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Public Act 102-0444 |
HB2785 Enrolled | LRB102 13785 CPF 19135 b |
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AN ACT concerning State government.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
Executive Order 3 (2017) Implementation Act. |
Section 5. Effect. This Act, including all of the |
amendatory provisions of this Act, implements and supersedes |
the provisions of Executive Order 3 (2017) concerning the |
transfer of rights, powers, duties, responsibilities, |
employees, property, funds, and functions from the Department |
of Commerce and Economic Opportunity to the Environmental |
Protection Agency. |
Section 10. Functions transferred. Except as provided in |
Section 15, on the effective date of this Act or as soon |
thereafter as practical, those powers, duties, rights, |
responsibilities, and functions of the Office of Energy and |
Recycling under the Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity that are referenced in this Act are transferred to |
the Environmental Protection Agency as provided in this Act. |
All of the general powers reasonably necessary and convenient |
to implement and administer those functions of the Office of |
Energy and Recycling transferred by this Act are vested in and |
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shall be exercised by the Environmental Protection Agency. |
Section 15. Functions not transferred. The functions |
associated with the Office of Energy and Recycling that are |
transferred to the Environmental Protection Agency under |
Section 10 do not include any one or more of the following:
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(1) electric energy efficiency programs administered |
by the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity |
under Section 8-103 of the Public Utilities Act; |
(2) natural gas efficiency programs administered by |
the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity under |
Section 8-104 of the Public Utilities Act; or |
(3) any functions of the Office of Energy and |
Recycling not transferred to the Environmental Protection |
Agency by this Act. |
Section 20. Representation on boards or other entities. |
With respect to the Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity, the transfers under this Act shall not affect: |
(1) the composition of any multi-member board, |
commission, or authority, unless otherwise provided in |
this Act; |
(2) the manner in which any official is appointed, |
except that when any provision of an Executive Order or |
Act provides for the membership of the Department of |
Commerce and Economic Opportunity on any council, |
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commission, board, or other entity in relation to any |
function of the Office of Energy and Recycling transferred |
to the Environmental Protection Agency under this Act, the |
Director of the Environmental Protection Agency or his or |
her designee shall serve in that place; if more than one |
such person is required by law to serve on any council, |
commission, board, or other entity, then an equivalent |
number of representatives of the Environmental Protection |
Agency shall so serve; |
(3) whether the nomination or appointment of any |
official is subject to the advice and consent of the |
Senate; |
(4) any eligibility or qualification requirements |
pertaining to service as an official; or |
(5) the service or term of any incumbent official |
serving as of the effective date of this Act. |
Section 25. Personnel transferred. Personnel and positions |
within the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity |
that are engaged in the performance of functions of the Office |
of Energy and Recycling transferred to the Environmental |
Protection Agency under this Act are transferred to and shall |
continue their service within the Environmental Protection |
Agency. The status and rights of those employees under the |
Personnel Code shall not be affected by this Act. The rights of |
the employees and the State of Illinois and its agencies under |
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the Personnel Code and applicable collective bargaining |
agreements or under any pension, retirement, or annuity plan |
shall not be affected by this Act. |
Section 30. Books and records transferred. All books, |
records, papers, documents, property (real and personal), |
contracts, causes of action, and pending business, pertaining |
to the powers, duties, rights, and responsibilities |
transferred to the Environmental Protection Agency under this |
Act, including, but not limited to, material in electronic or |
magnetic format and necessary computer hardware and software, |
shall be transferred to the Environmental Protection Agency. |
Section 35. Successor agency; unexpended moneys |
transferred. With respect to the functions of the Office of |
Energy and Recycling transferred under this Act, the |
Environmental Protection Agency is the successor agency to the |
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity under the |
Successor Agency Act and Section 9b of the State Finance Act. |
All unexpended appropriations and balances and other funds |
available for use by the Office of Energy and Recycling shall, |
pursuant to the direction of the Governor, be transferred for |
use by the Environmental Protection Agency in accordance with |
this Act. Unexpended balances so transferred shall be expended |
by the Environmental Protection Agency only for the purpose |
for which the appropriations were originally made. |
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Section 40. Reports, notices, or papers. Whenever reports |
or notices are required to be made or given or papers or |
documents furnished or served by any person to or upon the |
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity in connection |
with any of the powers, duties, rights, or responsibilities |
transferred by this Act to the Environmental Protection |
Agency, the same shall instead be made, given, furnished, or |
served in the same manner to or upon the Environmental |
Protection Agency.
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Section 45. Rules. |
(a) Any rules that (1) relate to the functions of the |
Office of Energy and Recycling transferred to the |
Environmental Protection Agency by this Act, (2) are in full |
force on the effective date of this Act, and (3) have been duly |
adopted by the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity |
shall become the rules of the Environmental Protection Agency. |
This Act does not affect the legality of any such rules in the |
Illinois Administrative Code. |
(b) Any proposed rule filed with the Secretary of State by |
the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity that |
pertains to the functions of the Office of Energy and |
Recycling transferred to the Environmental Protection Agency |
by this Act, and that is pending in the rulemaking process on |
the effective date of this Act shall be deemed to have been |
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filed by the Environmental Protection Agency. |
(c) On and after the effective date of this Act, the |
Environmental Protection Agency may propose and adopt, under |
the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, other rules that |
relate to the functions of the Office of Energy and Recycling |
transferred to the Environmental Protection Agency by this |
Act.
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Section 50. Rights, obligations, and duties unaffected by |
transfer. The transfer of powers, duties, rights, and |
responsibilities to the Environmental Protection Agency 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, duties, |
rights, and responsibilities. |
Section 55. Acts and actions unaffected by transfer. |
(a) This Act does not affect any act done, ratified, or |
canceled, or any right accruing or established, before the |
effective date of Executive Order 3 (2017) in connection with |
any function of the Office of Energy and Recycling transferred |
under this Act. |
This Act does not affect any action or proceeding had or |
commenced before the effective date of Executive Order 3 |
(2017) in an administrative, civil, or criminal cause |
regarding a function of the Office of Energy and Recycling |
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transferred from the Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity, but any such action or proceeding may be |
defended, prosecuted, or continued by the Environmental |
Protection Agency. |
Section 60. Exercise of transferred powers; savings |
provisions. The powers, duties, rights, and responsibilities |
related to the functions of the Office of Energy and Recycling |
transferred under this Act are vested in and shall be |
exercised by the Environmental Protection Agency. Each act |
done in the exercise of those powers, duties, rights, and |
responsibilities shall have the same legal effect as if done |
by the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity or its |
divisions, officers, or employees. |
Section 900. The Electric Vehicle Act is amended by |
changing Section 15 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 627/15)
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Sec. 15. Electric Vehicle Coordinator. The Governor shall |
appoint a person within the Environmental Protection Agency |
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity to serve as |
the Electric Vehicle Coordinator for the State of Illinois. |
This person may be an existing employee with other duties. The |
Coordinator shall act as a point person for electric vehicle |
related policies and activities in Illinois.
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(Source: P.A. 97-89, eff. 7-11-11.) |
Section 910. The Renewable Energy, Energy Efficiency, and |
Coal Resources
Development Law of 1997 is amended by changing |
Sections 6-3, 6-4, 6-5, 6-5.5, 6-6, and 6-7 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 687/6-3)
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(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
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Sec. 6-3. Renewable energy resources program.
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(a) The Environmental Protection Agency Department of |
Commerce and Economic Opportunity , to
be called the "Agency" |
"Department" hereinafter in this Law, shall
administer the |
Renewable Energy Resources Program to provide
grants, loans, |
and other incentives to foster investment in
and the |
development and use of renewable energy resources.
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(b) The Agency may, by administrative rule, Department |
shall establish and adjust eligibility criteria
for grants, |
loans, and other incentives to foster investment
in and the |
development and use of renewable energy resources.
These |
criteria shall be reviewed annually and adjusted as
necessary. |
The criteria should promote the goal of fostering
investment |
in and the development and use, in Illinois, of
renewable |
energy resources.
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(c) The Agency may Department shall accept applications |
for grants,
loans, and other incentives to foster investment |
in and the
development and use of renewable energy resources.
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(d) To the extent that funds are available and
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appropriated, the Agency Department shall provide grants, |
loans, and
other incentives to applicants
that meet the |
criteria specified by the Agency Department .
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(e) (Blank). The Department shall conduct an annual study |
on the
use and availability of renewable energy resources in
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Illinois. Each year, the Department shall submit a report on
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the study to the General Assembly. This report shall include
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suggestions for legislation which will encourage the
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development and use of renewable energy resources.
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(f) As used in this Law, "renewable energy resources" |
includes energy from
wind, solar thermal energy, photovoltaic
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cells and panels, dedicated crops
grown for energy production |
and organic waste biomass, hydropower that does not
involve |
new construction or significant expansion of hydropower dams, |
and other
such alternative sources of environmentally |
preferable energy.
"Renewable energy resources" does not |
include, however, energy from the
incineration or burning of |
waste wood, tires, garbage, general
household, institutional |
and commercial waste, industrial lunchroom or office
waste, |
landscape waste, or construction or demolition debris.
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(g) There is created the Energy Efficiency Investment Fund |
as a special
fund
in the State Treasury, to be administered by |
the Agency Department to support the
development of |
technologies for wind, biomass, and solar power in Illinois.
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The Agency
Department may accept private and public funds, |
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including federal funds, for
deposit into the Fund.
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(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06; 95-913, eff. 1-1-09 .)
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(20 ILCS 687/6-4)
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(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
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Sec. 6-4. Renewable Energy Resources Trust Fund.
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(a) A fund to be called the Renewable Energy Resources
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Trust Fund is hereby established in the State Treasury.
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(b) The Renewable Energy Resources Trust Fund shall be
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administered by the Agency Department to provide grants, |
loans, and
other incentives to foster investment in and the |
development
and use of renewable energy resources as provided |
in Section
6-3 of this Law or pursuant to the Illinois |
Renewable Fuels Development Program Act.
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(c) All funds used by the Agency Department for the |
Renewable
Energy Resources Program shall be subject to |
appropriation by
the General Assembly.
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(Source: P.A. 94-839, eff. 6-6-06 .)
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(20 ILCS 687/6-5)
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(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
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Sec. 6-5. Renewable Energy Resources and Coal Technology
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Development Assistance Charge. |
(a) Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 16-111 of |
the Public
Utilities
Act but subject to subsection (e) of this |
Section,
each
public utility, electric cooperative, as defined |
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in Section 3.4 of the Electric
Supplier
Act, and municipal |
utility, as referenced in Section 3-105 of the Public
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Utilities Act,
that is engaged in the delivery of electricity |
or the distribution of natural
gas within
the State of |
Illinois shall, effective January 1, 1998, assess each of its
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customer
accounts a monthly Renewable Energy Resources and |
Coal Technology
Development Assistance Charge. The delivering |
public utility, municipal
electric or
gas utility, or electric |
or gas cooperative for a self-assessing purchaser
remains
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subject to the collection of the fee imposed by this Section. |
The monthly
charge
shall be as follows:
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(1) $0.05 per month on each account for residential
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electric service as defined in Section 13 of the Energy
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Assistance Act;
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(2) $0.05 per month on each account for residential
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gas service as defined in Section 13 of the
Energy |
Assistance Act;
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(3) $0.50 per month on each account for
nonresidential |
electric service, as defined in Section 13
of the Energy |
Assistance Act, which had less than 10
megawatts of peak |
demand during the previous calendar
year;
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(4) $0.50 per month on each account for
nonresidential |
gas service, as defined in Section 13 of
the Energy |
Assistance Act, which had distributed to it
less than |
4,000,000
therms of gas during the previous calendar year;
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(5) $37.50 per month on each account for
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nonresidential electric service, as defined in Section 13
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of the Energy Assistance Act, which had 10 megawatts
or |
greater of peak demand during the previous calendar
year; |
and
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(6) $37.50 per month on each account for
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nonresidential gas service, as defined in Section 13 of
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the Energy Assistance Act, which had 4,000,000 or
more |
therms of gas distributed to it during the previous
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calendar year.
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(b) The Renewable Energy Resources and Coal Technology |
Development
Assistance
Charge assessed by electric and gas |
public utilities shall be considered a
charge
for public |
utility service.
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(c) Fifty percent of the moneys collected pursuant to
this |
Section shall be deposited in the Renewable Energy
Resources |
Trust Fund by the Department of Revenue. From those funds, |
$2,000,000 may be used annually by the Environmental |
Protection Agency Department to provide grants to the Illinois |
Green Economy Network for the purposes of funding education |
and training for renewable energy and energy efficiency |
technology and for the operation and services of the Illinois |
Green Economy Network. The remaining 50 percent
of the moneys
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collected pursuant to this Section shall be deposited in the
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Coal Technology Development Assistance Fund by the Department |
of Revenue
for the exclusive purposes of (1) capturing or |
sequestering carbon emissions produced by coal combustion; (2) |
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supporting research on the capture and sequestration of carbon |
emissions produced by coal combustion; and (3) improving coal |
miner safety.
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(d) By the 20th day of the month following the month in |
which the charges
imposed by this Section were collected, each |
utility
and alternative retail electric
supplier collecting |
charges
pursuant to this Section shall remit
to the Department |
of Revenue for deposit in the
Renewable Energy Resources Trust |
Fund and the Coal Technology Development
Assistance Fund all
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moneys received as payment of the charge provided for in this
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Section on a return prescribed and furnished by the Department |
of Revenue
showing such information as the Department of |
Revenue may reasonably require.
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If any payment provided for in this Section exceeds the |
utility or alternate retail electric supplier's liabilities |
under this Act, as shown on an original return, the utility or |
alternative retail electric supplier may credit the excess |
payment against liability subsequently to be remitted to the |
Department of Revenue under this Act. |
(e) The charges imposed by this Section shall only apply
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to customers of municipal electric or gas utilities and |
electric or gas
cooperatives if the municipal electric or gas |
utility or electric or
gas
cooperative makes an affirmative |
decision to impose the
charge.
If a municipal electric or gas |
utility or an electric or gas cooperative
makes an
affirmative |
decision to impose the charge provided by this Section, the
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municipal
electric or gas utility or electric or gas |
cooperative shall inform the
Department of
Revenue in writing |
of such decision when it begins to impose the charge.
If a |
municipal electric or gas utility or electric or gas
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cooperative does not assess this charge, its customers shall
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not be eligible for the Renewable Energy Resources Program.
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(f) The Department of Revenue may establish such rules as |
it deems
necessary to implement this Section.
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(Source: P.A. 100-402, eff. 8-25-17; 100-1171, eff. 1-4-19 .)
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(20 ILCS 687/6-5.5) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021) |
Sec. 6-5.5. Renewable energy grants. |
(a) Subject to appropriation, the Agency may Department |
shall establish and operate a renewable energy grant program |
to assist public schools and community colleges with |
engineering studies and feasibility studies and in training |
green economy technology and in the installation, acquisition, |
construction, and improvement of renewable energy resources, |
including without limitation smart grid technology, solar |
energy (such as solar panels), geothermal energy, and wind |
energy. |
(b) Application for a grant under this Section must be in |
the form and manner established by the Department. The schools |
and community colleges may accept private funds for their |
portion of the cost.
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(c) The Agency Department may adopt any rules that are |
necessary to carry out its responsibilities under this |
Section.
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(Source: P.A. 96-725, eff. 8-25-09; 97-72, eff. 7-1-11 .)
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(20 ILCS 687/6-6)
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(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
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Sec. 6-6. Energy efficiency program.
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(a) For the year beginning January 1, 1998, and
thereafter |
as provided in this Section, each electric utility
as defined |
in Section 3-105 of the Public Utilities Act and each
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alternative retail electric supplier as defined in Section |
16-102 of the
Public Utilities Act supplying
electric power |
and energy to retail customers located in the
State of |
Illinois shall contribute annually
a pro rata share of
a total |
amount of $3,000,000 based upon the number of
kilowatt-hours |
sold by each such entity in the 12 months
preceding the year of |
contribution. On or before May 1 of each year, the
Illinois |
Commerce Commission shall
determine and notify the Agency
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Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity of the pro |
rata share
owed by each electric utility and each alternative |
retail electric supplier
based upon information supplied |
annually to the Illinois Commerce
Commission. On or before |
June 1 of each year, the Agency Department of Commerce and
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Economic Opportunity
shall
send written notification to each |
electric utility and each alternative retail
electric supplier |
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of the amount of pro rata share they owe.
These contributions |
shall
be remitted to the Department of Revenue on or before |
June 30 of each
year the contribution is due on a return |
prescribed and furnished by the
Department of Revenue showing |
such information as the Department of Revenue may
reasonably |
require. The funds received pursuant to this Section shall be |
subject to the
appropriation of funds by the General Assembly. |
The
Department of Revenue shall place the funds remitted under |
this Section
in a trust fund, that is hereby created in the |
State Treasury,
called the Energy Efficiency Trust Fund.
If an |
electric utility or alternative retail electric supplier does |
not remit
its
pro rata share to the Department of Revenue, the |
Department of Revenue
must inform the Illinois Commerce |
Commission of such failure. The Illinois
Commerce Commission |
may then revoke the certification of that electric
utility or |
alternative retail electric supplier. The Illinois Commerce
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Commission may not renew the certification of any electric |
utility or
alternative retail electric supplier that is |
delinquent in paying its pro
rata
share.
