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Rep. Sonya M. Harper
Filed: 4/15/2024
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1 | | AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 5052
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2 | | AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 5052 by replacing |
3 | | everything after the enacting clause with the following: |
4 | | "Section 5. The State Finance Act is amended by adding |
5 | | Section 5.1015 as follows: |
6 | | (30 ILCS 105/5.1015 new) |
7 | | Sec. 5.1015. The Good Food Purchasing Fund. |
8 | | Section 10. The Local Food, Farms, and Jobs Act is amended |
9 | | by changing Sections 1 and 5 and by adding Sections 12, 35, and |
10 | | 40 as follows: |
11 | | (30 ILCS 595/1) |
12 | | Sec. 1. Short title ; references to Act . |
13 | | (a) Short title. This Act may be cited as the " Local Food, |
14 | | Farms, and Jobs Act " . |
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1 | | (b) References to Act. This Act may be referred to as the |
2 | | Good Food Purchasing Law. |
3 | | (Source: P.A. 96-579, eff. 8-18-09.) |
4 | | (30 ILCS 595/5) |
5 | | Sec. 5. Definitions. In this Act: "Local farm or food |
6 | | products" are products: (1) grown in Illinois; or (2) |
7 | | processed and packaged in Illinois, using at least one |
8 | | ingredient grown in Illinois. |
9 | | "Good Food Purchasing Program core values" means Good Food |
10 | | Purchasing Program procurement criteria based on all of the |
11 | | following: |
12 | | (1) Prioritizing local suppliers, especially small or |
13 | | mid-sized farms, food manufacturers, or food businesses |
14 | | that are privately or cooperatively operated or operated |
15 | | as a not-for-profit within (i) a 250-mile radius for food |
16 | | other than meat, poultry, or seafood or (ii) a 500-mile |
17 | | radius for meat, poultry, or seafood, prioritizing |
18 | | suppliers that are entrepreneurs of color and community |
19 | | members most impacted by current and historic economic |
20 | | marginalization, leveraging institutional buying power, |
21 | | infrastructure, financial resources, staff time, and land |
22 | | in support of community members, food producers, and food |
23 | | workers who have experienced negative systemic social or |
24 | | economic impact, building partnerships with community |
25 | | members to ensure that food products and menus reflect the |
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1 | | interests and cultures of everyone they serve, and |
2 | | identifying pathways for purchasing from small and |
3 | | community-based suppliers for products that cannot be |
4 | | grown or harvested within the mileage limitations, such as |
5 | | seafood, coffee, cocoa, and sugar. |
6 | | (2) Prioritizing suppliers that consider: (i) |
7 | | community health and universal rights to clean air and |
8 | | water; (ii) reduction or elimination of synthetic |
9 | | pesticides and fertilizers; (iii) improved soil health and |
10 | | carbon sequestration; (iv) reduced fossil fuel energy |
11 | | inputs and protection of water resources; (v) biodiversity |
12 | | and ecological resilience; (vi) food waste reduction; |
13 | | (vii) greenhouse gas emission reduction; and (viii) |
14 | | reduction or elimination of single-use plastics and other |
15 | | resource-intensive packaging and reducing carbon and water |
16 | | footprint of food purchases. |
17 | | (3) Sourcing from producers and vendors that (i) |
18 | | comply with labor laws, including minimum wage laws, |
19 | | through contractual requirements and enforcement, (ii) |
20 | | honor the right to freedom of association, (iii) provide |
21 | | workers with the ability to organize a union and to |
22 | | bargain collectively, free from reprisal, for livable |
23 | | wages and safe and healthy working conditions, (iv) uphold |
24 | | and implement workers' rights principles, and (v) |
25 | | implement cooperative ownership, democratic |
26 | | decision-making, and migrant, racial, and gender justice. |
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1 | | (4) Sourcing from farms and ranches that provide |
2 | | healthy and humane conditions for farm animals throughout |
3 | | their lives through (i) nutrition, (ii) physical |
4 | | environment, (iii) health, (iv) behavioral interaction, |
5 | | and (v) mental or affective state. |
6 | | (5) Promoting community health, nutrition, equitable |
7 | | access, and food sovereignty by prioritizing high-quality |
8 | | and culturally relevant whole or minimally processed |
9 | | foods, including vegetables, fruit, and whole grains, and |
10 | | plant-forward meals. Preservation methods such as canning |
11 | | and bottling using oils, sugar, or salt are not permitted. |
12 | | (6) In general, prioritizing products certified under |
13 | | certifications currently endorsed by the Center for Good |
