96TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2009 and 2010
HB5147

 

Introduced 1/29/2010, by Rep. Michael G. Connelly

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
220 ILCS 5/16-107.5
220 ILCS 5/16-108
220 ILCS 5/16-127
415 ILCS 5/3.290   was 415 ILCS 5/3.21
415 ILCS 5/3.330   was 415 ILCS 5/3.32
415 ILCS 5/3.535   was 415 ILCS 5/3.53
415 ILCS 5/14.4   from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1014.4
415 ILCS 5/22.22   from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.22
415 ILCS 5/22.37 new
415 ILCS 5/39.2   from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1039.2
415 ILCS 5/39.5   from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1039.5

    Amends the Public Utilities Act. Provides that an eligible renewable electrical generating facility includes a generator powered by agricultural residues, wood, landscape trimmings, or organic wastes. Requires a certain percentage of an electricity provider's power to come from biomass. Authorizes increases in the number and nameplate rating of customers who are eligible for net metering. Amends the Environmental Protection Act. Provides that landscape waste is not municipal waste. Extends the length of time that landscape waste may be held at a transfer station before the station must be regulated as a pollution control facility. Exempts lignocellulosic agricultural residues, organic landscape waste, and clean wood waste from regulation as waste. Exempts agricultural waste from certain groundwater rules. Requires the Agency to develop, and the Board to adopt, performance standards for landscape waste gasification facilities as well as testing procedures and standards for the end product produced by those facilities. Defines "flood proofed" for the purpose of a provision concerning local siting review. Makes other changes.


LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

FISCAL NOTE ACT MAY APPLY

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

HB5147 LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1     AN ACT concerning energy facilities.
 
2     Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3 represented in the General Assembly:
 
4     Section 5. The Public Utilities Act is amended by changing
5 Sections 16-107.5, 16-108, and 16-127 as follows:
 
6     (220 ILCS 5/16-107.5)
7     Sec. 16-107.5. Net electricity metering.
8     (a) The Legislature finds and declares that a program to
9 provide net electricity metering, as defined in this Section,
10 for eligible customers can encourage private investment in
11 renewable energy resources, stimulate economic growth, reduce
12 greenhouse gas emissions and the dependence of the United
13 States on foreign energy sources, enhance the continued
14 diversification of Illinois' energy resource mix, and protect
15 the Illinois environment.
16     (b) As used in this Section, (i) "eligible customer" means
17 a retail customer that owns or operates a solar, wind, or other
18 eligible renewable electrical generating facility with a rated
19 capacity of not more than 2,000 kilowatts that is located on
20 the customer's premises and is intended primarily to offset the
21 customer's own electrical requirements; (ii) "electricity
22 provider" means an electric utility or alternative retail
23 electric supplier; (iii) "eligible renewable electrical

 

 

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1 generating facility" means a generator powered by solar
2 electric energy, wind, dedicated crops grown for electricity
3 generation, agricultural residues, wood, municipal landscape
4 trimmings, organic wastes, anaerobic digestion of livestock or
5 food processing waste, fuel cells or microturbines powered by
6 renewable fuels, or hydroelectric energy; and (iv) "net
7 electricity metering" (or "net metering") means the
8 measurement, during the billing period applicable to an
9 eligible customer, of the net amount of electricity supplied by
10 an electricity provider to the customer's premises or provided
11 to the electricity provider by the customer.
12     (c) A net metering facility shall be equipped with metering
13 equipment that can measure the flow of electricity in both
14 directions at the same rate. For eligible residential
15 customers, this shall typically be accomplished through use of
16 a single, bi-directional meter. If the eligible customer's
17 existing electric revenue meter does not meet this requirement,
18 the electricity provider shall arrange for the local electric
19 utility or a meter service provider to install and maintain a
20 new revenue meter at the electricity provider's expense. For
21 non-residential customers, the electricity provider may
22 arrange for the local electric utility or a meter service
23 provider to install and maintain metering equipment capable of
24 measuring the flow of electricity both into and out of the
25 customer's facility at the same rate and ratio, typically
26 through the use of a dual channel meter. For generators with a

 

 

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1 nameplate rating of 120 40 kilowatts and below, the costs of
2 installing such equipment shall be paid for by the electricity
3 provider. For generators with a nameplate rating over 120 40
4 kilowatts and up to 2,000 kilowatts capacity, the costs of
5 installing such equipment shall be paid for by the customer.
6 Any subsequent revenue meter change necessitated by any
7 eligible customer shall be paid for by the customer.
8     (d) An electricity provider shall measure and charge or
9 credit for the net electricity supplied to eligible customers
10 or provided by eligible customers in the following manner:
11         (1) If the amount of electricity used by the customer
12     during the billing period exceeds the amount of electricity
13     produced by the customer, the electricity provider shall
14     charge the customer for the net electricity supplied to and
15     used by the customer as provided in subsection (e) of this
16     Section.
17         (2) If the amount of electricity produced by a customer
18     during the billing period exceeds the amount of electricity
19     used by the customer during that billing period, the
20     electricity provider supplying that customer shall apply a
21     1:1 kilowatt-hour credit to a subsequent bill for service
22     to the customer for the net electricity supplied to the
23     electricity provider. The electricity provider shall
24     continue to carry over any excess kilowatt-hour credits
25     earned and apply those credits to subsequent billing
26     periods to offset any customer-generator consumption in

 

 

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1     those billing periods until all credits are used or until
2     the end of the annualized period.
3         (3) At the end of the year or annualized over the
4     period that service is supplied by means of net metering,
5     or in the event that the retail customer terminates service
6     with the electricity provider prior to the end of the year
7     or the annualized period, any remaining credits in the
8     customer's account shall expire.
9     (e) An electricity provider shall provide to net metering
10 customers electric service at non-discriminatory rates that
11 are identical, with respect to rate structure, retail rate
12 components, and any monthly charges, to the rates that the
13 customer would be charged if not a net metering customer. An
14 electricity provider shall not charge net metering customers
15 any fee or charge or require additional equipment, insurance,
16 or any other requirements not specifically authorized by
17 interconnection standards authorized by the Commission, unless
18 the fee, charge, or other requirement would apply to other
19 similarly situated customers who are not net metering
20 customers. The customer will remain responsible for all taxes,
21 fees, and utility delivery charges that would otherwise be
22 applicable to the net amount of electricity used by the
23 customer. Subsections (c) through (e) of this Section shall not
24 be construed to prevent an arms-length agreement between an
25 electricity provider and an eligible customer that sets forth
26 different prices, terms, and conditions for the provision of

 

 

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1 net metering service, including, but not limited to, the
2 provision of the appropriate metering equipment for
3 non-residential customers.
4     (f) Notwithstanding the requirements of subsections (c)
5 through (e) of this Section, an electricity provider must
6 require dual-channel metering for non-residential customers
7 operating eligible renewable electrical generating facilities
8 with a nameplate rating over 120 40 kilowatts and up to 2,000
9 kilowatts. In such cases, electricity charges and credits shall
10 be determined as follows:
11         (1) The electricity provider shall assess and the
12     customer remains responsible for all taxes, fees, and
13     utility delivery charges that would otherwise be
14     applicable to the gross amount of kilowatt-hours supplied
15     to the eligible customer by the electricity provider.
16         (2) Each month that service is supplied by means of
17     dual-channel metering, the electricity provider shall
18     compensate the eligible customer for any excess
19     kilowatt-hour credits at the electricity provider's
20     avoided cost of electricity supply over the monthly period
21     or as otherwise specified by the terms of a power-purchase
22     agreement negotiated between the customer and electricity
23     provider.
24         (3) For all eligible net metering customers taking
25     service from an electricity provider under contracts or
26     tariffs employing time of use rates, any monthly

 

 

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1     consumption of electricity shall be calculated according
2     to the terms of the contract or tariff to which the same
3     customer would be assigned to or be eligible for if the
4     customer was not a net metering customer. When those same
5     customer-generators are net generators during any discrete
6     time of use period, the net kilowatt-hours produced shall
7     be valued at the same price per kilowatt-hour as the
8     electric service provider would charge for retail
9     kilowatt-hour sales during that same time of use period.
10     (g) For purposes of federal and State laws providing
11 renewable energy credits or greenhouse gas credits, the
12 eligible customer shall be treated as owning and having title
13 to the renewable energy attributes, renewable energy credits,
14 and greenhouse gas emission credits related to any electricity
15 produced by the qualified generating unit. The electricity
16 provider may not condition participation in a net metering
17 program on the signing over of a customer's renewable energy
18 credits; provided, however, this subsection (g) shall not be
19 construed to prevent an arms-length agreement between an
20 electricity provider and an eligible customer that sets forth
21 the ownership or title of the credits.
22     (h) Within 120 days after the effective date of this
23 amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly, the Commission
24 shall establish standards for net metering and, if the
25 Commission has not already acted on its own initiative,
26 standards for the interconnection of eligible renewable

 

 

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1 generating equipment to the utility system. The
2 interconnection standards shall address any procedural
3 barriers, delays, and administrative costs associated with the
4 interconnection of customer-generation while ensuring the
5 safety and reliability of the units and the electric utility
6 system. The Commission shall consider the Institute of
7 Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Standard 1547 and
8 the issues of (i) reasonable and fair fees and costs, (ii)
9 clear timelines for major milestones in the interconnection
10 process, (iii) nondiscriminatory terms of agreement, and (iv)
11 any best practices for interconnection of distributed
12 generation.
13     (i) All electricity providers shall begin to offer net
14 metering no later than April 1, 2008.
15     (j) An electricity provider shall provide net metering to
16 eligible customers until the load of its net metering customers
17 equals 5% 1% of the total peak demand supplied by that
18 electricity provider during the previous year, provided that
19 any load above 1% of the total peak demand supplied by the
20 provider during the previous year shall consist of baseload
21 power generation from biomass, as defined in subsection (d) of
22 Section 16-127, with an availability greater than 50% measured
23 on a yearly basis. Electricity providers are authorized to
24 offer net metering beyond the 5% 1% level if they so choose.
25 The number of new eligible customers with generators that have
26 a nameplate rating of 120 40 kilowatts and below will be

 

 

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1 limited to 1000 200 total new billing accounts for the
2 utilities (Ameren Companies, ComEd, and MidAmerican) for the
3 period of April 1, 2010 2008 through March 31, 2011, with
4 additional new billing accounts not to exceed 1500 in each year
5 thereafter 2009.
6     (k) Each electricity provider shall maintain records and
7 report annually to the Commission the total number of net
8 metering customers served by the provider, as well as the type,
9 capacity, and energy sources of the generating systems used by
10 the net metering customers. Nothing in this Section shall limit
11 the ability of an electricity provider to request the redaction
12 of information deemed by the Commission to be confidential
13 business information. Each electricity provider shall notify
14 the Commission when the total generating capacity of its net
15 metering customers is equal to or in excess of the 5% 1% cap
16 specified in subsection (j) of this Section.
17     (l) Notwithstanding the definition of "eligible customer"
18 in item (i) of subsection (b) of this Section, each electricity
19 provider shall consider whether to allow meter aggregation for
20 the purposes of net metering on:
21         (1) properties owned or leased by multiple customers
22     that contribute to the operation of an eligible renewable
23     electrical generating facility, such as a community-owned
24     wind project, a community biomass combined heat and power
25     system, or a community methane digester processing
26     livestock waste from multiple sources; and

 

 

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1         (2) individual units, apartments, or properties owned
2     or leased by multiple customers and collectively served by
3     a common eligible renewable electrical generating
4     facility, such as an apartment building served by
5     photovoltaic panels on the roof.
6     For the purposes of this subsection (l), "meter
7 aggregation" means the combination of reading and billing on a
8 pro rata basis for the types of eligible customers described in
9 this Section.
10     (m) Nothing in this Section shall affect the right of an
11 electricity provider to continue to provide, or the right of a
12 retail customer to continue to receive service pursuant to a
13 contract for electric service between the electricity provider
14 and the retail customer in accordance with the prices, terms,
15 and conditions provided for in that contract. Either the
16 electricity provider or the customer may require compliance
17 with the prices, terms, and conditions of the contract.
18 (Source: P.A. 95-420, eff. 8-24-07.)
 
19     (220 ILCS 5/16-108)
20     Sec. 16-108. Recovery of costs associated with the
21 provision of delivery services.
22     (a) An electric utility shall file a delivery services
23 tariff with the Commission at least 210 days prior to the date
24 that it is required to begin offering such services pursuant to
25 this Act. An electric utility shall provide the components of

 

 

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1 delivery services that are subject to the jurisdiction of the
2 Federal Energy Regulatory Commission at the same prices, terms
3 and conditions set forth in its applicable tariff as approved
4 or allowed into effect by that Commission. The Commission shall
5 otherwise have the authority pursuant to Article IX to review,
6 approve, and modify the prices, terms and conditions of those
7 components of delivery services not subject to the jurisdiction
8 of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, including the
9 authority to determine the extent to which such delivery
10 services should be offered on an unbundled basis. In making any
11 such determination the Commission shall consider, at a minimum,
12 the effect of additional unbundling on (i) the objective of
13 just and reasonable rates, (ii) electric utility employees, and
14 (iii) the development of competitive markets for electric
15 energy services in Illinois.
16     (b) The Commission shall enter an order approving, or
17 approving as modified, the delivery services tariff no later
18 than 30 days prior to the date on which the electric utility
19 must commence offering such services. The Commission may
20 subsequently modify such tariff pursuant to this Act.
21     (c) The electric utility's tariffs shall define the classes
22 of its customers for purposes of delivery services charges.
23 Delivery services shall be priced and made available to all
24 retail customers electing delivery services in each such class
25 on a nondiscriminatory basis regardless of whether the retail
26 customer chooses the electric utility, an affiliate of the

 

 

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1 electric utility, or another entity as its supplier of electric
2 power and energy. Charges for delivery services shall be cost
3 based, and shall allow the electric utility to recover the
4 costs of providing delivery services through its charges to its
5 delivery service customers that use the facilities and services
6 associated with such costs. Such costs shall include the costs
7 of owning, operating and maintaining transmission and
8 distribution facilities. The Commission shall also be
9 authorized to consider whether, and if so to what extent, the
10 following costs are appropriately included in the electric
11 utility's delivery services rates: (i) the costs of that
12 portion of generation facilities used for the production and
13 absorption of reactive power in order that retail customers
14 located in the electric utility's service area can receive
15 electric power and energy from suppliers other than the
16 electric utility, and (ii) the costs associated with the use
17 and redispatch of generation facilities to mitigate
18 constraints on the transmission or distribution system in order
19 that retail customers located in the electric utility's service
20 area can receive electric power and energy from suppliers other
21 than the electric utility. Nothing in this subsection shall be
22 construed as directing the Commission to allocate any of the
23 costs described in (i) or (ii) that are found to be
24 appropriately included in the electric utility's delivery
25 services rates to any particular customer group or geographic
26 area in setting delivery services rates.

 

 

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1     (d) The Commission shall establish charges, terms and
2 conditions for delivery services that are just and reasonable
3 and shall take into account customer impacts when establishing
4 such charges. In establishing charges, terms and conditions for
5 delivery services, the Commission shall take into account
6 voltage level differences. A retail customer shall have the
7 option to request to purchase electric service at any delivery
8 service voltage reasonably and technically feasible from the
9 electric facilities serving that customer's premises provided
10 that there are no significant adverse impacts upon system
11 reliability or system efficiency. A retail customer shall also
12 have the option to request to purchase electric service at any
13 point of delivery that is reasonably and technically feasible
14 provided that there are no significant adverse impacts on
15 system reliability or efficiency. Such requests shall not be
16 unreasonably denied.
17     (e) Electric utilities shall recover the costs of
18 installing, operating or maintaining facilities for the
19 particular benefit of one or more delivery services customers,
20 including without limitation any costs incurred in complying
21 with a customer's request to be served at a different voltage
22 level, directly from the retail customer or customers for whose
23 benefit the costs were incurred, to the extent such costs are
24 not recovered through the charges referred to in subsections
25 (c) and (d) of this Section.
26     (f) An electric utility shall be entitled but not required

 

 

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1 to implement transition charges in conjunction with the
2 offering of delivery services pursuant to Section 16-104. If an
3 electric utility implements transition charges, it shall
4 implement such charges for all delivery services customers and
5 for all customers described in subsection (h), but shall not
6 implement transition charges for power and energy that a retail
7 customer takes from cogeneration or self-generation facilities
8 located on that retail customer's premises, if such facilities
9 meet the following criteria:
10         (i) the cogeneration or self-generation facilities
11     serve a single retail customer and are located on that
12     retail customer's premises (for purposes of this
13     subparagraph and subparagraph (ii), an industrial or
14     manufacturing retail customer and a third party contractor
15     that is served by such industrial or manufacturing customer
16     through such retail customer's own electrical distribution
17     facilities under the circumstances described in subsection
18     (vi) of the definition of "alternative retail electric
19     supplier" set forth in Section 16-102, shall be considered
20     a single retail customer);
21         (ii) the cogeneration or self-generation facilities
22     either (A) are sized pursuant to generally accepted
23     engineering standards for the retail customer's electrical
24     load at that premises (taking into account standby or other
25     reliability considerations related to that retail
26     customer's operations at that site) or (B) if the facility

 

 

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1     is a cogeneration or self-generation facility located on
2     the retail customer's premises, the retail customer is the
3     thermal host for at least a portion of that facility and
4     the facility has been designed to meet that retail
5     customer's thermal energy requirements resulting in
6     electrical output beyond that retail customer's electrical
7     demand at that premises, comply with the operating and
8     efficiency standards applicable to "qualifying facilities"
9     specified in title 18 Code of Federal Regulations Section
10     292.205, expanded to include renewable energy production
11     from biomass, as defined in subsection (d) of Section
12     16-127, as in effect on April 1, 2010 the effective date of
13     this amendatory Act of 1999;
14         (iii) the retail customer on whose premises the
15     facilities are located either has an exclusive right to
16     receive, and corresponding obligation to pay for, all of
17     the electrical capacity of the facility, or in the case of
18     a cogeneration facility that has been designed to meet the
19     retail customer's thermal energy requirements at that
20     premises, an identified amount of the electrical capacity
21     of the facility, over a minimum 5-year period; and
22         (iv) if the cogeneration facility is sized for the
23     retail customer's thermal load at that premises but exceeds
24     the electrical load by less than 120 kilowatts, any sales
25     of excess power or energy are made at retail rates, or at
26     greater than or equal to 120 kilowatts , any sales of excess

 

 

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1     power or energy are made only at wholesale, are subject to
2     the jurisdiction of the Federal Energy Regulatory
3     Commission, and are not for the purpose of circumventing
4     the provisions of this subsection (f).
5 If a generation facility located at a retail customer's
6 premises does not meet the above criteria, an electric utility
7 implementing transition charges shall implement a transition
8 charge until December 31, 2006 for any power and energy taken
9 by such retail customer from such facility as if such power and
10 energy had been delivered by the electric utility. Provided,
11 however, that an industrial retail customer that is taking
12 power from a generation facility that does not meet the above
13 criteria but that is located on such customer's premises will
14 not be subject to a transition charge for the power and energy
15 taken by such retail customer from such generation facility if
16 the facility does not serve any other retail customer and
17 either was installed on behalf of the customer and for its own
18 use prior to January 1, 1997, or is both predominantly fueled
19 by byproducts of such customer's manufacturing process at such
20 premises and sells or offers an average of 300 megawatts or
21 more of electricity produced from such generation facility into
22 the wholesale market. Such charges shall be calculated as
23 provided in Section 16-102, and shall be collected on each
24 kilowatt-hour delivered under a delivery services tariff to a
25 retail customer from the date the customer first takes delivery
26 services until December 31, 2006 except as provided in

 

 

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1 subsection (h) of this Section. Provided, however, that an
2 electric utility, other than an electric utility providing
3 service to at least 1,000,000 customers in this State on
4 January 1, 1999, shall be entitled to petition for entry of an
5 order by the Commission authorizing the electric utility to
6 implement transition charges for an additional period ending no
7 later than December 31, 2008. The electric utility shall file
8 its petition with supporting evidence no earlier than 16
9 months, and no later than 12 months, prior to December 31,
10 2006. The Commission shall hold a hearing on the electric
11 utility's petition and shall enter its order no later than 8
12 months after the petition is filed. The Commission shall
13 determine whether and to what extent the electric utility shall
14 be authorized to implement transition charges for an additional
15 period. The Commission may authorize the electric utility to
16 implement transition charges for some or all of the additional
17 period, and shall determine the mitigation factors to be used
18 in implementing such transition charges; provided, that the
19 Commission shall not authorize mitigation factors less than
20 110% of those in effect during the 12 months ended December 31,
21 2006. In making its determination, the Commission shall
22 consider the following factors: the necessity to implement
23 transition charges for an additional period in order to
24 maintain the financial integrity of the electric utility; the
25 prudence of the electric utility's actions in reducing its
26 costs since the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997;

