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Public Act 095-0728 |
SB0970 Enrolled |
LRB095 05812 CMK 25902 b |
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AN ACT concerning conservation.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, |
represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
University of Illinois Scientific Surveys Act. |
Section 5. Purposes. The purposes of this Act are to |
establish at the University of Illinois an institute for |
natural resources sustainability and to transfer to it all |
rights, powers, duties, property, and functions currently |
vested in the Department of Natural Resources pertaining to its |
Natural History Survey division, State Water Survey division, |
State Geological Survey division, and Waste Management and |
Research Center division (which may also be referred to as the |
Illinois Sustainable Technology Center). |
Section 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this Act, |
unless the context otherwise requires: |
"Board of Trustees" means the Board of Trustees of the |
University of Illinois. |
"Scientific Surveys" means, collectively, the State |
Natural History Survey division, the State Water Survey |
division, the State Geological Survey division, and the Waste |
Management and Research Center division transferred by this Act |
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from the Department of Natural Resources to the Board of |
Trustees. |
Section 15. Organization. The Board of Trustees shall |
establish and operate an institute for natural sciences and |
sustainability. The institute shall contain within it the State |
Natural History Survey division, the State Water Survey |
division, the State Geological Survey division, the Waste |
Management and Research Center division, and such other related |
entities, research functions, and responsibilities as may be |
appropriate. The institute shall be under the governance and |
control of the Board of Trustees. |
Section 20. General powers and duties. In addition to its |
other powers and duties, the Board of Trustees shall have the |
power to provide for the management and operation of the |
Scientific Surveys including, but not limited to, the following |
powers and duties which shall be performed by the Scientific |
Surveys: |
(1) To investigate and study the natural resources of the |
State and to prepare reports and furnish information |
fundamental to the conservation and development of natural |
resources and, for that purpose, the officers and employees |
thereof shall have the authority to enter and cross all lands |
in this State, doing no damage to private property. |
(2) To collaborate with and advise departments having |
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administrative powers and duties relating to the natural |
resources of the State, and to collaborate with similar |
departments in other states and with the United States |
Government. |
(3) To conduct a natural history survey of the State, |
giving preference to subjects of educational and economical |
importance. |
(4) To investigate the entomology of the State. |
(5) To investigate all insects dangerous or injurious to |
agricultural or horticultural plants and crops, to livestock, |
to nursery trees and plants, to the products of the truck farm |
and vegetable garden, to shade trees and other ornamental |
vegetation of cities and villages, and to the products of the |
mills and the contents of warehouses, and all insects injurious |
or dangerous to the public health. |
(6) To study the geological formation of the State with |
reference to its resources of coal, ores, clays, building |
stones, cement, materials suitable for use in the construction |
of the roads, gas, oil, mineral and artesian water, aquifers |
and aquitards, and other resources and products. |
(7) To cooperate with United States federal agencies in the |
preparation and completion of a contour topographic map and the |
collection, recording, and printing of water and atmospheric |
resource data including stream flow measurements and to collect |
facts and data concerning the volumes and flow of underground, |
surface, and atmospheric waters of the State and to determine |
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the mineral and chemical qualities of water from different |
geological formations and surface and atmospheric waters for |
the various sections of the State. |
(8) To act as the central data repository and research |
coordinator for the State in matters related to water and |
atmospheric resources. The State Water Survey of the University |
of Illinois may monitor and evaluate all weather modification |
operations in Illinois. |
(9) To collaborate with the Illinois State Academy of |
Science and to publish the results of the investigations and |
research in the field of natural science to the end that the |
same may be distributed to the interested public. |
(10) To perform all other duties and assume all obligations |
of the Department of Natural Resources pertaining to the State |
Water Survey, the State Geological Survey, the State Natural |
History Survey, and the Waste Management and Research Center. |
(11) To maintain all previously existing relationships |
between the State Water Survey, the State Geological Survey, |
the State Natural History Survey, and the Illinois Sustainable |
Technology Center and the public and private colleges and |
universities in Illinois. |
(12) To participate in federal geologic mapping programs.
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(13) To conduct educational programs to further the |
exchange of information
to reduce the generation of hazardous |
wastes or to treat or dispose of
such wastes so as to make them |
nonhazardous.
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(14) To provide a technical information service for |
industries involved in
the generation, treatment, or disposal |
of hazardous wastes.
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(15) To disseminate information regarding advances in |
hazardous waste
management technology that could both protect |
the environment and further
industrial productivity.
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(16) To provide research in areas related to reduction of |
the generation of
hazardous wastes; treatment, recycling and |
reuse; and other issues that
the Board may suggest. |
Section 25. Transfer of powers. All of the rights, powers, |
and duties vested by law in the Department of Natural |
Resources, or in any office, division, or bureau thereof, and |
pertaining in any way to the operation, management, control, |
and maintenance of the Scientific Surveys, including but not |
limited to, the authority to impose and collect fees and |
service charges, as deemed appropriate and necessary by the |
Board of Trustees, for the services performed or provided by |
the Scientific Surveys, are hereby transferred to and vested in |
the Board of Trustees. |
Section 30. Transfer of personnel. The employment of all |
scientific and nonscientific personnel employed by the |
Department of Natural Resources on behalf of the Scientific |
Surveys is hereby transferred to the Board of Trustees. The |
transfer shall not affect the status and rights of any person |
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under the State Universities Retirement System or the State |
Universities Civil Service System. |
Section 35. Transfer of property. |
(a) All books, records, papers, documents, property (real |
and personal), contracts, grants, and pending business in any |
way pertaining to the Scientific Surveys and to the rights, |
powers, and duties transferred by this Act from the Department |
of Natural Resources to the Board of Trustees, including but |
not limited to material in electronic or magnetic format and |
necessary computer hardware and software, shall be delivered |
and transferred to the Board of Trustees. |
(b) The Board of Trustees shall succeed to, assume, and |
exercise all rights, powers, duties, property, and |
responsibilities formerly exercised by the Department of |
Natural Resources on behalf of the Scientific Surveys prior to |
the effective date of this Section. All contracts, grants, and |
agreements entered into by any of the Scientific Surveys or the |
Department of Natural Resources on behalf of any of the |
Scientific Surveys, prior to the effective date of this Section |
shall subsist notwithstanding the transfer of the functions of |
the Department of Natural Resources with respect to Scientific |
Surveys to the Board of Trustees. All bonds, notes, and other |
evidences of indebtedness outstanding on the effective date of |
this Section issued by the Department of Natural Resources on |
behalf of the Scientific Surveys, or any of them, shall become |
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the bonds, notes, or other evidences of indebtedness of the |
University of Illinois and shall be otherwise unaffected by the |
transfer of functions to the Board of Trustees. |
(c) The title to all patents, trademarks, and copyrights |
issued to any of the Scientific Surveys prior to the effective |
date of this Section is hereby transferred to and vested in the |
Board of Trustees. Any income received from those patents, |
trademarks, and copyrights and any funds received in connection |
with the retention, receipt, assignment, license, sale, or |
transfer of interest in, rights to, or income from discoveries, |
inventions, patents, trademarks, or copyrightable works of any |
of the Scientific Surveys shall become the property of the |
Board of Trustees on behalf of the University of Illinois. |
(d) The title to all other property, whether real, |
personal, or mixed, and all accounts receivable belonging to or |
under the jurisdiction of the Department of Natural Resources |
in any way pertaining to the Scientific Surveys, or any of |
them, prior to the effective date of this Section is hereby |
transferred to and vested in the Board of Trustees on behalf of |
the University of Illinois. |
Section 40. Unexpended moneys transferred. |
(a) The right of custody, possession, and control over all |
items of income, funds, or deposits in any way pertaining to |
the Scientific Surveys prior to the effective date of this |
Section that are held or retained by, or under the jurisdiction |
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of, the Department of Natural Resources is hereby transferred |
to and vested in the Board of Trustees to be retained by the |
University in its treasury, or deposited with a bank or savings |
and loan association, all in accordance with the provisions of |
paragraph (2) of Section 6d of the State Finance Act. |
(b) All unexpended appropriations and balances and other |
moneys available for use in connection with any of the |
functions transferred to the Board of Trustees under this Act, |
including but not limited to all unexpended grant proceeds |
pertaining in any way to the Scientific Surveys, is hereby |
transferred from the Department of Natural Resources to the |
Board of Trustees for use by the Board of Trustees in the |
exercise of those functions transferred. Unexpended balances |
so transferred shall be retained by the University of Illinois |
in its own treasury, or deposited with a bank or savings and |
loan association, and expended only for the purpose for which |
the appropriations or grants were originally made, all in |
accordance with the provisions of paragraph (2) of Section 6d |
of the State Finance Act. |
Section 45. Funds retained and disbursed. The University of |
Illinois may retain in its treasury any funds derived from |
contracts, grants, fees, service charges, rentals, or other |
sources, assessed or obtained for or arising out of the |
operation of the Scientific Surveys. Those funds shall be |
disbursed from time to time pursuant to the order and direction |
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of the Board of Trustees, and in accordance with any contracts, |
pledges, trusts, or agreements heretofore or hereafter made by |
the Board of Trustees. |
Section 50. Savings provisions. |
(a) The rights, powers and duties retained in the |
Department of Natural Resources and not transferred under this |
Act shall remain vested in and shall be exercised by the |
Department subject to the provisions of this Act. |
(b) The transfer of rights, powers, and duties to the Board |
of Trustees under this Act does not invalidate any previous |
action taken by or in respect to any of its predecessor |
departments or divisions or their officers or employees. |
References to these predecessor departments or divisions or |
their officers or employees in any document, contract, |
agreement, or law shall, in appropriate contexts, be deemed to |
refer to the successor department, agency, officer, or |
employee. The Scientific Surveys shall continue to be eligible |
to receive sponsored funding from the Department of Natural |
Resources or any other State agency. |
(c) The transfer of powers and duties to the Board of |
Trustees under this Act does not affect any person's rights, |
obligations, or duties, including any civil or criminal |
penalties applicable thereto, arising out of those transferred |
powers and duties. |
(d) Whenever reports or notices are now required to be made |
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or given or documents furnished or served by any person to or |
upon the departments or divisions, officers, and employees |
transferred by this Act, they shall be made, given, furnished, |
or served in the same manner to or upon the successor |
department or agency, officer, or employee. |
(e) This Act does not affect any act done, ratified, or |
cancelled, any right occurring or established, or any action or |
proceeding had or commenced in an administrative, civil, or |
criminal cause before this Act takes effect. Any such action or |
proceeding still pending may be prosecuted and continued by the |
Department of Natural Resources. |
Section 55. Successor agency. For purposes of the Successor |
Agency Act and Section 9b of the State Finance Act, the Board |
of Trustees is the successor to the Department of Natural |
Resources with respect to the rights, powers, duties, property, |
functions, and other matters transferred by this Act. |
Section 800. The Personnel Code is amended by changing |
Section 4c as follows: |
(20 ILCS 415/4c) (from Ch. 127, par. 63b104c) |
Sec. 4c. General exemptions. The following positions in |
State
service shall be exempt from jurisdictions A, B, and C, |
unless the
jurisdictions shall be extended as provided in this |
Act:
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(1) All officers elected by the people.
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(2) All positions under the Lieutenant Governor, |
Secretary of State,
State Treasurer, State Comptroller, |
State Board of Education, Clerk of
the Supreme Court,
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Attorney General, and State Board of Elections.
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(3) Judges, and officers and employees of the courts, |
and notaries
public.
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(4) All officers and employees of the Illinois General |
Assembly, all
employees of legislative commissions, all |
officers and employees of the
Illinois Legislative |
Reference Bureau, the Legislative
Research Unit, and the |
Legislative Printing Unit.
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(5) All positions in the Illinois National Guard and |
Illinois State
Guard, paid from federal funds or positions
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in the State Military Service filled by enlistment and paid |
from State
funds.
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(6) All employees of the Governor at the executive |
mansion and on
his immediate personal staff.
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(7) Directors of Departments, the Adjutant General, |
the Assistant
Adjutant General, the Director of the |
Illinois Emergency
Management Agency, members of boards |
and commissions, and all other
positions appointed by the |
Governor by and with the consent of the
Senate.
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(8) The presidents, other principal administrative |
officers, and
teaching, research and extension faculties |
of
Chicago State University, Eastern Illinois University, |
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Governors State
University, Illinois State University, |
Northeastern Illinois University,
Northern Illinois |
University, Western Illinois University, the Illinois
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Community College Board, Southern Illinois
University, |
Illinois Board of Higher Education, University of
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Illinois, State Universities Civil Service System, |
University Retirement
System of Illinois, and the |
administrative officers and scientific and
technical staff |
of the Illinois State Museum.
