Public Act 095-0777
 
SB2431 Enrolled LRB095 16875 BDD 42917 b

    AN ACT concerning safety.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is
amended by changing Sections 5-15 and 5-20 as follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 5/5-15)  (was 20 ILCS 5/3)
    Sec. 5-15. Departments of State government. The
Departments of State government are created as follows:
    The Department on Aging.
    The Department of Agriculture.
    The Department of Central Management Services.
    The Department of Children and Family Services.
    The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity.
    The Department of Corrections.
    The Department of Employment Security.
    The Illinois Emergency Management Agency.
    The Department of Financial Institutions.
    The Department of Healthcare and Family Services.
    The Department of Human Rights.
    The Department of Human Services.
    The Illinois Power Agency.
    The Department of Insurance.
    The Department of Juvenile Justice.
    The Department of Labor.
    The Department of the Lottery.
    The Department of Natural Resources.
    The Department of Professional Regulation.
    The Department of Public Health.
    The Department of Revenue.
    The Department of State Police.
    The Department of Transportation.
    The Department of Veterans' Affairs.
(Source: P.A. 94-696, eff. 6-1-06; 95-331, eff. 8-21-07;
95-481, eff. 8-28-07.)
 
    (20 ILCS 5/5-20)  (was 20 ILCS 5/4)
    Sec. 5-20. Heads of departments. Each department shall have
an officer as its head who shall be known as director or
secretary and who shall, subject to the provisions of the Civil
Administrative Code of Illinois, execute the powers and
discharge the duties vested by law in his or her respective
department.
    The following officers are hereby created:
    Director of Aging, for the Department on Aging.
    Director of Agriculture, for the Department of
Agriculture.
    Director of Central Management Services, for the
Department of Central Management Services.
    Director of Children and Family Services, for the
Department of Children and Family Services.
    Director of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, for the
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity.
    Director of Corrections, for the Department of
Corrections.
    Director of the Illinois Emergency Management Agency, for
the Illinois Emergency Management Agency.
    Director of Employment Security, for the Department of
Employment Security.
    Director of Financial Institutions, for the Department of
Financial Institutions.
    Director of Healthcare and Family Services, for the
Department of Healthcare and Family Services.
    Director of Human Rights, for the Department of Human
Rights.
    Secretary of Human Services, for the Department of Human
Services.
    Director of the Illinois Power Agency, for the Illinois
Power Agency.
    Director of Insurance, for the Department of Insurance.
    Director of Juvenile Justice, for the Department of
Juvenile Justice.
    Director of Labor, for the Department of Labor.
    Director of the Lottery, for the Department of the Lottery.
    Director of Natural Resources, for the Department of
Natural Resources.
    Director of Professional Regulation, for the Department of
Professional Regulation.
    Director of Public Health, for the Department of Public
Health.
    Director of Revenue, for the Department of Revenue.
    Director of State Police, for the Department of State
Police.
    Secretary of Transportation, for the Department of
Transportation.
    Director of Veterans' Affairs, for the Department of
Veterans' Affairs.
(Source: P.A. 94-696, eff. 6-1-06; 95-331, eff. 8-21-07;
95-481, eff. 8-28-07.)
 
    Section 10. The Nuclear Safety Law of 2004 is amended by
changing Section 25 as follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 3310/25)
    Sec. 25. Boiler and pressure vessel safety. The Illinois
Emergency Management Agency shall exercise, administer, and
enforce all of the following rights, powers, and duties:
        (1) Rights, powers, and duties vested in the Department
    of Nuclear Safety by the Boiler and Pressure Vessel Safety
    Act prior to the abolishment of the Department of Nuclear
    Safety, to the extent the rights, powers, and duties relate
    to nuclear steam-generating facilities.
        (2) Rights, powers, and duties relating to nuclear
    steam-generating facilities vested in the Department of
    Nuclear Safety by the Boiler and Pressure Vessel Safety Act
    prior to the abolishment of the Department of Nuclear
    Safety, which include but are not limited to the
    formulation of definitions, rules, and regulations for the
    safe and proper construction, installation, repair, use,
    and operation of nuclear steam-generating facilities, the
    adoption of rules for already installed nuclear
    steam-generating facilities, the adoption of rules for
    accidents in nuclear steam-generating facilities, the
    examination for or suspension of inspectors' licenses of
    the facilities, and the hearing of appeals from decisions
    relating to the facilities.
         (3) Rights, powers, and duties relating to nuclear
    steam-generating facilities, vested in the State Fire
    Marshal, the Chief Inspector, or the Department of Nuclear
    Safety prior to its abolishment, by the Boiler and Pressure
    Vessel Safety Act, which include but are not limited to the
    employment of inspectors of nuclear steam-generating
    facilities, issuance or suspension of their commissions,
    prosecution of the Act or rules promulgated thereunder for
    violations by nuclear steam-generating facilities,
    maintenance of inspection records of all the facilities,
    publication of rules relating to the facilities, having
    free access to the facilities, issuance of inspection
    certificates of the facilities, and the furnishing of bonds
    conditioned upon the faithful performance of their duties.
    The Director of the Illinois Emergency Management Agency
    may designate a Chief Inspector, or other inspectors, as he
    or she deems necessary to perform the functions transferred
    by this Section.
    The transfer of rights, powers, and duties specified in
paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) is limited to the program
transferred by this Act and shall not be deemed to abolish or
diminish the exercise of those same rights, powers, and duties
by the Office of the State Fire Marshal, the Board of Boiler
and Pressure Vessel Rules, the State Fire Marshal, or the Chief
Inspector with respect to programs retained by the Office of
the State Fire Marshal.
(Source: P.A. 93-1029, eff. 8-25-04.)
 
    Section 15. The Radioactive Waste Compact Enforcement Act
is amended by changing Sections 25, 30, and 31 as follows:
 
    (45 ILCS 141/25)
    Sec. 25. Enforcement.
    (a) The Illinois Emergency Management Agency (Agency)
Department shall adopt regulations to administer and enforce
the provisions of this Act. The regulations shall be adopted
with the consultation and cooperation of the Commission.
    Regulations adopted by the Agency Department under this Act
shall prohibit the shipment into or acceptance of waste in
Illinois if the shipment or acceptance would result in a
violation of any provision of the Compact or this Act.
    (b) The Agency Department may, by regulation, impose
conditions on the shipment into or acceptance of waste in
Illinois that the Agency Department determines to be reasonable
and necessary to enforce the provisions of this Act. The
conditions may include, but are not limited to (i) requiring
prior notification of any proposed shipment or receipt of
waste; (ii) requiring the shipper or recipient to identify the
location to which the waste will be sent for disposal following
treatment or storage in Illinois; (iii) limiting the time that
waste from outside Illinois may be held in Illinois; (iv)
requiring the shipper or recipient to post bond or by other
mechanism to assure that radioactive material will not be
treated, stored, or disposed of in Illinois in violation of any
provision of this Act; (v) requiring that the shipper consent
to service of process before shipment of waste into Illinois.
    (c) The Agency Department shall, by regulation, impose a
system of civil penalties in accordance with the provisions of
this Act. Amounts recovered under these regulations shall be
deposited in the Low-Level Radioactive Waste Facility
Development and Operation Fund.
    (d) The regulations adopted by the Agency Department may
provide for the granting of exemptions, but only upon a showing
by the applicant that the granting of an exemption would be
consistent with the Compact.
(Source: P.A. 87-1166.)
 
    (45 ILCS 141/30)
    Sec. 30. Penalties.
    (a) Any person who ships or receives radioactive material
in violation of any provision of this Act or a regulation of
the Agency Department adopted under this Act shall be subject
to a civil penalty not to exceed $100,000 per occurrence.
    (b) Any person who fails to pay a civil penalty imposed by
regulations adopted under this Act, or any portion of the
penalty, shall be liable in a civil action in an amount not to
exceed 4 times the amount imposed and not paid.
    (c) Any person who intentionally violates a provision of
subsection (a)(1), (a)(2), (a)(3), (a)(4) or (a)(6) of Section
20 of this Act shall be guilty of a Class 4 felony.
    (d) At the request of the Agency Department, the Attorney
General shall, on behalf of the State, bring an action for the
recovery of any civil penalty or the prosecution of any
criminal offense provided for by this Act. Any civil penalties
so recovered shall be deposited in the Low-Level Radioactive
Waste Facility Development and Operation Fund.
(Source: P.A. 87-1166.)
 
    (45 ILCS 141/31)
    Sec. 31. The Agency Department may accept donations of
money, equipment, supplies, materials, and services from any
person for accomplishing the purposes of this Act. Any donation
of money shall be deposited in the Low-Level Radioactive Waste
Facility Development and Operation Fund and shall be expended
by the Agency Department only in accordance with the purposes
of the donation.
(Source: P.A. 87-1166.)
 
    Section 20. The Environmental Protection Act is amended by
changing Sections 25a-1 and 25b as follows:
 
    (415 ILCS 5/25a-1)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1025a-1)
    Sec. 25a-1. At least 60 days before beginning the
decommissioning of any nuclear power plant located in this
State, the owner or operator of the plant shall file, for
information purposes only, a copy of the decommissioning plan
for the plant with the Agency and a copy with the Illinois
Emergency Management Agency Department of Nuclear Safety.
(Source: P.A. 86-901.)
 
    (415 ILCS 5/25b)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1025b)
    Sec. 25b. Any person, corporation or public authority
intending to construct a nuclear steam-generating facility or a
nuclear fuel reprocessing plant shall file with the Illinois
Emergency Management Agency Department of Nuclear Safety an
environmental feasibility report which incorporates the data
provided in the preliminary safety analysis required to be
filed with the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The
Board may by rule prescribe the form of such report. The Board
shall have the power to adopt standards to protect the health,
safety and welfare of the citizens of Illinois from the hazards
of radiation to the extent that such powers are not preempted
under the federal constitution.
(Source: P.A. 87-292.)
 
    Section 25. The Illinois Nuclear Facility Safety Act is
amended by changing Sections 2, 4, 5, and 7 as follows:
 
    (420 ILCS 10/2)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4352)
    Sec. 2. Policy statement. It is declared to be the policy
of the State of Illinois to prevent accidents at nuclear
facilities in Illinois for the economic well-being of the
People of the State of Illinois and for the health and safety
of workers at nuclear facilities and private citizens who could
be injured as a result of releases of radioactive materials
from nuclear facilities. It is the intent of the General
Assembly that this Act should be construed consistently with
federal law to maximize the role of the State in contributing
to safety at nuclear facilities in Illinois. It is the intent
of the General Assembly that the Illinois Emergency Management
Agency Department of Nuclear Safety should not take any actions
which are preempted by federal law or engage in dual regulation
of nuclear facilities, unless dual regulation is allowed by
federal law and policies of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
In implementing its responsibilities under this Act, the Agency
Illinois Department of Nuclear Safety shall not take any action
which interferes with the safe operation of a nuclear facility.
(Source: P.A. 86-901.)
 
    (420 ILCS 10/4)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4354)
    Sec. 4. Authorization. The Agency Department is authorized
to enter into any and all cooperative agreements with the
federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission consistent with the
applicable provisions of the Atomic Energy Act.
(Source: P.A. 86-901.)
 
    (420 ILCS 10/5)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4355)
    Sec. 5. Program for Illinois nuclear power plant
inspectors.
    (a) Consistent with federal law and policy statements of
and cooperative agreements with the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission with respect to State participation in health and
safety regulation of nuclear facilities, and in recognition of
the role provided for the states by such laws, policy
statements and cooperative agreements, the Agency Department
shall develop and implement a program for Illinois resident
inspectors that, when fully implemented, shall provide for one
full-time Agency Departmental Illinois resident inspector at
each nuclear power plant in Illinois. The owner of each of the
nuclear power plants to which they are assigned shall provide,
at its expense, office space and equipment reasonably required
by the resident inspectors while they are on the premises of
the nuclear power plants. The Illinois resident inspectors
shall operate in accordance with a cooperative agreement
executed by the Agency Department and the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission and shall have access to the nuclear power plants to
which they have been assigned in accordance with that
agreement; provided, however, that the Illinois resident
inspectors shall have no greater access than is afforded to a
resident inspector of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
    (b) The Agency Department may also inspect licensed nuclear
power plants that have permanently ceased operations. The
inspections shall be performed by inspectors qualified as
Illinois resident inspectors. The inspectors need not be
resident at nuclear power plants that have permanently ceased
operations. The inspectors shall conduct inspections in
accordance with a cooperative agreement executed by the Agency
Department and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and shall have
access to the nuclear power plants that have permanently ceased
operations; provided, however, that the Illinois inspectors
shall have no greater access than is afforded to inspectors of
the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The owner of each of the
nuclear power plants that has permanently ceased operations
shall provide, at its expense, office space and equipment
reasonably required by the inspectors while they are on the
premises of the nuclear power plants.
    (c) The Illinois resident inspectors and inspectors
assigned under subsection (b) shall each operate in accordance
with the security plan for the nuclear power plant to which
they are assigned, but in no event shall they be required to
meet any requirements imposed by a nuclear power plant owner
that are not imposed on resident inspectors and inspectors of
the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The Agency Department's
programs and activities under this Section shall not be
inconsistent with federal law.
(Source: P.A. 91-171, eff. 7-16-99.)
 
    (420 ILCS 10/7)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4357)
    Sec. 7. The Agency Department shall not engage in any
program of Illinois resident inspectors or inspectors assigned
under subsection (b) of Section 5 at any nuclear power plant in
Illinois except as specifically directed by law.
(Source: P.A. 91-171, eff. 7-16-99.)
 