 

 

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1 the ability of the electric utility to provide safe, adequate
2 and reliable service to retail customers in its service area;
3 and the impact on competition of allowing the electric utility
4 to implement transition charges for the additional period.
5     (g) The electric utility shall file tariffs that establish
6 the transition charges to be paid by each class of customers to
7 the electric utility in conjunction with the provision of
8 delivery services. The electric utility's tariffs shall define
9 the classes of its customers for purposes of calculating
10 transition charges. The electric utility's tariffs shall
11 provide for the calculation of transition charges on a
12 customer-specific basis for any retail customer whose average
13 monthly maximum electrical demand on the electric utility's
14 system during the 6 months with the customer's highest monthly
15 maximum electrical demands equals or exceeds 3.0 megawatts for
16 electric utilities having more than 1,000,000 customers, and
17 for other electric utilities for any customer that has an
18 average monthly maximum electrical demand on the electric
19 utility's system of one megawatt or more, and (A) for which
20 there exists data on the customer's usage during the 3 years
21 preceding the date that the customer became eligible to take
22 delivery services, or (B) for which there does not exist data
23 on the customer's usage during the 3 years preceding the date
24 that the customer became eligible to take delivery services, if
25 in the electric utility's reasonable judgment there exists
26 comparable usage information or a sufficient basis to develop

 

 

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1 such information, and further provided that the electric
2 utility can require customers for which an individual
3 calculation is made to sign contracts that set forth the
4 transition charges to be paid by the customer to the electric
5 utility pursuant to the tariff.
6     (h) An electric utility shall also be entitled to file
7 tariffs that allow it to collect transition charges from retail
8 customers in the electric utility's service area that do not
9 take delivery services but that take electric power or energy
10 from an alternative retail electric supplier or from an
11 electric utility other than the electric utility in whose
12 service area the customer is located. Such charges shall be
13 calculated, in accordance with the definition of transition
14 charges in Section 16-102, for the period of time that the
15 customer would be obligated to pay transition charges if it
16 were taking delivery services, except that no deduction for
17 delivery services revenues shall be made in such calculation,
18 and usage data from the customer's class shall be used where
19 historical usage data is not available for the individual
20 customer. The customer shall be obligated to pay such charges
21 on a lump sum basis on or before the date on which the customer
22 commences to take service from the alternative retail electric
23 supplier or other electric utility, provided, that the electric
24 utility in whose service area the customer is located shall
25 offer the customer the option of signing a contract pursuant to
26 which the customer pays such charges ratably over the period in

 

 

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1 which the charges would otherwise have applied.
2     (i) An electric utility shall be entitled to add to the
3 bills of delivery services customers charges pursuant to
4 Sections 9-221, 9-222 (except as provided in Section 9-222.1),
5 and Section 16-114 of this Act, Section 5-5 of the Electricity
6 Infrastructure Maintenance Fee Law, Section 6-5 of the
7 Renewable Energy, Energy Efficiency, and Coal Resources
8 Development Law of 1997, and Section 13 of the Energy
9 Assistance Act.
10     (j) If a retail customer that obtains electric power and
11 energy from cogeneration or self-generation facilities
12 installed for its own use on or before January 1, 1997,
13 subsequently takes service from an alternative retail electric
14 supplier or an electric utility other than the electric utility
15 in whose service area the customer is located for any portion
16 of the customer's electric power and energy requirements
17 formerly obtained from those facilities (including that amount
18 purchased from the utility in lieu of such generation and not
19 as standby power purchases, under a cogeneration displacement
20 tariff in effect as of the effective date of this amendatory
21 Act of 1997), the transition charges otherwise applicable
22 pursuant to subsections (f), (g), or (h) of this Section shall
23 not be applicable in any year to that portion of the customer's
24 electric power and energy requirements formerly obtained from
25 those facilities, provided, that for purposes of this
26 subsection (j), such portion shall not exceed the average

 

 

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1 number of kilowatt-hours per year obtained from the
2 cogeneration or self-generation facilities during the 3 years
3 prior to the date on which the customer became eligible for
4 delivery services, except as provided in subsection (f) of
5 Section 16-110.
6 (Source: P.A. 91-50, eff. 6-30-99; 92-690, eff. 7-18-02.)
 
7     (220 ILCS 5/16-127)
8     Sec. 16-127. Environmental disclosure.
9     (a) Effective January 1, 1999, every electric utility and
10 alternative retail electric supplier shall provide the
11 following information, to the maximum extent practicable, with
12 its bills to its customers on a quarterly basis:
13         (i) the known sources of electricity supplied,
14     broken-out by percentages, of biomass power, coal-fired
15     power, hydro power, natural gas-fired power, nuclear
16     power, oil-fired power, solar power, wind power and other
17     resources, respectively;
18         (ii) a pie-chart that graphically depicts the
19     percentages of the sources of the electricity supplied as
20     set forth in subparagraph (i) of this subsection; and
21         (iii) a pie-chart that graphically depicts the
22     quantity of renewable energy resources procured pursuant
23     to Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act as a
24     percentage of electricity supplied to serve eligible
25     retail customers as defined in Section 16-111.5(a) of this

 

 

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1     Act.
2     (b) In addition, every electric utility and alternative
3 retail electric supplier shall provide, to the maximum extent
4 practicable, with its bills to its customers on a quarterly
5 basis, a standardized chart in a format to be determined by the
6 Commission in a rule following notice and hearings which
7 provides the amounts of carbon dioxide, nitrogen oxides and
8 sulfur dioxide emissions and nuclear waste attributable to the
9 known sources of electricity supplied as set forth in
10 subparagraph (i) of subsection (a) of this Section.
11     (c) The electric utilities and alternative retail electric
12 suppliers may provide their customers with such other
13 information as they believe relevant to the information
14 required in subsections (a) and (b) of this Section.
15     (d) For the purposes of subsection (j) of Section 16-107.5,
16 subsection (f) of Section 16-108, and subsection (a) of this
17 Section, "biomass" means dedicated crops grown for energy
18 production, agricultural residues, wood, municipal landscape
19 trimmings, livestock manure, and organic wastes.
20     (e) All of the information provided in subsections (a) and
21 (b) of this Section shall be presented to the Commission for
22 inclusion in its World Wide Web Site.
23 (Source: P.A. 95-481, eff. 8-28-07.)
 
24     Section 10. The Environmental Protection Act is amended by
25 changing Sections 3.290, 3.330, 3.535, 14.4, 22.22, 39.2, and

 

 

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1 39.5 and by adding Section 22.37 as follows:
 
2     (415 ILCS 5/3.290)  (was 415 ILCS 5/3.21)
3     Sec. 3.290. Municipal waste. "Municipal waste" means
4 garbage, general household and commercial waste, industrial
5 lunchroom or office waste, landscape waste, and construction or
6 demolition debris.
7 (Source: P.A. 92-574, eff. 6-26-02.)
 
8     (415 ILCS 5/3.330)  (was 415 ILCS 5/3.32)
9     Sec. 3.330. Pollution control facility.
10     (a) "Pollution control facility" is any waste storage site,
11 sanitary landfill, waste disposal site, waste transfer
12 station, waste treatment facility, or waste incinerator. This
13 includes sewers, sewage treatment plants, and any other
14 facilities owned or operated by sanitary districts organized
15 under the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District Act.
16     The following are not pollution control facilities:
17         (1) (blank);
18         (2) waste storage sites regulated under 40 CFR, Part
19     761.42;
20         (3) sites or facilities used by any person conducting a
21     waste storage, waste treatment, waste disposal, waste
22     transfer or waste incineration operation, or a combination
23     thereof, for wastes generated by such person's own
24     activities, when such wastes are stored, treated, disposed

 

 

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1     of, transferred or incinerated within the site or facility
2     owned, controlled or operated by such person, or when such
3     wastes are transported within or between sites or
4     facilities owned, controlled or operated by such person;
5         (4) sites or facilities at which the State is
6     performing removal or remedial action pursuant to Section
7     22.2 or 55.3;
8         (5) abandoned quarries used solely for the disposal of
9     concrete, earth materials, gravel, or aggregate debris
10     resulting from road construction activities conducted by a
11     unit of government or construction activities due to the
12     construction and installation of underground pipes, lines,
13     conduit or wires off of the premises of a public utility
14     company which are conducted by a public utility;
15         (6) sites or facilities used by any person to
16     specifically conduct a landscape composting operation;
17         (7) regional facilities as defined in the Central
18     Midwest Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact;
19         (8) the portion of a site or facility where coal
20     combustion wastes are stored or disposed of in accordance
21     with subdivision (r)(2) or (r)(3) of Section 21;
22         (9) the portion of a site or facility used for the
23     collection, storage or processing of waste tires as defined
24     in Title XIV;
25         (10) the portion of a site or facility used for
26     treatment of petroleum contaminated materials by

 

 

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1     application onto or incorporation into the soil surface and
2     any portion of that site or facility used for storage of
3     petroleum contaminated materials before treatment. Only
4     those categories of petroleum listed in Section 57.9(a)(3)
5     are exempt under this subdivision (10);
6         (11) the portion of a site or facility where used oil
7     is collected or stored prior to shipment to a recycling or
8     energy recovery facility, provided that the used oil is
9     generated by households or commercial establishments, and
10     the site or facility is a recycling center or a business
11     where oil or gasoline is sold at retail;
12         (11.5) processing sites or facilities that receive
13     only on-specification used oil, as defined in 35 Ill.
14     Admin. Code 739, originating from used oil collectors for
15     processing that is managed under 35 Ill. Admin. Code 739 to
16     produce products for sale to off-site petroleum
17     facilities, if these processing sites or facilities are:
18     (i) located within a home rule unit of local government
19     with a population of at least 30,000 according to the 2000
20     federal census, that home rule unit of local government has
21     been designated as an Urban Round II Empowerment Zone by
22     the United States Department of Housing and Urban
23     Development, and that home rule unit of local government
24     has enacted an ordinance approving the location of the site
25     or facility and provided funding for the site or facility;
26     and (ii) in compliance with all applicable zoning

 

 

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1     requirements;
2         (12) the portion of a site or facility utilizing coal
3     combustion waste for stabilization and treatment of only
4     waste generated on that site or facility when used in
5     connection with response actions pursuant to the federal
6     Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and
7     Liability Act of 1980, the federal Resource Conservation
8     and Recovery Act of 1976, or the Illinois Environmental
9     Protection Act or as authorized by the Agency;
10         (13) the portion of a site or facility accepting
11     exclusively general construction or demolition debris,
12     located in a county with a population over 500,000 as of
13     January 1, 2000, and operated and located in accordance
14     with Section 22.38 of this Act;
15         (14) the portion of a site or facility, located within
16     a unit of local government that has enacted local zoning
17     requirements, used to accept, separate, and process
18     uncontaminated broken concrete, with or without protruding
19     metal bars, provided that the uncontaminated broken
20     concrete and metal bars are not speculatively accumulated,
21     are at the site or facility no longer than one year after
22     their acceptance, and are returned to the economic
23     mainstream in the form of raw materials or products;
24         (15) the portion of a site or facility located in a
25     county with a population over 3,000,000 that has obtained
26     local siting approval under Section 39.2 of this Act for a

 

 

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1     municipal waste incinerator on or before July 1, 2005 and
2     that is used for a non-hazardous waste transfer station;
3         (16) a site or facility that temporarily holds in
4     transit for 10 days or less, non-petruscible solid waste in
5     original containers, no larger in capacity than 500
6     gallons, provided that such waste is further transferred to
7     a recycling, disposal, treatment, or storage facility on a
8     non-contiguous site and provided such site or facility
9     complies with the applicable 10-day transfer requirements
10     of the federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of
11     1976 and United States Department of Transportation
12     hazardous material requirements. For purposes of this
13     Section only, "non-petruscible solid waste" means waste
14     other than municipal garbage that does not rot or become
15     putrid, including, but not limited to, paints, solvent,
16     filters, and absorbents;
17         (17) the portion of a site or facility located in a
18     county with a population greater than 3,000,000 that has
19     obtained local siting approval, under Section 39.2 of this
20     Act, for a municipal waste incinerator on or before July 1,
21     2005 and that is used for wood combustion facilities for
22     energy recovery that accept and burn only wood material, as
23     included in a fuel specification approved by the Agency;
24         (18) a transfer station used exclusively for landscape
25     waste, including a transfer station where landscape waste
26     is ground to reduce its volume, where the landscape waste

 

 

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1     is held no longer than 18 months 24 hours from the time it
2     was received; and
3         (19) the portion of a site or facility that (i) is used
4     for the composting of food scrap, livestock waste, crop
5     residue, uncontaminated wood waste, or paper waste,
6     including, but not limited to, corrugated paper or
7     cardboard, and (ii) meets all of the following
8     requirements:
9             (A) There must not be more than a total of 30,000
10         cubic yards of livestock waste in raw form or in the
11         process of being composted at the site or facility at
12         any one time.
13             (B) All food scrap, livestock waste, crop residue,
14         uncontaminated wood waste, and paper waste must, by the
15         end of each operating day, be processed and placed into
16         an enclosed vessel in which air flow and temperature
17         are controlled, or all of the following additional
18         requirements must be met:
19                 (i) The portion of the site or facility used
20             for the composting operation must include a
21             setback of at least 200 feet from the nearest
22             potable water supply well.
23                 (ii) The portion of the site or facility used
24             for the composting operation must be located
25             outside the boundary of the 10-year floodplain or
26             floodproofed.

 

 

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1                 (iii) The portion of the site or facility used
2             for the composting operation must be located at
3             least one-eighth of a mile from the nearest
4             residence, other than a residence located on the
5             same property as the site or facility.
6                 (iv) The portion of the site or facility used
7             for the composting operation must be located at
8             least one-eighth of a mile from the property line
9             of all of the following areas:
10                     (I) Facilities that primarily serve to
11                 house or treat people that are
12                 immunocompromised or immunosuppressed, such as
13                 cancer or AIDS patients; people with asthma,
14                 cystic fibrosis, or bioaerosol allergies; or
15                 children under the age of one year.
16                     (II) Primary and secondary schools and
17                 adjacent areas that the schools use for
18                 recreation.
19                     (III) Any facility for child care licensed
20                 under Section 3 of the Child Care Act of 1969;
21                 preschools; and adjacent areas that the
22                 facilities or preschools use for recreation.
23                 (v) By the end of each operating day, all food
24             scrap, livestock waste, crop residue,
25             uncontaminated wood waste, and paper waste must be
26             (i) processed into windrows or other piles and (ii)

 

 

HB5147 - 29 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1             covered in a manner that prevents scavenging by
2             birds and animals and that prevents other
3             nuisances.
4             (C) Food scrap, livestock waste, crop residue,
5         uncontaminated wood waste, paper waste, and compost
6         must not be placed within 5 feet of the water table.
7             (D) The site or facility must meet all of the
8         requirements of the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act (16
9         U.S.C. 1271 et seq.).
10             (E) The site or facility must not (i) restrict the
11         flow of a 100-year flood, (ii) result in washout of
12         food scrap, livestock waste, crop residue,
13         uncontaminated wood waste, or paper waste from a
14         100-year flood, or (iii) reduce the temporary water
15         storage capacity of the 100-year floodplain, unless
16         measures are undertaken to provide alternative storage
17         capacity, such as by providing lagoons, holding tanks,
18         or drainage around structures at the facility.
19             (F) The site or facility must not be located in any
20         area where it may pose a threat of harm or destruction
21         to the features for which:
22                 (i) an irreplaceable historic or
23             archaeological site has been listed under the
24             National Historic Preservation Act (16 U.S.C. 470
25             et seq.) or the Illinois Historic Preservation
26             Act;

 

 

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1                 (ii) a natural landmark has been designated by
2             the National Park Service or the Illinois State
3             Historic Preservation Office; or
4                 (iii) a natural area has been designated as a
5             Dedicated Illinois Nature Preserve under the
6             Illinois Natural Areas Preservation Act.
7             (G) The site or facility must not be located in an
8         area where it may jeopardize the continued existence of
9         any designated endangered species, result in the
10         destruction or adverse modification of the critical
11         habitat for such species, or cause or contribute to the
12         taking of any endangered or threatened species of
13         plant, fish, or wildlife listed under the Endangered
14         Species Act (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) or the Illinois
15         Endangered Species Protection Act.
16     (b) A new pollution control facility is:
17         (1) a pollution control facility initially permitted
18     for development or construction after July 1, 1981; or
19         (2) the area of expansion beyond the boundary of a
20     currently permitted pollution control facility; or
21         (3) a permitted pollution control facility requesting
22     approval to store, dispose of, transfer or incinerate, for
23     the first time, any special or hazardous waste.
24 (Source: P.A. 95-131, eff. 8-13-07; 95-177, eff. 1-1-08;
25 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 95-408, eff. 8-24-07; 95-876, eff.
26 8-21-08; 96-418, eff. 1-1-10; 96-611, eff. 8-24-09; revised

 

 

HB5147 - 31 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1 10-1-09.)
 
2     (415 ILCS 5/3.535)  (was 415 ILCS 5/3.53)
3     Sec. 3.535. Waste. "Waste" means any garbage, sludge from
4 a waste treatment plant, water supply treatment plant, or air
5 pollution control facility or other discarded material,
6 including solid, liquid, semi-solid, or contained gaseous
7 material resulting from industrial, commercial, mining and
8 agricultural operations, and from community activities, but
9 does not include lignocellulosic agricultural residues,
10 organic landscape waste, clean wood waste, solid or dissolved
11 material in domestic sewage, or solid or dissolved materials in
12 irrigation return flows, or coal combustion by-products as
13 defined in Section 3.135, or industrial discharges which are
14 point sources subject to permits under Section 402 of the
15 Federal Water Pollution Control Act, as now or hereafter
16 amended, or source, special nuclear, or by-product materials as
17 defined by the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended (68 Stat.
18 921) or any solid or dissolved material from any facility
19 subject to the Federal Surface Mining Control and Reclamation
20 Act of 1977 (P.L. 95-87) or the rules and regulations
21 thereunder or any law or rule or regulation adopted by the
22 State of Illinois pursuant thereto.
23 (Source: P.A. 92-574, eff. 6-26-02.)
 
