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Public Act 096-0774 |
HB2491 Enrolled |
LRB096 10484 JDS 20656 b |
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AN ACT concerning safety.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Drycleaner Environmental Response Trust |
Fund Act is amended by changing Sections 20, 40, 60, and 65 and |
by adding Section 69 as follows:
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(415 ILCS 135/20)
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Sec. 20. Council rules.
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(a) The Council may adopt rules in accordance with the |
emergency rulemaking
provisions of Section 5-45 of the Illinois |
Administrative Procedure Act for one
year after
the effective |
date of this Act. Thereafter, the Council shall conduct general
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rulemaking as provided under the Illinois Administrative |
Procedure Act.
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(b) The Council shall adopt rules regarding its practice |
and procedures for
investigating and settling claims made |
against the Fund,
determining reimbursement guidelines, |
coordinating with the Agency, and
otherwise implementing and |
administering the Fund under this
Act.
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(c) The Council shall adopt rules regarding its practice |
and procedures to
develop underwriting standards, establish |
insurance account coverage
and risk factors, settle claims made |
against the insurance account of the Fund,
determine |
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appropriate deductibles or retentions in coverages or benefits
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offered under the insurance account of the Fund, determine |
reimbursement
guidelines,
and otherwise implement and |
administer the insurance account under this
Act.
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(d) The Council shall adopt rules necessary for the |
implementation and
collection of insurance account premiums |
prior to offering insurance to an
owner or operator of a |
drycleaning facility or other person.
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(e) The Council shall adopt rules prescribing requirements |
for the retention
of records
by an owner or operator and the |
periods for which he or she must
retain those records.
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(f) The Council shall adopt rules describing the manner in |
which all
disbursed moneys received from the Agency shall be |
deposited with a bank or
savings and loan association to be |
approved by the Council. For purposes of
this subsection, the |
Council shall be considered a public agency and,
therefore, no |
bank or savings and loan association shall receive public funds
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from the Council, and the Council shall not make any |
investments, unless in
accordance with the Public Funds |
Investment Act.
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(g) All final Council decisions regarding the Fund or any |
reimbursement from
the
Fund and any decision concerning the |
classification of drycleaning solvents
pursuant to subsection |
(a) of Section 65 of this Act and any notice of the assessment |
of civil penalties under Section 69 of this Act shall be |
subject to
appeal to the Administrator of the Council, by the |
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affected
parties , within 60 days after the final decision . The |
Council shall determine by rule persons who have standing to
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appeal final Council decisions. Any written decision by the |
Administrator may be appealed to the Council within 60 days |
after the Administrator's final decision. Any decision by the |
Council may be appealed to the Council's administrative law |
judge within 60 days after the Council's final decision. Notice |
of any hearing provided for by this Act shall be given not less |
than 7 days before the day fixed for the hearing All appeals of |
final Council decisions shall be
presented to and
reviewed by |
the Council's administrative hearing officer . An appeal of the
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administrative law judge's hearing officer's decision will be |
subject to judicial review in
accordance with the |
Administrative Review Law.
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Any decision not timely appealed shall become a final |
administrative decision without the necessity of a final |
administrative decision being issued and shall be deemed to be |
a final administrative decision. |
The Council shall adopt rules relating to appeal |
procedures . |
The Council may designate an attorney, employed by the |
Council or privately employed, to act as an administrative law |
judge to preside at any administrative hearing resulting from |
the appeal of a Council decision. The Council and the |
Department of Revenue are authorized to enter into an agreement |
whereby an administrative law judge employed by the Department |
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may be assigned to preside at the administrative hearings. |
Proof of the Council's administrative decision may be made |
at any administrative or legal proceeding by a reproduced copy |
of the Council's record relating to the decision under the |
certificate of the Council. A reproduced copy shall, without |
further proof, be admitted into evidence and shall be prima |
facie proof of the decision. |
The provisions of the Administrative Review Law, and any |
rules adopted under the Administrative Review law by the |
Council, shall govern all proceedings for the judicial review |
of final administrative decisions of the Council. The term |
"administrative decision" has the same meaning as it does in |
Section 3-101 of the Code of Civil Procedure. |
Venue for an administrative review action challenging the |
results of an administrative hearing upholding an |
administrative decision issued by the Council
shall be proper |
in the Circuit Court of the county where the plaintiff has its |
principal place of business, or Sangamon County if the |
plaintiff's principal place of business is located outside |
Illinois. that shall
require the Council to deliver notice of |
appeal to the affected parties within
30 days of receipt of |
notice, require that the hearing be held within 180
days of the |
filing of the petition unless good cause is shown for the |
delay,
and require that a final decision be issued no later |
than 120
days following the close of the hearing. The time |
restrictions in this
subsection may be waived by mutual |
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agreement of the parties.