    Section 30. The Spent Nuclear Fuel Act is amended by
changing Section 2 as follows:
 
    (420 ILCS 15/2)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 230.22)
    Sec. 2. No person may dispose of, store, or accept any
spent nuclear fuel which was used in any power generating
facility located outside this State, or transport into this
State for disposal or storage any spent nuclear fuel which was
used in any power generating facility located outside this
State, unless the state of origin of such spent nuclear fuel
has a facility, which is not part of a power generating
facility, for the disposal or storage of spent nuclear fuel
substantially like that of this State and has entered into a
reciprocity agreement with this State. The determination as to
whether the state of origin has a disposal or storage facility
for spent nuclear fuel substantially like that of this State is
to be made by the Director of the Illinois Emergency Management
Agency Department of Nuclear Safety and all reciprocity
agreements must be approved by a majority of the members of
both Houses of the General Assembly and approved and signed by
the Governor.
(Source: P.A. 81-1516, Art. II.)
 
    Section 35. The Illinois Low-Level Radioactive Waste
Management Act is amended by changing Sections 2, 3, 4, 5, 6,
7, 8, 9, 10, 10.2, 10.3, 11, 13, 14, 15, 17, and 21.1 as
follows:
 
    (420 ILCS 20/2)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-2)
    Sec. 2. (a) The General Assembly finds:
        (1) that low-level radioactive wastes are produced in
    this State with even greater volumes to be produced in the
    future;
        (2) that such radioactive wastes pose a significant
    risk to the public health, safety and welfare of the people
    of Illinois; and
        (3) that it is the obligation of the State of Illinois
    to its citizens to provide for the safe management of the
    low-level radioactive wastes produced within its borders.
    (b) The Illinois Emergency Management Agency Department of
Nuclear Safety has attained federal agreement state status and
thereby has assumed regulatory authority over low-level
radioactive waste from the United States Nuclear Regulatory
Commission under Section 274b of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954
(42 U.S.C. 2014). It is the purpose of this Act to establish a
comprehensive program for the storage, treatment, and disposal
of low-level radioactive wastes in Illinois. It is the intent
of the General Assembly that the program provide for the
management of these wastes in the safest manner possible and in
a manner that creates the least risk to human health and the
environment of Illinois and that the program encourage to the
fullest extent possible the use of environmentally sound waste
management practices alternative to land disposal including
waste recycling, compaction, incineration and other methods to
reduce the amount of wastes produced, and to ensure public
participation in all phases of the development of this
radioactive waste management program.
(Source: P.A. 90-29, eff. 6-26-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 20/3)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-3)
    Sec. 3. Definitions.
    "Agency" means the Illinois Emergency Management Agency.
    (a) "Broker" means any person who takes possession of
low-level waste for purposes of consolidation and shipment.
    (b) "Compact" means the Central Midwest Interstate
Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact.
    (c) "Decommissioning" means the measures taken at the end
of a facility's operating life to assure the continued
protection of the public from any residual radioactivity or
other potential hazards present at a facility.
    (d) "Department" means the Department of Nuclear Safety.
    (e) "Director" means the Director of the Illinois Emergency
Management Agency Department of Nuclear Safety.
    (f) "Disposal" means the isolation of waste from the
biosphere in a permanent facility designed for that purpose.
    (g) "Facility" means a parcel of land or site, together
with structures, equipment and improvements on or appurtenant
to the land or site, which is used or is being developed for
the treatment, storage or disposal of low-level radioactive
waste. "Facility" does not include lands, sites, structures or
equipment used by a generator in the generation of low-level
radioactive wastes.
    (h) "Generator" means any person who produces or possesses
low-level radioactive waste in the course of or incident to
manufacturing, power generation, processing, medical diagnosis
and treatment, research, education or other activity.
    (i) "Hazardous waste" means a waste, or combination of
wastes, which because of its quantity, concentration, or
physical, chemical, or infectious characteristics may cause or
significantly contribute to an increase in mortality or an
increase in serious, irreversible, or incapacitating
reversible, illness; or pose a substantial present or potential
hazard to human health or the environment when improperly
treated, stored, transported, or disposed of, or otherwise
managed, and which has been identified, by characteristics or
listing, as hazardous under Section 3001 of the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, P.L. 94-580 or under
regulations of the Pollution Control Board.
    (j) "High-level radioactive waste" means:
        (1) the highly radioactive material resulting from the
    reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel including liquid waste
    produced directly in reprocessing and any solid material
    derived from the liquid waste that contains fission
    products in sufficient concentrations; and
        (2) the highly radioactive material that the Nuclear
    Regulatory Commission has determined, on the effective
    date of this Amendatory Act of 1988, to be high-level
    radioactive waste requiring permanent isolation.
    (k) "Low-level radioactive waste" or "waste" means
radioactive waste not classified as high-level radioactive
waste, transuranic waste, spent nuclear fuel or byproduct
material as defined in Section 11e(2) of the Atomic Energy Act
of 1954 (42 U.S.C. 2014).
    (l) "Mixed waste" means waste that is both "hazardous
waste" and "low-level radioactive waste" as defined in this
Act.
    (m) "Person" means an individual, corporation, business
enterprise or other legal entity either public or private and
any legal successor, representative, agent or agency of that
individual, corporation, business enterprise, or legal entity.
    (n) "Post-closure care" means the continued monitoring of
the regional disposal facility after closure for the purposes
of detecting a need for maintenance, ensuring environmental
safety, and determining compliance with applicable licensure
and regulatory requirements, and includes undertaking any
remedial actions necessary to protect public health and the
environment from radioactive releases from the facility.
    (o) "Regional disposal facility" or "disposal facility"
means the facility established by the State of Illinois under
this Act for disposal away from the point of generation of
waste generated in the region of the Compact.
    (p) "Release" means any spilling, leaking, pumping,
pouring, emitting, emptying, discharging, injecting, escaping,
leaching, dumping or disposing into the environment of
low-level radioactive waste.
    (q) "Remedial action" means those actions taken in the
event of a release or threatened release of low-level
radioactive waste into the environment, to prevent or minimize
the release of the waste so that it does not migrate to cause
substantial danger to present or future public health or
welfare or the environment. The term includes, but is not
limited to, actions at the location of the release such as
storage, confinement, perimeter protection using dikes,
trenches or ditches, clay cover, neutralization, cleanup of
released low-level radioactive wastes, recycling or reuse,
dredging or excavations, repair or replacement of leaking
containers, collection of leachate and runoff, onsite
treatment or incineration, provision of alternative water
supplies and any monitoring reasonably required to assure that
these actions protect human health and the environment.
    (q-5) "Scientific Surveys" means, collectively, the State
Geological Survey Division and the State Water Survey Division
of the Department of Natural Resources.
    (r) "Shallow land burial" means a land disposal facility in
which radioactive waste is disposed of in or within the upper
30 meters of the earth's surface. However, this definition
shall not include an enclosed, engineered, structurally
re-enforced and solidified bunker that extends below the
earth's surface.
    (s) "Storage" means the temporary holding of waste for
treatment or disposal for a period determined by Agency
Department regulations.
    (t) "Treatment" means any method, technique or process,
including storage for radioactive decay, designed to change the
physical, chemical or biological characteristics or
composition of any waste in order to render the waste safer for
transport, storage or disposal, amenable to recovery,
convertible to another usable material or reduced in volume.
    (u) "Waste management" means the storage, transportation,
treatment or disposal of waste.
(Source: P.A. 90-29, eff. 6-26-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 20/4)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-4)
    Sec. 4. Generator and broker registration.
    (a) All generators and brokers of any amount of low-level
radioactive waste in Illinois shall register with the Agency
Department of Nuclear Safety. Generators shall register within
60 days of the commencement of generating any low-level
radioactive wastes. Brokers shall register within 60 days of
taking possession of any low-level radioactive waste. Such
registration shall be on a form developed by the Agency
Department and shall contain the name, address and officers of
the generator or broker, information on the types and amounts
of wastes produced or possessed and any other information
required by the Agency Department.
    (b) All registered generators and brokers of any amount of
low-level radioactive waste in Illinois shall file an annual
report with the Agency Department. The annual report for
generators shall contain information on the types and
quantities of low-level wastes produced in the previous year
and expected to be produced in the future, the methods used to
manage these wastes, the technological feasibility, economic
reasonableness and environmental soundness of alternative
treatment, storage and disposal methods and any other
information required by the Agency Department. The annual
report for brokers shall contain information on the types and
quantities of low-level radioactive wastes received and
shipped, identification of the generators from whom such wastes
were received, and the destination of shipments of such wastes.
    (c) All registration forms and annual reports required to
be filed with the Agency Department shall be made available to
the public for inspection and copying.
(Source: P.A. 90-29, eff. 6-26-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 20/5)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-5)
    Sec. 5. Requirements for disposal facility contractors;
operating agreements.
    (a) The Agency Department shall promulgate rules and
regulations establishing standards applicable to the selection
of a contractor or contractors for the design, development,
construction, and operation of a low-level radioactive waste
disposal facility away from the point of generation necessary
to protect human health and the environment. The regulations
shall establish, but need not be limited to, the following:
        (1) The number of contractors to design, develop, and
    operate a low-level radioactive waste disposal facility;
        (2) Requirements and standards relating to the
    financial integrity of the firm;
        (3) Requirements and standards relating to the
    experience and performance history of the firm in the
    design, development, construction and operation of
    low-level radioactive waste disposal facilities; and
        (4) Requirements and standards for the qualifications
    of the employees of the firm.
    The Agency Department shall hold at least one public
hearing before promulgating the regulations.
    (b) The Agency Department may enter into one or more
operating agreements with a qualified operator of the regional
disposal facility, which agreement may contain such provisions
with respect to the construction, operation, closure, and
post-closure maintenance of the regional disposal facility by
the operator as the Agency Department shall determine,
including, without limitation, (i) provisions leasing, or
providing for the lease of, the site to the operator and
authorizing the operator to construct, own and operate the
facility and to transfer the facility to the Agency Department
following closure and any additional years of post-closure
maintenance that the Agency Department shall determine; (ii)
provisions granting exclusive rights to the operator with
respect to the disposal of low-level radioactive waste in this
State during the term of the operating agreement; (iii)
provisions authorizing the operator to impose fees upon all
persons using the facility as provided in this Act and
providing for the Agency Department to audit the charges of the
operator under the operating agreement; and (iv) provisions
relating to the obligations of the operator and the Agency
Department in the event of any closure of the facility or any
termination of the operating agreement.
(Source: P.A. 90-29, eff. 6-26-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 20/6)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-6)
    Sec. 6. Requirements for disposal facility.
    (a) The Agency Department shall as it deems necessary to
protect human health and the environment, promulgate rules and
regulations establishing standards applicable to the regional
disposal facility. The rules and regulations shall reflect the
best available management technologies which are economically
reasonable, technologically feasible and environmentally sound
for the disposal of the wastes and shall establish, but need
not be limited to the establishment of:
        (1) requirements and performance standards for the
    design, construction, operation, maintenance and
    monitoring of the low-level radioactive waste disposal
    facility;
        (2) requirements and standards for the keeping of
    records and the reporting and retaining of data collected
    by the contractor selected to operate the disposal
    facility;
        (3) requirements and standards for the technical
    qualifications of the personnel of the contractor selected
    to develop and operate the disposal facility;
        (4) requirements and standards for establishing the
    financial responsibility of the contractor selected to
    operate the disposal facility;
        (5) requirements and standards for the emergency
    closure of the disposal facility; and
        (6) requirements and standards for the closure,
    decommissioning and post-closure care, monitoring,
    maintenance and use of the disposal facility.
    (b) The regulations shall include provisions requiring
that the contractor selected to operate the disposal facility
post a performance bond with the Agency Department or show
evidence of liability insurance or other means of establishing
financial responsibility in an amount sufficient to adequately
provide for any necessary remedial actions or liabilities that
might be incurred by the operation of the disposal facility
during the operating period and during a reasonable period of
post-closure care.
    (c) The regulations adopted for the requirements and
performance standards of a disposal facility shall not provide
for the shallow land burial of low-level radioactive wastes.
    (d) The Agency Department shall hold at least one public
hearing before adopting rules under this Section.
    (e) All rules adopted under this Section shall be at least
as stringent as those promulgated by the U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission under the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 (42
U.S.C. 2014) and any other applicable federal laws.
    (f) The State of Illinois shall have no liability to any
person or entity by reason of a failure, delay, or cessation in
the operation of the disposal facility.
(Source: P.A. 90-29, eff. 6-26-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 20/7)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-7)
    Sec. 7. Requirements for waste treatment. The Agency
Department shall promulgate rules and regulations establishing
standards applicable to the treatment of low-level radioactive
wastes disposed of in any facility in Illinois necessary to
protect human health and the environment. Such rules and
regulations shall reflect the best available treatment
technologies that are economically reasonable, technologically
feasible and environmentally sound for reducing the quantity
and radioactive quality of such wastes prior to land burial and
shall establish, but need not be limited to, requirements
respecting:
    (1) the form in which low-level radioactive wastes may be
disposed;
    (2) the use of treatment technologies for recycling,
compacting, solidifying or otherwise treating low-level
radioactive wastes prior to disposal; and
    (3) the use of technologies for the treatment of such
wastes to minimize the radioactive characteristics of the waste
disposed of or to reduce the tendency of the waste to migrate
in geologic and hydrologic formations.
    The Agency Department shall hold at least one public
hearing prior to promulgating such regulations.
(Source: P.A. 90-29, eff. 6-26-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 20/8)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-8)
    Sec. 8. Requirements for waste facility licensing.
    (a) No person shall operate any facility for the storage,
treatment, or disposal of low-level radioactive wastes away
from the point of generation in Illinois without a license
granted by the Agency Department.
    (b) Each application for a license under this Section shall
contain such information as may be required by the Agency
Department, including, but not limited to, information
respecting:
        (1) estimates of the quantities and types of wastes to
    be stored, treated or disposed of at the facility;
        (2) the design specifications and proposed operating
    procedures of the facility necessary to assure compliance
    with the rules adopted under Sections 6 and 7;
        (3) financial and personnel information necessary to
    assure the integrity and qualifications of the contractor
    selected to operate the facility;
        (4) a closure plan to ensure the proper closure,
    decommissioning, and post-closure care of the disposal
    facility; and
        (5) a contingency plan to establish the procedures to
    be followed in the event of unanticipated radioactive
    releases.
    (c) The Director may issue a license for the construction
and operation of a facility authorized by this Act, provided
the applicant for the license has complied with applicable
provisions of this Act and regulations of the Agency
Department. No license issued by the Director shall authorize
the disposal of mixed waste at any regional disposal facility.
In the event that an applicant or licensee proposes
modifications to a facility, or in the event that the Director
determines that modifications are necessary to conform to the
requirements of this Act, the Director may issue any license
modifications necessary to protect human health and the
environment and may specify the time allowed to complete the
modifications.
    (d) Upon a determination by the Director of substantial
noncompliance with any license granted under this Act or upon a
