»k Vest UuUmvi Strcot
 Chicago,  Illlnoio

 3. A.  Eavell
 Aeaiataat to Vice President
 U.S.  Steal Corporation
 525 Williaa Pona PIs=«
        r^, Pennsylvania

        C. Eov^ll
 CiUof tn^iccer
 ADcrican  Steal Fcundrlca
 Pr\l' '
    cLao,  lilinoia

        C.
Joba D.  Xz^
Halco
t2l6 West 66ti Piaco
          Illinois
if m Ins C. Ivca
United States Gjpsua
Chicago, Illinois

£. Jlorlooa, Jr.
Pro si uent
Lc.ct Chicago, Indiana

  orge F. Jaclcacn
Cities Qorvica  C5il Ccc^i
     Chicago,
IC^nnetb 0. Jackson
Katioaal Steel Ccrporatioa
2900 Great
     Jacob
 vl fast 52 Street
         Illinois
         Jannsllo
         Lirector
P..?.. ;"1 - Box UO
dxotcrtoa, Ir..;lr:r
Mro. Divard Jautc.3
ISO Test Ccnjrcsa Gtrcot
Villa ?or/., Illlnoio
Jcn-^s W. Jordiso
C^criic^ioner V'-itor & Severs
Ci-y cf Chicago
         lilinoin
Ic^ii t'altca
1023 ^ip_>2unnd Street
Gary, inui
        D. Jobuacs
           of Water & Severs
F.ioa UcA city liOi
         Illinois
Mrs. Ellen L. J
::;-rta Cr;oi*a University of z
$'J'j Ml^ll AYCiUG
                                                                                  Club
Liscr Jol^ioon
Cccc C^unV Clean Gtreaaa Cossittce
>';2 i.'coclia.va Avcnuo
           , Iliir.oia
Gerald r. J
         llotrict of iiscci
pi'1. 3 Coiu=iiia Avczrau
C-l-^-i K. Jcir^on
Civil i.»uis2cr
:: _ rt'-.v>-3 tcra \J'A var ci ty
Civli ;T»3ir.t"Jvir.i L^^artaj

-------
                                                                              1589
 Eoaneth L. Jotosoa
 Kc-cionical Sn^inear
 U.3. Public Health Service
 £27 Ccutix £th Avcnuo
 LaGron^, Illinois

 Harold C. JordaJil, Jr.
 Ivc?£icaal Coordinator
 U.S. EcKJ^s^ of tii2 Interior
 303 Price HLsse
       s  Viscoasia
 £5. K  Jor-cnsoa
  26 West Eipley ClrcBt
       aa City,
Er« A. Joel Ka
Director of
                      (i Control
                                of
       >, Illinois

A. ISirttn Kits

Citycf Gory

Cary, TT^""^

ESaard D. Ksipor, Jr.
Jx-i-jcr-Eaat Chicago Fu,'f!r.ery
Wail. Oil Cc^zzzy
In^ias^polis Boulevard
East Cliicajo,  Iniiana
VUlioa Q. Ifchr
Project Sirostor, (&Z3S?
U.S. PJJ
    Kjst Van Bursa Street
     ^o, Zllinoio
John 7. Kelly
Lirector - JIava Ulitor
Coatfcscat Eportsaaa Clui
                                              Jolsa V. i&nnsy
                                              Public SiJlatiosg Consultant
                                               iiicr^jo, Illinola

                                               erman D. r^re^r-a
                                                                              Corp.
                                               21 Couta Vc^aci AVO.IUQ
                                                       Illinois
                                              Pata ICcyo
                                              £'-.U Coaoit Gtroct
                                              lii^Kjnil, Indiana
Vnitar Kicchcl, Jr.
A r* "* "i f* •{• n *-> •*•
• IWJ*.^ CCZ*» V
                                              tr-^3 rivioica, Dc^cvrtcoat cf JusUcg
                                                          B.C.
                                              1-U.lv^u^eo Journal
                                              2 rest Kittlia Street
                                                       VJlsccnsia
                                              Join i-;. ?
                                                         n Officer
                                              &.C-3 Src-id-wuy
                                              Ci-J.C2,^o, Illinoie
                                                                  Council
                                              i'cvird ?.  Kirs
                                              L^nitiry OiTicar
                                              -Chicckjo Ecara of Sc
                                              5U t:--st iaii!23i-d Street
                                              Ciica^o, ininois
                                             Frcu H. Van
                                             Ccnsocr,  Tcwriscnd & Asjsociatos
                                             3-jJ  list  Grand Aviaus
                                             Vice-cat Kirrln
                                             CimrinteniLeat,  iiist Citlca^o Vater
                                             ^733 C-loott Avenue

-------
                                                                                  1590
 P. W. Klttrell
 Riblic Health Engineer
 U.S. Pablic Health Service
 5teft Ganitory 2a3inearin3 Center
 Cincinnati, Ohio

 Krs. C. V. KLasoen
 Cprinsf ield League of Voaan Voters
 2022 Pork Drlvo
              ILUno
 Mrs.  Itooert H. KLin«
 Chairman Water Resources
 Lcakjua of Voacn Voters
 333 ICorth Kiverside Erive
 Rivardale, lUlnoia

 Srvin J. Kaiscik
 Chief Sanitarian
 Lalie  County ilecith
 Court Ko'03«
 Crovn Point, Indiana
Ten
liansond Tizsoa
     IQioblauch
Borthvcstern
19J»7 I^ple Avcnua
Evaactcn, lilinoia

0. U» Koaster
Plant tonaser
Lever Ercth«r3 Company
1203 Calusat Avenua
iiirmond, Indiana

Albert Kcett
EaLcornn
Allied Coenlcal
     Femadale Avcnua
J. L. Kohlbedter
Supsrinteniient Stean Povsr
£630 East lOyto Streot
Chicago, Illlnoia
K. L. Eollor
Director
K;'.ter Industries 4 Easincorins Service
  Pivision
U.S. roprartaent of Conacrcc
L'nshicjtcn, D. C.

