HB2302 98TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY

  
  

 


 
98TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2013 and 2014
HB2302

 

Introduced , by Rep. Rich Brauer

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
415 ILCS 135/5
415 ILCS 135/60
415 ILCS 135/65

    Amends the Drycleaner Environmental Response Trust Fund Act. Specifies that green solvents are not drycleaning solvents for the purposes of the Act. Deletes provisions that provided for the taxation and regulation of green solvents under the Act. Provides that on and after January 1, 2014 no annual licensure fee is required for a facility that uses exclusively green solvents. Provides that if the Drycleaner Environmental Response Trust Fund Council has determined prior to the effective date of the amendatory Act that a product is a green solvent, then the Council shall not reconsider or otherwise change that determination on or after the effective date of the amendatory Act. Makes other changes. Defines "green solvent".


LRB098 08764 JDS 38889 b

FISCAL NOTE ACT MAY APPLY

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

HB2302LRB098 08764 JDS 38889 b

1    AN ACT concerning safety.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 5. The Drycleaner Environmental Response Trust
5Fund Act is amended by changing Sections 5, 60, and 65 as
6follows:
 
7    (415 ILCS 135/5)
8    Sec. 5. Definitions. As used in this Act:
9    (a) "Active drycleaning facility" means a drycleaning
10facility actively engaged in drycleaning operations and
11licensed under Section 60 of this Act.
12    (b) "Agency" means the Illinois Environmental Protection
13Agency.
14    (c) "Claimant" means an owner or operator of a drycleaning
15facility who has applied for reimbursement from the remedial
16account or who has submitted a claim under the insurance
17account with respect to a release.
18    (d) "Council" means the Drycleaner Environmental Response
19Trust Fund Council.
20    (e) "Drycleaner Environmental Response Trust Fund" or
21"Fund" means the fund created under Section 10 of this Act.
22    (f) "Drycleaning facility" means a facility located in this
23State that is or has been engaged in drycleaning operations for

 

 

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1the general public, other than a:
2        (1) facility located on a United States military base;
3        (2) industrial laundry, commercial laundry, or linen
4    supply facility;
5        (3) prison or other penal institution that engages in
6    drycleaning only as part of a Correctional Industries
7    program to provide drycleaning to persons who are
8    incarcerated in a prison or penal institution or to
9    resident patients of a State-operated mental health
10    facility;
11        (4) not-for-profit hospital or other health care
12    facility; or a
13        (5) facility located or formerly located on federal or
14    State property.
15    (g) "Drycleaning operations" means drycleaning of apparel
16and household fabrics for the general public, as described in
17Standard Industrial Classification Industry No. 7215 and No.
187216 in the Standard Industrial Classification Manual (SIC) by
19the Technical Committee on Industrial Classification.
20    (h) "Drycleaning solvent" means any and all nonaqueous
21solvents, including but not limited to a chlorine-based or
22petroleum-based formulation or product, including green
23solvents, that are used as a primary cleaning agent in
24drycleaning operations. "Drycleaning solvent" does not include
25any green solvent.
26    (i) "Emergency" or "emergency action" means a situation or

 

 

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1an immediate response to a situation to protect public health
2or safety. "Emergency" or "emergency action" does not mean
3removal of contaminated soils, recovery of free product, or
4financial hardship. An "emergency" or "emergency action" would
5normally be expected to be directly related to a sudden event
6or discovery and would last until the threat to public health
7is mitigated.
8    (i-5) "Green solvent" has the meaning established under 35
9Ill. Adm. Code 1500.20.
10    (j) "Groundwater" means underground water that occurs
11within the saturated zone and geologic materials where the
12fluid pressure in the pore space is equal to or greater than
13the atmospheric pressure.
14    (k) "Inactive drycleaning facility" means a drycleaning
15facility that is not being used for drycleaning operations and
16is not registered under this Act.
17    (l) "Maintaining a place of business in this State" or any
18like term means (1) having or maintaining within this State,
19directly or through a subsidiary, an office, distribution
20facility, distribution house, sales house, warehouse, or other
21place of business or (2) operating within this State as an
22agent or representative for a person or a person's subsidiary
23engaged in the business of selling to persons within this
24State, irrespective of whether the place of business or agent
25or other representative is located in this State permanently or
26temporary, or whether the person or the person's subsidiary

 

 

