Sen. Javier L. Cervantes

Filed: 3/20/2024

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO SENATE BILL 838

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend Senate Bill 838 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 5. The Environmental Protection Act is amended by
5adding Section 9.20 as follows:
 
6    (415 ILCS 5/9.20 new)
7    Sec. 9.20. Health and equity insights.
8    (a) Findings. The General Assembly finds that:
9        (1) pollution is distributed unevenly, impacts
10    overburdened communities disproportionately, and varies on
11    a block-by-block basis;
12        (2) disparities in impact are often missed by standard
13    monitoring practices;
14        (3) identifying locations that attract high numbers of
15    medium-duty vehicles and heavy-duty vehicles is crucial to
16    mitigate emissions significantly;

 

 

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1        (4) investment and policy development decisions must
2    be made with communities and environmental justice
3    advocates in order to reliably, effectively, and
4    accurately prioritize impacted communities; and
5        (5) collaboration with impacted communities must
6    continue through implementation of policy solutions that
7    are designed with those same communities.
8    (b) Definitions. In this Section:
9    "Agency" means the Illinois Environmental Protection
10Agency.
11    "Board" means the Illinois Pollution Control Board.
12    "Community air quality monitoring" means the deployment of
13low-cost sensors at the neighborhood level to better identify
14and mitigate the large disparities in pollution exposure and
15health outcomes that can occur at the local level.
16    "Continuous fenceline air quality monitoring" means
17monitoring that is located on-site, that is not switched on
18and off, and that consistently collects data 24 hours a day, 7
19days a week unless paused for repair, calibration, or
20servicing.
21    "Council" means the Health and Equity Advisory Council
22established under this Section.
23    "Department" means the Department of Commerce and Economic
24Opportunity.
25    "Federal Equivalent Method" or "FEM" means a method that
26is used for measuring the concentration of an air pollutant in

 

 

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1the ambient air and that has been designated as an equivalent
2method to the Federal Reference Method.
3    "Federal Reference Method" or "FRM" means a method of
4monitoring that is certified as regulatory grade and that
5employs strict measurement standards and performance
6standards. FRM monitors are generally used by regulatory
7bodies, such as the United States Environmental Protection
8Agency.
9    "Local authority" means a State or local governmental
10entity with the authority to enable mobile monitoring as a
11complement to stationary and meteorological monitoring.
12    "Meteorological monitoring" means monitoring for
13meteorological data, such as wind speed and direction.
14    "Overburdened communities" has the same meaning as
15"environmental justice community" as defined and as may be
16updated in the long-term renewable resources procurement plan
17of the Illinois Power Agency and its Program Administrator
18under the Illinois Solar for All Program.
19    "Regulated facility" means the following:
20        (1) any facility that is at least 100,000 square feet
21    in size;
22        (2) any set of facilities with a common owner or
23    operator that, in the aggregate, is at least 500,000
24    square feet in size; and
25        (3) any facility that is deemed by the Agency, after
26    consultation with affected communities, to threaten local

 

 

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1    health either because of its individual impact or its
2    contribution to a cumulative impact.
3    "Satellite air quality monitoring" means monitoring,
4conducted by one or more satellites, to measure the
5concentration of airborne particles, such as aerosols, in the
6atmosphere through observations of how much light reaches the
7surface of the Earth and how much light is reflected off of the
8aerosols.
9    "Significant emitters" means the stationary, indirect, and
10mobile sources that are the greatest contributors to
11health-harming pollutants.
12    "Truck trip" means the one-way trip a truck or tractor
13makes to or from a site with at least one warehouse to deliver
14or collect goods stored at that warehouse for later
15distribution to other locations. A truck or tractor entering a
16warehouse site and then leaving that site constitutes 2 trips.
17    "Truck-attracting facility" means a property, including,
18but not limited to, parking areas and driving lanes, for
19trucks, trailers, or passenger vehicles.
20    "Truck-attracting facility" includes:
21        (1) a warehouse, distribution center, or intermodal
22    facility on the property, including, but not limited to, a
23    main building, an accessory building, or both;
24        (2) an entry-and-exit point for vehicle accessory
25    maintenance or a security building; and
26        (3) fueling or charging infrastructure for vehicles.

