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Public Act 102-1144 |
SB1794 Enrolled | LRB102 15982 HLH 21352 b |
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AN ACT concerning local 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 5. The Local Government Taxpayers' Bill of Rights |
Act is amended by changing Section 30 as follows:
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(50 ILCS 45/30)
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Sec. 30. Statute of limitations. Units of local
government |
have an obligation to review tax returns in a
timely manner and |
issue any determination of tax due as
promptly as possible so |
that taxpayers may make timely
corrections of future returns |
and minimize any interest
charges applied to tax |
underpayments. Each unit of local
government must provide |
appropriate statutes of limitation
for the determination and |
assessment of taxes covered by this
Act, provided, however, |
that a statute of limitations may not
exceed the following:
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(1) No notice of determination of tax due or
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assessment may be issued more than 5 4 years after the end
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of the calendar year for which the return for the period
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was filed or the end of the calendar year in which the
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return for the period was due, whichever occurs later. An |
audit or review that is timely performed under Section 35 |
of this Act or Section 8-11-2.5 of the Illinois Municipal |
Code shall toll the applicable 5-year period for a period |
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of not more than 1 year.
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(2) If any tax return was not filed or if during
any |
4-year period for which a notice of tax determination
or |
assessment may be issued by the unit of local
government |
the tax paid or remitted was less than 75% of
the tax due |
for that period, the statute of limitations
shall be no |
more than 6 years after the end of the
calendar year in |
which the return for the period was due
or the end of the |
calendar year in which the return for
the period was |
filed, whichever occurs later.
In the event that a unit of |
local government fails to
provide a statute of |
limitations, the maximum statutory
period provided in this |
Section applies.
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(3) The changes to this Section made by this amendatory |
Act of the 102nd General Assembly do not revive any |
determination and assessment of tax due where the statute of |
limitations has expired as of the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, but the changes |
do extend the statute of limitations for the determination and |
assessment of taxes where the statute of limitation has not |
expired as of the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
102nd General Assembly. |
This Section does not place any limitation on a unit of
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local government if a fraudulent tax return is filed.
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(Source: P.A. 91-920, eff. 1-1-01.)
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Section 10. The Illinois Municipal Code is amended by |
changing Section 8-11-2.5 as follows: |
(65 ILCS 5/8-11-2.5)
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Sec. 8-11-2.5. Municipal tax review; requests for |
information. |
(a) If a municipality has imposed a tax under Section |
8-11-2, then the municipality , which may act through its |
designated auditor or agent, may conduct an audit of tax |
receipts collected from the public utility that is subject to |
the tax
or that collects the tax from purchasers on behalf of |
the municipality to determine whether the amount of tax that |
was paid by the public utility was accurate.
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(b) Not more than once every 2 years, a municipality that |
has imposed a tax under Section 8-11-2 of this Act may, subject |
to the limitations and protections stated in Section 16-122 of |
the Public Utilities Act and in the Local Government |
Taxpayers' Bill of Rights Act, make a written request via |
e-mail to an e-mail address provided by the utility for any |
information from a utility in the format maintained by the |
public utility in the ordinary course of its business that the |
municipality reasonably requires in order to perform an audit |
under subsection (a). The information that may be requested by |
the municipality includes, without limitation: |
(1) in an electronic format used by the public utility |
in the ordinary course of its business, the |
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premises-specific and other information database used by |
the public utility to determine the amount of tax due to |
the municipality , for a time period that includes the year |
in which the request is made and not more than 6 years |
immediately preceding that year, as appropriate for the |
period being audited, and which shall include for each |
customer premises in the municipality: (i) the premises |
address and zip code; (ii) the classification of the |
premises as designated by the public utility, such as |
residential, commercial, or industrial; (iii) monthly |
usage information sufficient to calculate taxes due, in |
therms, kilowatts, minutes, or other such other unit of |
measurement used to calculate the taxes; (iv) the taxes |
actually assessed, collected, and remitted to the |
municipality; (v) the first date of service for the |
premises, if that date occurred within the period being |
audited; and (vi) any tax exemption claimed for the |
premises and any additional information that supports a |
specific tax exemption, if the municipality requests that |
information, including the customer name and other |
relevant data; however, a public utility that is an |
electric utility may not provide other customer-specific |
information to the municipality ; provided, however, that, |
if the municipality has requested customer-specific |
billing, usage, and load shape data from a public utility |
that is an electric utility and has not provided the |
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electric utility with the verifiable authorization |
required by Section 16-122 of the Public Utilities Act, |
then the electric utility shall remove from the database |
all customer-specific billing, usage, and load shape data |