determination that an emergency exists posing a significant
hazard to public health and the environment, the Director may
revoke a license issued under this Act. Before revoking any
license, the Director shall serve notice upon the alleged
violator setting forth the Sections of this Act, or the rules
adopted under this Act, that are alleged to have been violated.
The Director shall hold at least one public hearing not later
than 30 days following the notice.
    (e) No person shall operate and the Director shall not
issue any license under this Section to operate any disposal
facility for the shallow land burial of low-level radioactive
wastes in Illinois.
    (f) (Blank).
    (g) Notwithstanding subsection (d) of Section 10.3 of this
Act, a license issued by the Agency Department to operate any
regional disposal facility shall be revoked as a matter of law
to the extent that the license authorizes disposal if:
        (1) the facility accepts for disposal byproduct
    material as defined in Section 11e(2) of the Atomic Energy
    Act of 1954 (42 U.S.C. 2014), high-level radioactive waste
    or mixed waste, and
        (2) (A) if the facility is located more than 1 1/2
    miles from the boundary of a municipality and the county in
    which the facility is located passes an ordinance ordering
    the license revoked, or
        (B) if the facility is located within a municipality or
    within 1 1/2 miles of the boundary of a municipality and
    that municipality passes an ordinance ordering the license
    revoked.
(Source: P.A. 90-29, eff. 6-26-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 20/9)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-9)
    Sec. 9. Requirements for waste transporters.
    (a) No person shall transport any low-level radioactive
waste to a storage, treatment or disposal facility in Illinois
licensed under Section 8 without a permit granted by the Agency
Department.
    (b) No person shall transport any low-level radioactive
waste to a storage, treatment or disposal facility licensed
under Section 8 without a manifest document. The Agency
Department shall develop the form for such manifests and shall
promulgate rules and regulations establishing a system of
tracking wastes from their point of generation to storage,
treatment, and ultimate disposal.
    (c) Each application for a permit under this Section shall
contain any information as may be required under regulations
promulgated by the Agency Department, including, but not
limited to, information respecting:
        (1) The estimated quantities and types of wastes to be
    transported to a facility located in Illinois;
        (2) The procedures and methods used to monitor and
    inspect the shipments to ensure that leakage or spills do
    not occur;
        (3) The timetables according to which the wastes are to
    be shipped.
        (4) The qualifications and training of personnel
    handling low-level radioactive waste; and
        (5) The use of interim storage and transshipment
    facilities.
    (d) The Director may issue a permit to any applicant who
has met and whom he believes will comply with the requirements
of the Illinois Hazardous Materials Transportation Act and any
other applicable State or federal laws or regulations. In the
event that an applicant or permittee proposes modifications of
a permit, or in the event that the Director determines that
modifications are necessary to conform with the requirements of
the Act, the Director may issue any permit modifications
necessary to protect human health and the environment and may
specify the time allowed to complete the modifications.
    (e) The Agency Department shall inspect each shipment of
low-level radioactive wastes received at the regional disposal
facility for compliance with the packaging, placarding and
other requirements established by rules and regulations
promulgated by the Illinois Department of Transportation under
the Illinois Hazardous Materials Transportation Act and any
other applicable State or federal regulations. The Agency
Department shall notify the Attorney General of any apparent
violations for possible prosecution under Sections 11 and 12 of
that Act.
(Source: P.A. 90-29, eff. 6-26-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 20/10)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-10)
    Sec. 10. Disposal facility contractor selection. Upon
adopting the regulations establishing requirements for waste
disposal facilities provided for in Section 6, the Agency
Department shall solicit proposals for the selection of one or
more contractors to site, design, develop, construct, operate,
close, provide post-closure care for, and decommission the
disposal facility. Not later than 6 months after the
solicitation of proposals, the Director shall select the
applicant who has submitted the proposal that best conforms to
the requirements of this Act and to the rules adopted under
this Act.
(Source: P.A. 90-29, eff. 6-26-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 20/10.2)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-10.2)
    Sec. 10.2. Creation of Low-Level Radioactive Waste Task
Group; adoption of criteria; selection of site for
characterization.
    (a) There is hereby created the Low-Level Radioactive Waste
Task Group consisting of the Directors of the Environmental
Protection Agency, the Department of Natural Resources, and the
Illinois Emergency Management Agency Department of Nuclear
Safety (or their designees) and 6 additional members designated
by the Governor. The 6 additional members shall:
        (1) be confirmed by the Senate; and
        (2) receive compensation of $300 per day for their
    services on the Task Group unless they are officers or
    employees of the State, in which case they shall receive no
    additional compensation.
    Four of the additional members shall have expertise in the
field of geology, hydrogeology, or hydrology. Of the 2
remaining additional members, one shall be a member of the
public with experience in environmental matters and one shall
have at least 5 years experience in local government. The
Directors of the Environmental Protection Agency, the
Department of Natural Resources, and the Illinois Emergency
Management Agency Department of Nuclear Safety (or their
designees) shall receive no additional compensation for their
service on the Task Group. All members of the Task Group shall
be compensated for their expenses. The Governor shall designate
the chairman of the Task Group. Upon adoption of the criteria
under subsection (b) of this Section, the Directors of the
Illinois Emergency Management Agency Department of Nuclear
Safety and the Environmental Protection Agency shall be
replaced on the Task Group by members designated by the
Governor and confirmed by the Senate. The members designated to
replace the Directors of the Illinois Emergency Management
Agency Department of Nuclear Safety and the Environmental
Protection Agency shall have such expertise as the Governor may
determine. The members of the Task Group shall be members until
they resign, are replaced by the Governor, or the Task Group is
abolished. Except as provided in this Act, the Task Group shall
be subject to the Open Meetings Act and the Illinois
Administrative Procedure Act. Any action required to be taken
by the Task Group under this Act shall be taken by a majority
vote of its members. An identical vote by 5 members of the Task
Group shall constitute a majority vote.
    (b) To protect the public health, safety and welfare, the
Task Group shall develop proposed criteria for selection of a
site for a regional disposal facility. Principal criteria shall
relate to the geographic, geologic, seismologic, tectonic,
hydrologic, and other scientific conditions best suited for a
regional disposal facility. Supplemental criteria may relate
to land use (including (i) the location of existing underground
mines and (ii) the exclusion of State parks, State conservation
areas, and other State owned lands identified by the Task
Group), economics, transportation, meteorology, and any other
matter identified by the Task Group as relating to desirable
conditions for a regional disposal facility. All of the
criteria shall be as specific as possible.
    The chairman of the Task Group shall publish a notice of
availability of the proposed criteria in the State newspaper,
make copies of the proposed criteria available without charge
to the public, and hold public hearings to receive comments on
the proposed criteria. Written comments on the proposed
criteria may be submitted to the chairman of the Task Group
within a time period to be determined by the Task Group. Upon
completion of the review of timely submitted comments on the
proposed criteria, the Task Group shall adopt criteria for
selection of a site for a regional disposal facility. Adoption
of the criteria is not subject to the Illinois Administrative
Procedure Act. The chairman of the Task Group shall provide
copies of the criteria to the Governor, the President and
Minority Leader of the Senate, the Speaker and Minority Leader
of the House, and all county boards in the State of Illinois
and shall make copies of the criteria available without charge
to the public.
    (c) Upon adoption of the criteria, the Director of Natural
Resources shall direct the Scientific Surveys to screen the
State of Illinois. By September 30, 1997, the Scientific
Surveys shall (i) complete a Statewide screening of the State
using available information and the Surveys' geography-based
information system to produce individual and composite maps
showing the application of individual criteria; (ii) complete
the evaluation of all land volunteered before the effective
date of this amendatory Act of 1997 to determine whether any of
the volunteered land appears likely to satisfy the criteria;
(iii) document the results of the screening and volunteer site
evaluations in a written report and submit the report to the
chairman of the Task Group and to the Director; and (iv)
transmit to the Task Group and to the Agency Department, in a
form specified by the Task Group and the Agency Department, all
information and documents assembled by the Scientific Surveys
in performing the obligations of the Scientific Surveys under
this Act. Upon completion of the screening and volunteer site
evaluation process, the Director of the Department of Natural
Resources shall be replaced on the Task Group by a member
appointed by the Governor and confirmed by the Senate. The
member appointed to replace the Director of the Department of
Natural Resources shall have expertise that the Governor
determines to be appropriate.
    (c-3) By December 1, 2000, the Department of Nuclear Safety
(now the Illinois Emergency Management Agency), in
consultation with the Task Group, waste generators, and any
interested counties and municipalities and after holding 3
public hearings throughout the State, shall prepare a report
regarding, at a minimum, the impact and ramifications, if any,
of the following factors and circumstances on the siting,
design, licensure, development, construction, operation,
closure, and post-closure care of a regional disposal facility:
        (1) the federal, state, and regional programs for the
    siting, development, and operation of disposal facilities
    for low-level radioactive wastes and the nature, extent,
    and likelihood of any legislative or administrative
    changes to those programs;
        (2) (blank);
        (3) the current and most reliable projections
    regarding the costs of the siting, design, development,
    construction, operation, closure, decommissioning, and
    post-closure care of a regional disposal facility;
        (4) the current and most reliable estimates of the
    total volume of low-level radioactive waste that will be
    disposed at a regional disposal facility in Illinois and
    the projected annual volume amounts;
        (5) the nature and extent of the available, if any,
    storage and disposal facilities outside the region of the
    Compact for storage and disposal of low-level radioactive
    waste generated from within the region of the Compact; and
        (6) the development and implementation of a voluntary
    site selection process in which land may be volunteered for
    the regional disposal facility jointly by landowners and
    (i) the municipality in which the land is located, (ii)
    every municipality within 1 1/2 miles of the land if the
    land is not within a municipality, or (iii) the county or
    counties in which the land is located if the land is not
    within a municipality and not within 1 1/2 miles of a
    municipality. The Director shall provide copies of the
    report to the Governor, the President and Minority Leader
    of the Senate, and the Speaker and Minority Leader of the
    House. The Director shall also publish a notice of
    availability of the report in the State newspaper and make
    copies of the report available without charge to the
    public.
    (c-5) Following submittal of the report pursuant to
subsection (c-3) of this Section, the Agency Department may
adopt rules establishing a site selection process for the
regional disposal facility. In developing rules, the Agency
Department shall, at a minimum, consider the following:
        (1) A comprehensive and open process under which the
    land for sites recommended and proposed by the contractor
    under subsection (e) of this Section shall be volunteered
    lands as provided in this Section. Land may be volunteered
    for the regional disposal facility jointly by landowners
    and (i) the municipality in which the land is located, (ii)
    every municipality with 1 1/2 miles of the land if the land
    is not within a municipality, or (iii) the county or
    counties in which the land is located if the land is not
    within a municipality and not within 1 1/2 miles of a
    municipality.
        (2) Utilization of the State screening and volunteer
    site evaluation report prepared by the Scientific Surveys
    under subsection (c) of this Section for the purpose of
    determining whether proposed sites appear likely to
    satisfy the site selection criteria.
        (3) Coordination of the site selection process with the
    projected annual and total volume of low-level radioactive
    waste to be disposed at the regional disposal facility as
    identified in the report prepared under subsection (c-3) of
    this Section.
    The site selection process established under this
subsection shall require the contractor selected by the Agency
Department pursuant to Sections 5 and 10 of this Act to propose
one site to the Task Group for approval under subsections (d)
through (i) of this Section.
    No proposed site shall be selected as the site for the
regional disposal facility unless it satisfies the site
selection criteria established by the Task Group under
subsection (b) of this Section.
    (d) The contractor selected by the Agency Department under
Sections 5 and 10 of this Act shall conduct evaluations,
including possible intrusive field investigations, of the
sites and locations identified under the site selection process
established under subsection (c-5) of this Section.
    (e) Upon completion of the site evaluations, the contractor
selected by the Agency Department shall identify one site of at
least 640 acres that appears promising for development of the
regional disposal facility in compliance with the site
selection criteria established by the Task Group pursuant to
subsection (b) of this Section. The contractor may conduct any
other evaluation of the site identified under this subsection
that the contractor deems appropriate to determine whether the
site satisfies the criteria adopted under subsection (b) of
this Section. Upon completion of the evaluations under this
subsection, the contractor shall prepare and submit to the
Agency Department a report on the evaluation of the identified
site, including a recommendation as to whether the identified
site should be further considered for selection as a site for
the regional disposal facility. A site so recommended for
further consideration is hereinafter referred to as a "proposed
site".
    (f) A report completed under subsection (e) of this Section
that recommends a proposed site shall also be submitted to the
chairman of the Task Group. Within 45 days following receipt of
a report, the chairman of the Task Group shall publish in
newspapers of general circulation in the county or counties in
which a proposed site is located a notice of the availability
of the report and a notice of a public meeting. The chairman of
the Task Group shall also, within the 45-day period, provide
copies of the report and the notice to the Governor, the
President and Minority Leader of the Senate, the Speaker and
Minority Leader of the House, members of the General Assembly
from the legislative district or districts in which a proposed
site is located, the county board or boards of the county or
counties containing a proposed site, and each city, village,
and incorporated town within a 5 mile radius of a proposed
site. The chairman of the Task Group shall make copies of the
report available without charge to the public.
    (g) The chairman of the Task Group shall convene at least
one public meeting on each proposed site. At the public meeting
or meetings, the contractor selected by the Agency Department
shall present the results of the evaluation of the proposed
site. The Task Group shall receive such other written and oral
information about the proposed site that may be submitted at
the meeting. Following the meeting, the Task Group shall decide
whether the proposed site satisfies the criteria adopted under
subsection (b) of this Section. If the Task Group determines
that the proposed site does not satisfy the criteria, the
Agency Department may require a contractor to submit a further
report pursuant to subsection (e) of this Section proposing
another site from the locations identified under the site
selection process established pursuant to subsection (c-5) of
this Section as likely to satisfy the criteria. Following
notice and distribution of the report as required by subsection
(f) of this Section, the new proposed site shall be the subject
of a public meeting under this subsection. The contractor
selected by the Agency Department shall propose additional
sites, and the Task Group shall conduct additional public
meetings, until the Task Group has approved a proposed site
recommended by a contractor as satisfying the criteria adopted
under subsection (b) of this Section. In the event that the
Task Group does not approve any of the proposed sites
recommended by the contractor under this subsection as
satisfying the criteria adopted under subsection (b) of this
Section, the Task Group shall immediately suspend all work and
the Agency Department shall prepare a study containing, at a
minimum, the Agency's Department's recommendations regarding
the viability of the site selection process established
pursuant to this Act, based on the factors and circumstances
specified in items (1) through (6) of subsection (c-3) of
Section 10.2. The Agency Department shall provide copies of the
study to the Governor, the President and Minority Leader of the
Senate, and the Speaker and Minority Leader of the House. The
Agency Department shall also publish a notice of availability
of the study in the State newspaper and make copies of the
report available without charge to the public.
    (h) (Blank).
    (i) Upon the Task Group's decision that a proposed site
satisfies the criteria adopted under subsection (b) of this
Section, the contractor shall proceed with the
characterization and licensure of the proposed site under
Section 10.3 of this Act and the Task Group shall immediately
suspend all work, except as otherwise specifically required in
subsection (b) of Section 10.3 of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 90-29, eff. 6-26-97; 91-601, eff. 8-16-99.)
 
