Public Act 098-0346
 
HB1209 EnrolledLRB098 08975 NHT 39109 b

    AN ACT concerning conservation.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Department of Commerce and Economic
Opportunity Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is
amended by changing Section 605-515 as follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 605/605-515)  (was 20 ILCS 605/46.13a)
    Sec. 605-515. Environmental Regulatory Assistance Program.
    (a) In this Section, except where the context clearly
requires otherwise, "small business stationary source" means a
business that is owned or operated by a person that employs 100
or fewer individuals; is a small business; is not a major
stationary source as defined in Titles I and III of the federal
1990 Clean Air Act Amendments; does not emit 50 tons or more
per year of any regulated pollutant (as defined under the
federal Clean Air Act); and emits less than 75 tons per year of
all regulated pollutants.
    (b) The Department may:
        (1) Provide access to technical and compliance
    information for Illinois firms, including small and middle
    market companies, to facilitate local business compliance
    with the federal, State, and local environmental
    regulations.
        (2) Coordinate and enter into cooperative agreements
    with a State ombudsman office, which shall be established
    in accordance with the federal 1990 Clean Air Act
    Amendments to provide direct oversight to the program
    established under that Act.
        (3) Enter into contracts, cooperative agreements, and
    financing agreements and establish and collect charges and
    fees necessary or incidental to the performance of duties
    and the execution of powers under this Section.
        (4) Accept and expend, subject to appropriation,
    gifts, grants, awards, funds, contributions, charges,
    fees, and other financial or nonfinancial aid from federal,
    State, and local governmental agencies, businesses,
    educational agencies, not-for-profit organizations, and
    other entities, for the purposes of this Section.
        (5) Establish, staff, and administer programs and
    services and adopt such rules and regulations necessary to
    carry out the intent of this Section and Section 507,
    "Small Business Stationary Source Technical and
    Environmental Compliance Assistance Program", of the
    federal 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments.
    (c) The Department's environmental compliance programs and
services for businesses may include, but need not be limited
to, the following:
        (1) Communication and outreach services to or on behalf
    of individual companies, including collection and
    compilation of appropriate information on regulatory
    compliance issues and control technologies, and
    dissemination of that information through publications,
    direct mailings, electronic communications, conferences,
    workshops, one-on-one counseling, and other means of
    technical assistance.
        (2) Provision of referrals and access to technical
    assistance, pollution prevention and facility audits, and
    otherwise serving as an information clearinghouse on
    pollution prevention through the coordination of the
    Illinois Sustainable Technology Waste Management and
    Research Center of the University of Illinois. In addition,
    environmental and regulatory compliance issues and
    techniques, which may include business rights and
    responsibilities, applicable permitting and compliance
    requirements, compliance methods and acceptable control
    technologies, release detection, and other applicable
    information may be provided.
        (3) Coordination with and provision of administrative
    and logistical support to the State Compliance Advisory
    Panel.
    (d) There is hereby created a special fund in the State
Treasury to be known as the Small Business Environmental
Assistance Fund. Monies received under subdivision (b)(4) of
this Section shall be deposited into the Fund.
    Monies in the Small Business Environmental Assistance Fund
may be used, subject to appropriation, only for the purposes
authorized by this Section.
(Source: P.A. 95-728, eff. 7-1-08 - See Sec. 999.)
 