before providing it to the municipality; and |
(2) the premises address for customer accounts that |
the public utility's records indicate are: (i) in a |
bordering municipality, township, or unincorporated area |
(other than the City of Chicago), provided that the |
municipality provides the public utility a list of such |
bordering jurisdictions; or (ii) in any zip code with |
boundaries that include or are adjacent to the requesting |
municipality provided that the municipality provides the |
public utility a list of those zip codes; this item (ii) |
applies to requests made on or after September 1, 2022. If |
any such customer is determined by the municipality and |
the utility to be located within the requesting |
municipality, then the public utility shall provide the |
additional information provided in paragraph (1) of this |
subsection (b). in a format used by the public utility in |
the ordinary course of its business, summary data, as |
needed by the municipality, to determine the unit |
consumption of utility services by providing the gross |
therms, kilowatts, minutes, or other units of measurement |
being taxed within the municipal jurisdiction and the |
gross revenues collected and the associated taxes |
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assessed . |
Following the municipality's receipt of the information |
provided by the public utility pursuant to paragraphs (1) or |
(2) of this subsection (b), if a question or issue arises that |
can only be addressed by accessing customer-specific or |
additional information not described in this Section, then the |
utility shall attempt to resolve the question or issue without |
disclosing any customer-specific information. If this process |
does not resolve the question or issue, then either the |
municipality or public utility can further pursue the matter |
before the Department of Revenue, which has the discretion to |
receive or share customer-specific information with the |
municipality as appropriate subject to confidentiality |
restrictions. |
(c) Each public utility must provide the information |
requested under subsection (b) within 45 days after the date |
of the request. : |
(1) 60 days after the date of the request if the |
population of the requesting municipality is 500,000 or |
less; or |
(2) 90 days after the date of the request if the |
population of the requesting municipality exceeds 500,000. |
The time in which a public utility must provide the |
information requested under subsection (b) may be extended by |
an agreement between the municipality and the public utility. |
If a public utility receives, during a single month, |
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information requests from more than 2 municipalities, or the |
aggregate population of the requesting municipalities is |
100,000 customers or more, the public utility is entitled to |
an additional 30 days to respond to those requests. |
(d) If an audit by the municipality or its agents finds an |
error by the public utility in the amount of taxes paid by the |
public utility, then the municipality must notify the public |
utility of the error. Any such notice must be issued pursuant |
to Section 30 of the Local Government Taxpayers' Bill of |
Rights Act or
a lesser period of time from the date the tax was |
due that may be specified in the municipal
ordinance imposing |
the tax. Upon such a notice, any audit shall be conducted |
pursuant to Section 35 of the Local Government Taxpayers' Bill |
of Rights Act subject to the timelines set forth in this |
subsection (d). The public utility must submit a written |
response within 60 days after the date the notice was |
postmarked stating that it has corrected the error or stating |
the reason that the error is inapplicable or inaccurate. The |
municipality then has 60 days after the receipt of the public |
utility's response to review and contest the conclusion of the |
public utility. If the parties are unable to agree on the |
disposition of the audit findings within 120 days after the |
notification of the error to the public utility, then either |
party may submit the matter for appeal as outlined in Section |
40 of the Local Government Taxpayers' Bill of Rights Act. If |
the appeals process does not produce a satisfactory result, |
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then either party may pursue the alleged error in a court of |
competent jurisdiction. |
(e) The public utility shall be liable to the municipality |
for unpaid taxes, including taxes that the public utility |
failed to properly bill to the customer subject to subsection |
paragraph (2) of subsection (e-10) of this Section. This |
subsection (e) does not limit a utility's right to an |
offsetting credit it would otherwise be entitled to, including |
that authorized by subsection (c) of Section 8-11-2 of the |
Code. To the extent that a public utility's errors in past tax |
collections and payments relate to premises located in an area |
of the municipality that was annexed on or after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, |
however, the public utility shall only be liable for such |
errors beginning 60 days after the date that the municipality |
provided the public utility notice of the annexation, provided |
that the public utility provides municipalities with an email |
address to send annexation notices. A copy of the annexation |
ordinance and the map filed with the County Clerk sent to the |
email address provided by the public utility shall be deemed |
sufficient notice, but other forms of notice may also be |
sufficient No public utility is liable for any error in past |
collections and payments that was unknown by it prior to the |
audit process unless (i) the error was due to negligence by the |
public utility in the collection or processing of required |
data and (ii) the municipality had not failed to respond in |
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writing on an accurate and timely basis to any written request |
of the public utility to review and correct information used |
by the public utility to collect the municipality's tax if a |
diligent review of such information by the municipality |
reasonably could have been expected to discover such error. |
If, however, an error in past collections or payments resulted |
in a customer, who should not have owed a tax to any |
municipality, having paid a tax to a municipality, then the |
customer may, to the extent allowed by Section 9-252 of the |
Public Utilities Act, recover the tax from the public utility, |
