Rep. Ann M. Williams

Filed: 4/8/2025

 

 


 

 


 
10400HB3609ham002LRB104 12086 AAS 25192 a

1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 3609

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 3609, AS AMENDED,
3by replacing everything after the enacting clause with the
4following:
 
5    "Section 1. Short title. This Act may be referred to as the
6Thermal Energy Network and Jobs Act.
 
7    Section 5. Legislative findings and intent.
8    (a) The General Assembly finds and declares that:
9        (1) This State has a strong interest in ensuring that
10    emissions of greenhouse gases from buildings are reduced
11    because buildings are one of this State's largest sources
12    of greenhouse gases due to the combustion of fossil fuels
13    for heating, domestic hot water production, cooking, and
14    other end uses.
15        (2) The decarbonization of buildings must be pursued
16    in a manner that is affordable and accessible, preserves

 

 

10400HB3609ham002- 2 -LRB104 12086 AAS 25192 a

1    and creates living-wage jobs, and retains the knowledge
2    and experience of the existing utility union workforce.
3        (3) Thermal energy networks have the potential to
4    decarbonize buildings at the community and utility scale
5    and help achieve the goals of Public Act 102-662 (also
6    known as the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act).
7        (4) Thermal energy networks consist of pipe loops
8    between multiple buildings and energy sources, which carry
9    water and can be connected to by building owners to
10    support heating and cooling and hot water services.
11    Building owners can connect to the loops to support water
12    heating and cooling and hot water services.
13        (5) Many utilities in this State have been seeking to
14    develop thermal energy networks but have encountered legal
15    and regulatory barriers.
16        (6) This State has a strong interest in ensuring an
17    adequate supply of reliable electrical power and,
18    therefore, needs to promote the development of alternative
19    power sources and take steps to assure reliable
20    deliverability. Thermal energy networks are highly
21    efficient because they use and exchange thermal energy
22    from many underground sources and buildings, including
23    recycled thermal energy, which minimizes impacts on the
24    electricity grid.
25        (7) Access to thermal energy networks has the
26    potential to reduce the upfront and operating costs of

 

 

10400HB3609ham002- 3 -LRB104 12086 AAS 25192 a

1    building electrification for customers.
2        (8) Thermal loop technology provides benefits to
3    participants and non-participants alike, including
4    societal benefits to the environment and the market
5    benefits associated with the reduction of both the volume
6    and peak demand of electricity and natural gas.
7        (9) A utility's access to capital, the utility's
8    experience with networked infrastructure in public
9    rights-of-way, and the requirement that the utility serve
10    all customers positions the utility well to develop and
11    scale thermal energy networks that are accessible to all
12    customers and to coordinate the development of thermal
13    energy networks with any orderly rightsizing of the
14    utility gas system.
15        (10) This State also has an interest in the efficient
16    and reliable delivery of energy and the energy
17    infrastructure of the State, which interest is
18    acknowledged throughout the Public Utilities Act. Utility
19    corporations and other power suppliers share these
20    interests and, moreover, have a duty to protect
21    proprietary interests in the projects they fund. Such
22    investments of ratepayer resources can be protected by
23    establishing effective contractor qualification and
24    performance standards, including requirements for
25    prevailing wage rates, bona fide apprenticeship criteria,
26    and project labor agreements.

 

 

10400HB3609ham002- 4 -LRB104 12086 AAS 25192 a

1        (11) The construction industry is highly skilled and
2    labor intensive, and the installation of modern thermal
3    energy networks involves particularly complex work.
4    Therefore, effective qualification standards for craft
5    labor personnel employed on these projects are critically
6    needed to promote successful project delivery.
7        (12) Finally, these findings are especially vital now
8    because the construction industry is experiencing
9    widespread skill shortages across the country, which are
10    crippling existing capital projects and threatening
11    projects planned for the future. The construction of
12    thermal energy networks will utilize many of the same
13    skills that the current utility and building trades
14    workforces already possess.
15    (b) It is the intent of the General Assembly that passage
16of this Act is for the following purposes:
17        (1) to remove the legal barriers to utility
18    development of thermal energy networks and require the
19    Illinois Commerce Commission, within 90 days after the
20    effective date of this amendatory Act of the 104th General
21    Assembly, to begin to authorize and direct utilities to
22    immediately commence piloting thermal energy networks in
23    each and every utility territory;
24        (2) to direct and authorize the Illinois Commerce
25    Commission to develop a regulatory structure for utility
26    thermal energy networks that scales affordable and