    Section 10. The Business Assistance and Regulatory Reform
Act is amended by changing Section 15 as follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 608/15)
    Sec. 15. Providing Information and Expediting Permit
Reviews.
    (a) The office shall provide an information system using a
toll-free business assistance number. The number shall be
advertised throughout the State. If requested, the caller will
be sent a basic business kit, describing the basic requirements
and procedures for doing business in Illinois. If requested,
the caller shall be directed to one or more of the additional
services provided by the office. All persons providing advice
to callers on behalf of the office and all persons responsible
for directly providing services to persons visiting the office
or one of its branches shall be persons with small business
experience in an administrative or managerial capacity.
    (b) (Blank).
    (c) Any applicant for permits required for a business
activity may confer with the office to obtain assistance in the
prompt and efficient processing and review of applications. The
office may designate an employee of the office to act as a
permit assistance manager to:
        (1) facilitate contacts for the applicant with
    responsible agencies;
        (2) arrange conferences to clarify the requirements of
    interested agencies;
        (3) consider with State agencies the feasibility of
    consolidating hearings and data required of the applicant;
        (4) assist the applicant in resolution of outstanding
    issues identified by State agencies; and
        (5) coordinate federal, State and local regulatory
    procedures and permit review actions to the extent
    possible.
    (d) The office shall publish a directory of State business
permits and State programs to assist small businesses.
    (e) The office shall attempt to establish agreements with
local governments to allow the office to provide assistance to
applicants for permits required by these local governments.
    (f) Interested State agencies shall, to the maximum extent
feasible, establish procedures to expedite applications for
infrastructure projects. Applications for permits for
infrastructure projects shall be approved or disapproved
within 45 days of submission, unless law or regulations specify
a different period. If the interested agency is unable to act
within that period, the agency shall provide a written
notification to the office specifying reasons for its inability
to act and the date by which approval or disapproval shall be
determined. The office may require any interested State agency
to designate an employee who will coordinate the handling of
permits in that area.
    (g) In addition to its responsibilities in connection with
permit assistance, the office shall provide general regulatory
information by directing businesses to appropriate officers in
State agencies to supply the information requested.
    (h) The office shall help businesses to locate and apply to
training programs available to train current employees in
particular skills, techniques or areas of knowledge relevant to
the employees' present or anticipated job duties. In pursuit of
this objective, the office shall provide businesses with
pertinent information about training programs offered by State
agencies, units of local government, public universities and
colleges, community colleges, and school districts in
Illinois.
    (i) The office shall help businesses to locate and apply to
State programs offering to businesses grants, loans, loan or
bond guarantees, investment partnerships, technology or
productivity consultation, or other forms of business
assistance.
    (j) To the extent authorized by federal law, the office
shall assist businesses in ascertaining and complying with the
requirements of the federal Americans with Disabilities Act.
    (k) The office shall provide confidential on-site
assistance in identifying problems and solutions in compliance
with requirements of State and federal environmental
regulations. The office shall work through and contract with
the Illinois Sustainable Technology Waste Management and
Research Center to provide confidential on-site consultation
audits that (i) assist regulatory compliance and (ii) identify
pollution prevention opportunities.
    (k-5) Until July 1, 2012, the office shall provide
confidential on-site assistance, including, but not limited
to, consultation audits, to identify problems and solutions
regarding compliance with the requirements of the federal
Occupational Safety and Health Administration. On and after
July 1, 2012, the Department of Labor shall provide
confidential on-site assistance, including, but not limited
to, consultation audits, to identify problems and solutions
regarding compliance with the requirements of the federal
Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
    (l) The office shall provide information on existing loan
and business assistance programs provided by the State.
    (m) Each State agency having jurisdiction to approve or
deny a permit shall have the continuing power heretofore or
hereafter vested in it to make such determinations. The
provisions of this Act shall not lessen or reduce such powers
and shall modify the procedures followed in carrying out such
powers only to the extent provided in this Act.
    (n) (1) Each State agency shall fully cooperate with the
office in providing information, documentation, personnel or
facilities requested by the office.
    (2) Each State agency having jurisdiction of any permit to
which the master application procedure is applicable shall
designate an employee to act as permit liaison office with the
office in carrying out the provisions of this Act.
    (o) (1) The office has authority, but is not required, to
keep and analyze appropriate statistical data regarding the
number of permits issued by State agencies, the amount of time
necessary for the permits to be issued, the cost of obtaining
such permits, the types of projects for which specific permits
are issued, a geographic distribution of permits, and other
pertinent data the office deems appropriate.
    The office shall make such data and any analysis of the
data available to the public.
    (2) The office has authority, but is not required, to
conduct or cause to be conducted a thorough review of any
agency's permit requirements and the need by the State to
require such permits. The office shall draw on the review, on
its direct experience, and on its statistical analyses to
prepare recommendations regarding how to:
        (i) eliminate unnecessary or antiquated permit
    requirements;
        (ii) consolidate duplicative or overlapping permit
    requirements;
        (iii) simplify overly complex or lengthy application
    procedures;
        (iv) expedite time-consuming agency review and
    approval procedures; or
        (v) otherwise improve the permitting processes in the
    State.
    The office shall submit copies of all recommendations
within 5 days of issuance to the affected agency, the Governor,
the General Assembly, and the Joint Committee on Administrative
Rules.
    (p) The office has authority to review State forms on its
own initiative or upon the request of another State agency to
ascertain the burden, if any, of complying with those forms. If
the office determines that a form is unduly burdensome to
business, it may recommend to the agency issuing the form
either that the form be eliminated or that specific changes be
made in the form.
    (q) Not later than March 1 of each year, beginning March 1,
1995, the office shall submit an annual report of its
activities during the preceding year to the Governor and
General Assembly. The report shall describe the activities of
the office during the preceding year and shall contain
statistical information on the permit assistance activities of
the office.
(Source: P.A. 97-787, eff. 7-13-12.)
 