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(9) All other employees except the presidents, other |
principal
administrative officers, and teaching, research |
and extension faculties
of the universities under the |
jurisdiction of the Board of Regents and
the colleges and |
universities under the jurisdiction of the Board of
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Governors of State Colleges and Universities, Illinois |
Community College
Board, Southern Illinois University, |
Illinois Board of Higher Education,
Board of Governors of |
State Colleges and Universities, the Board of
Regents, |
University of Illinois, State Universities Civil Service
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System, University Retirement System of Illinois, so long |
as these are
subject to the provisions of the State |
Universities Civil Service Act.
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(10) The State Police so long as they are subject to |
the merit
provisions of the State Police Act.
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(11) (Blank). The scientific staff of the State |
Scientific Surveys and the
Waste Management and Research
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Center.
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(12) The technical and engineering staffs of the |
Department of
Transportation, the Department of Nuclear |
Safety, the Pollution Control
Board, and the Illinois |
Commerce Commission, and the technical and engineering
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staff providing architectural and engineering services in |
the Department of
Central Management Services.
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(13) All employees of the Illinois State Toll Highway |
Authority.
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(14) The Secretary of the Illinois Workers' |
Compensation Commission.
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(15) All persons who are appointed or employed by the |
Director of
Insurance under authority of Section 202 of the |
Illinois Insurance Code
to assist the Director of Insurance |
in discharging his responsibilities
relating to the |
rehabilitation, liquidation, conservation, and
dissolution |
of companies that are subject to the jurisdiction of the
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Illinois Insurance Code.
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(16) All employees of the St. Louis Metropolitan Area |
Airport
Authority.
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(17) All investment officers employed by the Illinois |
State Board of
Investment.
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(18) Employees of the Illinois Young Adult |
Conservation Corps program,
administered by the Illinois |
Department of Natural Resources, authorized
grantee under |
Title VIII of the Comprehensive
Employment and Training Act |
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of 1973, 29 USC 993.
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(19) Seasonal employees of the Department of |
Agriculture for the
operation of the Illinois State Fair |
and the DuQuoin State Fair, no one
person receiving more |
than 29 days of such employment in any calendar year.
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(20) All "temporary" employees hired under the |
Department of Natural
Resources' Illinois Conservation |
Service, a youth
employment program that hires young people |
to work in State parks for a period
of one year or less.
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(21) All hearing officers of the Human Rights |
Commission.
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(22) All employees of the Illinois Mathematics and |
Science Academy.
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(23) All employees of the Kankakee River Valley Area
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Airport Authority.
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(24) The commissioners and employees of the Executive |
Ethics
Commission.
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(25) The Executive Inspectors General, including |
special Executive
Inspectors General, and employees of |
each Office of an
Executive Inspector General.
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(26) The commissioners and employees of the |
Legislative Ethics
Commission.
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(27) The Legislative Inspector General, including |
special Legislative
Inspectors General, and employees of |
the Office of
the Legislative Inspector General.
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(28) The Auditor General's Inspector General and |
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employees of the Office
of the Auditor General's Inspector |
General.
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(Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03; 93-721, eff. 1-1-05; |
93-1091, eff. 3-29-05.)
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Section 805. The Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is |
amended by changing Section 605-515 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 605/605-515) (was 20 ILCS 605/46.13a)
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Sec. 605-515. Environmental Regulatory Assistance Program.
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(a) In this Section, except where the
context clearly |
requires otherwise, "small business stationary source" means a
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business that is owned
or operated by a person that employs 100 |
or fewer individuals; is a small
business; is not a major |
stationary source as defined in Titles I and III
of the federal |
1990 Clean Air Act Amendments; does not emit 50 tons or more
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per year of any regulated pollutant (as defined under the |
federal Clean Air
Act); and emits less than 75 tons per year of |
all regulated pollutants.
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(b) The Department may:
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(1) Provide access to technical and compliance |
information for
Illinois firms, including small and middle |
market companies, to facilitate
local business compliance |
with the federal, State, and local environmental
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regulations.
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(2) Coordinate and enter into cooperative agreements |
with a State
ombudsman office, which shall be established |
in accordance with the federal
1990 Clean Air Act |
Amendments to provide direct oversight to the program
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established under that Act.
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(3) Enter into contracts, cooperative agreements, and |
financing
agreements and establish and collect charges and |
fees necessary or
incidental to the performance of duties |
and the execution of powers
under this Section.
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(4) Accept and expend, subject to appropriation, |
gifts, grants,
awards, funds, contributions, charges, |
fees, and other financial or
nonfinancial aid from federal, |
State, and local governmental agencies,
businesses, |
educational agencies, not-for-profit organizations, and |
other
entities, for the purposes of this Section.
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(5) Establish, staff, and administer programs and |
services and adopt
such rules and regulations necessary to |
carry out the intent of
this Section and Section 507, |
"Small Business Stationary Source Technical
and |
Environmental Compliance Assistance Program", of the |
federal 1990
Clean Air Act Amendments.
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(c) The Department's environmental compliance programs and |
services for
businesses may include, but need not be limited |
to, the following:
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(1) Communication and outreach services to or on behalf |
of individual
companies, including collection and |
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compilation of appropriate information
on regulatory |
compliance issues and control technologies, and |
dissemination
of that information through publications, |
direct mailings,
electronic
communications, conferences, |
workshops, one-on-one counseling, and other
means of |
technical assistance.
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(2) Provision of referrals and access to technical
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assistance, pollution prevention and facility audits, and |
otherwise
serving as an information clearinghouse on |
pollution prevention through the
coordination of the Waste |
Management and Research Center , a
division of the |
University of Illinois Department of Natural Resources . In |
addition,
environmental and regulatory compliance issues |
and techniques, which may
include business rights and |
responsibilities, applicable permitting and
compliance |
requirements, compliance methods and acceptable control
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technologies, release detection, and other applicable |
information may be
provided.
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(3) Coordination with and provision of administrative |
and logistical
support to the State
Compliance Advisory |
Panel.
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(d) There is hereby created a special fund in the State |
Treasury to be
known as the Small Business Environmental |
Assistance Fund. Monies received
under subdivision (b)(4) of |
this Section shall be deposited into the Fund.
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Monies in the Small Business Environmental Assistance Fund |
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may be used,
subject to appropriation, only for the purposes |
authorized by this Section.
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(Source: P.A. 90-490, eff. 8-17-97; 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
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Section 810. The Department of Natural Resources Act is |
amended by changing Sections 1-25 and 20-5 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 801/1-25)
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Sec. 1-25. Powers of the scientific surveys and State |
Museum.
In addition to its other powers and duties, the |
Department shall
have the following powers and duties which |
shall be performed by the
scientific surveys and the State |
Museum:
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(1) To investigate and study the natural resources of |
the State and
to prepare printed reports and furnish |
information fundamental to the
conservation and |
development of natural resources and for that purpose
the |
officers and employees thereof may, pursuant to rule |
adopted by the
Department, enter and cross all lands in |
this State, doing
no damage to private property.
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(2) To cooperate with and advise departments having |
administrative
powers and duties relating to the natural |
resources of the State, and to
cooperate with similar |
departments in other states and with the United
States |
Government.
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(3) To conduct a natural history survey of the State, |
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giving
preference to subjects of educational and |
economical importance.
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(4) To publish, from time to time, reports covering the |
entire field
of zoology and botany of the State.
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(5) To supply natural history specimens to the State |
educational
institutions and to the public schools.
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(6) To investigate the entomology of the State.
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(7) To investigate all insects dangerous or injurious |
to
agricultural or horticultural plants and crops, |
livestock, to nursery
trees and plants, to the products of |
the truck farm and vegetable
garden, to shade trees and |
other ornamental vegetation of cities and
villages, to the |
products of the mills and the contents of warehouses,
and |
all insects injurious or dangerous to the public health.
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(8) To conduct experiments with methods for the |
prevention, arrest,
abatement and control of insects |
injurious to persons or property.
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(9) To instruct the people, by lecture, demonstration |
or bulletin,
in the best methods of preserving and |
protecting their property and
health against injuries by |
insects.
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(10) To publish, from time to time, articles on the |
injurious and
beneficial insects of the State.
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(11) To study the geological formation of the State |
with reference
to its resources of coal, ores, clays, |
building stones, cement,
materials suitable for use in the |
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construction of roads, gas, mineral
and artesian water and |
other products.
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(12) To publish, from time to time, topographical, |
geological and
other maps to illustrate resources of the |
State.
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(13) To publish, from time to time, bulletins giving a |
general and
detailed description of the geological and |
mineral resources, including
water resources, of the |
State.
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(14) To cooperate with United States federal agencies |
in the preparation
and completion of a contour topographic |
map and the collection, recording
and printing of water and |
atmospheric resource data including stream flow
|
measurements and to collect facts and data concerning the |
volumes and flow
of underground, surface and atmospheric |
waters of the State and to
determine the mineral qualities |
of water from different geological
formations and surface |
and atmospheric waters for the various sections of
the |
State.
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(15) To publish, from time to time, the results of its
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investigations of the mineral qualities, volumes and flow |
of underground
and surface waters of the State to the end |
that the available water
resources of the State may be |
better known and to make mineral analyses
of samples of |
water from municipal or private sources giving no opinion
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from those analyses of the hygienic, physiological or |
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medicinal
qualities of such waters.
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(16) To act as the central data repository and research |
coordinator
for the State in matters related to water and |
atmospheric resources.
The State Water Survey Division of |
the Department may monitor and evaluate
all weather |
modification operations in Illinois.
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(17) To distribute, in its discretion, to the various |
educational
institutions of the State, specimens, samples, |
and materials collected
by it after the same have served |
the purposes of the Department.
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(3) (18) To cooperate with the Illinois State Academy |
of Science and to
publish a suitable number of the results |
of the investigations and
research in the field of natural |
science to the end that the same may be
distributed to the |
interested public.
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(4) (19) To maintain a State Museum, and to collect and |
preserve objects
of scientific and artistic value, |
representing past and present fauna
and flora, the life and |
work of man, geological history, natural
resources, and the |
manufacturing and fine arts; to interpret for and
educate |
the public concerning the foregoing.
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(5) (20) To cooperate with the Illinois State Museum |
Society for the
mutual benefit of the Museum and the |
Society, with the Museum furnishing
necessary space for the |
Society to carry on its functions and keep its
records, |
and, upon the recommendation of the Museum Director with |
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the
approval of the Board of State Museum Advisors and the |
Director of the
Department, to enter into agreements with |
the Illinois State Museum
Society for the operation of a |
sales counter and other concessions for
the mutual benefit |
of the Museum and the Society.
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(6) (21) To accept grants of property and to hold |
property to be
administered as part of the State Museum for |
the purpose of
preservation, research of interpretation of |
significant areas within the
State for the purpose of |
preserving, studying and interpreting
archaeological and |
natural phenomena.
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(7) (22) To contribute to and support the operations, |
programs
and capital development of public museums in this |
State.
For the purposes of this Section, "public museum" |
means a facility: (A) that
is operating for the purposes of |
promoting cultural development
through
special activities |
or programs or through performing arts that are
performed |
in an indoor setting, and acquiring,
conserving, |
preserving,
studying, interpreting, enhancing, and in |
particular, organizing and
continuously exhibiting |
specimens, artifacts, articles, documents and
other things |
of historical, anthropological, archaeological, |
industrial,
scientific or artistic import, to the public |
for its instruction and
enjoyment, and (B) that either (i) |
is operated by or located upon land
owned by a unit of |
local
government
or (ii) is a museum that has an annual |
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attendance of at least
150,000 and
offers educational |
programs to school groups during school hours.
A museum is |
eligible to receive funds for capital development under
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this subdivision (7)
(22) only if it is operated by or |
located upon land owned by a unit of local
government or if |
it is certified by a unit of local
government in
which it |
is located as a public museum meeting the criteria of this |
Section.