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(b) The Agency Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity shall disburse the
moneys in the
Energy Efficiency |
Trust Fund to benefit residential electric customers
through |
projects which the Agency Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity has
determined will
promote energy efficiency in |
the State of Illinois. The
Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity shall establish a list of
projects eligible for
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grants from the Energy Efficiency Trust Fund including, but
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not limited to, supporting energy efficiency efforts for |
low-income households,
replacing energy inefficient windows |
with
more efficient windows, replacing energy inefficient
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appliances with more efficient appliances, replacing energy
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inefficient lighting with more efficient lighting, insulating
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dwellings and buildings, using market incentives to encourage |
energy
efficiency, and such other projects which will
increase |
energy efficiency in homes and rental properties.
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(c) The Agency may, by administrative rule, Department of |
Commerce and Economic Opportunity shall establish
criteria and |
an
application process for this grant program.
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(d) (Blank). The Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity shall conduct a
study of other
possible energy |
efficiency improvements and evaluate methods
for promoting |
energy efficiency and conservation, especially
for the benefit |
of low-income customers.
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(e) (Blank). The Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity shall submit an
annual report to the
General |
Assembly evaluating the effectiveness of the projects
and |
programs provided in this Section, and recommending
further |
legislation which will encourage additional
development and |
implementation of energy efficiency projects
and programs in |
Illinois and other actions that help to meet
the goals of this |
Section.
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(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06 .)
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(20 ILCS 687/6-7)
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(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
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Sec. 6-7. Repeal. The provisions of this Law are repealed |
on December 31, 2025 2021 .
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(Source: P.A. 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.)
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Section 915. The Illinois Renewable Fuels Development |
Program Act is amended by changing Sections 5, 10, 15, 25, and |
30 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 689/5)
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Sec. 5. Findings and State policy. The General Assembly |
recognizes that
agriculture is a vital sector of the Illinois |
economy and that an important
growth industry
for the Illinois |
agricultural sector is renewable fuels production. Renewable
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fuels
produced from Illinois agricultural products hold great |
potential for growing
the State's
economy, reducing our |
dependence on foreign oil supplies, and improving the
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environment by reducing harmful emissions from vehicles. |
Illinois is the
nation's leading
producer of ethanol, a clean, |
renewable fuel with significant environmental
benefits. The
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General Assembly finds that reliable supplies of renewable |
fuels will be
integral to
the long term
energy security of the |
United States.
The General Assembly declares that it is the |
public policy of the
State of
Illinois to promote and |
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encourage the production and use of renewable fuels as
a means
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not only to improve air quality in the State and the nation, |
but also to grow
the
agricultural sector of the Illinois |
economy. To achieve these public
policy
objectives, the |
General Assembly hereby authorizes the creation and
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implementation of
the Illinois Renewable Fuels Development |
Program within the Agency Department .
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(Source: P.A. 93-15, eff. 6-11-03.)
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(20 ILCS 689/10)
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Sec. 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
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"Agency" means the Environmental Protection Agency. |
"Biodiesel" means a renewable diesel fuel derived
from
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biomass that is intended for use in diesel engines.
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"Biodiesel blend" means a blend of biodiesel
with
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petroleum-based diesel fuel in which the resultant product |
contains no less
than 1% and
no more than 99% biodiesel.
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"Biomass" means non-fossil organic materials that have
an
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intrinsic chemical energy content. "Biomass" includes, but is |
not limited to,
soybean oil,
other vegetable oils, and |
ethanol.
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"Department" means the Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity.
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"Diesel fuel" means any product intended for use
or
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offered for sale as a fuel for engines in which the fuel is |
injected into the
combustion
chamber and ignited by pressure |
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without electric spark.
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"Director" means the Director of the Agency Commerce and |
Economic Opportunity .
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"Ethanol" means a product produced from agricultural |
commodities or
by-products used as a fuel or to be blended with |
other fuels for use in motor
vehicles.
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"Fuel" means fuel as defined in Section 1.19 of the Motor |
Fuel Tax Law.
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"Gasohol" means motor fuel that is no more than 90% |
gasoline and
at least 10%
denatured ethanol that contains no |
more than 1.25% water by weight.
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"Gasoline" means all products commonly or
commercially |
known or sold as gasoline (including casing head and |
absorption or
natural gasoline).
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"Illinois agricultural product" means any agricultural |
commodity grown in
Illinois
that is used by a production |
facility to produce renewable fuel in Illinois,
including, but
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not limited to, corn, barley, and soy beans.
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"Labor Organization"
means any organization defined as a |
"labor organization" under Section 2 of
the National Labor |
Relations Act (29 U.S.C. 152).
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"Majority blended ethanol fuel"
means motor fuel that
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contains no less than 70% and no more than 90% denatured |
ethanol and no less
than 10% and no more than 30% gasoline.
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"Motor vehicles" means motor vehicles as defined in the |
Illinois Vehicle Code
and watercraft propelled by an internal |
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combustion engine.
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"Owner" means any individual, sole proprietorship, limited |
partnership,
co-partnership, joint venture, corporation, |
cooperative, or other legal
entity, including its agents, that |
operates or
will operate a
plant located within the State of |
Illinois.
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"Plant" means a production facility that produces a |
renewable fuel. "Plant"
includes land, any building or other |
improvement on or to land, and any
personal
properties deemed |
necessary or suitable for use, whether or not now in
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existence, in the
processing of fuel from agricultural |
commodities or by-products.
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"Renewable fuel" means ethanol, gasohol, majority blended |
ethanol fuel,
biodiesel
blend fuel,
and biodiesel.
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(Source: P.A. 93-15, eff. 6-11-03; 93-618, eff. 12-11-03; |
94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
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(20 ILCS 689/15)
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Sec. 15. Illinois Renewable Fuels Development Program.
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(a) The Agency may Department must develop and administer |
the Illinois Renewable Fuels
Development Program to assist in |
the construction, modification, alteration, or
retrofitting of |
renewable fuel plants in Illinois.
The recipient of a grant |
under
this Section
must:
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(1) be constructing, modifying, altering, or |
retrofitting a plant in the
State
of Illinois;
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(2) be constructing, modifying, altering, or |
retrofitting a plant that has
annual production capacity |
of no less than 5,000,000
gallons of renewable fuel
per |
year; and
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(3) enter into a project labor agreement as prescribed |
by Section 25 of
this
Act.
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(b) Grant applications must be made on forms provided by |
and in accordance
with
procedures established by the Agency |
Department .
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(c) The Agency Department must give preference to |
applicants that use Illinois
agricultural products in the |
production of renewable fuel at the plant for
which the
grant |
is being requested.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-140, eff. 1-1-10.)
|
(20 ILCS 689/25)
|
Sec. 25. Project labor agreements.
|
(a) The project labor agreement must include the |
following:
|
(1) provisions establishing the minimum hourly wage |
for each class of
labor organization employee;
|
(2) provisions establishing the benefits and other |
compensation for each
class of labor organization |
employee; and
|
(3) provisions establishing that no strike or disputes |
will be engaged in
by
the labor organization employees.
|
|
The owner of the plant and the labor organizations shall have |
the authority to
include
other terms and conditions as they |
deem necessary.
|
(b) The project labor agreement shall be filed with the |
Director in
accordance
with procedures established by the |
Agency Department . At a minimum, the project labor
agreement |
must provide the names, addresses, and occupations of the |
owner of
the plant
and the individuals representing the labor |
organization employees participating
in the
project labor |
agreement. The agreement must also specify the terms and
|
conditions
required in subsection (a).
|
(Source: P.A. 93-15, eff. 6-11-03.)
|
(20 ILCS 689/30)
|
Sec. 30. Administration of the Act; rules. The Agency may |
Department shall
administer
this Act and shall adopt any rules |
necessary for that purpose.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-15, eff. 6-11-03.)
|
Section 920. The Energy Conservation and Coal Development |
Act is amended by changing Sections 1 and 3 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 1105/1) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 7401)
|
Sec. 1. Definitions; transfer of duties.
|
(a) For the purposes of this Act, unless the context |
otherwise requires:
|
|
"Department" means the Department of Commerce and |
Economic Opportunity.
|
"Director" means the Director of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity.
|
(b) As provided in Section 80-20 of the Department of |
Natural Resources
Act, the Department of Commerce and |
Community Affairs (now Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity)
shall assume the rights,
powers, and duties of |
the former Department of Energy and Natural Resources
under |
this Act, except as those rights, powers, and duties are |
otherwise
allocated or transferred by this amendatory Act of |
the 102nd General Assembly or any other law.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
|
(20 ILCS 1105/3) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 7403)
|
Sec. 3. Powers and duties.
|
(a) In addition to its other powers, the Environmental |
Protection Agency Department has the following
powers:
|
(1) To administer for the State any energy programs |
and activities
under federal law, regulations or |
guidelines, and to coordinate such
programs and activities |
with other State agencies, units of local
government, and |
educational institutions.
|
(2) To represent the State in energy matters involving |
the federal
government, other states, units of local |
government, and regional
agencies. |
|
(3) To prepare energy assurance contingency plans for |
consideration by the
Governor and the General Assembly. |
Such plans may shall include procedures
for determining |
when a foreseeable danger exists of energy shortages,
|
including shortages of petroleum, coal, nuclear power, |
natural gas, and
other forms of energy, and may shall |
specify the actions to be taken to
minimize hardship and |
maintain the general welfare during such energy
shortages.
|
(4) To cooperate with State colleges and universities |
and their
governing boards in energy programs and |
activities.
|
(5) (Blank).
|
(6) To accept, receive, expend, and administer, |
including by
contracts and grants to other State agencies, |
any energy-related gifts,
grants, cooperative agreement |
funds, and other funds made available to
the Agency |
Department by the federal government and other public and |
private
sources , as well as any of those funds made |
available to the Department before the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly . |
(7) To assist the Department of Central Management |
Services in establishing and maintaining a system to |
analyze and report energy consumption of facilities leased |
by the Department of Central Management Services.
|
(a-5) In addition to its other powers, the Department has |
the following powers: |
|
(1) (7) To investigate practical problems, seek and |
utilize financial
assistance, implement studies and |
conduct research relating to the
production, distribution |
and use of alcohol fuels.
|
(2) (8) To serve as a clearinghouse for information on |
alcohol production
technology; provide assistance, |
information and data relating to the production
and use of |
alcohol; develop informational packets and brochures, and |
hold
public seminars to encourage the development and |
utilization of the best
available technology.
|
(3) (9) To coordinate with other State agencies in |
order to promote the
maximum flow of information and to |
avoid unnecessary overlapping of alcohol
fuel programs. In |
order to effectuate this goal, the Director of the
|
Department or his representative shall consult with the |
Directors, or their
representatives, of the Departments of |
Agriculture, Central Management
Services, Transportation, |
and Revenue, the
Office of the State Fire Marshal, and the |
Environmental Protection Agency.
|
(4) (10) To operate, within the Department, an Office |
of Coal Development
and Marketing for the promotion and |
marketing of Illinois coal both
domestically and |
internationally. The Department may use monies |
appropriated
for this purpose for necessary administrative |
expenses.
|
The
Office of Coal Development and Marketing shall |
|
develop and implement an
initiative to assist the coal |
industry in Illinois to increase its share of the
|
international coal market.
|
(5) (11) To assist the Department of Central |
Management Services in
establishing and maintaining a |
system to analyze and report energy
consumption of |
facilities leased by the Department of Central Management
|
Services.
|
(6) (12) To consult with the Department Departments of |
Natural Resources and
Transportation and the Illinois |
Environmental
Protection Agency for the purpose of |
developing methods and standards that
encourage the |
utilization of coal combustion by-products as value added
|
products in productive and benign applications.
|
(7) (13) To provide technical assistance and |
information to
sellers and distributors of storage hot |
water heaters doing business in
Illinois , pursuant to |
Section 1 of the Hot Water Heater Efficiency Act .
|
(b) (Blank).
|
(c) (Blank).
|
(d) The Agency Department shall develop a package of |
educational materials
containing information regarding the |
necessity of waste reduction and recycling to reduce
|
dependence on landfills and to maintain environmental quality. |
The Agency
Department shall make this information available to |
the public on its website and for schools to access for their |
|
development of materials. Those materials shall be suitable |
for instructional use in grades 3, 4
and 5.
|
(e) (Blank).
|
(f) (Blank).
|
(g) (Blank).
|
(h) (Blank).
|
(i) (Blank).
|
(Source: P.A. 98-44, eff. 6-28-13; 98-692, eff. 7-1-14.)
|
Section 925. The Energy Conservation Act is amended by |
changing Section 4 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 1115/4) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 7604)
|
Sec. 4. Technical Assistance Programs.
|
(a) The Environmental Protection Agency may Department of |
Commerce and Economic Opportunity shall provide to a unit of |
local government, upon request by the unit, technical
|
assistance in the development of energy efficiency standards, |
including, but not limited to, thermal efficiency standards |
and lighting
efficiency standards to units of local |
government, upon request by such unit .
|
(b) (Blank). The Department shall provide technical |
assistance in the development of
a program for energy |
efficiency in procurement to units of local government,
upon |
request by such unit.
|
(c) The Technical Assistance Programs provided in this |
|
Section shall be
supported by funds provided to the State |
pursuant to the federal "Energy
Policy and Conservation Act of |
1975" or other federal acts that provide
funds for energy |
conservation efforts through the use of building codes.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
|
(20 ILCS 1115/5 rep.) |
Section 930. The Energy Conservation Act is amended by |
repealing Section 5. |
Section 935. The Energy
Efficient Building Act is amended |
by changing Sections 10, 15, 25, and 30 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 3125/10) |
Sec. 10. Definitions.
|
"Agency" means the Environmental Protection Agency. |
"Board" means the Capital Development Board.
|
"Building" includes both residential buildings and |
commercial buildings.
|
"Code" means the latest published edition of the |
International Code Council's International Energy Conservation |
Code as adopted by the Board, including any published |
supplements adopted by the Board and any amendments and |
adaptations to the Code that are made by the
Board.
|
"Commercial building" means any building except a building |
that is a residential building, as defined in this Section. |
|
"Department" means the Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity. |
"Municipality" means any city, village, or incorporated |
town.
|
"Residential building" means (i) a detached one-family or |
2-family dwelling or (ii) any building that is 3 stories or |
less in height above grade that contains multiple dwelling |
units, in which the occupants reside on a primarily permanent |
basis, such as a townhouse, a row house, an apartment house, a |
convent, a monastery, a rectory, a fraternity or sorority |
house, a dormitory, and a rooming house; provided, however, |
that when applied to a building located within the boundaries |
of a municipality having a population of 1,000,000 or more, |
the term "residential building" means a building containing |
one or more dwelling units, not exceeding 4 stories above |
grade, where occupants are primarily permanent.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-144, eff. 7-26-19 .) |
(20 ILCS 3125/15)
|
Sec. 15. Energy Efficient Building Code. The Board, in |
consultation with the Agency Department , shall adopt the Code |
as minimum
requirements for commercial buildings, applying to |
the construction of, renovations to, and additions to all |
commercial buildings in the State. The Board, in consultation |
with the Agency Department , shall also adopt the Code as the |
minimum and maximum requirements for residential buildings, |
|
applying to the construction of all residential buildings in |
the State, except as provided for in Section 45 of this Act. |
The Board may
appropriately adapt the International Energy |
Conservation Code to apply to the
particular economy, |
population distribution, geography, and climate of the
State |
and construction therein, consistent with the public policy
|
objectives of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-778, eff. 8-28-09.) |
(20 ILCS 3125/25)
|
Sec. 25. Technical assistance.
|
(a) The Agency Department shall make available to |
builders, designers, engineers, and
architects implementation |
materials and training to explain the requirements of the
Code |
and describe methods of compliance
acceptable to Code |
Enforcement Officials.
|
(b) The materials shall include software tools, simplified |
prescriptive
options, and other materials as appropriate. The |
simplified materials shall be
designed for projects in which a |
design professional may not be involved.
|
(c) The Agency Department shall provide local |
jurisdictions with technical assistance
concerning |
implementation and enforcement of the
Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-1033, eff. 8-17-12.) |
(20 ILCS 3125/30)
|
|
Sec. 30. Enforcement. The
Board, in consultation with the |
Agency Department , shall
determine
procedures for compliance |
with the Code. These procedures
may include but need not be
|
limited to certification by a national, State, or local |
accredited energy
conservation program or inspections from |
private Code-certified inspectors
using the Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-936, eff. 8-13-04.) |
Section 940. The Green Governments Illinois Act is amended |
by changing Section 20 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 3954/20)
|
Sec. 20. Responsibilities of the Council. The Council is |
responsible for the development and dissemination of programs, |
plans, and policies to reduce the environmental footprint of |
State government and for improving the implementation of |
greening the government initiatives in other institutions, |
thereby reducing costs to taxpayers and improving efficiency |
in operations. The Council shall convene on a quarterly basis |
and shall be responsible for the following: |
(a) Establishing long-term environmental |
sustainability goals that the State will strive to achieve |
within a period of 3, 5, and 10 years to improve the energy |
and environmental performance of State buildings, |
consistent with efficiency and economic objectives. These |
goals shall, at a minimum, include the following: |
|
broad-based performance goals for energy efficiency; use |
of renewable fuels; water conservation; green purchasing; |
paper consumption; and solid waste generation. These goals |
can be met through increased efficiency, operational |
changes, and improved maintenance and use of |
cost-effective alternative technologies, raw materials, |
and fuels. |
The Council shall: |
(1) communicate the environmental sustainability |
goals to all State agencies; |
(2) establish an electronic system to track and |
report on environmental progress; |
(3) monitor improvement activities; and |
(4) propose new goals as appropriate. |
(b) Coordinating an awards program that recognizes |
units of State and local government and educational |
institutions for developing, adopting, and implementing |
innovative or exemplary environmental sustainability plans |
in conformance with this Act. |
(c) Creating specific guidance materials for State |
agencies, educational institutions, and units of local |
government on how to integrate environmental |
sustainability into existing management systems, planning, |
and operational practices, while still providing necessary |
services and ensuring efficient and effective operations. |
These guidance materials must include a list of |
|
environmental and energy best practices, case studies, |
policy language, model plans, and other resource |
information. These materials must be made available on a |
website devoted to the Green Governments Illinois program.