14 | | Food Purchasing. |
15 | | "Good Food Purchasing Program equity, accountability, and |
16 | | transparency" means: |
17 | | (1) Having or developing a supplier or vendor |
18 | | diversification plan with goals that include reporting and |
19 | | accountability measures. Measures should be disaggregated |
20 | | by demographic group, including race and gender. |
21 | | (2) Planning implementation should prioritize |
22 | | purchases and address barriers to entry for suppliers who |
23 | | have experienced negative systemic social or economic |
24 | | impacts, including, but not limited to, women, veterans, |
25 | | persons with disabilities, and especially people of color, |
26 | | across all supply chains and to the greatest extent |
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1 | | possible. |
2 | | (3) Sharing purchasing data, assessments, purchasing |
3 | | targets, or implementation plans in a publicly accessible |
4 | | location including online with community members to |
5 | | facilitate engagement and transparency. |
6 | | (4) Engaging with community members, including, but |
7 | | not limited to, people served by meal programs, food |
8 | | service workers, constituents, and local food businesses, |
9 | | in informing values-based purchasing decisions and |
10 | | processes. |
11 | | (5) Developing and implementing comprehensive |
12 | | institutional policies that reflect community needs and |
13 | | values and prioritize transparency, racial equity, local |
14 | | economies, environmental sustainability, valued |
15 | | workforce, animal welfare, and community health and |
16 | | nutrition within their operations and food procurement. |
17 | | (6) Ensuring that institutional policies are embedded |
18 | | in agreements for contracted food services and that |
19 | | mechanisms are developed to ensure compliance and |
20 | | accountability through reporting and active contract |
21 | | management. |
22 | | "Minimally processed foods" means foods that are unaltered |
23 | | or slightly altered from the food's natural state through such |
24 | | processes as removal of inedible or unwanted parts, drying, |
25 | | powdering, squeezing, crushing, grinding, fractioning, |
26 | | steaming, poaching, boiling, roasting, pasteurization, |
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1 | | chilling, freezing, placing in containers, vacuum packaging, |
2 | | nonalcoholic fermentation, and other methods that do not add |
3 | | to the original food, salt, sugar, oils or fats, or food |
4 | | substances, other than additives that prolong product |
5 | | duration, protect original properties, or prevent |
6 | | proliferation of microorganisms. "Minimally processed foods" |
7 | | include, but are not limited to, whole grains or flours; fresh |
8 | | or frozen fruits and vegetables; meat, poultry, fish, and |
9 | | seafood, whole or in the form of steaks, fillets, and other |
10 | | cuts; fresh or pasteurized milk, eggs, fresh or pasteurized |
11 | | plain yogurt, legumes, and nuts and seeds. "Minimally |
12 | | processed foods" also includes foods made of 2 or more items in |
13 | | this group, such as dried mixed fruits, and foods with |
14 | | vitamins and minerals generally added to replace nutrients |
15 | | lost during minimal processing, such as flour fortified with |
16 | | iron and folic acid. |
17 | | (Source: P.A. 101-258, eff. 1-1-20 .) |
18 | | (30 ILCS 595/12 new) |
19 | | Sec. 12. Good Food Purchasing Program. |
20 | | (a) No later than one year after the effective date of this |
21 | | amendatory Act of the 103rd General Assembly, each State |
22 | | agency and State-owned facility that purchases food, |
23 | | including, without limitation, facilities for persons with |
24 | | mental health and developmental disabilities, correctional |
25 | | facilities, and public institutions of higher education, |
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1 | | including community colleges, shall have a timely plan for |
2 | | undergoing a Good Food Purchasing Program baseline assessment |
3 | | conducted by the Center for Good Food Purchasing, to determine |
4 | | current alignment with Good Food Purchasing Program core |
5 | | values and Good Food Purchasing Program equity, transparency, |
6 | | and accountability and how better to meet the Good Food |
7 | | Purchasing Program core values and Good Food Purchasing |
8 | | Program equity, transparency, and accountability. |
9 | | (b) No later than one year after completion of the |
10 | | baseline assessment under subsection (a), each State agency |
11 | | and State-owned facility shall develop and adopt a multi-year |
12 | | action plan with benchmarks to align food purchasing processes |
13 | | with Good Food Purchasing Program equity, transparency, and |
14 | | accountability and food purchases with Good Food Purchasing |
15 | | Program core values. |