 

 

10400HB3609ham002- 5 -LRB104 12086 AAS 25192 a

1    accessible building electrification, protects customers,
2    and balances the role of incumbent monopoly utilities with
3    other market and public actors;
4        (3) to promote the successful planning and delivery of
5    thermal energy networks and protect critical investments
6    in such projects by requiring the use of appropriate
7    quality craft labor policies that ensure the development
8    of and access to an adequate supply of well trained,
9    highly skilled craft persons needed to support timely,
10    reliable, high-quality projects;
11        (4) to promote strong economic development and good
12    jobs for local residents in the expanding decarbonized
13    sector by requiring application of progressive State labor
14    and employment policies that ensure public utility
15    investments and related State subsidies create
16    unparalleled skill training and employment opportunities
17    for residents in project areas through the use of local
18    prevailing wage standards and successful, bona fide
19    apprenticeship programs or project labor agreements that
20    incorporate prevailing wage and training standards and
21    provide additional benefits for project owners and
22    workers; and
23        (5) to promote the use of preapprenticeship programs
24    that will fortify and expand existing apprenticeship
25    programs through systematic outreach efforts to recruit
26    and assist persons from underrepresented and low income

 

 

10400HB3609ham002- 6 -LRB104 12086 AAS 25192 a

1    communities by providing such persons with remedial
2    education, social services, and unique opportunities for
3    direct access into high-quality apprenticeship programs
4    and gainful employment in the growing building
5    decarbonization workforce.
 
6    Section 10. The Public Utilities Act is amended by
7changing Section 3-101 and by adding Sections 3-128, 3-129,
83-130, 3-131, and 8-513 as follows:
 
9    (220 ILCS 5/3-101)  (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 3-101)
10    Sec. 3-101. Definitions. Unless otherwise specified, the
11terms set forth in Sections 3-102 through 3-131 3-126 are used
12in this Act as therein defined.
13(Source: P.A. 97-96, eff. 7-13-11; 97-239, eff. 8-2-11;
1497-813, eff. 7-13-12.)
 
15    (220 ILCS 5/3-128 new)
16    Sec. 3-128. Thermal energy. "Thermal energy" means piped
17noncombustible fluids used for transferring heat into and out
18of buildings for the purpose of reducing any resultant onsite
19greenhouse gas emissions of all types of heating and cooling
20processes, including, but not limited to, comfort heating and
21cooling, domestic hot water, and refrigeration.
 
22    (220 ILCS 5/3-129 new)

 

 

10400HB3609ham002- 7 -LRB104 12086 AAS 25192 a

1    Sec. 3-129. Thermal energy network. "Thermal energy
2network" means all real estate, fixtures, and personal
3property operated, owned, used, or to be used for, in
4connection with, or to facilitate a utility-scale distribution
5infrastructure project that supplies non-combusting thermal
6energy. "Thermal energy network" includes real estate,
7fixtures, and personal property that is operated, owned, or
8used by multiple parties.
 
9    (220 ILCS 5/3-130 new)
10    Sec. 3-130. Front-of-meter work. "Front-of-meter work"
11means a thermal energy network project that impacts the
12utility side of a meter.
 
13    (220 ILCS 5/3-131 new)
14    Sec. 3-131. Behind-the-meter work. "Behind-the-meter work"
15means a thermal energy network project that involves a
16physical, operational, or behavioral modification to the
17customer side of a utility meter, including the replacement of
18appliances, retrofits, and panel upgrades.
 
19    (220 ILCS 5/8-513 new)
20    Sec. 8-513. Pilot thermal energy network development.
21    (a) Within 10 months after the effective date of this
22amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly, every gas public
23utility or combination public utility serving over 100,000

 

 

10400HB3609ham002- 8 -LRB104 12086 AAS 25192 a

1customers shall file with the Commission a petition seeking
2Commission approval of a proposed pilot thermal energy network
3project. A gas public utility or combination public utility
4may seek Commission approval of one additional proposed pilot
5thermal energy network project each year for 2 years after the
6effective date of this amendatory Act of the 104th General
7Assembly. Designs for the projects should coordinate and
8maximize the value of existing State energy efficiency and
9weatherization programs and take advantage of federal funding
10opportunities to the extent practicable. No later than 18
11months after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
12104th General Assembly, the Commission shall enter an order
13approving, approving with modification, or rejecting each
14proposed pilot thermal energy network project and shall direct
15the public utility to implement the pilot thermal energy
16network projects as approved or approved as modified. In
17considering whether to approve or approve as modified each
18pilot thermal energy network project, the Commission shall
19consider whether the pilot thermal energy network project is
20in the public interest, whether the pilot thermal energy
21network project will develop information useful for the
22Commission in adopting rules governing thermal energy
23networks, whether the pilot thermal energy network project
24furthers climate justice and emissions reduction, whether the
25pilot thermal energy network project advances financial and
26technical approaches to equitable and affordable building