24     (415 ILCS 5/14.4)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1014.4)

 

 

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1     Sec. 14.4. Groundwater rules.
2     (a) No later than January 1, 1989, the Agency, after
3 consultation with the Interagency Coordinating Committee on
4 Groundwater and the Groundwater Advisory Council, shall
5 propose regulations to the Board prescribing standards and
6 requirements for the following activities:
7         (1) landfilling, land treating, surface impounding or
8     piling of special waste and other wastes which could cause
9     contamination of groundwater and which are generated on the
10     site, other than construction and demolition debris and
11     hazardous, livestock, agricultural, and landscape waste,
12     and construction and demolition debris;
13         (2) storage of special waste in an underground storage
14     tank for which federal regulatory requirements for the
15     protection of groundwater are not applicable;
16         (3) storage and related handling of pesticides and
17     fertilizers at a facility for the purpose of commercial
18     application;
19         (4) storage and related handling of road oils and
20     de-icing agents at a central location; and
21         (5) storage and related handling of pesticides and
22     fertilizers at a central location for the purpose of
23     distribution to retail sales outlets.
24     In preparing such regulation, the Agency shall provide as
25 it deems necessary for more stringent provisions for those
26 activities enumerated in this subsection which are not already

 

 

HB5147 - 33 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1 in existence. Any activity for which such standards and
2 requirements are proposed may be referred to as a new activity.
3 For the purposes of this Section, the term "commercial
4 application" shall not include the use of pesticides or
5 fertilizers in a manner incidental to the primary business
6 activity.
7     (a-5) On and after the effective date of this amendatory
8 Act of the 96th General Assembly, agricultural waste is exempt
9 from regulations proposed by the Agency under the authority of
10 paragraph (1) of subsection (a).
11     (b) No later than October 1, 1993, the Board shall
12 promulgate appropriate regulations for existing activities. In
13 promulgating these regulations, the Board shall, in addition to
14 the factors set forth in Title VII of this Act, consider the
15 following:
16         (1) appropriate programs for water quality monitoring;
17         (2) reporting, recordkeeping and remedial response
18     measures;
19         (3) appropriate technology-based measures for
20     pollution control; and
21         (4) requirements for closure or discontinuance of
22     operations.
23     Such regulations as are promulgated pursuant to this
24 subsection shall be for the express purpose of protecting
25 groundwaters. The applicability of such regulations shall be
26 limited to any existing activity which is located:

 

 

HB5147 - 34 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1         (A) within a setback zone regulated by this Act, other
2     than an activity located on the same site as a
3     non-community water system well and for which the owner is
4     the same for both the activity and the well; or
5         (B) within a regulated recharge area as delineated by
6     Board regulation, provided that:
7             (i) the boundary of the lateral area of influence
8         of a community water supply well located within the
9         recharge area includes such activity therein;
10             (ii) the distance from the wellhead of the
11         community water supply to the activity does not exceed
12         2500 feet; and
13             (iii) the community water supply well was in
14         existence prior to January 1, 1988.
15     In addition, the Board shall ensure that the promulgated
16 regulations are consistent with and not pre-emptive of the
17 certification system provided by Section 14.5. The Board shall
18 modify the regulations adopted under this subsection to provide
19 an exception for existing activities subject to Section 14.6.
20     (c) Concurrently with the action mandated by subsection
21 (a), the Agency shall evaluate, with respect to the protection
22 of groundwater, the adequacy of existing federal and State
23 regulations regarding the disposal of hazardous waste and the
24 offsite disposal of special and municipal wastes. The Agency
25 shall then propose, as it deems necessary, additional
26 regulations for such new disposal activities as may be

 

 

HB5147 - 35 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1 necessary to achieve a level of groundwater protection that is
2 consistent with the regulations proposed under subsection (a)
3 of this Section.
4     (d) Following receipt of proposed regulations submitted by
5 the Agency pursuant to subsection (a) of this Section, the
6 Board shall promulgate appropriate regulations for new
7 activities. In promulgating these regulations, the Board
8 shall, in addition to the factors set forth in Title VII of
9 this Act, consider the following:
10         (1) appropriate programs for water quality monitoring,
11     including, where appropriate, notification limitations to
12     trigger preventive response activities;
13         (2) design practices and technology-based measures
14     appropriate for minimizing the potential for groundwater
15     contamination;
16         (3) reporting, recordkeeping and remedial response
17     measures; and
18         (4) requirements for closure or discontinuance of
19     operations.
20     Such regulations as are promulgated pursuant to this
21 subsection shall be for the express purpose of protecting
22 groundwaters. The applicability of such regulations shall be
23 limited to any new activity which is to be located within a
24 setback zone regulated by this Act, or which is to be located
25 within a regulated recharge area as delineated by Board
26 regulation. In addition, the Board shall ensure that the

 

 

HB5147 - 36 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1 promulgated regulations are consistent with and not
2 pre-emptive of the certification system provided by Section
3 14.5. The Board shall modify the regulations adopted under this
4 subsection to provide an exception for new activities subject
5 to Section 14.6.
6     (e) Nothing in this Section shall be construed as
7 prohibiting any person for whom regulations are promulgated by
8 the Board pursuant to subsection (b) or (c) of this Section,
9 from proposing and obtaining, concurrently with the
10 regulations proposed by the Agency pursuant to subsection (a)
11 of this Section, a rule specific to individual persons or sites
12 pursuant to Title VII of this Act which codifies alternative
13 groundwater protection methods that provide substantially
14 equivalent protection for community water supplies.
15     (f) Nothing in this Section shall be construed as limiting
16 the power of any county or municipality to adopt ordinances,
17 which are consistent with but not more stringent than the
18 regulations adopted by the Board pursuant to this Section, for
19 application of standards and requirements within such setback
20 zones as are provided by this Act.
21     (g) The Agency shall prepare a groundwater protection
22 regulatory agenda for submittal to the Interagency
23 Coordinating Committee on Groundwater and the Groundwater
24 Advisory Council. In preparing this agenda, the Agency shall
25 consider situations where gaps may exist in federal or State
26 regulatory protection for groundwater, or where further

 

 

HB5147 - 37 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1 refinements could be necessary to achieve adequate protection
2 of groundwater.
3     (h) Nothing in this Section shall be construed as limiting
4 the general authority of the Board to promulgate regulations
5 pursuant to Title VII of this Act.
6     (i) The Board's rulemaking with respect to subsection
7 (a)(3) of this Section shall take into account the relevant
8 aspects of the Department of Agriculture's Part 255 regulations
9 which specify containment rules for agrichemical facilities.
10 (Source: P.A. 92-574, eff. 6-26-02.)
 
11     (415 ILCS 5/22.22)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.22)
12     Sec. 22.22. Landscape waste.
13     (a) Beginning July 1, 1990, no person may knowingly mix
14 landscape waste that is intended for collection or for disposal
15 at a landfill with any other municipal waste.
16     (b) Beginning July 1, 1990, no person may knowingly put
17 landscape waste into a container intended for collection or
18 disposal at a landfill, unless such container is biodegradable.
19     (c) No Beginning July 1, 1990, no owner or operator of a
20 sanitary landfill may shall accept landscape waste for final
21 disposal, except that landscape waste separated from municipal
22 waste may be accepted by a sanitary landfill if (1) the
23 landfill provides and maintains for that purpose separate
24 landscape waste processing composting facilities, such as
25 facilities for landscape waste composting, digestion, or

 

 

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1 gasification, and processes composts all landscape waste, and
2 (2) the processed composted waste is utilized, by the operators
3 of the landfill or by any other person, for power and heat
4 generation, or as part of the final vegetative cover for the
5 landfill, or for such other uses as soil conditioning material,
6 or the landfill has received an Agency permit to use source
7 separated and processed landscape waste as an alternative daily
8 cover and the landscape waste is processed at a site, other
9 than the sanitary landfill, that has received an Agency permit
10 before July 30, 1997 to process landscape waste. For purposes
11 of this Section, (i) "source separated" means divided into its
12 component parts at the point of generation and collected
13 separately from other solid waste and (ii) "processed" means
14 shredded by mechanical means to reduce the landscape waste to a
15 uniform consistency.
16     (d) The requirements of this Section shall not apply (i) to
17 landscape waste collected as part of a municipal street
18 sweeping operation where the intent is to provide street
19 sweeping service rather than leaf collection, nor (ii) to
20 landscape waste collected by bar screens or grates in a sewage
21 treatment system.
22 (Source: P.A. 92-574, eff. 6-26-02.)
 
23     (415 ILCS 5/22.37 new)
24     Sec. 22.37. Gasification quality standards.
25     (a) By January 1, 2011, the Agency shall develop and make

 

 

HB5147 - 39 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1 recommendations to the Board concerning (i) performance
2 standards for landscape waste gasification facilities and (ii)
3 testing procedures and standards for the end product produced
4 by landscape waste gasification facilities.
5     (b) Performance standards for landscape waste gasification
6 facilities shall, at a minimum:
7         (1) provide for the management of odor;
8         (2) provide for the management of surface water;
9         (3) specify the acceptable uses of end product produced
10     by the facility; and
11         (4) require a financial assurance plan necessary to
12     restore the site as specified in an Agency permit.
13     (c) By December 1, 2012, the Board shall adopt:
14         (1) performance standards for landscape waste
15     gasification facilities; and
16         (2) testing procedures and standards for the end
17     product produced by landscape waste gasification
18     facilities.
19     The Board shall evaluate the merits of different standards
20 for end product gasification applications.
21     (d) On-site gasification that is used solely for the
22 purpose of local generation of heat and electric power is
23 exempt from any standards promulgated under subsections (a) and
24 (b).
 
25     (415 ILCS 5/39.2)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1039.2)

 

 

HB5147 - 40 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1     Sec. 39.2. Local siting review.
2     (a) The county board of the county or the governing body of
3 the municipality, as determined by paragraph (c) of Section 39
4 of this Act, shall approve or disapprove the request for local
5 siting approval for each pollution control facility which is
6 subject to such review. An applicant for local siting approval
7 shall submit sufficient details describing the proposed
8 facility to demonstrate compliance, and local siting approval
9 shall be granted only if the proposed facility meets the
10 following criteria:
11         (i) the facility is necessary to accommodate the waste
12     needs of the area it is intended to serve;
13         (ii) the facility is so designed, located and proposed
14     to be operated that the public health, safety and welfare
15     will be protected;
16         (iii) the facility is located so as to minimize
17     incompatibility with the character of the surrounding area
18     and to minimize the effect on the value of the surrounding
19     property;
20         (iv) (A) for a facility other than a sanitary landfill
21     or waste disposal site, the facility is located outside the
22     boundary of the 100 year flood plain or the site is
23     flood-proofed; (B) for a facility that is a sanitary
24     landfill or waste disposal site, the facility is located
25     outside the boundary of the 100-year floodplain, or if the
26     facility is a facility described in subsection (b)(3) of

 

 

HB5147 - 41 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1     Section 22.19a, the site is flood-proofed, where "flood
2     proofed" means, for the purposes of this item (iv), being
3     designed to minimize or eliminate infiltration of flood
4     waters into the facility and discharges from the facility
5     into flood waters and being constructed to avoid impairment
6     or contamination during flooding;
7         (v) the plan of operations for the facility is designed
8     to minimize the danger to the surrounding area from fire,
9     spills, or other operational accidents;
10         (vi) the traffic patterns to or from the facility are
11     so designed as to minimize the impact on existing traffic
12     flows;
13         (vii) if the facility will be treating, storing or
14     disposing of hazardous waste, an emergency response plan
15     exists for the facility which includes notification,
16     containment and evacuation procedures to be used in case of
17     an accidental release;
18         (viii) if the facility is to be located in a county
19     where the county board has adopted a solid waste management
20     plan consistent with the planning requirements of the Local
21     Solid Waste Disposal Act or the Solid Waste Planning and
22     Recycling Act, the facility is consistent with that plan;
23     for purposes of this criterion (viii), the "solid waste
24     management plan" means the plan that is in effect as of the
25     date the application for siting approval is filed; and
26         (ix) if the facility will be located within a regulated

 

 

HB5147 - 42 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1     recharge area, any applicable requirements specified by
2     the Board for such areas have been met.
3     The county board or the governing body of the municipality
4 may also consider as evidence the previous operating experience
5 and past record of convictions or admissions of violations of
6 the applicant (and any subsidiary or parent corporation) in the
7 field of solid waste management when considering criteria (ii)
8 and (v) under this Section.
9     If the facility is subject to the location restrictions in
10 Section 22.14 of this Act, compliance with that Section shall
11 be determined as of the date the application for siting
12 approval is filed.
13     (b) No later than 14 days before the date on which the
14 county board or governing body of the municipality receives a
15 request for site approval, the applicant shall cause written
16 notice of such request to be served either in person or by
17 registered mail, return receipt requested, on the owners of all
18 property within the subject area not solely owned by the
19 applicant, and on the owners of all property within 250 feet in
20 each direction of the lot line of the subject property, said
21 owners being such persons or entities which appear from the
22 authentic tax records of the County in which such facility is
23 to be located; provided, that the number of all feet occupied
24 by all public roads, streets, alleys and other public ways
25 shall be excluded in computing the 250 feet requirement;
26 provided further, that in no event shall this requirement

 

 

HB5147 - 43 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1 exceed 400 feet, including public streets, alleys and other
2 public ways.
3     Such written notice shall also be served upon members of
4 the General Assembly from the legislative district in which the
5 proposed facility is located and shall be published in a
6 newspaper of general circulation published in the county in
7 which the site is located.
8     Such notice shall state the name and address of the
9 applicant, the location of the proposed site, the nature and
10 size of the development, the nature of the activity proposed,
11 the probable life of the proposed activity, the date when the
12 request for site approval will be submitted, and a description
13 of the right of persons to comment on such request as hereafter
14 provided.
15     (c) An applicant shall file a copy of its request with the
16 county board of the county or the governing body of the
17 municipality in which the proposed site is located. The request
18 shall include (i) the substance of the applicant's proposal and
19 (ii) all documents, if any, submitted as of that date to the
20 Agency pertaining to the proposed facility, except trade
21 secrets as determined under Section 7.1 of this Act. All such
22 documents or other materials on file with the county board or
23 governing body of the municipality shall be made available for
24 public inspection at the office of the county board or the
25 governing body of the municipality and may be copied upon
26 payment of the actual cost of reproduction.

 

 

HB5147 - 44 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1     Any person may file written comment with the county board
2 or governing body of the municipality concerning the
3 appropriateness of the proposed site for its intended purpose.
4 The county board or governing body of the municipality shall
5 consider any comment received or postmarked not later than 30
6 days after the date of the last public hearing.
7     (d) At least one public hearing is to be held by the county
8 board or governing body of the municipality no sooner than 90
9 days but no later than 120 days after the date on which it
10 received the request for site approval. No later than 14 days
11 prior to such hearing, notice shall be published in a newspaper
12 of general circulation published in the county of the proposed
13 site, and delivered by certified mail to all members of the
14 General Assembly from the district in which the proposed site
15 is located, to the governing authority of every municipality
16 contiguous to the proposed site or contiguous to the
17 municipality in which the proposed site is to be located, to
18 the county board of the county where the proposed site is to be
19 located, if the proposed site is located within the boundaries
20 of a municipality, and to the Agency. Members or
21 representatives of the governing authority of a municipality
22 contiguous to the proposed site or contiguous to the
23 municipality in which the proposed site is to be located and,
24 if the proposed site is located in a municipality, members or
25 representatives of the county board of a county in which the
26 proposed site is to be located may appear at and participate in

 

 

HB5147 - 45 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1 public hearings held pursuant to this Section. The public
2 hearing shall develop a record sufficient to form the basis of
3 appeal of the decision in accordance with Section 40.1 of this
4 Act. The fact that a member of the county board or governing
5 body of the municipality has publicly expressed an opinion on
6 an issue related to a site review proceeding shall not preclude
7 the member from taking part in the proceeding and voting on the
8 issue.
9     (e) Decisions of the county board or governing body of the
10 municipality are to be in writing, specifying the reasons for
11 the decision, such reasons to be in conformance with subsection
12 (a) of this Section. In granting approval for a site the county
13 board or governing body of the municipality may impose such
14 conditions as may be reasonable and necessary to accomplish the
15 purposes of this Section and as are not inconsistent with
16 regulations promulgated by the Board. Such decision shall be
17 available for public inspection at the office of the county
18 board or governing body of the municipality and may be copied
19 upon payment of the actual cost of reproduction. If there is no
20 final action by the county board or governing body of the
21 municipality within 180 days after the date on which it
22 received the request for site approval, the applicant may deem
23 the request approved.
24     At any time prior to completion by the applicant of the
25 presentation of the applicant's factual evidence and an
26 opportunity for cross-questioning by the county board or

 

 

HB5147 - 46 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1 governing body of the municipality and any participants, the
2 applicant may file not more than one amended application upon
3 payment of additional fees pursuant to subsection (k); in which
4 case the time limitation for final action set forth in this
5 subsection (e) shall be extended for an additional period of 90
6 days.
7     If, prior to making a final local siting decision, a county
8 board or governing body of a municipality has negotiated and
9 entered into a host agreement with the local siting applicant,
10 the terms and conditions of the host agreement, whether written
11 or oral, shall be disclosed and made a part of the hearing
12 record for that local siting proceeding. In the case of an oral
13 agreement, the disclosure shall be made in the form of a
14 written summary jointly prepared and submitted by the county
15 board or governing body of the municipality and the siting
16 applicant and shall describe the terms and conditions of the
17 oral agreement.
18     (e-5) Siting approval obtained pursuant to this Section is
19 transferable and may be transferred to a subsequent owner or
20 operator. In the event that siting approval has been
21 transferred to a subsequent owner or operator, that subsequent
22 owner or operator assumes and takes subject to any and all
23 conditions imposed upon the prior owner or operator by the
24 county board of the county or governing body of the
25 municipality pursuant to subsection (e). However, any such
26 conditions imposed pursuant to this Section may be modified by

 

 

HB5147 - 47 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1 agreement between the subsequent owner or operator and the
2 appropriate county board or governing body. Further, in the
3 event that siting approval obtained pursuant to this Section
4 has been transferred to a subsequent owner or operator, that
5 subsequent owner or operator assumes all rights and obligations
6 and takes the facility subject to any and all terms and
7 conditions of any existing host agreement between the prior
8 owner or operator and the appropriate county board or governing
9 body.
10     (f) A local siting approval granted under this Section
11 shall expire at the end of 2 calendar years from the date upon
12 which it was granted, unless the local siting approval granted
13 under this Section is for a sanitary landfill operation, in
14 which case the approval shall expire at the end of 3 calendar
15 years from the date upon which it was granted, and unless
16 within that period the applicant has made application to the
17 Agency for a permit to develop the site. In the event that the
18 local siting decision has been appealed, such expiration period
19 shall be deemed to begin on the date upon which the appeal
20 process is concluded.
21     Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, upon the
22 expiration of a development permit under subsection (k) of
23 Section 39, any associated local siting approval granted for
24 the facility under this Section shall also expire.
25     If a first development permit for a municipal waste
26 incineration facility expires under subsection (k) of Section

 

 

HB5147 - 48 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1 39 after September 30, 1989 due to circumstances beyond the
2 control of the applicant, any associated local siting approval
3 granted for the facility under this Section may be used to
4 fulfill the local siting approval requirement upon application
5 for a second development permit for the same site, provided
6 that the proposal in the new application is materially the
7 same, with respect to the criteria in subsection (a) of this
8 Section, as the proposal that received the original siting
9 approval, and application for the second development permit is
10 made before January 1, 1990.
11     (g) The siting approval procedures, criteria and appeal
12 procedures provided for in this Act for new pollution control
13 facilities shall be the exclusive siting procedures and rules
14 and appeal procedures for facilities subject to such
15 procedures. Local zoning or other local land use requirements
16 shall not be applicable to such siting decisions.
17     (h) Nothing in this Section shall apply to any existing or
18 new pollution control facility located within the corporate
19 limits of a municipality with a population of over 1,000,000.
20     (i) (Blank.)
21     The Board shall adopt regulations establishing the
22 geologic and hydrologic siting criteria necessary to protect
23 usable groundwater resources which are to be followed by the
24 Agency in its review of permit applications for new pollution
25 control facilities. Such regulations, insofar as they apply to
26 new pollution control facilities authorized to store, treat or

 

 

HB5147 - 49 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1 dispose of any hazardous waste, shall be at least as stringent
2 as the requirements of the Resource Conservation and Recovery
3 Act and any State or federal regulations adopted pursuant
4 thereto.
5     (j) Any new pollution control facility which has never
6 obtained local siting approval under the provisions of this
7 Section shall be required to obtain such approval after a final
8 decision on an appeal of a permit denial.
9     (k) A county board or governing body of a municipality may
10 charge applicants for siting review under this Section a
11 reasonable fee to cover the reasonable and necessary costs
12 incurred by such county or municipality in the siting review
13 process.
14     (l) The governing Authority as determined by subsection (c)
15 of Section 39 of this Act may request the Department of
16 Transportation to perform traffic impact studies of proposed or
17 potential locations for required pollution control facilities.
18     (m) An applicant may not file a request for local siting
19 approval which is substantially the same as a request which was
20 disapproved pursuant to a finding against the applicant under
21 any of criteria (i) through (ix) of subsection (a) of this
22 Section within the preceding 2 years.
23     (n) In any review proceeding of a decision of the county
24 board or governing body of a municipality made pursuant to the
25 local siting review process, the petitioner in the review
26 proceeding shall pay to the county or municipality the cost of

 

 

HB5147 - 50 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1 preparing and certifying the record of proceedings. Should the
2 petitioner in the review proceeding fail to make payment, the
3 provisions of Section 3-109 of the Code of Civil Procedure
4 shall apply.
5     In the event the petitioner is a citizens' group that
6 participated in the siting proceeding and is so located as to
7 be affected by the proposed facility, such petitioner shall be
8 exempt from paying the costs of preparing and certifying the
9 record.
10     (o) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, a
11 transfer station used exclusively for landscape waste, where
12 landscape waste is held no longer than 24 hours from the time
13 it was received, is not subject to the requirements of local
14 siting approval under this Section, but is subject only to
15 local zoning approval.
16 (Source: P.A. 94-591, eff. 8-15-05; 95-288, eff. 8-20-07.)
 
17     (415 ILCS 5/39.5)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1039.5)
18     Sec. 39.5. Clean Air Act Permit Program.
19     1. Definitions.
20     For purposes of this Section:
21     "Administrative permit amendment" means a permit revision
22 subject to subsection 13 of this Section.
23     "Affected source for acid deposition" means a source that
24 includes one or more affected units under Title IV of the Clean
25 Air Act.