    Section 15. The Hazardous Waste Technology Exchange
Service Act is amended by changing Sections 3, 4, and 6 as
follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 1130/3)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 6803)
    Sec. 3. For the purposes of this Act, unless the context
otherwise requires:
    (a) "Board" means the Board of Trustees of the University
of Illinois.
    (b) "Center" means the Illinois Sustainable Technology
Waste Management and Research Center of the University of
Illinois.
(Source: P.A. 95-728, eff. 7-1-08 - See Sec. 999.)
 
    (20 ILCS 1130/4)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 6804)
    Sec. 4. Illinois Sustainable Technology Waste Management
and Research Center. The Illinois Sustainable Technology
Center (formerly known as the Waste Management and Research
Center) is transferred to the University of Illinois.
(Source: P.A. 95-728, eff. 7-1-08 - See Sec. 999.)
 
    (20 ILCS 1130/6)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 6806)
    Sec. 6. Appropriations. For the purpose of maintaining the
Illinois Sustainable Technology Waste Management and Research
Center, paying the expenses and providing the facilities and
structures incident thereto, appropriations shall be made to
the University of Illinois, payable from the Hazardous Waste
Research Fund and other funds in the State Treasury.
(Source: P.A. 95-728, eff. 7-1-08 - See Sec. 999.)
 
    Section 20. The Green Governments Illinois Act is amended
by changing Section 15 as follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 3954/15)
    Sec. 15. Composition of the Council membership and
administrative support. Representatives The Council shall be
composed of representatives from various State agencies and
State universities with specific fiscal, procurement,
educational, and environmental policy expertise shall comprise
the Council. Until the effective date of this amendatory Act of
the 97th General Assembly, the Lieutenant Governor is the chair
of the Council. On and after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly, the Governor is
the chair of the Council, and the Lieutenant Governor, or his
or her designee, shall be a member of the council. The director
or President, respectively, of each of the following State
agencies and State universities, or his or her designee, is a
member of the Council: the Department of Commerce and Economic
Opportunity, the Environmental Protection Agency, the
University of Illinois, the Department of Natural Resources,
the Department of Central Management Services, the Governor's
Office of Management and Budget, the Department of Agriculture,
the Department of Transportation, the Department of
Corrections, the Department of Human Services, the Department
of Public Health, the State Board of Education, the Board of
Higher Education, and the Capital Development Board.
    The Office of the Governor shall provide administrative
support to the Council. A minimum of one staff position in the
Office of the Governor shall be dedicated to the Green
Governments Illinois program.
(Source: P.A. 96-74, eff. 7-24-09; 97-573, eff. 8-25-11.)
 
