State of Illinois
90th General Assembly
Legislation

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[ House Amendment 001 ]

90_SB0304sam001

                                           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1                    AMENDMENT TO SENATE BILL 304
 2        AMENDMENT NO.     .  Amend Senate Bill 304  by  replacing
 3    the title with the following:
 4        "AN ACT regarding natural resources."; and
 5    by  replacing  everything  after the enacting clause with the
 6    following:
 7        "Section 5. The Personnel Code  is  amended  by  changing
 8    Section 4c as follows:
 9        (20 ILCS 415/4c) (from Ch. 127, par. 63b104c)
10        Sec. 4c.  General exemptions.  The following positions in
11    State service shall be exempt from jurisdictions A, B, and C,
12    unless  the  jurisdictions  shall  be extended as provided in
13    this Act:
14             (1)  All officers elected by the people.
15             (2)  All positions under  the  Lieutenant  Governor,
16        Secretary  of  State, State Treasurer, State Comptroller,
17        State Board of Education, Clerk of the Supreme Court, and
18        Attorney General.
19             (3)  Judges,  and  officers  and  employees  of  the
20        courts, and notaries public.
21             (4)  All officers  and  employees  of  the  Illinois
                            -2-            LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        General    Assembly,   all   employees   of   legislative
 2        commissions, all officers and employees of  the  Illinois
 3        Legislative  Reference  Bureau,  the Legislative Research
 4        Unit, and the Legislative Printing Unit.
 5             (5)  All positions in the Illinois  National  Guard,
 6        and  Illinois  State  Guard,  paid  from federal funds or
 7        positions  in  the  State   Military  Service  filled  by
 8        enlistment and paid from State funds.
 9             (6)  All employees of the Governor at the  executive
10        mansion and on his immediate personal staff.
11             (7)  Directors of Departments, the Adjutant General,
12        the  Assistant  Adjutant  General,  the  Director  of the
13        Illinois Emergency Management Agency, members  of  boards
14        and  commissions,   and  all other positions appointed by
15        the Governor by and with the consent of the Senate.
16             (8)  The presidents, other principal  administrative
17        officers,  and teaching, research and extension faculties
18        of Chicago State University, Eastern Illinois University,
19        Governors State University,  Illinois  State  University,
20        Northeastern   Illinois   University,  Northern  Illinois
21        University, Western  Illinois  University,  the  Illinois
22        Community  College  Board,  Southern Illinois University,
23        Illinois  Board  of  Higher  Education,   University   of
24        Illinois,   State   Universities  Civil  Service  System,
25        University  Retirement  System  of  Illinois,   and   the
26        administrative  officers  and  scientific  and  technical
27        staff of the Illinois State Museum.
28             (9)  All  other  employees  except  the  presidents,
29        other  principal  administrative  officers, and teaching,
30        research and  extension  faculties  of  the  universities
31        under  the  jurisdiction  of the Board of Regents and the
32        colleges and universities under the  jurisdiction of  the
33        Board  of  Governors  of State Colleges and Universities,
34        Illinois  Community  College  Board,  Southern   Illinois
                            -3-            LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        University,  Illinois Board of Higher Education, Board of
 2        Governors of State Colleges and Universities,  the  Board
 3        of  Regents,  University  of Illinois, State Universities
 4        Civil Service System,  University  Retirement  System  of
 5        Illinois,  so long as these are subject to the provisions
 6        of the State Universities Civil Service Act.
 7             (10)  The State Police so long as they  are  subject
 8        to the merit provisions of the State Police Act.
 9             (11)  The  scientific  staff of the State Scientific
10        Surveys and the Waste Management and  Research  Hazardous
11        Waste Research and Information Center.
12             (12)  The  technical  and  engineering staffs of the
13        Department of Transportation, the Department  of  Nuclear
14        Safety,  and of the Illinois Commerce Commission, and the
15        technical and engineering staff  providing  architectural
16        and  engineering  services  in  the Department of Central
17        Management Services.
18             (13)  All  employees  of  the  Illinois  State  Toll
19        Highway Commission.
20             (14)  The Secretary of the Industrial Commission.
21             (15)  All persons who are appointed or  employed  by
22        the Director of Insurance  under authority of Section 202
23        of the Illinois Insurance Code to assist the Director  of
24        Insurance in discharging his responsibilities relating to
25        the   rehabilitation,   liquidation,   conservation,  and
26        dissolution  of  companies  that  are  subject   to   the
27        jurisdiction of the Illinois  Insurance Code.
28             (16)  All  employees  of  the St. Louis Metropolitan
29        Area Airport Authority.
30             (17)  All  investment  officers  employed   by   the
31        Illinois State Board of Investment.
32             (18)  Employees   of   the   Illinois   Young  Adult
33        Conservation Corps program, administered by the  Illinois
34        Department of Natural Resources, authorized grantee under
                            -4-            LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        Title  VIII of the "Comprehensive Employment and Training
 2        Act of 1973", 29 USC 993.
 3             (19)  Seasonal  employees  of  the   Department   of
 4        Agriculture  for the operation of the Illinois State Fair
 5        and the DuQuoin State Fair, no one person receiving  more
 6        than 29 days of such employment in any calendar year.
 7             (20)  All  "temporary"  employees  hired  under  the
 8        Department  of  Natural  Resources' Illinois Conservation
 9        Service, a youth  employment  program  that  hires  young
10        people to work in State parks for a period of one year or
11        less.
12             (21)  All  hearing  officers  of  the  Human  Rights
13        Commission.
14             (22)  All  employees of the Illinois Mathematics and
15        Science Academy.
16             (23)  All employees of  the  Kankakee  River  Valley
17        Area Airport Authority.
18    (Source: P.A. 89-4, eff. 1-1-96; 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
19        Section  10. The Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is
20    amended by changing Section 46.13a as follows:
21        (20 ILCS 605/46.13a) (from Ch. 127, par. 46.13a)
22        Sec. 46.13a. Environmental Regulatory Assistance Program.
23        (a)  The following terms, whenever used or referred to in
24    this Section, shall have the following meanings  ascribed  to
25    them, except where the context clearly requires otherwise:
26             (1)  "Small  business  stationary  source"  means  a
27        business  that  is  owned  or  operated  by a person that
28        employs 100 or fewer individuals; is a small business; is
29        not a major stationary source as defined in Titles I  and
30        III  of  the  federal 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments; does
31        not emit 50 tons  or  more  per  year  of  any  regulated
32        pollutant  (as  defined under the federal Clean Air Act);
                            -5-            LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        and emits less than 75 tons per  year  of  all  regulated
 2        pollutants.
 3             (2)  "Department"  means  the Illinois Department of
 4        Commerce and Community Affairs.
 5        (b)  The Department may:
 6             (1)  Provide  access  to  technical  and  compliance
 7        information  for  Illinois  firms,  including  small  and
 8        middle market companies,  to  facilitate  local  business
 9        compliance    with   the   federal,   State   and   local
10        environmental regulations.
11             (2)  Coordinate   and   enter    into    cooperative
12        agreements  with a State ombudsman office, which shall be
13        established in accordance with the federal 1990 Clean Air
14        Act Amendments to provide direct oversight to the program
15        established under that Act.
16             (3)  Enter into contracts,  cooperative  agreements,
17        and   financing  agreements  and  establish  and  collect
18        charges  and  fees  necessary  or   incidental   to   the
19        performance  of  duties and the execution of powers under
20        this Section.
21             (4)  Accept and expend,  subject  to  appropriation,
22        gifts,  grants,  awards,  funds,  contributions, charges,
23        fees  and  other  financial  or  nonfinancial  aid   from
24        federal,   State   and   local   governmental   agencies,
25        businesses,    educational    agencies,    not-for-profit
26        organizations,  and  other  entities, for the purposes of
27        this Section.
28             (5)  Establish, staff and  administer  programs  and
29        services  and  adopt such rules and regulations as may be
30        necessary to carry out the intent  of  this  Section  and
31        Section  507, "Small Business Stationary Source Technical
32        and Environmental Compliance Assistance Program", of  the
33        federal 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments.
34        (c)  The  Department's  environmental compliance programs
                            -6-            LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    and services for businesses may  include,  but  need  not  be
 2    limited to, the following:
 3             (1)  Communication  and  outreach  services to or on
 4        behalf of individual companies, including collection  and
 5        compilation  of  appropriate  information  on  regulatory
 6        compliance   issues   and   control   technologies,   and
 7        dissemination  of  such information through publications,
 8        direct mailings, electronic communications,  conferences,
 9        workshops,  one-on-one  counseling  and  other  means  of
10        technical assistance.
11             (2)  Provision  of referrals and access to technical
12        assistance, pollution prevention and facility audits, and
13        otherwise serving  as  an  information  clearinghouse  on
14        pollution  prevention  through  the  coordination  of the
15        Waste Management and Research  Hazardous  Waste  Research
16        and  Information  Center, a division of the Department of
17        Natural  Resources.   In  addition,   environmental   and
18        regulatory  compliance  issues  and techniques, which may
19        include business rights and responsibilities,  applicable
20        permitting   and   compliance   requirements,  compliance
21        methods  and  acceptable  control  technologies,  release
22        detection,  and  other  applicable  information  may   be
23        provided.
24             (3)  Coordination     with    and    provision    of
25        administrative  and  logistical  support  to  the   State
26        Compliance Advisory Panel.
27        (d)  There  is hereby created a special fund in the State
28    Treasury to be known  as  the  Small  Business  Environmental
29    Assistance Fund.  Monies received under subdivision (b)(4) of
30    this Section shall be deposited into the Fund.