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(Source: P.A. 90-502, eff. 8-19-97.)
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(415 ILCS 135/40)
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Sec. 40. Remedial action account.
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(a) The remedial action account is established to provide |
reimbursement to
eligible
claimants for
drycleaning solvent |
investigation, remedial action planning, and
remedial action |
activities for existing drycleaning solvent contamination
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discovered at their drycleaning facilities.
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(b) The following persons are eligible for reimbursement |
from the remedial
action account:
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(1) In the case of claimant who is the owner or |
operator of an active
drycleaning
facility licensed by the |
Council under this Act at the time of application for
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remedial action benefits afforded under
the Fund, the
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claimant is only eligible for reimbursement of remedial
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action costs incurred in connection with a release
from |
that drycleaning facility,
subject to any other |
limitations under this Act.
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(2) In the case of a claimant who is the owner of an |
inactive drycleaning
facility and
was the owner or operator |
of the drycleaning facility when it was
an active |
drycleaning facility, the claimant is only eligible for
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reimbursement of remedial action costs incurred in
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connection with a release from the drycleaning facility,
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subject to any other limitations under
this Act.
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(c) An eligible claimant requesting reimbursement from the |
remedial action
account shall meet all of the following:
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(1) The claimant demonstrates that the source of the |
release is from
the claimant's drycleaning facility.
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(2) At the time the release was discovered by the |
claimant, the claimant
and the drycleaning facility were in |
compliance with the Agency reporting
and technical |
operating requirements.
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(3) The claimant reported the release in a timely |
manner to
the Agency in accordance with State law.
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(4) The claimant applying for reimbursement has not |
filed for
bankruptcy on or after the date of his or her |
discovery of the release.
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(5) If the claimant is the owner or operator of an |
active drycleaning
facility, the claimant has provided to |
the Council proof of implementation and
maintenance of the |
following pollution prevention measures:
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(A) That all drycleaning solvent wastes generated |
at a drycleaning
facility be managed in accordance with |
applicable State
waste management laws and rules.
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(B) A prohibition on the discharge of wastewater |
from drycleaning
machines or of drycleaning solvent |
from drycleaning
operations to a sanitary sewer or |
septic tank or to the
surface or in groundwater.
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(C) That every drycleaning facility:
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(I) install a containment dike or other |
containment
structure around each machine, item of |
equipment, drycleaning area, and portable waste |
container in which
any
drycleaning solvent is |
utilized, which shall be capable
of containing |
leaks, spills, or releases of
drycleaning
solvent |
from that machine, item, area, or container. The |
containment
dike or other containment structure |
shall be capable of at least the following:
(i) |
containing a capacity of 110% of the drycleaning |
solvent in the largest
tank or vessel within the |
machine; (ii) containing 100% of the drycleaning
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solvent of each item of equipment or drycleaning |
area; and (iii) containing
100% of the drycleaning |
solvent of the largest portable waste container or |
at
least 10% of the total volume of the portable |
waste containers stored within
the containment |
dike or structure, whichever is greater.
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Petroleum underground storage tank systems |
that are upgraded in
accordance with USEPA upgrade |
standards pursuant to 40 CFR Part 280 for the
tanks |
and
related piping systems and use a leak detection |
system approved by the USEPA or
IEPA are exempt |
from this secondary containment requirement; and
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(II) seal or otherwise render impervious those |
portions of
diked floor surfaces on which a |
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drycleaning
solvent may leak, spill, or otherwise |
be released.