1-iTO. Tcrksl Korllnj
Eo:; 92
I'usdcC; Illinois

Join Ksvalik
Clean Ctrsaas Coralttea
53^1 Gcuth food Dtrcot
         Illinoic
L. S. Kraus
Greater Peoria Sanitary Hotrict
2322 iknith Earst
Peoria, Illinois

Fred G. Krikau
          Steel Corporation
    a. Perry Avenua
Chicago, Illlaois

Pdchard F. Kuclt
Izcak l.'alton I/-»s
1221U South Lafayette
         Illinois
      aB H. Siehn, Jr.
CLiicf CiTiitary Ziyinccr
     trsnt of Water & Gewers
     East Chsltcnljca  Placa
Ciiicojo, Illinois
Caiof Interstate Enforccr^nt Ca
Icjarta-jat of ilealtn, Education,  aril
   V.'elfars
V.*acbin3toa, D. C.
R. J.
Princip
IvYi s^r I'.n.iinc or s
J1S3 I.Vrti l^iTiills
CiJ-o-zjo, IlliaoiB

-------
                                                                               1591
  George A.  Lace
  Attorney
  Metropolitan Sanitary District of
    Greater  Chicago
  100 ifest Erie
  Chicago, Illinois

  Ikrsan A.  Lans
  Aosistant  Secretary
  Uritcd States Gj-psua  Company
  101 South Vuclcer  Brlva
  Chicago, Illinois
 Ifcul E.
 Greeley &
 Ik Ii3t Jackson
          Illinois
 T. E. larsoa
 Illinois State Water Gurvcy
 Assistant Chief
 Box 232
 Urbana, Illinois
Corrpoay
 J. M. Lavson
 Refinery
 Berry n^
 Industrial
 Gory, laaiana
 Comsl A. Leoau
 Sanitary District
 City of  ££3t
 52JO India
 lijot Cblcajo,  Indiana
K. C. Leavitt
Assistant Plant
CHjor^ical Divioion
U^ion Carbide Cozporatlca
P.O. Box 750
        Assiotant to Chief, VSiPC
U.S. Public Health Scrvico
3D26 Risa South
Washington, B.C.
                                  Leland
                              Sanitary Engineer
                              Illinois Sanitary Water Board
                              1919 Vest Taylor Street
                              ChicsGO, Illinois
                              0. t-!. Leonard
                              Consulting
                              2950 Cleveland Avcnuo
                                       City, Indiana
                              Paul L=vin
                                  sa County Health
                              222 Vlllov
                              vrncaton, Illinoia
                              Lecoartl E.  Link
                              Senior Engineer
                              Ar^or^ie national Laboratory
                              9700 South Cass Avenua
                              Ar^oona, Illinois
                                                         Lioarie
          Star
3.333 Siokic Highway
         fork, Illinois
                             IJilllao 2.
                             Eiractor of Conoervatioa
                             Hlinoio Eejartnant of Conservation
                             102 State Office
                                         ,  Illinoio
                             Ifre. Gcorga M.
                             HinsCale Lea^us of Wooen Voters
                             223 Keot ^
                             Hincuale,  Illinois

                             A. C. Lorinot
                             Chiof Ficbcry Biologist
                             Illinois Eepartesnt of Conservation
                             ^55 NorthCrest Erive
                             Litchfield, Illinois

-------
                                                                              1592
Francis 3. Lorenz
Director Public Worts &
State of TUtpoia
300 Berth State Street
Chicago*
Leo Louis
President
Gary-J3obort Vater Corporation
650 Madison
3ary,  Indiana

A.  Lund
Village Mxnagsr
           Illlnoi*
Joseph M.
Marvin Lyzenga
Soles Representative
77 Couth Wacltsr Drive
Chicago, Illinois

Harry B* MacDonald
Manufacturing Superintendent
Lever Brothsrs
1230  Caluact Avenua
     Joseph HacDonald
             Chaircon 3rd -District
1)1323 Lvana Avonut
        Illinois
        M. Uxcksnthun
Aquatic Biolojict
U.S. Public H.altii Service
TaTt Sanitary Eajiceerins Center
            Ohio
Chester M
Co-Cbaircoa Thorn Cresfc-Caluact Area
10759 Avcaud Korth
Chicago* Illinois
Russell C.
Technical Garvice
         Oil Conpoay
    South iiist street
Crovn Point, Iniiona
       Corporation
211 Couth >iiin Streot
Lo^l-ard, Illinois

Clorka V. Mxnipin, Jr., XD
Eesioaol H-ttlth Director
Public Health Cer/ico
1*33 W*st Yoa Curea Ctreat
Chicago, Illinois