31        Monies  in  the  Small  Business Environmental Assistance
32    Fund may be used, subject  to  appropriation,  only  for  the
33    purposes authorized by this Section.
34    (Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
                            -7-            LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        Section 15. The Business Assistance and Regulatory Reform
 2    Act is amended by changing Section 15 as follows:
 3        (20 ILCS 608/15)
 4        Sec.  15.  Providing  information  and  expediting permit
 5    reviews.
 6        (a)  The office shall provide an information system using
 7    a toll-free business assistance number.  The number shall  be
 8    advertised  throughout  the  State.  If requested, the caller
 9    will be sent a  basic  business  kit,  describing  the  basic
10    requirements  and  procedures for doing business in Illinois.
11    If requested, the caller shall be directed to one or more  of
12    the additional services provided by the office.  In addition,
13    the  office  shall have branches located throughout the State
14    to assist persons who prefer not (or who are unable)  to  use
15    the  call system.  All persons providing advice to callers on
16    behalf of the office and all persons responsible for directly
17    providing services to persons visiting the office or  one  of
18    its  branches shall be persons with small business experience
19    in an administrative or managerial capacity.
20        (b)  The   office   shall   develop   and   implement   a
21    computerized master application  procedure  to  expedite  the
22    identification   and   processing  of  permits  for  business
23    undertakings, projects and activities.
24             (1)  The  application  shall  be  made  on  a   form
25        prescribed  by  the  office,  designed  primarily for the
26        convenience of  applicants  confronting  requirements  of
27        multiple  permits  from  one or more State agencies.  The
28        office shall assist any person requesting  assistance  in
29        completing the application.
30             (2)  Upon receipt of a completed master application,
31        the  office  shall  notify  each  State  agency  having a
32        possible interest  in  the  proposed  business  activity.
33        Each  agency so notified shall respond within 15 days and
                            -8-            LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        advise the office whether one or more permits  under  its
 2        jurisdiction  may  be  required  for  the  activity.  The
 3        response will also include the fees to  be  charged.  The
 4        requirements  of  this subdivision (b)(2) shall not apply
 5        if the master  application contained false, misleading or
 6        deceptive information, or  failed  to  include  pertinent
 7        information,  the  lack  of which could reasonably lead a
 8        State agency to misjudge  the  applicability  of  permits
 9        under  its jurisdiction, or if new permit requirements or
10        related standards subsequently became effective for which
11        a State agency had  no  discretion  in  establishing  the
12        effective  date. For purposes of this Act, "State agency"
13        means a department or agency of  State  government  under
14        the  jurisdiction  and  control  of  the  Office  of  the
15        Governor.
16             (3)  After  the  15  day notice and response period,
17        the office shall promptly provide the applicant with  the
18        necessary  application  forms and related information for
19        all permits specified by the interested  State  agencies.
20        Applications  may  be directly filed with the agencies or
21        with the office, together with the requisite  fees.   The
22        office  may  at  the  request  of the applicant conduct a
23        pre-application conference with  representatives  of  the
24        interested    State    agencies   and   agencies   having
25        responsibilities for business promotion.
26        (c)  Any applicant for permits required  for  a  business
27    activity  may  confer with the office to obtain assistance in
28    the  prompt  and   efficient   processing   and   review   of
29    applications.   The  office  may designate an employee of the
30    office to act as a permit assistance manager to:
31             (1)  facilitate  contacts  for  the  applicant  with
32        responsible agencies;
33             (2)  arrange conferences to clarify the requirements
34        of interested agencies;
                            -9-            LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1             (3)  consider with State agencies the feasibility of
 2        consolidating  hearings  and   data   required   of   the
 3        applicant;
 4             (4)  assist   the   applicant   in   resolution   of
 5        outstanding issues identified by State agencies; and
 6             (5)  coordinate  federal, State and local regulatory
 7        procedures  and  permit  review  actions  to  the  extent
 8        possible.
 9        (d)  The  office  shall  publish  a  directory  of  State
10    business  permits  and  State  programs   to   assist   small
11    businesses.
12        (e)  The  office shall designate "economically distressed
13    areas",  being  State  enterprise  zones   that   have   been
14    designated  enterprise  zones  under  the Illinois Enterprise
15    Zone Act  because  of  their  high  unemployment  rate,  high
16    poverty rate, or low income. The office shall provide on-site
17    permit   assistance  in  those  areas  and  may  require  any
18    interested State agency to designate an  employee  who  shall
19    coordinate  the handling of permits in that area.  Interested
20    State  agencies  shall,  to  the  maximum  extent   feasible,
21    establish procedures to expedite applications in economically
22    distressed  areas.   The  office  shall  attempt to establish
23    agreements with the local governments having jurisdiction  in
24    these  areas,  to  allow  the office to provide assistance to
25    applicants for permits required by these local governments.
26        (f)  The  office  shall   designate   permit   assistance
27    managers  to  assist  in  obtaining  the prompt and efficient
28    processing and review of applications for permits required by
29    businesses performing  infrastructure  projects.   Interested
30    State   agencies  shall,  to  the  maximum  extent  feasible,
31    establish   procedures   to   expedite    applications    for
32    infrastructure   projects.    Applications  for  permits  for
33    infrastructure projects  shall  be  approved  or  disapproved
34    within  45  days  of  submission,  unless  law or regulations
                            -10-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    specify a different period.   If  the  interested  agency  is
 2    unable  to act within that period, the agency shall provide a
 3    written notification to the office specifying reasons for its
 4    inability  to  act  and  the  date  by  which   approval   or
 5    disapproval  shall be determined.  The office may require any
 6    interested State agency to designate  an  employee  who  will
 7    coordinate the handling of permits in that area.
 8        (g)  In  addition  to  its responsibilities in connection
 9    with permit assistance,  the  office  shall  provide  general
10    regulatory information by directing businesses to appropriate
11    officers   in   State  agencies  to  supply  the  information
12    requested.
13        (h)  The office shall help businesses to locate and apply
14    to training programs available to train current employees  in
15    particular  skills, techniques or areas of knowledge relevant
16    to the employees' present  or  anticipated  job  duties.   In
17    pursuit   of   this   objective,  the  office  shall  provide
18    businesses with pertinent information about training programs
19    offered by State agencies, units of local government,  public
20    universities  and  colleges,  community  colleges, and school
21    districts in Illinois.
22        (i)  The office shall help businesses to locate and apply
23    to State programs offering to businesses grants, loans,  loan
24    or  bond  guarantees,  investment partnerships, technology or
25    productivity  consultation,  or  other  forms   of   business
26    assistance.
27        (j)  To  the extent authorized by federal law, the office
28    shall assist businesses in ascertaining  and  complying  with
29    the  requirements  of the federal Americans with Disabilities
30    Act.
31        (k)  The  office  shall  provide   confidential   on-site
32    assistance   in   identifying   problems   and  solutions  in
33    compliance with  requirements  of  the  federal  Occupational
34    Safety  and Health Administration and other State and federal
                            -11-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    environmental regulations.  The office shall work through and
 2    contract with the Waste  Management  and  Research  Hazardous
 3    Waste Research and Information Center to provide confidential
 4    on-site   consultation  audits  that  (i)  assist  regulatory
 5    compliance   and   (ii)   identify    pollution    prevention
 6    opportunities.
 7        (l)  The  office  shall  provide  information on existing
 8    loan and business assistance programs provided by the State.
 9        (m)  Each State agency having jurisdiction to approve  or
10    deny  a  permit shall have the continuing power heretofore or
11    hereafter vested in it  to  make  such  determinations.   The
12    provisions of this Act shall not lessen or reduce such powers
13    and shall modify the procedures followed in carrying out such
14    powers only to the extent provided in this Act.
15        (n) (1)  Each State agency shall fully cooperate with the
16    office  in providing information, documentation, personnel or
17    facilities requested by the office.
18        (2)  Each State agency having jurisdiction of any  permit
19    to which the master application procedure is applicable shall
20    designate  an  employee  to act as permit liaison office with
21    the office in carrying out the provisions of this Act.
22        (o) (1)  The office has authority, but is  not  required,
23    to  keep  and  analyze appropriate statistical data regarding
24    the number of permits issued by State agencies, the amount of
25    time necessary for the permits to  be  issued,  the  cost  of
26    obtaining  such  permits,  the  types  of  projects for which
27    specific permits are issued,  a  geographic  distribution  of
28    permits,   and   other   pertinent   data  the  office  deems
29    appropriate.
30        The office shall make such data and any analysis  of  the
31    data available to the public.
32        (2)  The  office  has  authority, but is not required, to
33    conduct or cause to be conducted a  thorough  review  of  any
34    agency's  permit  requirements  and  the need by the State to
                            -12-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    require such permits.  The office shall draw on  the  review,
 2    on  its direct experience, and on its statistical analyses to
 3    prepare recommendations regarding how to:
 4             (i)  eliminate  unnecessary  or  antiquated   permit
 5        requirements;
 6             (ii)  consolidate  duplicative or overlapping permit
 7        requirements;
 8             (iii)  simplify   overly    complex    or    lengthy
 9        application procedures;
10             (iv)  expedite   time-consuming  agency  review  and
11        approval procedures; or
12             (v)  otherwise improve the permitting  processes  in
13        the State.