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(D) A requirement that all drycleaning solvent |
shall be delivered
to drycleaning facilities by means |
of closed, direct-coupled
delivery systems.
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(6) An active drycleaning facility has maintained |
continuous financial
assurance for environmental liability |
coverage in the amount of at least
$500,000 at least since |
the date of award of benefits under this Section
or July 1, |
2000, whichever is earlier.
An uninsured drycleaning |
facility that
has filed an application for insurance with |
the Fund by January 1, 2004,
obtained insurance through |
that application, and maintained that insurance
coverage |
continuously shall be considered to have conformed with the
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requirements of this subdivision (6). To conform with this |
requirement the
applicant must pay the equivalent of the |
total premiums due for the period
beginning June 30, 2000 |
through the date of application plus a 20% penalty of
the |
total premiums due for that period.
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(7) The release was discovered on or after July
1, 1997 |
and before July 1, 2006.
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(d) A claimant shall submit a completed application form
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provided by the Council. The application shall contain |
documentation of
activities, plans, and expenditures |
associated with the eligible costs
incurred in response to a |
release of drycleaning solvent from a
drycleaning facility. |
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Application for remedial action account benefits must be
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submitted to the Council on or before June 30, 2005.
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(e) Claimants shall be subject to the following deductible |
requirements,
unless modified pursuant to the Council's |
authority under
Section 75:
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(1) An eligible claimant submitting a claim
for an |
active drycleaning facility is responsible for the first |
$5,000 of
eligible investigation costs and for the first |
$10,000 of eligible remedial
action costs incurred in |
connection with the release from the drycleaning
facility |
and is only eligible for reimbursement for costs that |
exceed
those amounts, subject to any other limitations of |
this Act.
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(2) An eligible claimant submitting a
claim for an |
inactive drycleaning facility is responsible for the first |
$10,000
of eligible investigation costs and for the first |
$10,000 of eligible remedial
action costs incurred in |
connection with the release from that drycleaning
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facility, and is only eligible for reimbursement for costs |
that exceed
those amounts, subject to any other limitations |
of this Act.
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(f) Claimants are subject to the following limitations on |
reimbursement:
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(1) Subsequent to meeting the deductible requirements |
of
subsection (e), and pursuant to the requirements of |
Section 75,
reimbursement shall not exceed $300,000 per |
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active drycleaning facility and
$50,000 per inactive |
drycleaning facility.
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(2) A contract in which one of the parties to the |
contract is a claimant,
for goods or services that may be |
payable or reimbursable from
the Council, is void and |
unenforceable unless and until the Council has found
that |
the
contract terms are within the range of usual and |
customary rates
for similar or equivalent goods or services |
within this State and
has found that the goods or services |
are necessary for the claimant to
comply with Council |
standards or other applicable regulatory standards.
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(3) A claimant may appoint the Council as an agent for |
the purposes of
negotiating contracts with suppliers of |
goods or services
reimbursable by the Fund. The Council may |
select another
contractor for goods or services other than |
the one offered by the
claimant if the scope of the |
proposed work or actual work of the
claimant's offered |
contractor does not reflect the quality of workmanship
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required or if the costs are determined to be excessive, as |
determined by the
Council.
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(4) The Council may require a claimant to obtain and |
submit 3 bids
and may require specific terms and conditions |
in a
contract subject to approval.
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(5) The Council may enter into a contract or an |
exclusive contract with
the supplier of goods or services |
required by a claimant or class of
claimants, in connection |
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with an expense reimbursable from the
Fund, for a specified |
good or service at a gross maximum
price or fixed rate, and |
may limit reimbursement accordingly.
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(6) Unless emergency conditions exist, a service |
provider shall
obtain the Council's approval of the budget |
for the remediation work
before commencing the work. No |
expense incurred that is above the budgeted
amount shall be |
paid unless the Council approves
the expense prior to its |
being incurred. All invoices and bills relating to
the |
remediation work shall be submitted with appropriate |
documentation, as
deemed
necessary by the Council , not |
later than 30 days after the work has
been performed .