Steve W. liinich
La^e County Indiana Surveyor
Lake County
Crovn Point, Indiana

John W. ibnn
Technical I&na^cr
Jisbil Oil Cov.-j?any
3021 Intliac^polis Eculevcrd
£cst Chicago, Indiana
UTS. Bobert M
Byda Park &nvcod Corrunity CcnTercncc
1A53 !'/<-« ftarlt Eculcvard
     ^o, Illinois
        L. Msrelnlafe
I'atvrr Pollution Biolcgist
u.s. ?.n - GLrji3?
1S19 *,;sst"lHjr3hin3 Road
         Illinois
Ccvard L.
Car.itzry Engineer
lilinoia Dcj?artr.2nt of public Health
1>19 Ww>st Taylor Street
Chicago, Illinois
?. J. I&r&cball
Vice Preside:: t
Abi»ott Ltiborat-orica 8t
  Advisory C&,*siV^««j
1,-urth Ciiica-o, Illicois
John ^i
                         Tu:-? Technical
     Couth lentil Avcr.03
               , Viccsnsia

-------
                                                                                 1593
 Earab Jfcsa
 Colvt-st City
 ll-i«ptb Street
 Gaiur-vt City,  Illicoio

 Villiaa V. Matb-avs
 Superintendent
 C.-xry Conitory  District
 P.O. 2ox 35G
 Crry, Indiana

 Ecriol E. >Sitscbk*
 C-iuerxl CSaireaa
 Cccii: County  Clean Strcass Ccrssittee
 1>'>J1 Ltnioa  Leaf Prive
 Colonel John C. Attica
 r-Ictrict Lr.^inccr
 U.S. Arsy tit^insor Dictrict,
 £19 Touth tcarbom
 Coica^o, TUlnoia

    ph C. KcCoily
 Scl.arorvllle Indiana
            Park
 Ken ?«s
                                                       Assistant SarJ.tary lis
 U.I. ETJ3
 &.O iii^r.-
 i;va:-i8tua, Illinois
 G. L. Jj
 ricut Supcnatonucnt
 Gcaural Ar^-ricaa Tronspcrtat-oa Cos
 J;£-';5 Poiirccd
 G. G. teGeorac
 I^^-cr •ijsicec'-la,-; & Quality Ccatrol
G.  K.  24;In
Cjici' Cnor-iat
  lSti Ss Isdia^pclio Bculov^r
 J^yroa M. ito'lrath
 L-.-jicIu.tivc Cousael
 f'iGy Oiu 3er*ats OiTicc Uuiidia^
 \ia:•ainG^on, D.C,
CiriTlos A i  flc
Pro j eat i-iinr^jer
       o 2ri'A33 i Irca Oc
    Vest 22 Street
C-ak Brook,  Illinois
Jarcs  0.  !£:L
Canjtructioa
U.C. PJ3
t33 Vest  V&n 2aroa Street
Clilcajo,  Illinois
•Sanitary  Lc^ir.ecr III
City of Ciiicajo
D^..ir to3.it of W-tcr ani Severs
33)3 £23t CJtioltiuhaa Place
Cuicc^o,  Illir.oia
L'-ic;! Carulue
2?j  I-X-rth Jioid-n:a
     ?  .
U.'J. ruivy yth ivi-vsl «istrici
restrict Public Worl'JJ OCl'ico
Iuil
-------
                                                                               1594
 Frank KcKicaU
 (inrid«rt Conpany
 2333 West Losjon Boulevard
 Chicago,  Illinois

 Richard J,  Rautha
 Chief Plant Syjincer
     -Xnox Coryany
      PcdlroocL Avenuo
 Cast Chicago, Indiana

 J.  Edvard ifecrs
 Sanitary District of Blooa Township
 P.O. Box 25
 Chicago Heights,  Illinois
Robert Ifefford
Chief Sonitorxan
Porter County Health
R.R.  $
Williaa H. Ha-onncU
Acllnj  Chief
Divisioa of Air Pollution
U.S. PII3
3P C Street, 3.¥.
Room 2^23 South
          * D.C.
Stephen
Deputy Project Director
U.S. RI3 - GLEQ?
1019 Vest Porshio-s Koad
         Zllinoia
    C. Kolater
Enot Gary
3625 Central Avenue
Eait
         J. Mola«
trustee
I^tropolitan Sanitary District of
  Greater Ciica^o
100 Ikst Eri* Street
Chicago, Illinois
      H. Melbye
1*51 j Vest 101 street
        j Illinois
a. H, toredlth, Jr.
Coordinator - Air & Vater Casaitteea
ilunbla Oil & Rerinlnj Ccsgany
P.O. BOX 21GO
       , Texas
Albert J,
                                             Illinois relocate to Great Lake*
231 Couth
     ^o, Illinois

Glen W. tiitcalfa
Supervisor of Sanitation
Chicago Pork District
k2y last l^th Boulevard
         Illinois
     M. Kiclaltc
CosdLttee Kesber
LcR^ua of WccKjn Voters
26 North Pennsylvania Street
Henry A. 2-illlor
Choirmn Lover Des Plaines deaa
  Strinaa Cozsittea
23 Lon^cceaon Road
Riverside, Illinois

J. a. Killer, Chief Engineer
Wisconsin Steel Inc.
2SOD East 106th Streets
         Illinois
Perry E. Mlllr;r
Ascictant Z/iroctor
Division of Sanitary
Indiana State Board o? Health
1330 Vest KlchiGzm street
Inulacajolis, Indiana
Randall C. Miller,
City Ball
Kichigan City,