14        The  office  shall  submit  copies of all recommendations
15    within 5  days  of  issuance  to  the  affected  agency,  the
16    Governor,  the  General  Assembly, and the Joint Committee on
17    Administrative Rules.
18        (p)  The office has authority to review  State  forms  on
19    its  own  initiative  or  upon  the  request of another State
20    agency to ascertain the burden, if  any,  of  complying  with
21    those  forms.  If the office determines that a form is unduly
22    burdensome to  business,  it  may  recommend  to  the  agency
23    issuing  the  form either that the form be eliminated or that
24    specific changes be made in the form.
25        (q)  Not later than March 1 of each year, beginning March
26    1, 1995, the office shall submit  an  annual  report  of  its
27    activities  during  the  preceding  year  to the Governor and
28    General Assembly.  The report shall describe  the  activities
29    of  the  office  during  the preceding year and shall contain
30    statistical information on the permit  assistance  activities
31    of the office.
32    (Source: P.A. 88-404.)
33        Section  20.  The  Department of Natural Resources Act is
                            -13-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    amended by changing Sections 15-5 and 20-5 as follows:
 2        (20 ILCS 801/15-5)
 3        Sec. 15-5. Office of Scientific  Research  and  Analysis.
 4    The  Department  of Natural Resources shall have within it an
 5    Office of Scientific Research and Analysis.  The Office shall
 6    contain within it a Natural History Survey division, a  State
 7    Water  Survey division, a State Geological Survey division, a
 8    Waste Management and Research Hazardous  Waste  Research  and
 9    Information  Center division, and such other related research
10    functions and responsibilities as may be appropriate provided
11    by law.  The Board of Natural Resources and  Conservation  is
12    retained  as  the  governing board for the Scientific Surveys
13    and Waste Management and Research  Hazardous  Waste  Research
14    and Information Center.
15    (Source: P.A. 89-50, eff. 7-1-95; 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
16        (20 ILCS 801/20-5)
17        Sec.  20-5.  State  Museum.   The  Department  of Natural
18    Resources shall have within it a division consisting  of  the
19    Illinois  State  Museum,  which shall be within the Office of
20    Scientific Research and Analysis. The Board of  the  Illinois
21    State Museum is retained as the governing board for the State
22    Museum.
23    (Source: P.A. 89-50, eff. 7-1-95; 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
24        Section 25.  The Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is
25    amended by changing Section 63a and by adding Sections 63b1.2
26    and 63b2.9 as follows:
27        (20 ILCS 805/63a) (from Ch. 127, par. 63a)
28        Sec.  63a.   The  Department of Natural Resources has the
29    powers enumerated in Sections 63a1 through 63b2.9 63b2.8.
30    (Source: P.A. 88-657, eff. 1-1-95; 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
                            -14-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        (20 ILCS 805/63b1.2 new)
 2        Sec. 63b1.2.   Indirect  cost  reimbursements.   Indirect
 3    cost  reimbursements applied for by the Department of Natural
 4    Resources may be allocated  as  State  matching  funds.   Any
 5    indirect  cost  reimbursement applied for and received by the
 6    Department shall be deposited to the same fund as the  direct
 7    cost  and  may  be  expended,  subject  to appropriation, for
 8    support of programs administered by the Department of Natural
 9    Resources.
10        (20 ILCS 805/63b2.9 new)
11        Sec. 63b2.9.  Grants and contracts.  To accept,  receive,
12    expend,  and  administer,  including  by grant, agreement, or
13    contract,  those  funds  that  are  made  available  to   the
14    Department  from  the federal government and other public and
15    private sources in the exercise of its statutory  powers  and
16    duties.
17        The  Department  may make grants to other State agencies,
18    universities,   not-for-profit   organizations   and    local
19    governments,  pursuant to an appropriation in the exercise of
20    its statutory powers and duties.
21        Section 30. The Energy Conservation and Coal  Development
22    Act is amended by changing Section 16 as follows:
23        (20 ILCS 1105/16) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 7415)
24        Sec. 16. Battery Task Force.
25        (a)  Within  the  Department  is  created  a Battery Task
26    Force to be comprised of (i) the Director of  the  Department
27    who shall serve as chair of the Task Force; (ii) the Director
28    of  the  Environmental Protection Agency;  (iii) the Director
29    of the Waste Management and Research Hazardous Waste Research
30    and Information Center; and (iv)  15  persons  who  shall  be
31    appointed  by  the  Director  of  the Department, including 2
                            -15-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    persons representing an environmental organization, 2 persons
 2    representing   the   battery   cell   industry,   2   persons
 3    representing the rechargeable powered tool/device industry, 3
 4    representatives  from  local  government   with   residential
 5    recycling  programs  (including  one from a municipality with
 6    more than a million  people),  one  person  representing  the
 7    retail  industry, one person representing a consumer group, 2
 8    persons  representing  the  waste  management  industry,  one
 9    person  representing  a  recycling  firm,  and   one   person
10    representing  a  citizens'  group active in local solid waste
11    issues.
12        (b)  The  Task  Force  shall  prepare  a  report  of  its
13    findings and recommendations and shall present the report  to
14    the  Governor  and the General Assembly on or before April 1,
15    1993. Among other things, the Task Force shall evaluate:
16             (1)  collection, storage, and processing systems for
17        the recycling and proper management of  common  household
18        batteries  and rechargeable battery products generated by
19        consumers,  businesses,  institutions,  and  governmental
20        units;
21             (2)  public education programs  that  promote  waste
22        reduction,  reuse, and recycling strategies for household
23        batteries;
24             (3)  disposal bans on specific  household  batteries
25        or rechargeable battery products;
26             (4)  management  options  for rechargeable tools and
27        appliances;
28             (5)  technical and financial assistance programs for
29        local governments;
30             (6)  guidelines and  regulations  for  the  storage,
31        transportation, and disposal of household batteries;
32             (7)  labeling  requirements  for household batteries
33        and battery packaging;
34             (8)  metal content limits and sale restrictions  for
                            -16-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        carbon-zinc, nickel-cadmium, and button batteries;
 2             (9)  market   development   options   for  materials
 3        recovered from household batteries;
 4             (10)  industry   waste    reduction    developments,
 5        including  substitution  of longer-life, rechargeable and
 6        recyclable   batteries,   substitution   of   alternative
 7        products which do not require batteries, increased use of
 8        power-source adapters, and use of  replaceable  batteries
 9        in battery-powered appliances; and
10             (11)  the  feasibility  of  reverse  distribution of
11        batteries.
12        The  Task  Force  shall  review,  evaluate,  and  compare
13    existing  battery  management  and  collection  systems   and
14    studies  including those used from other states, the European
15    Community, and other major industrial nations. The Task Force
16    shall consult with manufacturers and the public to  determine
17    the  most  cost  effective  and  efficient  means for battery
18    management.
19    (Source: P.A. 87-1250; 88-45.)
20        Section  35.  The  Hazardous  Waste  Technology  Exchange
21    Service Act is amended by changing Sections 3, 4, 5, and 6 as
22    follows:
23        (20 ILCS 1130/3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 6803)
24        Sec. 3.  For the purposes of this Act, unless the context
25    otherwise requires:
26        (a)  "Board" means the Board  of  Natural  Resources  and
27    Conservation of the Department of Natural Resources.
28        (b)  "Center"  means  the  Waste  Management and Research
29    Hazardous  Waste  Research  and  Information  Center  of  the
30    Department of Natural Resources.
31        (c)  "Department"  means  the   Department   of   Natural
32    Resources.
                            -17-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    (Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
 2        (20 ILCS 1130/4) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 6804)
 3        Sec.  4. Waste Management and Research Center. As soon as
 4    may be practicable after the effective date of this Act,  the
 5    Department  shall  establish  a  Hazardous Waste Research and
 6    Information Center. On and after the effective date  of  this
 7    amendatory  Act  of  1997,  that Center shall be known as the
 8    Waste Management and Research Center.
 9    (Source: P.A. 86-652.)
10        (20 ILCS 1130/5) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 6805)
11        Sec. 5. Duties of Center; Industrial Advisory Committee.
12        (a)  The Waste Management and  Research  Hazardous  Waste
13    Research and Information Center shall:
14             (1)  Conduct  educational  programs  to  further the
15        exchange of  information  to  reduce  the  generation  of
16        hazardous wastes or to treat or dispose of such wastes so
17        as to make them nonhazardous.
18             (2)  Provide  a  technical  information  service for
19        industries involved  in  the  generation,  treatment,  or
20        disposal of hazardous wastes.
21             (3)  Disseminate  information  regarding advances in
22        hazardous waste management technology  which  could  both
23        protect    the   environment   and   further   industrial
24        productivity.
25             (4)  Provide research in areas related to  reduction
26        of   the   generation  of  hazardous  wastes;  treatment,
27        recycling and reuse; and other issues which the Board may
28        suggest.
29             (5)  Provide other services as deemed  necessary  or
30        desirable by the Board.
31             (6)  Submit   a   biennial  report  to  the  General
32        Assembly on Center activities.
                            -18-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        (b)  The Director of the Department shall be  responsible
 2    for the administration of the Center.
 3        (c)  The  Department  shall have the authority to accept,
 4    receive and administer on behalf of the  Center  any  grants,
 5    gifts or other funds made available for purposes of this Act.
 6        (d)  The  Board  shall  (1) provide policy guidelines and
 7    goals for the Center; (2) approve the  Center's  budget;  (3)
 8    approve  any  reports; and (4) otherwise direct the Center in
 9    accordance with its statutory powers and duties contained  in
10    Section  6  of  "An  Act  in  relation  to natural resources,
11    research,  data  collection   and   environmental   studies",
12    approved July 14, 1978, as amended.