    Section 25. The University of Illinois Exercise of
Functions and Duties Law of the Civil Administrative Code of
Illinois is amended by changing Section 3000-5 as follows:
 
    (110 ILCS 355/3000-5)  (was 110 ILCS 355/62)
    Sec. 3000-5. Retention of duties by University of Illinois.
Unless otherwise provided by law, the functions and duties
formerly exercised by the State entomologist, the Illinois
Natural History Survey State laboratory of natural history, the
Illinois State Water Survey water survey, and the Illinois
State Geological Survey geological survey and the functions and
duties of the Illinois Sustainable Technology Center (formerly
known as the Waste Management and Research Center) and its
Hazardous Materials Laboratory as authorized by the Hazardous
Waste Technology Exchange Service Act shall continue to be
exercised at the University of Illinois in buildings and places
provided by the trustees of the University.
(Source: P.A. 95-728, eff. 7-1-08 - See Sec. 999.)
 
    Section 30. The University of Illinois Scientific Surveys
Act is amended by changing Sections 5, 10, 15, 20, and 55 as
follows:
 
    (110 ILCS 425/5)
    Sec. 5. Purposes. The purposes of this Act are to establish
at the University of Illinois the Prairie Research Institute an
institute for natural resources sustainability and to transfer
to it all rights, powers, duties, property, and functions
currently vested in the Department of Natural Resources
pertaining to its Illinois Natural History Survey division,
Illinois State Water Survey division, Illinois State
Geological Survey division, and Illinois Sustainable
Technology Center (formerly known as the Waste Management and
Research Center) division (which may also be referred to as the
Illinois Sustainable Technology Center).
(Source: P.A. 95-728, eff. 7-1-08 - See Sec. 999.)
 
    (110 ILCS 425/10)
    Sec. 10. Definitions. For the purposes of this Act, unless
the context otherwise requires:
    "Board of Trustees" means the Board of Trustees of the
University of Illinois.
    "Scientific Surveys" means, collectively, the Illinois
State Natural History Survey division, the Illinois State Water
Survey division, the Illinois State Geological Survey
division, and the Illinois Sustainable Technology Center
(formerly known as the Waste Management and Research Center)
division transferred by this Act from the Department of Natural
Resources to the Board of Trustees.
(Source: P.A. 95-728, eff. 7-1-08 - See Sec. 999.)
 
    (110 ILCS 425/15)
    Sec. 15. Organization. The Board of Trustees shall
establish and operate the Prairie Research Institute an
institute for natural sciences and sustainability. The
Institute institute shall contain within it the Illinois State
Natural History Survey division, the Illinois State Water
Survey division, the Illinois State Geological Survey
division, the Illinois Sustainable Technology Waste Management
and Research Center division, the Illinois State
Archaeological Survey, and such other related entities,
research functions, and responsibilities as may be
appropriate. The Institute institute shall be under the
governance and control of the Board of Trustees.
(Source: P.A. 95-728, eff. 7-1-08 - See Sec. 999.)
 