 

 

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1    "Truck count" means an accounting of the number of trucks
2traveling through a designated intersection.
3    (c) Health and Equity Advisory Council.
4        (1) The Health and Equity Advisory Council is hereby
5    established. The Council shall:
6            (A) make findings, conclusions, and
7        recommendations regarding environmental justice in the
8        State and uses of federal funds provided to the State
9        for environmental justice;
10            (B) file with the General Assembly, in accordance
11        with Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization
12        Act, by no later than June 30, 2026, an initial report
13        that is consistent with the transparency provisions of
14        subsection (k) and that delineates the Council's
15        findings, conclusions, and recommendations; and
16            (C) after the initial report under subparagraph
17        (B), file with the General Assembly, in accordance
18        with Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization
19        Act, by June 30, 2026 and June 30 of each year
20        thereafter, an annual report that is consistent with
21        the transparency provisions of subsection (k) and that
22        delineates the Council's findings, conclusions, and
23        recommendations.
24        (2) Voting members of the Council shall be appointed
25    by the Governor by no later than 60 days after the
26    effective date of this amendatory Act of the 103rd General

 

 

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1    Assembly. If a vacancy occurs on the Council, the vacancy
2    shall be filled in a manner that is consistent with the
3    original appointments. The Council shall consist of the
4    following voting members:
5            (A) 4 members, appointed as follows, who
6        represent, when possible, disadvantaged communities:
7                (i) one member appointed by the Speaker of the
8            House of Representatives, who shall serve as
9            co-chairperson;
10                (ii) one member appointed by the President of
11            the Senate, who shall serve as co-chairperson;
12                (iii) one member appointed by the Minority
13            Leader of the Senate;
14                (iv) one member appointed by the Minority
15            Leader of the House of Representatives;
16            (B) the Director of Public Health or his or her
17        designee;
18            (C) the Secretary of Human Services or his or her
19        designee;
20            (D) the Secretary of Transportation or his or her
21        designee; and
22            (E) at least 2 representatives of communities with
23        heavy truck traffic.
24        Additional individuals may be appointed as voting
25    members of the Council with the approval of both
26    co-chairpersons.

 

 

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1        (3) The Council may, at the discretion of the Council,
2    add the following nonvoting members:
3            (A) one representative of a labor organization;
4            (B) one representative of a statewide organization
5        representing manufacturers;
6            (C) 2 representatives of faith-based
7        organizations; and
8            (D) 2 representatives of health organizations.
9        Additional individuals may participate as nonvoting
10    members of the Council at the discretion of both
11    co-chairpersons.
12    (d) Truck counting and other monitoring.
13        (1) Each year, the Agency shall conduct truck counting
14    on a representative sample of local roads where trucks
15    enter or exit a truck-attracting facility. If possible,
16    the truck counts must include the class and age of the
17    trucks counted. Truck-counting efforts shall build on
18    existing efforts by community and environmental justice
19    organizations and shall be conducted in consultation with
20    those same entities. Any consultant hired by the Agency to
21    conduct truck counting shall be approved by the Council.
22    The Agency shall also take into consideration the
23    experience of communities in deciding where to site
24    monitors and how to move forward on subsequent policy
25    development and implementation.
26        (2) A truck-attracting facility must continuously

 

 

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1    monitor on-site emissions for diesel particulate matter
2    and nitrogen oxides. Monitoring must be conducted using at
3    least 4 continuous fenceline monitors spaced as far apart
4    as possible from one another around the perimeter of the
5    truck-attracting facility.
6        (3) Within one year after the effective date of this
7    amendatory Act of the 103rd General Assembly, the Agency
8    shall cite Federal Reference Methods (FRM) and Federal
9    Equivalent Methods (FEM) established under 40 CFR Part 53,
10    informed by satellite and community data when available,
11    when determining the placement of air monitoring devices
12    at truck-attracting facilities.
13        (4) The Agency shall not announce in advance the days
14    when federal reference monitors are collecting data or the
15    days when mobile or meteorological monitoring is taking
16    place, if the Agency does not already continuously collect
17    data from those monitors or through that monitoring. The
18    Agency shall identify which federal reference monitors in
19    the State are not collecting data continuously. The Agency
20    shall transition all instruments to continuous monitoring
21    within 2 years upon determining which monitors are not
22    collecting data continuously.
23        (5) The Agency must create a process for community
24    representatives or companies to co-locate monitoring
25    equipment at FRM monitors or FEM monitors managed or owned
26    by the State. Communities may request a new FRM monitor or