13        (e)  The  Director  shall  appoint an Industrial Advisory
14    Committee which  shall  be  composed  of  representatives  of
15    industries which are involved in the generation, treatment or
16    disposal   of   hazardous   waste,   or   representatives  of
17    organizations of such industries.  To  the  extent  possible,
18    the  Director  shall  choose  members  representing large and
19    small industries from all geographical areas  of  the  State.
20    Members of the Industrial Advisory Committee shall receive no
21    compensation  but  may  be reimbursed for reasonable expenses
22    incurred in carrying out their duties.
23        The  Industrial  Advisory  Committee  shall  advise   the
24    Department  on programs, services and activities necessary to
25    assist large and small businesses in  economically  reducing,
26    through source reduction, treatment and recycling, the amount
27    and  toxicity  of  hazardous waste to be disposed of on or in
28    the land.
29    (Source: P.A. 86-652.)
30        (20 ILCS 1130/6) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 6806)
31        Sec. 6. Appropriations.  For the purpose  of  maintaining
32    the  Waste  Management  and Research Hazardous Waste Research
33    and Information Center, paying the expenses and providing the
                            -19-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    facilities and structures  incident  thereto,  appropriations
 2    shall  be  made to the Department, payable from the Hazardous
 3    Waste Research Fund and other funds in the State Treasury.
 4    (Source: P.A. 86-652.)
 5        Section 40.  The State Finance Act is amended by changing
 6    Section 6z-32 as follows:
 7        (30 ILCS 105/6z-32)
 8        Sec. 6z-32. Conservation 2000.
 9        (a)  The Conservation 2000 Fund and the Conservation 2000
10    Projects Fund are created  as  special  funds  in  the  State
11    Treasury.    These   funds  shall  be  used  to  establish  a
12    comprehensive program to protect Illinois' natural  resources
13    through cooperative partnerships between State government and
14    public  and private landowners.  Moneys in these Funds may be
15    used,  subject  to  appropriation,   by   the   Environmental
16    Protection   Agency   and  the  Departments  of  Agriculture,
17    Conservation,   Energy    and    Natural    Resources,    and
18    Transportation  for  purposes  relating  to  natural resource
19    protection, recreation, tourism, and compatible  agricultural
20    and  economic development activities.  Without limiting these
21    general purposes, moneys in these Funds may be used,  subject
22    to appropriation, for the following specific purposes:
23             (1)  To foster sustainable agriculture practices and
24        control  soil erosion and sedimentation, including grants
25        to Soil and Water Conservation Districts for conservation
26        practice   cost-share   grants   and    for    personnel,
27        educational, and administrative expenses.
28             (2)  To establish and protect a system of ecosystems
29        in  public  and  private  ownership  through conservation
30        easements, incentives to public and  private  landowners,
31        including  technical  assistance  and  grants,  and  land
32        acquisition  provided  these mechanisms are all voluntary
                            -20-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        on the part of the landowner and do not involve  the  use
 2        of eminent domain.
 3             (3)  To  develop  a systematic and long-term program
 4        to effectively measure and monitor natural resources  and
 5        ecological  conditions  through investments in technology
 6        and involvement of scientific experts.
 7             (4)  To initiate strategies  to  enhance,  use,  and
 8        maintain   Illinois'   inland  lakes  through  education,
 9        technical assistance, research, and financial incentives.
10             (5)  To conduct  an  extensive  review  of  existing
11        Illinois water laws.
12        (b)  The  State  Comptroller  and  State  Treasurer shall
13    automatically  transfer  on  the  last  day  of  each  month,
14    beginning on September 30, 1995 and ending on June 30,  2001,
15    from  the General Revenue Fund to the Conservation 2000 Fund,
16    an amount equal to 1/10 of the  amount  set  forth  below  in
17    fiscal  year  1996  and an amount equal to 1/12 of the amount
18    set forth below in each of the other specified fiscal years:
19             Fiscal Year              Amount
20               1996                  $ 3,500,000
21               1997                  $ 9,000,000
22               1998                  $10,000,000
23               1999                  $11,000,000
24               2000                  $12,500,000
25               2001                  $14,000,000
26        (c)  There shall be deposited into the Conservation  2000
27    Projects  Fund  such  bond  proceeds and other moneys as may,
28    from time to time, be provided by law.
29    (Source: P.A. 89-49, eff. 6-29-95;  89-626,  8-9-96;  revised
30    12-10-96.)
31        Section  45.  The  Illinois  Pension  Code  is amended by
32    changing Section 15-106 as follows:
                            -21-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        (40 ILCS 5/15-106) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 15-106)
 2        Sec. 15-106.  Employer.  "Employer":  The  University  of
 3    Illinois,   Southern   Illinois   University,  Chicago  State
 4    University,  Eastern  Illinois  University,  Governors  State
 5    University, Illinois State University, Northeastern  Illinois
 6    University,  Northern  Illinois  University, Western Illinois
 7    University, the State Board of Higher Education, the Illinois
 8    Mathematics and Science Academy, the State Geological  Survey
 9    Division  of  the  Department of Natural Resources, the State
10    Natural History Survey Division of the Department of  Natural
11    Resources,  the State Water Survey Division of the Department
12    of Natural  Resources,  the  Waste  Management  and  Research
13    Hazardous  Waste  Research  and  Information  Center  of  the
14    Department of Natural Resources, the University Civil Service
15    Merit  Board, the Board of Trustees of the State Universities
16    Retirement System,  the  Illinois  Community  College  Board,
17    State  Community College of East St. Louis, community college
18    boards, any association of community college boards organized
19    under Section 3-55 of the Public Community College Act,  and,
20    only  during  the  period  for  which  employer contributions
21    required  under  Section  15-155  are  paid,  the   following
22    organizations:  the  alumni associations, the foundations and
23    the athletic  associations  which  are  affiliated  with  the
24    universities   and  colleges  included  in  this  Section  as
25    employers. A department as defined in Section 14-103.04 is an
26    employer for any person appointed by the Governor  under  the
27    Civil  Administrative  Code  of  Illinois  the State who is a
28    participating employee as defined in Section 15-109.
29    (Source: P.A. 89-4, eff. 1-1-96; 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
30        Section 50. The Civil Administrative Code of Illinois  is
31    amended by changing Section 62 as follows:
32        (110 ILCS 355/62) (from Ch. 127, par. 62)
                            -22-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        Sec.  62.  Retention of duties by University of Illinois.
 2    Unless otherwise provided by law, the  functions  and  duties
 3    formerly  exercised  by  the  State  entomologist,  the State
 4    laboratory of natural history, the State water survey and the
 5    State geological survey and vested in the Illinois Department
 6    of Natural Resources, and the functions  and  duties  of  the
 7    Waste  Management  and  Research Hazardous Waste Research and
 8    Information Center and its Hazardous Materials Laboratory  as
 9    authorized by the Hazardous Waste Technology Exchange Service
10    Act,  approved  September  16,  1984,  as  now  or  hereafter
11    amended,  shall continue to be exercised at the University of
12    Illinois in buildings and places  provided  by  the  trustees
13    thereof.
14    (Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
15        Section 55. The Surface Coal Mining Land Conservation and
16    Reclamation  Act  is amended by changing Sections 1.03, 1.04,
17    1.05, 2.08, 6.07, 6.08, 7.03, 7.04, and 9.01 as follows:
18        (225 ILCS 720/1.03) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 7901.03)
19        Sec. 1.03.  Definitions.
20        (a)  Whenever used or referred to in this Act,  unless  a
21    different meaning clearly appears from the context;
22             (1)  "Affected land" means:
23                  (A)  in   the   context   of   surface   mining
24             operations,   the   areas   described   in   Section
25             1.03(a)(24)(B), and
26                  (B)  in   the  context  of  underground  mining
27             operations, surface areas on which  such  operations
28             occur  or  where such activities disturb the natural
29             land surface.
30             (2)  "Approximate  original  contour"   means   that
31        surface configuration achieved by backfilling and grading
32        of  the  mined area so that the reclaimed area, including
                            -23-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        any terracing or  access  roads,  closely  resembles  the
 2        general surface configuration of the land prior to mining
 3        and  blends into and compliments  the drainage pattern of
 4        the surrounding terrain, with  all  highwalls  and  spoil
 5        piles eliminated.
 6             (3)  "Article" means an article of this Act.
 7             (4)  "Department"  means  the  Department of Natural
 8        Resources, or such department, bureau, or  commission  as
 9        may  lawfully  succeed  to  the powers and duties of such
10        Department.
11             (5)  "Director" means the Director of the Department
12        or such officer, bureau or  commission  as  may  lawfully
13        succeed to the powers and duties of such Director.
14             (6)  "Federal  Act" means the Federal Surface Mining
15        Control and Reclamation Act of 1977 (Public Law 95-87).
16             (7)  "Imminent danger to the health  and  safety  of
17        the  public"  means  the  existence  of  any condition or
18        practice,  or  any  violation  of  a  permit   or   other
19        requirement  of  this  Act  in  a  mining and reclamation
20        operation, which condition, practice, or violation  could
21        reasonably be expected to cause substantial physical harm
22        to persons outside the permit area before such condition,
23        practice,  or  violation  can  be  abated.   A reasonable
24        expectation of death or serious injury  before  abatement
25        exists  if  a  rational  person,  subjected  to  the same
26        conditions or practices giving rise to the  peril,  would
27        not   expose  himself  to  the  danger  during  the  time
28        necessary for abatement.