16 | | (c) The year after completing the multi-year action plan |
17 | | and each year thereafter, each State agency and State-owned |
18 | | facility shall undergo a Good Food Purchasing Program |
19 | | assessment and update its multi-year action plan to annually |
20 | | increase the procurement of food that meets the Good Food |
21 | | Purchasing Program core values and Good Food Purchasing |
22 | | Program equity, transparency, and accountability. |
23 | | (d) To meet the goals set forth in this Section, when a |
24 | | State contract for purchase of food is to be awarded to the |
25 | | lowest responsible bidder or proposer, an otherwise qualified |
26 | | bidder or proposer who will fulfill the contract through the |
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1 | | use of food that aligns with Good Food Purchasing Program core |
2 | | values may be given preference over other bidders or |
3 | | proposers. |
4 | | (e) To facilitate reporting required under this Section, |
5 | | all State agencies and State-owned facilities that purchase |
6 | | food shall include in all invitations for bids, requests for |
7 | | proposals, and contracts a requirement for vendor |
8 | | data-sharing, including, but not limited to, product types, |
9 | | quantities, sizes, prices, origin, processors, and |
10 | | distributors. |
11 | | (f) On each January 1 following adoption of a multi-year |
12 | | action plan, each State agency and State-owned facility that |
13 | | purchases food shall publish in its procurement bulletin and |
14 | | on its website notice of its purchases of food in the |
15 | | immediately preceding fiscal year, its Good Food Purchasing |
16 | | Program baseline and annual assessments, and its multi-year |
17 | | action plan. |
18 | | (g) Under the procedures laid out in subsection (h) of |
19 | | Section 5-5 of the Illinois Procurement Code, the Procurement |
20 | | Policy Board may review a proposal, bid, or contract and issue |
21 | | a recommendation to void a contract or reject a proposal or bid |
22 | | based on a vendor, proposer, or bidder's current violation or |
23 | | history of violation of federal, State, or local law, |
24 | | including, but not limited to, Federal labor laws under Title |
25 | | 29 of the United States Code and the Minimum Wage Law. |
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1 | | (30 ILCS 595/35 new) |
2 | | Sec. 35. Good Food Purchasing Task Force. |
3 | | (a) The Good Food Purchasing Task Force created by House |
4 | | Joint Resolution 33 adopted in the 102nd General Assembly is |
5 | | reestablished and shall continue with its study of current |
6 | | procurement of food within the State and to explore how good |
7 | | food purchasing can be implemented to maximize the procurement |
8 | | of healthy foods that are sustainably, locally, and equitably |
9 | | sourced. |
10 | | (b) Any action taken in reliance on House Joint Resolution |
11 | | 33 of the 102nd General Assembly after January 1, 2023 by any |
12 | | person or entity is hereby validated. |
13 | | (c) The Task Force shall consist of the following members, |
14 | | who shall serve without compensation: |
15 | | (1) the Lieutenant Governor or his or her designee; |
16 | | (2) the Speaker of the House of Representatives or his |
17 | | or her designee; |
18 | | (3) the Minority Leader of the House of |
19 | | Representatives or his or her designee; |
20 | | (4) the Senate President or his or her designee; |
21 | | (5) the Senate Minority Leader or his or her designee; |
22 | | (6) one member nominated by a statewide local food |
23 | | advocacy organization and appointed by the Lieutenant |
24 | | Governor; |
25 | | (7) one member nominated by a national multi-sector |
26 | | food advocacy organization and appointed by the Lieutenant |
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1 | | Governor; |
2 | | (8) one member nominated by a Chicago-based food |
3 | | advocacy organization and appointed by the Lieutenant |
4 | | Governor; |
5 | | (9) one member nominated by a statewide environmental |
6 | | advocacy organization and appointed by the Lieutenant |
7 | | Governor; |
8 | | (10) one member nominated by a statewide labor |
9 | | organization that represents food workers and appointed by |
10 | | the Lieutenant Governor; |
11 | | (11) one member nominated by a national farm-animal |
12 | | welfare organization and appointed by the Lieutenant |
13 | | Governor; |
14 | | (12) the Director of the Department of Commerce and |
15 | | Economic Opportunity or his or her designee; |
16 | | (13) the Director of the Environmental Protection |
17 | | Agency or his or her designee; |
18 | | (14) the Director of the Department of Public Health |
19 | | or his or her designee; |
20 | | (15) the Director of the Department of Natural |
21 | | Resources or his or her designee; |
22 | | (16) the Chief Procurement Officer for General |