Recipients of funds for capital development under
|
this subdivision (7) (22) shall match State funds with |
local or private funding
according to the following:
|
(a) for a public museum with an attendance of |
300,000 or less during the
preceding calendar year, no |
match is required;
|
(b) for a public museum with an attendance of over |
300,000 but less than
600,000 during the preceding |
calendar year, the match must be at a ratio of $1
from |
local and
private funds for every $1 in State funds; |
and
|
(c) for a public museum with an attendance of over |
600,000 during the
preceding calendar year, the match |
must be at a ratio of $2 from local and
private funds |
for every
$1 in State funds.
|
The Department shall formulate rules and regulations |
relating to the
allocation of any funds appropriated by the |
General Assembly for the
purpose of contributing to the |
support of public museums in this State.
|
|
(8) (23) To perform all other duties and assume all |
obligations of the former
Department of Energy and Natural |
Resources and the former Department of
Registration and |
Education pertaining to the State Water Survey, the State
|
Geological Survey, the State Natural History Survey, and |
the State Museum.
|
(24) To maintain all previously existing relationships |
between the
State Water Survey, State Geological Survey, |
and State Natural History
Survey and the public and private |
colleges and universities in Illinois.
|
(25) To participate in federal geologic mapping |
programs.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-606, eff. 6-28-02; 93-872, eff. 1-1-05.)
|
(20 ILCS 801/20-5)
|
Sec. 20-5. State Museum. The Department of Natural |
Resources
shall have within it the office a division consisting |
of the Illinois State Museum ,
which shall be within the Office |
of Scientific Research and Analysis . The
Board of the Illinois |
State Museum is retained as the governing
board for the State |
Museum.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-50, eff. 7-1-95; 89-445, eff. 2-7-96; 90-490, |
eff.
8-17-97.)
|
(20 ILCS 801/15-5 rep.)
|
(20 ILCS 801/15-10 rep.)
|
|
Section 815. The Department of Natural Resources Act is |
amended by repealing Sections 15-5 and 15-10. |
Section 820. The Energy Conservation and Coal Development |
Act is amended by changing Section 8 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 1105/8) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 7408)
|
Sec. 8. Illinois Coal Development Board.
|
(a) There shall be established as an advisory board to the
|
Department, the Illinois Coal
Development Board, hereinafter |
in this Section called the Board. The Board
shall be composed |
of the following voting members: the
Director of the
|
Department, who shall be Chairman thereof; the Deputy Director |
of the Bureau
of Business Development within the Department of |
Commerce and Economic Opportunity; the President of the |
University of Illinois or his or her designee; the Director of
|
Natural
Resources or that Director's designee; the Director of |
the Office of Mines and
Minerals within the Department of |
Natural Resources;
4 members of the General Assembly (one each |
appointed by the President of
the Senate, the Senate Minority |
Leader, the Speaker of the House, and the House
Minority |
Leader); and 8
persons appointed by the Governor, with the |
advice and consent of the Senate,
including representatives of |
Illinois
industries that are involved in the extraction, |
utilization or transportation
of Illinois coal, persons |
representing financial or banking interests in the
State, and |
|
persons experienced in international business and economic
|
development. These members shall be chosen from persons of |
recognized ability
and experience in their designated field. |
The members
appointed by the Governor shall serve
for terms of |
4 years, unless otherwise provided in this subsection. The
|
initial terms of the original appointees shall expire on July |
1, 1985, except
that the Governor shall designate 3 of the |
original appointees to serve initial
terms that shall expire on |
July 1, 1983. The initial term of the member
appointed by the |
Governor to fill the office created after July 1, 1985 shall
|
expire on July 1, 1989. The initial terms of the members |
appointed by the
Governor to fill the offices created by this |
amendatory Act of 1993 shall
expire on July 1, 1995, and July |
1, 1997, as determined by the Governor.
A member appointed by
a |
Legislative Leader shall serve for the duration of the General |
Assembly for
which he or she is appointed, so long as the |
member remains a member of that
General Assembly.
|
The Board shall meet at least annually or at the call of |
the Chairman.
At any time the majority of the Board may |
petition the Chairman for a meeting
of the Board. Nine members |
of the Board shall constitute a
quorum. Members of the Board |
shall be reimbursed for actual and necessary
expenses incurred |
while performing their duties as members of the Board from
|
funds appropriated to the Department for such purpose.
|
(b) The Board shall provide advice and make recommendations |
on
the following Department powers and duties:
|
|
(1) To develop an annual agenda which may include but |
is not limited to
research and methodologies conducted for |
the purpose of increasing the
utilization of Illinois' coal |
and other fossil fuel resources, with
emphasis on high |
sulfur coal, in the following areas: coal extraction,
|
preparation and characterization; coal technologies |
(combustion,
gasification, liquefaction, and related |
processes); marketing;
public awareness and education, as |
those terms are used in the Illinois
Coal Technology |
Development Assistance Act; transportation; procurement of
|
sites and issuance of permits; and environmental impacts.
|
(2) To support and coordinate Illinois coal research, |
and to approve
projects consistent with the annual agenda |
and budget for coal research and
the purposes of this Act |
and to
approve the annual budget and operating plan
for |
administration of the Board.
|
(3) To promote the coordination of available research |
information on the
production, preparation, distribution |
and uses of Illinois coal. The Board
shall advise the |
existing research institutions within the State on areas
|
where research may be necessary.
|
(4) To cooperate to the fullest extent possible with |
State and federal
agencies and departments, independent |
organizations, and other interested
groups, public and |
private, for the purposes of promoting Illinois coal
|
resources.
|
|
(5) To submit an annual report to the Governor and the |
General Assembly
outlining the progress and |
accomplishments made in the year, providing an
accounting |
of funds received and disbursed, reviewing the status of |
research
contracts, and furnishing other relevant |
information.
|
(6) To focus on existing coal research efforts in |
carrying out its
mission; to make use of existing research
|
facilities in Illinois or other institutions carrying out |
research on
Illinois coal; as far as practicable, to make
|
maximum
use of
the research facilities available at the |
Illinois State Geological Survey of the University of |
Illinois ,
the Coal Extraction and Utilization Research |
Center, the Illinois Coal
Development Park and |
universities and colleges located within
the State of |
Illinois; and to create
a
consortium or center which |
conducts, coordinates and supports coal research
|
activities in the State of Illinois. Programmatic |
activities of such a
consortium or center shall be subject |
to approval by the Department and shall be
consistent with |
the purposes of this Act. The Department may
authorize
|
expenditure of funds in support of the administrative and |
programmatic
operations of such a center or consortium |
consistent with its statutory
authority. Administrative |
actions undertaken by or for such a center or
consortium |
shall be subject to the approval of the Department.
|
|
(7) To make a reasonable attempt, before initiating any |
research under
this Act, to avoid duplication of effort and |
expense by coordinating the
research efforts among various |
agencies, departments, universities or
organizations, as |
the case may be.
|
(8) To adopt, amend and repeal rules, regulations and |
bylaws governing
the Board's organization and conduct of |
business.
|
(9) To authorize the expenditure of monies from the |
Coal Technology
Development Assistance Fund, the Public |
Utility Fund and other funds in
the State Treasury |
appropriated to the Department, consistent with the
|
purposes of this Act.
|
(10) To seek, accept, and expend gifts or grants in any |
form, from any
public agency or from any other source. Such |
gifts and grants may be held
in trust by the Department and |
expended at the direction of the
Department and
in the |
exercise of the Department's powers and performance of
the |
Department's duties.
|
(11) To publish, from time to time, the results of |
Illinois coal research
projects funded through the |
Department.
|
(12) To authorize loans from appropriations from the |
Build Illinois
Bond Purposes Fund, the Build Illinois Bond |
Fund and the Illinois
Industrial Coal Utilization Fund.
|
(13) To authorize expenditures of monies for coal |
|
development projects
under the authority of Section 13 of |
the General Obligation Bond Act.
|
(c) The Board shall also provide advice and make |
recommendations on the following Department powers and duties:
|
(1) To create and maintain thorough, current and |
accurate records on
all markets for and actual uses of coal |
mined in Illinois, and to make such
records available to |
the public upon request.
|
(2) To identify all current and anticipated future |
technical,
economic, institutional, market, environmental, |
regulatory and other
impediments to the utilization of |
Illinois coal.
|
(3) To monitor and evaluate all proposals and plans of |
public
utilities related to compliance with the |
requirements of Title IV of the
federal Clean Air Act |
Amendments of 1990, or with any other law which might
|
affect the use of Illinois coal, for the purposes of (i) |
determining the
effects of such proposals or plans on the |
use of Illinois coal, and (ii)
identifying alternative |
plans or actions which would maintain or increase
the use |
of Illinois coal.
|
(4) To develop strategies and to propose policies to |
promote
environmentally responsible uses of Illinois coal |
for meeting electric
power supply requirements and for |
other purposes.
|
(5) (Blank).
|
|
(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
|
Section 825. The Clean Coal FutureGen for Illinois Act is |
amended by changing Section 20 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 1107/20) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2010)
|
Sec. 20. Title to sequestered gas. If the FutureGen Project |
locates at either the Tuscola or Mattoon site in the State of |
Illinois, then the FutureGen Alliance agrees that the Operator |
shall transfer and convey and the State of Illinois shall |
accept and receive, with no payment due from the State of |
Illinois, all rights, title, and interest in and to and any |
liabilities associated with the sequestered gas, including any |
current or future environmental benefits, marketing claims, |
tradable credits, emissions allocations or offsets (voluntary |
or compliance based) associated therewith, upon such gas |
reaching the status of post-injection, which shall be verified |
by the Agency or other designated State of Illinois agency. The |
Operator shall retain all rights, title, and interest in and to |
and any liabilities associated with the pre-injection |
sequestered gas. The Illinois State Geological Survey of the |
University of Illinois Department of Natural Resources shall |
monitor, measure, and verify the permanent status of |
sequestered carbon dioxide and co-sequestered gases in which |
the State has acquired the right, title, and interest under |
|
this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-18, eff. 7-30-07.) |
Section 830. The Hazardous Waste Technology Exchange |
Service Act is amended by changing Sections 3, 4, and 6 as |
follows:
|
(20 ILCS 1130/3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 6803)
|
Sec. 3. For the purposes of this Act, unless the context |
otherwise requires:
|
(a) "Board" means the Board of Trustees of the University |
of Illinois Natural Resources and Conservation of the
|
Department of Natural Resources .
|
(b) "Center" means the Waste Management and Research Center
|
of the University of Illinois Department of Natural Resources .
|
(c) "Department" means the Department of
Natural |
Resources.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96; 90-490, eff. 8-17-97.)
|
(20 ILCS 1130/4) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 6804)
|
Sec. 4. Waste Management and Research Center. The As soon |
as may be
practicable after the effective date of
this Act, the |
Department shall establish a
Hazardous Waste Research and
|
Information Center.
On and after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1997, that Center
shall be known as the Waste |
Management and Research Center is transferred to the University |
|
of Illinois .
|
(Source: P.A. 90-490, eff. 8-17-97.)
|
(20 ILCS 1130/6) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 6806)
|
Sec. 6. Appropriations. For the purpose of maintaining the |
Waste
Management and Research Center, paying the expenses and |
providing the
facilities and structures incident thereto, |
appropriations shall be made to
the University of Illinois |
Department , payable from the Hazardous Waste Research Fund and |
other
funds in the State Treasury.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-490, eff. 8-17-97.)
|
(20 ILCS 1130/5 rep.)
|
Section 831. The Hazardous Waste Technology Exchange |
Service Act is amended by repealing Section 5. |
Section 835. The Green Governments Illinois Act is amended |
by changing Section 15 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 3954/15)
|
Sec. 15. Composition of the Council. The Council shall be |
comprised of representatives from various State agencies and |
State universities with specific fiscal, procurement, |
educational, and environmental policy expertise. The |
Lieutenant Governor is the chair of the Council. The director |
or President, respectively, of each of the following State |
|
agencies and State universities , or his or her designee, is a |
member of the Council: the Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity, the Environmental Protection Agency, the |
University of Illinois; the Department of Natural Resources, |
the Department of Natural Resources Waste Management and |
Research Center , the Department of Central Management |
Services, the Governor's Office of Management and Budget, the |
Department of Agriculture, the Department of Transportation, |
the Department of Corrections, the Department of Human |
Services, the Department of Public Health, the State Board of |
Education, the Board of Higher Education, and the Capital |
Development Board. The Office of the Lieutenant Governor shall |
provide administrative support to the Council. A minimum of one |
staff position in the Office of the Lieutenant Governor shall |
be dedicated to the Green Governments Illinois program.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-657, eff. 10-10-07.) |
Section 840. The State Finance Act is amended by changing |
Sections 6z-14 and 8.24 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 105/6z-14) (from Ch. 127, par. 142z-14)
|
Sec. 6z-14. The following items of income received by the |
University of Illinois Department of
Natural Resources from |
patents and
copyrights of the Illinois Scientific Surveys shall |
be retained by the University of Illinois in its treasury |
deposited into the General Revenue Fund : funds received in |
|
connection with the
retention, receipt, assignment, license, |
sale or transfer of interests in,
rights to or income from |
discoveries, inventions, patents or copyrightable
works. All |
interest earned shall be deposited in the University of |
Illinois Income
General Revenue Fund. The University Pursuant |
to appropriation, the Department may use those moneys for the |
purpose of appropriated for that purpose for patenting or |
copyrighting discoveries,
inventions or copyrightable works or |
supporting other programs of the
Illinois Scientific Surveys.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-91, eff. 7-1-05.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/8.24) (from Ch. 127, par. 144.24)
|
Sec. 8.24. One hundred percent of the revenues received by |
the University of Illinois Department
of Natural Resources from |
the sale of publications, bulletins,
circulars, maps, reports, |
catalogues and other data and information presented
in |
documents shall be deposited into the University of Illinois |
Income Natural Resources Information Fund.