|
(d) Developing and implementing, to the extent |
fiscally feasible, training programs designed to instill |
the importance and value of environmental sustainability.
|
(e) Providing new ways for State government to build |
markets for environmentally preferable products and |
services without compromising price, competition, and |
availability. The Council shall initially focus on |
integrated pest management, bio-based products, recycled |
content paper, energy efficiency, renewable energy, |
alternative fuel vehicles, and green cleaning supplies. |
Within existing resources, and within 60 days after the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General |
Assembly, the Department of Central Management Services, |
with the approval of the council, shall designate a single |
point of contact for State agencies, suppliers, and other |
interested parties to contact regarding environmentally |
preferable purchasing issues. |
(f) Working collaboratively with State agencies, units |
of local government, educational institutions, and the |
legislative branches of government to promote |
benchmarking, commissioning, and retro-commissioning to |
make government and institutional buildings more |
|
resource-efficient, energy efficient, and healthful public |
places. |
(g) Reviewing budgetary policy and making |
recommendations to the Governor on incentives for State |
agencies to undertake environmental improvements that |
result in long-term cost-savings, productivity |
enhancements, or other outcomes deemed appropriate to the |
State's sustainability goals. |
(h) Reporting annually to the Governor and the General |
Assembly on the results of environmental sustainability |
actions taken by State agencies, educational institutions |
and units of local government during the prior fiscal |
year. The report must include the environmental and |
economic benefits of the environmental sustainability |
actions, where feasible, the consumption of those actions, |
and provide recommendations for future environmental |
improvement activities during the following year. The |
report shall be filed by September 1, 2008, and November 1 |
of each subsequent year. |
(h-5) Participating in the proposal review and |
subgrant award processes conducted by the Environmental |
Protection Agency Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity to distribute the portion of funds eligible |
for State government use under the federal Energy |
Independence and Security Act of 2007, H.R. 6, Title V, |
Subtitle E (Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block |
|
Grants). A designee of the Governor shall also participate |
in these processes, and no subgrant may be awarded unless |
the Governor's designee first approves that subgrant. |
(i) The chairman of the Council shall determine |
whether or not the I-Cycle program is operating |
effectively and make recommendations concerning management |
of the I-Cycle program. The chairman has the authority to |
dissolve the I-Cycle program if the program is found to be |
ineffective.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-657, eff. 10-10-07; 96-74, eff. 7-24-09.) |
Section 945. The School Code is amended by changing |
Sections 10-20.19c and 34-18.15 as follows:
|
(105 ILCS 5/10-20.19c) (from Ch. 122, par. 10-20.19c)
|
Sec. 10-20.19c. Recycled paper and paper products and |
solid waste management.
|
(a) Definitions. As used in this Section, the following |
terms shall
have the meanings indicated, unless the context |
otherwise requires:
|
"Deinked stock" means paper that has been processed to |
remove inks,
clays, coatings, binders and other contaminants.
|
"High grade printing and writing papers" includes offset |
printing
paper, duplicator paper, writing paper (stationery), |
tablet paper, office
paper, note pads, xerographic paper, |
envelopes, form bond including
computer paper and carbonless |
|
forms, book papers, bond papers, ledger paper,
book stock and |
cotton fiber papers.
|
"Paper and paper products" means high grade printing and |
writing papers,
tissue products, newsprint, unbleached |
packaging and recycled paperboard.
|
"Postconsumer material" means only those products |
generated by a business
or consumer which have served their |
intended end uses, and which have been
separated or diverted |
from solid waste; wastes generated during the
production of an |
end product are excluded.
|
"Recovered paper material" means paper waste generated |
after the
completion of the papermaking process, such as |
postconsumer materials,
envelope cuttings, bindery trimmings, |
printing waste, cutting and
other converting waste, butt |
rolls, and mill wrappers, obsolete inventories,
and rejected |
unused stock. "Recovered paper material", however, does not
|
include fibrous waste generated during the manufacturing |
process such as
fibers recovered from waste water or trimmings |
of paper machine rolls (mill
broke), or fibrous byproducts of |
harvesting, extraction or woodcutting
processes, or forest |
residues such as bark.
|
"Recycled paperboard" includes paperboard products, |
folding cartons and
pad backings.
|
"Tissue products" includes toilet tissue, paper towels, |
paper napkins,
facial tissue, paper doilies, industrial |
wipers, paper bags and brown
papers. These products shall also |
|
be unscented and shall not be colored.
|
"Unbleached packaging" includes corrugated and fiber |
storage boxes.
|
(a-5) Each school district shall periodically review its |
procurement procedures and specifications related to the |
purchase of products and supplies. Those procedures and |
specifications must be modified as necessary to require the |
school district to seek out products and supplies that contain |
recycled materials and to ensure that purchased products and |
supplies are reusable, durable, or made from recycled |
materials, if economically and practically feasible. In |
selecting products and supplies that contain recycled |
material, preference must be given to products and supplies |
that contain the highest amount of recycled material and that |
are consistent with the effective use of the product or |
supply, if economically and practically feasible. |
(b) Wherever economically and practically feasible, as |
determined by the
school board, the school board, all public |
schools and
attendance centers within a school district, and |
their school supply stores
shall procure recycled paper and |
paper products as follows:
|
(1) Beginning July 1, 2008, at least 10% of the total |
dollar value of
paper and paper products purchased by |
school boards, public schools and
attendance centers, and |
their school supply stores shall be recycled paper
and |
paper products.
|
|
(2) Beginning July 1, 2011, at least 25% of the total |
dollar value of
paper and paper products purchased by |
school boards, public schools and
attendance centers, and |
their school supply stores shall be recycled paper
and |
paper products.
|
(3) Beginning July 1, 2014, at least 50% of the total |
dollar value of
paper and paper products purchased by |
school boards, public schools and
attendance centers, and |
their school supply stores shall be recycled paper
and |
paper products.
|
(4) Beginning July 1, 2020, at least 75% of the total |
dollar value of
paper and paper products purchased by |
school boards, public schools and
attendance centers, and |
their school supply stores shall be recycled paper
and |
paper products.
|
(5) Beginning upon the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1992,
all paper purchased by the board |
of education, public schools and attendance
centers for |
publication of student newspapers shall be recycled |
newsprint.
The amount purchased shall not be included in |
calculating the amounts
specified in paragraphs (1) |
through (4).
|
(c) Paper and paper products purchased from private sector |
vendors
pursuant to printing contracts are not considered |
paper and paper products
for the purposes of subsection (b), |
unless purchased under contract for
the printing of student |
|
newspapers.
|
(d)(1) Wherever economically and practically feasible, the |
recycled
paper and paper products referred to in subsection |
(b) shall contain
postconsumer or recovered paper materials as |
specified by paper category in
this subsection:
|
(i) Recycled high grade printing and writing paper |
shall contain at
least 50% recovered paper material. Such |
recovered paper material, until
July 1, 2008, shall |
consist of at least 20% deinked stock or postconsumer
|
material; and beginning July 1, 2008, shall consist of at |
least 25% deinked
stock or postconsumer material; and |
beginning July 1, 2010, shall consist of
at least 30% |
deinked stock or postconsumer material; and beginning July |
1,
2012, shall consist of at least 40% deinked stock or |
postconsumer material;
and beginning July 1, 2014, shall |
consist of at least 50% deinked stock or
postconsumer |
material.
|
(ii) Recycled tissue products, until July 1, 1994, |
shall contain at
least 25% postconsumer material; and |
beginning July 1, 1994, shall contain
at least 30% |
postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, 1996, shall
|
contain at least 35% postconsumer material; and beginning |
July 1, 1998,
shall contain at least 40% postconsumer |
material; and beginning July 1,
2000, shall contain at |
least 45% postconsumer material.
|
(iii) Recycled newsprint, until July 1, 1994, shall |
|
contain at
least 40% postconsumer material; and beginning |
July 1, 1994, shall contain
at least 50% postconsumer |
material; and beginning July 1, 1996, shall
contain at |
least 60% postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, |
1998,
shall contain at least 70% postconsumer material; |
and beginning July 1,
2000, shall contain at least 80% |
postconsumer material.
|
(iv) Recycled unbleached packaging, until July 1, |
1994, shall contain at
least 35% postconsumer material; |
and beginning July 1, 1994, shall contain
at least 40% |
postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, 1996, shall
|
contain at least 45% postconsumer material; and beginning |
July 1, 1998,
shall contain at least 50% postconsumer |
material; and beginning July 1,
2000, shall contain at |
least 55% postconsumer material.
|
(v) Recycled paperboard, until July 1, 1994, shall |
contain at
least 80% postconsumer material; and beginning |
July 1, 1994, shall contain
at least 85% postconsumer |
material; and beginning July 1, 1996, shall
contain at |
least 90% postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, |
1998,
shall contain at least 95% postconsumer material.
|
(2) For the purposes of this Section, "postconsumer |
material" includes:
|
(i) paper, paperboard, and fibrous waste from |
retail stores, office
buildings, homes and so forth, |
after the waste has passed through its end
usage as a |
|
consumer item, including used corrugated boxes, old |
newspapers,
mixed waste paper, tabulating cards, and |
used cordage; and
|
(ii) all paper, paperboard, and fibrous wastes |
that are diverted or
separated from the municipal |
waste stream.
|
(3) For the purposes of this Section, "recovered paper |
material" includes:
|
(i) postconsumer material;
|
(ii) dry paper and paperboard waste generated |
after completion of the
papermaking process (that is, |
those manufacturing operations up to and
including the |
cutting and trimming of the paper machine reel into |
smaller
rolls or rough sheets), including envelope |
cuttings, bindery trimmings, and
other paper and |
paperboard waste resulting from printing, cutting, |
forming
and other converting operations, or from bag, |
box and carton manufacturing,
and butt rolls, mill |
wrappers, and rejected unused stock; and
|
(iii) finished paper and paperboard from obsolete |
inventories of paper
and paperboard manufacturers, |
merchants, wholesalers, dealers, printers,
converters |
or others.
|
(e) Nothing in this Section shall be deemed to apply to art |
materials,
nor to any newspapers, magazines, text books, |
library books or other
copyrighted publications which are |
|
purchased or used by any school board or
any public school or |
attendance center within a school district, or which
are sold |
in any school supply store operated by or within any such |
school
or attendance center, other than newspapers written, |
edited or produced
by students enrolled in the school |
district, public school or attendance
center.
|
(e-5) Each school district shall periodically review its |
procedures on solid waste reduction regarding the management |
of solid waste generated by academic, administrative, and |
other institutional functions. Those waste reduction |
procedures must be designed to, when economically and |
practically feasible, recycle the school district's waste |
stream, including without limitation landscape waste, computer |
paper, and white office paper. School districts are encouraged |
to have procedures that provide for the investigation of |
potential markets for other recyclable materials that are |
present in the school district's waste stream. The waste |
reduction procedures must be designed to achieve, before July |
1, 2020, at least a 50% reduction in the amount of solid waste |
that is generated by the school district. |
(f) The State Board of Education, in coordination with the |
Department Departments of
Central Management Services and |
Commerce and Economic Opportunity , may adopt such
rules and |
regulations as it deems necessary
to assist districts in |
carrying out the provisions of this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06; 95-741, eff. 7-18-08.)
|
|
(105 ILCS 5/34-18.15) (from Ch. 122, par. 34-18.15)
|
Sec. 34-18.15. Recycled paper and paper products and solid |
waste management.
|
(a) Definitions. As used in this Section, the following |
terms shall have
the meanings indicated, unless the context |
otherwise requires:
|
"Deinked stock" means paper that has been processed to |
remove inks,
clays, coatings, binders and other contaminants.
|
"High grade printing and writing papers" includes offset |
printing paper,
duplicator paper, writing paper (stationery), |
tablet paper, office paper,
note pads, xerographic paper, |
envelopes, form bond including computer
paper and carbonless |
forms, book papers, bond papers, ledger paper, book
stock and |
cotton fiber papers.
|
"Paper and paper products" means high grade printing and |
writing papers,
tissue products, newsprint, unbleached |
packaging and recycled paperboard.
|
"Postconsumer material" means only those products |
generated by a business
or consumer which have served their |
intended end uses, and which have been
separated or diverted |
from solid waste; wastes generated during the
production of an |
end product are excluded.
|
"Recovered paper material" means paper waste generated |
after the
completion of the papermaking process, such as |
postconsumer materials,
envelope cuttings, bindery trimmings, |
|
printing waste, cutting and
other converting waste, butt |
rolls, and mill wrappers, obsolete inventories,
and rejected |
unused stock. "Recovered paper material", however, does not
|
include fibrous waste generated during the manufacturing |
process as fibers
recovered from waste water or trimmings of |
paper machine rolls (mill
broke), or fibrous byproducts of |
harvesting, extraction or woodcutting
processes, or forest |
residues such as bark.
|
"Recycled paperboard" includes paperboard products, |
folding cartons
and pad backings.
|
"Tissue products" includes toilet tissue, paper towels, |
paper napkins,
facial tissue, paper doilies, industrial |
wipers, paper bags and brown
papers. These products shall also |
be unscented and shall not be colored.
|
"Unbleached packaging" includes corrugated and fiber |
storage boxes.
|
(a-5) The school district shall periodically review its |
procurement procedures and specifications related to the |
purchase of products and supplies. Those procedures and |
specifications must be modified as necessary to require the |
school district to seek out products and supplies that contain |
recycled materials and to ensure that purchased products and |
supplies are reusable, durable, or made from recycled |
materials, if economically and practically feasible. In |
selecting products and supplies that contain recycled |
material, preference must be given to products and supplies |
|
that contain the highest amount of recycled material and that |
are consistent with the effective use of the product or |
supply, if economically and practically feasible. |
(b) Wherever economically and practically feasible, as |
determined by the
board of education, the board of education, |
all public schools and
attendance centers within the school |
district, and their school supply
stores shall procure |
recycled paper and paper products as follows:
|
(1) Beginning July 1, 2008, at least 10% of the total |
dollar value of
paper and paper products purchased by the |
board of education, public
schools and attendance centers, |
and their school supply stores shall be
recycled paper and |
paper products.
|
(2) Beginning July 1, 2011, at least 25% of the total |
dollar value of
paper and paper products purchased by the |
board of education, public
schools and attendance centers, |
and their school supply stores shall be
recycled paper and |
paper products.
|
(3) Beginning July 1, 2014, at least 50% of the total |
dollar value of
paper and paper products purchased by the |
board of education, public
schools and attendance centers, |
and their school supply stores shall be
recycled paper and |
paper products.
|
(4) Beginning July 1, 2020, at least 75% of the total |
dollar value of
paper and paper products purchased by the |
board of education, public
schools and attendance centers, |
|
and their school supply stores shall be
recycled paper and |
paper products.
|
(5) Beginning upon the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1992,
all paper purchased by the board |
of education, public schools and
attendance centers for |
publication of student newspapers shall be recycled
|
newsprint. The amount purchased shall not be included in |
calculating the
amounts specified in paragraphs (1) |
through (4).
|
(c) Paper and paper products purchased from private sector |
vendors
pursuant to printing contracts are not considered |
paper and paper products
for the purposes of subsection (b), |
unless purchased under contract for
the printing of student |
newspapers.
|
(d)(1) Wherever economically and practically feasible, the |
recycled
paper and paper products referred to in subsection |
(b) shall contain
postconsumer or recovered paper materials as |
specified by paper category in
this subsection:
|
(i) Recycled high grade printing and writing paper |
shall contain at
least 50% recovered paper material. Such |
recovered paper material, until
July 1, 2008, shall |
consist of at least 20% deinked stock or postconsumer
|
material; and beginning July 1, 2008, shall consist of at |
least 25% deinked
stock or postconsumer material; and |
beginning July 1, 2010, shall consist of
at least 30% |
deinked stock or postconsumer material; and beginning July |
|
1, 2012, shall consist of at least 40% deinked stock or |
postconsumer material;
and beginning July 1, 2014, shall |
consist of at least 50% deinked stock or
postconsumer |
material.
|
(ii) Recycled tissue products, until July 1, 1994, |
shall contain at
least 25% postconsumer material; and |
beginning July 1, 1994, shall contain
at least 30% |
postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, 1996, shall
|
contain at least 35% postconsumer material; and beginning |
July 1, 1998,
shall contain at least 40% postconsumer |
material; and beginning July 1,
2000, shall contain at |
least 45% postconsumer material.
|
(iii) Recycled newsprint, until July 1, 1994, shall |
contain at
least 40% postconsumer material; and beginning |
July 1, 1994, shall contain
at least 50% postconsumer |
material; and beginning July 1, 1996, shall
contain at |
least 60% postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, |
1998,
shall contain at least 70% postconsumer material; |
and beginning July 1,
2000, shall contain at least 80% |
postconsumer material.
|
(iv) Recycled unbleached packaging, until July 1, |
1994, shall contain at
least 35% postconsumer material; |
and beginning July 1, 1994, shall contain
at least 40% |
postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, 1996, shall
|
contain at least 45% postconsumer material; and beginning |
July 1, 1998,
shall contain at least 50% postconsumer |
|
material; and beginning July 1,
2000, shall contain at |
least 55% postconsumer material.