-------
                                                                                1595
        D.
 Project li
    South I.'orthvcst iHL&x
          j,  Illinoia
 li-a. Walter W. l-iislu
 £322 AtcJaison Avcnua
 tihltlnj, Indiana

 Edward J. Kolloy
 CLieujjo Eosrcl of Health
 $li W*;ct Uubbard  Street
          Illinoia

 F. B. Itntcu
 ilcv Yorlc S'tats
 Albany, Ksw Yori
 Jchn
 Air Pollution Sanitarian
 Gciry Health Ds
 1^23 Verjirla
       Indiana
           I-Srria
    Steal Eous&ries
Ccaal Straat
          ndin
                          Inc.
John G.
lir^ctor or Pablic Vorl:3
Lako County, Illinoio
Laia County Health
      Grand
    .  Clarence i-torrison
    cjaa of it'ccsn Voters
       urtoiutii Avonua
Wilcatto,  Illinoia

Kra.  Donald >i>rriscn
Vator Hcscurces Comittco
Lcujie of Wcsaaa Voters of Illir.oi
3^1 ricl^e  Avcr.ua
l.'innctia,  Illinois
                                               A.  Jijrrov
                                                    Town Board of
                                                ld^c Ecad
                                         Joan R. Ztoroow
                                         Assistant Attorney Gccernl
                                         Illinois  Kator Loara
                                         W-5  SocitH tth strcst
                                                       Illlnsia
                                         D. B.
                                         CirLcf Bureau Ctreaa Iblliition Control
                                           lTir.ois Dcportusnt of Poblia Healta
                                             State Offices
                                                   cl, Illinois
                                         ilrs. D. 3. liorton
                                         l-\25 Cliarry F.osd
                                                      Illinois
                                         0. J. I-lic^a
                                         G tat/2 Canitsry En^Ln^or
                                         T.."isoensin Gtate Bccrd of Eealth
                                         6>y Cran-Jall Street
                                         liiCison, WiBConcin
                                         John l>iihler.ter<5
                                         1657 I'aat 63 Street
                                               C.  Priscilla :irp::y
                                               Lsajus of s'orien Voters
                                                   Indiana

                                         xivid L. i-iirray

                                                    VJatcr
                                                  52 Street
                                                   l,«sv Yorit
                                         Leslie 0. 1'ynatt
                                         Ciiiof Ciic^iot
                                         Allied C2o3nicnl Corporation

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                                                                             1596
 Bichard 3. Hello
 "Water Resources Engineer
 Illinois Sanitary Water Board
 1732 South Bark Avenue
 Springfield,  Illinois

 Richard J. Eelson, Director
 Public Relations
 Inland Steel  Company
 30 E. Mwaroa  Street
 Chicago, Illinois

 Eugene J. Ksssolson
 Vastcs Control Engineer
 Velsicol Casnical Corporation
 3^1 East Ohio Street
 Chicago, Illinois

 Dr.  John B. Eicosia
 Jiiyor of East Chicago
 1907 iUth Street
 Eaot Coicacoj  Indiana
Barbara J. Eoell
Watar  Chemist
City of Chicago
1OOO East Ohio Streot
Chicago, Illinois

R. E.  Kovick
Es^ional FroGraa Director
liivironnantal Eo^iuocrii^ & Food
  Protection
RJ3  -  Re-ion V
      ist Veua Eurcn Street
        , lUinoio

Mrs. Caroline O'Brien
Kator  Resources Coszjitteo
Lea^ua of Kosan Votara
5522 South CMlds
Eiasiale, Illinoia

Walt Ostby
Plant  Casaiot
737 Paytoa Street
Geneva, Illinois

Cecile K. Ovabey
ia03 Vest Hillsrov
          Illinois
C. R. Ownbey
Supsrvisir^i 3-nitary liijiuccr
U.G. Public ilcalth Survieo
Chicago, Illinois

Lucille Czanno
 P--r»   f --»- ^~**
 .u> • «^^i «<
li-33 Vest Yen Surca Street
Coica^o, Illinois

Earl S. Psriier
Pioat iiiiineer
Gon-srol Au-sricaa Trarisportatioa
  Corporation
P.O. Box 1;CO
East CaiccL^o, Ir.Iia.ia
£. G. rhulsoa
Colsoa Corporation
P.O. Box 13^5
        sla, Pennsylvania
     Pivey
Area taaa^sr, Rillc Holatioaa
Accricaa Oil Cor:?r.ay
Suite 3:0, PrciuaUcl Plaaa
     go, Illinois
Pdctsra A. Piivia
tircctor of ii^inser
Illinois
135 Couth
Chicago, Illinois

Harry U. Bavlovski
Civil Engineer
reparfcajat of Water &
City Hall, Sooa t
Chicaso, Illinoifl
Eonald Fedo
City En^in^er
City of Couth KLlvauUoe
City >M}
South IJilvaulise, Wisconsin
George P. Falc
Project Eajinser
Ai*taur G. ll2!C-iQ
£j5 Wist l-ioaro3  Street
Chicago, Illinois

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                                                                                1597
 Evend E. Palch
 Sanitary Engineer
 Public Health Sarvica
 ^33 *i>fest Yon  Euraa Street
 Chicago, Illinois

 Charles 0. Pallor
 Professor & Chainsm
 Valparaiso University
 Valparaiso, Indiana