Appropriations from |
the Natural Resources Information Fund shall be made
to the |
University of Illinois Department for the (1) expenses |
connected with the production of
such documents and (2) |
purchase of U.S. Geological Survey topographic maps
and other |
documents. The Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois |
of Natural Resources and Conservation shall
establish |
guidelines governing fee schedules, conditions of sale, and
|
administration of the Natural Resources Information Fund.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
|
Section 845. The Illinois Pension Code is amended by |
changing Section 15-106 as follows:
|
(40 ILCS 5/15-106) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 15-106)
|
Sec. 15-106. Employer. "Employer": The University of |
Illinois, Southern
Illinois University, Chicago State |
University, Eastern Illinois University,
Governors State |
University, Illinois State University, Northeastern Illinois
|
University, Northern Illinois University, Western Illinois |
University, the
State Board of Higher Education, the Illinois |
Mathematics and Science Academy,
the State Geological Survey |
Division of the Department of Natural Resources,
the State |
Natural History Survey Division of the Department of Natural
|
Resources, the State Water Survey Division of the Department of |
Natural
Resources, the Waste Management and Research Center of |
the Department of
Natural Resources, the University Civil |
Service Merit Board, the Board of
Trustees of the State |
Universities Retirement System, the Illinois Community
College |
Board, community college
boards, any association of community |
college boards organized under Section
3-55 of the Public |
Community College Act, the Board of Examiners established
under |
the Illinois Public Accounting Act, and, only during the period |
for which
employer contributions required under Section 15-155 |
are paid, the following
organizations: the alumni |
|
associations, the foundations and the athletic
associations |
which are affiliated with the universities and colleges |
included
in this Section as employers. |
A department as defined in Section 14-103.04 is
an employer |
for any person appointed by the Governor under the Civil
|
Administrative Code of Illinois who is a participating employee |
as defined in
Section 15-109. The Department of Central |
Management Services is an employer with respect to persons |
employed by the State Board of Higher Education in positions |
with the Illinois Century Network as of June 30, 2004 who |
remain continuously employed after that date by the Department |
of Central Management Services in positions with the Illinois |
Century Network, the Bureau of Communication and Computer |
Services, or, if applicable, any successor bureau.
|
The cities of Champaign and Urbana shall be considered
|
employers, but only during the period for which contributions |
are required to
be made under subsection (b-1) of Section |
15-155 and only with respect to
individuals described in |
subsection (h) of Section 15-107.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-369, eff. 8-23-07.)
|
Section 850. The Illinois Drainage Code is amended by |
changing Section 12-19 as follows:
|
(70 ILCS 605/12-19) (from Ch. 42, par. 12-19)
|
Sec. 12-19. Cooperation with other public agencies.
|
|
Commissioners of a district shall cooperate in the exchange of
|
information pertaining to drainage with the commissioners of |
other
districts and with local, State and Federal governments, |
officers and
agencies operating in fields affecting or related |
to drainage, including,
but not restricted to, the Department |
of Natural Resources, the State Water
Resources and Flood |
Control Board, the
State Soil Conservation Advisory Board, the |
State Geological Survey of the University of Illinois
Division , |
and the State Water Survey of the University of Illinois |
Division .
|
(Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
|
Section 855. The Solid Waste Disposal District Act is |
amended by changing Section 24 as follows:
|
(70 ILCS 3105/24) (from Ch. 85, par. 1674)
|
Sec. 24. After the effective date of this Act, no district, |
person, firm or
corporation, public or private, may establish a |
new solid waste disposal
site or facility without first |
obtaining a permit from the Environmental
Protection Agency |
under the provisions of the Environmental Protection Act.
|
Application for such permit shall be on forms provided by the |
Agency and
shall be accompanied by such supporting documents as |
the Agency shall
require. Prior to issuing a permit to |
establish a new solid waste disposal
site or facility the |
Agency shall review the application and supporting
documents |
|
and make an on-site inspection of the proposed site. The Agency
|
may request the Chief of the Illinois State Geological Survey |
of the University of Illinois to prepare a
report concerning |
the soil characteristics, water table, and other
appropriate |
physical characteristics of the proposed site. If the proposed
|
new solid waste disposal site or facility conforms to the |
minimum standards
provided in such Act, the Agency shall issue |
a permit for the operation of
such site or facility. If the |
proposed new solid waste disposal site or
facility does not |
conform to the minimum standards provided by such Act, no
|
permit shall be issued and the solid waste disposal site or |
facility shall
not be constructed or operated.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-650.)
|
Section 860. The University of Illinois Exercise of |
Functions and Duties Law
of the Civil Administrative Code of |
Illinois is amended by changing Section 3000-5 as follows:
|
(110 ILCS 355/3000-5) (was 110 ILCS 355/62)
|
Sec. 3000-5. Retention of duties by University of Illinois. |
Unless
otherwise
provided by law, the functions and duties
|
formerly exercised by the State entomologist, the State |
laboratory of
natural history, the State water survey, and the |
State geological survey
and
vested in the Illinois Department |
of Natural
Resources and the functions and duties of the Waste |
Management and
Research Center and its Hazardous Materials |
|
Laboratory as authorized by
the Hazardous Waste Technology |
Exchange Service Act shall continue to be exercised at the
|
University of Illinois in buildings and places provided by the |
trustees
of the University.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-490, eff. 8-17-97; 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
Section 865. The Well Abandonment Act is amended by |
changing Section 1 as follows:
|
(225 ILCS 730/1) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 5201)
|
Sec. 1. It is the duty of the permittee of any well drilled |
or deepened
for oil or gas, to file all geophysical logs and a |
well drilling report of
said well in the office of the State |
Geological Survey Division of the University of Illinois |
Department of Natural Resources within 90 days
after drilling |
ceases.
|
The well drilling report: (1) shall show the character
and |
depth of the formations passed through or encountered in the |
drilling
of the well, particularly showing the depth and |
thickness of oil-bearing
strata, and gas-bearing strata, (2) |
shall show the position and thickness
of coal beds and deposits |
of mineral materials of economic value, and (3)
shall give the |
location of the hole.
|
The Department of Natural Resources shall supply
to the |
Geological Survey a copy of each permit, showing the location |
of the
well.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
|
Section 870. The Environmental Protection Act is amended by |
changing Section 22.2 as follows:
|
(415 ILCS 5/22.2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.2)
|
Sec. 22.2. Hazardous waste; fees; liability.
|
(a) There are hereby created within the State Treasury 2
|
special funds to be known respectively as the "Hazardous Waste |
Fund" and
the "Hazardous Waste Research Fund", constituted from |
the fees collected
pursuant to this Section.
In addition to the |
fees collected under this Section, the Hazardous Waste
Fund |
shall include other moneys made available from any source for |
deposit into
the Fund.
|
(b) (1) On and after January 1, 1989, the Agency shall |
collect from the
owner or operator of each of the following |
sites a fee in the amount of:
|
(A) 9 cents per gallon or $18.18 per cubic yard, if |
the
hazardous waste disposal site is located off the |
site where such waste was
produced. The maximum amount |
payable under this subdivision (A) with respect
to the |
hazardous waste generated by a single generator and |
deposited in
monofills is $30,000 per year. If, as a |
result of the use of multiple monofills, waste
fees in |
excess of the maximum are assessed with respect to a |
single waste
generator, the generator may apply to the |
|
Agency for a credit.
|
(B) 9 cents or $18.18 per cubic yard, if the |
hazardous waste
disposal site is located on the site |
where such waste was produced,
provided however the |
maximum amount of fees payable under this paragraph
(B) |
is $30,000 per year for each such hazardous waste |
disposal site.
|
(C) If the hazardous waste disposal site is an |
underground injection
well, $6,000 per year if not more |
than 10,000,000 gallons per year are
injected, $15,000 |
per year if more than 10,000,000 gallons but not more |
than
50,000,000 gallons per year are injected, and |
$27,000 per year if more than
50,000,000 gallons per |
year are injected.
|
(D) 3 cents per gallon or
$6.06 per cubic yard of |
hazardous waste received
for treatment at a hazardous |
waste treatment site, if the hazardous waste
treatment |
site is located off the site where such waste was |
produced and
if such hazardous waste treatment site is |
owned, controlled and operated
by a person other than |
the generator of such waste.
After treatment at such |
hazardous waste treatment site, the waste shall
not be |
subject to any other fee imposed by this subsection |
(b). For purposes
of this subsection (b), the term |
"treatment" is defined as in Section
3.505 but shall |
not include recycling, reclamation or reuse.
|
|
(2) The General Assembly shall annually appropriate to |
the Fund such
amounts as it deems necessary to fulfill the |
purposes of this Act.
|
(3) The Agency shall have the authority to accept, |
receive, and
administer on behalf of the State any moneys |
made available to the State from
any source for the |
purposes of the Hazardous Waste Fund set forth in |
subsection
(d) of this Section.
|
(4) Of the amount collected as fees provided for in |
this Section, the
Agency shall manage the use of such funds |
to assure that sufficient funds
are available for match |
towards federal expenditures for response action at
sites |
which are listed on the National Priorities List; provided, |
however,
that this shall not apply to additional monies |
appropriated to the Fund by
the General Assembly, nor shall |
it apply in the event that the Director
finds that revenues |
in the Hazardous Waste Fund must be used to address
|
conditions which create or may create an immediate danger |
to the
environment or public health or to the welfare of |
the people of the State
of Illinois.
|
(5) Notwithstanding the other provisions of this
|
subsection (b), sludge from a publicly-owned sewage works |
generated
in Illinois, coal mining wastes and refuse |
generated in Illinois, bottom
boiler ash, flyash and flue |
gas desulphurization sludge from public
utility electric |
generating facilities located in Illinois, and bottom
|
|
boiler ash and flyash from all incinerators which process |
solely
municipal waste shall not be subject to the fee.
|
(6) For the purposes of this subsection (b), "monofill" |
means a
facility, or a unit at a facility, that accepts |
only wastes bearing the
same USEPA hazardous waste |
identification number, or compatible wastes as
determined |
by the Agency.
|
(c) The Agency shall establish procedures, not later than |
January 1,
1984, relating to the collection of the fees |
authorized by this Section.
Such procedures shall include, but |
not be limited to: (1) necessary records
identifying the |
quantities of hazardous waste received or disposed; (2) the
|
form and submission of reports to accompany the payment of fees |
to the
Agency; and (3) the time and manner of payment of fees |
to the Agency,
which payments shall be not more often than |
quarterly.
|
(d) Beginning July 1, 1996, the Agency shall deposit all |
such receipts in the State Treasury to the credit of the
|
Hazardous Waste Fund, except as provided in subsection (e) of |
this Section.