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(7) Neither the Council nor an eligible claimant is |
responsible for
payment for
costs incurred that have not |
been previously approved by the
Council, unless an |
emergency exists.
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(8) The Council may determine the usual and customary |
costs of each
item for which reimbursement may be awarded |
under this Section.
The Council may revise the usual and |
customary costs from time
to time as necessary, but costs |
submitted for reimbursement shall
be subject to the rates |
in effect at the time the costs were
incurred.
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(9) If a claimant has pollution liability insurance |
coverage other than
coverage provided by the insurance |
account under this Act,
that coverage shall be primary. |
Reimbursement from the remedial
account shall be limited to |
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the deductible amounts under the primary
coverage and the
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amount that exceeds the policy limits of the primary |
coverage,
subject to the deductible amounts of this Act. If |
there is a
dispute between the claimant and the primary |
insurance provider,
reimbursement from the remedial action |
account may be made to the claimant
after the claimant
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assigns all of his or her interests in the insurance |
coverage to the Council.
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(g) The source of funds for the remedial action account |
shall be moneys
allocated to the account by the Council |
according to the Fund budget
approved by the Council.
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(h) A drycleaning facility will be classified as active or |
inactive for
purposes of
determining benefits under this |
Section based on the status of the facility
on the date a claim |
is filed.
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(i) Eligible claimants shall conduct remedial action in |
accordance with
the
Site Remediation Program under the |
Environmental Protection Act and Part 740 of
Title 35 of the |
Illinois Administrative Code and the Tiered Approach to Cleanup
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Objectives under Part 742 of Title 35 of the Illinois |
Administrative Code.
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(Source: P.A. 93-201, eff. 1-1-04.)
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(415 ILCS 135/60)
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(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2020)
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Sec. 60. Drycleaning facility license.
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(a) On and after January 1, 1998, no person shall operate a |
drycleaning
facility in this State without a license issued by |
the Council.
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(b) The Council shall issue an initial or renewal license |
to a drycleaning
facility on submission by an applicant of a |
completed form prescribed by the
Council and proof of payment |
of the required fee to the Department of Revenue.
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(c) On or after January 1, 2004, the annual fees for |
licensure are as
follows:
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(1) $500 for a facility that uses (i) 50 gallons or
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less of
chlorine-based or green drycleaning solvents |
annually, (ii) 250 or less
gallons annually of |
hydrocarbon-based drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning
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machine equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii) 500 |
gallons
or less annually of hydrocarbon-based drycleaning |
solvents in a
drycleaning machine without a solvent |
reclaimer.
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(2) $500 for a facility that uses (i)
more than 50 |
gallons but not more than 100
gallons of chlorine-based or |
green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii)
more than 250 |
gallons but not more 500 gallons annually of |
hydrocarbon-based
solvents in
a drycleaning machine |
equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii) more
than 500 |
gallons but not more than 1,000 gallons
annually of |
hydrocarbon-based drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning
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machine without a solvent reclaimer.
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(3) $500 for a facility that uses (i) more than 100 |
gallons but not more than 150 gallons of chlorine-based
or |
green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii) more than 500 |
gallons but
not more than 750 gallons annually of |
hydrocarbon-based solvents in a
drycleaning machine |
equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii) more than
1,000
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gallons but not more than 1,500 gallons annually of
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hydrocarbon-based drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning |
machine without a
solvent reclaimer.
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(4) $1,000 for a facility that uses (i) more than 150 |
gallons but not
more than 200 gallons of chlorine-based or |
green drycleaning solvents annually,
(ii) more than 750 |
gallons but not more than 1,000 gallons annually of
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hydrocarbon-based solvents in a drycleaning machine |
equipped with a solvent
reclaimer, or (iii) more than
1,500 |
gallons but not more than 2,000 gallons annually of |
hydrocarbon-based
drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning |
machine without a solvent
reclaimer.