 

 

HB5147 - 51 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1     "Affected States" for purposes of formal distribution of a
2 draft CAAPP permit to other States for comments prior to
3 issuance, means all States:
4         (1) Whose air quality may be affected by the source
5     covered by the draft permit and that are contiguous to
6     Illinois; or
7         (2) That are within 50 miles of the source.
8     "Affected unit for acid deposition" shall have the meaning
9 given to the term "affected unit" in the regulations
10 promulgated under Title IV of the Clean Air Act.
11     "Applicable Clean Air Act requirement" means all of the
12 following as they apply to emissions units in a source
13 (including regulations that have been promulgated or approved
14 by USEPA pursuant to the Clean Air Act which directly impose
15 requirements upon a source and other such federal requirements
16 which have been adopted by the Board. These may include
17 requirements and regulations which have future effective
18 compliance dates. Requirements and regulations will be exempt
19 if USEPA determines that such requirements need not be
20 contained in a Title V permit):
21         (1) Any standard or other requirement provided for in
22     the applicable state implementation plan approved or
23     promulgated by USEPA under Title I of the Clean Air Act
24     that implement the relevant requirements of the Clean Air
25     Act, including any revisions to the state Implementation
26     Plan promulgated in 40 CFR Part 52, Subparts A and O and

 

 

HB5147 - 52 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1     other subparts applicable to Illinois. For purposes of this
2     subsection (1) of this definition, "any standard or other
3     requirement" shall mean only such standards or
4     requirements directly enforceable against an individual
5     source under the Clean Air Act.
6         (2)(i) Any term or condition of any preconstruction
7         permits issued pursuant to regulations approved or
8         promulgated by USEPA under Title I of the Clean Air
9         Act, including Part C or D of the Clean Air Act.
10             (ii) Any term or condition as required pursuant to
11         Section 39.5 of any federally enforceable State
12         operating permit issued pursuant to regulations
13         approved or promulgated by USEPA under Title I of the
14         Clean Air Act, including Part C or D of the Clean Air
15         Act.
16         (3) Any standard or other requirement under Section 111
17     of the Clean Air Act, including Section 111(d).
18         (4) Any standard or other requirement under Section 112
19     of the Clean Air Act, including any requirement concerning
20     accident prevention under Section 112(r)(7) of the Clean
21     Air Act.
22         (5) Any standard or other requirement of the acid rain
23     program under Title IV of the Clean Air Act or the
24     regulations promulgated thereunder.
25         (6) Any requirements established pursuant to Section
26     504(b) or Section 114(a)(3) of the Clean Air Act.

 

 

HB5147 - 53 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1         (7) Any standard or other requirement governing solid
2     waste incineration, under Section 129 of the Clean Air Act.
3         (8) Any standard or other requirement for consumer and
4     commercial products, under Section 183(e) of the Clean Air
5     Act.
6         (9) Any standard or other requirement for tank vessels,
7     under Section 183(f) of the Clean Air Act.
8         (10) Any standard or other requirement of the program
9     to control air pollution from Outer Continental Shelf
10     sources, under Section 328 of the Clean Air Act.
11         (11) Any standard or other requirement of the
12     regulations promulgated to protect stratospheric ozone
13     under Title VI of the Clean Air Act, unless USEPA has
14     determined that such requirements need not be contained in
15     a Title V permit.
16         (12) Any national ambient air quality standard or
17     increment or visibility requirement under Part C of Title I
18     of the Clean Air Act, but only as it would apply to
19     temporary sources permitted pursuant to Section 504(e) of
20     the Clean Air Act.
21     "Applicable requirement" means all applicable Clean Air
22 Act requirements and any other standard, limitation, or other
23 requirement contained in this Act or regulations promulgated
24 under this Act as applicable to sources of air contaminants
25 (including requirements that have future effective compliance
26 dates).

 

 

HB5147 - 54 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1     "CAAPP" means the Clean Air Act Permit Program, developed
2 pursuant to Title V of the Clean Air Act.
3     "CAAPP application" means an application for a CAAPP
4 permit.
5     "CAAPP Permit" or "permit" (unless the context suggests
6 otherwise) means any permit issued, renewed, amended, modified
7 or revised pursuant to Title V of the Clean Air Act.
8     "CAAPP source" means any source for which the owner or
9 operator is required to obtain a CAAPP permit pursuant to
10 subsection 2 of this Section.
11     "Clean Air Act" means the Clean Air Act, as now and
12 hereafter amended, 42 U.S.C. 7401, et seq.
13     "Designated representative" shall have the meaning given
14 to it in Section 402(26) of the Clean Air Act and the
15 regulations promulgated thereunder which states that the term
16 'designated representative' shall mean a responsible person or
17 official authorized by the owner or operator of a unit to
18 represent the owner or operator in all matters pertaining to
19 the holding, transfer, or disposition of allowances allocated
20 to a unit, and the submission of and compliance with permits,
21 permit applications, and compliance plans for the unit.
22     "Draft CAAPP permit" means the version of a CAAPP permit
23 for which public notice and an opportunity for public comment
24 and hearing is offered by the Agency.
25     "Effective date of the CAAPP" means the date that USEPA
26 approves Illinois' CAAPP.

 

 

HB5147 - 55 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1     "Emission unit" means any part or activity of a stationary
2 source that emits or has the potential to emit any air
3 pollutant. This term is not meant to alter or affect the
4 definition of the term "unit" for purposes of Title IV of the
5 Clean Air Act.
6     "Federally enforceable" means enforceable by USEPA.
7     "Final permit action" means the Agency's granting with
8 conditions, refusal to grant, renewal of, or revision of a
9 CAAPP permit, the Agency's determination of incompleteness of a
10 submitted CAAPP application, or the Agency's failure to act on
11 an application for a permit, permit renewal, or permit revision
12 within the time specified in paragraph 5(j), subsection 13, or
13 subsection 14 of this Section.
14     "General permit" means a permit issued to cover numerous
15 similar sources in accordance with subsection 11 of this
16 Section.
17     "Major source" means a source for which emissions of one or
18 more air pollutants meet the criteria for major status pursuant
19 to paragraph 2(c) of this Section.
20     "Maximum achievable control technology" or "MACT" means
21 the maximum degree of reductions in emissions deemed achievable
22 under Section 112 of the Clean Air Act.
23     "Owner or operator" means any person who owns, leases,
24 operates, controls, or supervises a stationary source.
25     "Permit modification" means a revision to a CAAPP permit
26 that cannot be accomplished under the provisions for

 

 

HB5147 - 56 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1 administrative permit amendments under subsection 13 of this
2 Section.
3     "Permit revision" means a permit modification or
4 administrative permit amendment.
5     "Phase II" means the period of the national acid rain
6 program, established under Title IV of the Clean Air Act,
7 beginning January 1, 2000, and continuing thereafter.
8     "Phase II acid rain permit" means the portion of a CAAPP
9 permit issued, renewed, modified, or revised by the Agency
10 during Phase II for an affected source for acid deposition.
11     "Potential to emit" means the maximum capacity of a
12 stationary source to emit any air pollutant under its physical
13 and operational design. Any physical or operational limitation
14 on the capacity of a source to emit an air pollutant, including
15 air pollution control equipment and restrictions on hours of
16 operation or on the type or amount of material combusted,
17 stored, or processed, shall be treated as part of its design if
18 the limitation is enforceable by USEPA. This definition does
19 not alter or affect the use of this term for any other purposes
20 under the Clean Air Act, or the term "capacity factor" as used
21 in Title IV of the Clean Air Act or the regulations promulgated
22 thereunder.
23     "Preconstruction Permit" or "Construction Permit" means a
24 permit which is to be obtained prior to commencing or beginning
25 actual construction or modification of a source or emissions
26 unit.

 

 

HB5147 - 57 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1     "Proposed CAAPP permit" means the version of a CAAPP permit
2 that the Agency proposes to issue and forwards to USEPA for
3 review in compliance with applicable requirements of the Act
4 and regulations promulgated thereunder.
5     "Regulated air pollutant" means the following:
6         (1) Nitrogen oxides (NOx) or any volatile organic
7     compound.
8         (2) Any pollutant for which a national ambient air
9     quality standard has been promulgated.
10         (3) Any pollutant that is subject to any standard
11     promulgated under Section 111 of the Clean Air Act.
12         (4) Any Class I or II substance subject to a standard
13     promulgated under or established by Title VI of the Clean
14     Air Act.
15         (5) Any pollutant subject to a standard promulgated
16     under Section 112 or other requirements established under
17     Section 112 of the Clean Air Act, including Sections
18     112(g), (j) and (r).
19             (i) Any pollutant subject to requirements under
20         Section 112(j) of the Clean Air Act. Any pollutant
21         listed under Section 112(b) for which the subject
22         source would be major shall be considered to be
23         regulated 18 months after the date on which USEPA was
24         required to promulgate an applicable standard pursuant
25         to Section 112(e) of the Clean Air Act, if USEPA fails
26         to promulgate such standard.

 

 

HB5147 - 58 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1             (ii) Any pollutant for which the requirements of
2         Section 112(g)(2) of the Clean Air Act have been met,
3         but only with respect to the individual source subject
4         to Section 112(g)(2) requirement.
5     "Renewal" means the process by which a permit is reissued
6 at the end of its term.
7     "Responsible official" means one of the following:
8         (1) For a corporation: a president, secretary,
9     treasurer, or vice-president of the corporation in charge
10     of a principal business function, or any other person who
11     performs similar policy or decision-making functions for
12     the corporation, or a duly authorized representative of
13     such person if the representative is responsible for the
14     overall operation of one or more manufacturing,
15     production, or operating facilities applying for or
16     subject to a permit and either (i) the facilities employ
17     more than 250 persons or have gross annual sales or
18     expenditures exceeding $25 million (in second quarter 1980
19     dollars), or (ii) the delegation of authority to such
20     representative is approved in advance by the Agency.
21         (2) For a partnership or sole proprietorship: a general
22     partner or the proprietor, respectively, or in the case of
23     a partnership in which all of the partners are
24     corporations, a duly authorized representative of the
25     partnership if the representative is responsible for the
26     overall operation of one or more manufacturing,

 

 

HB5147 - 59 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1     production, or operating facilities applying for or
2     subject to a permit and either (i) the facilities employ
3     more than 250 persons or have gross annual sales or
4     expenditures exceeding $25 million (in second quarter 1980
5     dollars), or (ii) the delegation of authority to such
6     representative is approved in advance by the Agency.
7         (3) For a municipality, State, Federal, or other public
8     agency: either a principal executive officer or ranking
9     elected official. For the purposes of this part, a
10     principal executive officer of a Federal agency includes
11     the chief executive officer having responsibility for the
12     overall operations of a principal geographic unit of the
13     agency (e.g., a Regional Administrator of USEPA).
14         (4) For affected sources for acid deposition:
15             (i) The designated representative shall be the
16         "responsible official" in so far as actions,
17         standards, requirements, or prohibitions under Title
18         IV of the Clean Air Act or the regulations promulgated
19         thereunder are concerned.
20             (ii) The designated representative may also be the
21         "responsible official" for any other purposes with
22         respect to air pollution control.
23     "Section 502(b)(10) changes" means changes that contravene
24 express permit terms. "Section 502(b)(10) changes" do not
25 include changes that would violate applicable requirements or
26 contravene federally enforceable permit terms or conditions

 

 

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1 that are monitoring (including test methods), recordkeeping,
2 reporting, or compliance certification requirements.
3     "Solid waste incineration unit" means a distinct operating
4 unit of any facility which combusts any solid waste material
5 from commercial or industrial establishments or the general
6 public (including single and multiple residences, hotels, and
7 motels). The term does not include incinerators or other units
8 required to have a permit under Section 3005 of the Solid Waste
9 Disposal Act. The term also does not include (A) materials
10 recovery facilities (including primary or secondary smelters)
11 which combust waste for the primary purpose of recovering
12 metals, (B) qualifying small power production facilities, as
13 defined in Section 3(17)(C) of the Federal Power Act (16 U.S.C.
14 769(17)(C)), or qualifying cogeneration facilities, as defined
15 in Section 3(18)(B) of the Federal Power Act (16 U.S.C.
16 796(18)(B)), which burn homogeneous waste (such as units which
17 burn tires or used oil, but not including refuse-derived fuel),
18 landscape waste, agricultural residues, clean wood waste, or
19 crops grown for energy for the production of electric energy or
20 in the case of qualifying cogeneration facilities which burn
21 homogeneous waste for the production of electric energy and
22 steam or forms of useful energy (such as heat) which are used
23 for industrial, commercial, heating or cooling purposes, or (C)
24 air curtain incinerators provided that such incinerators only
25 burn wood wastes, yard waste and clean lumber and that such air
26 curtain incinerators comply with opacity limitations to be

 

 

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1 established by the USEPA by rule.
2     "Source" means any stationary source (or any group of
3 stationary sources) that are located on one or more contiguous
4 or adjacent properties that are under common control of the
5 same person (or persons under common control) and that belongs
6 to a single major industrial grouping. For the purposes of
7 defining "source," a stationary source or group of stationary
8 sources shall be considered part of a single major industrial
9 grouping if all of the pollutant emitting activities at such
10 source or group of sources located on contiguous or adjacent
11 properties and under common control belong to the same Major
12 Group (i.e., all have the same two-digit code) as described in
13 the Standard Industrial Classification Manual, 1987, or such
14 pollutant emitting activities at a stationary source (or group
15 of stationary sources) located on contiguous or adjacent
16 properties and under common control constitute a support
17 facility. The determination as to whether any group of
18 stationary sources are located on contiguous or adjacent
19 properties, and/or are under common control, and/or whether the
20 pollutant emitting activities at such group of stationary
21 sources constitute a support facility shall be made on a case
22 by case basis.
23     "Stationary source" means any building, structure,
24 facility, or installation that emits or may emit any regulated
25 air pollutant or any pollutant listed under Section 112(b) of
26 the Clean Air Act.

 

 

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1     "Support facility" means any stationary source (or group of
2 stationary sources) that conveys, stores, or otherwise assists
3 to a significant extent in the production of a principal
4 product at another stationary source (or group of stationary
5 sources). A support facility shall be considered to be part of
6 the same source as the stationary source (or group of
7 stationary sources) that it supports regardless of the 2-digit
8 Standard Industrial Classification code for the support
9 facility.
10     "USEPA" means the Administrator of the United States
11 Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) or a person designated
12 by the Administrator.
 
13     1.1. Exclusion From the CAAPP.
14         a. An owner or operator of a source which determines
15     that the source could be excluded from the CAAPP may seek
16     such exclusion prior to the date that the CAAPP application
17     for the source is due but in no case later than 9 months
18     after the effective date of the CAAPP through the
19     imposition of federally enforceable conditions limiting
20     the "potential to emit" of the source to a level below the
21     major source threshold for that source as described in
22     paragraph 2(c) of this Section, within a State operating
23     permit issued pursuant to Section 39(a) of this Act. After
24     such date, an exclusion from the CAAPP may be sought under
25     paragraph 3(c) of this Section.

 

 

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1         b. An owner or operator of a source seeking exclusion
2     from the CAAPP pursuant to paragraph (a) of this subsection
3     must submit a permit application consistent with the
4     existing State permit program which specifically requests
5     such exclusion through the imposition of such federally
6     enforceable conditions.
7         c. Upon such request, if the Agency determines that the
8     owner or operator of a source has met the requirements for
9     exclusion pursuant to paragraph (a) of this subsection and
10     other applicable requirements for permit issuance under
11     Section 39(a) of this Act, the Agency shall issue a State
12     operating permit for such source under Section 39(a) of
13     this Act, as amended, and regulations promulgated
14     thereunder with federally enforceable conditions limiting
15     the "potential to emit" of the source to a level below the
16     major source threshold for that source as described in
17     paragraph 2(c) of this Section.
18         d. The Agency shall provide an owner or operator of a
19     source which may be excluded from the CAAPP pursuant to
20     this subsection with reasonable notice that the owner or
21     operator may seek such exclusion.
22         e. The Agency shall provide such sources with the
23     necessary permit application forms.
 
24     2. Applicability.
25         a. Sources subject to this Section shall include:

 

 

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1             i. Any major source as defined in paragraph (c) of
2         this subsection.
3             ii. Any source subject to a standard or other
4         requirements promulgated under Section 111 (New Source
5         Performance Standards) or Section 112 (Hazardous Air
6         Pollutants) of the Clean Air Act, except that a source
7         is not required to obtain a permit solely because it is
8         subject to regulations or requirements under Section
9         112(r) of the Clean Air Act.
10             iii. Any affected source for acid deposition, as
11         defined in subsection 1 of this Section.
12             iv. Any other source subject to this Section under
13         the Clean Air Act or regulations promulgated
14         thereunder, or applicable Board regulations.
15         b. Sources exempted from this Section shall include:
16             i. All sources listed in paragraph (a) of this
17         subsection which are not major sources, affected
18         sources for acid deposition or solid waste
19         incineration units required to obtain a permit
20         pursuant to Section 129(e) of the Clean Air Act, until
21         the source is required to obtain a CAAPP permit
22         pursuant to the Clean Air Act or regulations
23         promulgated thereunder.
24             ii. Nonmajor sources subject to a standard or other
25         requirements subsequently promulgated by USEPA under
26         Section 111 or 112 of the Clean Air Act which are

 

 

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1         determined by USEPA to be exempt at the time a new
2         standard is promulgated.
3             iii. All sources and source categories that would
4         be required to obtain a permit solely because they are
5         subject to Part 60, Subpart AAA - Standards of
6         Performance for New Residential Wood Heaters (40 CFR
7         Part 60).
8             iv. All sources and source categories that would be
9         required to obtain a permit solely because they are
10         subject to Part 61, Subpart M - National Emission
11         Standard for Hazardous Air Pollutants for Asbestos,
12         Section 61.145 (40 CFR Part 61).
13             v. Any other source categories exempted by USEPA
14         regulations pursuant to Section 502(a) of the Clean Air
15         Act.
16         c. For purposes of this Section the term "major source"
17     means any source that is:
18             i. A major source under Section 112 of the Clean
19         Air Act, which is defined as:
20                 A. For pollutants other than radionuclides,
21             any stationary source or group of stationary
22             sources located within a contiguous area and under
23             common control that emits or has the potential to
24             emit, in the aggregate, 10 tons per year (tpy) or
25             more of any hazardous air pollutant which has been
26             listed pursuant to Section 112(b) of the Clean Air

 

 

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1             Act, 25 tpy or more of any combination of such
2             hazardous air pollutants, or such lesser quantity
3             as USEPA may establish by rule. Notwithstanding
4             the preceding sentence, emissions from any oil or
5             gas exploration or production well (with its
6             associated equipment) and emissions from any
7             pipeline compressor or pump station shall not be
8             aggregated with emissions from other similar
9             units, whether or not such units are in a
10             contiguous area or under common control, to
11             determine whether such stations are major sources.
12                 B. For radionuclides, "major source" shall
13             have the meaning specified by the USEPA by rule.
14             ii. A major stationary source of air pollutants, as
15         defined in Section 302 of the Clean Air Act, that
16         directly emits or has the potential to emit, 100 tpy or
17         more of any air pollutant (including any major source
18         of fugitive emissions of any such pollutant, as
19         determined by rule by USEPA). For purposes of this
20         subsection, "fugitive emissions" means those emissions
21         which could not reasonably pass through a stack,
22         chimney, vent, or other functionally-equivalent
23         opening. The fugitive emissions of a stationary source
24         shall not be considered in determining whether it is a
25         major stationary source for the purposes of Section
26         302(j) of the Clean Air Act, unless the source belongs

 

 

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1         to one of the following categories of stationary
2         source:
3                 A. Coal cleaning plants (with thermal dryers).
4                 B. Kraft pulp mills.
5                 C. Portland cement plants.
6                 D. Primary zinc smelters.
7                 E. Iron and steel mills.
8                 F. Primary aluminum ore reduction plants.
9                 G. Primary copper smelters.
10                 H. Municipal incinerators capable of charging
11             more than 250 tons of refuse per day.
12                 I. Hydrofluoric, sulfuric, or nitric acid
13             plants.
14                 J. Petroleum refineries.
15                 K. Lime plants.
16                 L. Phosphate rock processing plants.
17                 M. Coke oven batteries.
18                 N. Sulfur recovery plants.
19                 O. Carbon black plants (furnace process).
20                 P. Primary lead smelters.
21                 Q. Fuel conversion plants.
22                 R. Sintering plants.
23                 S. Secondary metal production plants.
24                 T. Chemical process plants.
25                 U. Fossil-fuel boilers (or combination
26             thereof) totaling more than 250 million British

 

 

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1             thermal units per hour heat input.
2                 V. Petroleum storage and transfer units with a
3             total storage capacity exceeding 300,000 barrels.
4                 W. Taconite ore processing plants.
5                 X. Glass fiber processing plants.
6                 Y. Charcoal production plants.
7                 Z. Fossil fuel-fired steam electric plants of
8             more than 250 million British thermal units per
9             hour heat input.
10                 AA. All other stationary source categories,
11             which as of August 7, 1980 are being regulated by a
12             standard promulgated under Section 111 or 112 of
13             the Clean Air Act.
14                 BB. Any other stationary source category
15             designated by USEPA by rule.
16             iii. A major stationary source as defined in part D
17         of Title I of the Clean Air Act including:
18                 A. For ozone nonattainment areas, sources with
19             the potential to emit 100 tons or more per year of
20             volatile organic compounds or oxides of nitrogen
21             in areas classified as "marginal" or "moderate",
22             50 tons or more per year in areas classified as
23             "serious", 25 tons or more per year in areas
24             classified as "severe", and 10 tons or more per
25             year in areas classified as "extreme"; except that
26             the references in this clause to 100, 50, 25, and

 

 

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1             10 tons per year of nitrogen oxides shall not apply
2             with respect to any source for which USEPA has made
3             a finding, under Section 182(f)(1) or (2) of the
4             Clean Air Act, that requirements otherwise
5             applicable to such source under Section 182(f) of
6             the Clean Air Act do not apply. Such sources shall
7             remain subject to the major source criteria of
8             paragraph 2(c)(ii) of this subsection.
9                 B. For ozone transport regions established
10             pursuant to Section 184 of the Clean Air Act,
11             sources with the potential to emit 50 tons or more
12             per year of volatile organic compounds (VOCs).
13                 C. For carbon monoxide nonattainment areas (1)
14             that are classified as "serious", and (2) in which
15             stationary sources contribute significantly to
16             carbon monoxide levels as determined under rules
17             issued by USEPA, sources with the potential to emit
18             50 tons or more per year of carbon monoxide.
19                 D. For particulate matter (PM-10)
20             nonattainment areas classified as "serious",
21             sources with the potential to emit 70 tons or more
22             per year of PM-10.
 