All monies in the Hazardous Waste Fund shall be |
used by the Agency for the following purposes:
|
(1) Taking whatever preventive or corrective
action is |
necessary or appropriate, in circumstances certified by |
the
Director, including but not limited to removal or |
remedial
action whenever there is a release or substantial |
threat of a release of
a hazardous substance or pesticide; |
|
provided, the Agency shall
expend no more than $1,000,000 |
on any single incident without appropriation
by the General |
Assembly.
|
(2) To meet any requirements which must be met by the |
State in order
to obtain federal funds pursuant to the |
Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation and |
Liability Act of 1980, (P.L. 96-510).
|
(3) In an amount up to 30% of the amount collected as |
fees provided
for in this Section, for use by the Agency to |
conduct
groundwater protection activities, including |
providing grants to appropriate
units of local government |
which are addressing protection of underground waters
|
pursuant to the provisions of this Act.
|
(4) To fund the development and implementation of the |
model pesticide
collection program under Section 19.1 of |
the Illinois Pesticide Act.
|
(5) To the extent the Agency has received and deposited |
monies in the
Fund other than fees collected under |
subsection (b) of this Section, to pay for
the cost of |
Agency employees for
services provided in reviewing the |
performance of response actions pursuant to
Title XVII of |
this Act.
|
(6) In an amount up to 15% of the fees collected |
annually
under subsection (b) of this Section, for use by |
the Agency
for administration of the provisions of this |
Section.
|
|
(e) The Agency shall deposit 10% of all receipts collected |
under subsection
(b) of this Section, but not to exceed |
$200,000 per year, in the State
Treasury to the credit of the |
Hazardous Waste Research Fund established by this
Act. Pursuant |
to appropriation, all monies in such Fund shall be used by the |
University of Illinois
Department of Natural Resources for the |
purposes set forth in
this subsection.
|
The University of Illinois Department of Natural Resources |
may enter into contracts with business,
industrial, |
university, governmental or other qualified individuals or
|
organizations to assist in the research and development |
intended to recycle,
reduce the volume of, separate, detoxify |
or reduce the hazardous properties of
hazardous wastes in |
Illinois. Monies in the Fund may also be used by the University |
of Illinois
Department of Natural Resources for technical |
studies, monitoring activities,
and educational and research |
activities which are related to the protection of
underground |
waters. Monies in the Hazardous Waste Research Fund may be used |
to
administer the Illinois Health and Hazardous Substances |
Registry Act. Monies
in the Hazardous Waste Research Fund shall |
not be used for any sanitary
landfill or the acquisition or |
construction of any facility. This does not
preclude the |
purchase of equipment for the purpose of public demonstration
|
projects. The University of Illinois Department of Natural |
Resources shall adopt guidelines for cost
sharing, selecting, |
and administering projects under this subsection.
|
|
(f) Notwithstanding any other provision or rule of law, and |
subject
only to the defenses set forth in subsection (j) of |
this Section, the
following persons shall be liable for all |
costs of removal or remedial
action incurred by the State of |
Illinois or any unit of local
government as a result of a |
release or substantial threat of a release of
a hazardous |
substance or pesticide:
|
(1) the owner and operator of a facility or vessel from |
which there is
a release or substantial threat of release |
of a hazardous substance or
pesticide;
|
(2) any person who at the time of disposal, transport, |
storage or
treatment of a hazardous substance or pesticide |
owned or operated the
facility or vessel used for such |
disposal, transport, treatment or storage
from which there |
was a release or substantial threat of a release of any
|
such hazardous substance or pesticide;
|
(3) any person who by contract, agreement, or otherwise |
has arranged with
another party or entity for transport, |
storage, disposal or treatment of
hazardous substances or |
pesticides owned, controlled or possessed by such
person at |
a facility owned or operated by another party or entity |
from
which facility there is a release or substantial |
threat of a release of
such hazardous substances or |
pesticides; and
|
(4) any person who accepts or accepted any hazardous |
substances or
pesticides for transport to disposal, |
|
storage or treatment facilities or
sites from which there |
is a release or a substantial threat of a release of
a |
hazardous substance or pesticide.
|
Any monies received by the State of Illinois pursuant to |
this
subsection (f) shall be deposited in the State Treasury to |
the credit
of the Hazardous Waste Fund.
|
In accordance with the other provisions of this Section, |
costs of
removal or remedial action incurred by a unit of local |
government may be
recovered in an action before the Board |
brought by the unit of local
government under subsection (i) of |
this Section. Any monies so recovered
shall be paid to the unit |
of local government.
|
(g)(1) No indemnification, hold harmless, or similar |
agreement or conveyance
shall be effective to transfer from |
the owner or operator of any vessel
or facility or from any |
person who may be liable for a release or
substantial |
threat of a release under this Section, to any other person |
the
liability imposed under this Section. Nothing in this |
Section shall bar
any agreement to insure, hold harmless or |
indemnify a party to such
agreements for any liability |
under this Section.
|
(2) Nothing in this Section, including the provisions |
of paragraph (g)(1)
of this Section, shall bar a cause of |
action that an owner or operator or
any other person |
subject to liability under this Section, or a guarantor,
|
has or would have, by reason of subrogation or otherwise |
|
against any person.
|
(h) For purposes of this Section:
|
(1) The term "facility" means:
|
(A) any building, structure, installation, |
equipment, pipe or pipeline
including but not limited |
to any pipe into a sewer or publicly owned
treatment |
works, well, pit, pond, lagoon, impoundment, ditch, |
landfill,
storage container, motor vehicle, rolling |
stock, or aircraft; or
|
(B) any site or area where a hazardous substance |
has been deposited,
stored, disposed of, placed, or |
otherwise come to be located.
|
(2) The term "owner or operator" means:
|
(A) any person owning or operating a vessel or |
facility;
|
(B) in the case of an abandoned facility, any |
person owning or operating
the abandoned facility or |
any person who owned, operated, or otherwise
|
controlled activities at the abandoned facility |
immediately prior to such
abandonment;
|
(C) in the case of a land trust as defined in |
Section 2 of the Land
Trustee as Creditor Act, the |
person owning the beneficial interest in the land
|
trust;
|
(D) in the case of a fiduciary (other than a land |
trustee), the estate,
trust estate, or other interest |
|
in property held in a fiduciary capacity,
and not the |
fiduciary. For the purposes of this Section, |
"fiduciary" means
a trustee, executor, administrator, |
guardian, receiver, conservator or other
person |
holding a facility or vessel in a fiduciary capacity;
|
(E) in the case of a "financial institution", |
meaning the Illinois
Housing Development Authority and |
that term as defined in Section 2 of the
Illinois |
Banking Act, that has acquired ownership, operation, |
management,
or control of a vessel or facility through |
foreclosure or under the terms
of a security interest |
held by the financial institution or under the terms
of |
an extension of credit made by the financial |
institution, the financial
institution only if the |
financial institution takes possession of the
vessel |
or facility and the financial institution exercises |
actual, direct,
and continual or recurrent managerial |
control in the operation of the
vessel or facility that |
causes a release or substantial threat of a release
of |
a hazardous substance or pesticide resulting in |
removal or remedial
action;
|
(F) In the case of an owner of residential |
property, the owner if the
owner is a person other than |
an individual, or if the owner is an individual
who |
owns more than 10 dwelling units in Illinois, or if the |
owner, or an agent,
representative, contractor, or |
|
employee of the owner, has caused, contributed
to, or |
allowed the release or threatened release of a |
hazardous substance or
pesticide. The term |
"residential property" means single family residences |
of
one to 4 dwelling units, including accessory land, |
buildings, or improvements
incidental to those |
dwellings that are exclusively used for the |
residential
use. For purposes of this subparagraph |
(F), the term "individual" means a
natural person, and |
shall not include corporations, partnerships, trusts, |
or
other non-natural persons.
|
(G) In the case of any facility, title or control |
of which was
conveyed due to bankruptcy, foreclosure, |
tax delinquency, abandonment, or
similar means
to a |
unit of State or local government, any person who |
owned, operated, or
otherwise controlled activities at |
the facility immediately beforehand.
|
(H) The term "owner or operator" does not include a |
unit of State or
local government which acquired |
ownership or control through bankruptcy, tax
|
delinquency, abandonment, or other circumstances in |
which the government
acquires title by virtue of its |
function as sovereign. The exclusion provided
under |
this paragraph shall not apply to any State or local |
government which has
caused or contributed to the |
release or threatened release of a hazardous
substance |
|
from the facility, and such a State or local government |
shall be
subject to the provisions of this Act in the |
same manner and to the same
extent, both procedurally |
and substantively, as any nongovernmental entity,
|
including liability under Section 22.2(f).
|
(i) The costs and damages provided for in this Section may |
be imposed by
the Board in an action brought before the Board |
in accordance with Title
VIII of this Act, except that Section |
33(c) of this Act shall not apply to
any such action.
|
(j) (1) There shall be no liability under this Section for |
a person
otherwise liable who can establish by a preponderance |
of the evidence that
the release or substantial threat of |
release of a hazardous substance and
the damages resulting |
therefrom were caused solely by:
|
(A) an act of God;
|
(B) an act of war;
|
(C) an act or omission of a third party other than an |
employee or agent
of the defendant, or other than one whose |
act or omission occurs in
connection with a contractual |
relationship, existing directly or
indirectly, with the |
defendant (except where the sole contractual
arrangement |
arises from a published tariff and acceptance for carriage |
by a
common carrier by rail), if the defendant establishes |
by a preponderance of
the evidence that (i) he exercised |
due care with respect to the hazardous
substance concerned, |
taking into consideration the characteristics of such
|
|
hazardous substance, in light of all relevant facts and |
circumstances, and
(ii) he took precautions against |
foreseeable acts or omissions of any such
third party and |
the consequences that could foreseeably result from such
|
acts or omissions; or
|
(D) any combination of the foregoing paragraphs.
|
(2) There shall be no liability under this Section for any |
release
permitted by State or federal law.
|
(3) There shall be no liability under this Section for |
damages as a result
of actions taken or omitted in the course |
of rendering care, assistance,
or advice in accordance with |
this Section or the National Contingency Plan
pursuant to the |
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and
|
Liability Act of 1980 (P.L. 96-510) or at the direction of an
|
on-scene coordinator appointed under such plan, with respect to |
an incident
creating a danger to public health or welfare or |
the environment as a result
of any release of a hazardous |
substance or a substantial threat thereof. This
subsection |
shall not preclude liability for damages as the result of gross
|
negligence or intentional misconduct on the part of such |
person. For the
purposes of the preceding sentence, reckless, |
willful, or wanton misconduct
shall constitute gross |
negligence.
|
(4) There shall be no liability under this Section for any |
person
(including, but not limited to, an owner of residential |
property who applies a
pesticide to the residential property or |
|
who has another person apply a
pesticide to the residential |
property) for response costs or damages as the
result of the |
storage, handling and use, or recommendation for storage,
|
handling and use, of a pesticide consistent with:
|
(A) its directions for storage, handling and use as |
stated in its
label or labeling;
|
(B) its warnings and cautions as stated in its label or |
labeling; and
|
(C) the uses for which it is registered under the |
Federal Insecticide,
Fungicide and Rodenticide Act and the |
Illinois Pesticide Act.
|
(4.5) There shall be no liability under subdivision (f)(1) |
of this Section
for response costs or damages as the result of |
a release
of a pesticide from an agrichemical facility site if
|
the Agency has received notice from the Department of |
Agriculture pursuant to
Section 19.3 of the Illinois Pesticide |
Act, the owner or operator of the
agrichemical facility is |
proceeding with a corrective action plan under the
Agrichemical |
Facility Response Action Program implemented under that |
Section,
and the Agency
has provided a written endorsement of a |
corrective action plan.
|
(4.6) There shall be no liability under subdivision (f)(1) |
of this
Section for response costs or damages as the result of |
a substantial threat of
a release of a pesticide from an |
agrichemical facility site if
the Agency has received notice |
from the Department of Agriculture pursuant to
Section 19.3 of |
|
the Illinois Pesticide Act and the owner or operator of the
|
agrichemical facility is proceeding with a corrective action |
plan under the
Agrichemical Facility Response Action Program |
implemented under that
Section.
|
(5) Nothing in this subsection (j) shall affect or modify |
in any way the
obligations or liability of any person under any |
other provision of this
Act or State or federal law, including |
common law, for damages, injury,
or loss resulting from a |
release or substantial threat of a release of any
hazardous |
substance or for removal or remedial action or the costs of |
removal
or remedial action of such hazardous substance.
|
(6)(A) The term "contractual relationship", for the |
purpose of this
subsection includes, but is not limited to, |
land contracts, deeds or other
instruments transferring title |
or possession, unless the real property on
which the facility |
concerned is located was acquired by the defendant after
the |
disposal or placement of the hazardous substance on, in, or at |
the
facility, and one or more of the circumstances described in |
clause (i),
(ii), or (iii) of this paragraph is also |
established by the defendant by a
preponderance of the |
evidence:
|
(i) At the time the defendant acquired the facility the |
defendant did
not know and had no reason to know that any |
hazardous substance which is
the subject of the release or |
threatened release was disposed of on, in or
at the |
facility.
|
|
(ii) The defendant is a government entity which |
acquired the facility by
escheat, or through any other |
involuntary transfer or acquisition, or
through the |
exercise of eminent domain authority by purchase or |
condemnation.
|
(iii) The defendant acquired the facility by |
inheritance or bequest.
|
In addition to establishing the foregoing, the defendant |
must establish
that he has satisfied the requirements of |
subparagraph (C) of paragraph (l)
of this subsection (j).
|
(B) To establish the defendant had no reason to know, as |
provided in
clause (i) of subparagraph (A) of this paragraph, |
the defendant must have
undertaken, at the time of acquisition, |
all appropriate inquiry into the
previous ownership and uses of |
the property consistent with good commercial
or customary |
practice in an effort to minimize liability. For purposes of
|
the preceding sentence, the court shall take into account any |
specialized
knowledge or experience on the part of the |
defendant, the relationship of
the purchase price to the value |
of the property if uncontaminated, commonly
known or reasonably |
ascertainable information about the property, the
obviousness |
of the presence or likely presence of contamination at the
|
property, and the ability to detect such contamination by |
appropriate
inspection.
|
(C) Nothing in this paragraph (6) or in subparagraph (C) of |
paragraph
(1) of this subsection shall diminish the liability |
|
of any previous owner
or operator of such facility who would |
otherwise be liable under this Act.