    (110 ILCS 425/20)
    Sec. 20. General powers and duties. In addition to its
other powers and duties, the Board of Trustees shall have the
power to provide for the management and operation of the
Prairie Research Institute Scientific Surveys including, but
not limited to, the following powers and duties which shall be
performed by the Scientific Surveys:
        (1) To investigate and study the natural and cultural
    resources of the State and to prepare reports and furnish
    information fundamental to the conservation and
    development of natural and cultural resources, and, for
    that purpose, the officers and employees thereof shall have
    the authority to enter and cross all lands in this State,
    doing no damage to private property.
        (2) To collaborate with and advise departments having
    administrative powers and duties relating to the natural
    resources of the State, and to collaborate with similar
    departments in other states and with the United States
    Government.
        (3) To conduct a natural history survey of the State,
    giving preference to subjects of educational and
    economical importance. The Illinois State Biologist shall
    be an employee of the Illinois Natural History Survey.
        (4) To investigate the entomology of the State. The
    Illinois State Entomologist shall be an employee of the
    Illinois Natural History Survey.
        (5) To investigate all insects dangerous or injurious
    to agricultural or horticultural plants and crops, to
    livestock, to nursery trees and plants, to the products of
    the truck farm and vegetable garden, to shade trees and
    other ornamental vegetation of cities and villages, and to
    the products of the mills and the contents of warehouses,
    and all insects injurious or dangerous to the public
    health.
        (6) To study the geological formation of the State with
    reference to its resources of coal, ores, clays, building
    stones, cement, materials suitable for use in the
    construction of the roads, gas, oil, mineral and artesian
    water, aquifers and aquitards, and other resources and
    products. The Illinois State Geologist shall be an employee
    of the Illinois State Geological Survey.
        (7) To cooperate with United States federal agencies in
    the preparation of geological and land surface maps and
    completion of a contour topographic map and the collection,
    recording, and printing of water and atmospheric resource
    data, including stream flow measurements; and to collect
    facts and data concerning the volumes and flow of
    underground, surface, and atmospheric waters of the State;
    and to determine the mineral and chemical qualities of
    water from different geological formations and surface and
    atmospheric waters for the various sections of the State.
        (8) To act as the central data repository and research
    coordinator for the State in matters related to water and
    atmospheric resources. The Illinois State Water Survey of
    the University of Illinois may monitor and evaluate all
    weather modification operations in Illinois. The Illinois
    State Climatologist and the Illinois State Hydrologist
    shall be employees of the Illinois State Water Survey.
        (9) To provide To collaborate with the Illinois State
    Academy of Science and to publish the results of the
    investigations and research in the field of natural science
    to the end that the same may be distributed to the
    interested public.
        (10) To perform all other duties and assume all
    obligations of the Department of Natural Resources
    pertaining to the Illinois State Water Survey, the Illinois
    State Geological Survey, the Illinois State Natural
    History Survey, and the Illinois Sustainable Technology
    Waste Management and Research Center, and the Illinois
    State Archaeological Survey.
        (11) To maintain all previously existing relationships
    between the Illinois State Water Survey, the Illinois State
    Geological Survey, the Illinois State Natural History
    Survey, and the Illinois Sustainable Technology Center,
    and the Illinois State Archaeological Survey and the public
    and private colleges and universities in Illinois.
        (12) To participate in federal and State geologic
    mapping programs.
        (13) To conduct educational programs to further the
    exchange of information to reduce the generation of
    hazardous wastes or to treat or dispose of such wastes so
    as to make them nonhazardous.
        (14) To provide a technical information service for
    industries involved in the generation, treatment, or
    disposal of hazardous wastes.
        (15) To disseminate information regarding advances in
    hazardous waste management technology and sustainability
    practices that could both protect the environment and
    further industrial productivity.
        (16) To provide research in areas related to reduction
    of the generation of hazardous wastes; treatment,
    recycling and reuse; toxic pollution prevention; and other
    issues that the Board may suggest. The Illinois Pollution
    Prevention Scientist shall be an employee of the Illinois
    Sustainable Technology Center.
        (17) To investigate, preserve, and interpret the
    archaeological heritage of this State within the contexts
    of public needs and sustainable economic development
    through scientific research, public service, education,
    and outreach activities. The Illinois State Archaeologist
    shall be an employee of the Illinois State Archeological
    Survey.
(Source: P.A. 95-728, eff. 7-1-08 - See Sec. 999.)
 
    (110 ILCS 425/55)
    Sec. 55. Successor agency. For purposes of the Successor
Agency Act and Section 9b of the State Finance Act, the Board
of Trustees is the successor to the Department of Natural
Resources and the Illinois Board of Natural Resources and
Conservation with respect to the rights, powers, duties,
property, functions, and other matters transferred by this Act.
(Source: P.A. 95-728, eff. 7-1-08 - See Sec. 999.)
 