23 | | Services or his or her designee; |
24 | | (17) the Chief Procurement Officer for Higher |
25 | | Education or his or her designee; |
26 | | (18) the Chief Procurement Officer for the Secretary |
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1 | | of State's Office or his or her designee; |
2 | | (19) the Chief Procurement Officer for the Department |
3 | | of Corrections or his or her designee; |
4 | | (20) the Chief Procurement Officer for the Department |
5 | | of Human Services or his or her designee; |
6 | | (21) the Chief Procurement Officer for Central |
7 | | Management Services or his or her designee; |
8 | | (22) the Director of the Department of Agriculture or |
9 | | his or her designee; and |
10 | | (23) one member nominated by a statewide organization |
11 | | that advocates for healthy nutrition and appointed by |
12 | | Lieutenant Governor. |
13 | | Members of the Task Force shall serve without |
14 | | compensation. The Task Force members shall select a |
15 | | chairperson at the first meeting of the Task Force. Any member |
16 | | appointed under House Joint Resolution 33 of the 102nd General |
17 | | Assembly who was a member of the Task Force at the end of the |
18 | | 102nd General Assembly shall continue to serve on the Task |
19 | | Force until the appointed member resigns or is otherwise |
20 | | removed from the Task Force. |
21 | | (d) The Department of Agriculture shall provide |
22 | | administrative support for the Task Force. |
23 | | (e) The Task Force shall submit its interim report to the |
24 | | Governor and General Assembly no later than July 1, 2025 and |
25 | | its final report to the Governor and General Assembly no later |
26 | | than July 1, 2026. Following submission of the final report, |
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1 | | the Task Force shall continue to meet to monitor and support |
2 | | implementation of this Act. |
3 | | (30 ILCS 595/40 new) |
4 | | Sec. 40. Good Food Purchasing Fund. The Good Food |
5 | | Purchasing Fund is established as a special fund in the State |
6 | | treasury. Interest earned by the Good Food Purchasing Fund |
7 | | shall be credited to the fund. Moneys in the fund are |
8 | | continuously appropriated to the Department of Agriculture to |
9 | | administer this Act, including by creating a Good Food |
10 | | Purchasing office within the Department, hiring staff, and |
11 | | providing training and technical assistance to State agencies |
12 | | and State-owned facilities that purchase food. T |
| | he Department |
13 | | shall be permitted to accept federal government, local |
14 | | government, and private resources at any time to implement |
15 | | this Act. |
16 | | (30 ILCS 595/10 rep.) |
17 | | Section 15. The Local Food, Farms, and Jobs Act is amended |
18 | | by repealing Section 10. |
19 | | Section 20. The Food Handling Regulation Enforcement Act |
20 | | is amended by changing Section 4 as follows: |
21 | | (410 ILCS 625/4) |
22 | | Sec. 4. Cottage food operation. |
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1 | | (a) For the purpose of this Section: |
2 | | A food is "acidified" if: (i) acid or acid ingredients are |
3 | | added to it to produce a final equilibrium pH of 4.6 or below; |
4 | | or (ii) it is fermented to produce a final equilibrium pH of |
5 | | 4.6 or below. |
6 | | "Canned food" means food that has been heat processed |
7 | | sufficiently under United States Department of Agriculture |
8 | | guidelines to enable storing the food at normal home |
9 | | temperatures. |
10 | | "Cottage food operation" means an operation conducted by a |
11 | | person who produces or packages food or drink, other than |
12 | | foods and drinks listed as prohibited in paragraph (1.5) of |
13 | | subsection (b) of this Section, in a kitchen located in that |
14 | | person's primary domestic residence or another appropriately |
15 | | designed and equipped kitchen on a farm for direct sale by the |
16 | | owner, a family member, or employee. |
17 | | "Cut leafy greens" means fresh leafy greens whose leaves |
18 | | have been cut, shredded, sliced, chopped, or torn. "Cut leafy |
19 | | greens" does not mean cut-to-harvest leafy greens. |
20 | | "Department" means the Department of Public Health. |
21 | | "Equilibrium pH" means the final potential of hydrogen |
22 | | measured in an acidified food after all the components of the |
23 | | food have achieved the same acidity. |
24 | | "Farmers' market" means a common facility or area where |
25 | | farmers gather to sell a variety of fresh fruits and |
26 | | vegetables and other locally produced farm and food products |
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1 | | directly to consumers. |
2 | | "Leafy greens" includes iceberg lettuce; romaine lettuce; |
3 | | leaf lettuce; butter lettuce; baby leaf lettuce, such as |