Notwithstanding this |
paragraph (6), if the defendant obtained actual
knowledge of |
the release or threatened release of a hazardous substance at
|
such facility when the defendant owned the real property and |
then
subsequently transferred ownership of the property to |
another person
without disclosing such knowledge, such |
defendant shall be treated as
liable under subsection (f) of |
this Section and no defense under
subparagraph (C) of paragraph |
(1) of this subsection shall be available
to such defendant.
|
(D) Nothing in this paragraph (6) shall affect the |
liability under this
Act of a defendant who, by any act or |
omission, caused or contributed to
the release or threatened |
release of a hazardous substance which is the
subject of the |
action relating to the facility.
|
(E) (i) Except as provided in clause (ii) of this |
subparagraph (E), a
defendant who has acquired real property |
shall have established a rebuttable
presumption against all |
State claims and a conclusive presumption against all
private |
party claims that the defendant has made all appropriate |
inquiry within
the meaning of subdivision (6)(B) of this |
subsection (j) if the defendant
proves that immediately prior |
to or at the time of the acquisition:
|
(I) the defendant obtained a Phase I Environmental |
Audit of the real
property that meets or exceeds the |
requirements of this subparagraph (E), and
the Phase I |
|
Environmental Audit did not disclose the presence or likely
|
presence of a release or a substantial threat of a release |
of a hazardous
substance or pesticide at, on, to, or from |
the real property; or
|
(II) the defendant obtained a Phase II Environmental |
Audit of the real
property that meets or exceeds the |
requirements of this subparagraph (E), and
the Phase II |
Environmental Audit did not disclose the presence or likely
|
presence of a release or a substantial threat of a release |
of a hazardous
substance or pesticide at, on, to, or from |
the real property.
|
(ii) No presumption shall be created under clause (i) of |
this subparagraph
(E), and a defendant shall be precluded from |
demonstrating that the defendant
has made all appropriate |
inquiry within the meaning of subdivision (6)(B) of
this |
subsection (j), if:
|
(I) the defendant fails to obtain all Environmental |
Audits required under
this subparagraph (E) or any such |
Environmental Audit fails to meet or exceed
the |
requirements of this subparagraph (E);
|
(II) a Phase I Environmental Audit discloses the |
presence or likely
presence of a release or a substantial |
threat of a release of a hazardous
substance or pesticide |
at, on, to, or from real property, and the defendant
fails |
to obtain a Phase II Environmental Audit;
|
(III) a Phase II Environmental Audit discloses the |
|
presence or likely
presence of a release or a substantial |
threat of a release of a hazardous
substance or pesticide |
at, on, to, or from the real property;
|
(IV) the defendant fails to maintain a written |
compilation and explanatory
summary report of the |
information reviewed in the course of each Environmental
|
Audit under this subparagraph (E); or
|
(V) there is any evidence of fraud, material |
concealment, or material
misrepresentation by the |
defendant of environmental conditions or of related
|
information discovered during the course of an |
Environmental Audit.
|
(iii) For purposes of this subparagraph (E), the term |
"environmental
professional" means an individual (other than a |
practicing attorney) who,
through academic training, |
occupational experience, and reputation (such as
engineers, |
industrial hygienists, or geologists) can objectively conduct |
one or
more aspects of an Environmental Audit and who either:
|
(I) maintains at the time of the Environmental Audit |
and for at least one
year thereafter at least $500,000 of |
environmental consultants' professional
liability |
insurance coverage issued by an insurance company licensed |
to do
business in Illinois; or
|
(II) is an Illinois licensed professional engineer or |
an Illinois licensed
industrial hygienist.
|
An environmental professional may employ persons who are |
|
not environmental
professionals to assist in the preparation of |
an Environmental Audit if such
persons are under the direct |
supervision and control of the environmental
professional.
|
(iv) For purposes of this subparagraph (E), the term "real |
property"
means any interest in any parcel of land, and |
includes, but is not limited to,
buildings, fixtures, and
|
improvements.
|
(v) For purposes of this subparagraph (E), the term "Phase |
I Environmental
Audit" means an investigation of real property, |
conducted by environmental
professionals, to discover the |
presence or likely presence of a release or a
substantial |
threat of a release of a hazardous substance or pesticide at, |
on,
to, or from real property, and whether a release or a |
substantial threat of
a release of a hazardous substance or |
pesticide has occurred or may occur at,
on, to, or from the |
real property. Until such time as the United
States |
Environmental Protection Agency establishes
standards for |
making appropriate inquiry into the previous
ownership and uses |
of the facility pursuant to 42 U.S.C.
Sec. 9601(35)(B)(ii), the |
investigation shall comply with the
procedures of the American |
Society for Testing and
Materials, including the document known |
as Standard
E1527-97, entitled "Standard Procedures for |
Environmental
Site Assessment: Phase 1 Environmental Site |
Assessment
Process". Upon their adoption, the standards |
promulgated
by USEPA pursuant to 42 U.S.C. Sec. 9601(35)(B)(ii) |
shall
govern the performance of Phase I Environmental Audits. |
|
In
addition to the above requirements, the Phase I
|
Environmental Audit shall include a review of recorded land
|
title records for the purpose of determining whether the real
|
property is subject to an environmental land use restriction
|
such as a No Further Remediation Letter, Environmental
Land Use |
Control, or Highway Authority Agreement.
|
(vi) For purposes of subparagraph (E), the term "Phase II |
Environmental
Audit" means an investigation of real property, |
conducted by environmental
professionals, subsequent to a |
Phase I Environmental Audit. If the Phase I
Environmental Audit |
discloses the presence or likely presence of a hazardous
|
substance or a pesticide or a release or a substantial threat |
of a release of
a hazardous substance or pesticide:
|
(I) In or to soil, the defendant, as part of the Phase |
II Environmental
Audit, shall perform a series of soil |
borings sufficient to determine whether
there is a presence |
or likely presence of a hazardous substance or pesticide
|
and whether there is or has been a release or a substantial |
threat of a release
of a hazardous substance or pesticide |
at, on, to, or from the real property.
|
(II) In or to groundwater, the defendant, as part of |
the Phase II
Environmental Audit, shall: review |
information regarding local geology, water
well locations, |
and locations of waters of the State as may be obtained |
from
State, federal, and local government records, |
including but not limited to the
United States Geological |
|
Survey Service , the State Geological Survey Division of the |
University of Illinois
Department of Natural Resources , |
and the State Water
Survey Division of the University of |
Illinois Department of Natural Resources ; and
perform |
groundwater monitoring sufficient to determine whether |
there is a
presence or likely presence of a hazardous |
substance or pesticide, and whether
there is or has been a |
release or a substantial threat of a release of a
hazardous |
substance or pesticide at, on, to, or from the real |
property.
|
(III) On or to media other than soil or groundwater, |
the defendant, as
part of the Phase II Environmental Audit, |
shall perform an investigation
sufficient to determine |
whether there is a presence or likely presence of a
|
hazardous substance or pesticide, and whether there is or |
has been a release or
a substantial threat of a release of |
a hazardous substance or pesticide at, on,
to, or from the |
real property.
|
(vii) The findings of each Environmental Audit prepared |
under this
subparagraph (E) shall be set forth in a written |
audit report. Each audit
report shall contain an affirmation by |
the defendant and by each environmental
professional who |
prepared the Environmental Audit that the facts stated in the
|
report are true and are made under a penalty of perjury as |
defined in Section
32-2 of the Criminal Code of 1961. It is |
perjury for any person to sign an
audit report that contains a |
|
false material statement that the person does not
believe to be |
true.
|
(viii) The Agency is not required to review, approve, or |
certify the results
of any Environmental Audit. The performance |
of an Environmental Audit shall in
no way entitle a defendant |
to a presumption of Agency approval or certification
of the |
results of the Environmental Audit.
|
The presence or absence of a disclosure document prepared |
under the
Responsible Property Transfer Act of 1988 shall not |
be a defense under this
Act and shall not satisfy the |
requirements of subdivision (6)(A) of this
subsection (j).
|
(7) No person shall be liable under this Section for |
response costs
or damages as the result of a pesticide release |
if the Agency has found
that a pesticide release occurred based |
on a Health Advisory issued by the
U.S. Environmental |
Protection Agency or an action level developed by the
Agency, |
unless the Agency notified the manufacturer of the pesticide |
and
provided an opportunity of not less than 30 days for the |
manufacturer to
comment on the technical and scientific |
justification supporting the Health
Advisory or action level.
|
(8) No person shall be liable under this Section for |
response costs or
damages as the result of a pesticide release |
that occurs in the course of a
farm pesticide collection |
program operated under Section 19.1 of the
Illinois Pesticide |
Act, unless the release results from gross negligence or
|
intentional misconduct.
|
|
(k) If any person who is liable for a release or |
substantial threat of
release of a hazardous substance or |
pesticide fails without sufficient
cause to provide removal or |
remedial action upon or in accordance with a
notice and request |
by the Agency or upon or in accordance with any order of
the |
Board or any court, such person may be liable to the State for |
punitive
damages in an amount at least equal to, and not more |
than 3 times, the
amount of any costs incurred by the State of |
Illinois as a result of such
failure to take such removal or |
remedial action. The punitive damages
imposed by the Board |
shall be in addition to any costs recovered from such
person |
pursuant to this Section and in addition to any other penalty |
or
relief provided by this Act or any other law.
|
Any monies received by the State pursuant to this |
subsection (k) shall
be deposited in the Hazardous Waste Fund.
|
(l) Beginning January 1, 1988, the Agency shall annually |
collect a $250
fee for each Special Waste Hauling Permit |
Application and, in addition,
shall collect a fee of $20 for |
each waste hauling vehicle identified in the
annual permit |
application and for each vehicle which is added to the permit
|
during the annual period. The Agency shall deposit 85% of such |
fees
collected under this subsection in the State Treasury to |
the credit of
the Hazardous Waste Research Fund; and shall |
deposit the remaining 15% of
such fees collected in the State |
Treasury to the credit of the
Environmental Protection Permit |
and Inspection Fund. The majority of such
receipts which are |
|
deposited in the Hazardous Waste Research Fund pursuant
to this |
subsection shall be used by the University of Illinois |
Department of Natural Resources for
activities which relate to |
the protection of underground waters.
Persons engaged in the |
offsite transportation of hazardous waste by highway
and |
participating in the Uniform Program under subsection (l-5) are |
not
required to file a Special Waste Hauling Permit |
Application.
|
(l-5) (1) As used in this subsection:
|
"Base state" means the state selected by a transporter |
according to the
procedures established under the Uniform |
Program.
|
"Base state agreement" means an agreement between |
participating states
electing to register or permit |
transporters.
|
"Participating state" means a state electing to |
participate in the
Uniform
Program by entering into a base |
state agreement.
|
"Transporter" means a person engaged in the offsite |
transportation of
hazardous waste by highway.
|
"Uniform application" means the uniform registration |
and permit
application
form prescribed under the Uniform |
Program.
|
"Uniform Program" means the Uniform State Hazardous |
Materials
Transportation Registration and Permit Program |
established in the report
submitted and amended pursuant to |
|
49 U.S.C. Section 5119(b), as implemented by
the Agency |
under this subsection.
|
"Vehicle" means any self-propelled motor vehicle, |
except a truck tractor
without a trailer,
designed or used |
for the transportation of hazardous waste subject to the
|
hazardous waste manifesting requirements of 40 U.S.C. |
Section 6923(a)(3).
|
(2) Beginning July 1, 1998, the Agency shall implement |
the Uniform
State Hazardous Materials Transportation |
Registration and Permit Program.
On and after that date, no |
person shall engage in the offsite transportation
of |
hazardous waste by highway without registering and |
obtaining a permit
under the Uniform Program.
A transporter |
with its principal place of business in Illinois shall |
register
with and obtain a permit from the Agency. A |
transporter that designates another
participating state in |
the Uniform Program as its base state shall likewise
|
register with and obtain a permit from that state before |
transporting hazardous
waste in Illinois.
|
(3) Beginning July 1, 1998, the Agency shall annually |
collect no more
than a
$250 processing and audit fee from |
each transporter of hazardous waste who has
filed a uniform |
application and, in addition, the Agency shall annually |
collect
an
apportioned vehicle registration fee of $20.