    Section 35. The Well Abandonment Act is amended by changing
Section 1 as follows:
 
    (225 ILCS 730/1)  (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 5201)
    Sec. 1. It is the duty of the permittee of any well drilled
or deepened for oil or gas, to file all geophysical logs and a
well drilling report of said well in the office of the State
Geological Survey of the University of Illinois within 90 days
after drilling ceases.
    The well drilling report: (1) shall show the character and
depth of the formations passed through or encountered in the
drilling of the well, particularly showing the depth and
thickness of oil-bearing strata, and gas-bearing strata, (2)
shall show the position and thickness of coal beds and deposits
of mineral materials of economic value, and (3) shall give the
location of the hole.
    The Department of Natural Resources shall supply to the
Illinois State Geological Survey a copy of each permit, showing
the location of the well.
(Source: P.A. 95-728, eff. 7-1-08 - See Sec. 999.)
 
    Section 40. The Toxic Pollution Prevention Act is amended
by changing Sections 3 and 5 as follows:
 
    (415 ILCS 85/3)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7953)
    Sec. 3. Definitions. As used in this Act:
    "Agency" means the Illinois Environmental Protection
Agency.
    "Center" means the Illinois Sustainable Technology Waste
Management and Research Center.
    "Person" means any individual, partnership,
co-partnership, firm, company, corporation, association, joint
stock company, trust, political subdivision, State agency, or
any other legal entity, or its legal representative, agent or
assigns.
    "Release" means emission to the air, discharge to surface
waters or off-site wastewater treatment facilities, or on-site
release to the land, including but not limited to landfills,
surface impoundments and injection wells.
    "Toxic substance" means any substance listed by the Agency
pursuant to Section 4 of this Act.
    "Toxic pollution prevention" means in-plant practices that
reduce, avoid or eliminate: (i) the use of toxic substances,
(ii) the generation of toxic constituents in wastes, (iii) the
disposal or release of toxic substances into the environment,
or (iv) the development or manufacture of products with toxic
constituents, through the application of any of the following
techniques:
        (1) input substitution, which refers to replacing a
    toxic substance or raw material used in a production
    process with a nontoxic or less toxic substance;
        (2) product reformulation, which refers to
    substituting for an existing end product an end product
    which is nontoxic or less toxic upon use, release or
    disposal;
        (3) production process redesign or modification, which
    refers to developing and using production processes of a
    different design than those currently used;
        (4) production process modernization, which refers to
    upgrading or replacing existing production process
    equipment or methods with other equipment or methods based
    on the same production process;
        (5) improved operation and maintenance of existing
    production process equipment and methods, which refers to
    modifying or adding to existing equipment or methods,
    including but not limited to such techniques as improved
    housekeeping practices, system adjustments, product and
    process inspections, and production process control
    equipment or methods;
        (6) recycling, reuse or extended use of toxic
    substances by using equipment or methods which become an
    integral part of the production process, including but not
    limited to filtration and other closed loop methods.
    However, "toxic pollution prevention" shall not include or
in any way be inferred to promote or require incineration,
transfer from one medium of release to another, off-site or out
of process waste recycling, or end of pipe treatment of toxic
substances.
    "Trade secret" means any information concerning production
processes employed or substances manufactured, processed or
otherwise used within a facility which the Agency determines to
satisfy the criteria established under Section 3.490 of the
Environmental Protection Act, and to which specific trade
secret status has been granted by the Agency.
(Source: P.A. 92-574, eff. 6-26-02.)
 