4 | | immature lettuce or leafy greens; escarole; endive; spring |
5 | | mix; spinach; cabbage; kale; arugula; and chard. "Leafy |
6 | | greens" does not include microgreens or herbs such as cilantro |
7 | | or parsley. |
8 | | "Local health department" means a State-certified health |
9 | | department of a unit of local government in which a cottage |
10 | | food operation is located. |
11 | | "Local public health department association" means an |
12 | | association solely representing 2 or more State-certified |
13 | | local health departments. |
14 | | "Low-acid canned food" means any canned food with a |
15 | | finished equilibrium pH greater than 4.6 and a water activity |
16 | | (aw) greater than 0.85. |
17 | | "Microgreen" means an edible plant seedling grown in soil |
18 | | or substrate and harvested above the soil or substrate line. |
19 | | "Potentially hazardous food" means a food that is |
20 | | potentially hazardous according to the Department's |
21 | | administrative rules. Potentially hazardous food (PHF) in |
22 | | general means a food that requires time and temperature |
23 | | control for safety (TCS) to limit pathogenic microorganism |
24 | | growth or toxin formation. |
25 | | "Sprout" means any seedling intended for human consumption |
26 | | that was produced in a manner that does not meet the definition |
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1 | | of microgreen. |
2 | | (b) A cottage food operation may produce homemade food and |
3 | | drink provided that all of the following conditions are met: |
4 | | (1) (Blank). |
5 | | (1.3) A cottage food operation must register with the |
6 | | local health department for the unit of local government |
7 | | in which it is located, but may sell products outside of |
8 | | the unit of local government where the cottage food |
9 | | operation is located. A copy of the certificate of |
10 | | registration must be available upon request by any local |
11 | | health department. |
12 | | (1.5) A cottage food operation shall not sell or offer |
13 | | to sell the following food items or processed foods |
14 | | containing the following food items, except as indicated: |
15 | | (A) meat, poultry, fish, seafood, or shellfish; |
16 | | (B) dairy, except as an ingredient in a |
17 | | non-potentially hazardous baked good or candy, such as |
18 | | caramel, subject to paragraph (4), or as an ingredient |
19 | | in a baked good frosting, such as buttercream; |
20 | | (C) eggs, except as an ingredient in a |
21 | | non-potentially hazardous food, including dry noodles, |
22 | | or as an ingredient in a baked good frosting, such as |
23 | | buttercream, if the eggs are not raw; |
24 | | (D) pumpkin pies, sweet potato pies, cheesecakes, |
25 | | custard pies, creme pies, and pastries with |
26 | | potentially hazardous fillings or toppings; |
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1 | | (E) garlic in oil or oil infused with garlic, |
2 | | except if the garlic oil is acidified; |
3 | | (F) low-acid canned foods; |
4 | | (G) sprouts; |
5 | | (H) cut leafy greens, except for cut leafy greens |
6 | | that are dehydrated, acidified, or blanched and |
7 | | frozen; |
8 | | (I) cut or pureed fresh tomato or melon; |
9 | | (J) dehydrated tomato or melon; |
10 | | (K) frozen cut melon; |
11 | | (L) wild-harvested, non-cultivated mushrooms; |
12 | | (M) alcoholic beverages; or |
13 | | (N) kombucha. |
14 | | (1.6) In order to sell canned tomatoes or a canned |
15 | | product containing tomatoes, a cottage food operator shall |
16 | | either: |
17 | | (A) follow exactly a recipe that has been tested |
18 | | by the United States Department of Agriculture or by a |
19 | | state cooperative extension located in this State or |
20 | | any other state in the United States; or |
21 | | (B) submit the recipe, at the cottage food |
22 | | operator's expense, to a commercial laboratory |
23 | | according to the commercial laboratory's directions to |
24 | | test that the product has been adequately acidified; |
25 | | use only the varietal or proportionate varietals of |
26 | | tomato included in the tested recipe for all |
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1 | | subsequent batches of such recipe; and provide |
2 | | documentation of the annual test results of the recipe |
3 | | submitted under this subparagraph upon registration |
4 | | and to an inspector upon request during any inspection |
5 | | authorized by subsection (d). |
6 | | (2) In order to sell a fermented or acidified food, a |
7 | | cottage food operation shall either: |
8 | | (A) submit a recipe that has been tested by the |
9 | | United States Department of Agriculture or a |
10 | | cooperative extension system located in this State or |
11 | | any other state in the United States; or |
12 | | (B) submit a written food safety plan for each |
13 | | category of products for which the cottage food |