29             (8)  (Blank).
30             (9)  "Interagency Committee" means  the  Interagency
31        Committee  on  Surface    Mining  Control and Reclamation
32        created by Section 1.05.
33             (9-a)  "Lands eligible  for  remining"  means  those
34        lands  that  would otherwise be eligible for expenditures
                            -24-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        under the Abandoned Mined  Lands  and  Water  Reclamation
 2        Act.
 3             (10)  "Mining   and  reclamation  operations"  means
 4        mining  operations  and  all  activities  necessary   and
 5        incident to the reclamation of such operations.
 6             (11)  "Mining  operations" means both surface mining
 7        operations and underground mining operations.
 8             (12)  "Operator" means any person  engaged  in  coal
 9        mining,  and  includes  political  subdivisions, units of
10        local government and instrumentalities of  the  State  of
11        Illinois, and public utilities.
12             (13)  "Permit" means a permit or a revised permit to
13        conduct  mining  operations and reclamation issued by the
14        Department under this Act.
15             (14)  "Permit  applicant"  or  "applicant"  means  a
16        person applying for a permit.
17             (15)  "Permit application" or "application" means an
18        application for a permit under this Act.
19             (16)  "Permit area" means the land described in  the
20        permit.
21             (17)  "Permittee" means a person holding a permit.
22             (18)  "Permit  term"  means  the period during which
23        the permittee may engage in  mining  operations  under  a
24        permit.
25             (19)  "Person"  means  an  individual,  partnership,
26        copartnership, firm, joint venture, company, corporation,
27        association,   joint   stock   company,   trust,  estate,
28        political subdivision, or any  other  public  or  private
29        legal  entity,  or  their  legal representative, agent or
30        assigns.
31             (20)  "Reclamation"   means    conditioning    areas
32        affected  by mining operations to achieve the purposes of
33        this Act.
34             (21)  "Reclamation plan" means a plan  described  in
                            -25-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        Section 2.03.
 2             (22)  "Regulations"  means  regulations  promulgated
 3        under the Federal Act.
 4             (23)  "Section" means a section of this Act.
 5             (24)  "Surface    mining   operations"   means   (A)
 6        activities  conducted  on  the  surface   of   lands   in
 7        connection   with   a   surface   coal  mine  or  surface
 8        operations.  Such activities include excavation  for  the
 9        purpose  of  obtaining coal including such common methods
10        as contour, strip, auger, mountaintop removal,  box  cut,
11        open  pit, and area mining, coal recovery from coal waste
12        disposal areas, the uses of explosives and blasting,  and
13        in  situ  distillation  or  retorting,  leaching or other
14        chemical  or  physical  processing,  and  the   cleaning,
15        concentrating,   or   other  processing  or  preparation,
16        loading of coal at or near the mine  site;  and  (B)  the
17        areas  on  which  such  activities  occur  or  where such
18        activities disturb the natural land surface.  Such  areas
19        include  any adjacent land the use of which is incidental
20        to  any  such  activities,  all  lands  affected  by  the
21        construction of new roads or the improvement  or  use  of
22        existing  roads  to  gain  access  to  the  site  of such
23        activities and for haulage,  and  excavations,  workings,
24        impoundments,  dams,  refuse  banks,  dumps,  stockpiles,
25        overburden  piles,  spoil  banks,  culm  banks, tailings,
26        holes  or  depressions,  repair  areas,  storage   areas,
27        processing  areas,  shipping  areas  and other areas upon
28        which are sited structures, facilities, or other property
29        or materials on the surface, resulting from  or  incident
30        to such activities.
31             (25)  "Toxic  conditions" and "toxic materials" mean
32        any conditions and materials that will not support higher
33        forms of plant or animal life in any place in  connection
34        with   or  as  a  result  of  the  completion  of  mining
                            -26-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        operations.
 2             (26)  "Underground  mining  operations"  means   the
 3        underground excavation of coal and (A) surface operations
 4        incident  to  the underground extraction of coal, such as
 5        construction, use, maintenance, and reclamation of roads,
 6        above-ground  repair  areas,  storage  areas,  processing
 7        areas, shipping areas, areas on which are  sited  support
 8        facilities  including  hoist and ventilation ducts, areas
 9        used for the storage and disposal of waste, and areas  on
10        which materials incident to underground mining operations
11        are  placed,  and  (B) underground operations incident to
12        underground  excavation  of  coal,  such  as  underground
13        construction,  operation,  and  reclamation  of   shafts,
14        adits,    underground   support   facilities,   in   situ
15        processing, and underground mining, hauling, storage,  or
16        blasting.
17             (27)  "Unwarranted  failure  to  comply"  means  the
18        failure of a permittee to prevent the occurrence of or to
19        abate  any  violation of his permit or any requirement of
20        this Act due to indifference, lack of diligence, or  lack
21        of reasonable care.
22        The  Department  shall by rule define other terms used in
23    this Act if necessary or desirable to achieve the purposes of
24    this Act.
25    (Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
26        (225 ILCS 720/1.04) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 7901.04)
27        Sec. 1.04.  Advisory Council on Reclamation.
28        (a)  There is created the Surface Mining Advisory Council
29    to consist of 9 members, plus the  Director  or  his  or  her
30    designee.  Members of the Advisory Council shall be appointed
31    by the Governor, with the advice and consent of  the  Senate.
32    The  members  appointed  to  the  Council shall represent the
33    following interests: conservation, agriculture, surface  coal
                            -27-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    mining  industry, local government, environmental protection,
 2    the  colleges  and  universities,  underground  coal   mining
 3    industry,  labor,  and the general public.  The members shall
 4    be knowledgeable concerning the nature of problems of  mining
 5    operations  and  reclamation.   The Council shall select from
 6    its members a chairperson and such other officers as it deems
 7    necessary.  The term of membership on  the  Advisory  Council
 8    shall  be  3 years, except that the Governor may make initial
 9    appointments or fill vacancies for lesser terms  so  that  at
10    least   3  memberships  expire  annually.    Members  may  be
11    reappointed. Vacancies  occurring  on  the  Advisory  Council
12    shall  be  filled,  as  nearly  as  possible,  with  a person
13    representing the interest of his or her  predecessor  on  the
14    Advisory Council.  Members of the Council shall be reimbursed
15    for   ordinary   and   necessary  expenses  incurred  in  the
16    performance of the Council's duties.  Members of the  Council
17    shall,  in addition, receive $100 a day for each day spent in
18    the performance of their duties as Advisory Council members.
19        (b)  The Advisory Council shall meet at least 3 times  in
20    each  calendar  year on a date specified at least one week in
21    advance of the meeting.  A  meeting  may  be  called  by  the
22    Director  or on the request of a majority of Advisory Council
23    members.
24        (c)  The Council shall act solely as an advisory body  to
25    the  Director  and  to  the  Land Reclamation Division of the
26    Office of Mines and  Minerals  within  the  Department.   The
27    recommendations  of  the Council shall have no binding effect
28    on the Director or on the Division of Land Reclamation.   The
29    advice,  findings and recommendations of the Advisory Council
30    shall be made public in a semi-annual report published by the
31    Department.
32        (d)  The Department shall present proposed rules  related
33    to  this  Act,  and  proposed  changes  in such rules, to the
34    Advisory Council for its comments before putting  such  rules
                            -28-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    or changes into effect, except for circumstances of emergency
 2    or other circumstances enumerated in subsection 5(b), (d) and
 3    (e) of The Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
 4        (e)  The  Council  shall  review  the Federal Act and the
 5    development and implementation of an approved permanent State
 6    program thereunder.  The Council shall make  its  review  and
 7    written  recommendations  to  the  Director.  The Council may
 8    seek comment from affected persons and the  public  prior  to
 9    making its recommendations.
10        (f)  If  as  a result of any final action by the Congress
11    of the United States, any agency of the United States, or any
12    court, any provision of the Federal Act or the Regulations is
13    amended, modified, construed,  or  rendered  inapplicable  to
14    mining and reclamation operations in this State, the Director
15    shall  forthwith  call a meeting of the Council.  The Council
16    shall review such final action and its effect in this  State.
17    The Council shall recommend changes in this Act and the rules
18    adopted  under this Act which would cause application of this
19    Act to reflect such final action.  Pending  formal  amendment
20    of  this  Act  for  reason  stated  in  this  subsection, the
21    Director may administer this Act by emergency regulations  in
22    accordance  with  the  purposes  of  this Act and in a manner
23    consistent with any such final action of Congress, a  federal
24    agency or a court.
25    (Source: P.A. 81-1015.)
26        (225 ILCS 720/1.05) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 7901.05)
27        Sec.  1.05.  Interagency Committee.  There is created the
28    Interagency  Committee  on   Surface   Mining   Control   and
29    Reclamation, which shall consist of the Director (or Division
30    Head)  of  each  of  the  following  State agencies:  (a) the
31    Department of Agriculture, (b) the  Environmental  Protection
32    Agency, (c) the Department of Commerce and Community Affairs,
33    and  (d) any other State Agency designated by the Director as
                            -29-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    having a programmatic role in the  review  or  regulation  of
 2    mining operations and reclamation whose comments are expected
 3    by the Director to be relevant and of material benefit to the
 4    process  of reviewing permit applications under this Act. The
 5    Interagency  Committee  on   Surface   Mining   Control   and
 6    Reclamation  shall  be  abolished on June 30, 1997. Beginning
 7    July 1, 1997, all programmatic functions  formerly  performed
 8    by  the  Interagency  Committee on Surface Mining Control and
 9    Reclamation shall be performed by the  Office  of  Mines  and
10    Minerals  within  the Department of Natural Resources, except
11    as otherwise provided by Section 9.04 of this Act.