    (415 ILCS 85/5)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7955)
    Sec. 5. Toxic Pollution Prevention Assistance Program.
There is hereby established a Toxic Pollution Prevention
Assistance Program at the Illinois Sustainable Technology
Waste Management and Research Center. The Center may establish
cooperative programs with public and private colleges and
universities designed to augment the implementation of this
Section. The Center may establish fees, tuition, or other
financial charges for participation in the Assistance Program.
These monies shall be deposited in the Toxic Pollution
Prevention Fund established in Section 7 of this Act. Through
the Assistance Program, the Center:
    (1) Shall provide general information about and actively
publicize the advantages of and developments in toxic pollution
prevention and sustainability practices.
    (2) May establish courses, seminars, conferences and other
events, and reports, updates, guides and other publications and
other means of providing technical information for industries,
local governments and citizens concerning toxic pollution
prevention strategies, and may, as appropriate, work in
cooperation with the Agency.
    (3) Shall engage in research on toxic pollution prevention
methods. Such research shall include assessments of the impact
of adopting toxic pollution prevention methods on the
environment, the public health, and worker exposure, and
assessments of the impact on profitability and employment
within affected industries.
    (4) Shall provide on-site technical consulting, to the
extent practicable, to help facilities to identify
opportunities for toxic pollution prevention, and to develop
comprehensive toxic pollution prevention plans that would
include water, energy, and solid waste. To be eligible for such
consulting, the owner or operator of a facility must agree to
allow information regarding the results of such consulting to
be shared with the public, provided that the identity of the
facility shall be made available only with its consent, and
trade secret information shall remain protected.
    (5) May sponsor pilot projects in cooperation with the
Agency, or an institute of higher education to develop and
demonstrate innovative technologies and methods for toxic
pollution prevention and sustainable development. The results
of all such projects shall be available for use by the public,
but trade secret information shall remain protected.
    (6) May award grants for activities that further the
purposes of this Act, including but not limited to the
following:
        (A) grants to not-for-profit organizations to
    establish free or low-cost technical assistance or
    educational programs to supplement the toxic pollution
    prevention activities of the Center;
        (B) grants to assist trade associations, business
    organizations, labor organizations and educational
    institutions in developing training materials to foster
    toxic pollution prevention; and
        (C) grants to assist industry, business organizations,
    labor organizations, education institutions and industrial
    hygienists to identify, evaluate and implement toxic
    pollution prevention measures and alternatives through
    audits, plans and programs.
        The Center may establish criteria and terms for such
    grants, including a requirement that a grantee provide
    matching funds. Grant money awarded under this Section may
    not be spent for capital improvements or equipment.
        In determining whether to award a grant, the Center
    shall consider at least the following:
            (i) the potential of the project to prevent
        pollution;
            (ii) the likelihood that the project will develop
        techniques or processes that will minimize the
        transfer of pollution from one environmental medium to
        another;
            (iii) the extent to which information to be
        developed through the project will be applicable to
        other persons in the State; and
            (iv) the willingness of the grant applicant to
        assist the Center in disseminating information about
        the pollution prevention methods to be developed
        through the project.
    (7) Shall establish and operate a State information
clearinghouse that assembles, catalogues and disseminates
information about toxic pollution prevention and available
consultant services. Such clearinghouse shall include a
computer database containing information on managerial,
technical and operational approaches to achieving toxic
pollution prevention. The computer database must be maintained
on a system designed to enable businesses, governmental
agencies and the general public readily to obtain information
specific to production technologies, materials, operations and
products. A business shall not be required to submit to the
clearinghouse any information that is a trade secret.
    (8) May contract with an established institution of higher
education to assist the Center in carrying out the provisions
of this Section. The assistance provided by such an institution
may include, but need not be limited to:
        (A) engineering field internships to assist industries
    in identifying toxic pollution prevention opportunities;
        (B) development of a toxic pollution prevention
    curriculum for students and faculty; and
        (C) applied toxic pollution prevention and recycling
    research.
    (9) Shall emphasize assistance to businesses that have
inadequate technical and financial resources to obtain
information and to assess and implement toxic pollution
prevention methods.
    (10) Shall publish a biannual report on its toxic pollution
prevention and sustainable development activities,
achievements, identified problems and future goals.
(Source: P.A. 95-728, eff. 7-1-08 - See Sec. 999.)
 