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1engages in the business of selling in this State.
2    (m) "No Further Remediation Letter" means a letter provided
3by the Agency pursuant to Section 58.10 of Title XVII of the
4Environmental Protection Act.
5    (n) "Operator" means a person or entity holding a business
6license to operate a licensed drycleaning facility or the
7business operation of which the drycleaning facility is a part.
8    (o) "Owner" means (1) a person who owns or has possession
9or control of a drycleaning facility at the time a release is
10discovered, regardless of whether the facility remains in
11operation or (2) a parent corporation of the person under item
12(1) of this subdivision.
13    (p) "Parent corporation" means a business entity or other
14business arrangement that has elements of common ownership or
15control or that uses a long-term contractual arrangement with a
16person to avoid direct responsibility for conditions at a
17drycleaning facility.
18    (q) "Person" means an individual, trust, firm, joint stock
19company, corporation, consortium, joint venture, or other
20commercial entity.
21    (r) "Program year" means the period beginning on July 1 and
22ending on the following June 30.
23    (s) "Release" means any spilling, leaking, emitting,
24discharging, escaping, leaching, or dispersing of drycleaning
25solvents from a drycleaning facility to groundwater, surface
26water, or subsurface soils.

 

 

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1    (t) "Remedial action" means activities taken to comply with
2Sections 58.6 and 58.7 of the Environmental Protection Act and
3rules adopted by the Pollution Control Board under those
4Sections.
5    (u) "Responsible party" means an owner, operator, or other
6person financially responsible for costs of remediation of a
7release of drycleaning solvents from a drycleaning facility.
8    (v) "Service provider" means a consultant, testing
9laboratory, monitoring well installer, soil boring contractor,
10other contractor, lender, or any other person who provides a
11product or service for which a claim for reimbursement has been
12or will be filed against the remedial account or insurance
13account, or a subcontractor of such a person.
14    (w) (Blank). "Virgin facility" means a drycleaning
15facility that has never had chlorine-based or petroleum-based
16drycleaning solvents stored or used at the property prior to it
17becoming a green solvent drycleaning facility.
18(Source: P.A. 93-201, eff. 1-1-04.)
 
19    (415 ILCS 135/60)
20    (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2020)
21    Sec. 60. Drycleaning facility license.
22    (a) On and after January 1, 1998, no person shall operate a
23drycleaning facility in this State without a license issued by
24the Council.
25    (b) The Council shall issue an initial or renewal license

 

 

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1to a drycleaning facility on submission by an applicant of a
2completed form prescribed by the Council, proof of payment of
3the required fee to the Department of Revenue, and, if the
4drycleaning facility has previously received or is currently
5receiving reimbursement for the costs of a remedial action, as
6defined in this Act, proof of compliance with subsection (j) of
7Section 40. Beginning January 1, 2013, license renewal
8application forms must include a certification by the applicant
9that all hazardous waste stored at the drycleaning facility is
10stored in accordance with all applicable federal and state laws
11and regulations, and that all hazardous waste transported from
12the drycleaning facility is transported in accordance with all
13applicable federal and state laws and regulations. Also,
14beginning January 1, 2013, license renewal applications must
15include copies of all manifests for hazardous waste transported
16from the drycleaning facility during the previous 12 months or
17since the last submission of copies of manifests, whichever is
18longer. If the Council does not receive a copy of a manifest
19for a drycleaning facility within a 3-year period, or within a
20shorter period as determined by the Council, the Council shall
21make appropriate inquiry into the management of hazardous waste
22at the facility and may share the results of the inquiry with
23the Agency.
24    (c) On and or after January 1, 2004, the annual fees for
25licensure are as follows:
26        (1) $500 for a facility that uses (i) 50 gallons or

 

 

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1    less of chlorine-based or green drycleaning solvents
2    annually, (ii) 250 or less gallons annually of
3    hydrocarbon-based drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning
4    machine equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii) 500
5    gallons or less annually of hydrocarbon-based drycleaning
6    solvents in a drycleaning machine without a solvent
7    reclaimer.
8        (2) $500 for a facility that uses (i) more than 50
9    gallons but not more than 100 gallons of chlorine-based or
10    green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii) more than 250
11    gallons but not more 500 gallons annually of
12    hydrocarbon-based solvents in a drycleaning machine
13    equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii) more than 500
14    gallons but not more than 1,000 gallons annually of
15    hydrocarbon-based drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning
16    machine without a solvent reclaimer.
17        (3) $500 for a facility that uses (i) more than 100
18    gallons but not more than 150 gallons of chlorine-based or
19    green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii) more than 500
20    gallons but not more than 750 gallons annually of
21    hydrocarbon-based solvents in a drycleaning machine
22    equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii) more than 1,000
23    gallons but not more than 1,500 gallons annually of
24    hydrocarbon-based drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning
25    machine without a solvent reclaimer.
26        (4) $1,000 for a facility that uses (i) more than 150