 J. A. Psllctior
 teanaser General E^jiseerinj rc-p
 5265 ilccan Avanuo
 2asE3oad, Indiana

 C. Pocfrerton, Jr.
 Sanitary Engineer
 ty.s. pas
 1*33 West Von Bursa Street
 Chicago, Illinois
    cisr A. Psole
 Virginia D. Pszbsr
      Thcravooil Drive
   fsera Grove, Illinoio
        Per.r,:rm
 U.3. Public Health Ssrvica
 233 JJilloa
 Notre Danti,
Robert Pe
ASjiatant Snnitory Sn.3ir.car
U.S.  Public Hsaltij Service
^SS T-.'iSt Von 3-orcn Strcat
      ^o,  Lllinoia
        Pstsrson
Director Cpsn Leads Project
123 West tiidicoa
CT^icajo,  Illinois

Eoyd M.  Ficlps
Vice Prs^iderit
Boyd E.  F:wlps,  Ins.,  Consvil
100D Waobir^tca
KicM^an City,

Eonry L.  Pitts,  At
2)8 EcutU LaSaUo
     so,  Illinois
      r>a Strcaa Pollution Control Beard
 133) "v'
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                                                                                 1598
 Frank A. Quinneil
 Ccaoultins Snijinsar
 2113 Mindal Avsnua
 Westcaester, Illinois
      M.
          Engineer Birector
U.S. Public H-Jiiitii Ge-rvice
Rocm kl5t Euiluins 22
£«inver Federal Center
Denver, Colorado

Joceph n*&ovski, Jr.
 East Chicago Vater Korka
 1*755 Olcott Aveaue
      CMca.30, Ind
 Hsrbort P.
 Conservation Lirector
 Porter County Chapter
 IsaaJc r'&
 2L R. Box
 Chestcrtca,  Indiana
J5ra,  Erael T.
Cock  County dcoa
20  west Avenua
liiv^raitia,  Illinoio
Ii&a Reed
Ccok County Clean
3D W jst Avenud
Riversida, Illinois
Glen V. Reyoaa
SKvar Superintendent
Grimtti, Indian

Uilliaa A. Riasld
iaiccutiva ixirsstor
Ita^t l.'altc-n Leagua of A'i
Glenview
        ce^an r.
        , liiinoi
                           Ccr,srittea
               oia
        L. Richards
President
Izaafc K^U-too L-OGUJ of Assr
X22*2 South Lr-Fayetto  Avenua
Ciiicajo, Illinois
                                              Er. :'Jrrian S.
                                              Asrcciate Profecsor of Government
                                              Couth Illinois Uaiversity
                                              1211 West Ecliuartz, Apartment 6
                                              Carbondule,
                                                       Sislsy, Jr.
                                              Director L*boratoric.-o
                                              U.S. Public Ecalth Sorvico
                                              1819 West Psreains F.oai
                                              Chicago, Illinois

                                              Jack Robertson
                                              Hoy ?. W«*ton> Inc.
                                              ^ 5t. Albans
                                              Ilevtowa Square, Pcru^cylvania

                                              Mrs* Charles J. Robinson
                                              Local Pro^rrja dairr^sn
                                                     of Wossn Voters
                                                   Forest Farlt
                                              Valparaiso, l^di&r^

                                              Valtcr F. Kobohn
                                              CiJ.tr, Vatcr Pollution S^ctic-a
                                              Ju-Olana State Board of ^•slIA
                                              1330 V^st :-Iiciiisan
                                              Indianapolis, Inuiosa
                                              Jolin A. Ho
                                              Yccr^ins Brothers Cor^any
                                              1999 Worth Ruby Street
                                              Melrose Pork, lUinols

                                              Jerry B. E
                                              porthvestara
                                              4905 Randolph
                                              Worth tittle Kocl£, Arl^
f.^ra. Sasuls Hcsaa
Welter Resources  dioirsnn
CaK rTark League of >;osaa  Voters
132J. Forest Aveisaa Avanuo
River Forest, Illinois

Sertaiel R. Cos«n
Deputy Attorney Gtfneral
1330 West Mdtt$an Street

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                                                                            1599
 Dr. P. J. Rosenblooa
 Health Coznissioner
 Gary Board of Health
 1U2? Virginia
 Gary, Indiana
        M. Rosengartcn
 Coordinator-Wast a Abateisent
 Union Carbide Chereical Corporation
 South Charleston, West Vir&inia

 Erlo R. Rocs
 Chicago Editor
 Steel TiiGazine
 £1*5 north r.Jichigan Avenue
 Chicago, Illinois

 John F. Pule
 Public Relations Representative
 Mobil Oil Company
 925 Grand Avenue
 Kansas City,  Missouri

 Mrs. Lilli&n H.  Rurnol
 Vater Pollution  Biolosist - GLIR3?
 Su^U South Kardlton
 Chicago,  117.1 noia

 Bill Ryder
 Reporter
 The Oil Daily
 59  East Van Buren
 Chicago,  Illinois

 Edward Salt
 Editor
 Ycunjstovn, Ohio

 Ibrahim J.  Sarsaba
 Civil Engineer
8lS Haalin  Street
Evans ton, Illinois

Charles Sandor
Supsrintendsat
Eamond Water Dcpoxtscnt
6505  Columbia Avenue
Harsond, Indiana
     se ScviddL
 Cool; County Clean Streaas
 7012 West Hamilton Drive
 Ililes, Illinois