14 | | operator uses the same procedures, such as pickles, |
15 | | kimchi, or hot sauce, and a pH test for a single |
16 | | product that is representative of that category; the |
17 | | written food safety plan shall be submitted annually |
18 | | upon registration and each pH test shall be submitted |
19 | | every 3 years; the food safety plan shall adhere to |
20 | | guidelines developed by the Department. |
21 | | (3) A fermented or acidified food shall be packaged |
22 | | according to one of the following standards: |
23 | | (A) A fermented or acidified food that is canned |
24 | | must be processed in a boiling water bath in a |
25 | | Mason-style jar or glass container with a |
26 | | tight-fitting lid. |
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1 | | (B) A fermented or acidified food that is not |
2 | | canned shall be sold in any container that is new, |
3 | | clean, and seals properly and must be stored, |
4 | | transported, and sold at or below 41 degrees. |
5 | | (4) In order to sell a baked good with cheese, a local |
6 | | health department may require a cottage food operation to |
7 | | submit a recipe, at the cottage food operator's expense, |
8 | | to a commercial laboratory to verify that it is |
9 | | non-potentially hazardous before allowing the cottage food |
10 | | operation to sell the baked good as a cottage food. |
11 | | (5) For a cottage food operation that does not utilize |
12 | | a municipal water supply, such as an operation using a |
13 | | private well, a local health department may require a |
14 | | water sample test to verify that the water source being |
15 | | used meets public safety standards related to E. coli |
16 | | coliform. If a test is requested, it must be conducted at |
17 | | the cottage food operator's expense. |
18 | | (6) A person preparing or packaging a product as part |
19 | | of a cottage food operation must be a Department-approved |
20 | | certified food protection manager. |
21 | | (7) Food packaging must conform with the labeling |
22 | | requirements of the Illinois Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act. |
23 | | A cottage food product shall be prepackaged and the food |
24 | | packaging shall be affixed with a prominent label that |
25 | | includes the following: |
26 | | (A) the name of the cottage food operation and |
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1 | | unit of local government in which the cottage food |
2 | | operation is located; |
3 | | (B) the identifying registration number provided |
4 | | by the local health department on the certificate of |
5 | | registration and the name of the municipality or |
6 | | county in which the registration was filed; |
7 | | (C) the common or usual name of the food product; |
8 | | (D) all ingredients of the food product, including |
9 | | any color, artificial flavor, and preservative, listed |
10 | | in descending order by predominance of weight shown |
11 | | with the common or usual names; |
12 | | (E) the following phrase in prominent lettering: |
13 | | "This product was produced in a home kitchen not |
14 | | inspected by a health department that may also process |
15 | | common food allergens. If you have safety concerns, |
16 | | contact your local health department."; |
17 | | (F) the date the product was processed; and |
18 | | (G) allergen labeling as specified under federal |
19 | | labeling requirements. |
20 | | (8) Food packaging may include the designation |
21 | | "Illinois-grown", "Illinois-sourced", or "Illinois farm |
22 | | product" if the packaged product is (1) grown in Illinois; |
23 | | or (2) processed and packaged in Illinois, using at least |
24 | | one ingredient grown in Illinois a local farm or food |
25 | | product as that term is defined in Section 5 of the Local |
26 | | Food, Farms, and Jobs Act . |
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1 | | (9) In the case of a product that is difficult to |
2 | | properly label or package, or for other reasons, the local |
3 | | health department of the location where the product is |
4 | | sold may grant permission to sell products that are not |
5 | | prepackaged, in which case other prominent written notice |
6 | | shall be provided to the purchaser. |
7 | | (10) At the point of sale, notice must be provided in a |
8 | | prominent location that states the following: "This |
9 | | product was produced in a home kitchen not inspected by a |
10 | | health department that may also process common food |
11 | | allergens." At a physical display, notice shall be a |
12 | | placard. Online, notice shall be a message on the cottage |
13 | | food operation's online sales interface at the point of |
14 | | sale. |
15 | | (11) Food and drink produced by a cottage food |
16 | | operation shall be sold directly to consumers for their |
17 | | own consumption and not for resale. Sales directly to |