|
(v) Recycled paperboard, until July 1, 1994, shall |
contain at
least 80% postconsumer material; and beginning |
July 1, 1994, shall contain
at least 85% postconsumer |
material; and beginning July 1, 1996, shall
contain at |
least 90% postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, |
1998,
shall contain at least 95% postconsumer material.
|
(2) For the purposes of this Section, "postconsumer |
material" includes:
|
(i) paper, paperboard, and fibrous waste from |
retail stores, office
buildings, homes and so forth, |
after the waste has passed through its end
usage as a |
consumer item, including used corrugated boxes, old |
newspapers,
mixed waste paper, tabulating cards, and |
used cordage; and
|
(ii) all paper, paperboard, and fibrous wastes |
that are diverted or
separated from the municipal |
waste stream.
|
(3) For the purpose of this Section, "recovered paper |
material" includes:
|
(i) postconsumer material;
|
(ii) dry paper and paperboard waste generated |
after completion of the
papermaking process (that is, |
those manufacturing operations up to and
including the |
cutting and trimming of the paper machine reel into |
|
smaller
rolls or rough sheets), including envelope |
cuttings, bindery trimmings, and
other paper and |
paperboard waste resulting from printing, cutting, |
forming
and other converting operations, or from bag, |
box and carton manufacturing,
and butt rolls, mill |
wrappers, and rejected unused stock; and
|
(iii) finished paper and paperboard from obsolete |
inventories of paper
and paperboard manufacturers, |
merchants, wholesalers, dealers, printers,
converters |
or others.
|
(e) Nothing in this Section shall be deemed to apply to art |
materials,
nor to any newspapers, magazines, text books, |
library books or other
copyrighted publications which are |
purchased or used by the board of
education or any public |
school or attendance center within the school
district, or |
which are sold in any school supply store operated by or
within |
any such school or attendance center, other than newspapers
|
written, edited or produced by students enrolled in the school |
district,
public school or attendance center.
|
(e-5) The school district shall periodically review its |
procedures on solid waste reduction regarding the management |
of solid waste generated by academic, administrative, and |
other institutional functions. Those waste reduction |
procedures must be designed to, when economically and |
practically feasible, recycle the school district's waste |
stream, including without limitation landscape waste, computer |
|
paper, and white office paper. The school district is |
encouraged to have procedures that provide for the |
investigation of potential markets for other recyclable |
materials that are present in the school district's waste |
stream. The waste reduction procedures must be designed to |
achieve, before July 1, 2020, at least a 50% reduction in the |
amount of solid waste that is generated by the school |
district. |
(f) The State Board of Education, in coordination with the |
Department Departments of
Central Management Services and |
Commerce and Economic Opportunity , may adopt such
rules and |
regulations as it deems necessary
to assist districts in |
carrying out the provisions of this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06; 95-741, eff. 7-18-08 .)
|
Section 950. The Environmental Protection Act is amended |
by changing Sections 22.15, 22.16b, 55.3, 55.7, 58.14a, and |
58.15 as follows:
|
(415 ILCS 5/22.15) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.15)
|
Sec. 22.15. Solid Waste Management Fund; fees.
|
(a) There is hereby created within the State Treasury a
|
special fund to be known as the Solid Waste Management Fund, to |
be
constituted from the fees collected by the State pursuant |
to this Section,
from repayments of loans made from the Fund |
for solid waste projects, from registration fees collected |
|
pursuant to the Consumer Electronics Recycling Act, and from |
amounts transferred into the Fund pursuant to Public Act |
100-433.
Moneys received by either the Agency or the |
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity
in repayment |
of loans made pursuant to the Illinois Solid Waste Management
|
Act shall be deposited into the General Revenue Fund.
|
(b) The Agency shall assess and collect a
fee in the amount |
set forth herein from the owner or operator of each sanitary
|
landfill permitted or required to be permitted by the Agency |
to dispose of
solid waste if the sanitary landfill is located |
off the site where such waste
was produced and if such sanitary |
landfill is owned, controlled, and operated
by a person other |
than the generator of such waste. The Agency shall deposit
all |
fees collected into the Solid Waste Management Fund. If a site |
is
contiguous to one or more landfills owned or operated by the |
same person, the
volumes permanently disposed of by each |
landfill shall be combined for purposes
of determining the fee |
under this subsection. Beginning on July 1, 2018, and on the |
first day of each month thereafter during fiscal years 2019 |
through 2021, the State Comptroller shall direct and State |
Treasurer shall transfer an amount equal to 1/12 of $5,000,000 |
per fiscal year from the Solid Waste Management Fund to the |
General Revenue Fund.
|
(1) If more than 150,000 cubic yards of non-hazardous |
solid waste is
permanently disposed of at a site in a |
calendar year, the owner or operator
shall either pay a |
|
fee of 95 cents per cubic yard or,
alternatively, the |
owner or operator may weigh the quantity of the solid |
waste
permanently disposed of with a device for which |
certification has been obtained
under the Weights and |
Measures Act and pay a fee of $2.00 per
ton of solid waste |
permanently disposed of. In no case shall the fee |
collected
or paid by the owner or operator under this |
paragraph exceed $1.55 per cubic yard or $3.27 per ton.
|
(2) If more than 100,000 cubic yards but not more than |
150,000 cubic
yards of non-hazardous waste is permanently |
disposed of at a site in a calendar
year, the owner or |
operator shall pay a fee of $52,630.
|
(3) If more than 50,000 cubic yards but not more than |
100,000 cubic
yards of non-hazardous solid waste is |
permanently disposed of at a site
in a calendar year, the |
owner or operator shall pay a fee of $23,790.
|
(4) If more than 10,000 cubic yards but not more than |
50,000 cubic
yards of non-hazardous solid waste is |
permanently disposed of at a site
in a calendar year, the |
owner or operator shall pay a fee of $7,260.
|
(5) If not more than 10,000 cubic yards of |
non-hazardous solid waste is
permanently disposed of at a |
site in a calendar year, the owner or operator
shall pay a |
fee of $1050.
|
(c) (Blank).
|
(d) The Agency shall establish rules relating to the |
|
collection of the
fees authorized by this Section. Such rules |
shall include, but not be
limited to:
|
(1) necessary records identifying the quantities of |
solid waste received
or disposed;
|
(2) the form and submission of reports to accompany |
the payment of fees
to the Agency;
|
(3) the time and manner of payment of fees to the |
Agency, which payments
shall not be more often than |
quarterly; and
|
(4) procedures setting forth criteria establishing |
when an owner or
operator may measure by weight or volume |
during any given quarter or other
fee payment period.
|
(e) Pursuant to appropriation, all monies in the Solid |
Waste Management
Fund shall be used by the Agency and the |
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity for the |
purposes set forth in this Section and in the Illinois
Solid |
Waste Management Act, including for the costs of fee |
collection and
administration, and for the administration of |
(1) the Consumer Electronics Recycling Act and (2) until |
January 1, 2020, the Electronic Products Recycling and Reuse |
Act.
|
(f) The Agency is authorized to enter into such agreements |
and to
promulgate such rules as are necessary to carry out its |
duties under this
Section and the Illinois Solid Waste |
Management Act.
|
(g) On the first day of January, April, July, and October |
|
of each year,
beginning on July 1, 1996, the State Comptroller |
and Treasurer shall
transfer $500,000 from the Solid Waste |
Management Fund to the Hazardous Waste
Fund. Moneys |
transferred under this subsection (g) shall be used only for |
the
purposes set forth in item (1) of subsection (d) of Section |
22.2.
|
(h) The Agency is authorized to provide financial |
assistance to units of
local government for the performance of |
inspecting, investigating and
enforcement activities pursuant |
to Section 4(r) at nonhazardous solid
waste disposal sites.
|
(i) The Agency is authorized to conduct household waste |
collection and
disposal programs.
|
(j) A unit of local government, as defined in the Local |
Solid Waste Disposal
Act, in which a solid waste disposal |
facility is located may establish a fee,
tax, or surcharge |
with regard to the permanent disposal of solid waste.
All |
fees, taxes, and surcharges collected under this subsection |
shall be
utilized for solid waste management purposes, |
including long-term monitoring
and maintenance of landfills, |
planning, implementation, inspection, enforcement
and other |
activities consistent with the Solid Waste Management Act and |
the
Local Solid Waste Disposal Act, or for any other |
environment-related purpose,
including but not limited to an |
environment-related public works project, but
not for the |
construction of a new pollution control facility other than a
|
household hazardous waste facility. However, the total fee, |
|
tax or surcharge
imposed by all units of local government |
under this subsection (j) upon the
solid waste disposal |
facility shall not exceed:
|
(1) 60¢ per cubic yard if more than 150,000 cubic |
yards of non-hazardous
solid waste is permanently disposed |
of at the site in a calendar year, unless
the owner or |
operator weighs the quantity of the solid waste received |
with a
device for which certification has been obtained |
under the Weights and Measures
Act, in which case the fee |
shall not exceed $1.27 per ton of solid waste
permanently |
disposed of.
|
(2) $33,350 if more than 100,000
cubic yards, but not |
more than 150,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous waste
is |
permanently disposed of at the site in a calendar year.
|
(3) $15,500 if more than 50,000 cubic
yards, but not |
more than 100,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous solid |
waste is
permanently disposed of at the site in a calendar |
year.
|
(4) $4,650 if more than 10,000 cubic
yards, but not |
more than 50,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous solid waste
|
is permanently disposed of at the site in a calendar year.
|
(5) $650 if not more than 10,000 cubic
yards of |
non-hazardous solid waste is permanently disposed of at |
the site in
a calendar year.
|
The corporate authorities of the unit of local government
|
may use proceeds from the fee, tax, or surcharge to reimburse a |
|
highway
commissioner whose road district lies wholly or |
partially within the
corporate limits of the unit of local |
government for expenses incurred in
the removal of |
nonhazardous, nonfluid municipal waste that has been dumped
on |
public property in violation of a State law or local |
ordinance.
|
A county or Municipal Joint Action Agency that imposes a |
fee, tax, or
surcharge under this subsection may use the |
proceeds thereof to reimburse a
municipality that lies wholly |
or partially within its boundaries for expenses
incurred in |
the removal of nonhazardous, nonfluid municipal waste that has |
been
dumped on public property in violation of a State law or |
local ordinance.
|
If the fees are to be used to conduct a local sanitary |
landfill
inspection or enforcement program, the unit of local |
government must enter
into a written delegation agreement with |
the Agency pursuant to subsection
(r) of Section 4. The unit of |
local government and the Agency shall enter
into such a |
written delegation agreement within 60 days after the
|
establishment of such fees. At least annually,
the Agency |
shall conduct an audit of the expenditures made by units of |
local
government from the funds granted by the Agency to the |
units of local
government for purposes of local sanitary |
landfill inspection and enforcement
programs, to ensure that |
the funds have been expended for the prescribed
purposes under |
the grant.
|
|
The fees, taxes or surcharges collected under this |
subsection (j) shall
be placed by the unit of local government |
in a separate fund, and the
interest received on the moneys in |
the fund shall be credited to the fund. The
monies in the fund |
may be accumulated over a period of years to be
expended in |
accordance with this subsection.
|
A unit of local government, as defined in the Local Solid |
Waste Disposal
Act, shall prepare and distribute to the |
Agency, in April of each year, a
report that details spending |
plans for monies collected in accordance with
this subsection. |
The report will at a minimum include the following:
|
(1) The total monies collected pursuant to this |
subsection.
|
(2) The most current balance of monies collected |
pursuant to this
subsection.
|
(3) An itemized accounting of all monies expended for |
the previous year
pursuant to this subsection.
|
(4) An estimation of monies to be collected for the |
following 3
years pursuant to this subsection.
|
(5) A narrative detailing the general direction and |
scope of future
expenditures for one, 2 and 3 years.
|
The exemptions granted under Sections 22.16 and 22.16a, |
and under
subsection (k) of this Section, shall be applicable |
to any fee,
tax or surcharge imposed under this subsection |
(j); except that the fee,
tax or surcharge authorized to be |
imposed under this subsection (j) may be
made applicable by a |
|
unit of local government to the permanent disposal of
solid |
waste after December 31, 1986, under any contract lawfully |
executed
before June 1, 1986 under which more than 150,000 |
cubic yards (or 50,000 tons)
of solid waste is to be |
permanently disposed of, even though the waste is
exempt from |
the fee imposed by the State under subsection (b) of this |
Section
pursuant to an exemption granted under Section 22.16.
|
(k) In accordance with the findings and purposes of the |
Illinois Solid
Waste Management Act, beginning January 1, 1989 |
the fee under subsection
(b) and the fee, tax or surcharge |
under subsection (j) shall not apply to:
|
(1) waste which is hazardous waste;
|
(2) waste which is pollution control waste;
|
(3) waste from recycling, reclamation or reuse |
processes which have been
approved by the Agency as being |
designed to remove any contaminant from
wastes so as to |
render such wastes reusable, provided that the process
|
renders at least 50% of the waste reusable;
|
(4) non-hazardous solid waste that is received at a |
sanitary landfill
and composted or recycled through a |
process permitted by the Agency; or
|
(5) any landfill which is permitted by the Agency to |
receive only
demolition or construction debris or |
landscape waste.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-103, eff. 8-11-17; 100-433, eff. 8-25-17; |
100-587, eff. 6-4-18; 100-621, eff. 7-20-18; 100-863, eff. |
|
8-14-18; 101-10, eff. 6-5-19; 101-636, eff. 6-10-20.)
|
(415 ILCS 5/22.16b) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.16b)
|
Sec. 22.16b. (a) Beginning January 1, 1991, the Agency |
shall assess and
collect a fee from the owner or operator of |
each new municipal waste
incinerator. The fee shall be |
calculated by applying the rates established
from time to time |
for the disposal of solid waste at sanitary landfills
under |
subdivision (b)(1) of Section 22.15 to the total amount of |
municipal
waste accepted for incineration at the new municipal |
waste incinerator.
The exemptions provided by this Act to the |
fees imposed under subsection
(b) of Section 22.15 shall not |
apply to the fee imposed by this Section.
|
The owner or operator of any new municipal waste |
incinerator permitted
after January 1, 1990, but before July |
1, 1990 by the Agency for the
development or operation of a new |
municipal waste incinerator shall be exempt
from this fee, but |
shall include the following conditions:
|
(1) The owner or operator shall provide information |
programs to those
communities serviced by the owner or |
operator concerning recycling and
separation of waste not |
suitable for incineration.
|
(2) The owner or operator shall provide information |
programs to those
communities serviced by the owner or |
operator concerning the Agency's
household hazardous waste |
collection program and participation in that program.
|
|
For the purposes of this Section, "new municipal waste |
incinerator" means
a municipal waste incinerator initially |
permitted for development or
construction on or after January |
1, 1990.
|
Amounts collected under this subsection shall be deposited |
into the
Municipal Waste Incinerator Tax Fund, which is hereby |
established as an
interest-bearing special fund in the State |
Treasury. Monies in the Fund
may be used, subject to |
appropriation:
|
(1) by the Agency Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity to fund its
public information programs on
|
recycling in those communities served by new municipal |
waste incinerators; and
|
(2) by the Agency to fund its household hazardous |
waste collection
activities in those communities served by |
new municipal waste incinerators.
|
(b) Any permit issued by the Agency for the development or |
operation of
a new municipal waste incinerator shall include |
the following conditions:
|
(1) The incinerator must be designed to provide |
continuous monitoring
while in operation, with direct |
transmission of the resultant data to the
Agency, until |
the Agency determines the best available control |
technology
for monitoring the data. The Agency shall |
establish the
test methods, procedures and averaging |
periods, as certified by the USEPA
for solid waste |
|
incinerator units, and the form and frequency of reports
|
containing results of the monitoring. Compliance and |
enforcement shall be
based on such reports. Copies of the |
results of such
monitoring shall be maintained on file at |
the facility concerned for one
year, and copies shall be |
made available for inspection and copying by
interested |
members of the public during business hours.
|
(2) The facility shall comply with the emission limits |
adopted by the
Agency under subsection (c).
|
(3) The operator of the facility shall take reasonable |
measures to
ensure that waste accepted for incineration |
complies with all legal
requirements for incineration. The |
incinerator operator shall establish
contractual |
requirements or other notification and inspection |
procedures
sufficient to assure compliance with this |
subsection (b)(3) which may
include, but not be limited |
to, routine inspections of waste, lists of
acceptable and |
unacceptable waste provided to haulers and notification to |
the
Agency when the facility operator rejects and sends |
loads away. The
notification shall contain at least the |
name of the hauler and the site
from where the load was |
hauled.
|
(4) The operator may not accept for incineration any |
waste generated
or collected in a municipality that has |
not implemented a recycling
plan or is party to an |
implemented county plan, consistent with State goals
and |
|
objectives. Such plans shall include provisions for |
collecting,
recycling or diverting from landfills and |
municipal incinerators landscape
waste, household |
hazardous waste and batteries. Such provisions may be
|
performed at the site of the new municipal incinerator.
|
The Agency, after careful scrutiny of a permit application |
for the
construction, development or operation of a new |
municipal waste incinerator,
shall deny the permit if (i) the |
Agency finds in the permit application
noncompliance with the |
laws and rules of the State or (ii) the application
indicates |
that the mandated air emissions standards will not be reached |
within
six months of the proposed municipal waste incinerator |
beginning operation.
|
(c) The Agency shall adopt specific limitations on the |
emission of
mercury, chromium, cadmium and lead, and good |
combustion practices, including
temperature controls from |
municipal waste incinerators pursuant to Section 9.4
of the |
Act.