 

 

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1    gallons but not more than 200 gallons of chlorine-based or
2    green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii) more than 750
3    gallons but not more than 1,000 gallons annually of
4    hydrocarbon-based solvents in a drycleaning machine
5    equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii) more than 1,500
6    gallons but not more than 2,000 gallons annually of
7    hydrocarbon-based drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning
8    machine without a solvent reclaimer.
9        (5) $1,000 for a facility that uses (i) more than 200
10    gallons but not more than 250 gallons of chlorine-based or
11    green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii) more than 1,000
12    gallons but not more than 1,250 gallons annually of
13    hydrocarbon-based solvents in a drycleaning machine
14    equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii) more than 2,000
15    gallons but not more than 2,500 gallons annually of
16    hydrocarbon-based drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning
17    machine without a solvent reclaimer.
18        (6) $1,000 for a facility that uses (i) more than 250
19    gallons but not more than 300 gallons of chlorine-based or
20    green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii) more than 1,250
21    gallons but not more than 1,500 gallons annually of
22    hydrocarbon-based solvents in a drycleaning machine
23    equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii) more than 2,500
24    gallons but not more than 3,000 gallons annually of
25    hydrocarbon-based drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning
26    machine without a solvent reclaimer.

 

 

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1        (7) $1,000 for a facility that uses (i) more than 300
2    gallons but not more than 350 gallons of chlorine-based or
3    green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii) more than 1,500
4    gallons but not more than 1,750 gallons annually of
5    hydrocarbon-based solvents in a drycleaning machine
6    equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii) more than 3,000
7    gallons but not more than 3,500 gallons annually of
8    hydrocarbon-based drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning
9    machine without a solvent reclaimer.
10        (8) $1,500 for a facility that uses (i) more than 350
11    gallons but not more than 400 gallons of chlorine-based or
12    green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii) more than 1,750
13    gallons but not more than 2,000 gallons annually of
14    hydrocarbon-based solvents in a drycleaning machine
15    equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii) more than 3,500
16    gallons but not more than 4,000 gallons annually of
17    hydrocarbon-based drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning
18    machine without a solvent reclaimer.
19        (9) $1,500 for a facility that uses (i) more than 400
20    gallons but not more than 450 gallons of chlorine-based or
21    green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii) more than 2,000
22    gallons but not more than 2,250 gallons annually of
23    hydrocarbon-based solvents in a drycleaning machine
24    equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii) more than 4,000
25    gallons but not more than 4,500 gallons annually of
26    hydrocarbon-based drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning

 

 

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1    machine without a solvent reclaimer.
2        (10) $1,500 for a facility that uses (i) more than 450
3    gallons but not more than 500 gallons of chlorine-based or
4    green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii) more than 2,250
5    gallons but not more than 2,500 gallons annually of
6    hydrocarbon-based solvents used in a drycleaning machine
7    equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii) more than 4,500
8    gallons but not more than 5,000 gallons annually of
9    hydrocarbon-based drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning
10    machine without a solvent reclaimer.
11        (11) $1,500 for a facility that uses (i) more than 500
12    gallons but not more than 550 gallons of chlorine-based or
13    green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii) more than 2,500
14    gallons but not more than 2,750 gallons annually of
15    hydrocarbon-based solvents in a drycleaning machine
16    equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii) more than 5,000
17    gallons but not more than 5,500 gallons annually of
18    hydrocarbon-based drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning
19    machine without a solvent reclaimer.
20        (12) $1,500 for a facility that uses (i) more than 550
21    gallons but not more than 600 gallons of chlorine-based or
22    green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii) more than 2,750
23    gallons but not more than 3,000 gallons annually of
24    hydrocarbon-based solvents in a drycleaning machine
25    equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii) more than 5,500
26    gallons but not more than 6,000 gallons annually of