 

 

10400HB3609ham002- 9 -LRB104 12086 AAS 25192 a

1electrification, and whether the pilot thermal energy network
2project creates benefits to customers and society at large,
3including, but not limited to, public health benefits in areas
4with disproportionate environmental or public health burdens,
5job retention and creation, reliability, and increased
6affordability of renewable thermal energy options. After the
7filing of a petition, a utility may request the Commission to
8grant additional time for pilot development approval, which
9shall be approved for at least 6 months upon request or up to
1012 months upon a showing that additional time would benefit
11pilot development. An electric public utility may also propose
12a pilot thermal energy network project in accordance with this
13subsection (a).
14    (b) If a utility proposes 3 pilot thermal energy network
15projects, at least one project shall be proposed in
16economically disadvantaged communities as defined in Section
175-35 of the Energy Transition Act and at least one shall
18include an industrial heat application that may additionally
19include residential and commercial applications. Priority
20shall be given to pilot proposals that replace leak-prone
21natural gas distribution infrastructure with distribution
22infrastructure that supplies non-combusting thermal energy or
23that replaces thermal energy for buildings currently heated
24with electric resistance heat. Each public utility shall
25coordinate with other public utilities and consultants with
26expertise on successful pilot projects to ensure that the

 

 

10400HB3609ham002- 10 -LRB104 12086 AAS 25192 a

1pilot projects are diverse and designed to inform the
2Commission's decisions in the proceeding on the various
3ownership, market, and rate structures for thermal energy
4networks. The pilot project proposals shall be made publicly
5available on the Commission's website. Utilities are
6encouraged to develop plans that enable and facilitate access
7to thermal loop technology benefits, including access by low
8and moderate income households. As part of any pilot project
9proposed pursuant to this Section, a public utility subject to
10this Section may propose to include customer rebates and
11incentives, and associated tariffs and proposed regulatory
12treatment, in a manner similar to what is included in
13Commission-approved electric energy efficiency plans pursuant
14to Section 8-103B of this Act.
15    (b-5) Each public utility proposing a pilot thermal energy
16network project shall hold at least one prefiling public
17meeting to receive public comment concerning the proposed
18thermal energy network in the municipality where the thermal
19energy network is to be located. Notice of the public meeting
20shall be published in a newspaper of general circulation for 3
21consecutive weeks, beginning no earlier than one month prior
22to the first public meeting. Notice of the public meeting,
23including a description of the thermal energy network, must be
24provided in writing to the clerk of the county where the
25project is to be located and to the chief clerk of the
26Commission. A representative of the Commission shall be

 

 

10400HB3609ham002- 11 -LRB104 12086 AAS 25192 a

1invited to each prefiling public meeting.
2    (c) Any gas public utility, electric public utility, or
3combination public utility constructing or operating a
4Commission-approved pilot thermal energy network project shall
5report to the Commission, on a quarterly basis and until
6completion of the pilot thermal energy network project, as
7determined by the Commission, the status of each pilot thermal
8energy network project. The Commission shall post and make
9publicly available the reports on its website. The report
10shall include, but not be limited to:
11        (1) the stage of development of each pilot project;
12        (2) the barriers to development;
13        (3) the number of customers served;
14        (4) the costs of the pilot project;
15        (5) the number of jobs retained or created by the
16    pilot project; and
17        (6) other information the Commission deems to be in
18    the public interest or considers likely to prove useful or
19    relevant to the rulemaking described in subsection (h).
20    (c-5) The Commission shall require projects submitted to
21the utility-scale renewable thermal energy network program for
22approval to include a proposed rate structure for thermal
23energy services supplied to network end users and consumer
24protection plans for end users. The Commission may approve the
25proposed rate structure if the projected heating and cooling
26costs for end users is not greater than the heating and cooling

 

 