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(5) $1,000 for a facility that uses (i) more than 200 |
gallons but not more
than 250 gallons of chlorine-based or |
green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii)
more than 1,000 |
gallons but not more than 1,250 gallons annually of
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hydrocarbon-based solvents in a drycleaning machine |
equipped with a solvent
reclaimer, or (iii) more than
2,000 |
gallons but not more than 2,500 gallons annually of |
hydrocarbon-based
drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning |
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machine without a solvent
reclaimer.
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(6) $1,000 for a facility that uses (i) more than 250 |
gallons but not
more than
300 gallons of chlorine-based or |
green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii) more
than 1,250 |
gallons but not more than 1,500 gallons annually of
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hydrocarbon-based solvents in a drycleaning machine |
equipped with a solvent
reclaimer, or (iii) more than 2,500 |
gallons but not more than 3,000 gallons
annually of |
hydrocarbon-based drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning |
machine
without
a solvent reclaimer.
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(7) $1,000 for a facility that uses (i) more than 300 |
gallons but not more
than
350 gallons of chlorine-based or |
green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii) more
than 1,500 |
gallons but not more than 1,750 gallons annually of
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hydrocarbon-based
solvents in a drycleaning machine |
equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii)
more than 3,000 |
gallons but not more than 3,500 gallons annually of
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hydrocarbon-based
drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning |
machine without a solvent
reclaimer.
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(8) $1,500 for a facility that uses (i) more than 350 |
gallons but not more
than
400 gallons of chlorine-based or |
green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii) more
than 1,750 |
gallons but not more than 2,000 gallons annually of
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hydrocarbon-based
solvents in a drycleaning machine |
equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii)
more than 3,500 |
gallons but not more than 4,000 gallons annually of
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hydrocarbon-based
drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning |
machine without a solvent
reclaimer.
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(9) $1,500 for a facility that uses (i) more than 400 |
gallons but not more
than 450 gallons of chlorine-based or |
green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii)
more than 2,000 |
gallons but not more than 2,250 gallons annually of
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hydrocarbon-based
solvents in a drycleaning machine |
equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii)
more
than
4,000 |
gallons but not more than 4,500 gallons annually of |
hydrocarbon-based
drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning |
machine without a solvent
reclaimer.
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(10) $1,500 for a facility that uses (i) more than 450 |
gallons but not
more than 500
gallons of chlorine-based or |
green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii) more
than
2,250 |
gallons but not more than 2,500 gallons annually of |
hydrocarbon-based
solvents used in a drycleaning machine |
equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or
(iii) more
than 4,500 |
gallons but not more than 5,000 gallons annually of
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hydrocarbon-based
drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning |
machine without a solvent reclaimer.
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(11) $1,500 for a facility that uses (i) more than 500 |
gallons but not
more than 550
gallons of chlorine-based or |
green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii) more
than
2,500 |
gallons but not more than 2,750 gallons annually of |
hydrocarbon-based
solvents in a drycleaning machine |
equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii)
more than
5,000 |
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gallons but not more than 5,500 gallons annually of |
hydrocarbon-based
drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning |
machine without a solvent
reclaimer.
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(12) $1,500 for a facility that uses (i) more than 550 |
gallons but not
more than 600
gallons of chlorine-based or |
green drycleaning solvents annually, (ii) more
than 2,750 |
gallons but not more than 3,000 gallons annually of
|
hydrocarbon-based
solvents in a drycleaning machine |
equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or (iii)
more than
5,500 |
gallons but not more than 6,000 gallons annually of |
hydrocarbon-based
drycleaning solvents in a drycleaning |
machine without a solvent
reclaimer.
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(13) $1,500 for a facility that uses (i) more than 600 |
gallons of
chlorine-based or green drycleaning solvents |
annually, (ii) more than 3,000
gallons but not more than |
3,250 gallons annually of hydrocarbon-based solvents
in a |
drycleaning
machine equipped with a solvent reclaimer, or |
(iii) more than 6,000 gallons of
hydrocarbon-based |
drycleaning solvents annually in a drycleaning machine
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equipped without a solvent reclaimer.
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(14) $1,500 for a facility that uses more than 3,250 |
gallons but not more
than 3,500 gallons annually of |
hydrocarbon-based solvents in a drycleaning
machine |
equipped with a solvent reclaimer.