 

 

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1    FEM monitor. This request may be based on satellite or
2    low-cost local data, health data, data concerning recent
3    changes in land use, or other qualitative or quantitative
4    metrics identified by overburdened communities. This
5    request should be granted as of right if the data shows the
6    source is already identified as a high-priority emitter,
7    or the community is already identified as overburdened.
8    (e) Indirect source review.
9        (1) No later than 12 months after the effective date
10    of this amendatory Act of the 103rd General Assembly, the
11    Agency shall adopt rules providing for the
12    facility-by-facility review of regulated facilities, along
13    with a menu of measures to reduce the impact of air
14    pollution from these indirect sources. The Agency shall
15    consider measures, including, but not limited to,
16    requiring all warehouse operators to implement an air
17    emissions reduction plan developed or approved by the
18    Agency in consultation with community representatives and
19    mitigation options, such as installing infrastructure and
20    requiring use of zero-emission vehicles on-site; using
21    alternatives to truck trips for incoming or outgoing
22    trips; installing on-site solar power generation,
23    electricity storage, and managed charging systems; or any
24    combination of these types of measures. The Agency shall
25    also consider greater stringency for all census blocks
26    where transport-related pollution is responsible for 20%

 

 

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1    or greater of new cases of childhood asthma and all
2    warehouses located within a half mile of an overburdened
3    community, as determined by the Agency after consulting
4    with overburdened communities and community leaders.
5        (2) Once the rules described in paragraph (1) are
6    adopted, the Agency shall require a regulated facility to
7    obtain a permit demonstrating that it will comply with
8    rules and regulations concerning indirect sources in the
9    State if the regulated facility has any development or
10    major modification that would increase the pollution
11    related to the facility.
12    (f) Fee and point system guidelines.
13        (1) The Agency shall create a points system under
14    which warehouse operators must earn points based on the
15    amount of emissions generated by trucks at their
16    facilities, and for implementing mitigation options, such
17    as installing infrastructure, requiring use of
18    zero-emission vehicles on-site, using alternatives to
19    truck trips for incoming or outgoing trips, providing air
20    filtration for neighbors of facilities, and installing
21    on-site solar power generation, electricity storage, and
22    managed charging systems.
23        (2) The Agency shall not allow the transfer of points
24    between facilities. If a warehouse operator earns more
25    points than is required for an annual points compliance
26    obligation in a given reporting period, then it may use

 

 

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1    those remaining points at the same warehouse to satisfy a
2    points compliance obligation in any of the following 3
3    years.
4        (3) Warehouse operators transferring points to a
5    different compliance period must demonstrate that any
6    on-site improvements or equipment installations that were
7    used to earn the points being transferred are still
8    operational at that warehouse facility in the year that
9    points are used.
10        (4) Points earned 3 years or less before a warehouse
11    operator's first compliance period may be banked and
12    transferred up to 3 years after the warehouse operator's
13    first compliance period. This early compliance must be
14    documented in an annual report immediately following the
15    year in which the action or investment was completed.
16        (5) The minimum registration fee established under
17    subsection (j) shall be set at a level sufficient to
18    reimburse public and private insurance plans and facility
19    neighbors for health care and associated expenditures due
20    to facility operations, including truck activity at the
21    facility. Fee investment shall be prioritized in the
22    community where the fees were levied unless consultation
23    with communities reveals an alternative location is more
24    appropriate.
25        (6) A portion of funds, to be determined by
26    consultation with community representatives, shall be used

 

 