|
(d) The Agency shall establish household hazardous waste |
collection
centers in appropriate places in this State. The |
Agency may operate and
maintain the centers itself or may |
contract with other parties for that
purpose. The Agency shall |
ensure that the wastes collected are properly
disposed of. The |
collection centers may charge fees for their services,
not to |
exceed the costs incurred. Such collection centers shall not |
(i) be
regulated as hazardous waste facilities under RCRA nor |
|
(ii) be subject to
local siting approval under Section 39.2 if |
the local governing authority
agrees to waive local siting |
approval procedures.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
|
(415 ILCS 5/55.3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1055.3)
|
Sec. 55.3. (a) Upon finding that an accumulation of used |
or waste tires
creates an immediate danger to health, the |
Agency may take action pursuant
to Section 34 of this Act.
|
(b) Upon making a finding that an accumulation of used or |
waste tires
creates a hazard posing a threat to public health |
or the environment, the
Agency may undertake preventive or |
corrective action in accordance with
this subsection. Such |
preventive or corrective action may consist of any
or all of |
the following:
|
(1) Treating and handling used or waste tires and |
other infested
materials within the area for control of |
mosquitoes and other disease vectors.
|
(2) Relocation of ignition sources and any used or |
waste tires within
the area for control and prevention of |
tire fires.
|
(3) Removal of used and waste tire accumulations from |
the area.
|
(4) Removal of soil and water contamination related to |
tire accumulations.
|
(5) Installation of devices to monitor and control |
|
groundwater and
surface water contamination related to |
tire accumulations.
|
(6) Such other actions as may be authorized by Board |
regulations.
|
(c) The Agency may, subject to the availability of |
appropriated funds,
undertake a consensual removal action for |
the removal of up to 1,000
used or waste tires at no cost to |
the owner according to the
following requirements:
|
(1) Actions under this subsection shall be taken |
pursuant to a written
agreement between the Agency and the |
owner of the tire accumulation.
|
(2) The written agreement shall at a minimum specify:
|
(i) that the owner relinquishes any claim of an |
ownership interest in
any tires that are removed, or |
in any proceeds from their sale;
|
(ii) that tires will no longer be allowed to be |
accumulated at the site;
|
(iii) that the owner will hold harmless the Agency |
or any employee or
contractor utilized by the Agency |
to effect the removal, for any damage to
property |
incurred during the course of action under this |
subsection, except
for gross negligence or intentional |
misconduct; and
|
(iv) any conditions upon or assistance required |
from the owner to assure
that the tires are so located |
or arranged as to facilitate their removal.
|
|
(3) The Agency may by rule establish conditions and |
priorities for
removal of used and waste tires under this |
subsection.
|
(4) The Agency shall prescribe the form of written |
agreements under
this subsection.
|
(d) The Agency shall have authority to provide notice to |
the owner
or operator, or both, of a site where used or waste |
tires are located and to
the owner or operator, or both, of the |
accumulation of tires at the site,
whenever the Agency finds |
that the used or waste tires pose a threat to
public health or |
the environment, or that there is no owner or
operator |
proceeding in accordance with a tire removal agreement |
approved
under Section 55.4.
|
The notice provided by the Agency shall include the |
identified
preventive or corrective action, and shall provide |
an opportunity for the
owner or operator, or both, to perform |
such action.
|
For sites with more than 250,000 passenger tire |
equivalents, following the
notice
provided for by this |
subsection (d), the Agency may enter into a written
|
reimbursement agreement with the owner or operator of the |
site. The agreement
shall
provide a schedule for the owner or |
operator to reimburse the Agency for costs
incurred for |
preventive or corrective action, which shall not exceed 5 |
years in
length.
An owner or operator making payments under a |
written reimbursement agreement
pursuant to this subsection |
|
(d) shall not be liable for punitive damages under
subsection |
(h) of this Section.
|
(e) In accordance with constitutional limitations,
the |
Agency shall have authority to enter at all reasonable times
|
upon any private or public property for the purpose of taking |
whatever
preventive or corrective action is necessary and |
appropriate in accordance
with the provisions of this Section, |
including but not limited to removal,
processing or treatment |
of used or waste tires, whenever the Agency finds
that used or |
waste tires pose a threat to public health or the environment.
|
(f) In undertaking preventive, corrective or consensual |
removal action
under this Section the Agency may consider use |
of the following: rubber
reuse alternatives, shredding or |
other conversion through use of mobile or
fixed facilities, |
energy recovery through burning or incineration, and
landfill |
disposal. To the extent practicable, the Agency shall consult |
with
the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity |
regarding the availability
of alternatives to landfilling used |
and waste tires, and shall make every
reasonable effort to |
coordinate tire cleanup projects with applicable programs
that |
relate to such alternative practices.
|
(g) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, the |
owner or operator
of any site or accumulation of used or waste |
tires at which the Agency has
undertaken
corrective or |
preventive action under this Section shall be liable for all
|
costs thereof incurred by the State of Illinois, including |
|
reasonable costs of
collection. Any monies received by the |
Agency hereunder shall be deposited
into the Used Tire |
Management Fund. The Agency may in its discretion store,
|
dispose of or convey the tires that are removed from an area at |
which it
has undertaken a corrective, preventive or consensual |
removal action, and
may sell or store such tires and other |
items, including but not limited to
rims, that are removed |
from the
area. The net proceeds of any sale shall be credited |
against the liability
incurred by the owner or operator for |
the costs of any preventive or
corrective action.
|
(h) Any person liable to the Agency for costs incurred |
under subsection
(g) of this Section may be liable to the State |
of Illinois for punitive
damages in an amount at least equal |
to, and not more than 2 times, the costs
incurred by the State |
if such person failed without sufficient cause to
take |
preventive or corrective action pursuant to notice issued |
under
subsection (d) of this Section.
|
(i) There shall be no liability under subsection (g) of |
this Section for
a person otherwise liable who can establish |
by a preponderance of the
evidence that the hazard created by |
the tires was caused solely by:
|
(1) an act of God;
|
(2) an act of war; or
|
(3) an act or omission of a third party other than an |
employee or agent,
and other than a person whose act or |
omission occurs in connection with a
contractual |
|
relationship with the person otherwise liable.
|
For the purposes of this subsection, "contractual |
relationship" includes,
but is not limited to, land contracts, |
deeds and other instruments
transferring title or possession, |
unless the real property upon which the
accumulation is |
located was acquired by the defendant after the
disposal or |
placement of used or waste tires on, in or at the property and
|
one or more of the following circumstances is also established |
by a
preponderance of the evidence:
|
(A) at the time the defendant acquired the |
property, the defendant did
not know and had no reason |
to know that any used or waste tires had been
disposed |
of or placed on, in or at the property, and the |
defendant
undertook, at the time of acquisition, all |
appropriate inquiries into the
previous ownership and |
uses of the property consistent with good commercial
|
or customary practice in an effort to minimize |
liability;
|
(B) the defendant is a government entity which |
acquired the property by
escheat or through any other |
involuntary transfer or acquisition, or
through the |
exercise of eminent domain authority by purchase or
|
condemnation; or
|
(C) the defendant acquired the property by |
inheritance or bequest.
|
(j) Nothing in this Section shall affect or modify the |
|
obligations or
liability of any person under any other |
provision of this Act, federal law,
or State law, including |
the common law, for injuries, damages or losses
resulting from |
the circumstances leading to Agency action under this Section.
|
(k) 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 |
subsection (c) of Section 33 of this Act
shall not apply to any |
such action.
|
(l) The Agency shall, when feasible, consult with the |
Department of
Public Health prior to taking any action to |
remove or treat an infested
tire accumulation for control of |
mosquitoes or other disease vectors. The
Agency may by |
contract or agreement secure the services of the Department
of |
Public Health, any local public health department, or any |
other
qualified person in treating any such infestation as |
part of an emergency
or preventive action.
|
(m) Neither the State, the Agency, the Board, the |
Director, nor any
State employee shall be liable for any |
damage or injury arising out of or
resulting from any action |
taken under this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
|
(415 ILCS 5/55.7) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1055.7)
|
Sec. 55.7. The Agency Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity may adopt
regulations as necessary for the
|
|
administration of the grant and loan programs funded from the |
Used Tire
Management Fund, including but not limited to |
procedures and criteria for
applying for, evaluating, awarding |
and terminating grants and loans. The Agency
Department of |
Commerce and Economic Opportunity may by rule specify criteria
|
for providing grant assistance
rather than loan assistance; |
such criteria shall promote the expeditious
development of |
alternatives to the disposal of used tires, and the
efficient |
use of monies for assistance. Evaluation criteria may be
|
established by rule, considering such factors as:
|
(1) the likelihood that a proposal will lead to the |
actual collection
and processing of used tires and |
protection of the environment and public
health in |
furtherance of the purposes of this Act;
|
(2) the feasibility of the proposal;
|
(3) the suitability of the location for the proposed |
activity;
|
(4) the potential of the proposal for encouraging |
recycling and
reuse of resources; and
|
(5) the potential for development of new technologies |
consistent with the
purposes of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
|
(415 ILCS 5/58.14a) |
Sec. 58.14a. River Edge Redevelopment Zone Site |
Remediation Tax Credit Review. |
|
(a) Prior to applying for the River Edge Redevelopment |
Zone site remediation tax credit under subsection (n) of |
Section 201 of the Illinois Income Tax Act, a Remediation |
Applicant must first submit to the Agency an application for |
review of remediation costs. The Agency shall review the |
application in consultation with the Department of Commerce |
and Economic Opportunity . The application and review process |
must be conducted in accordance with the requirements of this |
Section and the rules adopted under subsection (g). A |
preliminary review of the estimated remediation costs for |
development and implementation of the Remedial Action Plan may |
be obtained in accordance with subsection (d). |
(b) No application for review may be submitted until a No |
Further Remediation Letter has been issued by the Agency and |
recorded in the chain of title for the site in accordance with |
Section 58.10. The Agency shall review the application to |
determine whether the costs submitted are remediation costs |
and whether the costs incurred are reasonable. The application |
must be on forms prescribed and provided by the Agency. At a |
minimum, the application must include the following: |
(1) information identifying the Remediation Applicant, |
the site for which the tax credit is being sought, and the |
date of acceptance of the site into the Site Remediation |
Program; |
(2) a copy of the No Further Remediation Letter with |
official verification that the letter has been recorded in |
|
the chain of title for the site and a demonstration that |
the site for which the application is submitted is the |
same site as the one for which the No Further Remediation |
Letter is issued; |
(3) a demonstration that the release of the regulated |
substances of concern for which the No Further Remediation |
Letter was issued were not caused or contributed to in any |
material respect by the Remediation Applicant. |
Determinations as to credit availability shall be made |
consistent with the Pollution Control Board rules for the |
administration and enforcement of Section 58.9 of this |
Act; |
(4) an itemization and documentation, including |
receipts, of the remediation costs incurred; |
(5) a demonstration that the costs incurred are |
remediation costs as defined in this Act and its rules; |
(6) a demonstration that the costs submitted for |
review were incurred by the Remediation Applicant who |
received the No Further Remediation Letter; |
(7) an application fee in the amount set forth in |
subsection (e) for each site for which review of |
remediation costs is requested and, if applicable, |
certification from the Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity that the site is located in a River Edge |
Redevelopment Zone; and |
(8) any other information deemed appropriate by the |
|
Agency. |
(c) Within 60 days after receipt by the Agency of an |
application meeting the requirements of subsection (b), the |
Agency shall issue a letter to the applicant approving, |
disapproving, or modifying the remediation costs submitted in |
the application. If the remediation costs are approved as |
submitted, then the Agency's letter must state the amount of |
the remediation costs to be applied toward the River Edge |
Redevelopment Zone site remediation tax credit. If an |
application is disapproved or approved with modification of |
remediation costs, then the Agency's letter must set forth the |
reasons for the disapproval or modification and must state the |
amount of the remediation costs, if any, to be applied toward |
the River Edge Redevelopment Zone site remediation tax credit. |
If a preliminary review of a budget plan has been obtained |
under subsection (d), then the Remediation Applicant may |
submit, with the application and supporting documentation |
under subsection (b), a copy of the Agency's final |
determination accompanied by a certification that the actual |
remediation costs incurred for the development and |
implementation of the Remedial Action Plan are equal to or |
less than the costs approved in the Agency's final |
determination on the budget plan. The certification must be |
signed by the Remediation Applicant and notarized. Based on |
that submission, the Agency is not required to conduct further |
review of the costs incurred for development and |
|
implementation of the Remedial Action Plan, and it may approve |
the costs as submitted.
Within 35 days after the receipt of an |
Agency letter disapproving or modifying an application for |
approval of remediation costs, the Remediation Applicant may |
appeal the Agency's decision to the Board in the manner |
provided for the review of permits under Section 40 of this |
Act. |
(d) A Remediation Applicant may obtain a preliminary |
review of estimated remediation costs for the development and |
implementation of the Remedial Action Plan by submitting a |
budget plan along with the Remedial Action Plan. The budget |
plan must be set forth on forms prescribed and provided by the |
Agency and must include, without limitation, line-item |
estimates of the costs associated with each line item (such as |
personnel, equipment, and materials) that the Remediation |
Applicant anticipates will be incurred for the development and |
implementation of the Remedial Action Plan. The Agency shall |
review the budget plan along with the Remedial Action Plan to |
determine whether the estimated costs submitted are |
remediation costs and whether the costs estimated for the |
activities are reasonable. |
If the Remedial Action Plan is amended by the Remediation |
Applicant or as a result of Agency action, then the |
corresponding budget plan must be revised accordingly and |
resubmitted for Agency review. |
The budget plan must be accompanied by the applicable fee |
|
as set forth in subsection (e). |
The submittal of a budget plan is deemed to be an automatic |
60-day waiver of the Remedial Action Plan review deadlines set |
forth in this Section and its rules. |
Within the applicable period of review, the Agency shall |
issue a letter to the Remediation Applicant approving, |
disapproving, or modifying the estimated remediation costs |
submitted in the budget plan. If a budget plan is disapproved |
or approved with modification of estimated remediation costs, |
then the Agency's letter must set forth the reasons for the |
disapproval or modification. |
Within 35 days after receipt of an Agency letter |
disapproving or modifying a budget plan, the Remediation |
Applicant may appeal the Agency's decision to the Board in the |
manner provided for the review of permits under Section 40 of |
this Act. |
(e) Any fee for a review conducted under this Section is in |
addition to any other fees or payments for Agency services |
rendered under the Site Remediation Program. The fees under |
this Section are as follows: |
(1) the fee for an application for review of |
remediation costs is $250 for each site reviewed; and |
(2) there is no fee for the review of the budget plan |
submitted under subsection (d). |
The application fee must be made payable to the State of |
Illinois, for deposit into the Hazardous Waste Fund.
Pursuant |
|
to appropriation, the Agency shall use the fees collected |
under this subsection for development and administration of |
the review program. |
(f) The Agency has the authority to enter into any |
contracts or agreements that may be necessary to carry out its |
duties and responsibilities under this Section. |
(g) The Agency shall adopt rules prescribing procedures |
and standards for its administration of this Section. Prior to |
the
effective date of rules adopted under this Section, the |
Agency may conduct reviews of applications under this Section. |
The Agency may publish informal guidelines concerning this |
Section to provide guidance.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-454, eff. 8-27-07.)
|
(415 ILCS 5/58.15)
|
Sec. 58.15. Brownfields Programs.
|
(A) Brownfields Redevelopment Loan Program.
|
(a) The Agency shall establish and administer a revolving |
loan program to
be known as the "Brownfields Redevelopment |
Loan Program" for the purpose of
providing loans to be used for |
site investigation, site remediation, or both,
at brownfields |
sites. All principal, interest, and penalty payments from |
loans
made under this subsection (A) shall be deposited into |
the
Brownfields Redevelopment
Fund and reused in accordance |
with this Section.
|
(b) General requirements for loans:
|
|
(1) Loans shall be at or below market interest rates |
in accordance with
a
formula set forth in regulations |
promulgated under subdivision (A)(c) of this
subsection |
(A).
|
(2) Loans shall be awarded subject to availability of |
funding based on
the
order of receipt of applications |
satisfying all requirements as set forth in
the |
regulations promulgated under subdivision (A)(c) of
this |
subsection (A).
|
(3) The maximum loan amount under this subsection (A)
|
for
any one project is
$1,000,000.
|
(4) In addition to any requirements or conditions |
placed on loans by
regulation, loan agreements under the |
Brownfields Redevelopment Loan Program
shall include the |
following requirements:
|
(A) the loan recipient shall secure the loan |
repayment obligation;
|
(B) completion of the loan repayment shall not |
exceed 15 years
or as otherwise prescribed by Agency |
rule; and
|
(C) loan agreements shall provide for a confession |
of judgment by the
loan recipient upon default.
|
(5) Loans shall not be used to cover expenses incurred |
prior to the
approval of the loan application.
|
(6) If the loan recipient fails to make timely |
payments or otherwise
fails to meet its obligations as |
|
provided in this subsection (A) or implementing
|
regulations, the Agency is authorized to pursue the |
collection of the amounts
past due, the outstanding loan |
balance, and the costs thereby incurred, either
pursuant |
to the Illinois State Collection Act of 1986 or by any |
other means
provided by law, including the taking of |
title, by foreclosure or otherwise,
to any project or |
other property pledged, mortgaged, encumbered, or |
otherwise
available as security or collateral.
|
(c) The Agency shall have the authority to enter into any |
contracts or
agreements that may be necessary to carry out its |
duties or responsibilities
under this subsection (A). The |
Agency shall have the authority
to promulgate
regulations |
setting forth procedures and criteria for administering the
|
Brownfields Redevelopment Loan Program. The regulations |
promulgated by the
Agency for loans under this subsection (A) |
shall include, but
need not be limited to,
the following |
elements:
|
(1) loan application requirements;
|
(2) determination of credit worthiness of the loan |
applicant;
|
(3) types of security required for the loan;
|
(4) types of collateral, as necessary, that can be |
pledged for the loan;
|
(5) special loan terms, as necessary, for securing the |
repayment of the
loan;
|
|
(6) maximum loan amounts;
|
(7) purposes for which loans are available;
|
(8) application periods and content of applications;
|
(9) procedures for Agency review of loan applications, |
loan approvals or
denials, and loan acceptance by the loan |
recipient;
|
(10) procedures for establishing interest rates;
|
(11) requirements applicable to disbursement of loans |
to loan
recipients;
|
(12) requirements for securing loan repayment |
obligations;
|
(13) conditions or circumstances constituting default;
|
(14) procedures for repayment of loans and delinquent |
loans including,
but
not limited to, the initiation of |
principal and interest payments following
loan acceptance;
|
(15) loan recipient responsibilities for work |
schedules, work plans,
reports, and record keeping;
|
(16) evaluation of loan recipient performance, |
including auditing and
access to sites and records;
|
(17) requirements applicable to contracting and |
subcontracting by the
loan recipient, including |
procurement requirements;
|
(18) penalties for noncompliance with loan |
requirements and conditions,
including stop-work orders, |
termination, and recovery of loan funds; and
|
(19) indemnification of the State of Illinois and the |
|
Agency by the
loan recipient.
|
(d) Moneys in the Brownfields Redevelopment Fund may be |
used as a source
of revenue or security for the principal and |
interest on revenue or general
obligation bonds issued by the |
State or any political subdivision or
instrumentality thereof, |
if the proceeds of those bonds will be deposited
into the Fund.
|
(B) Brownfields Site Restoration Program.
|
(a) (1) The Agency , with the assistance of the Department |
of Commerce
and Economic Opportunity, must establish and |
administer a
program for the payment of remediation costs |
to be known as the Brownfields
Site Restoration Program. |
The Agency, through
the Program, shall provide
Remediation |
Applicants with financial assistance for the investigation |
and
remediation of abandoned or underutilized properties. |
The investigation and
remediation shall be performed in |
accordance with this Title XVII of this Act.
|
(2) For each State fiscal year in which funds are made |
available to the
Agency for payment under this subsection |
(B), the Agency must,
subject to the availability of |
funds, allocate 20% of the
funds to be available to |
Remediation Applicants within counties with
populations |
over 2,000,000. The
remaining funds must be made available |
to all other Remediation Applicants in
the State.
|
(3) The Agency must not approve payment in excess of |
$750,000 to a
Remediation Applicant for remediation costs |
|
incurred at a remediation site.