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(15) $1,500 for a facility that uses more than 3,500 |
gallons but not more
than 3,750 gallons annually of |
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hydrocarbon-based solvents used in a drycleaning
machine |
equipped with a solvent reclaimer.
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(16) $1,500 for a facility that uses more than 3,750 |
gallons but not more
than 4,000 gallons annually of |
hydrocarbon-based solvents in a drycleaning
machine |
equipped with a solvent reclaimer.
|
(17) $1,500 for a facility that uses more than 4,000 |
gallons annually of
hydrocarbon-based solvents in a |
drycleaning machine equipped with a solvent
reclaimer.
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For purpose of this subsection, the quantity of drycleaning |
solvents
used annually shall be determined as follows:
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(1) in the case of an initial applicant, the quantity |
of drycleaning
solvents that the applicant estimates will |
be used during his or her initial
license year. A fee |
assessed under this subdivision is subject to audited
|
adjustment for that year; or
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(2) in the case of a renewal applicant, the quantity of |
drycleaning
solvents actually purchased used in the |
preceding license year.
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The Council may adjust licensing fees annually based on the |
published
Consumer Price Index - All Urban Consumers ("CPI-U") |
or as otherwise determined
by the Council.
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(d) A license issued under this Section shall expire one |
year after the date
of issuance and may be renewed on |
reapplication to the Council and submission
of proof of payment |
of the appropriate fee to the Department of Revenue in
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accordance with subsections (c) and (e). At least 30 days |
before payment of a
renewal licensing fee is due, the Council |
shall attempt to:
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(1) notify the operator of each licensed drycleaning
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facility concerning the requirements of this Section;
and
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(2) submit a license fee payment form to the licensed
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operator of each drycleaning facility.
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(e) An operator of a drycleaning facility shall submit the |
appropriate
application form provided by the Council with the |
license fee in the form of
cash or guaranteed remittance to the |
Department of Revenue.
The license fee payment form and the |
actual license fee payment shall be
administered by the |
Department of Revenue under rules adopted by that
Department.
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(f) The Department of Revenue shall issue a proof of |
payment receipt to
each operator of a drycleaning facility who |
has paid the appropriate fee in
cash or by guaranteed |
remittance. However, the Department of Revenue shall not
issue |
a proof of payment receipt to a drycleaning facility that is |
liable to
the Department of Revenue for a tax imposed under |
this Act. The original
receipt shall be presented to the |
Council by the operator of a drycleaning
facility.
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(g) (Blank). An operator of a dry cleaning facility who is |
required to pay a license
fee under this Act and fails to pay |
the license fee when the fee is due may be assessed a penalty |
of $5 for each day after the license fee is due
and until the |
license fee is paid. The penalty shall be effective for license
|
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fees due on or after July 1, 1999.
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(h) The Council and the Department of Revenue may adopt |
rules as necessary
to administer the licensing
requirements of |
this Act.
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(Source: P.A. 93-201, eff. 1-1-04.)
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(415 ILCS 135/65)
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(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2020)
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Sec. 65. Drycleaning solvent tax.
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(a) On and after January 1, 1998, a tax is imposed upon
the |
use of drycleaning solvent by a person engaged in the business |
of operating
a drycleaning facility in this State at the rate |
of $3.50 per gallon of
perchloroethylene or other chlorinated |
drycleaning solvents used in
drycleaning operations, $0.35 per |
gallon of
petroleum-based drycleaning solvent, and $1.75 per |
gallon of green solvents,
unless the green solvent is used at a |
virgin facility, in which case the rate
is $0.35 per gallon. |
The Council
shall determine by rule which products are
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chlorine-based solvents, which products are petroleum-based
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solvents, and which products are green solvents. All |
drycleaning solvents
shall be considered
chlorinated solvents |
unless the Council determines
that the solvents are |
petroleum-based drycleaning solvents or green
solvents.
|
(b) The tax imposed by this Act shall be collected from the |
purchaser at
the time of sale by a seller of drycleaning |
solvents maintaining a place of
business in this State and |
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shall be remitted to the Department of Revenue under
the
|
provisions of this Act.