The |
amount of the apportioned vehicle registration fee
shall be |
calculated consistent with the procedures established |
|
under the
Uniform Program.
|
All moneys received by the Agency from the collection |
of fees pursuant to
the Uniform Program shall be deposited |
into the Hazardous Waste Transporter
account hereby |
created within the Environmental Protection Permit and
|
Inspection Fund. Moneys remaining in the account at
the
|
close of the fiscal year shall not lapse to the General |
Revenue Fund. The
State Treasurer may receive money or |
other assets from any source for deposit
into the account. |
The Agency may expend moneys from the account, upon
|
appropriation, for the implementation of the Uniform |
Program, including the
costs to the Agency of fee |
collection and administration. In addition, funds
not |
expended for the implementation of the Uniform Program may |
be utilized for
emergency response and cleanup activities |
related to hazardous
waste transportation that are |
initiated by the Agency.
|
Whenever the amount of the Hazardous Waste Transporter |
account exceeds by
115% the amount annually appropriated by the |
General Assembly, the Agency shall
credit participating |
transporters an amount, proportionately based on the
amount of |
the vehicle fee paid, equal to the excess in the account, and |
shall
determine the need to reduce the amount of the fee |
charged transporters in the
subsequent fiscal year by the |
amount of the credit.
|
(4) (A) The Agency may propose and the Board shall |
|
adopt rules as
necessary to implement and enforce the |
Uniform Program. The Agency is
authorized to enter into |
agreements with other agencies of this State as
necessary |
to carry out administrative functions or enforcement of the |
Uniform
Program.
|
(B) The Agency shall recognize a Uniform Program |
registration as valid for
one year from the date a notice |
of registration form is issued and a permit as
valid for 3 |
years from the date issued or until a transporter fails to |
renew
its registration, whichever occurs first.
|
(C) The Agency may inspect or examine any motor vehicle |
or facility
operated by a transporter, including papers, |
books, records, documents, or
other materials to determine |
if a transporter is complying with the
Uniform Program. The |
Agency may also conduct investigations and audits as
|
necessary to determine if a transporter is entitled to a |
permit or to make
suspension or revocation determinations |
consistent with the standards of the
Uniform Program.
|
(5) The Agency may enter into agreements with federal |
agencies, national
repositories, or other participating |
states as necessary to allow for the
reciprocal
|
registration and permitting of transporters pursuant to |
the Uniform Program.
The agreements may include procedures |
for determining a base state, the
collection and |
distribution of registration fees, dispute resolution, the
|
exchange of information for reporting and enforcement |
|
purposes, and other
provisions necessary to fully |
implement, administer, and enforce the Uniform
Program.
|
(m) (Blank).
|
(n) (Blank).
|
(Source: P.A. 92-574, eff. 6-26-02; 93-152, eff. 7-10-03.)
|
Section 875. The Illinois Pesticide Act is amended by |
changing Section 19 as follows:
|
(415 ILCS 60/19) (from Ch. 5, par. 819)
|
Sec. 19. Interagency Committee on Pesticides. The Director |
is authorized
to create an interagency committee on pesticides. |
Its purpose is to study
and advise on the use of pesticides on |
State property. Also, its purpose
is to advise any State agency |
in connection with quarantine programs or
the protection of the |
public health and welfare, and to recommend needed
legislation |
concerning pesticides.
|
1. An interagency committee on pesticides shall consist of: |
(1) the
Director of the Department of Agriculture, (2) the |
Director of Natural
Resources, (3) the Director of the |
Environmental
Protection Agency, (4) the Director of the |
Department of Public Health, (5)
the Secretary of the |
Department of Transportation, (6) the President Chief of the |
University of Illinois or his or her designee representing the
|
State Natural History Survey and (7) the Dean of the College of
|
Agriculture, University of Illinois. Each member of the |
|
committee may
designate some person in his department to serve |
on the committee in
his stead. Other State agencies may, at the |
discretion of the Director,
be asked to serve on the |
interagency committee on pesticides. The Director
of the |
Department of Agriculture shall be chairman of this committee.
|
2. The interagency committee shall: (1) Review the current |
status of
the sales and use of pesticides within the State of |
Illinois. (2) Review
pesticide programs to be sponsored or |
directed by a governmental agency.
(3) Consider the problems |
arising from pesticide use with particular emphasis
on the |
possible adverse effects on human health, livestock, crops, |
fish,
and wildlife, business, industry, agriculture, or the |
general public. (4)
Recommend legislation to the Governor, if |
appropriate, which will prohibit
the irresponsible use of |
pesticides. (5) Review rules and regulations
pertaining to the |
regulation or prohibition of the sale, use or application
of |
pesticides and labeling of pesticides for approval prior to |
promulgation
and adoption. (6) Contact various experts and lay |
groups, such as the
Illinois Pesticide Control Committee, to |
obtain their views and
cooperation. (7) Advise on and approve |
of all programs involving the use of
pesticides on State owned |
property, state controlled property, or
administered by State |
agencies. This shall not be construed to include
research |
programs, or the generally accepted and approved practices
|
essential to good farm and institutional management on the |
premises of the
various State facilities.
|
|
3. Members of this committee shall receive no compensation |
for their
services as members of this committee other than that |
provided by law for
their respective positions with the State |
of Illinois. All necessary
expenses for travel of the committee |
members shall be paid out of regular
appropriations of their |
respective agencies.
|
4. The committee shall meet at least once each quarter of |
the calendar
year, and may hold additional meetings upon the |
call of the chairman. Four
members shall constitute a quorum.
|
5. The committee shall make a detailed report of its |
findings and
recommendations to the Governor of Illinois prior |
to each General
Assembly Session.
|
6. The Interagency Committee on Pesticides shall, at a |
minimum,
annually, during the spring, conduct a statewide |
public education campaign
and agriculture chemical safety |
campaign to inform the public about
pesticide products, uses |
and safe disposal techniques. A toll-free hot
line number shall |
be made available for the public to report misuse cases.
|
The Committee shall include in its educational program |
information and
advice about the effects of various pesticides |
and application techniques
upon the groundwater and drinking |
water of the State.
|
7. The Interagency Committee on Pesticides shall conduct a |
special
study of the effects of chemigation and other |
agricultural applications of
pesticides upon the groundwater |
of this State. The results of such study
shall be reported to |
|
the General Assembly by March 1, 1989. The members of
the |
Committee may utilize the technical and clerical resources of |
their
respective departments and agencies as necessary or |
useful in the conduct
of the study.
|
8. In consultation with the Interagency Committee, the |
Department
shall develop, and the Interagency Committee shall |
approve,
procedures, methods, and guidelines for addressing |
agrichemical
pesticide contamination at agrichemical |
facilities in Illinois. In
developing those procedures, |
methods, and guidelines, the following shall
be considered and |
addressed: (1) an evaluation and assessment of site
conditions |
and operational practices at agrichemical facilities where
|
agricultural pesticides are handled; (2) what constitutes |
pesticide
contamination; (3) cost effective procedures for |
site assessments and
technologies for remedial action; and (4) |
achievement of adequate
protection of public health and the |
environment from such actual or
potential hazards. In |
consultation with the Interagency Committee, the Department
|
shall develop, and the Interagency Committee shall approve, |
guidelines and
recommendations regarding long term financial |
resources which may be
necessary to remediate pesticide |
contamination at agrichemical facilities
in Illinois. The |
Department, in consultation with the Interagency
Committee, |
shall present a report on those guidelines and
recommendations |
to the Governor and the General Assembly on or before
January |
1, 1993. The Department and the Interagency Committee shall
|
|
consult with the Illinois Pesticide Control
Committee and other |
appropriate parties during this development process.
|
9. As part of the consideration of cost effective |
technologies pursuant
to subsection 8 of this Section, the |
Department may, upon request, provide
a written authorization |
to the owner or operator of an agrichemical
facility for land |
application of agrichemical contaminated
soils at agronomic |
rates.
As used in this Section, "agrichemical" means pesticides |
or commercial
fertilizers, at an agrichemical facility, in |
transit from an agrichemical
facility to the field of |
application, or at the field of application.
The written |
authorization may also provide for use
of groundwater |
contaminated by the release of an agrichemical,
provided
that |
the groundwater is not also contaminated due to the release of |
a
petroleum product or hazardous substance other than an |
agrichemical. The uses
of agrichemical contaminated |
groundwater authorized by the
Department shall be
limited to |
supervised application or irrigation onto farmland and |
blending
as make-up water in the preparation of agrichemical |
spray solutions that
are to be applied to farmland. In either |
case, the use of the agrichemical
contaminated water shall not |
cause (i) the total annual application amounts
of a pesticide |
to exceed the respective pesticide label application
rate on |
any authorized sites
or (ii) the total annual application |
amounts of a fertilizer to exceed the
generally accepted annual |
application rate on any authorized sites. All
authorizations |
|
shall prescribe
appropriate operational control practices to |
protect the site of application
and shall identify each site or |
sites where land
application or irrigation take place. Where |
agrichemical
contaminated
groundwater is used on farmland, the |
prescribed practices shall be designed
to prevent off-site |
runoff or conveyance through underground tile
systems. The |
Department shall
periodically advise the Interagency Committee |
regarding the issuance of
such authorizations and the status of |
compliance at the application sites.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-113, eff. 7-20-01.)
|
Section 880. The Toxic Pollution Prevention Act is amended |
by changing Section 5 as follows:
|
(415 ILCS 85/5) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7955)
|
Sec. 5. Toxic Pollution Prevention Assistance Program. |
There is
hereby established a Toxic Pollution Prevention |
Assistance Program at the
Waste Management and Research
Center. |
The Center may establish
cooperative programs with public and |
private colleges and universities
designed to augment the |
implementation of this Section. The Center may
establish fees, |
tuition, or other financial charges for participation in
the |
Assistance Program. These monies shall be deposited in the |
Toxic
Pollution Prevention Fund established in Section 7 of |
this Act. Through the
Assistance Program, the Center:
|
(1) Shall provide general information about and actively |
|
publicize the
advantages of and developments in toxic pollution |
prevention.
|
(2) May establish courses, seminars, conferences and other |
events, and
reports, updates, guides and other publications and |
other means of
providing technical information for industries, |
local governments and
citizens concerning toxic pollution |
prevention strategies, and may, as
appropriate, work in |
cooperation with the Agency.
|
(3) Shall engage in research on toxic pollution prevention
|
methods. Such research shall include assessments of the impact
|
of adopting toxic pollution prevention methods on the |
environment, the
public health, and worker exposure, and |
assessments of the impact on
profitability and employment |
within affected industries.
|
(4) Shall provide on-site technical
consulting, to the |
extent practicable, to help facilities to
identify |
opportunities for toxic pollution prevention, and to develop
|
toxic pollution prevention plans. To be eligible for such
|
consulting, the owner or operator of a facility must agree to |
allow
information regarding the results of such consulting to |
be shared with the
public, provided that the identity of the |
facility shall be made available only
with its consent, and |
trade secret information shall remain protected.
|
(5) May sponsor pilot projects in cooperation with the
|
Agency, or an institute of higher education to develop
and |
demonstrate innovative technologies and methods for toxic |
|
pollution
prevention. The results of all such projects shall be |
available for use by
the public, but trade secret information |
shall remain protected.
|
(6) May award grants for activities that further the |
purposes of this
Act, including but not limited to the |
following:
|
(A) grants to not-for-profit organizations to |
establish free or
low-cost technical assistance or |
educational programs to supplement the
toxic pollution |
prevention activities of the Center;
|
(B) grants to assist trade associations, business |
organizations, labor
organizations and educational |
institutions in developing training materials
to foster |
toxic pollution prevention; and
|
(C) grants to assist industry, business organizations, |
labor
organizations, education institutions and industrial |
hygienists to
identify, evaluate and implement toxic |
pollution prevention measures and
alternatives through |
audits, plans and programs.
|
The Center may establish criteria and terms for such |
grants, including a
requirement that a grantee provide |
matching funds. Grant money awarded
under this Section may |
not be spent for capital improvements or equipment.
|
In determining whether to award a grant, the Center |
Director shall
consider at least the following:
|
(i) the potential of the project to prevent |
|
pollution;
|
(ii) the likelihood that the project will develop |
techniques or
processes that will minimize the |
transfer of pollution from one
environmental medium to |
another;
|
(iii) the extent to which information to be |
developed through the
project will be applicable to |
other persons in the State; and
|
(iv) the willingness of the grant applicant to |
assist the Center in
disseminating information about |
the pollution prevention methods to be
developed |
through the project.
|
(7) Shall establish and operate a State information |
clearinghouse
that
assembles, catalogues and disseminates |
information about toxic pollution
prevention and available |
consultant services. Such clearinghouse shall
include a |
computer database containing information on managerial, |
technical
and operational approaches to achieving toxic |
pollution prevention. The
computer database must be maintained |
on a system designed to enable
businesses, governmental |
agencies and the general public readily to obtain
information |
specific to production technologies, materials, operations and
|
products. A business shall not be required to submit to the |
clearinghouse
any information that is a trade secret.