23     3. Agency Authority To Issue CAAPP Permits and Federally
24 Enforceable State Operating Permits.
25         a. The Agency shall issue CAAPP permits under this

 

 

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1     Section consistent with the Clean Air Act and regulations
2     promulgated thereunder and this Act and regulations
3     promulgated thereunder.
4         b. The Agency shall issue CAAPP permits for fixed terms
5     of 5 years, except CAAPP permits issued for solid waste
6     incineration units combusting municipal waste which shall
7     be issued for fixed terms of 12 years and except CAAPP
8     permits for affected sources for acid deposition which
9     shall be issued for initial terms to expire on December 31,
10     1999, and for fixed terms of 5 years thereafter.
11         c. The Agency shall have the authority to issue a State
12     operating permit for a source under Section 39(a) of this
13     Act, as amended, and regulations promulgated thereunder,
14     which includes federally enforceable conditions limiting
15     the "potential to emit" of the source to a level below the
16     major source threshold for that source as described in
17     paragraph 2(c) of this Section, thereby excluding the
18     source from the CAAPP, when requested by the applicant
19     pursuant to paragraph 5(u) of this Section. The public
20     notice requirements of this Section applicable to CAAPP
21     permits shall also apply to the initial issuance of permits
22     under this paragraph.
23         d. For purposes of this Act, a permit issued by USEPA
24     under Section 505 of the Clean Air Act, as now and
25     hereafter amended, shall be deemed to be a permit issued by
26     the Agency pursuant to Section 39.5 of this Act.
 

 

 

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1     4. Transition.
2         a. An owner or operator of a CAAPP source shall not be
3     required to renew an existing State operating permit for
4     any emission unit at such CAAPP source once a CAAPP
5     application timely submitted prior to expiration of the
6     State operating permit has been deemed complete. For
7     purposes other than permit renewal, the obligation upon the
8     owner or operator of a CAAPP source to obtain a State
9     operating permit is not removed upon submittal of the
10     complete CAAPP permit application. An owner or operator of
11     a CAAPP source seeking to make a modification to a source
12     prior to the issuance of its CAAPP permit shall be required
13     to obtain a construction and/or operating permit as
14     required for such modification in accordance with the State
15     permit program under Section 39(a) of this Act, as amended,
16     and regulations promulgated thereunder. The application
17     for such construction and/or operating permit shall be
18     considered an amendment to the CAAPP application submitted
19     for such source.
20         b. An owner or operator of a CAAPP source shall
21     continue to operate in accordance with the terms and
22     conditions of its applicable State operating permit
23     notwithstanding the expiration of the State operating
24     permit until the source's CAAPP permit has been issued.
25         c. An owner or operator of a CAAPP source shall submit

 

 

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1     its initial CAAPP application to the Agency no later than
2     12 months after the effective date of the CAAPP. The Agency
3     may request submittal of initial CAAPP applications during
4     this 12 month period according to a schedule set forth
5     within Agency procedures, however, in no event shall the
6     Agency require such submittal earlier than 3 months after
7     such effective date of the CAAPP. An owner or operator may
8     voluntarily submit its initial CAAPP application prior to
9     the date required within this paragraph or applicable
10     procedures, if any, subsequent to the date the Agency
11     submits the CAAPP to USEPA for approval.
12         d. The Agency shall act on initial CAAPP applications
13     in accordance with subsection 5(j) of this Section.
14         e. For purposes of this Section, the term "initial
15     CAAPP application" shall mean the first CAAPP application
16     submitted for a source existing as of the effective date of
17     the CAAPP.
18         f. The Agency shall provide owners or operators of
19     CAAPP sources with at least three months advance notice of
20     the date on which their applications are required to be
21     submitted. In determining which sources shall be subject to
22     early submittal, the Agency shall include among its
23     considerations the complexity of the permit application,
24     and the burden that such early submittal will have on the
25     source.
26         g. The CAAPP permit shall upon becoming effective

 

 

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1     supersede the State operating permit.
2         h. The Agency shall have the authority to adopt
3     procedural rules, in accordance with the Illinois
4     Administrative Procedure Act, as the Agency deems
5     necessary, to implement this subsection.
 
6     5. Applications and Completeness.
7         a. An owner or operator of a CAAPP source shall submit
8     its complete CAAPP application consistent with the Act and
9     applicable regulations.
10         b. An owner or operator of a CAAPP source shall submit
11     a single complete CAAPP application covering all emission
12     units at that source.
13         c. To be deemed complete, a CAAPP application must
14     provide all information, as requested in Agency
15     application forms, sufficient to evaluate the subject
16     source and its application and to determine all applicable
17     requirements, pursuant to the Clean Air Act, and
18     regulations thereunder, this Act and regulations
19     thereunder. Such Agency application forms shall be
20     finalized and made available prior to the date on which any
21     CAAPP application is required.
22         d. An owner or operator of a CAAPP source shall submit,
23     as part of its complete CAAPP application, a compliance
24     plan, including a schedule of compliance, describing how
25     each emission unit will comply with all applicable

 

 

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1     requirements. Any such schedule of compliance shall be
2     supplemental to, and shall not sanction noncompliance
3     with, the applicable requirements on which it is based.
4         e. Each submitted CAAPP application shall be certified
5     for truth, accuracy, and completeness by a responsible
6     official in accordance with applicable regulations.
7         f. The Agency shall provide notice to a CAAPP applicant
8     as to whether a submitted CAAPP application is complete.
9     Unless the Agency notifies the applicant of
10     incompleteness, within 60 days of receipt of the CAAPP
11     application, the application shall be deemed complete. The
12     Agency may request additional information as needed to make
13     the completeness determination. The Agency may to the
14     extent practicable provide the applicant with a reasonable
15     opportunity to correct deficiencies prior to a final
16     determination of completeness.
17         g. If after the determination of completeness the
18     Agency finds that additional information is necessary to
19     evaluate or take final action on the CAAPP application, the
20     Agency may request in writing such information from the
21     source with a reasonable deadline for response.
22         h. If the owner or operator of a CAAPP source submits a
23     timely and complete CAAPP application, the source's
24     failure to have a CAAPP permit shall not be a violation of
25     this Section until the Agency takes final action on the
26     submitted CAAPP application, provided, however, where the

 

 

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1     applicant fails to submit the requested information under
2     paragraph 5(g) within the time frame specified by the
3     Agency, this protection shall cease to apply.
4         i. Any applicant who fails to submit any relevant facts
5     necessary to evaluate the subject source and its CAAPP
6     application or who has submitted incorrect information in a
7     CAAPP application shall, upon becoming aware of such
8     failure or incorrect submittal, submit supplementary facts
9     or correct information to the Agency. In addition, an
10     applicant shall provide to the Agency additional
11     information as necessary to address any requirements which
12     become applicable to the source subsequent to the date the
13     applicant submitted its complete CAAPP application but
14     prior to release of the draft CAAPP permit.
15         j. The Agency shall issue or deny the CAAPP permit
16     within 18 months after the date of receipt of the complete
17     CAAPP application, with the following exceptions: (i)
18     permits for affected sources for acid deposition shall be
19     issued or denied within 6 months after receipt of a
20     complete application in accordance with subsection 17 of
21     this Section; (ii) the Agency shall act on initial CAAPP
22     applications within 24 months after the date of receipt of
23     the complete CAAPP application; (iii) the Agency shall act
24     on complete applications containing early reduction
25     demonstrations under Section 112(i)(5) of the Clean Air Act
26     within 9 months of receipt of the complete CAAPP

 

 

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1     application.
2         Where the Agency does not take final action on the
3     permit within the required time period, the permit shall
4     not be deemed issued; rather, the failure to act shall be
5     treated as a final permit action for purposes of judicial
6     review pursuant to Sections 40.2 and 41 of this Act.
7         k. The submittal of a complete CAAPP application shall
8     not affect the requirement that any source have a
9     preconstruction permit under Title I of the Clean Air Act.
10         l. Unless a timely and complete renewal application has
11     been submitted consistent with this subsection, a CAAPP
12     source operating upon the expiration of its CAAPP permit
13     shall be deemed to be operating without a CAAPP permit.
14     Such operation is prohibited under this Act.
15         m. Permits being renewed shall be subject to the same
16     procedural requirements, including those for public
17     participation and federal review and objection, that apply
18     to original permit issuance.
19         n. For purposes of permit renewal, a timely application
20     is one that is submitted no less than 9 months prior to the
21     date of permit expiration.
22         o. The terms and conditions of a CAAPP permit shall
23     remain in effect until the issuance of a CAAPP renewal
24     permit provided a timely and complete CAAPP application has
25     been submitted.
26         p. The owner or operator of a CAAPP source seeking a

 

 

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1     permit shield pursuant to paragraph 7(j) of this Section
2     shall request such permit shield in the CAAPP application
3     regarding that source.
4         q. The Agency shall make available to the public all
5     documents submitted by the applicant to the Agency,
6     including each CAAPP application, compliance plan
7     (including the schedule of compliance), and emissions or
8     compliance monitoring report, with the exception of
9     information entitled to confidential treatment pursuant to
10     Section 7 of this Act.
11         r. The Agency shall use the standardized forms required
12     under Title IV of the Clean Air Act and regulations
13     promulgated thereunder for affected sources for acid
14     deposition.
15         s. An owner or operator of a CAAPP source may include
16     within its CAAPP application a request for permission to
17     operate during a startup, malfunction, or breakdown
18     consistent with applicable Board regulations.
19         t. An owner or operator of a CAAPP source, in order to
20     utilize the operational flexibility provided under
21     paragraph 7(l) of this Section, must request such use and
22     provide the necessary information within its CAAPP
23     application.
24         u. An owner or operator of a CAAPP source which seeks
25     exclusion from the CAAPP through the imposition of
26     federally enforceable conditions, pursuant to paragraph

 

 

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1     3(c) of this Section, must request such exclusion within a
2     CAAPP application submitted consistent with this
3     subsection on or after the date that the CAAPP application
4     for the source is due. Prior to such date, but in no case
5     later than 9 months after the effective date of the CAAPP,
6     such owner or operator may request the imposition of
7     federally enforceable conditions pursuant to paragraph
8     1.1(b) of this Section.
9         v. CAAPP applications shall contain accurate
10     information on allowable emissions to implement the fee
11     provisions of subsection 18 of this Section.
12         w. An owner or operator of a CAAPP source shall submit
13     within its CAAPP application emissions information
14     regarding all regulated air pollutants emitted at that
15     source consistent with applicable Agency procedures.
16     Emissions information regarding insignificant activities
17     or emission levels, as determined by the Agency pursuant to
18     Board regulations, may be submitted as a list within the
19     CAAPP application. The Agency shall propose regulations to
20     the Board defining insignificant activities or emission
21     levels, consistent with federal regulations, if any, no
22     later than 18 months after the effective date of this
23     amendatory Act of 1992, consistent with Section 112(n)(1)
24     of the Clean Air Act. The Board shall adopt final
25     regulations defining insignificant activities or emission
26     levels no later than 9 months after the date of the

 

 

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1     Agency's proposal.
2         x. The owner or operator of a new CAAPP source shall
3     submit its complete CAAPP application consistent with this
4     subsection within 12 months after commencing operation of
5     such source. The owner or operator of an existing source
6     that has been excluded from the provisions of this Section
7     under subsection 1.1 or subsection 3(c) of this Section and
8     that becomes subject to the CAAPP solely due to a change in
9     operation at the source shall submit its complete CAAPP
10     application consistent with this subsection at least 180
11     days before commencing operation in accordance with the
12     change in operation.
13         y. The Agency shall have the authority to adopt
14     procedural rules, in accordance with the Illinois
15     Administrative Procedure Act, as the Agency deems
16     necessary to implement this subsection.
 
17     6. Prohibitions.
18         a. It shall be unlawful for any person to violate any
19     terms or conditions of a permit issued under this Section,
20     to operate any CAAPP source except in compliance with a
21     permit issued by the Agency under this Section or to
22     violate any other applicable requirements. All terms and
23     conditions of a permit issued under this Section are
24     enforceable by USEPA and citizens under the Clean Air Act,
25     except those, if any, that are specifically designated as

 

 

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1     not being federally enforceable in the permit pursuant to
2     paragraph 7(m) of this Section.
3         b. After the applicable CAAPP permit or renewal
4     application submittal date, as specified in subsection 5 of
5     this Section, no person shall operate a CAAPP source
6     without a CAAPP permit unless the complete CAAPP permit or
7     renewal application for such source has been timely
8     submitted to the Agency.
9         c. No owner or operator of a CAAPP source shall cause
10     or threaten or allow the continued operation of an emission
11     source during malfunction or breakdown of the emission
12     source or related air pollution control equipment if such
13     operation would cause a violation of the standards or
14     limitations applicable to the source, unless the CAAPP
15     permit granted to the source provides for such operation
16     consistent with this Act and applicable Board regulations.
 
17     7. Permit Content.
18         a. All CAAPP permits shall contain emission
19     limitations and standards and other enforceable terms and
20     conditions, including but not limited to operational
21     requirements, and schedules for achieving compliance at
22     the earliest reasonable date, which are or will be required
23     to accomplish the purposes and provisions of this Act and
24     to assure compliance with all applicable requirements.
25         b. The Agency shall include among such conditions

 

 

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1     applicable monitoring, reporting, record keeping and
2     compliance certification requirements, as authorized by
3     paragraphs d, e, and f of this subsection, that the Agency
4     deems necessary to assure compliance with the Clean Air
5     Act, the regulations promulgated thereunder, this Act, and
6     applicable Board regulations. When monitoring, reporting,
7     record keeping, and compliance certification requirements
8     are specified within the Clean Air Act, regulations
9     promulgated thereunder, this Act, or applicable
10     regulations, such requirements shall be included within
11     the CAAPP permit. The Board shall have authority to
12     promulgate additional regulations where necessary to
13     accomplish the purposes of the Clean Air Act, this Act, and
14     regulations promulgated thereunder.
15         c. The Agency shall assure, within such conditions, the
16     use of terms, test methods, units, averaging periods, and
17     other statistical conventions consistent with the
18     applicable emission limitations, standards, and other
19     requirements contained in the permit.
20         d. To meet the requirements of this subsection with
21     respect to monitoring, the permit shall:
22             i. Incorporate and identify all applicable
23         emissions monitoring and analysis procedures or test
24         methods required under the Clean Air Act, regulations
25         promulgated thereunder, this Act, and applicable Board
26         regulations, including any procedures and methods

 

 

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1         promulgated by USEPA pursuant to Section 504(b) or
2         Section 114 (a)(3) of the Clean Air Act.
3             ii. Where the applicable requirement does not
4         require periodic testing or instrumental or
5         noninstrumental monitoring (which may consist of
6         recordkeeping designed to serve as monitoring),
7         require periodic monitoring sufficient to yield
8         reliable data from the relevant time period that is
9         representative of the source's compliance with the
10         permit, as reported pursuant to paragraph (f) of this
11         subsection. The Agency may determine that
12         recordkeeping requirements are sufficient to meet the
13         requirements of this subparagraph.
14             iii. As necessary, specify requirements concerning
15         the use, maintenance, and when appropriate,
16         installation of monitoring equipment or methods.
17         e. To meet the requirements of this subsection with
18     respect to record keeping, the permit shall incorporate and
19     identify all applicable recordkeeping requirements and
20     require, where applicable, the following:
21             i. Records of required monitoring information that
22         include the following:
23                 A. The date, place and time of sampling or
24             measurements.
25                 B. The date(s) analyses were performed.
26                 C. The company or entity that performed the

 

 

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1             analyses.
2                 D. The analytical techniques or methods used.
3                 E. The results of such analyses.
4                 F. The operating conditions as existing at the
5             time of sampling or measurement.
6             ii.    Retention of records of all monitoring data
7         and support information for a period of at least 5
8         years from the date of the monitoring sample,
9         measurement, report, or application. Support
10         information includes all calibration and maintenance
11         records, original strip-chart recordings for
12         continuous monitoring instrumentation, and copies of
13         all reports required by the permit.
14         f. To meet the requirements of this subsection with
15     respect to reporting, the permit shall incorporate and
16     identify all applicable reporting requirements and require
17     the following:
18             i. Submittal of reports of any required monitoring
19         every 6 months. More frequent submittals may be
20         requested by the Agency if such submittals are
21         necessary to assure compliance with this Act or
22         regulations promulgated by the Board thereunder. All
23         instances of deviations from permit requirements must
24         be clearly identified in such reports. All required
25         reports must be certified by a responsible official
26         consistent with subsection 5 of this Section.