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1    to fund the Insights, Jobs, and Environmental Justice
2    Grant Program established under this Section; fenceline
3    monitors; and materials necessary to provide education on
4    monitoring, air quality, and impacts of pollution in
5    communities.
6        (7) When considering alternatives to truck trips for
7    incoming or outgoing trips, the warehouse operator shall
8    consult impacted and displaced employees in selecting an
9    alternative to truck trips and shall only use an
10    alternative upon agreement with the impacted and displaced
11    employees. If employees in the warehouse have an exclusive
12    bargaining unit representative and the bargaining unit or
13    the terms of the collective bargaining agreement would be
14    impacted by the use of an alternative, then the warehouse
15    operator shall consult with and obtain agreement from the
16    employees who are impacted, displaced, or both and the
17    representative, in writing, before using the alternative.
18    (g) Health impacts.
19        (1) The Agency shall disclose air pollution impacts on
20    maternal, infant, and child health and health disparities
21    at the granularity of census block group or greater, in
22    line with the transparency requirements of subsection (k).
23    The Agency shall provide clear information on health
24    symptoms and outcomes. Metrics reported on at the census
25    block level shall include, but shall not be limited to,
26    the following:

 

 

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1            (A) the number of emergency room visits due to
2        pollution-related illness;
3            (B) the number of diagnoses of pollution-related
4        ailments; and
5            (C) the number of missed work and school days.
6        (2) The Agency shall disclose air pollution impacts on
7    educational attainment. Metrics reported on at the census
8    block level include, but shall not be limited to:
9            (A) school attendance;
10            (B) academic performance; and
11            (C) graduation rates at the granularity of census
12        block group or greater.
13        (3) The Agency shall disclose air pollution impacts on
14    the economy. Metrics that shall be reported on at the
15    census block level include, but are not limited to:
16            (A) labor force participation, measured in missed
17        workdays;
18            (B) labor force productivity; and
19            (C) inflation and tax revenues.
20        (3) The Agency shall disclose the sources of air
21    pollution at the granularity of census block group or
22    greater.
23        (4) The Agency shall disclose the jurisdiction with
24    authority over mitigation of emissions from each type of
25    emissions source.
26    (h) Insights, Jobs, and Environmental Justice Grant

 

 

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1Program. The Agency shall create and administer an Insights,
2Jobs, and Environmental Justice Grant Program. The Insights,
3Jobs, and Environmental Justice Grant Program shall be
4designed to:
5        (1) identify overburdened communities, in
6    collaboration with residents of overburdened communities,
7    representatives of those communities, or both;
8        (2) deploy an air monitoring network to collect
9    sufficient air quality data for review and accountability
10    for reductions; and
11        (3) identify sources and impacts of concern to
12    communities.
13    Applications for grants from the Insights, Jobs, and
14Environmental Justice Grant Program should be as simple and
15streamlined as possible to maximize participation. Application
16forms and applications should be reviewed by the Advisory
17Council to ensure accessibility and appropriateness of awards.
18    (i) Insights Analysis Program.
19        (1) In 2025 and every 2 years thereafter, the Agency
20    must conduct a review to determine levels of criteria
21    pollutants in the overburdened communities and in median
22    comparison neighborhoods. Unredacted reviews must be made
23    accessible to the public in full, unless necessary to
24    comply with confidentiality restrictions, and must be
25    posted on a publicly available, multilingual website.
26    Reviews must include an evaluation of initial and

 

 

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1    subsequent impacts related to criteria pollution in
2    overburdened communities and in comparison to median
3    comparison neighborhoods and may also include climate
4    impacts in overburdened communities.
5        (2) The Agency, in collaboration with the Department
6    and the Board, must identify significant emitters and
7    their parent companies; must identify and quantify the
8    health implications of the persistent air pollution; must
9    identify local educational outcomes of inequitable air
10    pollution; must identify local economic outcomes of
11    inequitable air pollution, such as lost labor
12    productivity, displaced residents, and tax base
13    implications; and must develop a high-priority list of
14    significant emitters and kinds of emissions.
15        (3) Where the Agency is unable to identify sources,
16    health, educational and economic implications of
17    pollution, the Agency must identify key areas of
18    uncertainty and propose a research agenda to achieve the
19    unrealized insights.
20        (4) The Agency shall identify or develop models for
21    emissions inventories from ports and warehouses as
22    indirect stationary sources; tools usable by communities
23    to attribute air pollution to different sources and
24    industries' models to translate concentration readings
25    from non-regulatory monitors; and other inputs, such as
26    meteorological data, for emissions rates, such as pounds