|
(8) May contract with an established institution of higher |
education
to assist the Center in carrying out the provisions |
|
of this Section. The
assistance provided by such an institution |
may include, but need not be
limited to:
|
(A) engineering field internships to assist industries |
in
identifying
toxic pollution prevention opportunities;
|
(B) development of a toxic pollution prevention |
curriculum for
students and faculty; and
|
(C) applied toxic pollution prevention and recycling |
research.
|
(9) Shall emphasize assistance to businesses that have |
inadequate
technical and financial resources to obtain |
information and to assess and
implement toxic pollution |
prevention methods.
|
(10) Shall publish a biannual report on its toxic pollution
|
prevention activities, achievements, identified problems and |
future goals.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-490, eff. 8-17-97.)
|
Section 885. The Illinois Low-Level Radioactive Waste |
Management Act is amended by changing Section 3 as follows:
|
(420 ILCS 20/3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-3)
|
Sec. 3. Definitions.
|
(a) "Broker" means any person who takes possession of |
low-level waste for
purposes of consolidation and shipment.
|
(b) "Compact" means the Central Midwest Interstate |
Low-Level Radioactive
Waste Compact.
|
|
(c) "Decommissioning" means the measures taken at the end |
of a facility's
operating life to assure the continued |
protection of the public from any
residual radioactivity or |
other potential hazards present at a facility.
|
(d) "Department" means the Department of Nuclear Safety.
|
(e) "Director" means the Director of the Department of |
Nuclear Safety.
|
(f) "Disposal" means the isolation of waste from the |
biosphere in a
permanent facility designed for that purpose.
|
(g) "Facility" means a parcel of land or site, together |
with structures,
equipment and improvements on or appurtenant |
to the land or site, which
is used or is being developed for |
the treatment, storage or disposal of
low-level radioactive |
waste. "Facility" does not include lands, sites,
structures or |
equipment used by a generator in the generation of low-level
|
radioactive wastes.
|
(h) "Generator" means any person who produces or possesses |
low-level
radioactive waste in the course of or incident to |
manufacturing, power
generation, processing, medical diagnosis |
and treatment, research,
education or other activity.
|
(i) "Hazardous waste" means a waste, or combination of |
wastes, which
because of its quantity, concentration, or |
physical, chemical, or
infectious characteristics may cause or |
significantly contribute to an
increase in mortality or an |
increase in serious, irreversible, or
incapacitating |
reversible, illness; or pose a substantial present or
potential |
|
hazard to human health or the environment when improperly
|
treated, stored, transported, or disposed of, or otherwise |
managed, and
which has been identified, by characteristics or |
listing, as hazardous
under Section 3001 of the Resource |
Conservation and Recovery Act of
1976, P.L. 94-580 or under |
regulations of the Pollution Control Board.
|
(j) "High-level radioactive waste" means:
|
(1) the highly radioactive material resulting from the |
reprocessing of
spent nuclear fuel including liquid waste |
produced directly in reprocessing
and any solid material |
derived from the liquid waste that contains fission
|
products in sufficient concentrations; and
|
(2) the highly radioactive material that the Nuclear |
Regulatory
Commission has determined, on the effective |
date of this Amendatory Act of
1988, to be high-level |
radioactive waste requiring permanent isolation.
|
(k) "Low-level radioactive waste" or "waste" means |
radioactive waste not
classified as high-level radioactive |
waste, transuranic waste, spent nuclear
fuel or byproduct |
material as defined in Section 11e(2) of the Atomic Energy
Act |
of 1954 (42 U.S.C. 2014).
|
(l) "Mixed waste" means waste that is both "hazardous |
waste" and "low-level
radioactive waste" as defined in this |
Act. |
(m) "Person" means an individual,
corporation, business |
enterprise or other legal entity either public or private
and |
|
any legal successor, representative, agent or agency of that |
individual,
corporation, business enterprise, or legal entity.
|
(n) "Post-closure care" means the continued monitoring of |
the regional
disposal facility after closure for the purposes |
of detecting a need for
maintenance, ensuring environmental |
safety, and determining compliance with
applicable licensure |
and regulatory requirements, and includes undertaking any
|
remedial actions necessary to protect public health and the |
environment from
radioactive releases from the facility.
|
(o) "Regional disposal facility" or "disposal facility" |
means the
facility established by the State of Illinois under |
this Act for disposal
away from the point of generation of |
waste
generated in the region of the Compact.
|
(p) "Release" means any spilling, leaking, pumping, |
pouring, emitting,
emptying, discharging, injecting, escaping, |
leaching, dumping or disposing
into the environment of |
low-level radioactive waste.
|
(q) "Remedial action" means those actions taken in the |
event of a release
or threatened release of low-level |
radioactive waste into the environment,
to prevent or minimize |
the release of the waste so that it does not migrate
to cause |
substantial danger to present or future public health or |
welfare
or the environment. The term includes, but is not |
limited to, actions
at the location of the release such as |
storage, confinement, perimeter
protection using dikes, |
trenches or ditches, clay cover, neutralization,
cleanup of |
|
released low-level radioactive wastes, recycling or reuse,
|
dredging or excavations, repair or replacement of leaking |
containers,
collection of leachate and runoff, onsite |
treatment or incineration,
provision of alternative water |
supplies and any monitoring reasonably
required to assure that |
these actions protect human health and the environment.
|
(q-5) "Scientific Surveys" means, collectively, the State |
Geological
Survey
Division and the State Water Survey Division |
of the University of Illinois Department of
Natural Resources .
|
(r) "Shallow land burial" means a land disposal facility in |
which
radioactive waste is disposed of in or within the upper |
30 meters of the
earth's surface. However, this definition |
shall not include an enclosed,
engineered, structurally |
re-enforced and solidified bunker that extends
below the |
earth's surface.
|
(s) "Storage" means the temporary holding of waste for |
treatment or
disposal for a period determined by Department |
regulations.
|
(t) "Treatment" means any method, technique or process, |
including storage
for radioactive decay, designed to change the |
physical, chemical or biological
characteristics or |
composition of any waste in order to render the waste
safer for |
transport, storage or disposal, amenable to recovery, |
convertible
to another usable material or reduced in volume.
|
(u) "Waste management" means the storage, transportation, |
treatment or
disposal of waste.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 90-29, eff. 6-26-97 .)
|
Section 890. The Wildlife Code is amended by changing |
Section 1.3 as follows:
|
(520 ILCS 5/1.3)
|
Sec. 1.3. The Department shall have the authority to manage
|
wildlife and regulate the taking of wildlife for
the
purposes |
of providing public recreation and controlling wildlife |
populations.
The seasons during which wildlife may be taken, |
the methods for taking
wildlife, the daily bag
limits, and the |
possession limits shall be established by the Department
|
through
administrative rule,
but the Department may not provide |
for a longer season, a
larger daily bag limit, or a larger |
possession limit than is provided in
this Code.
|
The Natural Resources Advisory Board may also recommend to |
the Director of
Natural Resources any reductions or increases |
of seasons and bag or possession
limits or the closure of any |
season when research and inventory data indicate
the need for |
such changes.
|
The Department is authorized to establish seasons for the |
taking of
migratory birds within the dates established annually |
by
Proclamation of the
Secretary, United States Department of |
the Interior, known as the
"Rules and Regulations for Migratory |
Bird Hunting" (50 CFR 20 et seq.). When
the biological balance |
of any
species is affected, the Director may with the approval |
|
of the
Conservation Advisory Board, by administrative rule, |
lengthen, shorten
or close the season during which waterfowl |
may be taken within the
federal limitations prescribed.
If the |
Department does not adopt an administrative rule establishing a
|
season, then the season shall be as set forth in the current |
"Rules and
Regulations for Migratory Bird Hunting". The |
Department shall advise the
public by reasonable means of the |
dates of the various seasons.
|
The Department may utilize the services of the staff of the |
Illinois
State Natural History Survey of the University of |
Illinois Division in the Department of
Natural Resources for |
making investigations as to the population status of
the |
various species of wildlife.
|
Employees or agents of any state, federal, or municipal |
government or body
when engaged in investigational work and law |
enforcement, may with prior
approval of the Director, be |
exempted from the provisions of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96; 90-435, eff. 1-1-98.)
|
Section 895. The Rivers, Lakes, and Streams Act is amended |
by changing Section 18g as follows:
|
(615 ILCS 5/18g) (from Ch. 19, par. 65g)
|
Sec. 18g. (a) The Department of Natural Resources
shall |
define the
100-year floodway within metropolitan counties |
located in the area served
by the Northeastern Illinois |
|
Planning Commission, except for the part of
that area which is |
within any city with a population exceeding 1,500,000. In
|
defining the 100-year floodway, the Department may rely on |
published data and
maps which have been prepared by the |
Department itself, by the Illinois State
Water Survey of the |
University of Illinois , by federal, State or local governmental |
agencies, or by any other
private or public source which it |
determines to be reliable and appropriate.
|
(b) The Department may issue permits for construction that |
is an appropriate
use of the designated 100-year floodway in |
such metropolitan counties.
If a unit of local government has |
adopted an ordinance that establishes
minimum standards for |
appropriate use of the floodway that are at least as
|
restrictive as those established by the Department and this |
Section, and
the unit of local government has adequate staff to |
enforce the ordinance,
the Department may delegate to such unit |
of local government the authority
to issue permits for |
construction that is an appropriate use of the
floodway within |
its jurisdiction.
|
(c) No person may engage in any new construction within the |
100-year
floodway as designated by the Department in such
|
metropolitan counties, unless such construction relates to an |
appropriate
use of the floodway. No unit of local government, |
including home rule
units, in such metropolitan counties may |
issue any building permit or other
apparent authorization for |
any prohibited new construction within the
100-year floodway.
|
|
(d) For the purpose of this Section:
|
(1) "100-year floodway" means the channel and that |
portion of the
floodplain adjacent to a stream or |
watercourse which is needed to store and
convey the |
100-year frequency flood discharge without a significant |
increase in
stage.
|
(2) "New construction" means the construction of any |
new building or
structure or the placement of any fill or |
material, but does not include the
repair, remodeling or |
maintenance of buildings or structures in existence
on the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of 1987.
|
(3) "Appropriate use of the floodway" means use for (i) |
flood control
structures, dikes, dams and other public |
works or private improvements
relating to the control of |
drainage, flooding or erosion; (ii) structures
or |
facilities relating to the use of, or requiring access to, |
the water or
shoreline, including pumping and treatment |
facilities, and facilities and
improvements related to |
recreational boats, commercial shipping and other
|
functionally dependent uses;
and (iii) any other purposes |
which the Department determines, by rule, to
be appropriate |
to the 100-year floodway, and the periodic inundation of
|
which will not pose a danger to the general health and |
welfare of the user,
or require the expenditure of public |
funds or the provision of public
resources or disaster |
relief services. Appropriate use of the floodway
does not |
|
include construction of a new building unless such building |
is a
garage, storage shed or other structure accessory to |
an existing building
and such building does not increase |
flood stages.
|
(4) "Person" includes natural persons, corporations, |
associations,
governmental entities, and all other legal |
entities.
|
(e) All construction undertaken on a designated 100-year |
floodway in
such metropolitan counties, without benefit of a |
permit from the Department
of Natural Resources, shall be |
unlawful
and the Department or any affected
unit of local |
government may, in its
discretion, proceed to obtain injunctive |
relief for abatement or removal of
such unlawful construction. |
The Department, in its discretion, may make
such investigations |
and conduct such hearings and adopt such rules as may
be |
necessary to the performance of its duties under this Section.
|
(f) This Section does not limit any power granted to the
|
Department by any other Act.
|
(g) This Section does not limit the concurrent exercise by |
any unit of
local government of any power consistent herewith.
|
(h) This Section does not apply to any city with a |
population
exceeding 1,500,000.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
|
Section 998. The State Finance Act is amended by adding |
Section 8o as follows: |
|
(30 ILCS 105/8o new) |
Sec. 8o. Transfer to the University of Illinois Income |
Fund. Immediately upon the effective date of this Section, the |
State Comptroller shall direct and the State Treasurer shall |
transfer $15,826,499 from the General Revenue Fund to the |
University of Illinois Income Fund.
|
Section 999. Effective date. This Section and Section 998 |
take effect on July 1, 2008. The other provisions of this Act |
take effect on July 1, 2008 or on the date the transfer from |
the General Revenue Fund to the University of Illinois Income |
Fund is made as required by Section 8o of the State Finance |
Act, whichever is later. |