 

 

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1             ii. Prompt reporting of deviations from permit
2         requirements, including those attributable to upset
3         conditions as defined in the permit, the probable cause
4         of such deviations, and any corrective actions or
5         preventive measures taken.
6         g. Each CAAPP permit issued under subsection 10 of this
7     Section shall include a condition prohibiting emissions
8     exceeding any allowances that the source lawfully holds
9     under Title IV of the Clean Air Act or the regulations
10     promulgated thereunder, consistent with subsection 17 of
11     this Section and applicable regulations, if any.
12         h. All CAAPP permits shall state that, where another
13     applicable requirement of the Clean Air Act is more
14     stringent than any applicable requirement of regulations
15     promulgated under Title IV of the Clean Air Act, both
16     provisions shall be incorporated into the permit and shall
17     be State and federally enforceable.
18         i. Each CAAPP permit issued under subsection 10 of this
19     Section shall include a severability clause to ensure the
20     continued validity of the various permit requirements in
21     the event of a challenge to any portions of the permit.
22         j. The following shall apply with respect to owners or
23     operators requesting a permit shield:
24             i. The Agency shall include in a CAAPP permit, when
25         requested by an applicant pursuant to paragraph 5(p) of
26         this Section, a provision stating that compliance with

 

 

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1         the conditions of the permit shall be deemed compliance
2         with applicable requirements which are applicable as
3         of the date of release of the proposed permit, provided
4         that:
5                 A. The applicable requirement is specifically
6             identified within the permit; or
7                 B. The Agency in acting on the CAAPP
8             application or revision determines in writing that
9             other requirements specifically identified are not
10             applicable to the source, and the permit includes
11             that determination or a concise summary thereof.
12             ii. The permit shall identify the requirements for
13         which the source is shielded. The shield shall not
14         extend to applicable requirements which are
15         promulgated after the date of release of the proposed
16         permit unless the permit has been modified to reflect
17         such new requirements.
18             iii. A CAAPP permit which does not expressly
19         indicate the existence of a permit shield shall not
20         provide such a shield.
21             iv. Nothing in this paragraph or in a CAAPP permit
22         shall alter or affect the following:
23                 A. The provisions of Section 303 (emergency
24             powers) of the Clean Air Act, including USEPA's
25             authority under that section.
26                 B. The liability of an owner or operator of a

 

 

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1             source for any violation of applicable
2             requirements prior to or at the time of permit
3             issuance.
4                 C. The applicable requirements of the acid
5             rain program consistent with Section 408(a) of the
6             Clean Air Act.
7                 D. The ability of USEPA to obtain information
8             from a source pursuant to Section 114
9             (inspections, monitoring, and entry) of the Clean
10             Air Act.
11         k. Each CAAPP permit shall include an emergency
12     provision providing an affirmative defense of emergency to
13     an action brought for noncompliance with technology-based
14     emission limitations under a CAAPP permit if the following
15     conditions are met through properly signed,
16     contemporaneous operating logs, or other relevant
17     evidence:
18             i. An emergency occurred and the permittee can
19         identify the cause(s) of the emergency.
20             ii. The permitted facility was at the time being
21         properly operated.
22             iii. The permittee submitted notice of the
23         emergency to the Agency within 2 working days of the
24         time when emission limitations were exceeded due to the
25         emergency. This notice must contain a detailed
26         description of the emergency, any steps taken to

 

 

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1         mitigate emissions, and corrective actions taken.
2             iv. During the period of the emergency the
3         permittee took all reasonable steps to minimize levels
4         of emissions that exceeded the emission limitations,
5         standards, or requirements in the permit.
6         For purposes of this subsection, "emergency" means any
7     situation arising from sudden and reasonably unforeseeable
8     events beyond the control of the source, such as an act of
9     God, that requires immediate corrective action to restore
10     normal operation, and that causes the source to exceed a
11     technology-based emission limitation under the permit, due
12     to unavoidable increases in emissions attributable to the
13     emergency. An emergency shall not include noncompliance to
14     the extent caused by improperly designed equipment, lack of
15     preventative maintenance, careless or improper operation,
16     or operation error.
17         In any enforcement proceeding, the permittee seeking
18     to establish the occurrence of an emergency has the burden
19     of proof. This provision is in addition to any emergency or
20     upset provision contained in any applicable requirement.
21     This provision does not relieve a permittee of any
22     reporting obligations under existing federal or state laws
23     or regulations.
24         l. The Agency shall include in each permit issued under
25     subsection 10 of this Section:
26             i. Terms and conditions for reasonably anticipated

 

 

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1         operating scenarios identified by the source in its
2         application. The permit terms and conditions for each
3         such operating scenario shall meet all applicable
4         requirements and the requirements of this Section.
5                 A. Under this subparagraph, the source must
6             record in a log at the permitted facility a record
7             of the scenario under which it is operating
8             contemporaneously with making a change from one
9             operating scenario to another.
10                 B. The permit shield described in paragraph
11             7(j) of this Section shall extend to all terms and
12             conditions under each such operating scenario.
13             ii. Where requested by an applicant, all terms and
14         conditions allowing for trading of emissions increases
15         and decreases between different emission units at the
16         CAAPP source, to the extent that the applicable
17         requirements provide for trading of such emissions
18         increases and decreases without a case-by-case
19         approval of each emissions trade. Such terms and
20         conditions:
21                 A. Shall include all terms required under this
22             subsection to determine compliance;
23                 B. Must meet all applicable requirements;
24                 C. Shall extend the permit shield described in
25             paragraph 7(j) of this Section to all terms and
26             conditions that allow such increases and decreases

 

 

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1             in emissions.
2         m. The Agency shall specifically designate as not being
3     federally enforceable under the Clean Air Act any terms and
4     conditions included in the permit that are not specifically
5     required under the Clean Air Act or federal regulations
6     promulgated thereunder. Terms or conditions so designated
7     shall be subject to all applicable state requirements,
8     except the requirements of subsection 7 (other than this
9     paragraph, paragraph q of subsection 7, subsections 8
10     through 11, and subsections 13 through 16 of this Section.
11     The Agency shall, however, include such terms and
12     conditions in the CAAPP permit issued to the source.
13         n. Each CAAPP permit issued under subsection 10 of this
14     Section shall specify and reference the origin of and
15     authority for each term or condition, and identify any
16     difference in form as compared to the applicable
17     requirement upon which the term or condition is based.
18         o. Each CAAPP permit issued under subsection 10 of this
19     Section shall include provisions stating the following:
20             i. Duty to comply. The permittee must comply with
21         all terms and conditions of the CAAPP permit. Any
22         permit noncompliance constitutes a violation of the
23         Clean Air Act and the Act, and is grounds for any or
24         all of the following: enforcement action; permit
25         termination, revocation and reissuance, or
26         modification; or denial of a permit renewal

 

 

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1         application.
2             ii. Need to halt or reduce activity not a defense.
3         It shall not be a defense for a permittee in an
4         enforcement action that it would have been necessary to
5         halt or reduce the permitted activity in order to
6         maintain compliance with the conditions of this
7         permit.
8             iii. Permit actions. The permit may be modified,
9         revoked, reopened, and reissued, or terminated for
10         cause in accordance with the applicable subsections of
11         Section 39.5 of this Act. The filing of a request by
12         the permittee for a permit modification, revocation
13         and reissuance, or termination, or of a notification of
14         planned changes or anticipated noncompliance does not
15         stay any permit condition.
16             iv. Property rights. The permit does not convey any
17         property rights of any sort, or any exclusive
18         privilege.
19             v. Duty to provide information. The permittee
20         shall furnish to the Agency within a reasonable time
21         specified by the Agency any information that the Agency
22         may request in writing to determine whether cause
23         exists for modifying, revoking and reissuing, or
24         terminating the permit or to determine compliance with
25         the permit. Upon request, the permittee shall also
26         furnish to the Agency copies of records required to be

 

 

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1         kept by the permit or, for information claimed to be
2         confidential, the permittee may furnish such records
3         directly to USEPA along with a claim of
4         confidentiality.
5             vi. Duty to pay fees. The permittee must pay fees
6         to the Agency consistent with the fee schedule approved
7         pursuant to subsection 18 of this Section, and submit
8         any information relevant thereto.
9             vii. Emissions trading. No permit revision shall
10         be required for increases in emissions allowed under
11         any approved economic incentives, marketable permits,
12         emissions trading, and other similar programs or
13         processes for changes that are provided for in the
14         permit and that are authorized by the applicable
15         requirement.
16         p. Each CAAPP permit issued under subsection 10 of this
17     Section shall contain the following elements with respect
18     to compliance:
19             i. Compliance certification, testing, monitoring,
20         reporting, and record keeping requirements sufficient
21         to assure compliance with the terms and conditions of
22         the permit. Any document (including reports) required
23         by a CAAPP permit shall contain a certification by a
24         responsible official that meets the requirements of
25         subsection 5 of this Section and applicable
26         regulations.

 

 

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1             ii. Inspection and entry requirements that
2         necessitate that, upon presentation of credentials and
3         other documents as may be required by law and in
4         accordance with constitutional limitations, the
5         permittee shall allow the Agency, or an authorized
6         representative to perform the following:
7                 A. Enter upon the permittee's premises where a
8             CAAPP source is located or emissions-related
9             activity is conducted, or where records must be
10             kept under the conditions of the permit.
11                 B. Have access to and copy, at reasonable
12             times, any records that must be kept under the
13             conditions of the permit.
14                 C. Inspect at reasonable times any facilities,
15             equipment (including monitoring and air pollution
16             control equipment), practices, or operations
17             regulated or required under the permit.
18                 D. Sample or monitor any substances or
19             parameters at any location:
20                     1. As authorized by the Clean Air Act, at
21                 reasonable times, for the purposes of assuring
22                 compliance with the CAAPP permit or applicable
23                 requirements; or
24                     2. As otherwise authorized by this Act.
25             iii. A schedule of compliance consistent with
26         subsection 5 of this Section and applicable

 

 

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1         regulations.
2             iv. Progress reports consistent with an applicable
3         schedule of compliance pursuant to paragraph 5(d) of
4         this Section and applicable regulations to be
5         submitted semiannually, or more frequently if the
6         Agency determines that such more frequent submittals
7         are necessary for compliance with the Act or
8         regulations promulgated by the Board thereunder. Such
9         progress reports shall contain the following:
10                 A. Required dates for achieving the
11             activities, milestones, or compliance required by
12             the schedule of compliance and dates when such
13             activities, milestones or compliance were
14             achieved.
15                 B. An explanation of why any dates in the
16             schedule of compliance were not or will not be met,
17             and any preventive or corrective measures adopted.
18             v. Requirements for compliance certification with
19         terms and conditions contained in the permit,
20         including emission limitations, standards, or work
21         practices. Permits shall include each of the
22         following:
23                 A. The frequency (annually or more frequently
24             as specified in any applicable requirement or by
25             the Agency pursuant to written procedures) of
26             submissions of compliance certifications.

 

 

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1                 B. A means for assessing or monitoring the
2             compliance of the source with its emissions
3             limitations, standards, and work practices.
4                 C. A requirement that the compliance
5             certification include the following:
6                     1. The identification of each term or
7                 condition contained in the permit that is the
8                 basis of the certification.
9                     2. The compliance status.
10                     3. Whether compliance was continuous or
11                 intermittent.
12                     4. The method(s) used for determining the
13                 compliance status of the source, both
14                 currently and over the reporting period
15                 consistent with subsection 7 of Section 39.5 of
16                 the Act.
17                 D. A requirement that all compliance
18             certifications be submitted to USEPA as well as to
19             the Agency.
20                 E. Additional requirements as may be specified
21             pursuant to Sections 114(a)(3) and 504(b) of the
22             Clean Air Act.
23                 F. Other provisions as the Agency may require.
24         q. If the owner or operator of CAAPP source can
25     demonstrate in its CAAPP application, including an
26     application for a significant modification, that an

 

 

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1     alternative emission limit would be equivalent to that
2     contained in the applicable Board regulations, the Agency
3     shall include the alternative emission limit in the CAAPP
4     permit, which shall supersede the emission limit set forth
5     in the applicable Board regulations, and shall include
6     conditions that insure that the resulting emission limit is
7     quantifiable, accountable, enforceable, and based on
8     replicable procedures.
9     8. Public Notice; Affected State Review.
10         a. The Agency shall provide notice to the public,
11     including an opportunity for public comment and a hearing,
12     on each draft CAAPP permit for issuance, renewal or
13     significant modification, subject to Sections 7(a) and 7.1
14     of this Act.
15         b. The Agency shall prepare a draft CAAPP permit and a
16     statement that sets forth the legal and factual basis for
17     the draft CAAPP permit conditions, including references to
18     the applicable statutory or regulatory provisions. The
19     Agency shall provide this statement to any person who
20     requests it.
21         c. The Agency shall give notice of each draft CAAPP
22     permit to the applicant and to any affected State on or
23     before the time that the Agency has provided notice to the
24     public, except as otherwise provided in this Act.
25         d. The Agency, as part of its submittal of a proposed
26     permit to USEPA (or as soon as possible after the submittal

 

 

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1     for minor permit modification procedures allowed under
2     subsection 14 of this Section), shall notify USEPA and any
3     affected State in writing of any refusal of the Agency to
4     accept all of the recommendations for the proposed permit
5     that an affected State submitted during the public or
6     affected State review period. The notice shall include the
7     Agency's reasons for not accepting the recommendations.
8     The Agency is not required to accept recommendations that
9     are not based on applicable requirements or the
10     requirements of this Section.
11         e. The Agency shall make available to the public any
12     CAAPP permit application, compliance plan (including the
13     schedule of compliance), CAAPP permit, and emissions or
14     compliance monitoring report. If an owner or operator of a
15     CAAPP source is required to submit information entitled to
16     protection from disclosure under Section 7(a) or Section
17     7.1 of this Act, the owner or operator shall submit such
18     information separately. The requirements of Section 7(a)
19     or Section 7.1 of this Act shall apply to such information,
20     which shall not be included in a CAAPP permit unless
21     required by law. The contents of a CAAPP permit shall not
22     be entitled to protection under Section 7(a) or Section 7.1
23     of this Act.
24         f. The Agency shall have the authority to adopt
25     procedural rules, in accordance with the Illinois
26     Administrative Procedure Act, as the Agency deems

 

 

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1     necessary, to implement this subsection.
 
2     9. USEPA Notice and Objection.
3         a. The Agency shall provide to USEPA for its review a
4     copy of each CAAPP application (including any application
5     for permit modification), statement of basis as provided in
6     paragraph 8(b) of this Section, proposed CAAPP permit,
7     CAAPP permit, and, if the Agency does not incorporate any
8     affected State's recommendations on a proposed CAAPP
9     permit, a written statement of this decision and its
10     reasons for not accepting the recommendations, except as
11     otherwise provided in this Act or by agreement with USEPA.
12     To the extent practicable, the preceding information shall
13     be provided in computer readable format compatible with
14     USEPA's national database management system.
15         b. The Agency shall not issue the proposed CAAPP permit
16     if USEPA objects in writing within 45 days of receipt of
17     the proposed CAAPP permit and all necessary supporting
18     information.
19         c. If USEPA objects in writing to the issuance of the
20     proposed CAAPP permit within the 45-day period, the Agency
21     shall respond in writing and may revise and resubmit the
22     proposed CAAPP permit in response to the stated objection,
23     to the extent supported by the record, within 90 days after
24     the date of the objection. Prior to submitting a revised
25     permit to USEPA, the Agency shall provide the applicant and

 

 

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1     any person who participated in the public comment process,
2     pursuant to subsection 8 of this Section, with a 10-day
3     period to comment on any revision which the Agency is
4     proposing to make to the permit in response to USEPA's
5     objection in accordance with Agency procedures.
6         d. Any USEPA objection under this subsection,
7     according to the Clean Air Act, will include a statement of
8     reasons for the objection and a description of the terms
9     and conditions that must be in the permit, in order to
10     adequately respond to the objections. Grounds for a USEPA
11     objection include the failure of the Agency to: (1) submit
12     the items and notices required under this subsection; (2)
13     submit any other information necessary to adequately
14     review the proposed CAAPP permit; or (3) process the permit
15     under subsection 8 of this Section except for minor permit
16     modifications.
17         e. If USEPA does not object in writing to issuance of a
18     permit under this subsection, any person may petition USEPA
19     within 60 days after expiration of the 45-day review period
20     to make such objection.
21         f. If the permit has not yet been issued and USEPA
22     objects to the permit as a result of a petition, the Agency
23     shall not issue the permit until USEPA's objection has been
24     resolved. The Agency shall provide a 10-day comment period
25     in accordance with paragraph c of this subsection. A
26     petition does not, however, stay the effectiveness of a

 

 

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1     permit or its requirements if the permit was issued after
2     expiration of the 45-day review period and prior to a USEPA
3     objection.
4         g. If the Agency has issued a permit after expiration
5     of the 45-day review period and prior to receipt of a USEPA
6     objection under this subsection in response to a petition
7     submitted pursuant to paragraph e of this subsection, the
8     Agency may, upon receipt of an objection from USEPA, revise
9     and resubmit the permit to USEPA pursuant to this
10     subsection after providing a 10-day comment period in
11     accordance with paragraph c of this subsection. If the
12     Agency fails to submit a revised permit in response to the
13     objection, USEPA shall modify, terminate or revoke the
14     permit. In any case, the source will not be in violation of
15     the requirement to have submitted a timely and complete
16     application.
17         h. The Agency shall have the authority to adopt
18     procedural rules, in accordance with the Illinois
19     Administrative Procedure Act, as the Agency deems
20     necessary, to implement this subsection.
 
21     10. Final Agency Action.
22         a. The Agency shall issue a CAAPP permit, permit
23     modification, or permit renewal if all of the following
24     conditions are met:
25             i. The applicant has submitted a complete and

 

 

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1         certified application for a permit, permit
2         modification, or permit renewal consistent with
3         subsections 5 and 14 of this Section, as applicable,
4         and applicable regulations.
5             ii. The applicant has submitted with its complete
6         application an approvable compliance plan, including a
7         schedule for achieving compliance, consistent with
8         subsection 5 of this Section and applicable
9         regulations.
10             iii. The applicant has timely paid the fees
11         required pursuant to subsection 18 of this Section and
12         applicable regulations.
13             iv. The Agency has received a complete CAAPP
14         application and, if necessary, has requested and
15         received additional information from the applicant
16         consistent with subsection 5 of this Section and
17         applicable regulations.
18             v. The Agency has complied with all applicable
19         provisions regarding public notice and affected State
20         review consistent with subsection 8 of this Section and
21         applicable regulations.
22             vi. The Agency has provided a copy of each CAAPP
23         application, or summary thereof, pursuant to agreement
24         with USEPA and proposed CAAPP permit required under
25         subsection 9 of this Section to USEPA, and USEPA has
26         not objected to the issuance of the permit in

 

 

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1         accordance with the Clean Air Act and 40 CFR Part 70.
2         b. The Agency shall have the authority to deny a CAAPP
3     permit, permit modification, or permit renewal if the
4     applicant has not complied with the requirements of
5     paragraphs (a)(i)-(a)(iv) of this subsection or if USEPA
6     objects to its issuance.
7         c. i. Prior to denial of a CAAPP permit, permit
8         modification, or permit renewal under this Section,
9         the Agency shall notify the applicant of the possible
10         denial and the reasons for the denial.
11             ii. Within such notice, the Agency shall specify an
12         appropriate date by which the applicant shall
13         adequately respond to the Agency's notice. Such date
14         shall not exceed 15 days from the date the notification
15         is received by the applicant. The Agency may grant a
16         reasonable extension for good cause shown.
17             iii. Failure by the applicant to adequately
18         respond by the date specified in the notification or by
19         any granted extension date shall be grounds for denial
20         of the permit.
21             For purposes of obtaining judicial review under
22         Sections 40.2 and 41 of this Act, the Agency shall
23         provide to USEPA and each applicant, and, upon request,
24         to affected States, any person who participated in the
25         public comment process, and any other person who could
26         obtain judicial review under Sections 40.2 and 41 of

 

 

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1         this Act, a copy of each CAAPP permit or notification
2         of denial pertaining to that party.
3         d. The Agency shall have the authority to adopt
4     procedural rules, in accordance with the Illinois
5     Administrative Procedure Act, as the Agency deems
6     necessary, to implement this subsection.
 
7     11. General Permits.
8         a. The Agency may issue a general permit covering
9     numerous similar sources, except for affected sources for
10     acid deposition unless otherwise provided in regulations
11     promulgated under Title IV of the Clean Air Act.
12         b. The Agency shall identify, in any general permit,
13     criteria by which sources may qualify for the general
14     permit.
15         c. CAAPP sources that would qualify for a general
16     permit must apply for coverage under the terms of the
17     general permit or must apply for a CAAPP permit consistent
18     with subsection 5 of this Section and applicable
19     regulations.
20         d. The Agency shall comply with the public comment and
21     hearing provisions of this Section as well as the USEPA and
22     affected State review procedures prior to issuance of a
23     general permit.
24         e. When granting a subsequent request by a qualifying
25     CAAPP source for coverage under the terms of a general

 

 

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1     permit, the Agency shall not be required to repeat the
2     public notice and comment procedures. The granting of such
3     request shall not be considered a final permit action for
4     purposes of judicial review.
5         f. The Agency may not issue a general permit to cover
6     any discrete emission unit at a CAAPP source if another
7     CAAPP permit covers emission units at the source.
8         g. The Agency shall have the authority to adopt
9     procedural rules, in accordance with the Illinois
10     Administrative Procedure Act, as the Agency deems
11     necessary, to implement this subsection.
 