 

 

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1    hydrocarbon-based drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning
2    machine without a solvent reclaimer.
3        (13) $1,500 for a facility that uses (i) more than 600
4    gallons of chlorine-based or green drycleaning solvents
5    annually, (ii) more than 3,000 gallons but not more than
6    3,250 gallons annually of hydrocarbon-based solvents in a
7    drycleaning machine equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or
8    (iii) more than 6,000 gallons of hydrocarbon-based
9    drycleaning solvents annually in a drycleaning machine
10    equipped without a solvent reclaimer.
11        (14) $1,500 for a facility that uses more than 3,250
12    gallons but not more than 3,500 gallons annually of
13    hydrocarbon-based solvents in a drycleaning machine
14    equipped with a solvent reclaimer.
15        (15) $1,500 for a facility that uses more than 3,500
16    gallons but not more than 3,750 gallons annually of
17    hydrocarbon-based solvents used in a drycleaning machine
18    equipped with a solvent reclaimer.
19        (16) $1,500 for a facility that uses more than 3,750
20    gallons but not more than 4,000 gallons annually of
21    hydrocarbon-based solvents in a drycleaning machine
22    equipped with a solvent reclaimer.
23        (17) $1,500 for a facility that uses more than 4,000
24    gallons annually of hydrocarbon-based solvents in a
25    drycleaning machine equipped with a solvent reclaimer.
26    On and after January 1, 2014, no annual licensure fee is

 

 

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1required for a facility that uses exclusively green solvents.
2    For purpose of this subsection, the quantity of drycleaning
3solvents used annually shall be determined as follows:
4        (1) in the case of an initial applicant, the quantity
5    of drycleaning solvents that the applicant estimates will
6    be used during his or her initial license year. A fee
7    assessed under this subdivision is subject to audited
8    adjustment for that year; or
9        (2) in the case of a renewal applicant, the quantity of
10    drycleaning solvents actually purchased in the preceding
11    license year.
12    The Council may adjust licensing fees annually based on the
13published Consumer Price Index - All Urban Consumers ("CPI-U")
14or as otherwise determined by the Council.
15    (d) A license issued under this Section shall expire one
16year after the date of issuance and may be renewed on
17reapplication to the Council and submission of proof of payment
18of the appropriate fee to the Department of Revenue in
19accordance with subsections (c) and (e). At least 30 days
20before payment of a renewal licensing fee is due, the Council
21shall attempt to:
22        (1) notify the operator of each licensed drycleaning
23    facility concerning the requirements of this Section; and
24        (2) submit a license fee payment form to the licensed
25    operator of each drycleaning facility.
26    (e) An operator of a drycleaning facility shall submit the

 

 

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1appropriate application form provided by the Council with the
2license fee in the form of cash, credit card, business check,
3or guaranteed remittance to the Department of Revenue. The
4Department may accept payment of the license fee under this
5Section by credit card only if the Department is not required
6to pay a discount fee charged by the credit card issuer. The
7license fee payment form and the actual license fee payment
8shall be administered by the Department of Revenue under rules
9adopted by that Department.
10    (f) The Department of Revenue shall issue a proof of
11payment receipt to each operator of a drycleaning facility who
12has paid the appropriate fee in cash or by guaranteed
13remittance, credit card, or business check. However, the
14Department of Revenue shall not issue a proof of payment
15receipt to a drycleaning facility that is liable to the
16Department of Revenue for a tax imposed under this Act. The
17original receipt shall be presented to the Council by the
18operator of a drycleaning facility.
19    (g) (Blank).
20    (h) The Council and the Department of Revenue may adopt
21rules as necessary to administer the licensing requirements of
22this Act.
23(Source: P.A. 96-774, eff. 1-1-10; 97-332, eff. 8-12-11;
2497-377, eff. 1-1-12; 97-663, eff. 1-13-12; 97-813, eff.
257-13-12; 97-1057, eff. 1-1-13.)
 