12    (Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
13        (225 ILCS 720/2.08) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 7902.08)
14        Sec.  2.08.   Standards  for  approval  of  permits   and
15    revisions.
16        (a)  On  the  basis  of  a  complete  application,  or  a
17    revision  thereof,  and  after  completion  of the procedures
18    required by Section 2.04, the Department shall grant, require
19    modification of, or  deny  the  application.   The  applicant
20    shall  have  the  burden of establishing that its application
21    complies with all the requirements of this Act.
22        (b)  No permit or revised permit shall be  issued  unless
23    the   application   affirmatively   demonstrates,   and   the
24    Department  finds  that  (1)  the application is accurate and
25    complete and that all the requirements of this Act have  been
26    complied  with;  (2)  the  applicant  has  demonstrated  that
27    reclamation as required by this Act can be accomplished under
28    this  reclamation plan and that completion of the reclamation
29    plan will in fact comply with  every  applicable  performance
30    standard  of  this  Act;  (3)  the assessment of the probable
31    cumulative impact of all anticipated mining in  the  area  on
32    the  hydrologic  balance  specified by the Department by rule
33    has been made by  the  Department  and  the  proposed  mining
                            -30-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    operation  has  been  designed  to prevent material damage to
 2    hydrologic balance outside the permit area; and (4) the  area
 3    proposed   to  be  mined  is  not  included  within  an  area
 4    designated unsuitable for surface coal mining  under  Article
 5    VII   and  is  not  within  an  area  under  study  for  such
 6    designation in an administrative proceeding  commenced  under
 7    Article  VII.   Except for operations subject to exemption by
 8    Section 510(d)(2) of the Federal Act (PL95-87), a  permit  or
 9    revised permit for mining operations on prime farmland may be
10    issued  only if the Department also finds in writing that the
11    operator has the technological  capability  to  restore  such
12    mined area, within a reasonable time, to equivalent or higher
13    levels   of   yield   as  non-mined  prime  farmland  in  the
14    surrounding area under equivalent levels  of  management  and
15    can  meet  the soil reconstruction standards in Section 3.07.
16    Such findings shall be made in accordance with standards  and
17    procedures adopted by the Department by rule.  The Department
18    shall  make  the  findings  required  by  this  subsection in
19    writing on the basis of the  information  set  forth  in  the
20    application, or from information otherwise available which is
21    described  in the Department's findings and made available to
22    the applicant and the public.
23        (c)  A permit or revised permit may be issued only  after
24    the  Department  considers  in  writing any comments filed by
25    members of the Interagency Committee and County Boards.  When
26    a complete application is received by the Department, a  copy
27    of  it  shall  be  provided to each member of the Interagency
28    Committee.  Members of the Interagency Committee shall review
29    and comment on protection of  the  hydrologic  system,  water
30    pollution   control,  the  reclamation  plan,  soil  handling
31    techniques, dams and impoundments and  postmining  land  use.
32    Comments  on the application shall be in writing and shall be
33    filed with the Department  within  45  days.   Each  member's
34    comments  shall  be  based  on  factual,  legal and technical
                            -31-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    considerations  with  respect  to  which   his   agency   has
 2    authority,  and  which  shall  be  set  forth  in writing.  A
 3    member who does not comment within 45 days shall be deemed to
 4    have waived his right to comment under this subsection.   The
 5    Department  shall  file  comments  received  from Interagency
 6    Committee members at the same locations at which  the  permit
 7    application  is available for public inspection in accordance
 8    with Section 2.04.
 9        (d)  If information available to the Department indicates
10    that  any  mining  operation  owned  or  controlled  by   the
11    applicant is currently in violation of this Act or other laws
12    pertaining  to  air  or  water  environmental protection, the
13    permit shall not be issued until the applicant submits  proof
14    that  such  violation has been corrected or is in the process
15    of being corrected to the satisfaction of the Department,  or
16    of  the department or agency which has jurisdiction over such
17    violation.  No permit shall be issued to an applicant after a
18    finding by the Department,  after  opportunity  for  hearing,
19    that   the  applicant,  or  the  operator  specified  in  the
20    application, controls or  has  controlled  mining  operations
21    with  a    demonstrated  pattern  of wilful violations of the
22    Federal Act or this Act of such nature and duration and  with
23    such  resulting  irreparable  damage to the environment as to
24    indicate an intent not to comply with the provisions  of  the
25    Federal Act or this Act.
26        (e)  After  the  effective date of this amendatory Act of
27    1997, the prohibition of subsection (d) shall not apply to  a
28    permit  application  due  to  any violation resulting from an
29    unanticipated event or condition at  a  surface  coal  mining
30    operation  on lands eligible for remining under a permit held
31    by the person making such application.
32        As used in this subsection:
33             (1)  "unanticipated event  or  condition"  means  an
34        event  or  condition  encountered in a remining operation
                            -32-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        that was not contemplated in the applicable surface  coal
 2        mining and reclamation permit; and
 3             (2)  "violation"  has  the same meaning as such term
 4        has under subsection (d).
 5    (Source: P.A. 81-1015.)
 6        (225 ILCS 720/6.07) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 7906.07)
 7        Sec. 6.07.  Forfeiture.
 8        (a)  The Attorney General, on request of the  Department,
 9    shall  institute proceedings to have the bond of the operator
10    forfeited for  violation  by  the  operator  of  any  of  the
11    provisions  of  this Act or for noncompliance with any lawful
12    rule or regulation promulgated by the Department  thereunder.
13    Before  making  such  request  of  the  Attorney General, the
14    Department shall  notify  the  operator  in  writing  of  the
15    alleged  violation  or  non-compliance  and  shall afford the
16    operator the right to  appear  before  the  Department  at  a
17    hearing to be held not less than 30 days after the receipt of
18    such notice by the operator.  At the hearing the operator may
19    present  for  the consideration of the Department statements,
20    documents and other information with respect to  the  alleged
21    violation.    After   the  conclusion  of  the  hearing,  the
22    Department shall either withdraw the notice of  violation  or
23    shall  request  the Attorney General to institute proceedings
24    to have the bond of the operator forfeited  as  to  the  land
25    involved.
26        (b)  The  Department  shall  prescribe by rule the events
27    and conditions on the basis  of  which  it  may  request  the
28    Attorney  General  to  institute bond forfeiture proceedings.
29    Such rules shall be no less stringent than the Regulations.
30        (c)  In  the  event  that  the  Department  requests  the
31    Attorney General to institute proceedings to  have  the  bond
32    forfeited,  the Department shall send written notification to
33    the permittee and, if applicable, the  surety  on  the  bond,
                            -33-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    stating  the  reasons  for  its decision and the amount to be
 2    forfeited.
 3        (d)  The amount of  forfeiture  shall  be  based  on  the
 4    actual  cost of the necessary work by a third party to remedy
 5    the violation, except that the amount shall  not  exceed  the
 6    amount  of  the  bond  or  deposit  for the area in which the
 7    violation occurred.
 8        (e)  Any operator  against  whom  forfeiture  proceedings
 9    have  been  required shall not be issued a permit for further
10    mining in Illinois unless he provides  additional  assurances
11    satisfactory to the Department that such proceedings will not
12    again become necessary.
13        (f)  In  the event the bond or deposit for a surface coal
14    mining operation on lands eligible for remining is forfeited,
15    funds appropriated for expenditure under the Abandoned  Mined
16    Lands  and Water Reclamation Act may be used if the amount of
17    the bond or deposit is not sufficient to provide for adequate
18    reclamation or abatement.
19    (Source: P.A. 81-1015.)
20        (225 ILCS 720/6.08) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 7906.08)
21        Sec. 6.08.  Release of bonds.
22        (a)  A permittee may file a request with  the  Department
23    for  the  release  of  all  or  part of a performance bond or
24    deposit.
25    Within 30 days after an application for such release has been
26    filed with the Department, the operator shall submit  a  copy
27    of  a  public  notice  placed  at  least  once  a  week for 4
28    successive weeks in a newspaper of general circulation in the
29    locality of the mining operation.  Such public  notice  shall
30    be  considered part of the bond release application and shall
31    contain a notification of the precise location  of  the  land
32    affected, the number of acres, the permit and the date it was
                            -34-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    approved, the amount of the bond filed and the portion sought
 2    to be released, the type and approximate dates of reclamation
 3    work  performed, and a description of the results achieved as
 4    they relate  to  the  operator's  approved  reclamation.   In
 5    addition,  as  part  of  any  bond  release  application, the
 6    applicant shall submit copies of letters which he has sent to
 7    adjoining property owners, local governmental bodies,  county
 8    boards,  planning  agencies,  and  sewage and water treatment
 9    authorities, or water companies in the locality in which  the
10    mining  and reclamation operations took place, notifying them
11    of his intention to seek release from the bond.
12        (b)  Within 30 days after receipt of the notification and
13    request, the  Department  shall  conduct  an  inspection  and
14    evaluation of the reclamation work involved.  Such evaluation
15    shall  consider, among other things, the degree of difficulty
16    to complete any remaining reclamation, whether  pollution  of
17    surface and subsurface water is occurring, the probability of
18    continuance  or  future occurrence of such pollution, and the
19    estimated cost of abating such pollution.