12     12. Operational Flexibility.
13         a. An owner or operator of a CAAPP source may make
14     changes at the CAAPP source without requiring a prior
15     permit revision, consistent with subparagraphs (a) (i)
16     through (a) (iii) of this subsection, so long as the
17     changes are not modifications under any provision of Title
18     I of the Clean Air Act and they do not exceed the emissions
19     allowable under the permit (whether expressed therein as a
20     rate of emissions or in terms of total emissions), provided
21     that the owner or operator of the CAAPP source provides
22     USEPA and the Agency with written notification as required
23     below in advance of the proposed changes, which shall be a
24     minimum of 7 days, unless otherwise provided by the Agency
25     in applicable regulations regarding emergencies. The owner

 

 

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1     or operator of a CAAPP source and the Agency shall each
2     attach such notice to their copy of the relevant permit.
3             i. An owner or operator of a CAAPP source may make
4         Section 502 (b) (10) changes without a permit revision,
5         if the changes are not modifications under any
6         provision of Title I of the Clean Air Act and the
7         changes do not exceed the emissions allowable under the
8         permit (whether expressed therein as a rate of
9         emissions or in terms of total emissions).
10                 A. For each such change, the written
11             notification required above shall include a brief
12             description of the change within the source, the
13             date on which the change will occur, any change in
14             emissions, and any permit term or condition that is
15             no longer applicable as a result of the change.
16                 B. The permit shield described in paragraph
17             7(j) of this Section shall not apply to any change
18             made pursuant to this subparagraph.
19             ii. An owner or operator of a CAAPP source may
20         trade increases and decreases in emissions in the CAAPP
21         source, where the applicable implementation plan
22         provides for such emission trades without requiring a
23         permit revision. This provision is available in those
24         cases where the permit does not already provide for
25         such emissions trading.
26                 A. Under this subparagraph (a)(ii), the

 

 

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1             written notification required above shall include
2             such information as may be required by the
3             provision in the applicable implementation plan
4             authorizing the emissions trade, including at a
5             minimum, when the proposed changes will occur, a
6             description of each such change, any change in
7             emissions, the permit requirements with which the
8             source will comply using the emissions trading
9             provisions of the applicable implementation plan,
10             and the pollutants emitted subject to the
11             emissions trade. The notice shall also refer to the
12             provisions in the applicable implementation plan
13             with which the source will comply and provide for
14             the emissions trade.
15                 B. The permit shield described in paragraph
16             7(j) of this Section shall not apply to any change
17             made pursuant to this subparagraph (a) (ii).
18             Compliance with the permit requirements that the
19             source will meet using the emissions trade shall be
20             determined according to the requirements of the
21             applicable implementation plan authorizing the
22             emissions trade.
23             iii. If requested within a CAAPP application, the
24         Agency shall issue a CAAPP permit which contains terms
25         and conditions, including all terms required under
26         subsection 7 of this Section to determine compliance,

 

 

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1         allowing for the trading of emissions increases and
2         decreases at the CAAPP source solely for the purpose of
3         complying with a federally-enforceable emissions cap
4         that is established in the permit independent of
5         otherwise applicable requirements. The owner or
6         operator of a CAAPP source shall include in its CAAPP
7         application proposed replicable procedures and permit
8         terms that ensure the emissions trades are
9         quantifiable and enforceable. The permit shall also
10         require compliance with all applicable requirements.
11                 A. Under this subparagraph (a)(iii), the
12             written notification required above shall state
13             when the change will occur and shall describe the
14             changes in emissions that will result and how these
15             increases and decreases in emissions will comply
16             with the terms and conditions of the permit.
17                 B. The permit shield described in paragraph
18             7(j) of this Section shall extend to terms and
19             conditions that allow such increases and decreases
20             in emissions.
21         b. An owner or operator of a CAAPP source may make
22     changes that are not addressed or prohibited by the permit,
23     other than those which are subject to any requirements
24     under Title IV of the Clean Air Act or are modifications
25     under any provisions of Title I of the Clean Air Act,
26     without a permit revision, in accordance with the following

 

 

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1     requirements:
2             (i) Each such change shall meet all applicable
3         requirements and shall not violate any existing permit
4         term or condition;
5             (ii) Sources must provide contemporaneous written
6         notice to the Agency and USEPA of each such change,
7         except for changes that qualify as insignificant under
8         provisions adopted by the Agency or the Board. Such
9         written notice shall describe each such change,
10         including the date, any change in emissions,
11         pollutants emitted, and any applicable requirement
12         that would apply as a result of the change;
13             (iii) The change shall not qualify for the shield
14         described in paragraph 7(j) of this Section; and
15             (iv) The permittee shall keep a record describing
16         changes made at the source that result in emissions of
17         a regulated air pollutant subject to an applicable
18         Clean Air Act requirement, but not otherwise regulated
19         under the permit, and the emissions resulting from
20         those changes.
21         c. The Agency shall have the authority to adopt
22     procedural rules, in accordance with the Illinois
23     Administrative Procedure Act, as the Agency deems
24     necessary to implement this subsection.
 
25     13. Administrative Permit Amendments.

 

 

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1         a. The Agency shall take final action on a request for
2     an administrative permit amendment within 60 days of
3     receipt of the request. Neither notice nor an opportunity
4     for public and affected State comment shall be required for
5     the Agency to incorporate such revisions, provided it
6     designates the permit revisions as having been made
7     pursuant to this subsection.
8         b. The Agency shall submit a copy of the revised permit
9     to USEPA.
10         c. For purposes of this Section the term
11     "administrative permit amendment" shall be defined as a
12     permit revision that can accomplish one or more of the
13     changes described below:
14             i. Corrects typographical errors;
15             ii. Identifies a change in the name, address, or
16         phone number of any person identified in the permit, or
17         provides a similar minor administrative change at the
18         source;
19             iii. Requires more frequent monitoring or
20         reporting by the permittee;
21             iv. Allows for a change in ownership or operational
22         control of a source where the Agency determines that no
23         other change in the permit is necessary, provided that
24         a written agreement containing a specific date for
25         transfer of permit responsibility, coverage, and
26         liability between the current and new permittees has

 

 

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1         been submitted to the Agency;
2             v. Incorporates into the CAAPP permit the
3         requirements from preconstruction review permits
4         authorized under a USEPA-approved program, provided
5         the program meets procedural and compliance
6         requirements substantially equivalent to those
7         contained in this Section;
8             vi. (Blank); or
9             vii. Any other type of change which USEPA has
10         determined as part of the approved CAAPP permit program
11         to be similar to those included in this subsection.
12         d. The Agency shall, upon taking final action granting
13     a request for an administrative permit amendment, allow
14     coverage by the permit shield in paragraph 7(j) of this
15     Section for administrative permit amendments made pursuant
16     to subparagraph (c)(v) of this subsection which meet the
17     relevant requirements for significant permit
18     modifications.
19         e. Permit revisions and modifications, including
20     administrative amendments and automatic amendments
21     (pursuant to Sections 408(b) and 403(d) of the Clean Air
22     Act or regulations promulgated thereunder), for purposes
23     of the acid rain portion of the permit shall be governed by
24     the regulations promulgated under Title IV of the Clean Air
25     Act. Owners or operators of affected sources for acid
26     deposition shall have the flexibility to amend their

 

 

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1     compliance plans as provided in the regulations
2     promulgated under Title IV of the Clean Air Act.
3         f. The CAAPP source may implement the changes addressed
4     in the request for an administrative permit amendment
5     immediately upon submittal of the request.
6         g. The Agency shall have the authority to adopt
7     procedural rules, in accordance with the Illinois
8     Administrative Procedure Act, as the Agency deems
9     necessary, to implement this subsection.
 
10     14. Permit Modifications.
11         a. Minor permit modification procedures.
12             i. The Agency shall review a permit modification
13         using the "minor permit" modification procedures only
14         for those permit modifications that:
15                 A. Do not violate any applicable requirement;
16                 B. Do not involve significant changes to
17             existing monitoring, reporting, or recordkeeping
18             requirements in the permit;
19                 C. Do not require a case-by-case determination
20             of an emission limitation or other standard, or a
21             source-specific determination of ambient impacts,
22             or a visibility or increment analysis;
23                 D. Do not seek to establish or change a permit
24             term or condition for which there is no
25             corresponding underlying requirement and which

 

 

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1             avoids an applicable requirement to which the
2             source would otherwise be subject. Such terms and
3             conditions include:
4                     1. A federally enforceable emissions cap
5                 assumed to avoid classification as a
6                 modification under any provision of Title I of
7                 the Clean Air Act; and
8                     2. An alternative emissions limit approved
9                 pursuant to regulations promulgated under
10                 Section 112(i)(5) of the Clean Air Act;
11                 E. Are not modifications under any provision
12             of Title I of the Clean Air Act; and
13                 F. Are not required to be processed as a
14             significant modification.
15             ii. Notwithstanding subparagraphs (a)(i) and
16         (b)(ii) of this subsection, minor permit modification
17         procedures may be used for permit modifications
18         involving the use of economic incentives, marketable
19         permits, emissions trading, and other similar
20         approaches, to the extent that such minor permit
21         modification procedures are explicitly provided for in
22         an applicable implementation plan or in applicable
23         requirements promulgated by USEPA.
24             iii. An applicant requesting the use of minor
25         permit modification procedures shall meet the
26         requirements of subsection 5 of this Section and shall

 

 

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1         include the following in its application:
2                 A. A description of the change, the emissions
3             resulting from the change, and any new applicable
4             requirements that will apply if the change occurs;
5                 B. The source's suggested draft permit;
6                 C. Certification by a responsible official,
7             consistent with paragraph 5(e) of this Section and
8             applicable regulations, that the proposed
9             modification meets the criteria for use of minor
10             permit modification procedures and a request that
11             such procedures be used; and
12                 D. Completed forms for the Agency to use to
13             notify USEPA and affected States as required under
14             subsections 8 and 9 of this Section.
15             iv. Within 5 working days of receipt of a complete
16         permit modification application, the Agency shall
17         notify USEPA and affected States of the requested
18         permit modification in accordance with subsections 8
19         and 9 of this Section. The Agency promptly shall send
20         any notice required under paragraph 8(d) of this
21         Section to USEPA.
22             v. The Agency may not issue a final permit
23         modification until after the 45-day review period for
24         USEPA or until USEPA has notified the Agency that USEPA
25         will not object to the issuance of the permit
26         modification, whichever comes first, although the

 

 

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1         Agency can approve the permit modification prior to
2         that time. Within 90 days of the Agency's receipt of an
3         application under the minor permit modification
4         procedures or 15 days after the end of USEPA's 45-day
5         review period under subsection 9 of this Section,
6         whichever is later, the Agency shall:
7                 A. Issue the permit modification as proposed;
8                 B. Deny the permit modification application;
9                 C. Determine that the requested modification
10             does not meet the minor permit modification
11             criteria and should be reviewed under the
12             significant modification procedures; or
13                 D. Revise the draft permit modification and
14             transmit to USEPA the new proposed permit
15             modification as required by subsection 9 of this
16             Section.
17             vi. Any CAAPP source may make the change proposed
18         in its minor permit modification application
19         immediately after it files such application. After the
20         CAAPP source makes the change allowed by the preceding
21         sentence, and until the Agency takes any of the actions
22         specified in subparagraphs (a)(v)(A) through (a)(v)(C)
23         of this subsection, the source must comply with both
24         the applicable requirements governing the change and
25         the proposed permit terms and conditions. During this
26         time period, the source need not comply with the

 

 

HB5147 - 114 - LRB096 18562 JDS 33944 b

1         existing permit terms and conditions it seeks to
2         modify. If the source fails to comply with its proposed
3         permit terms and conditions during this time period,
4         the existing permit terms and conditions which it seeks
5         to modify may be enforced against it.
6             vii. The permit shield under subparagraph 7(j) of
7         this Section may not extend to minor permit
8         modifications.
9             viii. If a construction permit is required,
10         pursuant to Section 39(a) of this Act and regulations
11         thereunder, for a change for which the minor permit
12         modification procedures are applicable, the source may
13         request that the processing of the construction permit
14         application be consolidated with the processing of the
15         application for the minor permit modification. In such
16         cases, the provisions of this Section, including those
17         within subsections 5, 8, and 9, shall apply and the
18         Agency shall act on such applications pursuant to
19         subparagraph 14(a)(v). The source may make the
20         proposed change immediately after filing its
21         application for the minor permit modification. Nothing
22         in this subparagraph shall otherwise affect the
23         requirements and procedures applicable to construction
24         permits.
25         b. Group Processing of Minor Permit Modifications.
26             i. Where requested by an applicant within its

 

 

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1         application, the Agency shall process groups of a
2         source's applications for certain modifications
3         eligible for minor permit modification processing in
4         accordance with the provisions of this paragraph (b).
5             ii. Permit modifications may be processed in
6         accordance with the procedures for group processing,
7         for those modifications:
8                 A. Which meet the criteria for minor permit
9             modification procedures under subparagraph
10             14(a)(i) of this Section; and
11                 B. That collectively are below 10 percent of
12             the emissions allowed by the permit for the
13             emissions unit for which change is requested, 20
14             percent of the applicable definition of major
15             source set forth in subsection 2 of this Section,
16             or 5 tons per year, whichever is least.
17             iii. An applicant requesting the use of group
18         processing procedures shall meet the requirements of
19         subsection 5 of this Section and shall include the
20         following in its application:
21                 A. A description of the change, the emissions
22             resulting from the change, and any new applicable
23             requirements that will apply if the change occurs.
24                 B. The source's suggested draft permit.
25                 C. Certification by a responsible official
26             consistent with paragraph 5(e) of this Section,

 

 

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1             that the proposed modification meets the criteria
2             for use of group processing procedures and a
3             request that such procedures be used.
4                 D. A list of the source's other pending
5             applications awaiting group processing, and a
6             determination of whether the requested
7             modification, aggregated with these other
8             applications, equals or exceeds the threshold set
9             under subparagraph (b)(ii)(B) of this subsection.
10                 E. Certification, consistent with paragraph
11             5(e), that the source has notified USEPA of the
12             proposed modification. Such notification need only
13             contain a brief description of the requested
14             modification.
15                 F. Completed forms for the Agency to use to
16             notify USEPA and affected states as required under
17             subsections 8 and 9 of this Section.
18             iv. On a quarterly basis or within 5 business days
19         of receipt of an application demonstrating that the
20         aggregate of a source's pending applications equals or
21         exceeds the threshold level set forth within
22         subparagraph (b)(ii)(B) of this subsection, whichever
23         is earlier, the Agency shall promptly notify USEPA and
24         affected States of the requested permit modifications
25         in accordance with subsections 8 and 9 of this Section.
26         The Agency shall send any notice required under

 

 

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1         paragraph 8(d) of this Section to USEPA.
2             v. The provisions of subparagraph (a)(v) of this
3         subsection shall apply to modifications eligible for
4         group processing, except that the Agency shall take one
5         of the actions specified in subparagraphs (a)(v)(A)
6         through (a)(v)(D) of this subsection within 180 days of
7         receipt of the application or 15 days after the end of
8         USEPA's 45-day review period under subsection 9 of this
9         Section, whichever is later.
10             vi. The provisions of subparagraph (a)(vi) of this
11         subsection shall apply to modifications for group
12         processing.
13             vii. The provisions of paragraph 7(j) of this
14         Section shall not apply to modifications eligible for
15         group processing.
16         c. Significant Permit Modifications.
17             i. Significant modification procedures shall be
18         used for applications requesting significant permit
19         modifications and for those applications that do not
20         qualify as either minor permit modifications or as
21         administrative permit amendments.
22             ii. Every significant change in existing
23         monitoring permit terms or conditions and every
24         relaxation of reporting or recordkeeping requirements
25         shall be considered significant. A modification shall
26         also be considered significant if in the judgment of

 

 

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1         the Agency action on an application for modification
2         would require decisions to be made on technically
3         complex issues. Nothing herein shall be construed to
4         preclude the permittee from making changes consistent
5         with this Section that would render existing permit
6         compliance terms and conditions irrelevant.
7             iii. Significant permit modifications must meet
8         all the requirements of this Section, including those
9         for applications (including completeness review),
10         public participation, review by affected States, and
11         review by USEPA applicable to initial permit issuance
12         and permit renewal. The Agency shall take final action
13         on significant permit modifications within 9 months
14         after receipt of a complete application.
15         d. The Agency shall have the authority to adopt
16     procedural rules, in accordance with the Illinois
17     Administrative Procedure Act, as the Agency deems
18     necessary, to implement this subsection.
 
19     15. Reopenings for Cause by the Agency.
20         a. Each issued CAAPP permit shall include provisions
21     specifying the conditions under which the permit will be
22     reopened prior to the expiration of the permit. Such
23     revisions shall be made as expeditiously as practicable. A
24     CAAPP permit shall be reopened and revised under any of the
25     following circumstances, in accordance with procedures

 

 

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1     adopted by the Agency:
2             i. Additional requirements under the Clean Air Act
3         become applicable to a major CAAPP source for which 3
4         or more years remain on the original term of the
5         permit. Such a reopening shall be completed not later
6         than 18 months after the promulgation of the applicable
7         requirement. No such revision is required if the
8         effective date of the requirement is later than the
9         date on which the permit is due to expire.
10             ii. Additional requirements (including excess
11         emissions requirements) become applicable to an
12         affected source for acid deposition under the acid rain
13         program. Excess emissions offset plans shall be deemed
14         to be incorporated into the permit upon approval by
15         USEPA.
16             iii. The Agency or USEPA determines that the permit
17         contains a material mistake or that inaccurate
18         statements were made in establishing the emissions
19         standards, limitations, or other terms or conditions
20         of the permit.
21             iv. The Agency or USEPA determines that the permit
22         must be revised or revoked to assure compliance with
23         the applicable requirements.
24         b. In the event that the Agency determines that there
25     are grounds for revoking a CAAPP permit, for cause,
26     consistent with paragraph a of this subsection, it shall

 

 

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1     file a petition before the Board setting forth the basis
2     for such revocation. In any such proceeding, the Agency
3     shall have the burden of establishing that the permit
4     should be revoked under the standards set forth in this Act
5     and the Clean Air Act. Any such proceeding shall be
6     conducted pursuant to the Board's procedures for
7     adjudicatory hearings and the Board shall render its
8     decision within 120 days of the filing of the petition. The
9     Agency shall take final action to revoke and reissue a
10     CAAPP permit consistent with the Board's order.
11         c. Proceedings regarding a reopened CAAPP permit shall
12     follow the same procedures as apply to initial permit
13     issuance and shall affect only those parts of the permit
14     for which cause to reopen exists.
15         d. Reopenings under paragraph (a) of this subsection
16     shall not be initiated before a notice of such intent is
17     provided to the CAAPP source by the Agency at least 30 days
18     in advance of the date that the permit is to be reopened,
19     except that the Agency may provide a shorter time period in
20     the case of an emergency.
21         e. The Agency shall have the authority to adopt
22     procedural rules, in accordance with the Illinois
23     Administrative Procedure Act, as the Agency deems
24     necessary, to implement this subsection.
 
25     16. Reopenings for Cause by USEPA.

 

 

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1         a. When USEPA finds that cause exists to terminate,
2     modify, or revoke and reissue a CAAPP permit pursuant to
3     subsection 15 of this Section, and thereafter notifies the
4     Agency and the permittee of such finding in writing, the
5     Agency shall forward to USEPA and the permittee a proposed
6     determination of termination, modification, or revocation
7     and reissuance as appropriate, in accordance with
8     paragraph b of this subsection. The Agency's proposed
9     determination shall be in accordance with the record, the
10     Clean Air Act, regulations promulgated thereunder, this
11     Act and regulations promulgated thereunder. Such proposed
12     determination shall not affect the permit or constitute a
13     final permit action for purposes of this Act or the
14     Administrative Review Law. The Agency shall forward to
15     USEPA such proposed determination within 90 days after
16     receipt of the notification from USEPA. If additional time
17     is necessary to submit the proposed determination, the
18     Agency shall request a 90-day extension from USEPA and
19     shall submit the proposed determination within 180 days of
20     receipt of notification from USEPA.
21             b. i. Prior to the Agency's submittal to USEPA of a
22         proposed determination to terminate or revoke and
23         reissue the permit, the Agency shall file a petition
24         before the Board setting forth USEPA's objection, the
25         permit record, the Agency's proposed determination,
26         and the justification for its proposed determination.