and any amount so paid by the public utility may be deducted by |
that public utility from any taxes then or thereafter owed by |
the public utility to that municipality . |
(e-5) Upon mutual agreement, a utility and municipality |
may use a web portal in lieu of email to receive notice of |
annexations and boundary changes. After December 31, 2025 for |
a gas public utility that serves more than 2,000,000 customers |
in Illinois and after December 31, 2022 for all other public |
utilities that serve more than 1,000,000 retail customers in |
Illinois, the public utilities shall provide a secure web |
portal for municipalities to use, and, thereafter, the web |
portals shall be used by all municipalities to notify the |
public utilities of annexations. The web portal must provide |
the municipality with an electronic record of all |
communications and attached documents that the municipality |
has submitted through the portal. |
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(e-10) (1) No later than August 1, 2023, the Department of |
Revenue shall develop and publish a written process to be used |
by each public utility and each municipality that imposes a |
tax under Section 8-11-2 of the Code, which may act through its |
designated auditor or agent, under which: |
(A) by December 31, 2024, and on a regular |
schedule thereafter to occur approximately every 5 |
years, each public utility shall work collaboratively |
with each municipality to develop and file with the |
Department of Revenue, a master list of all premises |
addresses in the municipality (including premises |
addresses with inactive accounts) that are subject to |
such tax and all accounts in the municipality that are |
exempt from such tax, provided that the final date for |
the first master list shall be extended, at the |
utility's request, to no later than December 31, 2026; |
(B) information is provided to the municipality to |
facilitate development of the master list including |
information described in paragraph (1) of subsection |
(b) of this Section regarding all accounts (including |
premises addresses with inactive accounts) that the |
public utility's records show are in the municipality |
and the premises addresses in (i) any bordering |
municipality, (ii) any bordering township, or (iii) |
any zip code that is in any part in the municipality or |
that borders the municipality; |
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(C) any dispute between the public utility and the |
municipality related to the master list will be |
resolved; |
(D) on a semi-annual basis following the |
development of the master list, each public utility |
shall provide to each municipality certain information |
that the municipality can use to nominate changes to |
the master list, including, but not limited to: (i) a |
list of any tax-related changes, such as the addition |
or removal of an exemption, or to the taxing |
jurisdiction, to any account on the master list; and |
(ii) new premises addresses within the municipality, |
any bordering municipality, in any bordering township, |
or in any zip code that is in any part in the |
municipality or that borders the municipality; |
(E) accounts nominated by the municipality to be |
added or deleted from the master list may be submitted |
to the public utility and related disputes will be |
resolved; |
(F) changes may be made to the master list; and |
(G) the utility may file a master list based |
solely on its records if the municipality fails to |
participate and such a municipality may request to |
restart the process prior to the end of the five-year |
cycle. |
(2) No public utility is liable for any error in tax |
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collections or payments due more than 60 days after the |
date that the first master list for the relevant |
municipality is filed with the Department of Revenue |
unless such error in tax collection or payment: |
(A) was related to a premises address on the |
master list at the time of the error; |
(B) was related to an area of the municipality |
annexed on or after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, notice |
of which was properly provided to the public utility |
pursuant to the procedures set forth in subsection |
(e); or |
(C) resulted from the public utility's failure to |
comply with the process established in this subsection |
(e-10). |
(3) If the public utility uses a portal as set forth in |
subsection (e-5), all lists, changes affecting tax |
collection and remission, proposed corrections, and |
reports shall be provided through such portal. |
(e-15) If a customer paid a tax to a municipality that the |
customer did not owe or was in excess of the tax the customer |
owed, then the customer may, to the extent allowed by Section |
9-252 of the Public Utilities Act, recover the tax or over |
payment from the public utility, and any amount so paid by the |
public utility may be deducted by that public utility from any |
taxes then or thereafter owed by the public utility to that |
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municipality. |
(e-20) (1) The Department of Revenue shall have the |
authority to resolve a claim by a municipality that a public |
utility materially failed to comply with the requirements of |
subsections (b) or (c) of this Section or the process |
developed under subsection (e-10) of this Section. If the |
Department of Revenue finds, after notice and hearing, that a |
public utility (i) caused a material delay in providing |
information properly requested under such subsections or (ii) |
omitted a material portion of information properly requested, |
then the Department shall assess a penalty on the utility of up |
to $50,000 per audit, or up to $10,000 per audit for a utility |
that served less than 100,000 retail customers on the date of |
the audit notice, or, if the claim relates to subsection |
(e-10), up to $50,000 per 5-year master list cycle or up to |
$10,000 per cycle for a utility that served less than 100,000 |
retail customers on the date such master list was filed with |
the Department, which penalty shall be paid by the public |
utility to the Department of Revenue for deposit into the |
Supplemental Low-Income Energy Assistance Fund. |
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, a penalty assessed |
pursuant to this subsection shall be the exclusive remedy for |
the conduct that is the subject of the claim. A penalty |
assessed under this subsection shall bar and prohibit pursuit |
of any other penalty, fine, or recovery related to the conduct |
for which the penalty was assessed. |