    (420 ILCS 20/10.3)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-10.3)
    Sec. 10.3. Site characterization; license application;
adjudicatory hearing; exclusivity.
    (a) If the contractor, following characterization,
determines that the proposed site is appropriate for the
development of a regional disposal facility, (i) the contractor
shall submit to the Agency Department an application for a
license to construct and operate the facility at the selected
site and (ii) the Task Group shall be abolished and its records
transferred to the Agency Department.
    (b) If the contractor determines, following or at any time
during characterization of the site proposed under Section 10.2
of this Act, that the proposed site is not appropriate for the
development of a regional disposal facility, the Agency
Department may require the contractor to propose an additional
site to the Task Group from the locations identified under the
site selection process established under subsection (c-5) of
Section 10.2 that is likely to satisfy the criteria adopted
under subsection (b) of Section 10.2. The new proposed site
shall be the subject of public notice, distribution, and public
meeting conducted by the Task Group under the procedures set
forth in subsections (f) and (g) of Section 10.2 of this Act.
The contractor selected by the Agency Department shall propose
additional sites and the Task Group shall conduct additional
public meetings until (i) the Task Group has approved a
proposed site recommended by a contractor as satisfying the
criteria adopted under subsection (b) of Section 10.2, and (ii)
the contractor has determined, following characterization,
that the site is appropriate for the development of the
regional disposal facility. Upon the selection of a proposed
site under this subsection, (i) the contractor shall submit to
the Agency Department an application for a license to construct
and operate a regional disposal facility at the selected site
and (ii) the Task Group shall be abolished and its records
transferred to the Agency Department.
    (c) The Agency Department shall review the license
application filed pursuant to Section 8 and subsections (a) and
(b) of this Section in accordance with its rules and the
agreement between the State of Illinois and the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission under Section 274 of the Atomic Energy
Act. If the Agency Department determines that the license
should be issued, the Agency Department shall publish in the
State newspaper a notice of intent to issue the license.
Objections to issuance of the license may be filed within 90
days of publication of the notice. Upon receipt of objections,
the Director shall appoint a hearing officer who shall conduct
an adjudicatory hearing on the objections. The burden of proof
at the hearing shall be on the person filing the objections.
Upon completion of the hearing, the hearing officer shall
recommend to the Director whether the license should be issued.
The decision of the Director to issue or deny the license may
be appealed under Section 18.
    (d) The procedures, criteria, terms, and conditions set
forth in this Act, and in the rules adopted under this Act, for
the treatment, storage, and disposal of low-level radioactive
waste and for the siting, licensure, design, construction,
maintenance, operation, closure, decommissioning, and
post-closure care of the regional disposal facility shall be
the exclusive procedures, criteria, terms, and conditions for
those matters.
(Source: P.A. 90-29, eff. 6-26-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 20/11)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-11)
    Sec. 11. Report by the Agency Department.
    (a) (Blank).
    (b) (Blank).
    (c) At any time necessary, as determined by the Director,
to ensure proper planning and policy responses relating to the
continued availability of facilities for the storage and
disposal of low-level radioactive wastes, the Agency
Department shall deliver to the Governor, the President and
Minority Leader of the Senate, and the Speaker and Minority
Leader of the House a report that shall include, at a minimum,
an analysis of the impacts of restrictions on disposal of
low-level radioactive waste at commercial disposal facilities
outside the State of Illinois and the Agency's Department's
analysis of, and recommendations regarding, the feasibility of
a centralized interim storage facility for low-level
radioactive waste generated within the region of the Compact
and the nature and extent, if any, of the generator's or any
other entity's responsibility for or title to the waste to be
stored at a centralized interim storage facility after the
waste has been delivered to that facility.
(Source: P.A. 90-29, eff. 6-26-97; 91-601, eff. 8-16-99.)
 
    (420 ILCS 20/13)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-13)
    Sec. 13. Waste fees.
    (a) The Agency Department shall collect a fee from each
generator of low-level radioactive wastes in this State. Except
as provided in subsections (b), (c), and (d), the amount of the
fee shall be $50.00 or the following amount, whichever is
greater:
        (1) $1 per cubic foot of waste shipped for storage,
    treatment or disposal if storage of the waste for shipment
    occurred prior to September 7, 1984;
        (2) $2 per cubic foot of waste stored for shipment if
    storage of the waste occurs on or after September 7, 1984,
    but prior to October 1, 1985;
        (3) $3 per cubic foot of waste stored for shipment if
    storage of the waste occurs on or after October 1, 1985;
        (4) $2 per cubic foot of waste shipped for storage,
    treatment or disposal if storage of the waste for shipment
    occurs on or after September 7, 1984 but prior to October
    1, 1985, provided that no fee has been collected previously
    for storage of the waste;
        (5) $3 per cubic foot of waste shipped for storage,
    treatment or disposal if storage of the waste for shipment
    occurs on or after October 1, 1985, provided that no fees
    have been collected previously for storage of the waste.
    Such fees shall be collected annually or as determined by
the Agency Department and shall be deposited in the low-level
radioactive waste funds as provided in Section 14 of this Act.
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, no fee under
this Section shall be collected from a generator for waste
generated incident to manufacturing before December 31, 1980,
and shipped for disposal outside of this State before December
31, 1992, as part of a site reclamation leading to license
termination.
    (b) Each nuclear power reactor in this State for which an
operating license has been issued by the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission shall not be subject to the fee required by
subsection (a) with respect to (1) waste stored for shipment if
storage of the waste occurs on or after January 1, 1986; and
(2) waste shipped for storage, treatment or disposal if storage
of the waste for shipment occurs on or after January 1, 1986.
In lieu of the fee, each reactor shall be required to pay an
annual fee as provided in this subsection for the treatment,
storage and disposal of low-level radioactive waste. Beginning
with State fiscal year 1986 and through State fiscal year 1997,
fees shall be due and payable on January 1st of each year. For
State fiscal year 1998 and all subsequent State fiscal years,
fees shall be due and payable on July 1 of each fiscal year.
The fee due on July 1, 1997 shall be payable on that date, or
within 10 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act
of 1997, whichever is later.
    The owner of any nuclear power reactor that has an
operating license issued by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission
for any portion of State fiscal year 1998 shall continue to pay
an annual fee of $90,000 for the treatment, storage, and
disposal of low-level radioactive waste through State fiscal
year 2002. The fee shall be due and payable on July 1 of each
fiscal year. The fee due on July 1, 1998 shall be payable on
that date, or within 10 days after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1998, whichever is later. If the balance in
the Low-Level Radioactive Waste Facility Development and
Operation Fund falls below $500,000, as of the end of any
fiscal year after fiscal year 2002, the Agency Department is
authorized to assess by rule, after notice and a hearing, an
additional annual fee to be paid by the owners of nuclear power
reactors for which operating licenses have been issued by the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, except that no additional
annual fee shall be assessed because of the fund balance at the
end of fiscal year 2005 or the end of fiscal year 2006. The
additional annual fee shall be payable on the date or dates
specified by rule and shall not exceed $30,000 per operating
reactor per year.
    (c) In each of State fiscal years 1988, 1989 and 1990, in
addition to the fee imposed in subsections (b) and (d), the
owner of each nuclear power reactor in this State for which an
operating license has been issued by the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission shall pay a fee of $408,000. If an operating license
is issued during one of those 3 fiscal years, the owner shall
pay a prorated amount of the fee equal to $1,117.80 multiplied
by the number of days in the fiscal year during which the
nuclear power reactor was licensed.
    The fee shall be due and payable as follows: in fiscal year
1988, $204,000 shall be paid on October 1, 1987 and $102,000
shall be paid on each of January 1, 1988 and April 1, 1988; in
fiscal year 1989, $102,000 shall be paid on each of July 1,
1988, October 1, 1988, January 1, 1989 and April 1, 1989; and
in fiscal year 1990, $102,000 shall be paid on each of July 1,
1989, October 1, 1989, January 1, 1990 and April 1, 1990. If
the operating license is issued during one of the 3 fiscal
years, the owner shall be subject to those payment dates, and
their corresponding amounts, on which the owner possesses an
operating license and, on June 30 of the fiscal year of
issuance of the license, whatever amount of the prorated fee
remains outstanding.
    All of the amounts collected by the Agency Department under
this subsection (c) shall be deposited into the Low-Level
Radioactive Waste Facility Development and Operation Fund
created under subsection (a) of Section 14 of this Act and
expended, subject to appropriation, for the purposes provided
in that subsection.
    (d) In addition to the fees imposed in subsections (b) and
(c), the owners of nuclear power reactors in this State for
which operating licenses have been issued by the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission shall pay the following fees for each
such nuclear power reactor: for State fiscal year 1989,
$325,000 payable on October 1, 1988, $162,500 payable on
January 1, 1989, and $162,500 payable on April 1, 1989; for
State fiscal year 1990, $162,500 payable on July 1, $300,000
payable on October 1, $300,000 payable on January 1 and
$300,000 payable on April 1; for State fiscal year 1991, either
(1) $150,000 payable on July 1, $650,000 payable on September
1, $675,000 payable on January 1, and $275,000 payable on April
1, or (2) $150,000 on July 1, $130,000 on the first day of each
month from August through December, $225,000 on the first day
of each month from January through March and $92,000 on the
first day of each month from April through June; for State
fiscal year 1992, $260,000 payable on July 1, $900,000 payable
on September 1, $300,000 payable on October 1, $150,000 payable
on January 1, and $100,000 payable on April 1; for State fiscal
year 1993, $100,000 payable on July 1, $230,000 payable on
August 1 or within 10 days after July 31, 1992, whichever is
later, and $355,000 payable on October 1; for State fiscal year
1994, $100,000 payable on July 1, $75,000 payable on October 1
and $75,000 payable on April 1; for State fiscal year 1995,
$100,000 payable on July 1, $75,000 payable on October 1, and
$75,000 payable on April 1, for State fiscal year 1996,
$100,000 payable on July 1, $75,000 payable on October 1, and
$75,000 payable on April 1. The owner of any nuclear power
reactor that has an operating license issued by the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission for any portion of State fiscal year 1998
shall pay an annual fee of $30,000 through State fiscal year
2003. For State fiscal year 2004 and subsequent fiscal years,
the owner of any nuclear power reactor that has an operating
license issued by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission shall pay
an annual fee of $30,000 per reactor, provided that the fee
shall not apply to a nuclear power reactor with regard to which
the owner notified the Nuclear Regulatory Commission during
State fiscal year 1998 that the nuclear power reactor
permanently ceased operations. The fee shall be due and payable
on July 1 of each fiscal year. The fee due on July 1, 1998 shall
be payable on that date, or within 10 days after the effective
date of this amendatory Act of 1998, whichever is later. The
fee due on July 1, 1997 shall be payable on that date or within
10 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of
1997, whichever is later. If the payments under this subsection
for fiscal year 1993 due on January 1, 1993, or on April 1,
1993, or both, were due before the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 87th General Assembly, then those
payments are waived and need not be made.
    All of the amounts collected by the Agency Department under
this subsection (d) shall be deposited into the Low-Level
Radioactive Waste Facility Development and Operation Fund
created pursuant to subsection (a) of Section 14 of this Act
and expended, subject to appropriation, for the purposes
provided in that subsection.
    All payments made by licensees under this subsection (d)
for fiscal year 1992 that are not appropriated and obligated by
the Agency Department above $1,750,000 per reactor in fiscal
year 1992, shall be credited to the licensees making the
payments to reduce the per reactor fees required under this
subsection (d) for fiscal year 1993.
    (e) The Agency Department shall promulgate rules and
regulations establishing standards for the collection of the
fees authorized by this Section. The regulations shall include,
but need not be limited to:
        (1) the records necessary to identify the amounts of
    low-level radioactive wastes produced;
        (2) the form and submission of reports to accompany the
    payment of fees to the Agency Department; and
        (3) the time and manner of payment of fees to the
    Agency Department, which payments shall not be more
    frequent than quarterly.
    (f) Any operating agreement entered into under subsection
(b) of Section 5 of this Act between the Agency Department and
any disposal facility contractor shall, subject to the
provisions of this Act, authorize the contractor to impose upon
and collect from persons using the disposal facility fees
designed and set at levels reasonably calculated to produce
sufficient revenues (1) to pay all costs and expenses properly
incurred or accrued in connection with, and properly allocated
to, performance of the contractor's obligations under the
operating agreement, and (2) to provide reasonable and
appropriate compensation or profit to the contractor under the
operating agreement. For purposes of this subsection (f), the
term "costs and expenses" may include, without limitation, (i)
direct and indirect costs and expenses for labor, services,
equipment, materials, insurance and other risk management
costs, interest and other financing charges, and taxes or fees
in lieu of taxes; (ii) payments to or required by the United
States, the State of Illinois or any agency or department
thereof, the Central Midwest Interstate Low-Level Radioactive
Waste Compact, and subject to the provisions of this Act, any
unit of local government; (iii) amortization of capitalized
costs with respect to the disposal facility and its
development, including any capitalized reserves; and (iv)
payments with respect to reserves, accounts, escrows or trust
funds required by law or otherwise provided for under the
operating agreement.
    (g) (Blank).
    (h) (Blank).
    (i) (Blank).
    (j) (Blank).
    (j-5) Prior to commencement of facility operations, the
Agency Department shall adopt rules providing for the
establishment and collection of fees and charges with respect
to the use of the disposal facility as provided in subsection
(f) of this Section.
    (k) The regional disposal facility shall be subject to ad
valorem real estate taxes lawfully imposed by units of local
government and school districts with jurisdiction over the
facility. No other local government tax, surtax, fee or other
charge on activities at the regional disposal facility shall be
allowed except as authorized by the Agency Department.
    (l) The Agency Department shall have the power, in the
event that acceptance of waste for disposal at the regional
disposal facility is suspended, delayed or interrupted, to
impose emergency fees on the generators of low-level
radioactive waste. Generators shall pay emergency fees within
30 days of receipt of notice of the emergency fees. The
Department shall deposit all of the receipts of any fees
collected under this subsection into the Low-Level Radioactive
Waste Facility Development and Operation Fund created under
subsection (b) of Section 14. Emergency fees may be used to
mitigate the impacts of the suspension or interruption of
acceptance of waste for disposal. The requirements for
rulemaking in the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act shall
not apply to the imposition of emergency fees under this
subsection.
    (m) The Agency Department shall promulgate any other rules
and regulations as may be necessary to implement this Section.
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04; 94-91, eff. 7-1-05.)
 