    Section 45. The Illinois Low-Level Radioactive Waste
Management Act is amended by changing Section 3 as follows:
 
    (420 ILCS 20/3)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-3)
    Sec. 3. Definitions.
    "Agency" means the Illinois Emergency Management Agency.
    "Broker" means any person who takes possession of low-level
waste for purposes of consolidation and shipment.
    "Compact" means the Central Midwest Interstate Low-Level
Radioactive Waste Compact.
    "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.
    "Director" means the Director of the Illinois Emergency
Management Agency.
    "Disposal" means the isolation of waste from the biosphere
in a permanent facility designed for that purpose.
    "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.
    "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.
    "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.
    "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.
    "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).
    "Mixed waste" means waste that is both "hazardous waste"
and "low-level radioactive waste" as defined in this Act.
    "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.
    "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.
    "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.
    "Release" means any spilling, leaking, pumping, pouring,
emitting, emptying, discharging, injecting, escaping,
leaching, dumping or disposing into the environment of
low-level radioactive waste.
    "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.
    "Scientific Surveys" means, collectively, the Illinois
State Geological Survey and the Illinois State Water Survey of
the University of Illinois.
    "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.
    "Storage" means the temporary holding of waste for
treatment or disposal for a period determined by Agency
regulations.
    "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.
    "Waste management" means the storage, transportation,
treatment or disposal of waste.
(Source: P.A. 95-728, eff. 7-1-08 - See Sec. 999; 95-777, eff.
8-4-08; 96-328, eff. 8-11-09.)
 
    Section 50. The Wildlife Code is amended by changing
Section 1.3 as follows:
 
    (520 ILCS 5/1.3)
    Sec. 1.3. The Department shall have the authority to manage
wildlife and regulate the taking of wildlife for the purposes
of providing public recreation and controlling wildlife
populations. The seasons during which wildlife may be taken,
the methods for taking wildlife, the daily bag limits, and the
possession limits shall be established by the Department
through administrative rule, but the Department may not provide
for a longer season, a larger daily bag limit, or a larger
possession limit than is provided in this Code.
    The Natural Resources Advisory Board may also recommend to
the Director of Natural Resources any reductions or increases
of seasons and bag or possession limits or the closure of any
season when research and inventory data indicate the need for
such changes.
    The Department is authorized to establish seasons for the
taking of migratory birds within the dates established annually
by Proclamation of the Secretary, United States Department of
the Interior, known as the "Rules and Regulations for Migratory
Bird Hunting" (50 CFR 20 et seq.). When the biological balance
of any species is affected, the Director may with the approval
of the Conservation Advisory Board, by administrative rule,
lengthen, shorten or close the season during which waterfowl
may be taken within the federal limitations prescribed. If the
Department does not adopt an administrative rule establishing a
season, then the season shall be as set forth in the current
"Rules and Regulations for Migratory Bird Hunting". The
Department shall advise the public by reasonable means of the
dates of the various seasons.
    The Department may utilize the services of the staff of the
Illinois State Natural History Survey of the University of
Illinois for making investigations as to the population status
of the various species of wildlife.
    Employees or agents of any state, federal, or municipal
government or body when engaged in investigational work and law
enforcement, may with prior approval of the Director, be
exempted from the provisions of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 95-728, eff. 7-1-08 - See Sec. 999.)
 
    (30 ILCS 105/8.24 rep.)
    Section 55. The State Finance Act is amended by repealing
Section 8.24.
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.
INDEX
Statutes amended in order of appearance
    20 ILCS 605/605-515was 20 ILCS 605/46.13a
    20 ILCS 608/15
    20 ILCS 1130/3from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 6803
    20 ILCS 1130/4from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 6804
    20 ILCS 1130/6from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 6806
    20 ILCS 3954/15
    110 ILCS 355/3000-5was 110 ILCS 355/62
    110 ILCS 425/5
    110 ILCS 425/10
    110 ILCS 425/15
    110 ILCS 425/20
    110 ILCS 425/55
    225 ILCS 730/1from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 5201
    415 ILCS 85/3from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7953
    415 ILCS 85/5from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7955
    420 ILCS 20/3from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 241-3
    520 ILCS 5/1.3
    30 ILCS 105/8.24 rep.