 LeHoy E. Scarce
 Chief Mlcrobiolo^ist
 Public Health Service - GLIR3?
 1G19 West Parshinii Eoad
 Chicago, Illinois

 R. M. Schafer
 Vice President
 Ilorry E.  Dchlenz
 President
 Pacific Flush Tank
 ii2^1 Ravansvood Avenue
 Chicago,  Illinois
 Mrs.  D. J.
 President
 H.^r:Dnd League  of Vcasn Voters
 6633  Forest Avenue
       ,  Indiana
     R. J. Schlott
League of Woaea  Voters
1010 Korth Princeton
Arlington Heishts, Illinois

lire. John Shubeck
LGCJUG of VoEsn  Voters
62o llorth DcuiLas
Arlington Heights, Illinois

A. Schuler
Plant Engineer
U.S.S. Lead Refinery Inc.
52PO Kennedy Avenue
Eoct Chicago, Indiana

Howard 1?. Schulz
Assistant Director
A:,-.erican I-iv-dical Association
535 Uorth rearborn
Chicago, Illinois

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                                                                               1600
 B. F. Sch-.il tz
 1-iiinteaa.ice Gupcjrlntcndeat
 General Mills
 lCnj?9 Miclic^oa Avcnua
 Ciic&£0, Illinois
 Gerald S. Sciiuatesa
           - GI3E2?
      West i^roiiinj Road
          Ulicoio
 V. B. Soefeldt
 Chonical Engineer
 Ar^onna &stionai  L
 97--0 Gcuth CasD Avonue
 Arjcons, Illinoia
 J. H. Cii
 Cinciair Hc
     north vr^clwr Drive
          Illinoia
 IU It. Cl
 P.-i.^.o::iL
 Llr.ic Elvlcion, Union Cartlde Corporation
 Ij^X) K--2aauy Avcnua
 East dica-io, Iniiaaa

 Dr. Jcba B. Staffer
 r;cscurcc3 PlsjininiJ crjficsr
 i:orthc»storn Illinois Pisariin^ Coaalssioa
     Vicst jradicvn
     s-jo,  Illinoia
Warrea
          Cc^zlcsion
       Aveuus
  lia Villa, Illinois
Ec'ccrt C.  Shar
         Pollution
         Civic I
C>>01 Gouth Harra
         Illln^io
Walter K.  Ci
State Ci.airs.aa Izeak WalUa Poilutich
          Avenuo
Joliet, Illinois
Donald E. Sblraa
limajsr, Public  Inforaatica
Inlar.d Stsel Cor
2? '.'ost tinrcg
    aiio, Tllinoig
tli-.W. Slbloy
t;--tcr 1'rijir.C'jr
Ko«l; lolar-d llxllroad
i>7^1 Uentvortii Avsr.u
          Illinois
1-Sro.  liitca Sibley
OXL VaUier Street
                Indiana
 C.  M. CJicloy
 Cover^iaat AT fain*
 Z!_v:.
 6C3
 Water Cupc-
 2'Xy IQtii Avon
                  Wisconsin
 Uoaald H. Eaith
          Editor
 Zy root Vaclior
          Illinois
 V'atcr Rjssiirci-u Co^iittco
 L'^a^uc of V'esjsn Votoro
 11 \.illOV PlECO
 Eyb-ar'c, Indiana
 City of Joliot
 12H3 0" '"en
 Jolict,°Illir.oig
 lire
                                                            J,. Csifa
                                                       of \'O^JT» Voters
                                                i^ilar,u,  Indioaa

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                                                                                  1601
         Q.  Czata
   ioai W-iltca
       Paris Lans
 Couth Holland,  Illinois

 Kelly ?. E.10CL;
 Administrative  Assistant
 Evacotoa Water  Dep
     Lincoln Street
            Illinois
 Paul flolhcia
 Plant .^.na^er
 Georgia-Pacific  Corporation
 2nd. Plsca & Vaite
       Indiana
 Peter H« SononfolOl
 Senior Flauner
 Illinois Board of Economic £e-velcp^ont
 160 ilortb L^Salle Street
          Illinois
 Jazas H. Sp-=ar=aa
 G trseta & jDrairr.^a En^inoer
 219 Ckjutii Bsarbcra Street
 r.Qca l5lO
          Illinois
 lira. Philip Stafford
 President
 League of V'cEsn Voters
 733 South Unii Street
 Hctart, Indiar^a

 Villiar Stanley
 Professor
 151 Sorfclfc Avenua
 Cloreadoa Hills, Illinois

 Jarco Staatca
General Acsrlcon !Eraac2?crtatic3 Ccnpany
135 £ouch '.Jabash
     so,  Illinois
Hro. F. J.  Stcdiaan
Leasus of »,'ocsn Voters
10 Hobinhood Ixiva
Cai Erooi,  Illinois
  cbirt G. Steel
  :ajinser
  I^::c;r-.-uil Ino.
  .Q. ^x; 17J
  -;arvoy, Illinois

  acli Steir.er
  vtV.r t;-ofaty Cczstrol
 3JJ3 ra.3t CGiit3U}-^12 PiBCS
 ;s-0. Cscil Dtcrsh^r.5
 r.<:aj-.:s of Wc.7^n Voters
 cC-':o Corclina
 •iiJLia.ia, Indiana

