delivered the opinion of the court:
The Greater Chillicothe Sanitary District of Peoria County filed with the Peoria County zoning department a request for a building permit to construct on a certain parcel of land a sewage disposal plant. This was denied. Thereafter, a petition was filed with the Zoning Board of Appeals of Peoria County for a variation in use of the subject property for such purpose. The plant was to consist of an administration building, parking facilities, a clarifier, a digester and five open sludge drying beds with other necessary appurtenances. The north half of the property was zoned “C” residential, and the south half “E” light industrial, neither of which zones permitted a sewage disposal plant. Plaintiffs are owners of land adjacent to the property for which the variation was sought and they appeared as оbjectors to the petition. The Zoning Board of Appeals heard extensive evidence and granted the variation. Thereafter, a building permit was issued on March 13, 1963. No objectors appeаled from the order issuing the building permit. No stay of proceedings was requested as provided in the county zoning ordinance. On April 15, 1963, plaintiffs filed a complaint for administrative review in the circuit court of Peoria County praying that the decision of the Zoning Board of Appeals be set aside, reversed and nullified. The circuit court affirmed the decision of the Zoning Board of Appeals. The Sanitary District cоnstructed the plant and at the time of this appeal the plant was near completion.
This appeal was taken by plaintiffs to reverse the judgment of the circuit court, the plaintiffs contending (1) thаt the part of the statute authorizing county zoning regulations to confer upon the Board of Appeals authority to vary or modify the zoning ordinance where there are pracical difficulties оr particular hardships in carrying out the strict letter as to use is an unconstitutional delegation of legislative authority, since no standard is set forth for determining what are practical difficulties or particular hardships (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1963, chap. 34, pars. 3154-3157); (2) that section 16.1 of article 16 of the Peoria County zoning ordinance, based on said statute, is illegal, void and unconstitutional and does not delegate to the Zoning Board of Appeals the right to change the use of land; and (3) that the findings of the Zoning Board are arbitrary, unsupported by evidence, amount to a denial of due process, and are contrary to рublic policy.
The Illinois law originally provided that the zoning board of appeals should be authorized to grant variations. In Welton v. Hamilton,
Subsequent to the decision in Welton v. Hamilton, and the amendment of the statute, this court has at numerous times recognized that variations as to use of property may be grаnted where supported by findings of fact. Thus, in Downey v. Grimshaw,
If the statute аuthorizing variations is constitutional as we here hold that it is, the portions of the Peoria County-zoning ordinance as to variation based on that statute likewise are valid. This ordinance specifically authorized the Zoning Board of Appeals to grant variations.
The decision of the County Zoning Board of' Appeals granting the variation made 16 findings of fact. These included that the proposed use would сause no harm to neighboring property, would cause no health hazard and was necessary for protection of the public health in the area. Failure to permit the proposed use wоuld result in practical difficulties and particular hardship. The evidence showed that the proposed site was the only available one for a gravity-flow type system and that such a system would opеrate when the electric power goes off while other systems would not. Witnesses familiar with this type of plant testified no objectionable odor would be noticeable beyond the plant site when thе plant is properly operated. Kenneth Mills, a banker and officer in a savings and loan association, testified the location of the plant would have no harmful effect upon neighboring prоperties and would increase the value of such properties for commercial purposes. It might here be noted that under the present zoning some of the adjacent property is zonеd for light industrial purposes. One of plaintiffs’ witnesses testified that construction of the plant would depreciate some of plaintiffs’ property 10% and that the highest, and best use for such adjacent property was for residential purposes. Nevertheless, it appears that the evidence that this proposed plant is needed for the public welfare, will not be objectionable, and is the only available site, is clear and uncontradicted. A careful analysis of the evidence makes it clear that the facts before the Board of Appeals fully warranted the granting of the variation.
On administrative review the issue is not whether the court approves the action taken by the administrative body but whether there was substantial evidence to support the decision. The circuit court found ample evidence to support the decision. The record fully sustains this determination. The decision to grant the variation was amply supported by the evidence.
We come now to the contention of the Sanitary District that the statute under which it is organized authorized it to establish a needed disposal system and that no other governmental unit can interfere with the exercise of that authority so that it need not comply with zoning regulations. We have never so held. This would result in an impossible as well as an undesirable situation. As we said in Decatur Park District v. Becker,
It is contended also that the issues herein have been rendered moot by the action of the Sanitary District in obtaining a permit to construct the plant and the failure of plaintiffs to appeal from such permit or to оbtain a stay order as is provided by the county zoning ordinance. We cannot agree with this contention since, if this were the case, the remedy of administrative review of a decision of the Zoning Board of Appeals would be rendered wholly ineffective. Moreover, in our view of the case, the Zoning Board properly granted the variation as the trial court held, thus rendering unnecessary further consideration of this contention.
For the reasons aforesaid, the judgment of the circuit court of Peoria County must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