 

 

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1         The Board shall conduct a hearing pursuant to the rules
2         prescribed by Section 32 of this Act, and the burden of
3         proof shall be on the Agency.
4             ii. After due consideration of the written and oral
5         statements, the testimony and arguments that shall be
6         submitted at hearing, the Board shall issue and enter
7         an interim order for the proposed determination, which
8         shall set forth all changes, if any, required in the
9         Agency's proposed determination. The interim order
10         shall comply with the requirements for final orders as
11         set forth in Section 33 of this Act. Issuance of an
12         interim order by the Board under this paragraph,
13         however, shall not affect the permit status and does
14         not constitute a final action for purposes of this Act
15         or the Administrative Review Law.
16             iii. The Board shall cause a copy of its interim
17         order to be served upon all parties to the proceeding
18         as well as upon USEPA. The Agency shall submit the
19         proposed determination to USEPA in accordance with the
20         Board's Interim Order within 180 days after receipt of
21         the notification from USEPA.
22         c. USEPA shall review the proposed determination to
23     terminate, modify, or revoke and reissue the permit within
24     90 days of receipt.
25             i. When USEPA reviews the proposed determination
26         to terminate or revoke and reissue and does not object,

 

 

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1         the Board shall, within 7 days of receipt of USEPA's
2         final approval, enter the interim order as a final
3         order. The final order may be appealed as provided by
4         Title XI of this Act. The Agency shall take final
5         action in accordance with the Board's final order.
6             ii. When USEPA reviews such proposed determination
7         to terminate or revoke and reissue and objects, the
8         Agency shall submit USEPA's objection and the Agency's
9         comments and recommendation on the objection to the
10         Board and permittee. The Board shall review its interim
11         order in response to USEPA's objection and the Agency's
12         comments and recommendation and issue a final order in
13         accordance with Sections 32 and 33 of this Act. The
14         Agency shall, within 90 days after receipt of such
15         objection, respond to USEPA's objection in accordance
16         with the Board's final order.
17             iii. When USEPA reviews such proposed
18         determination to modify and objects, the Agency shall,
19         within 90 days after receipt of the objection, resolve
20         the objection and modify the permit in accordance with
21         USEPA's objection, based upon the record, the Clean Air
22         Act, regulations promulgated thereunder, this Act, and
23         regulations promulgated thereunder.
24         d. If the Agency fails to submit the proposed
25     determination pursuant to paragraph a of this subsection or
26     fails to resolve any USEPA objection pursuant to paragraph

 

 

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1     c of this subsection, USEPA will terminate, modify, or
2     revoke and reissue the permit.
3         e. The Agency shall have the authority to adopt
4     procedural rules, in accordance with the Illinois
5     Administrative Procedure Act, as the Agency deems
6     necessary, to implement this subsection.
 
7     17. Title IV; Acid Rain Provisions.
8         a. The Agency shall act on initial CAAPP applications
9     for affected sources for acid deposition in accordance with
10     this Section and Title V of the Clean Air Act and
11     regulations promulgated thereunder, except as modified by
12     Title IV of the Clean Air Act and regulations promulgated
13     thereunder. The Agency shall issue initial CAAPP permits to
14     the affected sources for acid deposition which shall become
15     effective no earlier than January 1, 1995, and which shall
16     terminate on December 31, 1999, in accordance with this
17     Section. Subsequent CAAPP permits issued to affected
18     sources for acid deposition shall be issued for a fixed
19     term of 5 years. Title IV of the Clean Air Act and
20     regulations promulgated thereunder, including but not
21     limited to 40 C.F.R. Part 72, as now or hereafter amended,
22     are applicable to and enforceable under this Act.
23         b. A designated representative of an affected source
24     for acid deposition shall submit a timely and complete
25     Phase II acid rain permit application and compliance plan

 

 

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1     to the Agency, not later than January 1, 1996, that meets
2     the requirements of Titles IV and V of the Clean Air Act
3     and regulations. The Agency shall act on the Phase II acid
4     rain permit application and compliance plan in accordance
5     with this Section and Title V of the Clean Air Act and
6     regulations promulgated thereunder, except as modified by
7     Title IV of the Clean Air Act and regulations promulgated
8     thereunder. The Agency shall issue the Phase II acid rain
9     permit to an affected source for acid deposition no later
10     than December 31, 1997, which shall become effective on
11     January 1, 2000, in accordance with this Section, except as
12     modified by Title IV and regulations promulgated
13     thereunder; provided that the designated representative of
14     the source submitted a timely and complete Phase II permit
15     application and compliance plan to the Agency that meets
16     the requirements of Title IV and V of the Clean Air Act and
17     regulations.
18         c. Each Phase II acid rain permit issued in accordance
19     with this subsection shall have a fixed term of 5 years.
20     Except as provided in paragraph b above, the Agency shall
21     issue or deny a Phase II acid rain permit within 18 months
22     of receiving a complete Phase II permit application and
23     compliance plan.
24         d. A designated representative of a new unit, as
25     defined in Section 402 of the Clean Air Act, shall submit a
26     timely and complete Phase II acid rain permit application

 

 

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1     and compliance plan that meets the requirements of Titles
2     IV and V of the Clean Air Act and its regulations. The
3     Agency shall act on the new unit's Phase II acid rain
4     permit application and compliance plan in accordance with
5     this Section and Title V of the Clean Air Act and its
6     regulations, except as modified by Title IV of the Clean
7     Air Act and its regulations. The Agency shall reopen the
8     new unit's CAAPP permit for cause to incorporate the
9     approved Phase II acid rain permit in accordance with this
10     Section. The Phase II acid rain permit for the new unit
11     shall become effective no later than the date required
12     under Title IV of the Clean Air Act and its regulations.
13         e. A designated representative of an affected source
14     for acid deposition shall submit a timely and complete
15     Title IV NOx permit application to the Agency, not later
16     than January 1, 1998, that meets the requirements of Titles
17     IV and V of the Clean Air Act and its regulations. The
18     Agency shall reopen the Phase II acid rain permit for cause
19     and incorporate the approved NOx provisions into the Phase
20     II acid rain permit not later than January 1, 1999, in
21     accordance with this Section, except as modified by Title
22     IV of the Clean Air Act and regulations promulgated
23     thereunder. Such reopening shall not affect the term of the
24     Phase II acid rain permit.
25         f. The designated representative of the affected
26     source for acid deposition shall renew the initial CAAPP

 

 

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1     permit and Phase II acid rain permit in accordance with
2     this Section and Title V of the Clean Air Act and
3     regulations promulgated thereunder, except as modified by
4     Title IV of the Clean Air Act and regulations promulgated
5     thereunder.
6         g. In the case of an affected source for acid
7     deposition for which a complete Phase II acid rain permit
8     application and compliance plan are timely received under
9     this subsection, the complete permit application and
10     compliance plan, including amendments thereto, shall be
11     binding on the owner, operator and designated
12     representative, all affected units for acid deposition at
13     the affected source, and any other unit, as defined in
14     Section 402 of the Clean Air Act, governed by the Phase II
15     acid rain permit application and shall be enforceable as an
16     acid rain permit for purposes of Titles IV and V of the
17     Clean Air Act, from the date of submission of the acid rain
18     permit application until a Phase II acid rain permit is
19     issued or denied by the Agency.
20         h. The Agency shall not include or implement any
21     measure which would interfere with or modify the
22     requirements of Title IV of the Clean Air Act or
23     regulations promulgated thereunder.
24         i. Nothing in this Section shall be construed as
25     affecting allowances or USEPA's decision regarding an
26     excess emissions offset plan, as set forth in Title IV of

 

 

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1     the Clean Air Act or regulations promulgated thereunder.
2             i. No permit revision shall be required for
3         increases in emissions that are authorized by
4         allowances acquired pursuant to the acid rain program,
5         provided that such increases do not require a permit
6         revision under any other applicable requirement.
7             ii. No limit shall be placed on the number of
8         allowances held by the source. The source may not,
9         however, use allowances as a defense to noncompliance
10         with any other applicable requirement.
11             iii. Any such allowance shall be accounted for
12         according to the procedures established in regulations
13         promulgated under Title IV of the Clean Air Act.
14         j. To the extent that the federal regulations
15     promulgated under Title IV, including but not limited to 40
16     C.F.R. Part 72, as now or hereafter amended, are
17     inconsistent with the federal regulations promulgated
18     under Title V, the federal regulations promulgated under
19     Title IV shall take precedence.
20         k. The USEPA may intervene as a matter of right in any
21     permit appeal involving a Phase II acid rain permit
22     provision or denial of a Phase II acid rain permit.
23         l. It is unlawful for any owner or operator to violate
24     any terms or conditions of a Phase II acid rain permit
25     issued under this subsection, to operate any affected
26     source for acid deposition except in compliance with a

 

 

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1     Phase II acid rain permit issued by the Agency under this
2     subsection, or to violate any other applicable
3     requirements.
4         m. The designated representative of an affected source
5     for acid deposition shall submit to the Agency the data and
6     information submitted quarterly to USEPA, pursuant to 40
7     CFR 75.64, concurrently with the submission to USEPA. The
8     submission shall be in the same electronic format as
9     specified by USEPA.
10         n. The Agency shall act on any petition for exemption
11     of a new unit or retired unit, as those terms are defined
12     in Section 402 of the Clean Air Act, from the requirements
13     of the acid rain program in accordance with Title IV of the
14     Clean Air Act and its regulations.
15         o. The Agency shall have the authority to adopt
16     procedural rules, in accordance with the Illinois
17     Administrative Procedure Act, as the Agency deems
18     necessary to implement this subsection.
 
19     18. Fee Provisions.
20         a. For each 12 month period after the date on which the
21     USEPA approves or conditionally approves the CAAPP, but in
22     no event prior to January 1, 1994, a source subject to this
23     Section or excluded under subsection 1.1 or paragraph 3(c)
24     of this Section, shall pay a fee as provided in this part
25     (a) of this subsection 18. However, a source that has been

 

 

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1     excluded from the provisions of this Section under
2     subsection 1.1 or paragraph 3(c) of this Section because
3     the source emits less than 25 tons per year of any
4     combination of regulated air pollutants shall pay fees in
5     accordance with paragraph (1) of subsection (b) of Section
6     9.6.
7             i. The fee for a source allowed to emit less than
8         100 tons per year of any combination of regulated air
9         pollutants shall be $1,800 per year.
10             ii. The fee for a source allowed to emit 100 tons
11         or more per year of any combination of regulated air
12         pollutants, except for those regulated air pollutants
13         excluded in paragraph 18(f) of this subsection, shall
14         be as follows:
15                 A. The Agency shall assess an annual fee of
16             $18.00 per ton for the allowable emissions of all
17             regulated air pollutants at that source during the
18             term of the permit. These fees shall be used by the
19             Agency and the Board to fund the activities
20             required by Title V of the Clean Air Act including
21             such activities as may be carried out by other
22             State or local agencies pursuant to paragraph (d)
23             of this subsection. The amount of such fee shall be
24             based on the information supplied by the applicant
25             in its complete CAAPP permit application or in the
26             CAAPP permit if the permit has been granted and

 

 

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1             shall be determined by the amount of emissions that
2             the source is allowed to emit annually, provided
3             however, that no source shall be required to pay an
4             annual fee in excess of $250,000. The Agency shall
5             provide as part of the permit application form
6             required under subsection 5 of this Section a
7             separate fee calculation form which will allow the
8             applicant to identify the allowable emissions and
9             calculate the fee for the term of the permit. In no
10             event shall the Agency raise the amount of
11             allowable emissions requested by the applicant
12             unless such increases are required to demonstrate
13             compliance with terms of a CAAPP permit.
14                 Notwithstanding the above, any applicant may
15             seek a change in its permit which would result in
16             increases in allowable emissions due to an
17             increase in the hours of operation or production
18             rates of an emission unit or units and such a
19             change shall be consistent with the construction
20             permit requirements of the existing State permit
21             program, under Section 39(a) of this Act and
22             applicable provisions of this Section. Where a
23             construction permit is required, the Agency shall
24             expeditiously grant such construction permit and
25             shall, if necessary, modify the CAAPP permit based
26             on the same application.

 

 

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1                 B. The applicant or permittee may pay the fee
2             annually or semiannually for those fees greater
3             than $5,000. However, any applicant paying a fee
4             equal to or greater than $100,000 shall pay the
5             full amount on July 1, for the subsequent fiscal
6             year, or pay 50% of the fee on July 1 and the
7             remaining 50% by the next January 1. The Agency may
8             change any annual billing date upon reasonable
9             notice, but shall prorate the new bill so that the
10             permittee or applicant does not pay more than its
11             required fees for the fee period for which payment
12             is made.
13         b. (Blank).
14         c. (Blank).
15         d. There is hereby created in the State Treasury a
16     special fund to be known as the "CAA Permit Fund". All
17     Funds collected by the Agency pursuant to this subsection
18     shall be deposited into the Fund. The General Assembly
19     shall appropriate monies from this Fund to the Agency and
20     to the Board to carry out their obligations under this
21     Section. The General Assembly may also authorize monies to
22     be granted by the Agency from this Fund to other State and
23     local agencies which perform duties related to the CAAPP.
24     Interest generated on the monies deposited in this Fund
25     shall be returned to the Fund.
26         e. The Agency shall have the authority to adopt

 

 

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1     procedural rules, in accordance with the Illinois
2     Administrative Procedure Act, as the Agency deems
3     necessary to implement this subsection.
4         f. For purposes of this subsection, the term "regulated
5     air pollutant" shall have the meaning given to it under
6     subsection 1 of this Section but shall exclude the
7     following:
8             i. carbon monoxide;
9             ii. any Class I or II substance which is a
10         regulated air pollutant solely because it is listed
11         pursuant to Section 602 of the Clean Air Act; and
12             iii. any pollutant that is a regulated air
13         pollutant solely because it is subject to a standard or
14         regulation under Section 112(r) of the Clean Air Act
15         based on the emissions allowed in the permit effective
16         in that calendar year, at the time the applicable bill
17         is generated.
 
18     19. Air Toxics Provisions.
19         a. In the event that the USEPA fails to promulgate in a
20     timely manner a standard pursuant to Section 112(d) of the
21     Clean Air Act, the Agency shall have the authority to issue
22     permits, pursuant to Section 112(j) of the Clean Air Act
23     and regulations promulgated thereunder, which contain
24     emission limitations which are equivalent to the emission
25     limitations that would apply to a source if an emission

 

 

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1     standard had been promulgated in a timely manner by USEPA
2     pursuant to Section 112(d). Provided, however, that the
3     owner or operator of a source shall have the opportunity to
4     submit to the Agency a proposed emission limitation which
5     it determines to be equivalent to the emission limitations
6     that would apply to such source if an emission standard had
7     been promulgated in a timely manner by USEPA. If the Agency
8     refuses to include the emission limitation proposed by the
9     owner or operator in a CAAPP permit, the owner or operator
10     may petition the Board to establish whether the emission
11     limitation proposal submitted by the owner or operator
12     provides for emission limitations which are equivalent to
13     the emission limitations that would apply to the source if
14     the emission standard had been promulgated by USEPA in a
15     timely manner. The Board shall determine whether the
16     emission limitation proposed by the owner or operator or an
17     alternative emission limitation proposed by the Agency
18     provides for the level of control required under Section
19     112 of the Clean Air Act, or shall otherwise establish an
20     appropriate emission limitation, pursuant to Section 112
21     of the Clean Air Act.
22         b. Any Board proceeding brought under paragraph (a) or
23     (e) of this subsection shall be conducted according to the
24     Board's procedures for adjudicatory hearings and the Board
25     shall render its decision within 120 days of the filing of
26     the petition. Any such decision shall be subject to review

 

 

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1     pursuant to Section 41 of this Act. Where USEPA promulgates
2     an applicable emission standard prior to the issuance of
3     the CAAPP permit, the Agency shall include in the permit
4     the promulgated standard, provided that the source shall
5     have the compliance period provided under Section 112(i) of
6     the Clean Air Act. Where USEPA promulgates an applicable
7     standard subsequent to the issuance of the CAAPP permit,
8     the Agency shall revise such permit upon the next renewal
9     to reflect the promulgated standard, providing a
10     reasonable time for the applicable source to comply with
11     the standard, but no longer than 8 years after the date on
12     which the source is first required to comply with the
13     emissions limitation established under this subsection.
14         c. The Agency shall have the authority to implement and
15     enforce complete or partial emission standards promulgated
16     by USEPA pursuant to Section 112(d), and standards
17     promulgated by USEPA pursuant to Sections 112(f), 112(h),
18     112(m), and 112(n), and may accept delegation of authority
19     from USEPA to implement and enforce Section 112(l) and
20     requirements for the prevention and detection of
21     accidental releases pursuant to Section 112(r) of the Clean
22     Air Act.
23         d. The Agency shall have the authority to issue permits
24     pursuant to Section 112(i)(5) of the Clean Air Act.
25         e. The Agency has the authority to implement Section
26     112(g) of the Clean Air Act consistent with the Clean Air

 

 

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1     Act and federal regulations promulgated thereunder. If the
2     Agency refuses to include the emission limitations
3     proposed in an application submitted by an owner or
4     operator for a case-by-case maximum achievable control
5     technology (MACT) determination, the owner or operator may
6     petition the Board to determine whether the emission
7     limitation proposed by the owner or operator or an
8     alternative emission limitation proposed by the Agency
9     provides for a level of control required by Section 112 of
10     the Clean Air Act, or to otherwise establish an appropriate
11     emission limitation under Section 112 of the Clean Air Act.
 
12     20. Small Business.
13         a. For purposes of this subsection:
14         "Program" is the Small Business Stationary Source
15     Technical and Environmental Compliance Assistance Program
16     created within this State pursuant to Section 507 of the
17     Clean Air Act and guidance promulgated thereunder, to
18     provide technical assistance and compliance information to
19     small business stationary sources;
20         "Small Business Assistance Program" is a component of
21     the Program responsible for providing sufficient
22     communications with small businesses through the
23     collection and dissemination of information to small
24     business stationary sources; and
25         "Small Business Stationary Source" means a stationary

 

 

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1     source that:
2             1. is owned or operated by a person that employs
3         100 or fewer individuals;
4             2. is a small business concern as defined in the
5         "Small Business Act";
6             3. is not a major source as that term is defined in
7         subsection 2 of this Section;
8             4. does not emit 50 tons or more per year of any
9         regulated air pollutant; and
10             5. emits less than 75 tons per year of all
11         regulated pollutants.
12         b. The Agency shall adopt and submit to USEPA, after
13     reasonable notice and opportunity for public comment, as a
14     revision to the Illinois state implementation plan, plans
15     for establishing the Program.
16         c. The Agency shall have the authority to enter into
17     such contracts and agreements as the Agency deems necessary
18     to carry out the purposes of this subsection.
19         d. The Agency may establish such procedures as it may
20     deem necessary for the purposes of implementing and
21     executing its responsibilities under this subsection.
22         e. There shall be appointed a Small Business Ombudsman
23     (hereinafter in this subsection referred to as
24     "Ombudsman") to monitor the Small Business Assistance
25     Program. The Ombudsman shall be a nonpartisan designated
26     official, with the ability to independently assess whether

 

 

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1     the goals of the Program are being met.
2         f. The State Ombudsman Office shall be located in an
3     existing Ombudsman office within the State or in any State
4     Department.
5         g. There is hereby created a State Compliance Advisory
6     Panel (hereinafter in this subsection referred to as
7     "Panel") for determining the overall effectiveness of the
8     Small Business Assistance Program within this State.
9         h. The selection of Panel members shall be by the
10     following method:
11             1. The Governor shall select two members who are
12         not owners or representatives of owners of small
13         business stationary sources to represent the general
14         public;
15             2. The Director of the Agency shall select one
16         member to represent the Agency; and
17             3. The State Legislature shall select four members
18         who are owners or representatives of owners of small
19         business stationary sources. Both the majority and
20         minority leadership in both Houses of the Legislature
21         shall appoint one member of the panel.
22         i. Panel members should serve without compensation but
23     will receive full reimbursement for expenses including
24     travel and per diem as authorized within this State.
25         j. The Panel shall select its own Chair by a majority
26     vote. The Chair may meet and consult with the Ombudsman and

 

 

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1     the head of the Small Business Assistance Program in
2     planning the activities for the Panel.
 
3     21. Temporary Sources.
4         a. The Agency may issue a single permit authorizing
5     emissions from similar operations by the same source owner
6     or operator at multiple temporary locations, except for
7     sources which are affected sources for acid deposition
8     under Title IV of the Clean Air Act.
9         b. The applicant must demonstrate that the operation is
10     temporary and will involve at least one change of location
11     during the term of the permit.
12         c. Any such permit shall meet all applicable
13     requirements of this Section and applicable regulations,
14     and include conditions assuring compliance with all
15     applicable requirements at all authorized locations and
16     requirements that the owner or operator notify the Agency
17     at least 10 days in advance of each change in location.
 
18     22. Solid Waste Incineration Units.
19         a. A CAAPP permit for a solid waste incineration unit
20     combusting municipal waste subject to standards
21     promulgated under Section 129(e) of the Clean Air Act shall
22     be issued for a period of 12 years and shall be reviewed
23     every 5 years, unless the Agency requires more frequent
24     review through Agency procedures.

 

 

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1         b. During the review in paragraph (a) of this
2     subsection, the Agency shall fully review the previously
3     submitted CAAPP permit application and corresponding
4     reports subsequently submitted to determine whether the
5     source is in compliance with all applicable requirements.
6         c. If the Agency determines that the source is not in
7     compliance with all applicable requirements it shall
8     revise the CAAPP permit as appropriate.
9         d. The Agency shall have the authority to adopt
10     procedural rules, in accordance with the Illinois
11     Administrative Procedure Act, as the Agency deems
12     necessary, to implement this subsection.
13 (Source: P.A. 93-32, eff. 7-1-03; 94-580, eff. 8-12-05.)