20        (c)  Any person with a valid legal interest  which  might
21    be  adversely  affected by release of the bond or deposit, or
22    the responsible officer or head of  any  Federal,  State,  or
23    local  governmental  agency  which has jurisdiction by law or
24    special expertise with respect to any environmental,  social,
25    or   economic   impact  involved  in  the  operation,  or  is
26    authorized to develop  and  enforce  environmental  standards
27    with  respect to such operations, may file written objections
28    to the proposed release with the Department  within  30  days
29    after   the  last  publication  of  the  notice  provided  in
30    subsection (a) of this Section.  If  written  objections  are
31    filed,  and  a  hearing  is  requested,  the Department shall
32    inform all interested parties of the time and  place  of  the
33    hearing,  and  shall hold a public hearing in the locality of
34    the mining operation proposed for  bond  or  deposit  release
                            -35-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    within  30  days  after the request for such hearing.  At the
 2    option of an objector, hearings shall be held  at  the  State
 3    capital.   The  Department shall advertise the date, time and
 4    location of such public hearings in a  newspaper  of  general
 5    circulation in the locality for 2 consecutive weeks.
 6        (d)  The  Department may release in whole or in part said
 7    bond  or  deposit  if  the  Department   is   satisfied   the
 8    reclamation covered by the bond or deposit or portion thereof
 9    has  been  accomplished  as required by this Act according to
10    the following schedule:
11        (1)  When  the  operator   completes   the   backfilling,
12    regrading,   and   drainage  control  of  a  bonded  area  in
13    accordance with an approved reclamation plan, a maximum of 60
14    per cent of the bond or collateral for the applicable  permit
15    area may be released.
16        (2)  After  revegetation  has  been  established  on  the
17    regraded   mined   lands  in  accordance  with  the  approved
18    reclamation plan, an additional amount of the bond or deposit
19    may be released.  When determining  the  amount  of  bond  or
20    deposit to be released after successful revegetation has been
21    established,  the Department shall retain that amount of bond
22    or deposit for the revegetated area which would be sufficient
23    for  a  third  party  to  pay  the  cost  of   reestablishing
24    revegetation  and  for  the  period  specified  for  operator
25    responsibility.    No  part  of  the bond or deposit shall be
26    released under this paragraph so long as the lands  to  which
27    the  release  would  be applicable are contributing suspended
28    solids to streamflow or runoff outside  the  permit  area  in
29    excess  of  the  requirements  set  by this Act or until soil
30    productivity for prime farmlands has returned  to  equivalent
31    levels of yield as nonmined land of the same soil type in the
32    surrounding area under equivalent management practices.
33        (3)  When  the  operator  has  successfully completed all
34    mining and reclamation activities, the remaining  portion  of
                            -36-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    the  bond  may  be released, but not before the expiration of
 2    the period specified for operator responsibility.
 3        (4)  No  bond  shall  be   fully   released   until   all
 4    reclamation requirements of the permit and this Act are fully
 5    met.
 6        (e)  The Department shall notify the permittee in writing
 7    of  its  decision to release or not to release all or part of
 8    the performance bond or deposit (1) within 60 days after  the
 9    filing  of  the  request,  if no public hearing is held under
10    subsection (c) of this Section, or (2) if  a  public  hearing
11    has been held under subsection (c) of this Section, within 30
12    days thereafter.
13        (f)  If  the  Department  disapproves the application for
14    release of the  bond  or  deposit  or  portion  thereof,  the
15    Department shall state in writing the reasons for disapproval
16    and  shall  recommend  corrective actions necessary to secure
17    said release.  An opportunity for a public hearing  shall  be
18    provided.
19        (g)  If the Department approves the application, it shall
20    notify  the  municipality  and  county  in  which  the mining
21    operation is located by certified mail at least 30 days prior
22    to the release of all or a portion of the bond or deposit.
23        (h)  The Department may by rule  provide  procedures  for
24    the  administration of this Section, including procedures for
25    hearings and informal conferences.
26        (i)  Surface coal mining operations on lands eligible for
27    remining shall not affect the eligibility of those lands  for
28    reclamation  and  restoration under the Abandoned Mined Lands
29    and Water Reclamation Act after the release of  the  bond  or
30    deposit for any such operation under this Section.
31    (Source: P.A. 81-1509.)
32        (225 ILCS 720/7.03) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 7907.03)
33        Sec. 7.03.  Procedure for designation.
                            -37-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        (a)  Any  person  having  an  interest which is or may be
 2    adversely affected shall  have  the  right  to  petition  the
 3    Department  to  have an area designated as unsuitable for all
 4    or certain types of mining operations,  or  to  have  such  a
 5    designation   terminated.   Such  a  petition  shall  contain
 6    allegations of facts with  supporting  evidence  which  would
 7    tend to establish the allegations.
 8        (b)  Immediately  after  a petition under this Section is
 9    received, the Department  shall  prepare  a  land  report  in
10    accordance with Section 7.04, unless the petition is rejected
11    by the Department as incomplete, frivolous, or submitted by a
12    person  lacking  an  interest  which  is  or may be adversely
13    affected by surface coal mining operations.
14        (c)  Within 10 months after receipt of the petition,  the
15    Department shall hold a public hearing in the locality of the
16    affected  area,  after  appropriate notice and publication of
17    the date, time, and location of such hearing.    Such  notice
18    and  publication  shall state that a Land Report is available
19    for public inspection and the locations at which  it  may  be
20    inspected.   Such  a  hearing  shall be held not less than 30
21    days  after  the  Land  Report  has  been  prepared  by   the
22    Department  in  accordance with Section 7.04.  After petition
23    is filed under this  Section  and  before  the  hearing,  any
24    person  may  intervene  by  filing  allegations of facts with
25    supporting  evidence  which  would  tend  to  establish   the
26    allegations.
27        (d)  Within  60  days  after such hearing, the Department
28    shall issue and furnish  to  the  petitioner  and  all  other
29    parties  to  the  hearing,  a  written decision regarding the
30    petition, and the reasons therefor.
31        (e)  In the event  that  all  the  petitioners  stipulate
32    agreement  prior to the requested hearing, and withdraw their
33    request, such hearing need not be held.
34        (f)  The  Department  may  by   rule   adopt   additional
                            -38-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    procedures  for designation of lands under this Article.  The
 2    Department  shall  adopt  rules  to  prevent  the  filing  of
 3    repetitive or frivolous petitions with respect to  particular
 4    lands, and prescribing procedures for expediting decisions on
 5    repetitive or frivolous petitions.
 6    (Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
 7        (225 ILCS 720/7.04) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 7907.04)
 8        Sec. 7.04.  Land Report.
 9        (a)  The  Department  shall  prepare  a  Land Report with
10    respect to each petition  filed  with  the  Department  under
11    Section 7.03.  Each Land Report shall evaluate whether mining
12    operations  on  the land which is the subject of the petition
13    would have any or all of the effects described in  subsection
14    (b)  of  Section 7.02.  Each Land Report shall also contain a
15    detailed statement on (1) the potential coal resources of the
16    area, (2) the demand for coal resources, and (3)  the  impact
17    of  a  designation  of such lands as unsuitable for mining on
18    the environment, the economy, and the supply  of  coal.   The
19    Land Report shall state objectively the information which the
20    Department  has,  but shall not contain a recommendation with
21    respect to whether the petition should be granted or  denied.
22    Each  Land  Report  shall  be  completed not later than eight
23    months after receipt of  the  petition  filed  under  Section
24    7.03.
25        (b)  Each  Land  Report  shall  be  made available to the
26    public  by  the  Department  at  least  30  days  before  the
27    Department holds a public hearing under Section 7.03.
28    (Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
29        (225 ILCS 720/9.01) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 7909.01)
30        Sec. 9.01. Rules.
31        (a)  The Department may  propose,  adopt  and  promulgate
32    reasonable  rules  in  conformity  with  this  Act.   When it
                            -39-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    proposes or adopts rules the Department  shall  consider  the
 2    terrain,  the  climate  and  other  conditions of this State.
 3    Rules shall reflect the distinct differences between  surface
 4    mining operations and underground mining operations.
 5        (b)  Any  person  may  file  a  written petition with the
 6    Department proposing the adoption, amendment or repeal of any
 7    rule under this Act.  Within 90 days after  a  receipt  of  a
 8    petition,   the   Department  shall  initiate  a  rule-making
 9    proceeding under this Section with respect to such  proposal,
10    or  deny  such petition, setting forth in writing the reasons
11    for such denial.
12        (c)  Prior to the adoption, amendment, or repeal  of  any
13    rule,  the  Department  shall give at least 45 days notice of
14    its intended action. This notice period shall commence on the
15    first day the notice appears in the  Illinois  Register.  The
16    notice  shall include (1) a text of the proposed rule, or the
17    old and new materials of a proposed amendment, or the text of
18    the provision to be  repealed;  (2)  the  specific  statutory
19    citation  on  which the proposed rule, the proposed amendment
20    to a rule or the proposed repeal of a rule is  based  and  is
21    authorized;  (3)  a  description  of  the subjects and issues
22    involved; and  (4)  the  time,  place  and  manner  in  which
23    interested  persons  may  present their views and comments on
24    the intended action.  The  notice  shall  be  mailed  to  all
25    persons  who  have  filed  a  request with the Department for
26    advance notice of rule-making proceedings.
27        (d)  All interested persons who submit a  request  within
28    30  days  after notice of the proposed change is published in
29    the  Illinois  Register  shall  be  afforded   a   reasonable
30    opportunity  to  submit  data,  views, arguments or comments,
31    either  orally  or  in  writing  or  both.   The   right   to
32    cross-examine  any witnesses shall be given to any interested
33    parties, if such right is  requested.  The  Department  shall
34    consider  fully  all  written and oral submissions respecting
                            -40-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    the proposed rule.