    (420 ILCS 20/14)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-14)
    Sec. 14. Waste management funds.
    (a) There is hereby created in the State Treasury a special
fund to be known as the "Low-Level Radioactive Waste Facility
Development and Operation Fund". All monies within the
Low-Level Radioactive Waste Facility Development and Operation
Fund shall be invested by the State Treasurer in accordance
with established investment practices. Interest earned by such
investment shall be returned to the Low-Level Radioactive Waste
Facility Development and Operation Fund. Except as otherwise
provided in this subsection, the Agency Department shall
deposit 80% of all receipts from the fees required under
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 13 in the State Treasury to
the credit of this Fund. Beginning July 1, 1997, and until
December 31 of the year in which the Task Group approves a
proposed site under Section 10.3, the Department shall deposit
all fees collected under subsections (a) and (b) of Section 13
of this Act into the Fund. Subject to appropriation, the Agency
Department is authorized to expend all moneys in the Fund in
amounts it deems necessary for:
        (1) hiring personnel and any other operating and
    contingent expenses necessary for the proper
    administration of this Act;
        (2) contracting with any firm for the purpose of
    carrying out the purposes of this Act;
        (3) grants to the Central Midwest Interstate Low-Level
    Radioactive Waste Commission;
        (4) hiring personnel, contracting with any person, and
    meeting any other expenses incurred by the Agency
    Department in fulfilling its responsibilities under the
    Radioactive Waste Compact Enforcement Act;
        (5) activities under Sections 10, 10.2 and 10.3;
        (6) payment of fees in lieu of taxes to a local
    government having within its boundaries a regional
    disposal facility;
        (7) payment of grants to counties or municipalities
    under Section 12.1; and
        (8) fulfillment of obligations under a community
    agreement under Section 12.1.
    In spending monies pursuant to such appropriations, the
Agency Department shall to the extent practicable avoid
duplicating expenditures made by any firm pursuant to a
contract awarded under this Section. On or before March 1, 1989
and on or before October 1 of 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, and 1993,
the Department of Nuclear Safety (now the Illinois Emergency
Management Agency) shall deliver to the Governor, the President
and Minority Leader of the Senate, the Speaker and Minority
Leader of the House, and each of the generators that have
contributed during the preceding State fiscal year to the
Low-Level Radioactive Waste Facility Development and Operation
Fund a financial statement, certified and verified by the
Director, which details all receipts and expenditures from the
fund during the preceding State fiscal year; provided that the
report due on or before March 1, 1989 shall detail all receipts
and expenditures from the fund during the period from July 1,
1988 through January 31, 1989. The financial statements shall
identify all sources of income to the fund and all recipients
of expenditures from the fund, shall specify the amounts of all
the income and expenditures, and shall indicate the amounts of
all the income and expenditures, and shall indicate the purpose
for all expenditures.
    (b) There is hereby created in the State Treasury a special
fund to be known as the "Low-Level Radioactive Waste Facility
Closure, Post-Closure Care and Compensation Fund". All monies
within the Low-Level Radioactive Waste Facility Closure,
Post-Closure Care and Compensation Fund shall be invested by
the State Treasurer in accordance with established investment
practices. Interest earned by such investment shall be returned
to the Low-Level Radioactive Waste Facility Closure,
Post-Closure Care and Compensation Fund. The Agency Department
shall deposit 20% of all receipts from the fees required under
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 13 of this Act in the State
Treasury to the credit of this Fund, except that, pursuant to
subsection (a) of Section 14 of this Act, there shall be no
such deposit into this Fund between July 1, 1997 and December
31 of the year in which the Task Group approves a proposed site
pursuant to Section 10.3 of this Act. All deposits into this
Fund shall be held by the State Treasurer separate and apart
from all public money or funds of this State. Subject to
appropriation, the Agency Department is authorized to expend
any moneys in this Fund in amounts it deems necessary for:
        (1) decommissioning and other procedures required for
    the proper closure of the regional disposal facility;
        (2) monitoring, inspecting, and other procedures
    required for the proper closure, decommissioning, and
    post-closure care of the regional disposal facility;
        (3) taking any remedial actions necessary to protect
    human health and the environment from releases or
    threatened releases of wastes from the regional disposal
    facility;
        (4) the purchase of facility and third-party liability
    insurance necessary during the institutional control
    period of the regional disposal facility;
        (5) mitigating the impacts of the suspension or
    interruption of the acceptance of waste for disposal;
        (6) compensating any person suffering any damages or
    losses to a person or property caused by a release from the
    regional disposal facility as provided for in Section 15;
    and
        (7) fulfillment of obligations under a community
    agreement under Section 12.1.
    On or before March 1 of each year, the Agency Department
shall deliver to the Governor, the President and Minority
Leader of the Senate, the Speaker and Minority Leader of the
House, and each of the generators that have contributed during
the preceding State fiscal year to the Fund a financial
statement, certified and verified by the Director, which
details all receipts and expenditures from the Fund during the
preceding State fiscal year. The financial statements shall
identify all sources of income to the Fund and all recipients
of expenditures from the Fund, shall specify the amounts of all
the income and expenditures, and shall indicate the amounts of
all the income and expenditures, and shall indicate the purpose
for all expenditures.
    (c) (Blank).
    (d) The Agency Department may accept for any of its
purposes and functions any donations, grants of money,
equipment, supplies, materials, and services from any state or
the United States, or from any institution, person, firm or
corporation. Any donation or grant of money received after
January 1, 1986 shall be deposited in either the Low-Level
Radioactive Waste Facility Development and Operation Fund or
the Low-Level Radioactive Waste Facility Closure, Post-Closure
Care and Compensation Fund, in accordance with the purpose of
the grant.
(Source: P.A. 92-276, eff. 8-7-01.)
 
    (420 ILCS 20/15)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-15)
    Sec. 15. Compensation.
    (a) Any person may apply to the Agency Department pursuant
to this Section for compensation of a loss caused by the
release, in Illinois, of radioactivity from the regional
disposal facility. The Department shall prescribe appropriate
forms and procedures for claims filed pursuant to this Section,
which shall include, as a minimum, the following:
        (1) Provisions requiring the claimant to make a sworn
    verification of the claim to the best of his or her
    knowledge.
        (2) A full description, supported by appropriate
    evidence from government agencies, of the release of the
    radioactivity claimed to be the cause of the physical
    injury, illness, loss of income or property damage.
        (3) If making a claim based upon physical injury or
    illness, certification of the medical history of the
    claimant for the 5 years preceding the date of the claim,
    along with certification of the alleged physical injury or
    illness, and expenses for the physical injury or illness,
    made by hospitals, physicians or other qualified medical
    authorities.
        (4) If making a claim for lost income, information on
    the claimant's income as reported on his or her federal
    income tax return or other document for the preceding 3
    years in order to compute lost wages or income.
    (b) The Agency Department shall hold at least one hearing,
if requested by the claimant, within 60 days of submission of a
claim to the Agency Department. The Director shall render a
decision on a claim within 30 days of the hearing unless all of
the parties to the claim agree in writing to an extension of
time. All decisions rendered by the Director shall be in
writing, with notification to all appropriate parties. The
decision shall be considered a final administrative decision
for the purposes of judicial review.
    (c) The following losses shall be compensable under this
Section, provided that the Agency Department has found that the
claimant has established, by the weight of the evidence, that
the losses were proximately caused by the designated release
and are not otherwise compensable under law:
        (1) One hundred percent of uninsured, out-of-pocket
    medical expenses, for up to 3 years from the onset of
    treatment;
        (2) Eighty percent of any uninsured, actual lost wages,
    or business income in lieu of wages, caused by injury to
    the claimant or the claimant's property, not to exceed
    $15,000 per year for 3 years;
        (3) Eighty percent of any losses or damages to real or
    personal property; and
        (4) One hundred percent of costs of any remedial
    actions on such property necessary to protect human health
    and the environment.
    (d) No claim may be presented to the Agency Department
under this Section later than 5 years from the date of
discovery of the damage or loss.
    (e) Compensation for any damage or loss under this Section
shall preclude indemnification or reimbursement from any other
source for the identical damage or loss, and indemnification or
reimbursement from any other source shall preclude
compensation under this Section.
    (f) The Agency Department shall adopt, and revise when
appropriate, rules and regulations necessary to implement the
provisions of this Section, including methods that provide for
establishing that a claimant has exercised reasonable
diligence in satisfying the conditions of the application
requirements, for specifying the proof necessary to establish a
damage or loss compensable under this Section and for
establishing the administrative procedures to be followed in
reviewing claims.
    (g) Claims approved by the Director shall be paid from the
Low-Level Radioactive Waste Facility Closure, Post-Closure
Care and Compensation Fund, except that claims shall not be
paid in excess of the amount available in the Fund. In the case
of insufficient amounts in the Fund to satisfy claims against
the Fund, the General Assembly may appropriate monies to the
Fund in amounts it deems necessary to pay the claims.
(Source: P.A. 87-1166.)
 
    (420 ILCS 20/17)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-17)
    Sec. 17. Penalties.
    (a) Any person operating any facility in violation of
Section 8 shall be subject to a civil penalty not to exceed
$100,000 per day of violation.
    (b) Any person failing to pay the fees provided for in
Section 13 shall be liable to a civil penalty not to exceed 4
times the amount of the fees not paid.
    (c) At the request of the Agency Department, the civil
penalties shall be recovered in an action brought by the
Attorney General on behalf of the State in the circuit court in
which the violation occurred. All amounts collected from fines
under this Section shall be deposited in the Low-Level
Radioactive Waste Facility Closure, Post-Closure Care and
Compensation Fund.
(Source: P.A. 87-1166.)
 
    (420 ILCS 20/21.1)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-21.1)
    Sec. 21.1. (a) For the purpose of conducting subsurface
surveys and other studies under this Act, officers and
employees of the Agency Department and officers and employees
of any person under contract or subcontract with the Agency
Department shall have the power to enter upon the lands or
waters of any person upon written notice to the known owners
and occupants, if any.
    (b) In addition to the powers under subsection (a), and
without limitation to those powers, the Agency Department and
any person under contract or subcontract with the Agency
Department shall also have the power to enter contracts and
agreements which allow entry upon the lands or waters of any
person for the purpose of conducting subsurface surveys and
other studies under this Act.
    (c) The Agency Department shall be responsible for any
actual damages occasioned by the entry upon the lands or waters
of any person under this Section.
(Source: P.A. 85-1133.)
 
    Section 40. The Radioactive Waste Storage Act is amended by
changing Sections 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 as follows:
 
    (420 ILCS 35/1)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 230.1)
    Sec. 1. The Director of the Illinois Emergency Management
Agency Nuclear Safety is authorized to acquire by private
purchase, acceptance, or by condemnation in the manner provided
for the exercise of the power of eminent domain under the
Eminent Domain Act, any and all lands, buildings and grounds
where radioactive by-products and wastes produced by
industrial, medical, agricultural, scientific or other
organizations can be concentrated, stored or otherwise
disposed in a manner consistent with the public health and
safety. Whenever, in the judgment of the Director of the
Illinois Emergency Management Agency Nuclear Safety, it is
necessary to relocate existing facilities for the
construction, operation, closure or long-term care of a
facility for the safe and secure disposal of low-level
radioactive waste, the cost of relocating such existing
facilities may be deemed a part of the disposal facility land
acquisition and the Illinois Emergency Management Agency
Department of Nuclear Safety may, on behalf of the State, pay
such costs. Existing facilities include public utilities,
commercial or industrial facilities, residential buildings,
and such other public or privately owned buildings as the
Director of the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Nuclear
Safety deems necessary for relocation. The Illinois Emergency
Management Agency Department of Nuclear Safety is authorized to
operate a relocation program, and to pay such costs of
relocation as are provided in the federal "Uniform Relocation
Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act", Public
Law 91-646. The Director of the Illinois Emergency Management
Agency Nuclear Safety is authorized to exceed the maximum
payments provided pursuant to the federal "Uniform Relocation
Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act" if
necessary to assure the provision of decent, safe, and sanitary
housing, or to secure a suitable alternate location. Payments
issued under this Section shall be made from the Low-level
Radioactive Waste Facility Development and Operation Fund
established by the Illinois Low-Level Radioactive Waste
Management Act.
(Source: P.A. 94-1055, eff. 1-1-07.)
 