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(c) The tax imposed by this Act that is not collected by a |
seller of
drycleaning solvents shall be paid directly to the |
Department of Revenue by the
purchaser or end user who is |
subject to the tax imposed by this Act.
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(d) No tax shall be imposed upon the use of drycleaning |
solvent if the
drycleaning solvent will not be used in a |
drycleaning facility or if a floor
stock
tax has been imposed |
and paid on the drycleaning solvent. Prior to the
purchase of |
the solvent, the purchaser shall provide a written and signed
|
certificate to the drycleaning solvent seller stating:
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(1) the name and address of the purchaser;
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(2) the purchaser's signature and date of signing; and
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(3) one of the following:
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(A) that the drycleaning solvent will not be used |
in a drycleaning
facility; or
|
(B) that a floor stock tax has been imposed and |
paid on the drycleaning
solvent.
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A person who provides a false certification under this |
subsection shall be
liable for a
civil penalty not to exceed |
$500 for a first violation and a civil penalty not
to exceed |
$5,000 for a second or subsequent violation.
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(e) On January 1, 1998, there is imposed on each operator |
of a
drycleaning facility a tax on drycleaning
solvent held by |
the operator on that date for use in
a drycleaning facility.
|
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The tax imposed shall be
the tax that would have been imposed |
under
subsection (a)
if the drycleaning solvent held by the |
operator on that date had been
purchased
by the operator during
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the first year of this Act.
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(f) On or before the 25th day of the 1st month following |
the end of the
calendar quarter, a seller of drycleaning |
solvents who has collected a tax
pursuant to this Section |
during the previous calendar quarter, or a purchaser
or end |
user of
drycleaning solvents required under subsection (c) to |
submit the tax directly
to the Department, shall file a return
|
with the Department of Revenue. The return shall be filed on a |
form prescribed
by the Department of Revenue and shall contain |
information that the Department
of
Revenue reasonably |
requires, but at a minimum will require the reporting of
the |
volume of
drycleaning solvent sold to each licensed drycleaner. |
The Department of Revenue
shall report quarterly to the Council |
the volume of drycleaning solvent
purchased for the quarter by |
each licensed drycleaner. Each seller of
drycleaning solvent |
maintaining a
place of business in this State who is required |
or authorized to collect the
tax imposed by this Act shall pay |
to the Department the amount of the tax at
the time when he or |
she is required to file his or her return for the period
during |
which the tax was collected. Purchasers or end users remitting |
the tax
directly to
the Department under subsection (c) shall |
file a return with
the Department of Revenue and pay the tax so |
incurred by the purchaser or end
user during
the preceding |
|
calendar quarter. |
Except as provided in this Section, the seller of |
drycleaning solvents filing the return under this Section |
shall, at the time of filing the return, pay to the Department |
the amount of tax imposed by this Act less a discount of 1.75%, |
or $5 per calendar year, whichever is greater. Failure to |
timely file the returns and provide to the Department the data |
requested under this Act will result in disallowance of the |
reimbursement discount.
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(g) The tax on drycleaning solvents
used in drycleaning |
facilities and the floor stock tax shall be administered by
|
Department of Revenue
under rules adopted by that Department.
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(h) On and after January 1, 1998, no person shall knowingly |
sell or transfer
drycleaning solvent to an operator of a |
drycleaning facility that is not
licensed by the Council under |
Section 60. A person who violates this subsection
is liable for |
a civil penalty not to exceed $500 for a first violation and a
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civil penalty not to exceed $5,000 for a second or subsequent |
violation.
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(i) The Department of Revenue may adopt rules
as necessary |
to implement this Section.
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(Source: P.A. 93-201, eff. 1-1-04.)