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(2) No penalty shall be assessed by the Department |
pursuant to this subsection if the Department finds that a |
delay or omission was immaterial or de minimis. |
(3) Any penalties or fines paid by a public utility |
pursuant to this subsection shall not be recoverable through |
the utility's rates. |
(4) If a municipality and public utility have a |
disagreement regarding the scope or conduct of an audit |
undertaken pursuant to this Section, they shall work together |
in good faith to attempt to resolve the dispute. If, after a |
period of no less than 14 days, the municipality and public |
utility are not able to reach an agreement regarding the |
dispute, either entity, or both entities jointly, may submit a |
request to the Illinois Department of Revenue seeking |
resolution of the dispute, and the Department shall have the |
authority to resolve the issue, and shall resolve such dispute |
within 60 days. Each such request must include a statement |
showing that consultation and reasonable attempts to resolve |
the dispute have failed. |
The time period established pursuant to this Section for |
complying with requests for information under this Section |
shall be suspended during the dispute resolution processes set |
forth in this paragraph (4) of subsection (e-20), but only for |
the issue or issues that are the subject of the dispute. |
Information requests that are undisputed shall continue to be |
subject to the time periods for compliance set forth in this |
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Section. |
(f) All account specific and premises-specific information |
provided by a public utility under this Section may be used |
only for the purpose of an audit of taxes conducted under this |
Section and the enforcement of any related tax claim. All such |
information must be held in strict confidence by the |
municipality
and its agents and may not be disclosed to the |
public under the Freedom of Information Act or under any other |
similar statutes allowing for or requiring public disclosure. |
(g) The provisions of this Section shall not be construed |
as diminishing or replacing any civil remedy available to a |
municipality, taxpayer, or tax collector. |
(h) This Section does not apply to any municipality having |
a population greater than 1,000,000.
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(i) The changes to subsection (e) and paragraph (2) of |
subsection (e-10) of this Section made by this amendatory Act |
of the 102nd General Assembly apply to taxes due on or after |
August 1, 2022. The remaining changes to this Section made by |
this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly apply on or |
after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd |
General Assembly. |
(j) As used in this Section: |
"Customer-specific information" means the name, phone |
number, email address, and banking information of a customer. |
"Customer-specific information" includes the load-shape data |
associated with a customer account. "Customer-specific |
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information" does not include the tax-exempt status of the |
premises and the name of tax exempt customers. |
"Premises-specific information" means any information, |
including billing and usage data, associated with a premises |
address that is not customer-specific information. |
"Premises address" includes the jurisdiction to which the |
address is currently coded by the public utility for municipal |
tax purposes. |
(Source: P.A. 96-1422, eff. 8-3-10.) |
Section 15. The Public Utilities Act is amended by |
changing Section 16-122 as follows:
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(220 ILCS 5/16-122)
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Sec. 16-122. Customer information.
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(a) Upon the request of a retail customer, or a person
who |
presents verifiable authorization and is acting as the
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customer's agent, and payment of a reasonable fee, electric
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utilities shall provide to the customer or its authorized
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agent the customer's billing and usage data.
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(b) Upon request from any alternative retail electric
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supplier and payment of a reasonable fee, an electric utility
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serving retail customers in its service area shall make
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available generic information concerning the usage, load shape
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curve or other general characteristics of customers by rate
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classification. Provided however, no customer specific
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billing, usage or load shape data shall be provided under this
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subsection unless authorization to provide such information is
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provided by the customer pursuant to subsection (a) of this
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Section.
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(c) Upon request from a unit of local government and |
payment of a
reasonable fee, an electric utility shall make |
available information concerning
the usage, load shape curves, |
and other characteristics of customers by
customer |
classification and location within the boundaries of the unit |
of local
government, however, no customer specific billing, |
usage, or load shape data
shall be provided under this |
subsection unless authorization to provide that
information is |
provided by the customer. This subsection (c) does not |
prohibit an electric utility from providing a unit of local |
government or its designated auditor the materials delineated |
in Section 8-11-2.5 of the Illinois Municipal Code for the |
purposes of an audit under that Section.
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(d) All such customer information shall be made available
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in a timely fashion in an electronic format, if available.
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(Source: P.A. 92-585, eff. 6-26-02.)
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Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law. |