Eligibility must be |
determined based on a minimum capital investment in the
|
redevelopment of the site, and payment amounts must not |
exceed the net
economic benefit to the State of the |
remediation project. In addition to these
limitations, the |
total payment to be made to an applicant must not exceed an
|
amount equal to 20% of the capital investment at the site.
|
(4) Only those remediation projects for which a No |
Further Remediation
Letter is issued by the Agency after |
December 31, 2001 are eligible to
participate in the |
Brownfields Site Restoration Program. The program does not
|
apply to any sites that have received a No Further |
Remediation Letter prior to
December 31, 2001 or for costs |
incurred prior to the Agency Department of Commerce and |
Economic Opportunity (formerly Department of Commerce and
|
Community Affairs) approving a
site eligible for the |
Brownfields Site Restoration Program.
|
(5) Brownfields Site Restoration Program funds shall |
be subject to
availability of funding and distributed |
based on the order of receipt of
applications satisfying |
all requirements as set forth in this Section.
|
(b) Prior to applying to the Agency for payment, a |
Remediation Applicant
shall first submit to the
Agency its |
proposed remediation costs. The Agency shall make a
|
pre-application assessment, which is not to be binding upon |
the Department of
Commerce and Economic Opportunity or upon |
|
future review of the project, relating
only to whether the |
Agency has adequate funding to
reimburse the applicant for the |
remediation costs if the applicant is found to
be eligible for |
reimbursement of remediation costs. If the Agency determines
|
that it is likely to have adequate funding to reimburse the |
applicant for
remediation costs, the Remediation Applicant may |
then submit to the Agency
Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity an
application for review of eligibility. The |
Agency Department must review the
eligibility application to |
determine whether the Remediation Applicant is
eligible for |
the payment. The application must be on forms prescribed and
|
provided by the Agency Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity . At a minimum,
the application must include the
|
following:
|
(1) Information identifying the Remediation Applicant |
and the site for
which the payment is being sought and the |
date of acceptance into the Site
Remediation Program.
|
(2) Information demonstrating that the site for which |
the payment is
being
sought is abandoned or underutilized |
property. "Abandoned property" means
real
property |
previously used for, or that has the potential to be used |
for,
commercial or industrial purposes that reverted to |
the ownership of the State,
a county or municipal |
government, or an agency thereof, through donation,
|
purchase, tax delinquency, foreclosure, default, or |
settlement, including
conveyance by deed in lieu of |
|
foreclosure; or privately owned property that
has been |
vacant for a period of not less than 3 years from the time |
an
application is made to the Agency Department of |
Commerce and Economic Opportunity .
"Underutilized |
property" means real
property of which less than 35% of |
the commercially usable space of the
property
and |
improvements thereon are used for their most commercially |
profitable and
economically productive uses.
|
(3) Information demonstrating that remediation of the |
site for which the
payment is being sought will result in a |
net economic benefit to the State of
Illinois. The "net |
economic benefit" must be determined based on factors
|
including, but not limited to, the capital investment, the |
number of jobs
created, the number of jobs retained if it |
is demonstrated the jobs would
otherwise be lost, capital |
improvements, the number of construction-related
jobs, |
increased sales, material purchases, other increases in |
service and
operational expenditures, and other factors |
established by the Agency Department of
Commerce and |
Economic Opportunity .
Priority must be given to sites |
located in areas with high levels of poverty,
where the |
unemployment rate exceeds the State average, where an |
enterprise zone
exists, or where the area is otherwise |
economically depressed as determined by
the Agency |
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity .
|
(4) An application fee in the amount set forth in |
|
subdivision (B)(c)
for each
site for which review of an |
application is being sought.
|
(c) The fee for eligibility reviews conducted by the |
Agency Department of
Commerce
and Economic Opportunity under |
this subsection (B) is $1,000 for each site
reviewed. The
|
application fee must be made payable to the Agency
Department |
of
Commerce and Economic Opportunity for deposit into the |
Brownfields Redevelopment Workforce, Technology, and
Economic |
Development Fund. These application fees shall be used by the |
Agency
Department
for administrative expenses incurred under |
this subsection (B).
|
(d) Within 60 days after receipt by the Agency Department |
of Commerce and
Economic Opportunity of an application meeting
|
the requirements of subdivision (B)(b), the Agency Department
|
of Commerce and Economic Opportunity must issue a letter to |
the
applicant approving the application, approving the |
application with
modifications, or disapproving the |
application. If the application is
approved or approved with |
modifications, the Agency's Department of Commerce and
|
Economic Opportunity's letter must also
include its |
determination of the
"net economic benefit" of the remediation |
project and the maximum amount of the
payment to be made |
available to the applicant for remediation costs. The
payment |
by the Agency under this subsection (B) must not exceed
the |
"net economic
benefit" of the remediation project , as |
determined by the Department of
Commerce and Economic |
|
Opportunity .
|
(e) An application for a review of remediation costs must |
not be submitted
to the Agency unless the Agency Department of |
Commerce and
Economic Opportunity has
determined the |
Remediation Applicant is
eligible under subdivision (B)(d). If |
the Agency Department of
Commerce and Economic Opportunity has |
determined that a
Remediation Applicant is eligible under |
subdivision (B)(d),
the Remediation
Applicant may submit an |
application for payment to the Agency under this
subsection |
(B). Except as provided in subdivision (B)(f),
an
application |
for
review of remediation costs must not be submitted until a |
No Further
Remediation Letter has been issued by the Agency |
and recorded in the chain of
title for the site in accordance |
with Section 58.10. The Agency must review
the application to |
determine whether the costs submitted are remediation costs
|
and whether the costs incurred are reasonable. The application |
must be on
forms prescribed and provided by the Agency. At a |
minimum, the application
must include the following:
|
(1) Information identifying the Remediation Applicant |
and the site for
which the payment is being sought and the |
date of acceptance of the site into
the Site Remediation |
Program.
|
(2) A copy of the No Further Remediation Letter with |
official
verification
that the letter has been recorded in |
the chain of title for the site and a
demonstration that |
the site for which the application is submitted is the |
|
same
site as the one for which the No Further Remediation |
Letter is issued.
|
(3) A demonstration that the release of the regulated |
substances of
concern for which the No Further Remediation |
Letter was issued was not caused
or contributed to in any |
material respect by the Remediation Applicant. The
Agency |
must make determinations as to reimbursement availability |
consistent
with rules
adopted by the Pollution Control |
Board for the administration and enforcement
of Section |
58.9 of this Act.
|
(4) A copy of the Agency's Department of Commerce and |
Economic Opportunity's letter
approving eligibility, |
including the net economic benefit of the remediation
|
project.
|
(5) An itemization and documentation, including |
receipts, of the
remediation costs incurred.
|
(6) A demonstration that the costs incurred are |
remediation costs as
defined in this Act and rules adopted |
under this Act.
|
(7) A demonstration that the costs submitted for |
review were incurred by
the Remediation Applicant who |
received the No Further Remediation Letter.
|
(8) An application fee in the amount set forth in |
subdivision (B)(j)
for each
site for which review of |
remediation costs is requested.
|
(9) Any other information deemed appropriate by the |
|
Agency.
|
(f) An application for review of remediation costs may be |
submitted to the
Agency prior to the issuance of a No Further |
Remediation Letter if the
Remediation Applicant has a Remedial |
Action Plan approved by the Agency under
the terms of which the |
Remediation Applicant will remediate groundwater for
more than |
one year. The Agency must review the application to determine
|
whether the costs submitted are remediation costs and whether |
the costs
incurred are reasonable. The application must be on |
forms prescribed and
provided by the Agency. At a minimum, the |
application must include the
following:
|
(1) Information identifying the Remediation Applicant |
and the site for
which the payment is being sought and the |
date of acceptance of the site into
the Site Remediation |
Program.
|
(2) A copy of the Agency letter approving the Remedial |
Action Plan.
|
(3) A demonstration that the release of the regulated |
substances of
concern for which the Remedial Action Plan |
was approved was not caused or
contributed to in any |
material respect by the Remediation Applicant. The
Agency |
must make determinations as to reimbursement availability |
consistent
with rules
adopted by the Pollution Control |
Board for the administration and enforcement
of Section |
58.9 of this Act.
|
(4) A copy of the Agency's Department of Commerce and |
|
Economic Opportunity's letter
approving eligibility, |
including the net economic benefit of the remediation
|
project.
|
(5) An itemization and documentation, including |
receipts, of the
remediation costs incurred.
|
(6) A demonstration that the costs incurred are |
remediation costs as
defined in this Act and rules adopted |
under this Act.
|
(7) A demonstration that the costs submitted for |
review were incurred by
the Remediation Applicant who |
received approval of the Remediation Action
Plan.
|
(8) An application fee in the amount set forth in |
subdivision (B)(j)
for each
site for which review of |
remediation costs is requested.
|
(9) Any other information deemed appropriate by the |
Agency.
|
(g) For a Remediation Applicant seeking a payment under |
subdivision
(B)(f),
until the Agency issues a No Further |
Remediation Letter for the site, no more
than 75% of the |
allowed payment may be claimed by the Remediation Applicant.
|
The remaining 25% may be claimed following the issuance by the |
Agency of a
No Further Remediation Letter for the site. For a |
Remediation Applicant
seeking a payment under subdivision |
(B)(e), until the
Agency issues a No Further
Remediation |
Letter for the site, no payment may be
claimed by the |
Remediation Applicant.
|
|
(h) (1) Within 60 days after receipt by the Agency of an |
application
meeting the requirements of subdivision (B)(e) |
or (B)(f),
the Agency must issue a
letter to the applicant |
approving, disapproving, or modifying the remediation
|
costs submitted in the application. If an application is |
disapproved or
approved with modification of remediation |
costs, then the Agency's letter must
set forth the reasons |
for the disapproval or modification.
|
(2) If a preliminary review of a budget plan has been |
obtained under
subdivision (B)(i), the Remediation |
Applicant may submit, with the application
and
supporting |
documentation under subdivision (B)(e) or (B)(f), a copy |
of the
Agency's
final determination accompanied by a |
certification that the actual remediation
costs incurred |
for the development and implementation of the Remedial |
Action
Plan are equal to or less than the costs approved in |
the Agency's final
determination on the budget plan. The |
certification must be signed by the
Remediation Applicant |
and notarized. Based on that submission, the Agency is
not |
required to conduct further review of the costs incurred |
for development
and implementation of the Remedial Action |
Plan and may approve costs as
submitted.
|
(3) Within 35 days after receipt of an Agency letter |
disapproving or
modifying an application for approval of |
remediation costs, the Remediation
Applicant may appeal |
the Agency's decision to the Board in the manner provided
|
|
for the review of permits in Section 40 of this Act.
|
(i) (1) A Remediation Applicant may obtain a preliminary |
review of
estimated remediation costs for the development |
and implementation of the
Remedial Action Plan by |
submitting a budget plan along with the Remedial
Action |
Plan. The budget plan must be set forth on forms |
prescribed and
provided by the Agency and must include, |
but is not limited to, line item
estimates of the costs |
associated with each line item (such as personnel,
|
equipment, and materials) that the Remediation Applicant |
anticipates will be
incurred for the development and |
implementation of the Remedial Action Plan.
The Agency |
must review the budget plan along with the Remedial Action |
Plan to
determine whether the estimated costs submitted |
are remediation costs and
whether the costs estimated for |
the activities are reasonable.
|
(2) If the Remedial Action Plan is amended by the |
Remediation Applicant
or
as a result of Agency action, the |
corresponding budget plan must be revised
accordingly and |
resubmitted for Agency review.
|
(3) The budget plan must be accompanied by the |
applicable fee as set
forth
in subdivision (B)(j).
|
(4) Submittal of a budget plan must be deemed an |
automatic 60-day
waiver of the Remedial Action Plan review |
deadlines set forth in this
subsection (B)
and rules |
adopted under this subsection (B).
|
|
(5) Within the applicable period of review, the Agency |
must issue a
letter
to the Remediation Applicant |
approving, disapproving, or modifying the
estimated |
remediation costs submitted in the budget plan. If a |
budget plan is
disapproved or approved with modification |
of estimated remediation costs, the
Agency's letter must |
set forth the reasons for the disapproval or modification.
|
(6) Within 35 days after receipt of an Agency letter |
disapproving or
modifying a budget plan, the Remediation |
Applicant may appeal the Agency's
decision to the Board in |
the manner provided for the review of permits in
Section |
40 of this Act.
|
(j) The fees for reviews conducted by the Agency under |
this subsection (B)
are in
addition to any other fees or |
payments for Agency services rendered pursuant to
the Site |
Remediation Program and are as follows:
|
(1) The fee for an application for review of |
remediation costs is $1,000
for each site reviewed.
|
(2) The fee for the review of the budget plan |
submitted under
subdivision
(B)(i) is $500 for each site |
reviewed.
|
The application fee and the fee for the review of the |
budget plan must be
made payable to the State of Illinois, for
|
deposit into the Brownfields Redevelopment Fund.
|
(k) Moneys in the Brownfields Redevelopment Fund may be |
used for the
purposes of this Section, including payment for |
|
the costs of
administering this subsection (B).
Any moneys |
remaining in the Brownfields Site Restoration Program Fund on |
the
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 92nd General |
Assembly shall be
transferred to the Brownfields Redevelopment |
Fund.
Total payments made to all Remediation Applicants by the |
Agency for purposes of
this subsection (B) must not exceed |
$1,000,000 in State fiscal year 2002.
|
(l) The Department and the Agency is are authorized to |
enter into any
contracts
or
agreements that may be necessary |
to carry out the Agency's their duties and responsibilities
|
under this subsection (B).
|
(m) Within 6 months after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of
2002,
the Department of Commerce and |
Community Affairs (now Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity) and the Agency must propose
rules prescribing |
procedures and
standards for the administration of this |
subsection (B). Within 9 months after
receipt of the proposed |
rules, the Board shall adopt on second notice, pursuant
to |
Sections 27 and 28 of this Act and the Illinois Administrative |
Procedure
Act, rules that are consistent with this subsection |
(B). Prior to the
effective date
of rules adopted under this |
subsection (B), the Department of Commerce and
Community
|
Affairs (now Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity)
|
and the Agency may conduct
reviews of applications under this |
subsection (B) and the Agency is further
authorized
to |
distribute guidance documents on costs that are eligible or |
|
ineligible as
remediation costs.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-333, eff. 8-12-11.)
|
Section 960. The Solid Waste Planning and Recycling Act is |
amended by changing Section 7 as follows:
|
(415 ILCS 15/7) (from Ch. 85, par. 5957)
|
Sec. 7.