    (420 ILCS 35/2)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 230.2)
    Sec. 2. The Director of the Illinois Emergency Management
Agency Nuclear Safety may accept, receive, and receipt for
moneys or lands, buildings and grounds for and in behalf of the
State, given by the Federal Government under any federal law to
the State or by any other public or private agency, for the
acquisition or operation of a site or sites for the
concentration and storage of radioactive wastes. Such funds
received by the Director pursuant to this section shall be
deposited with the State Treasurer and held and disbursed by
him in accordance with "An Act in relation to the receipt,
custody, and disbursement of money allotted by the United
States of America or any agency thereof for use in this State",
approved July 3, 1939, as amended. Provided that such moneys or
lands, buildings and grounds shall be used only for the
purposes for which they are contributed.
(Source: P.A. 81-1516.)
 
    (420 ILCS 35/3)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 230.3)
    Sec. 3. The Director of the Illinois Emergency Management
Agency Nuclear Safety may lease such lands, buildings and
grounds as it may acquire under the provisions of this Act to a
private firm or firms for the purpose of operating a site or
sites for the concentration and storage of radioactive wastes
or for such other purpose not contrary to the public interests.
(Source: P.A. 81-1516.)
 
    (420 ILCS 35/4)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 230.4)
    Sec. 4. The operation of any and all sites acquired for the
concentration and storage of radioactive wastes shall be under
the direct supervision of the Illinois Emergency Management
Agency Department of Nuclear Safety and shall be in accordance
with regulations promulgated and enforced by the Agency
Department to protect the public health and safety.
(Source: P.A. 81-1516.)
 
    (420 ILCS 35/5)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 230.5)
    Sec. 5. The Director of the Illinois Emergency Management
Agency Nuclear Safety is authorized to enter into contracts as
he may deem necessary for carrying out the provisions of this
Act. Such contracts may include the assessment of fees by the
Agency Director. The fees required shall be established at a
rate which provides an annual amount equal to the anticipated
reasonable cost necessary to maintain, monitor, and otherwise
supervise and care for lands and facilities as required in the
interest of public health and safety.
(Source: P.A. 81-1516.)
 
    (420 ILCS 35/6)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 230.6)
    Sec. 6. It is recognized by the General Assembly that any
site used for the concentration and storage of radioactive
waste material will represent a continuing and perpetual
responsibility in the interests of the public health, safety
and general welfare, and that the same must ultimately be
reposed in a sovereign government without regard for the
existence or nonexistence of any particular agency,
instrumentality, department, division or officer thereof. In
all instances lands, buildings and grounds which are to be
designated as sites for the concentration and storage of
radioactive waste materials shall be acquired in fee simple
absolute and dedicated in perpetuity to such purpose. All
rights, title and interest in, of and to any radioactive waste
materials accepted by the Illinois Emergency Management Agency
Department of Nuclear Safety for permanent storage at such
facilities, shall upon acceptance become the property of the
State and shall be in all respects administered, controlled,
and disposed of, including transfer by sale, lease, loan or
otherwise, by the Agency Department of Nuclear Safety in the
name of the State. All fees received pursuant to contracts
entered into by the Illinois Emergency Management Agency
Director shall be deposited in the State Treasury and shall be
set apart in a special fund to be known as the "Radioactive
Waste Site Perpetual Care Fund". Monies deposited in the fund
shall be expended by the Illinois Emergency Management Agency
Director to monitor and maintain the site as required to
protect the public health and safety on a continuing and
perpetual basis. All payments received by the Department of
Nuclear Safety (now the Illinois Emergency Management Agency)
pursuant to the settlement agreement entered May 25, 1988, in
the matter of the People of the State of Illinois, et al. v.
Teledyne, Inc., et al. (No. 78 MR 25, Circuit Court, Bureau
County, Illinois) shall be held by the State Treasurer separate
and apart from all public moneys or funds of the State, and
shall be used only as provided in such settlement agreement.
(Source: P.A. 86-257.)
 
    Section 45. The Radioactive Waste Tracking and Permitting
Act is amended by changing Sections 5, 10, and 15 as follows:
 
    (420 ILCS 37/5)
    Sec. 5. Legislative findings.
    (a) The General Assembly finds:
        (1) that a considerable volume of wastes are produced
    in this State with even greater volumes to be produced in
    the future;
        (2) that these wastes pose a significant risk to the
    public health, safety and welfare of the people of
    Illinois; and
        (3) that it is the obligation of the State of Illinois
    to its citizens to provide for the safe management of the
    wastes produced within its borders.
    (b) It is the intent of this Act to authorize the Illinois
Emergency Management Agency Department of Nuclear Safety to
establish, by regulation, a tracking system for the regulation
of the use of facilities licensed under Section 8 of the
Illinois Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Act.
(Source: P.A. 88-616, eff. 9-9-94.)
 
    (420 ILCS 37/10)
    Sec. 10. Definitions.
    (a) "Agency" "Department" means the Illinois Emergency
Management Agency Department of Nuclear Safety.
    (b) "Director" means the Director of the Illinois Emergency
Management Agency Department of Nuclear Safety.
    (c) "Disposal" means the isolation of waste from the
biosphere in a permanent facility designed for that purpose.
    (d) "Facility" means a parcel of land or a site, together
with structures, equipment, and improvements on or appurtenant
to the land or site, that is used or is being developed for the
treatment, storage, or disposal of low-level radioactive
waste.
    (e) "Low-level radioactive waste" or "waste" means
radioactive waste not classified as (1) high-level radioactive
waste, (2) transuranic waste, (3) spent nuclear fuel, or (4)
by-product material as defined in Section 11e(2) of the Atomic
Energy Act. This definition shall apply notwithstanding any
declaration by the federal government or a state that any
radioactive material is exempt from any regulatory control.
    (f) "Person" means an individual, corporation, business
enterprise, or other legal entity, public or private, or any
legal successor, representative, agent, or agency of that
individual, corporation, business enterprise, or legal entity.
    (g) "Regional facility" or "disposal facility" means a
facility that is located in Illinois and established by
Illinois, under designation of Illinois as a host state by the
Commission for disposal of waste.
    (h) "Storage" means the temporary holding of waste for
treatment or disposal for a period determined by Agency
Department regulations.
    (i) "Treatment" means any method, technique, or process,
including storage for radioactive decay, that is designed to
change the physical, chemical, or biological characteristics
or composition of any waste in order to render the waste safer
for transport, storage, or disposal, amenable to recovery,
convertible to another usable material, or reduced in volume.
(Source: P.A. 88-616, eff. 9-9-94.)
 
    (420 ILCS 37/15)
    Sec. 15. Permit requirements for the storage, treatment,
and disposal of waste at a disposal facility.
    (a) Upon adoption of regulations under subsection (c) of
this Section, no person shall deposit any low-level radioactive
waste at a storage, treatment, or disposal facility in Illinois
licensed under Section 8 of the Illinois Low-Level Radioactive
Waste Management Act without a permit granted by the Illinois
Emergency Management Agency Department of Nuclear Safety.
    (b) Upon adoption of regulations under subsection (c) of
this Section, no person shall operate a storage, treatment, or
disposal facility licensed under Section 8 of the Illinois
Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Act without a permit
granted by the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Department
of Nuclear Safety.
    (c) The Illinois Emergency Management Agency Department of
Nuclear Safety shall adopt regulations providing for the
issuance, suspension, and revocation of permits required under
subsections (a) and (b) of this Section. The regulations may
provide a system for tracking low-level radioactive waste to
ensure that waste that other states are responsible for
disposing of under federal law does not become the
responsibility of the State of Illinois. The regulations shall
be consistent with the Federal Hazardous Materials
Transportation Act.
    (d) The Agency Department may enter into a contract or
contracts for operation of the system for tracking low-level
radioactive waste as provided in subsection (c) of this
Section.
    (e) A person who violates this Section or any regulation
promulgated under this Section shall be subject to a civil
penalty, not to exceed $10,000, for each violation. Each day a
violation continues shall constitute a separate offense. A
person who fails to pay a civil penalty imposed by a regulation
adopted under this Section, or any portion of the penalty, is
liable in a civil action in an amount not to exceed 4 times the
amount imposed and not paid. At the request of the Agency
Department, the Attorney General shall, on behalf of the State,
bring an action for the recovery of any civil penalty provided
for by this Section. Any civil penalties so recovered shall be
deposited in the Low-Level Radioactive Waste Facility Closure,
Post-Closure Care and Compensation Fund.
(Source: P.A. 88-616, eff. 9-9-94.)
 
    Section 50. The Radiation Protection Act of 1990 is amended
by changing Sections 4 and 6 as follows:
 
    (420 ILCS 40/4)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 210-4)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2011)
    Sec. 4. Definitions. As used in this Act:
    (a) "Accreditation" means the process by which the Agency
grants permission to persons meeting the requirements of this
Act and the Agency's Department's rules and regulations to
engage in the practice of administering radiation to human
beings.
    (a-2) "Agency" means the Illinois Emergency Management
Agency.
    (a-3) "Assistant Director" means the Assistant Director of
the Agency.
    (a-5) "By-product material" means: (1) any radioactive
material (except special nuclear material) yielded in or made
radioactive by exposure to radiation incident to the process of
producing or utilizing special nuclear material; and (2) the
tailings or wastes produced by the extraction or concentration
of uranium or thorium from any ore processed primarily for its
source material content, including discrete surface wastes
resulting from underground solution extraction processes but
not including underground ore bodies depleted by such solution
extraction processes.
    (b) (Blank).
    (c) (Blank).
    (d) "General license" means a license, pursuant to
regulations promulgated by the Agency, effective without the
filing of an application to transfer, acquire, own, possess or
use quantities of, or devices or equipment utilizing,
radioactive material, including but not limited to by-product,
source or special nuclear materials.
    (d-1) "Identical in substance" means the regulations
promulgated by the Agency would require the same actions with
respect to ionizing radiation, for the same group of affected
persons, as would federal laws, regulations, or orders if any
federal agency, including but not limited to the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Food and Drug Administration, or
Environmental Protection Agency, administered the subject
program in Illinois.
    (d-3) "Mammography" means radiography of the breast
primarily for the purpose of enabling a physician to determine
the presence, size, location and extent of cancerous or
potentially cancerous tissue in the breast.
    (d-7) "Operator" is an individual, group of individuals,
partnership, firm, corporation, association, or other entity
conducting the business or activities carried on within a
radiation installation.
    (e) "Person" means any individual, corporation,
partnership, firm, association, trust, estate, public or
private institution, group, agency, political subdivision of
this State, any other State or political subdivision or agency
thereof, and any legal successor, representative, agent, or
agency of the foregoing, other than the United States Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, or any successor thereto, and other than
federal government agencies licensed by the United States
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, or any successor thereto.
"Person" also includes a federal entity (and its contractors)
if the federal entity agrees to be regulated by the State or as
otherwise allowed under federal law.
    (f) "Radiation" or "ionizing radiation" means gamma rays
and x-rays, alpha and beta particles, high speed electrons,
neutrons, protons, and other nuclear particles or
electromagnetic radiations capable of producing ions directly
or indirectly in their passage through matter; but does not
include sound or radio waves or visible, infrared, or
ultraviolet light.
    (f-5) "Radiation emergency" means the uncontrolled release
of radioactive material from a radiation installation which
poses a potential threat to the public health, welfare, and
safety.
    (g) "Radiation installation" is any location or facility
where radiation machines are used or where radioactive material
is produced, transported, stored, disposed of, or used for any
purpose.
    (h) "Radiation machine" is any device that produces
radiation when in use.
    (i) "Radioactive material" means any solid, liquid, or
gaseous substance which emits radiation spontaneously.
    (j) "Radiation source" or "source of ionizing radiation"
means a radiation machine or radioactive material as defined
herein.
    (k) "Source material" means (1) uranium, thorium, or any
other material which the Agency declares by order to be source
material after the United States Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, or any successor thereto, has determined the
material to be such; or (2) ores containing one or more of the
foregoing materials, in such concentration as the Agency
declares by order to be source material after the United States
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, or any successor thereto, has
determined the material in such concentration to be source
material.
    (l) "Special nuclear material" means (1) plutonium,
uranium 233, uranium enriched in the isotope 233 or in the
isotope 235, and any other material which the Agency declares
by order to be special nuclear material after the United States
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, or any successor thereto, has
determined the material to be such, but does not include source
material; or (2) any material artificially enriched by any of
the foregoing, but does not include source material.
    (m) "Specific license" means a license, issued after
application, to use, manufacture, produce, transfer, receive,
acquire, own, or possess quantities of, or devices or equipment
utilizing radioactive materials.
(Source: P.A. 94-104, eff. 7-1-05; 95-511, eff. 8-28-07.)
 
