OPINION OF THE COURT
Defendant owns and operates the Wallkill Sewage Treatment Plant subject to the conditions imposed in a State pollutant discharge elimination system permit issued by plaintiff Department of Environmental Conservation (hereinafter DEC) pursuant to ECL article 17. From time to time prior to July 1, 1988, defendant’s plant violated the conditions of the permit, resulting in a penalty assessment of $10,000. Defendant and plaintiff Commissioner of Environmental Conservation entered into a consent order suspending the penalty, provided that defendant comply with a schedule relating to the construction of a new sewage treatment facility which would comply with the conditions of the permit. Defendant undertook the construction of a new facility, but was unable to comply with the agreed-upon schedule due to cost overruns, flaws in the initial design and delays in excavation caused by hitting bedrock. As a result, defendant was unable to comply *10with the permit conditions by July 1, 1988, the date fixed in a modified schedule of compliance.
Plaintiffs commenced this action pursuant to ECL article 17 to compel defendant’s compliance with the conditions of the permit, to enforce the penalty provision of the consent orders and to have the court impose civil penalties against defendant. Supreme Court granted partial summary judgment in favor of plaintiffs on the issue of liability and, with the consent of the parties, ordered that defendant complete construction of its new plant by August 1, 1989 and be in compliance with the permit conditions by November 1, 1989. A hearing was held to determine the penalties to be assessed against defendant. Based upon its finding that defendant acted in good faith and without willful misconduct in attempting to meet the modified schedule of compliance agreed upon by the parties, Supreme Court refused to assess any penalty against defendant other than a $500 per day penalty for each day after December 31, 1989 that defendant’s new plant was not complete and operating. Plaintiffs appeal.
We agree with plaintiffs’ contention that Supreme Court erred in failing to impose the $10,000 fine specified in the parties’ consent order, as defendant had contractually bound itself to pay the fine (see, ECL 71-1929 [1]; Williams v Ludlow’s Sand & Gravel Co., 122 AD2d 612, lv dismissed 68 NY2d 997). We disagree, however, with plaintiffs’ contention that, once the court found defendant to be in violation of the conditions of the permit, a penalty of up to $25,000 per day had to be imposed pursuant to ECL 71-1929. We conclude that the question of whether to impose a penalty, as well as the amount thereof, is a matter which rests in the discretion of the court.
ECL 71-1935 provides that the penalty established by ECL 71-1929 cannot be imposed in certain emergency circumstances. The statute does not provide that the penalty established by ECL 71-1929 must be imposed unless the circumstances constitute one of the defined emergencies. Nor does the use of the word "shall” in ECL 71-1929 (1) necessarily mean that Supreme Court has no discretion in deciding whether to impose the penalty (see, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 1, Statutes § 171). "[T]he line between mandatory and directory statutes cannot be drawn with precision” (People v Karr, 240 NY 348, 351; accord, Matter of King v Carey, 57 NY2d 505, 513). As this court said in Matter of Elliott v City of Binghamton (94 AD2d 887, affd 61 NY2d 920): "Whether a *11statute * * * is framed in mandatory language is not necessarily of paramount importance in determining whether the provision in question is in fact mandatory or permissive. Rather, the considerations which control are the intent of the provision, gleaned from the entire [statute] and the surrounding circumstances, the purpose of the provision, the policy to be promoted, and the results which would obtain if one conclusion were followed to the exclusion of another” (supra, at 889).
In the case at bar, it is clear from the over-all statutory scheme that the legislative intent behind ECL 71-1929, which is contained in the "Enforcement” article of the Environmental Conservation Law, is to provide a means for securing compliance with certain substantive provisions of the Environmental Conservation Law, including those pertaining to State pollutant discharge elimination system permits. The purpose of the civil penalty is not to generate revenue. Rather, the penalty is punitive in nature, serving the purposes of both retribution and deterrence, in addition to restitution (see, Tull v United States, 481 US 412, 422-423 [nature of civil penalty provisions contained in the Clean Water Act]). Voluntary compliance with the substantive requirements of the Environmental Conservation Law appears to be the policy underlying the entire enforcement scheme, including the civil penalty provision.
It is our view that the intent and purpose of ECL 71-1929, as well as the underlying policy of voluntary compliance, would better be served by according Supreme Court not only the discretion to fix the amount of the penalty, but also the discretion to decide whether to impose a penalty in the first place. Support for this conclusion can be found in the Legislature’s decision not to fix a minimum amount for the civil penalty. Assuming that the imposition of a penalty was mandatory, Supreme Court would nevertheless have the discretion to fix the penalty at any amount greater than zero up to the current maximum of $25,000 per day of violation. If the facts and circumstances were appropriate, Supreme Court could exercise this discretion by imposing a nominal penalty of $1 or less per day of violation. Such a nominal penalty would not serve the purposes of retribution, deterrence and restitution, nor promote the policy of voluntary compliance; therefore, it would only be imposed where the violator acted in good faith to comply voluntarily with the relevant requirements, but was frustrated, through no fault of his own, by unanticipated *12events which left him no alternative to the violation. Because the Legislature has authorized Supreme Court to impose a range of penalties which includes a nominal penalty that would not serve the purposes and policy of the civil penalty provision, we conclude that the Legislature intended Supreme Court to have the discretion to impose no penalty at all if warranted by the facts and circumstances surrounding the violation. Had the Legislature intended to impose a penalty for all violations, regardless of the nature of the violation and the surrounding facts and circumstances, it could easily have included a minimum penalty amount, as well as a maximum.
Supreme Court decided not to impose a penalty because defendant acted in good faith, made diligent efforts to comply with the requirements of its permit and was frustrated by unanticipated events beyond its control, leaving it with no alternative other than to continue its discharge of effluent into the Wallkill River while it worked to bring its new facility on line. The court noted that other municipalities in the vicinity were having compliance problems, and it is also noteworthy that the penalty would be paid out of the pockets of one set of taxpayers, those in the Town of Wallkill, and into the coffers of another set of taxpayers, all New Yorkers. Despite the court’s erroneous reference to ECL 71-1935, which is irrelevant to this case, Supreme Court did not abuse its discretion in deciding not to impose a civil penalty pursuant to ECL 71-1929.