(a) Each county shall begin implementation of its |
waste
management plan, including the recycling program, within |
one year of
adoption of the plan. The county may enter into |
written agreements with
other persons, including a |
municipality or persons transporting municipal
waste on the |
effective date of this Act, pursuant to which the persons
|
undertake to fulfill some or all of the county's |
responsibilities under
this Act. A person who enters into an |
agreement shall be responsible with
the county for the |
implementation of such programs.
|
(b) In implementing the recycling program, consideration |
for the
collection, marketing and disposition of recyclable |
materials shall be
given to persons engaged in the business of |
recycling within the county on
the effective date of this Act, |
whether or not the persons were operating
for profit.
|
If a township within the county is operating a recycling |
program on the
effective date of the plan which substantially |
conforms with or exceeds the
requirements of the recycling |
program included in the plan, the township
may continue to |
|
operate its recycling program, and such operation shall
|
constitute, within the township, implementation of the |
recycling program
included in the plan. A township may at any |
time adopt and implement a
recycling program that is more |
stringent than that required by the county
waste management |
plan.
|
(c) The Agency Department shall assist counties in |
implementing recycling
programs under this Act, and may, |
pursuant to appropriation, make grants
and loans from the |
Solid Waste Management Fund to counties or other units of
|
local government for that purpose, to be used for capital |
assistance or for the payment of
recycling diversion credits |
or for other recycling program purposes, in
accordance with |
such guidelines as may be adopted by the Agency Department .
|
(Source: P.A. 97-333, eff. 8-12-11.)
|
Section 970. The Illinois Solid Waste Management Act is |
amended by changing Sections 2.1, 3, 3.1, 6, 6a, and 7 as |
follows:
|
(415 ILCS 20/2.1) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7052.1)
|
Sec. 2.1. Definitions. When used in this Act, unless the |
context
otherwise requires, the following terms have the |
meanings ascribed to them
in this Section:
|
"Agency" means the Environmental Protection Agency. |
"Department", when a particular entity is not specified, |
|
means (i) in
the case of a function to be performed on or after |
July 1, 1995 (the effective
date of the Department of Natural |
Resources Act) and until the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 102nd General Assembly , the Department of Commerce
|
and Community Affairs
(now Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity), as successor to the former Department of Energy |
and
Natural Resources under the Department of Natural |
Resources Act; or (ii) in
the case of a function required to be |
performed before July 1, 1995, the
former Illinois Department |
of Energy and Natural Resources.
|
"Deinked stock" means paper that has been processed to |
remove inks,
clays, coatings, binders and other contaminants.
|
"End product" means only those items that are designed to |
be used until
disposal; items designed to be used in |
production of a subsequent item are
excluded.
|
"High grade printing and writing papers" includes offset |
printing paper,
duplicator paper, writing paper (stationery), |
office paper, note
pads, xerographic paper, envelopes, form |
bond including computer
paper and carbonless forms, book |
papers, bond papers, ledger paper, book
stock and cotton fiber |
papers.
|
"Paper and paper products" means high grade printing and |
writing
papers, tissue products, newsprint, unbleached |
packaging and recycled
paperboard.
|
"Postconsumer material" means only those products |
generated by a business
or consumer which have served their |
|
intended end uses, and which have been
separated or diverted |
from solid waste; wastes generated during production
of an end |
product are excluded.
|
"Recovered paper material" means paper waste generated |
after the completion
of the papermaking process, such as |
postconsumer materials, envelope cuttings,
bindery trimmings, |
printing waste, cutting and other converting waste, butt
|
rolls, and mill wrappers, obsolete inventories, and rejected |
unused stock.
"Recovered paper material", however, does not |
include fibrous waste
generated during the manufacturing |
process such as fibers recovered from
waste water or trimmings |
of paper machine rolls (mill broke), or fibrous
byproducts of |
harvesting, extraction or woodcutting processes, or forest
|
residues such as bark.
|
"Recycled paperboard" includes recycled paperboard |
products, folding
cartons and pad backing.
|
"Recycling" means the process by which solid waste is |
collected,
separated and processed for reuse as either a raw |
material or a product
which itself is subject to recycling,
|
but does not include the combustion
of waste for energy |
recovery or volume reduction.
|
"Tissue products" includes toilet tissue, paper towels, |
paper napkins,
facial tissue, paper doilies, industrial |
wipers, paper bags and brown papers.
|
"Unbleached packaging" includes corrugated and fiber |
boxes.
|
|
"USEPA Guidelines for federal procurement" means all |
minimum recycled
content standards recommended by the U.S. |
Environmental Protection Agency.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
|
(415 ILCS 20/3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7053)
|
Sec. 3. State agency materials recycling program.
|
(a) All State agencies responsible for the maintenance of |
public lands in
the State shall, to the maximum extent |
feasible, use compost materials in all land maintenance
|
activities which are to be paid with public funds.
|
(a-5) All State agencies responsible for the maintenance |
of public lands in the State shall review its procurement |
specifications and policies to determine (1) if incorporating |
compost materials will help reduce stormwater run-off and |
increase infiltration of moisture in land maintenance |
activities and (2) the current recycled content usage and |
potential for additional recycled content usage by the Agency |
in land maintenance activities and report to the General |
Assembly by December 15, 2015. |
(b) The Department of Central Management Services, in |
coordination
with the Agency Department of Commerce and |
Economic Opportunity , shall implement
waste reduction |
programs, including source separation and collection, for
|
office wastepaper, corrugated containers, newsprint and mixed |
paper, in all
State buildings as appropriate and feasible. |
|
Such waste reduction programs
shall be designed to achieve |
waste reductions of at least 25% of
all such waste by December |
31, 1995, and at least 50% of all such waste by
December 31, |
2000. Any source separation and collection program
shall |
include, at a minimum, procedures for collecting and storing
|
recyclable materials, bins or containers for storing |
materials, and
contractual or other arrangements with buyers |
of recyclable materials. If
market conditions so warrant, the |
Department of Central Management
Services, in coordination |
with the Agency Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity , may modify programs developed pursuant to this |
Section.
|
The Department of Commerce and Community Affairs (now |
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity) shall conduct |
waste
categorization studies of all State facilities for |
calendar years 1991,
1995 and 2000. Such studies shall be |
designed to assist the Department of
Central Management |
Services to achieve the waste reduction goals
established in |
this subsection.
|
(c) Each State agency shall, upon consultation with the |
Agency Department of
Commerce and Economic Opportunity ,
|
periodically review its procurement procedures and |
specifications related
to the purchase of products or |
supplies. Such procedures and
specifications shall be modified |
as necessary to require the procuring
agency to seek out |
products and supplies that contain recycled materials,
and to |
|
ensure that purchased products or supplies are reusable, |
durable or
made from recycled materials whenever economically |
and practically
feasible. In choosing among products or |
supplies that contain recycled
material, consideration shall |
be given to products and supplies with the
highest recycled |
material content that is consistent with the effective and
|
efficient use of the product or supply.
|
(d) Wherever economically and practically feasible, the |
Department of
Central Management Services shall procure |
recycled paper and paper products
as follows:
|
(1) Beginning July 1, 1989, at least 10% of the
total |
dollar value of paper and paper products purchased by
the |
Department of Central Management Services shall be
|
recycled paper and paper products.
|
(2) Beginning July 1, 1992, at least 25% of the
total |
dollar value of paper and paper products purchased by
the |
Department of Central Management Services shall be
|
recycled paper and paper products.
|
(3) Beginning July 1, 1996, at least
40% of the total |
dollar value of paper and paper products
purchased by the |
Department of Central Management Services shall be
|
recycled paper and paper products.
|
(4) Beginning July 1, 2000, at least 50% of the total |
dollar value of
paper and paper products purchased by the |
Department of Central Management
Services shall be |
recycled paper and paper products.
|
|
(e) Paper and paper products purchased from private |
vendors
pursuant to printing contracts are not considered |
paper products for the
purposes of subsection (d). However, |
the Department of Central Management
Services shall report to |
the General Assembly on an annual
basis the total dollar value |
of printing contracts awarded to private
sector vendors that |
included the use of recycled paper.
|
(f)(1) Wherever economically and practically feasible, |
the recycled paper
and paper products referred to in |
subsection (d) shall contain postconsumer
or recovered |
paper materials as specified by paper category in this |
subsection:
|
(i) Recycled high grade printing and writing paper |
shall contain at
least 50% recovered paper material. |
Such recovered paper material, until
July 1, 1994, |
shall consist of at least 20% deinked stock or |
postconsumer
material; and beginning July 1, 1994, |
shall consist of at least 25%
deinked stock or |
postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, 1996, |
shall
consist of at least 30% deinked stock or |
postconsumer material; and
beginning July 1, 1998, |
shall consist of at least 40% deinked stock or
|
postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, 2000, |
shall consist of at
least 50% deinked stock or |
postconsumer material.
|
(ii) Recycled tissue products, until July 1, 1994, |
|
shall contain at
least 25% postconsumer material; and |
beginning July 1, 1994, shall contain
at least 30% |
postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, 1996, |
shall
contain at least 35% postconsumer material; and |
beginning July 1, 1998,
shall contain at least 40% |
postconsumer material; and beginning July 1,
2000, |
shall contain at least 45% postconsumer material.
|
(iii) Recycled newsprint, until July 1, 1994, |
shall contain at least
40% postconsumer material; and |
beginning July 1, 1994, shall contain at
least 50% |
postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, 1996, |
shall contain
at least 60% postconsumer material; and |
beginning July 1, 1998, shall
contain at least 70% |
postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, 2000,
|
shall contain at least 80% postconsumer material.
|
(iv) Recycled unbleached packaging, until July 1, |
1994, shall
contain at least 35% postconsumer |
material; and beginning July 1, 1994,
shall contain at |
least 40% postconsumer material; and beginning July 1,
|
1996, shall contain at least 45% postconsumer |
material; and beginning July
1, 1998, shall contain at |
least 50% postconsumer material; and beginning
July 1, |
2000, shall contain at least 55% postconsumer |
material.
|
(v) Recycled paperboard, until July 1, 1994, shall |
contain at least
80% postconsumer material; and |
|
beginning July 1, 1994, shall contain at
least 85% |
postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, 1996, |
shall contain
at least 90% postconsumer material; and |
beginning July 1, 1998, shall
contain at least 95% |
postconsumer material.
|
(2) For the purposes of this Section, "postconsumer |
material" includes:
|
(i) paper, paperboard, and fibrous wastes from |
retail stores, office
buildings, homes, and so forth, |
after the waste has passed through its end
usage as a |
consumer item, including used corrugated boxes, old |
newspapers,
mixed waste paper, tabulating cards, and |
used cordage; and
|
(ii) all paper, paperboard, and fibrous wastes |
that are diverted or
separated from the municipal |
solid waste stream.
|
(3) For the purposes of this Section, "recovered paper |
material" includes:
|
(i) postconsumer material;
|
(ii) dry paper and paperboard waste generated |
after completion of the
papermaking process (that is, |
those manufacturing operations up to and
including the |
cutting and trimming of the paper machine reel into |
smaller
rolls or rough sheets), including envelope |
cuttings, bindery trimmings, and
other paper and |
paperboard waste resulting from printing, cutting,
|
|
forming, and other converting operations, or from bag, |
box and carton
manufacturing, and butt rolls, mill |
wrappers, and rejected unused stock; and
|
(iii) finished paper and paperboard from obsolete |
inventories of
paper and paperboard manufacturers, |
merchants, wholesalers, dealers,
printers, converters, |
or others.
|
(g) The Department of Central Management Services may
|
adopt regulations to carry out the provisions and
purposes of |
this Section.
|
(h) Every State agency shall, in its procurement |
documents, specify
that, whenever economically and practically |
feasible, a product to be
procured must consist, wholly or in |
part, of recycled materials, or be
recyclable or reusable in |
whole or in part. When applicable, if state
guidelines are not |
already prescribed, State agencies shall follow USEPA
|
guidelines for federal procurement.
|
(i) All State agencies shall cooperate with the Department |
of Central
Management Services in carrying out this Section. |
The Department of
Central Management Services may enter into |
cooperative purchasing
agreements with other governmental |
units in order to obtain volume
discounts, or for other |
reasons in accordance with the Governmental Joint
Purchasing |
Act, or in accordance with the Intergovernmental Cooperation |
Act
if governmental units of other states or the federal |
government are involved.
|
|
(j) The Department of Central Management Services shall |
submit an annual
report to the General Assembly concerning its |
implementation of the
State's collection and recycled paper |
procurement programs. This report
shall include a description |
of the actions that the Department of Central
Management |
Services has taken in the previous fiscal year to implement |
this
Section. This report shall be submitted on or before |
November 1 of each year.
|
(k) The Department of Central Management Services, in
|
cooperation with all other appropriate departments and |
agencies of the
State, shall institute whenever economically |
and practically feasible the
use of re-refined motor oil in |
all State-owned motor vehicles and the use
of remanufactured |
and retread tires whenever such use is practical,
beginning no |
later than July 1, 1992.
|
(l) (Blank).
|
(m) The Department of Central Management Services, in |
coordination with
the Department of Commerce and Community |
Affairs (now Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity), |
has implemented an aluminum
can recycling program in all State |
buildings within 270 days of the effective
date of this |
amendatory Act of 1997. The program provides for (1) the
|
collection and storage of used aluminum cans in bins or other |
appropriate
containers made reasonably available to occupants |
and visitors of State
buildings and (2) the sale of used |
aluminum cans to buyers of recyclable
materials.
|
|
Proceeds from the sale of used aluminum cans shall be |
deposited into I-CYCLE
accounts maintained in the Facilities |
Management Revolving Fund and, subject
to appropriation, shall |
be used by the Department of Central Management
Services and |
any other State agency to offset the costs of implementing the
|
aluminum can recycling program under this Section.
|
All State agencies having an aluminum can recycling |
program in place shall
continue with their current plan. If a |
State agency has an existing recycling
program in place, |
proceeds from the aluminum can recycling program may be
|
retained and distributed pursuant to that program, otherwise |
all revenue
resulting from these programs shall be forwarded |
to Central Management
Services, I-CYCLE for placement into the |
appropriate account within the Facilities Management Revolving |
Fund, minus any operating costs associated with the
program.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-636, eff. 6-10-20.)
|
(415 ILCS 20/3.1) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7053.1)
|
Sec. 3.1. Institutions of higher learning.
|
(a) For purposes of this
Section "State-supported |
institutions of higher learning" or
"institutions" means the |
University of Illinois, Southern Illinois
University, the |
colleges and universities under the jurisdiction of the
Board |
of Governors of State Colleges and Universities, the colleges |
and
universities under the jurisdiction of the Board of |
Regents of Regency
Universities, and the public community |
|
colleges subject to the Public
Community College Act.
|
(b) Each State-supported institution of higher learning |
shall develop a
comprehensive waste reduction plan covering a |
period of 10 years
which addresses the management of solid |
waste generated by academic,
administrative, student housing |
and other institutional functions. The
waste reduction plan |
shall be developed by January 1, 1995. The
initial plan |
required under this Section shall be updated by the
|
institution every 5 years, and any proposed amendments to the |
plan shall be
submitted for review in accordance with |
subsection (f).
|
(c) Each waste reduction plan shall address, at a minimum, |
the
following topics: existing waste generation by volume, |
waste composition,
existing waste reduction and recycling |
activities, waste collection and
disposal costs, future waste |
management methods, and specific goals to
reduce the amount of |
waste generated that is subject to landfill disposal.
|
(d) Each waste reduction plan shall provide for recycling |
of
marketable materials currently present in the institution's |
waste stream,
including but not limited to landscape waste, |
corrugated cardboard,
computer paper, and white office paper, |
and shall provide for the
investigation of potential markets |
for other recyclable materials present in
the institution's |
waste stream. The recycling provisions of the
waste reduction |
plan shall be designed to achieve, by January 1, 2000, at
least |
a 40% reduction (referenced to a base year of 1987) in the |
|
amount
of solid waste that is generated by the institution and |
identified in the
waste reduction plan as being subject to |
landfill disposal.
|
(e) Each waste reduction plan shall evaluate the |
institution's
procurement policies and practices to eliminate |
procedures which
discriminate against items with recycled |
content, and to identify products
or items which are procured |
by the institution on a frequent or repetitive
basis for which |
products with recycled content may be substituted. Each
waste |
reduction plan shall prescribe that it will be the policy of
|
the institution to purchase products with recycled content |
whenever such
products have met specifications and standards |
of equivalent products which
do not contain recycled content.
|
(f) Each waste reduction plan developed in accordance with |
this
Section shall be submitted to the Agency Department of |
Commerce and Economic Opportunity for review and approval. The |
Agency's
Department's review shall be
conducted in cooperation |
with the Board of Higher Education and the
Illinois Community |
College Board.
|
(g) The Agency Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity shall provide
technical assistance, technical |
materials, workshops and other information
necessary to assist |
in the development and implementation of the
waste reduction |
plans. The Agency Department shall develop guidelines and
|
funding criteria for providing grant assistance to |
institutions for the
implementation of approved waste |
|
reduction plans.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
|
(415 ILCS 20/6) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7056)
|
Sec. 6. The Agency Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity shall be the lead agency for implementation of |
this Act and
shall have the following powers:
|
(a) To provide technical and educational assistance for |
applications of
technologies and practices which will minimize |
the land disposal of
non-hazardous solid waste; economic |
feasibility of implementation of solid
waste management |
alternatives; analysis of markets for recyclable materials
and |
energy products; application of the Geographic Information
|
System to provide analysis of natural resource, land use, and |
environmental
impacts; evaluation of financing and ownership |
options; and evaluation of
plans prepared by units of local |
government pursuant to Section 22.15 of
the Environmental |
Protection Act.
|
(b) (Blank).
|
(c) To provide loans or recycling and composting grants to |
businesses and
not-for-profit and governmental organizations |
for the purposes of increasing
the quantity of materials |
recycled or composted in Illinois; developing and
implementing
|
innovative recycling methods and technologies; developing and |
expanding
markets for recyclable materials; and increasing the |
self-sufficiency of
the recycling industry in Illinois. The |
|
Agency Department shall work with and
coordinate its |
activities with existing for-profit and not-for-profit
|
collection and recycling systems to encourage orderly growth |
in the supply
of and markets for recycled materials and to |
assist existing collection and
recycling efforts.