18 | | consumers include, but are not limited to, sales at or |
19 | | through: |
20 | | (A) farmers' markets; |
21 | | (B) fairs, festivals, public events, or online; |
22 | | (C) pickup from the private home or farm of the |
23 | | cottage food operator, if the pickup is not prohibited |
24 | | by any law of the unit of local government that applies |
25 | | equally to all cottage food operations; in a |
26 | | municipality with a population of 1,000,000 or more, a |
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1 | | cottage food operator shall comply with any law of the |
2 | | municipality that applies equally to all home-based |
3 | | businesses; |
4 | | (D) delivery to the customer; and |
5 | | (E) pickup from a third-party private property |
6 | | with the consent of the third-party property holder. |
7 | | (12) Only food that is non-potentially hazardous may |
8 | | be shipped. A cottage food product shall not be shipped |
9 | | out of State. Each cottage food product that is shipped |
10 | | must be sealed in a manner that reveals tampering, |
11 | | including, but not limited to, a sticker or pop top. |
12 | | (c) A local health department shall register any eligible |
13 | | cottage food operation that meets the requirements of this |
14 | | Section and shall issue a certificate of registration with an |
15 | | identifying registration number to each registered cottage |
16 | | food operation. A local health department may establish a |
17 | | self-certification program for cottage food operators to |
18 | | affirm compliance with applicable laws, rules, and |
19 | | regulations. Registration shall be completed annually and the |
20 | | local health department may impose a fee not to exceed $50. |
21 | | (d) In the event of a consumer complaint or foodborne |
22 | | illness outbreak, upon notice from a different local health |
23 | | department, or if the Department or a local health department |
24 | | has reason to believe that an imminent health hazard exists or |
25 | | that a cottage food operation's product has been found to be |
26 | | misbranded, adulterated, or not in compliance with the |
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1 | | conditions for cottage food operations set forth in this |
2 | | Section, the Department or the local health department may: |
3 | | (1) inspect the premises of the cottage food operation |
4 | | in question; |
5 | | (2) set a reasonable fee for the inspection; and |
6 | | (3) invoke penalties and the cessation of the sale of |
7 | | cottage food products until it deems that the situation |
8 | | has been addressed to the satisfaction of the Department |
9 | | or local health department; if the situation is not |
10 | | amenable to being addressed, the local health department |
11 | | may revoke the cottage food operation's registration |
12 | | following a process outlined by the local health |
13 | | department. |
14 | | (e) A local health department that receives a consumer |
15 | | complaint or a report of foodborne illness related to a |
16 | | cottage food operator in another jurisdiction shall refer the |
17 | | complaint or report to the local health department where the |
18 | | cottage food operator is registered. |
19 | | (f) By January 1, 2022, the Department, in collaboration |
20 | | with local public health department associations and other |
21 | | stakeholder groups, shall write and issue administrative |
22 | | guidance to local health departments on the following: |
23 | | (1) development of a standard registration form, |
24 | | including, if applicable, a written food safety plan; |
25 | | (2) development of a Home-Certification Self Checklist |
26 | | Form; |
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1 | | (3) development of a standard inspection form and |
2 | | inspection procedures; and |
3 | | (4) procedures for cottage food operation workspaces |
4 | | that include, but are not limited to, cleaning products, |
5 | | general sanitation, and requirements for functional |
6 | | equipment. |
7 | | (g) A person who produces or packages a non-potentially |
8 | | hazardous baked good for sale by a religious, charitable, or |
9 | | nonprofit organization for fundraising purposes is exempt from |
10 | | the requirements of this Section. |
11 | | (h) A home rule unit may not regulate cottage food |
12 | | operations in a manner inconsistent with the regulation by the |
13 | | State of cottage food operations under this Section. This |
14 | | Section is a limitation under subsection (i) of Section 6 of |
15 | | Article VII of the Illinois Constitution on the concurrent |
16 | | exercise by home rule units of powers and functions exercised |
17 | | by the State. |
18 | | (i) The Department may adopt rules as may be necessary to |
19 | | implement the provisions of this Section. |
20 | | (Source: P.A. 101-81, eff. 7-12-19; 102-633, eff. 1-1-22 .)". |