 

 

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1    (415 ILCS 135/65)
2    (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2020)
3    Sec. 65. Drycleaning solvent tax.
4    (a) On and after January 1, 1998, a tax is imposed upon the
5use of drycleaning solvent by a person engaged in the business
6of operating a drycleaning facility in this State at the rate
7of $3.50 per gallon of perchloroethylene or other chlorinated
8drycleaning solvents used in drycleaning operations and , $0.35
9per gallon of petroleum-based drycleaning solvent, and $1.75
10per gallon of green solvents, unless the green solvent is used
11at a virgin facility, in which case the rate is $0.35 per
12gallon. The Council shall determine by rule which products are
13chlorine-based solvents, which products are petroleum-based
14solvents, and which products are green solvents. All
15drycleaning solvents shall be considered chlorinated solvents
16unless the Council determines that the solvents are
17petroleum-based drycleaning solvents or green solvents. If the
18Council has determined prior to the effective date of this
19amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly that a product is a
20green solvent, then the Council shall not reconsider or
21otherwise change that determination on or after the effective
22date of this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly.
23    (b) The tax imposed by this Act shall be collected from the
24purchaser at the time of sale by a seller of drycleaning
25solvents maintaining a place of business in this State and
26shall be remitted to the Department of Revenue under the

 

 

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1provisions of this Act.
2    (c) The tax imposed by this Act that is not collected by a
3seller of drycleaning solvents shall be paid directly to the
4Department of Revenue by the purchaser or end user who is
5subject to the tax imposed by this Act.
6    (d) No tax shall be imposed upon the use of drycleaning
7solvent if the drycleaning solvent will not be used in a
8drycleaning facility or if a floor stock tax has been imposed
9and paid on the drycleaning solvent. Prior to the purchase of
10the solvent, the purchaser shall provide a written and signed
11certificate to the drycleaning solvent seller stating:
12        (1) the name and address of the purchaser;
13        (2) the purchaser's signature and date of signing; and
14        (3) one of the following:
15            (A) that the drycleaning solvent will not be used
16        in a drycleaning facility; or
17            (B) that a floor stock tax has been imposed and
18        paid on the drycleaning solvent.
19    (e) On January 1, 1998, there is imposed on each operator
20of a drycleaning facility a tax on drycleaning solvent held by
21the operator on that date for use in a drycleaning facility.
22The tax imposed shall be the tax that would have been imposed
23under subsection (a) if the drycleaning solvent held by the
24operator on that date had been purchased by the operator during
25the first year of this Act.
26    (f) On or before the 25th day of the 1st month following

 

 

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1the end of the calendar quarter, a seller of drycleaning
2solvents who has collected a tax pursuant to this Section
3during the previous calendar quarter, or a purchaser or end
4user of drycleaning solvents required under subsection (c) to
5submit the tax directly to the Department, shall file a return
6with the Department of Revenue. The return shall be filed on a
7form prescribed by the Department of Revenue and shall contain
8information that the Department of Revenue reasonably
9requires, but at a minimum will require the reporting of the
10volume of drycleaning solvent sold to each licensed drycleaner.
11The Department of Revenue shall report quarterly to the Council
12the volume of drycleaning solvent purchased for the quarter by
13each licensed drycleaner. Each seller of drycleaning solvent
14maintaining a place of business in this State who is required
15or authorized to collect the tax imposed by this Act shall pay
16to the Department the amount of the tax at the time when he or
17she is required to file his or her return for the period during
18which the tax was collected. Purchasers or end users remitting
19the tax directly to the Department under subsection (c) shall
20file a return with the Department of Revenue and pay the tax so
21incurred by the purchaser or end user during the preceding
22calendar quarter.
23    Except as provided in this Section, the seller of
24drycleaning solvents filing the return under this Section
25shall, at the time of filing the return, pay to the Department
26the amount of tax imposed by this Act less a discount of 1.75%,

 

 

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1or $5 per calendar year, whichever is greater. Failure to
2timely file the returns and provide to the Department the data
3requested under this Act will result in disallowance of the
4reimbursement discount.
5    (g) The tax on drycleaning solvents used in drycleaning
6facilities and the floor stock tax shall be administered by
7Department of Revenue under rules adopted by that Department.
8    (h) On and after January 1, 1998, no person shall knowingly
9sell or transfer drycleaning solvent to an operator of a
10drycleaning facility that is not licensed by the Council under
11Section 60.
12    (i) The Department of Revenue may adopt rules as necessary
13to implement this Section.
14(Source: P.A. 96-774, eff. 1-1-10.)