|
The Agency Department shall develop a public education |
program concerning the
importance of both composting and |
recycling in order to preserve landfill
space in Illinois.
|
(d) To establish guidelines and funding criteria for the |
solicitation of
projects under this Act, and to receive and |
evaluate applications for
loans or grants for solid waste |
management projects based upon such
guidelines and criteria. |
Funds may be loaned with or without interest.
|
(e) To support and coordinate solid waste research in |
Illinois, and to
approve the annual solid waste research |
agenda prepared by the University of
Illinois.
|
(f) To provide loans or grants for research, development |
and
demonstration of innovative technologies and practices, |
including but not
limited to pilot programs for collection and |
disposal of household wastes.
|
(g) To promulgate such rules and regulations as are |
necessary to carry
out the purposes of subsections (c), (d) |
and (f) of this Section.
|
(h) (Blank). To cooperate with the Environmental |
Protection Agency for the
purposes specified herein.
|
The Agency Department is authorized to accept any and all |
|
grants,
repayments of
interest and principal on loans, |
matching funds,
reimbursements, appropriations, income derived |
from investments, or other
things of value from the federal or |
state governments or from any
institution, person, |
partnership, joint venture, corporation, public or
private.
|
The Agency Department is authorized to use moneys |
available for that purpose, subject
to appropriation, |
expressly for the purpose of implementing a
loan program |
according to procedures established pursuant to this Act.
|
Those moneys shall be used by the Agency Department for the |
purpose of
financing additional projects and for the Agency's |
Department's administrative
expenses related thereto.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-621, eff. 7-20-18.)
|
(415 ILCS 20/6a) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7056a)
|
Sec. 6a. The Agency Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity shall:
|
(1) Work with nationally based consumer groups and |
trade associations to support the development of
|
nationally recognized logos which may be used to indicate |
whether a
container and any other consumer products which |
are claimed to be recyclable by a product manufacturer are |
recyclable, compostable, or biodegradable.
|
(2) Work with nationally based consumer groups and |
trade associations to
develop nationally recognized |
criteria for determining under what
conditions the logos |
|
may be used.
|
(3) Develop and conduct a public education and |
awareness campaign to
encourage the public to look for and |
buy products in containers which are
recyclable or made of |
recycled materials.
|
(4) Develop and prepare educational materials |
describing the benefits
and methods of recycling for |
distribution to elementary schools in Illinois.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-306, eff. 1-1-16 .)
|
(415 ILCS 20/7) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7057)
|
Sec. 7. It is the intent of this Act to provide the |
framework for a
comprehensive solid waste management program |
in Illinois.
|
The Department shall prepare and
submit to the Governor |
and the General Assembly on or before January 1,
1992, a report |
evaluating the effectiveness of the programs provided under
|
this Act and Section 22.14 of the Environmental Protection |
Act; assessing
the need for a continuation of existing |
programs, development and
implementation of new programs and |
appropriate funding mechanisms; and
recommending legislative |
and administrative action to fully implement a
comprehensive |
solid waste management program in Illinois.
|
The Department shall investigate the suitability and |
advisability of
providing tax incentives for Illinois |
businesses to use recycled products
and purchase or lease |
|
recycling equipment and shall report to the Governor
and the |
General Assembly by January 1, 1987 on the results of this
|
investigation.
|
By July 1, 1989, the Department shall
submit to the |
Governor and members of the General Assembly a waste reduction
|
report:
|
(a) that describes various mechanisms that could be |
utilized to
stimulate and enhance the reduction of |
industrial and post-consumer waste
in the State, including |
their advantages and disadvantages. The mechanisms
to be |
analyzed shall include, but not be limited to, incentives |
for
prolonging product life, methods for ensuring product |
recyclability, taxes
for excessive packaging, tax |
incentives, prohibitions on the use of certain
products, |
and performance standards for products; and
|
(b) that includes specific recommendations to |
stimulate and enhance
waste reduction in the industrial |
and consumer sector, including, but not
limited to, |
legislation, financial incentives and disincentives, and |
public
education.
|
The Agency Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity , with the cooperation of the State Board of |
Education , the Illinois
Environmental Protection Agency, and |
others as needed, shall develop,
coordinate and conduct an |
education program for
solid waste management and recycling. |
The program shall include, but not
be limited to, education |
|
for the general public, businesses, government,
educators and |
students.
|
The education program shall address, at a minimum, the |
following topics:
the solid waste management alternatives of |
recycling, composting, and
source reduction; resource |
allocation and depletion; solid waste planning;
reuse of |
materials; pollution prevention; and household hazardous |
waste.
|
The Agency Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity |
shall cooperate with
municipal and county governments,
|
regional school superintendents, educational educational |
service centers, local school
districts, and planning agencies |
and committees to coordinate local and
regional education |
programs and workshops and to expedite the exchange of
|
technical information.
|
By March 1, 1989, the Department shall prepare a report on |
strategies
for distributing and marketing landscape waste |
compost from centralized
composting sites operated by units of |
local government. The report shall,
at a minimum, evaluate the |
effects of product quality, assured supply, cost
and public |
education on the availability of compost, free delivery, and
|
public sales composting program. The evaluation of public |
sales programs
shall focus on direct retail sale of bagged |
compost at the site or special
distribution centers and bulk |
sale of finished compost to wholesalers for
resale.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-81, eff. 7-12-19.)
|
|
Section 975. The Recycled Newsprint Use Act is amended by |
adding Section 2002.03 and by changing Sections 2004, 2005, |
2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, and 2013 as follows: |
(415 ILCS 110/2002.03 new) |
Sec. 2002.03. Agency. "Agency" means the Environmental |
Protection Agency.
|
(415 ILCS 110/2004) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 9754)
|
Sec. 2004. Consumer usage certification. Each consumer of |
newsprint
within the State shall, on or before March 1 of each |
year, certify to the Agency
Department the amount in tons of |
every type of newsprint used by the
consumer of newsprint the |
previous year and the percentage of recycled
fibers present in |
each type of newsprint, so that the Agency Department can
|
calculate the recycled fiber usage for that consumer of |
newsprint.
All Illinois consumers of newsprint shall submit |
the first consumer usage
certificate by March 1, 1992, for the |
calendar year 1991. Only consumers of
newsprint who provide |
timely usage
certificates shall receive credit for recycled |
fiber usage.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-583, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
(415 ILCS 110/2005) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 9755)
|
Sec. 2005. Audit. Every consumer of newsprint who submits |
|
recycled
fiber usage certification may be subject to an audit |
by the Agency Department to
ensure that the recycled fiber |
percentage requirement was met.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-1443.)
|
(415 ILCS 110/2007) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 9757)
|
Sec. 2007. List identifying consumers and suppliers. For |
the purposes
of implementing and enforcing this Act, the |
Agency Department shall develop and
maintain a list that |
identifies every consumer of newsprint in Illinois and
every |
person who supplies a consumer of newsprint with newsprint. |
The Agency
Department may use information from local business |
permits, trade
publications, or any other relevant information |
to develop the list.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-1443.)
|
(415 ILCS 110/2008) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 9758)
|
Sec. 2008. Comparable quality standards.
|
(a) For the purposes of
implementing and enforcing this |
Act, the Agency Department shall set comparable
quality |
standards for each of the grades of newsprint available from |
all
suppliers of newsprint to determine the comparable quality |
of recycled
content newsprint to virgin material. The |
standards shall be based on the
average numerical standards of |
printing opacity, brightness level, and
cross machine tear |
strength.
|
|
(b) The Agency Department shall review its standards at |
least once every 2
years and determine whether they should be |
adjusted to reflect changes in
industry standards and |
practices, and if so, the Agency Department shall set new |
standards.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-1443.)
|
(415 ILCS 110/2010) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 9760)
|
Sec. 2010. Content of delivered newsprint. If any person |
knowingly
provides a consumer of newsprint with a false or |
misleading certificate concerning the
recycled fiber |
percentage of the delivered newsprint, the Agency Department , |
within
30 days of making this determination, shall refer the |
false or misleading
certificate to the Attorney General for |
prosecution for fraud.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-1443.)
|
(415 ILCS 110/2011) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 9761)
|
Sec. 2011. Consumer use certificate. Any consumer of |
newsprint who
knowingly provides the Agency Department with a |
false or misleading certificate
concerning the percentage of |
recycled fiber used commits a Class C
misdemeanor, and the |
Agency Department , within 30 days of making this
|
determination, shall refer the false or misleading certificate |
to the
Attorney General for prosecution.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-1443.)
|
|
(415 ILCS 110/2012) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 9762)
|
Sec. 2012. Prices; confidential proprietary information. |
Specific
information on newsprint prices included as part of a |
certificate submitted
to the Agency Department by newsprint |
consumers or suppliers is
proprietary information and shall |
not be made available to the general public.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-1443.)
|
(415 ILCS 110/2013) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 9763)
|
Sec. 2013. Mandatory recycling.
|
(a) If the Department determines that the 1993 annual
|
aggregate average of recycled fiber usage does not meet or |
exceed the goal
established in Section 2003 of this Act, the |
provisions of this
Section shall be implemented.
|
(b) During the year 1994 every consumer of newsprint in |
Illinois shall
be required to ensure that its recycled fiber |
usage is at least 28%, unless
he complies with subsection (c) |
or (d).
|
(c) If recycled content newsprint cannot be
found that |
meets quality standards established by the Agency Department , |
or if
recycled content newsprint cannot be found in sufficient |
quantities to
meet recycled fiber usage requirements within a |
given year, or if recycled
newsprint cannot be found at a price |
comparable to that of newsprint made
from 100% virgin fibers, |
the consumer of newsprint shall so certify to the Agency
|
|
Department and provide the Agency Department with the specific |
reasons for failing
to meet recycled fiber usage requirements.
|
(d) A consumer of newsprint who has made
previous |
contracts with newsprint suppliers before January 1, 1991, may |
be
exempt from the requirements of this Act if those
|
requirements are in conflict with the agreements set forth in |
the contract.
The consumer of newsprint must conform to the |
conditions of
this Act immediately upon expiration or |
nullification of the contract.
Contracts may not be entered |
into or renewed as an attempt to evade the
requirements of this |
Act.
|
(e) Any consumer of newsprint who knowingly provides the |
Agency Department with
a false or misleading certificate |
concerning why the consumer of newsprint
was unable to obtain |
the minimum amount of recycled content
newsprint needed to |
achieve the recycled fiber usage requirements, commits
a Class |
C misdemeanor, and the Agency Department , within 30 days of |
making this
determination, shall refer the false or misleading |
certificate to the
Attorney General for prosecution.
|
(f) Any person who knowingly violates subsection (b) of |
this Section is
guilty of a business offense punishable by a |
fine of not more than $1,000.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-655, eff. 7-30-98.)
|
Section 980. The Alternate Fuels Act is amended by |
changing Sections 15, 31, and 32 as follows:
|
|
(415 ILCS 120/15)
|
Sec. 15. Rulemaking. The Agency shall promulgate rules
and |
dedicate sufficient resources to implement the purposes of
|
Section 30 of this Act. Such rules shall be
consistent with the |
provisions of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 and any
|
regulations promulgated pursuant thereto. The Secretary of |
State may
promulgate rules to implement Section 35 of this |
Act. The Agency Department of
Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity may promulgate rules to implement Section 25 of
|
this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
|
(415 ILCS 120/31)
|
Sec. 31. Alternate Fuel Infrastructure Program. Subject to |
appropriation,
the Agency may
Department of Commerce and |
Community Affairs
(now Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity) shall establish a grant program to provide |
funding for the building of
E85 blend,
propane, at least 20% |
biodiesel blended fuel, and compressed natural gas (CNG) |
fueling facilities, including private
on-site fueling |
facilities, to be built within
the
covered area or in Illinois |
metropolitan areas over 100,000 in population.
The Agency
|
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity
shall be |
responsible for
reviewing the
proposals and awarding the |
grants.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 94-62, eff. 6-20-05.)
|
(415 ILCS 120/32)
|
Sec. 32. Clean Fuel Education Program. Subject to |
appropriation, the Agency
Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity ,
in cooperation with the Agency
and Chicago Area |
Clean Cities, may shall administer the Clean Fuel
Education |
Program, the
purpose
of which is to educate fleet |
administrators and Illinois' citizens about the
benefits of |
using
alternate fuels. The program shall include a media |
campaign.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
|
Section 995. The Prevailing Wage Act is amended by |
changing Section 2 as follows:
|
(820 ILCS 130/2) (from Ch. 48, par. 39s-2)
|
Sec. 2. This Act applies to the wages of laborers, |
mechanics and
other workers employed in any public works, as |
hereinafter defined, by
any public body and to anyone under |
contracts for public works. This includes any maintenance, |
repair, assembly, or disassembly work performed on equipment |
whether owned, leased, or rented.
|
As used in this Act, unless the context indicates |
otherwise:
|
"Public works" means all fixed works constructed or |
|
demolished by
any public body,
or paid for wholly or in part |
out of public funds. "Public works" as
defined herein includes |
all projects financed in whole
or in part with bonds, grants, |
loans, or other funds made available by or through the State or |
any of its political subdivisions, including but not limited |
to: bonds issued under the Industrial Project Revenue Bond
Act |
(Article 11, Division 74 of the Illinois Municipal Code), the |
Industrial
Building Revenue Bond Act, the Illinois Finance |
Authority Act,
the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority Act, |
or the Build Illinois Bond Act; loans or other funds made
|
available pursuant to the Build Illinois Act; loans or other |
funds made available pursuant to the Riverfront Development |
Fund under Section 10-15 of the River Edge Redevelopment Zone |
Act; or funds from the Fund for
Illinois' Future under Section |
6z-47 of the State Finance Act, funds for school
construction |
under Section 5 of the General Obligation Bond Act, funds
|
authorized under Section 3 of the School Construction Bond |
Act, funds for
school infrastructure under Section 6z-45 of |
the State Finance Act, and funds
for transportation purposes |
under Section 4 of the General Obligation Bond
Act. "Public |
works" also includes (i) all projects financed in whole or in |
part
with funds from the Environmental Protection Agency |
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity under the |
Illinois Renewable Fuels Development Program
Act for which |
there is no project labor agreement; (ii) all work performed |
pursuant to a public private agreement under the Public |
|
Private Agreements for the Illiana Expressway Act or the |
Public-Private Agreements for the South Suburban Airport Act; |
and (iii) all projects undertaken under a public-private |
agreement under the Public-Private Partnerships for |
Transportation Act. "Public works" also includes all projects |
at leased facility property used for airport purposes under |
Section 35 of the Local Government Facility Lease Act. "Public |
works" also includes the construction of a new wind power |
facility by a business designated as a High Impact Business |
under Section 5.5(a)(3)(E) of the Illinois Enterprise Zone |
Act.
"Public works" does not include work done directly by any |
public utility company, whether or not done under public |
supervision or direction, or paid for wholly or in part out of |
public funds. "Public works" also includes any corrective |
action performed pursuant to Title XVI of the Environmental |
Protection Act for which payment from the Underground Storage |
Tank Fund is requested. "Public works" does not include |
projects undertaken by the owner at an owner-occupied |
single-family residence or at an owner-occupied unit of a |
multi-family residence. "Public works" does not include work |
performed for soil and water conservation purposes on |
agricultural lands, whether or not done under public |
supervision or paid for wholly or in part out of public funds, |
done directly by an owner or person who has legal control of |
those lands.
|
"Construction" means all work on public works involving |
|
laborers,
workers or mechanics. This includes any maintenance, |
repair, assembly, or disassembly work performed on equipment |
whether owned, leased, or rented.
|
"Locality" means the county where the physical work upon |
public works
is performed, except (1) that if there is not |
available in the county a
sufficient number of competent |
skilled laborers, workers and mechanics
to construct the |
public works efficiently and properly, "locality"
includes any |
other county nearest the one in which the work or
construction |
is to be performed and from which such persons may be
obtained |
in sufficient numbers to perform the work and (2) that, with
|
respect to contracts for highway work with the Department of
|
Transportation of this State, "locality" may at the discretion |
of the
Secretary of the Department of Transportation be |
construed to include
two or more adjacent counties from which |
workers may be accessible for
work on such construction.
|
"Public body" means the State or any officer, board or |
commission of
the State or any political subdivision or |
department thereof, or any
institution supported in whole or |
in part by public funds,
and includes every county, city, |
town,
village, township, school district, irrigation, utility, |
reclamation
improvement or other district and every other |
political subdivision,
district or municipality of the state |
whether such political
subdivision, municipality or district |
operates under a special charter
or not.
|
"Labor organization" means an organization that is the |
|
exclusive representative of an
employer's employees recognized |
or certified pursuant to the National Labor Relations Act. |
The terms "general prevailing rate of hourly wages", |
"general
prevailing rate of wages" or "prevailing rate of |
wages" when used in
this Act mean the hourly cash wages plus |
annualized fringe benefits for training and
apprenticeship |
programs approved by the U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of
|
Apprenticeship and Training, health and welfare, insurance, |
vacations and
pensions paid generally, in the
locality in |
which the work is being performed, to employees engaged in
|
work of a similar character on public works.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1177, eff. 6-1-19 .)
|
Section 9995. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act |
makes changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by |
text that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a |
Section represented by multiple versions), the use of that |
text does not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the |
changes made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any |
other Public Act. |
Section 9997. Severability. The provisions of this Act are |
severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
|
Section 9999. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
|