 

 

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1    per hour or tons per year.
2    (j) Funding.
3    The Board shall impose an annual registration fee for
4warehouse operators, and institute additional fees for
5warehouse operators that fail to comply with any rules or
6regulations promulgated pursuant to this Section. Fines for
7noncompliance with this Section shall be used for the
8Insights, Jobs, and Environmental Justice Grant Program,
9described in subsection (h), as well as needs identified
10through consultations with impacted communities, including,
11but not limited to, investment in infrastructure, other
12pollution mitigation measures, monitoring, and healthcare. The
13fees and fines shall be made payable to the Environmental
14Protection Trust Fund.
15    (k) Public participation and transparency.
16        (1) The Agency shall provide a public participation
17    process, including, but not limited to:
18            (A) public notice of the submission of permit
19        applications to assess potential additional
20        contributions to any cumulative impacts;
21            (B) posting, on a public website in
22        machine-readable format, the full permit application,
23        the draft and final findings by the consulted
24        agencies, and the agencies' response to comments;
25            (C) an opportunity for the submission of public
26        comments;

 

 

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1            (D) an opportunity for a public hearing before a
2        determination; and
3            (E) a summary and response of the comments
4        prepared by the consulted agencies.
5        (2) The Agency shall track progress in an easily
6    accessible format and shall provide a transparent and
7    publicly available rationale for policy and regulatory
8    decisions and shall describe the extent to which community
9    engagement and collected data informed those decisions.
10    Such information must be updated on a quarterly basis. If
11    progress is deemed insufficient by the Advisory Council
12    described in subsection (c), the Agency shall be required
13    to undertake remedial actions and, where appropriate,
14    identify metrics of progress, as designated by the
15    Advisory Council to ensure achievement of the provisions
16    of this Section.
17    (l) Published list. The Agency shall annually publish a
18list of warehouses and other truck-attracting facilities that
19will include the following information, which will be annually
20reported by the facilities:
21        (1) location;
22        (2) facility square footage;
23        (3) operator name;
24        (4) owner name;
25        (5) secured lender name;
26        (6) number of truck bays;

 

 

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1        (7) compliance status;
2        (8) documented labor violations;
3        (9) the number of electric vehicle charging stations
4    installed and actual usage;
5        (10) the number of hydrogen fueling stations installed
6    and actual usage;
7        (11) the number of on-site renewable energy generation
8    systems installed;
9        (12) the number of vehicles used to deliver from the
10    site that are owned by the operator but leased to a
11    third-party and the proportion of those vehicles that are
12    leased and the proportion that are owned by the operator;
13        (13) the average daily number of inbound and outbound
14    vehicle trips by vehicle weight and class, by time of day,
15    and by day of the week; and
16        (14) the average daily vehicle miles traveled for all
17    vehicles making inbound and outbound trips to and from the
18    qualifying warehouse.
19    (m) Enforcement; investigation.
20        (1) The Agency shall conduct an annual investigation
21    of a random selection of at least 5% of all stationary and
22    indirect sources in non-overburdened communities. The
23    Agency shall conduct an annual investigation of at least
24    10% of all stationary and indirect sources in overburdened
25    communities. The Agency shall conduct an annual
26    investigation of any stationary or indirect source with

 

 

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1    more than 500 children under the age of 5 living within
2    one-half mile of the source. Communities may request an
3    investigation at stationary or indirect sources. This
4    request shall be granted as of right if the source is
5    already identified as a high priority emitter or the
6    community is already identified as an overburdened
7    community. The results of any investigation shall be made
8    public along with any recommended or required mitigation
9    actions.
10        (2) An annual investigation shall consist of the
11    following:
12            (A) fenceline monitoring and an analysis of
13        meteorological data;
14            (B) an analysis of satellite data;
15            (C) updates on land use, truck counts and ages,
16        and other inputs into emissions inventories;
17            (D) the identification of defeat devices installed
18        on trucks; and
19            (E) other metrics identified as important by
20        community representatives.
21    (n) Severability. If any provision of this Section or its
22application to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the
23invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of
24this Section which can be given effect without the invalid
25provision or application, and to this end the provisions of
26this Section are severable.".