    (420 ILCS 40/6)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 210-6)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2011)
    Sec. 6. Accreditation of administrators of radiation;
Limited scope accreditation; Rules and regulations; Education.
    (a) The Agency shall promulgate such rules and regulations
as are necessary to establish accreditation standards and
procedures, including a minimum course of education and
continuing education requirements in the administration of
radiation to human beings, which are appropriate to the
classification of accreditation and which are to be met by all
physician assistants, advanced practice nurses, nurses,
technicians, or other assistants who administer radiation to
human beings under the supervision of a person licensed under
the Medical Practice Act of 1987. Such rules and regulations
may provide for different classes of accreditation based on
evidence of national certification, clinical experience or
community hardship as conditions of initial and continuing
accreditation. The rules and regulations of the Agency shall be
consistent with national standards in regard to the protection
of the health and safety of the general public.
    (b) The rules and regulations shall also provide that
persons who have been accredited by the Agency, in accordance
with the Radiation Protection Act, without passing an
examination, will remain accredited as provided in Section 43
of this Act and that those persons may be accredited, without
passing an examination, to use other equipment, procedures, or
supervision within the original category of accreditation if
the Agency receives written assurances from a person licensed
under the Medical Practice Act of 1987, that the person
accredited has the necessary skill and qualifications for such
additional equipment procedures or supervision. The Agency
shall, in accordance with subsection (c) of this Section,
provide for the accreditation of nurses, technicians, or other
assistants, unless exempted elsewhere in this Act, to perform a
limited scope of diagnostic radiography procedures of the
chest, the extremities, skull and sinuses, or the spine, while
under the supervision of a person licensed under the Medical
Practice Act of 1987.
    (c) The rules or regulations promulgated by the Agency
pursuant to subsection (a) shall establish standards and
procedures for accrediting persons to perform a limited scope
of diagnostic radiography procedures. The rules or regulations
shall require persons seeking limited scope accreditation to
register with the Agency as a "student-in-training," and
declare those procedures in which the student will be receiving
training. The student-in-training registration shall be valid
for a period of 16 months, during which the time the student
may, under the supervision of a person licensed under the
Medical Practice Act of 1987, perform the diagnostic
radiography procedures listed on the student's registration.
The student-in-training registration shall be nonrenewable.
    Upon expiration of the 16 month training period, the
student shall be prohibited from performing diagnostic
radiography procedures unless accredited by the Agency to
perform such procedures. In order to be accredited to perform a
limited scope of diagnostic radiography procedures, an
individual must pass an examination offered by the Agency. The
examination shall be consistent with national standards in
regard to protection of public health and safety. The
examination shall consist of a standardized component covering
general principles applicable to diagnostic radiography
procedures and a clinical component specific to the types of
procedures for which accreditation is being sought. The Agency
may assess a reasonable fee for such examinations to cover the
costs incurred by the Agency Department in conjunction with
offering the examinations.
    (d) The Agency shall by rule or regulation exempt from
accreditation physician assistants, advanced practice nurses,
nurses, technicians, or other assistants who administer
radiation to human beings under supervision of a person
licensed to practice under the Medical Practice Act of 1987
when the services are performed on employees of a business at a
medical facility owned and operated by the business. Such
exemption shall only apply to the equipment, procedures and
supervision specific to the medical facility owned and operated
by the business.
(Source: P.A. 93-149, eff. 7-10-03; 94-104, eff. 7-1-05.)
 
    Section 55. The Uranium and Thorium Mill Tailings Control
Act is amended by changing Sections 5, 10, 15, 25, 30, 32, 35,
and 40 as follows:
 
    (420 ILCS 42/5)
    Sec. 5. Legislative findings.
    (a) The General Assembly finds:
        (1) that a very large volume of by-product material,
    commonly referred to as uranium and thorium mill tailings,
    is located within this State, much of it in urban areas;
        (2) that such radioactive materials pose a significant
    risk to the public health, safety, and welfare of the
    people of Illinois; and
        (3) that the Illinois Emergency Management Agency
    Department of Nuclear Safety, pursuant to the provisions of
    the Radiation Protection Act of 1990, regulates the
    generation, possession, use, and disposal of such
    materials to protect the public health and safety from the
    radiation risks associated with these materials and to
    ensure that they do not pose an undue risk to the public
    health, safety, or the environment; and
        (4) that in addition to this regulation, it is
    beneficial for the State to have a policy promoting the
    safe and timely decommissioning of source material milling
    facilities that have come to the end of their productive
    lives and the safe and effective decontamination of areas
    within the State that are contaminated with uranium or
    thorium mill tailings.
    (a-5) The General Assembly also finds:
        (1) that the Director, as represented by the Attorney
    General, and Kerr-McGee Chemical Corporation entered into
    an agreement dated May 19, 1994 and other related
    agreements to facilitate the removal of by-product
    material from the City of West Chicago in reliance upon the
    enactment of this amendatory Act of 1994;
        (2) that the May 19, 1994 agreement is consistent with
    the public purpose as expressed in this Act; and
        (3) that the May 19, 1994 agreement is not an agreement
    intended to relieve Kerr-McGee Chemical Corporation from
    the applicability of this Act under Section 35.
    (b) It is the purpose of this Act to establish a
comprehensive program for the timely decommissioning of
uranium and thorium mill tailings facilities in Illinois and
for the decontamination of properties that are contaminated
with uranium or thorium mill tailings. It is the intent of the
General Assembly that such a program provide for the safe
management of these mill tailings and that the program
encourage public participation in all phases of the development
of this management program. It is further the intent of the
General Assembly that this program be in addition to the
regulatory program established in the Radiation Protection Act
of 1990.
(Source: P.A. 87-1024; 88-638, eff. 9-9-94.)
 
    (420 ILCS 42/10)
    Sec. 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
    "Agency" means the Illinois Emergency Management Agency.
    "By-product material" means the tailings or wastes
produced by the extraction or concentration of uranium or
thorium from any ore processed primarily for its source
material content, including discrete surface wastes resulting
from underground solution extraction processes but not
including underground ore bodies depleted by such solution
extraction processes.
    "Department" means the Department of Nuclear Safety.
    "Director" means the Director of the Illinois Emergency
Management Agency Department of Nuclear Safety.
    "Person" means any individual, corporation, partnership,
firm, association, trust, estate, public or private
institution, group, agency, political subdivision of this
State, any other State or political subdivision or agency
thereof, and any legal successor, representative, agent, or
agency of the foregoing, other than the United States Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, or any successor thereto, and other than
federal government agencies licensed by the United States
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, or any successor thereto.
    "Radiation emergency" means the uncontrolled release of
radioactive material from a radiation installation that poses a
potential threat to the public health, welfare, and safety.
    "Source material" means (i) uranium, thorium, or any other
material that the Agency Department declares by order to be
source material after the United States Nuclear Regulatory
Commission or its successor has determined the material to be
source material; or (ii) ores containing one or more of those
materials in such concentration as the Agency Department
declares by order to be source material after the United States
Nuclear Regulatory Commission or its successor has determined
the material in such concentration to be source material.
    "Specific license" means a license, issued after
application, to use, manufacture, produce, transfer, receive,
acquire, own, or possess quantities of radioactive materials or
devices or equipment utilizing radioactive materials.
(Source: P.A. 87-1024.)
 
    (420 ILCS 42/15)
    Sec. 15. Storage fees.
    (a) Beginning January 1, 1994, an annual fee shall be
imposed on the owner or operator of any property that has been
used in whole or in part for the milling of source material and
is being used for the storage or disposal of by-product
material, equal to $2 per cubic foot of by-product material
being stored or disposed of by the facility. After a facility
is cleaned up in accordance with the Agency's Department's
radiological soil clean-up criteria, no fee shall be due,
imposed upon, or collected from an owner. No fee shall be
imposed upon any by-product material moved to a facility in
contemplation of the subsequent removal of the by-product
material pursuant to law or upon any by-product material moved
to a facility in contemplation of processing the material
through a physical separation facility. No fees shall be
collected from any State, county, municipal, or local
governmental agency. In connection with settling litigation
regarding the amount of the fee to be imposed, the Director may
enter into an agreement with the owner or operator of any
facility specifying that the fee to be imposed shall not exceed
$26,000,000 in any calendar year. The fees assessed under this
Section are separate and distinct from any license fees imposed
under Section 11 of the Radiation Protection Act of 1990.
    The fee shall be due on June 1 of each year or at such other
times in such installments as the Director may provide by rule.
To facilitate the expeditious removal of by-product material,
rules establishing payment dates or schedules may be adopted as
emergency rules under Section 5-45 of the Administrative
Procedure Act. The fee shall be collected and administered by
the Agency Department, and shall be deposited into the General
Revenue Fund.
    (b) Moneys may be expended by the Agency Department,
subject to appropriation, for the following purposes but only
as the moneys relate to by-product material attributable to the
owner or operator who pays the fees under subsection (a):
        (1) the costs of monitoring, inspecting, and otherwise
    regulating the storage and disposal of by-product
    material, wherever located;
        (2) the costs of undertaking any maintenance,
    decommissioning activities, cleanup, responses to
    radiation emergencies, or remedial action that would
    otherwise be required of the owner or operator by law or
    under a license amendment or condition in connection with
    by-product materials;
        (3) the costs that would otherwise be required of the
    owner or operator, by law or under a license amendment or
    condition, incurred by the State arising from the
    transportation of the by-product material from a storage or
    unlicensed disposal location to a licensed permanent
    disposal facility; and
        (4) reimbursement to the owner or operator of any
    facility used for the storage or disposal of by-product
    material for costs incurred by the owner or operator in
    connection with the decontamination or decommissioning of
    the storage or disposal facility or other properties
    contaminated with by-product material. However, the amount
    of the reimbursements paid to the owner or operator of a
    by-product material storage or disposal facility shall not
    be reduced for any amounts recovered by the owner or
    operator pursuant to Title X of the federal Energy Policy
    Act of 1992 and shall not exceed the amount of money paid
    by that owner or operator under subsection (a) plus the
    interest attributable to amounts paid by that owner or
    operator.
    An owner or operator who incurs costs in connection with
the decontamination or decommissioning of the storage or
disposal facility or other properties contaminated with
by-product material is entitled to have those costs promptly
reimbursed as provided in this Section. In the event the owner
or operator has incurred reimbursable costs for which there are
not adequate moneys with which to provide reimbursement, the
Director shall reduce the amount of any fee payable in the
future imposed under this Act by the amount of the reimbursable
expenses incurred by the owner or operator. An owner or
operator of a facility shall submit requests for reimbursement
to the Director in a form reasonably required by the Director.
Upon receipt of a request, the Director shall give written
notice approving or disapproving each of the owner's or
operator's request for reimbursement within 60 days. The
Director shall approve requests for reimbursement unless the
Director finds that the amount is excessive, erroneous, or
otherwise inconsistent with paragraph (4) of this subsection or
with any license or license amendments issued in connection
with that owner's or operator's decontamination or
decommissioning plan. If the Director disapproves a
reimbursement request, the Director shall set forth in writing
to the owner or operator the reasons for disapproval. The owner
or operator may resubmit to the Agency Department a disapproved
reimbursement request with additional information as may be
required. Disapproval of a reimbursement request shall
constitute final action for purposes of the Administrative
Review Law unless the owner or operator resubmits the denied
request within 35 days. To the extent there are funds
available, the Director shall prepare and certify to the
Comptroller the disbursement of the approved sums to the owners
or operators or, if there are insufficient funds available, the
Director shall off-set future fees otherwise payable by the
owner or operator by the amount of the approved reimbursable
expenses.
    (c) To the extent that costs identified in parts (1), (2),
and (3) of subsections (b) are recovered by the Agency
Department under the Radiation Protection Act of 1990 or its
rules, the Agency Department shall not use money under this
Section to cover these costs.
    (d) (Blank).
(Source: P.A. 94-91, eff. 7-1-05.)
 
    (420 ILCS 42/25)
    Sec. 25. Response plans.
    (a) Within one year of the effective date of this Act, the
owner or operator of any licensed site where by-product
material is located on the effective date of this Act shall
file with the Agency Department a detailed plan describing all
of the activities necessary for implementation of a permanent
remedial action, including, but not limited to, disposal of
by-product material at a permanent disposal site, restoration
of the licensed site to unrestricted use, and decontamination
of all properties that have been identified as being
contaminated with by-product material produced at the licensed
site. If the licensed site is located in a municipality or
within 1.5 miles of the boundary of any municipality, the plan
shall also be filed with the governing body of that
municipality. If the licensed site is in an unincorporated area
of a county and situated more than 1.5 miles from the boundary
of the nearest municipality, the plan shall be filed with the
governing body of that county.
    (b) Within one year of discontinuing active source material
milling operations, the owner or operator of any facility where
ores are processed primarily for their source material content
shall file with the Agency Department a detailed plan
describing all of the activities necessary for implementation
of a permanent remedial action, including, but not limited to,
disposal of by-product material at a permanent disposal site,
restoration of the facility site to unrestricted use, and
decontamination of all properties that have been identified as
being contaminated with by-product material produced at the
licensed facility. If the facility is located in a municipality
or within 1.5 miles of the boundary of any municipality, the
plan shall also be filed with the governing body of that
municipality. If the site is in an unincorporated area of a
county and situated more than 1.5 miles from the boundary of
the nearest municipality, the plan shall be filed with the
governing body of that county.
    (c) The plans filed under subsection (a) or (b) shall
include a schedule for disposal of by-product material at a
facility that has a specific license authorizing disposal of
by-product material. The schedule shall be such that disposal
could be completed within 48 months or less of commencement of
disposal activities. The plans shall also describe permits,
approvals, and other authorizations that will need to be
obtained and the plans for obtaining those permits, approvals
and authorizations.
(Source: P.A. 87-1024.)
 
    (420 ILCS 42/30)
    Sec. 30. Rules and regulations. The Agency Department may
adopt such rules and procedures as it may deem necessary or
useful in the execution of its duties under this Act. The rules
may require submission of pertinent information by taxpayers.
(Source: P.A. 87-1024.)
 