10400HB3609ham002- 12 -LRB104 12086 AAS 25192 a

1costs the end users would have incurred if the end users had
2not participated in the program.
3    (d) Any gas public utility, electric public utility, or
4combination public utility constructing or operating a
5Commission-approved pilot thermal energy network project shall
6demonstrate that it has entered into a labor peace agreement
7with a bona fide labor organization that is actively engaged
8in representing its employees. The labor peace agreement shall
9apply to the employees necessary for the ongoing maintenance
10and operation of the thermal energy network. The labor peace
11agreement shall be an ongoing material condition of
12authorization to maintain and operate the thermal energy
13networks.
14    (e) Any contractor or subcontractor that performs work on
15a pilot thermal energy network under this Section shall be a
16responsible bidder as described in Section 30-22 of the
17Illinois Procurement Code and shall certify that not less than
18prevailing wage, as determined under the Prevailing Wage Act,
19was or will be paid to employees who are engaged in
20construction activities associated with the pilot thermal
21energy network project. The contractor or subcontractor shall
22submit evidence to the Commission that it complied with the
23requirements of this subsection.
24    (f) For any pending application for a thermal energy
25network, the contractor or subcontractor shall submit evidence
26that the contractor or subcontractor has entered into a fully

 

 

10400HB3609ham002- 13 -LRB104 12086 AAS 25192 a

1executed project labor agreement with the applicable local
2building trades council for the front-of-meter and
3behind-the-meter work required for the thermal energy network.
4The Commission shall not approve any pending applications
5until the contractor or subcontractor has submitted the
6information required under this subsection.
7    (g) Within 4 years after the effective date of this
8amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly, the Commission
9shall adopt rules to, at a minimum:
10        (1) create fair market access rules for thermal energy
11    networks to accept thermal energy and that do not increase
12    greenhouse gas emissions or copollutants;
13        (2) to the extent it is in the public interest to do
14    so, exempt small-scale thermal energy networks from active
15    regulation by the Commission;
16        (3) promote the training and transition of utility
17    workers impacted by this amendatory Act of the 104th
18    General Assembly; and
19        (4) encourage third-party participation and
20    competition where it will maximize benefits to customers.
21    (h) A gas public utility or combination public utility
22required to develop any pilot thermal energy network project
23under this Section shall be permitted to recover all
24reasonable and prudently incurred costs associated with the
25development, construction, and operation of one or more pilot
26thermal energy network projects through general rates set

 

 

10400HB3609ham002- 14 -LRB104 12086 AAS 25192 a

1pursuant to Section 9-201 or through rates set in a Multi-Year
2Rate Plan pursuant to Section 16-108.18. A gas public utility,
3electric public utility, or combination public utility
4developing a thermal energy network project that includes an
5industrial heat application may recover rates proportionally
6from each class of customer. The Commission shall have broad
7discretion in approving proposed pilot projects that are
8consistent with the public interest consistent with this
9Section and in approving all tariffs and issuing other
10regulatory approvals as necessary to permit a pilot program
11that facilitates a full review of technologies, and associated
12policies, with respect to thermal network technology in this
13State. An electric utility or a utility that offers both gas
14and electric service that is required to submit an integrated
15grid plan shall include any proposed pilot programs under this
16Section as part of the proposed grid plan pursuant to Section
1716-105.17 and shall inform stakeholders of the proposed pilot
18programs during the stakeholder process that precedes the
19filing of the grid plan. Any obligation imposed by this
20Section on a utility shall be suspended pending a review of the
21proposed grid planning process. If the Commission (i)
22determines that the investments required to comply with this
23Section impair customer affordability or (ii) does not approve
24the proposed pilot programs, the requirements of this
25subsection (i) shall be suspended until the Commission
26approves recovery under a proposed pilot program in a future

 

 

10400HB3609ham002- 15 -LRB104 12086 AAS 25192 a

1integrated grid plan or Multi-Year Rate Plan.
2    (i) The total cost of implementation and administration of
3thermal energy network projects shall not exceed $25,000,000
4in a given year. If projects exceed the cost limitation under
5this subsection (i), the Commission shall immediately suspend
6new applications and prioritize the continuation of existing
7participants' benefits under this Section as funds permit.
 
8    Section 97. Severability. If any provision of this Act or
9its application to any gas public utility, electric public
10utility, or combination public utility constructing or
11operating a Commission-approved pilot thermal energy network
12project is determined to be invalid or otherwise
13unenforceable, such determination shall not affect the
14validity or enforceability of any other provision of this Act,
15which shall continue in full force and effect.
 
16    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
17becoming law.".