 Dr.r.i'oi A. Stock
 /'-i3tant £?^iit-iry mjinsc
 U.3. Public H-altii Service
 i*33 l:c.-st Van 2uren Gtraet
 Ccica^o, Illinois
 C-r.trcl Illinois Industrial Accociation
 3316 r^rth Z^st Ada^3 Street
 Fc-yriz, Illinois

 Eon  Ctona
 Director, Govcrnr.3nt Relaticna
 Cxxtboard Bc-atir-s Club cf Af
 333  i'-'^rth '•icbi^an Avenue
 Ciiicijo,  Illinois
    iaa D.  Straczei
Il.vcctor of La^i oratory
         District Elooa Tovnsnip
Ctsic^o Hei^hta,  Illinois

D^rl s. Strayiora
Trustee
             Scnitaiy iiGtrict of
ICO 1-ast L'rie  itre
Chi^-r.^o, Illinois

Jcicpi M. E:>*ort
Bur^-ss Hocten
        Illinoia

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                                                                            1602
Floyd Svanton
Technical Sole*
Stein TfoU
7231 Souti 78th
£rid£cvicv, Illinois
John R.
Partner
Coaacer, Tovnsend & Associate*
360 £a3t Grand Avenua
Coica2O, Illinois

tf. Ira Cyler
Post Votcrintirian
Fort Sljeridon, Illinois
Arlene
Gscretary
U.S. Public ifealti Service
J*33 Vest Van Eurcn Street
Cfcica,20, Illinois

J.  G. Telfer, M.D.
American Ksdical  Association
555 l.'crtb Dearbora
Coicajo, Illinois

V.  A. Thiel
Chief Zn^ir^er
LaSallo Steel Company
1U12
     D. Tbooas
U.S. Public acalto Sorvica
    Vest Van Euren Street
     ao, Illinoia
J. Edward
Sioior Assistant Sanitary
U.S. Public Kcalta &;rviu
ii33 West Van Burcn Street
Chicago, Illinois

Eichard P. Tinlthaa
Attorney
Lsvcv Brothsrs Corpany
708 Coluaet
       , Indiana
J. L. Tit*
Sanitary Ens
Indiana State Board of
121 Bslaont Strs^t
         City, Indiana
     Adler Titelbaua
Leslie of Wcosn Votc-ra
£003 t'eat 102ad Streat
         Illinois
Lilbsra J* Titus
riiyor
City Br.11
R. L.
ajioral Supervisor
U.S. Steel
1 l,'orth Broadvay
Q. H.
Cly-ie £. Villiaos & Associates
TOT.U ilall
Ochcrerville, Indiana

S. Trofusno
Cbair^ton
     County dean Streams Co^
      Bi-cxel
Goutli Holland, Illinois

Jca R. Trizna
     County
Chicago & Jefferson
Joliot, Illinoia

Mrs* J. H. Troy
Cooinan Colusst
Gave the I?uno3 Council
1512 rkri; trive
iXicstcr, Indiana

Mr a. Dccold Trus?
I'ircctcr
Lc^ijua of Kcsxsa Voters
15. 5 - Jiox 26
VolparaJLso, Indiana

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                                                                               1603
 Chris TuakaJ
        j Inspector
  Jesas L. Verber
       lauiana
 P. E. Tucfcsr
 Ccordisator Indian* Health Engineer
 Tatio.ial Steal Corporation
 Rcocarch & Esusl
 Weirtoa, Veat Virginia

 A. V. Tuesler
 General Suyervleor
 U.S. Steel
 3teS Last 89th
 Chicago, Illinola
 Arthur C. Tuo
 Eiiccutiva Director
 Pjx*tcr Corjiriy Plan Ccaaissloa
 Valparaiso, Indiana

 Carol Tyler
 President
 Lcajus of worsa Voters
 9151 Grace Place
 lii^uland, Indiana

 Dr.  John A. Valchulls
 Eactcriolo^ist
 Ciilca^o Board of Health
 5» Vest fiubbard Street
 CiiiceGo,  Illinois

 Jdzeo ?.  Vance
 l»5t>i Artillery Uulldinj
 Arlington H^iaata,  Illinois

 John V. Van Keso
 Assistant to Preoideat
 lacvcgt Steed Civiaion
 portals,  Icdlar*a
Janss C. Vau^ha
Acoistant Engineer
'..'ctsr Purificatioa
1607 iist Oixio Street
Chicago, Illlaole
  U.S. Public health Service
  1&19 Went ParsiiJjy ?,cad
  Chlca;;^, Illlnais

  Itail Vifial
  Fishery Biolcjist
  Illinois repc.r'o!:«at of Cosocrvatloa
  659 J^lros* Street
           Illinois
  Phillip Vinsitorlo
 Watu-r Gafaty Coatrol
 33'_O last Ciicltishaa Place
 Chicago,  Illinoia

 Allzart 0. Vinicli
 Pr^si'-eat Zcari of Trustsc*
 Ecjartcsnt cf Water Vorla
 ^733 Olcott  Avccua
 liist Chicago, Icrilana

 B. J.  Wachtor
 Industrial Vater En^iaa
 1*50 Diat Ohio
 Chicago, Illinoia

 E. 32ruco Kaddell
 1st Vico Presid^at
 Iioai Voltoa
 luadce, Illinois
 Paul Kns
 City Zn
 City r>all
 East Gory, Indiana

 Victor fcasaer
 C-saltsry iasineer Consultant
 Cm-Tux Industries
 5C'22 I'cailovocd Lrlvo
A. K. Vokcfleld
                                             later 3LaI-:-3 Vacations Association
                                                         Chio