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(415 ILCS 135/69 new) |
Sec. 69. Civil penalties. |
(a) Except as provided in this Section, any person who |
|
violates any provision
of this Act or any regulation adopted by |
the Council, or any license or registration or term or |
condition thereof, or that violates any order of the Council |
under this Act, shall be liable for a civil penalty as provided |
in this Section. The penalties may, upon order of the Council |
or a court of competent jurisdiction, be made payable to the |
Drycleaner Environmental Response Trust Fund, to be used in |
accordance with the provisions of the Drycleaner Environmental |
Response Trust Fund Act. |
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of |
this Section: |
(1) Any person who violates Section 60(a) of this Act |
by failing to pay the license fee when due, may be assessed |
a civil penalty of $5 per day for each day after the |
license fee is due until the license fee is paid. The |
penalty shall be effective for license fees due on or after |
July 1, 1999. |
(2) Any person who violates Section 65(d) or 65(h) of |
this Act shall be liable for a civil penalty not to exceed |
$500 for the first violation and a civil penalty not to |
exceed $5,000 for a second or subsequent violation. |
(3) Any person who violates Section 67 of this Act |
shall be liable for a civil penalty not to exceed $100 per |
day for each day the person is not registered to sell |
drycleaning solvents. |
(c) The Council shall issue an administrative assessment |
|
setting forth any penalties it imposes under subsection (b) of |
this Section and shall serve notice of the assessment upon the |
party assessed. The Council's determination shall be
deemed |
correct and shall serve as evidence of the correctness of the |
Council's determination that a penalty is due. Proof of a |
determination by the Council may be made at any administrative |
hearing or in any legal proceeding by a reproduced copy or |
computer print-out of the Council's record relating thereto in |
the name of the Council under the certificate of the Council. |
If reproduced copies of the Council's records are offered |
as proof of a penalty assessment, the Council must certify that |
those copies are true and exact copies of records on file with |
the Council. If computer print-outs of the Council's records |
are offered as proof of a determination, the Council Chairman |
must certify that those computer print-outs are true and exact |
representations of records properly entered into standard |
electronic computing equipment, in the regular course of the |
Council's business, at or reasonably near the time of the |
occurrence of the facts recorded, from trustworthy and reliable |
information. A certified reproduced copy or certified computer |
print-out shall, without further proof, be admitted into |
evidence in any administrative or legal proceeding and is prima |
facie proof of the correctness of the Council's determination. |
Whenever notice is required by this Section, the notice may |
be given by United States registered or certified mail, |
addressed to the person concerned at his last known address, |
|
and proof of mailing shall be sufficient for the purposes of |
this Act. Notice of any hearing provided for by this Act shall |
be given not less than 7 days before the day fixed for the |
hearing. Following the initial contact of a person represented |
by an attorney, the Council shall not contact that person but |
shall only contact the attorney representing that person. |
(d) The penalties provided for in this Section may be |
recovered in a civil action instituted by the Attorney General |
in the name of the people of the State of Illinois. |
(e) The Attorney General may also, at the request of the |
Council or on his or her own motion, institute a civil action |
for an injunction, prohibitory or mandatory, to restrain |
violations of this Act, any rule or regulation adopted under |
this Act, any license or registration or term or condition of a |
license or registration, or any Council order, or to require |
other actions as may be necessary to address violations |
thereof. |
(f) Without limiting any other authority which may exist |
for the awarding of attorney's fees and costs, the Council, or |
a court of competent jurisdiction, may award costs and |
reasonable attorney's fees, including the reasonable costs of |
expert witnesses and consultants, to the Attorney General in a |
case where the Attorney General has prevailed against a person |
who has committed a willful, knowing, or repeated violation of |
this Act, any rule or regulation adopted under
this Act, any |
license or registration or term or condition of a license or |
|
registration, or any Council order. Any funds collected under |
this subsection (f) in which the Attorney General has prevailed |
shall be deposited in the Drycleaner Environmental Response |
Trust Fund created in Section 10 of this Act. |
(g) All final orders imposing civil penalties under this |
Section shall prescribe the time for payment of the penalties. |
If any penalty is not paid within the time prescribed, interest |
on the penalty shall be paid, at the rate set forth in Section |
3-2 of the Illinois Uniform Penalty and Interest Act, for the |
period from the date payment is due until the date payment is |
received. However, if the time for payment is stayed during the |
pendency of an appeal, interest shall not accrue during the |
stay.
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