    (420 ILCS 42/32)
    Sec. 32. Limitations on groundwater and property use.
    (a) In connection with the decommissioning of a source
material milling facility or the termination of the facility's
license, the Agency Department shall have the authority to
adopt by rule, or impose by order or license amendment or
condition, restrictions on the use of groundwater on any
property that has been licensed for the milling of source
material and any property downgradient from the property that
has been licensed for the milling of source material where the
groundwater impacted by a licensed facility has constituents
above naturally-occurring levels and is in excess of the
groundwater standards enforceable by the Agency Department.
    (b) In connection with the decommissioning of a source
material milling facility or the termination of the facility's
license, the Agency Department shall have the authority to
adopt by rule, or impose by order or license amendment or
condition, restrictions on property that has been licensed for
the milling of source material where the soil has constituents
above naturally-occurring levels to limit or prohibit:
        (1) the construction of basements or other similar
    below-ground structures, other than footings or pilings,
    on any portion of the property where elevated levels of the
    constituents are present in the soil; and
        (2) the excavation of soil from a portion of the
    property where elevated levels of the constituents are
    present in the excavated soil, unless the excavated soil is
    (i) disposed of in a facility licensed or permitted to
    dispose of that soil or (ii) returned to the approximate
    depth from which it was excavated and covered with an
    equivalent cover.
    (c) The authority granted to the Agency Department under
this Section is intended to secure the greatest protection of
the public health and safety practicable in the decommissioning
of a source material milling facility or the termination of the
facility's license and shall be in addition to the authority
granted under the Radiation Protection Act of 1990.
(Source: P.A. 90-39, eff. 6-30-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 42/35)
    Sec. 35. Agreements. If the Director of Nuclear Safety
certifies to the General Assembly that the State and the owner
or operator of a licensed by-product material storage or
disposal facility have entered into an agreement enforceable in
court that accomplishes the purposes of subsection (b) of
Section 5 of this Act, and that also provides financial
assurances to protect the State against costs described in
parts (1), (2), and (3) of subsection (b) of Section 15, then
Sections 15, 25 and 40(b) of this Act, and any rules that the
Agency Department may adopt to implement those Sections, shall
not apply to that owner or operator.
(Source: P.A. 87-1024.)
 
    (420 ILCS 42/40)
    Sec. 40. Violations and penalties.
    (a) Any person who violates Section 20 shall be subject to
a civil penalty not to exceed $10,000 per day of violation.
    (b) Any person failing to pay the fees provided for in
Section 15 shall be subject to a civil penalty not to exceed 4
times the amount of the fees not paid.
    (c) Violations of this Act shall be prosecuted by the
Attorney General at the request of the Agency Department. Civil
penalties under this Act are recoverable in an action brought
by the Attorney General on behalf of the State in the circuit
court of the county in which the facility is located. All
amounts collected from fines under this Section shall be
deposited in the General Revenue Fund. It shall also be the
duty of the Attorney General upon the request of the Agency
Department to bring an action for an injunction against any
person violating any of the provisions of this Act. The Court
may assess all or a portion of the cost of actions brought
under this subsection, including but not limited to attorney,
expert witness, and consultant fees, to the owner or operator
of the source material milling facility or to any other person
responsible for the violation or contamination.
(Source: P.A. 94-91, eff. 7-1-05.)
 
    Section 60. The Laser System Act of 1997 is amended by
changing Sections 10, 15, 20, 22, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 60,
and 65 as follows:
 
    (420 ILCS 56/10)
    Sec. 10. Legislative purpose. It is the purpose of this Act
to provide for a program of effective regulation of laser
systems for the protection of human health, welfare, and
safety. The Agency Department shall therefore regulate laser
systems under this Act to ensure the safe use and operation of
those systems.
(Source: P.A. 90-209, eff. 7-25-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 56/15)
    Sec. 15. Definitions. For the purposes of this Act, unless
the context requires otherwise:
        (1) "Agency" "Department" means the Illinois Emergency
    Management Agency Illinois Department of Nuclear Safety.
        (2) "Director" means the Director of the Illinois
    Emergency Management Agency Nuclear Safety.
        (3) "FDA" means the Food and Drug Administration of the
    United States Department of Health and Human Services.
        (4) "Laser installation" means a location or facility
    where laser systems are produced, stored, disposed of, or
    used for any purpose.
        (5) "Laser machine" means a device that is capable of
    producing laser radiation when associated controlled
    devices are operated.
        (6) "Laser radiation" means an electromagnetic
    radiation emitted from a laser system and includes all
    reflected radiation, any secondary radiation, or other
    forms of energy resulting from the primary laser beam.
        (7) "Laser system" means a device, machine, equipment,
    or other apparatus that applies a source of energy to a
    gas, liquid, crystal, or other solid substances or
    combination thereof in a manner that electromagnetic
    radiations of a relatively uniform wave length are
    amplified and emitted in a cohesive beam capable of
    transmitting the energy developed in a manner that may be
    harmful to living tissues, including but not limited to
    electromagnetic waves in the range of visible, infrared, or
    ultraviolet light. Such systems in schools, colleges,
    occupational schools, and State colleges and other State
    institutions are also included in the definition of "laser
    systems".
        (8) "Operator" is an individual, group of individuals,
    partnership, firm, corporation, association, or other
    entity conducting the business or activities carried on
    within a laser installation.
(Source: P.A. 90-209, eff. 7-25-97; 91-188, eff. 7-20-99.)
 
    (420 ILCS 56/20)
    Sec. 20. Registration requirements. An operator of a laser
installation, unless otherwise exempted, shall register the
installation with the Agency Department before the
installation is placed in operation. The registration shall be
filed annually on a form prescribed by the Agency Department.
If any change occurs in a laser installation, the change or
changes shall be registered with the Agency Department within
30 days. If registering a change in each source of laser
radiation or the type or strength of each source of radiation
is impractical, the Agency Department, upon request of the
operator, may approve blanket registration of the
installation. Laser installations registered with the Agency
Department on the effective date of this Act shall retain their
registration.
    Registration of a laser installation shall not imply
approval of manufacture, storage, use, handling, operation, or
disposal of laser systems or laser radiation, but shall serve
merely as notice to the Agency Department of the location and
character of radiation sources in this State.
(Source: P.A. 90-209, eff. 7-25-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 56/22)
    Sec. 22. State regulation of federal entities. The Agency
Department is authorized to regulate laser installations
operated by federal entities (or their contractors) if the
federal entities agree to be regulated by the State or the
regulation is otherwise allowed under federal law. The Agency
Department may, by rule, establish fees to support the
regulation.
(Source: P.A. 91-188, eff. 7-20-99.)
 
    (420 ILCS 56/25)
    Sec. 25. Exemptions. The registration requirements of this
Act shall not apply to the following:
        (1) a laser system that is not considered to be an
    acute hazard to the skin and eyes from direct radiation as
    determined by the FDA classification scheme established in
    21 C.F.R. Section 1040.10.
        (2) a laser system being transported on railroad cars,
    motor vehicles, aircraft, or vessels in conformity with
    rules adopted by an agency having jurisdiction over safety
    during transportation, or laser systems that have been
    installed on aircraft, munitions, or other equipment that
    is subject to the regulations of, and approved by an
    appropriate agency of, the federal government.
        (3) a laser system where the hazard to public health,
    in the opinion of the Agency Department, is absent or
    negligible.
(Source: P.A. 90-209, eff. 7-25-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 56/30)
    Sec. 30. Registration fee. The Agency Department may
establish by rule a registration fee for operators of laser
machines required to register under this Act. The Agency
Director may by rule exempt public institutions from the
registration fee requirement. Registration fees assessed shall
be due and payable within 60 days after the date of billing.
If, after 60 days, the registration fee is not paid, the Agency
Department may issue an order directing the operator of the
installation to cease use of the laser machines for which the
fee is outstanding or take other appropriate enforcement action
as provided in Section 36 of the Radiation Protection Act of
1990. An order issued by the Agency Department shall afford the
operator a right to a hearing before the Agency Department. A
written request for a hearing must be served on the Agency
Department within 10 days of notice of the order. If the
operator fails to file a timely request for a hearing with the
Agency Department, the operator shall be deemed to have waived
his or her right to a hearing. All moneys received by the
Agency Department under this Act shall be deposited into the
Radiation Protection Fund and are not refundable. Pursuant to
appropriation, moneys deposited into the Fund may be used by
the Agency Department to administer and enforce this Act.
(Source: P.A. 90-209, eff. 7-25-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 56/35)
    Sec. 35. Agency Department rules. The Agency Department is
authorized to adopt rules for the administration and
enforcement of this Act and to enter upon, inspect, and
investigate the premises and operations of all laser systems of
this State, whether or not the systems are required to be
registered by this Act. In adopting rules authorized by this
Section and in exempting certain laser systems from the
registration requirements of Section 20, the Agency Department
may seek advice and consultation from engineers, physicists,
physicians, or other persons with special knowledge of laser
systems and of the medical and biological effects of laser
systems.
(Source: P.A. 90-209, eff. 7-25-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 56/40)
    Sec. 40. Reports of accidental injuries. The operator of a
laser system shall promptly report to the Agency Department an
accidental injury to an individual in the course of use,
handling, operation, manufacture, or discharge of a laser
system.
(Source: P.A. 90-209, eff. 7-25-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 56/45)
    Sec. 45. Agency Department authority in case of immediate
threat to health. Notwithstanding any other provision of this
Act, whenever the Agency Department finds that a condition
exists that constitutes an immediate threat to the public
health or safety, the Agency Department is authorized to do all
of the following:
        (a) Enter onto public or private property and take
    possession of or require the immediate cessation of use of
    laser systems that pose an immediate threat to health or
    safety.
        (b) Enter an order for abatement of a violation of a
    provision of this Act or a rule adopted or an order issued
    under this Act that requires immediate action to protect
    the public health or safety. The order shall recite the
    existence of the immediate threat and the findings of the
    Agency Department pertaining to the threat. The order shall
    direct a response that the Agency Department determines
    appropriate under the circumstances, including but not
    limited to all of the following:
            (1) Discontinuance of the violation.
            (2) Rendering the laser system inoperable.
            (3) Impounding of a laser system possessed by a
        person engaging in the violation.
        Such order shall be effective immediately but shall
    include notice of the time and place of a public hearing
    before the Agency Department to be held within 30 days of
    the date of the order to assure the justification of the
    order. On the basis of the public hearing, the Agency
    Department shall continue its order in effect, revoke it,
    or modify it. Any party affected by an order of the Agency
    Department shall have the right to waive the public hearing
    proceedings.
        (c) Direct the Attorney General to obtain an injunction
    against a person responsible for causing or allowing the
    continuance of the immediate threat to health or safety.
(Source: P.A. 90-209, eff. 7-25-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 56/50)
    Sec. 50. Public nuisance; injunctive relief. The
conducting of any business or the carrying on of activities
within a laser installation without registering a laser
installation or without complying with the provisions of this
Act relating to the laser installation is declared to be
inimical to the public welfare and public safety and to
constitute a public nuisance. It is the duty of the Attorney
General, upon the request of the Agency Department, to bring an
action in the name of the People of the State of Illinois to
enjoin an operator from unlawfully engaging in the business or
activity conducted within the laser installation until the
operator of the installation complies with the provisions of
this Act. This injunctive remedy shall be in addition to, and
not in lieu of, any criminal penalty provided in this Act.
(Source: P.A. 90-209, eff. 7-25-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 56/60)
    Sec. 60. Illinois Administrative Procedure Act. The
provisions of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act are
hereby expressly adopted and shall apply to all administrative
rules and procedures of the Illinois Emergency Management
Agency Department of Nuclear Safety under this Act, except that
Section 5 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act relating
to procedures for rulemaking does not apply to the adoption of
any rule required by federal law in connection with which the
Agency Department is precluded from exercising any discretion.
(Source: P.A. 90-209, eff. 7-25-97.)
 
    (420 ILCS 56/65)
    Sec. 65. Administrative Review Law. All final
administrative decisions of the Agency Department under this
Act shall be subject to judicial review under the provisions of
the Administrative Review Law and its rules. The term
"administrative decision" is defined as in Section 3-101 of the
Code of Civil Procedure.
(Source: P.A. 90-209, eff. 7-25-97.)
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.
INDEX
Statutes amended in order of appearance
    20 ILCS 5/5-20 was 20 ILCS 5/4
    20 ILCS 3310/25
    45 ILCS 141/25
    45 ILCS 141/30
    45 ILCS 141/31
    415 ILCS 5/25a-1 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1025a-1
    415 ILCS 5/25b from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1025b
    420 ILCS 10/2 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4352
    420 ILCS 10/4 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4354
    420 ILCS 10/5 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4355
    420 ILCS 10/7 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4357
    420 ILCS 15/2 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 230.22
    420 ILCS 20/2 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-2
    420 ILCS 20/3 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-3
    420 ILCS 20/4 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-4
    420 ILCS 20/5 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-5
    420 ILCS 20/6 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-6
    420 ILCS 20/7 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-7
    420 ILCS 20/8 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-8
    420 ILCS 20/9 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-9
    420 ILCS 20/10 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-10
    420 ILCS 20/10.2 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-10.2
    420 ILCS 20/10.3 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-10.3
    420 ILCS 20/11 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-11
    420 ILCS 20/13 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-13
    420 ILCS 20/14 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-14
    420 ILCS 20/15 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-15
    420 ILCS 20/17 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-17
    420 ILCS 20/21.1 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-21.1
    420 ILCS 35/1 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 230.1
    420 ILCS 35/2 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 230.2
    420 ILCS 35/3 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 230.3
    420 ILCS 35/4 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 230.4
    420 ILCS 35/5 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 230.5
    420 ILCS 35/6 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 230.6
    420 ILCS 37/5
    420 ILCS 37/10
    420 ILCS 37/15
    420 ILCS 40/4 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 210-4
    420 ILCS 40/6 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 210-6
    420 ILCS 42/5
    420 ILCS 42/10
    420 ILCS 42/15
    420 ILCS 42/25
    420 ILCS 42/30
    420 ILCS 42/32
    420 ILCS 42/35
    420 ILCS 42/40
    420 ILCS 56/10
    420 ILCS 56/15
    420 ILCS 56/20
    420 ILCS 56/22
    420 ILCS 56/25
    420 ILCS 56/30
    420 ILCS 56/35
    420 ILCS 56/40
    420 ILCS 56/45
    420 ILCS 56/50
    420 ILCS 56/60
    420 ILCS 56/65