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                                                                              1604
 C.  R.
 Allied Chsndcal Corporation
 P.O. Box 70
 Jfcrristovn, Jtev Jersey

 David  V. Walker
 Chief  Resources Planner
 Illinois Board of £conoaic Eevdopsent
 Ecoa UOO - Stats orfice Building
              Illinoio
LeYarcaa Vallaca
         Supervisor
            Shaet & Tuba Colony
East C3aica  Indiana

P.c'oert L. Vallace
Pluabing Inspector in Otarja
City of  Caicajo
1COO Zaot Ohio Street
         Illinois
Robert 0. Valler
Assistant Chief Water Enjicce
Scon tok  City Hall
         Illinoio
John 3. Valsb
Senior Assistant Sanitary inj
U.S. Public Ecaltix Dorvicc
1»33 Vest Van  Eurca Street
         Illinois
Ceor^a E. Valtcrs
plant Engineer
Caterpillar tractor Cocpany
P.O. lie* 2^3
Aurora, Illinoio

Thoaas E. Vard
Public Halations
U.S. Steel
SOS Ccuth LaCollo Street
         Illinois
F. L.
Vice President
U3S Leid Refinery
Last
H. H. Vastechi
Assistant Editor
       s Wcelc
    Itorta lilcbican
Chicago, Illinois

Charles E. Vatero, K.D.
^ii:uJ-cr of T-ciolcal G^-rvico
Alliiil Chesicul Corporation
                                                      ,  Virginia
       E. VatJiins
\ratcr Chcsdct III
Chicscp Vatcr Dvi»art^«n
10JD last Ohio Street
Cliicajo, Illinois

y. G. Vatters
Eorj Vomer Corporation
Ics Pleinca, Illinoia

Mitten a. l:cicer, K.D.
5US3 South Cornell
Chicago, Illinois

John Vcldon
50 T,:o3t 3shiller Street
Ci-J.c^jo, Illiaois

lira. John C. V?cmici:'j
Ccnscrvatioa
rol-t-3a-J-.iY(jr(^ilG
15-oY forest Avcnuo
Eoltcn, Illinois
A. K. West
Public Health
       Scaltii &jr^
     Canitarv
Cincinnati, Ohio
                         Club
                          Center
C. 2-J. Vhs]
K-Viio-r, Flood Services
Ccpoland Proeesa Corporation
Cal--Broo!t Kail
3*A Professional
    Erooi:, Illincio

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                                                                             1605
 Cheater R. Viederann
 Consulting Mechanical Engineer
 International iiarvectcr
 16O Korth BLchisaa
          Illinois
 iilvard J. VierzfcicldL
 Engineer
 toerican Steel Foundries
 Prudential Plaza
 Chicago, Illinois

 P. N. villeins
 Technical timascr
 Jtobil Cdl Cospaay
 P.O. £:>x 477
 Trenton, Michigan

 Icnald 2, Vill
 Jfeyor
 City Ball
 Valparaiso, Indiana

 Gene E. Willefcs
 Chief, Engineering Section
 U.C. PH3 » GLIRBP
 1319 V«at Persbins Food
 Chicago, Illinois

 Harold Williama
 Sanitary Engineer
 Yeoiana Brother* Conpony
 510 Korta Dearlxsra
          Zllinoift
R.  C.
Adviser
Hidvcat Steel
Portage, Indiana

IT.  ?. Kiltot
Dii
Qlin
2^28
£v&naton, Illinois
       Vilson
Civil Engineer
Eorthveotsrn University
Evanston,
 Evurett Vitta
 Chesterton Tovn Board Barber
 Chesterton, Indiana
          B. Volf
           Supervisor
 Allied chsnlcal. Corporation
 12260 Scuta
      go,  Illinois
 Shue Tuck
 Ks search
 University of Cbico^o
 1JHU Couth 59
 Chicago, Illinois

 Charles L. Woody
 Edible Process Superintendent
 Lever Brothers Coqpony
 1230 Caluoat Avenue
Fred S. Vuetic
Trod H. Vuetic 6 Associates
7*** South Chicago Avenue-
Chicaso,  Illinois
       A. Wydra
Electro»Motiv« Bod 6 Gun Club
      gO; Illinois
Boicrt A. Vynco
Tcsiinlcal Assistant
Clinton Cora Processing
Clinton, leva
Franklin D. Todcr, M.D.
Director of Public Health
503 State Office Euildins
Springfield, Illinois

Albert V. Tovanovich
Vice President, Ttxwa Board
2565 Brandt Street
Portage, Indiana

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                                                                             1606
Alox Zelchsnkd
Ecparter
Economist Sevspapers
529 Vest Schiller Street
         Ulinoia
C. E. Ziegler
BecordiniS Secretary
Islander Sportsmen Club
3619 Krlshtvood Avenue
         Illinois
Chester J. Zieoniak
Tovn Jiigineer
Tovc of Griffith
8931 Eoss Drive
          Indiana
H. F. Zinozxjister
Co-sarvatlon Engineer
C. Z. Williams & Associate a
1902 Sheridan  Avenue
SOUth B-ildj  JrtfHana.

Bicbard Zveiback
Internation  Union Representative
Arwricon Federaiioa of State County I-Sriicipal
  Lcployees
5U West Randolph
Chicago, Illinois
                                                   * U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE : l»< O—7»»-4l5

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