 2        (e)  No rule may be adopted unless  substantial  evidence
 3    in support of such rule is submitted. When a rule is adopted,
 4    the  Department  shall  issue  a  concise  statement  of  the
 5    principal  reasons  for  or  against  its  adoption,  and its
 6    reasons for overruling the considerations urged  against  its
 7    adoption.
 8        (f)  No  rule  is valid unless adopted in compliance with
 9    this Section.
10        (g)  The Department shall  file  in  the  office  of  the
11    Secretary of State and in the Department's principal office a
12    certified copy of each rule and modification or repeal of any
13    rule adopted by it.
14        (c)  (h)  Each  adopted  rule  is effective 30 days after
15    filing, unless a later date is specified in the rule. No rule
16    adopted shall be retroactive. Any  operator  shall  have  the
17    right  to  proceed  with operations under this Act until such
18    rules are adopted and no such rules shall be made  applicable
19    to any operations prior to the effective date thereof.
20        (d)  (i)  In  addition to the provisions of this Section,
21    and  to  the  extent  consistent  with  this   Section,   the
22    provisions of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act apply
23    to the adoption of rules under this Act.
24    (Source: P.A. 81-1015.)
25        Section 60. The Toxic Pollution Prevention Act is amended
26    by changing Sections 3 and 5 as follows:
27        (415 ILCS 85/3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7953)
28        Sec. 3.  Definitions.  As used in this Act:
29        "Agency"  means  the  Illinois  Environmental  Protection
30    Agency.
31        "Center"   means   the   Waste  Management  and  Research
32    Hazardous Waste Research and Information Center.
                            -41-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        "Person"    means    any     individual,     partnership,
 2    co-partnership,   firm,  company,  corporation,  association,
 3    joint stock  company,  trust,  political  subdivision,  State
 4    agency,   or   any   other   legal   entity,   or  its  legal
 5    representative, agent or assigns.
 6        "Release" means emission to the air, discharge to surface
 7    waters  or  off-site  wastewater  treatment  facilities,   or
 8    on-site  release  to  the  land, including but not limited to
 9    landfills, surface impoundments and injection wells.
10        "Toxic substance"  means  any  substance  listed  by  the
11    Agency pursuant to Section 4 of this Act.
12        "Toxic  pollution  prevention"  means  in-plant practices
13    that reduce, avoid  or  eliminate:   (i)  the  use  of  toxic
14    substances,  (ii)  the  generation  of  toxic constituents in
15    wastes, (iii) the disposal or  release  of  toxic  substances
16    into  the environment, or (iv) the development or manufacture
17    of products with toxic constituents, through the  application
18    of any of the following techniques:
19             (1)  input substitution, which refers to replacing a
20        toxic  substance  or  raw  material  used in a production
21        process with a nontoxic or less toxic substance;
22             (2)  product   reformulation,   which   refers    to
23        substituting  for  an existing end product an end product
24        which is nontoxic or less  toxic  upon  use,  release  or
25        disposal;
26             (3)  production  process  redesign  or modification,
27        which refers to developing and using production processes
28        of a different design than those currently used;
29             (4)  production process modernization, which  refers
30        to  upgrading  or  replacing  existing production process
31        equipment or methods  with  other  equipment  or  methods
32        based on the same production process;
33             (5)  improved  operation and maintenance of existing
34        production process equipment and methods, which refers to
                            -42-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        modifying or adding to  existing  equipment  or  methods,
 2        including  but not limited to such techniques as improved
 3        housekeeping practices, system adjustments,  product  and
 4        process   inspections,  and  production  process  control
 5        equipment or methods;
 6             (6)  recycling,  reuse  or  extended  use  of  toxic
 7        substances by using equipment or methods which become  an
 8        integral  part  of  the production process, including but
 9        not limited to filtration and other closed loop methods.
10        However, "toxic pollution prevention" shall  not  include
11    or in any way be inferred to promote or require incineration,
12    transfer  from  one medium of release to another, off-site or
13    out of process waste recycling, or end of pipe  treatment  of
14    toxic substances.
15        "Trade   secret"   means   any   information   concerning
16    production  processes  employed  or  substances manufactured,
17    processed or otherwise  used  within  a  facility  which  the
18    Agency  determines  to satisfy the criteria established under
19    Section 3.48 of the  Environmental  Protection  Act,  and  to
20    which  specific  trade  secret status has been granted by the
21    Agency.
22    (Source: P.A. 86-914.)
23        (415 ILCS 85/5) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7955)
24        Sec. 5.  Toxic Pollution Prevention  Assistance  Program.
25    There  is  hereby  established  a  Toxic Pollution Prevention
26    Assistance Program  at  the  Waste  Management  and  Research
27    Hazardous  Waste  Research and Information Center. The Center
28    may establish cooperative programs with  public  and  private
29    colleges   and   universities   designed   to   augment   the
30    implementation  of  this  Section.   The Center may establish
31    fees, tuition, or other financial charges  for  participation
32    in the Assistance Program. These monies shall be deposited in
33    the  Toxic Pollution Prevention Fund established in Section 7
                            -43-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    of this Act.  Through the Assistance Program, the Center:
 2             (1)  Shall provide  general  information  about  and
 3        actively  publicize the advantages of and developments in
 4        toxic pollution prevention.
 5             (2)  May establish  courses,  seminars,  conferences
 6        and  other events, and reports, updates, guides and other
 7        publications  and  other  means  of  providing  technical
 8        information  for  industries,   local   governments   and
 9        citizens    concerning    toxic    pollution   prevention
10        strategies, and may, as appropriate, work in  cooperation
11        with the Agency.
12             (3)  Shall  engage  in  research  on toxic pollution
13        prevention  methods.    Such   research   shall   include
14        assessments  of  the  impact  of adopting toxic pollution
15        prevention methods on the environment, the public health,
16        and worker exposure, and assessments  of  the  impact  on
17        profitability and employment within affected industries.
18             (4)  Shall  provide on-site technical consulting, to
19        the extent practicable, to help  facilities  to  identify
20        opportunities  for  toxic  pollution  prevention,  and to
21        develop toxic pollution prevention plans.  To be eligible
22        for such consulting, the owner or operator of a  facility
23        must  agree to allow information regarding the results of
24        such consulting to be shared with  the  public,  provided
25        that the identity of the facility shall be made available
26        only with its consent, and trade secret information shall
27        remain protected.
28             (5)  May  sponsor pilot projects in cooperation with
29        the Agency,  or  an  institute  of  higher  education  to
30        develop   and  demonstrate  innovative  technologies  and
31        methods for toxic pollution prevention.  The  results  of
32        all  such  projects  shall  be  available  for use by the
33        public,  but  trade  secret  information   shall   remain
34        protected.
                            -44-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1             (6)  May  award  grants  for activities that further
 2        the purposes of this Act, including but  not  limited  to
 3        the following:
 4                  (A)  grants  to not-for-profit organizations to
 5             establish free or low-cost technical  assistance  or
 6             educational   programs   to   supplement  the  toxic
 7             pollution prevention activities of the Center;
 8                  (B)  grants  to  assist   trade   associations,
 9             business   organizations,  labor  organizations  and
10             educational  institutions  in  developing   training
11             materials to foster toxic pollution prevention; and
12                  (C)  grants   to   assist   industry,  business
13             organizations,   labor   organizations,    education
14             institutions  and industrial hygienists to identify,
15             evaluate and implement  toxic  pollution  prevention
16             measures  and alternatives through audits, plans and
17             programs.
18             The Center may establish criteria and terms for such
19        grants, including a requirement that  a  grantee  provide
20        matching  funds.   Grant money awarded under this Section
21        may not be spent for capital improvements or equipment.
22                  In determining whether to award  a  grant,  the
23        Director shall consider at least the following:
24                  (i)  the  potential  of  the project to prevent
25             pollution;
26                  (ii)  the  likelihood  that  the  project  will
27             develop techniques or processes that  will  minimize
28             the  transfer  of  pollution  from one environmental
29             medium to another;
30                  (iii)  the extent to which  information  to  be
31             developed  through the project will be applicable to
32             other persons in the State; and
33                  (iv)  the willingness of the grant applicant to
34             assist the Center in disseminating information about
                            -45-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1             the pollution prevention  methods  to  be  developed
 2             through the project.
 3             (7)  Shall establish and operate a State information
 4        clearinghouse that assembles, catalogues and disseminates
 5        information   about   toxic   pollution   prevention  and
 6        available consultant services.  Such clearinghouse  shall
 7        include  a  computer  database  containing information on
 8        managerial,  technical  and  operational  approaches   to
 9        achieving   toxic  pollution  prevention.   The  computer
10        database must be  maintained  on  a  system  designed  to
11        enable  businesses, governmental agencies and the general
12        public  readily  to  obtain   information   specific   to
13        production   technologies,   materials,   operations  and
14        products.  A business shall not be required to submit  to
15        the clearinghouse any information that is a trade secret.
16             (8)  May contract with an established institution of
17        higher education to assist the Center in carrying out the
18        provisions  of  this Section.  The assistance provided by
19        such an institution may include, but need not be  limited
20        to:
21                  (A)  engineering  field  internships  to assist
22             industries in identifying toxic pollution prevention
23             opportunities;
24                  (B)  development   of   a    toxic    pollution
25             prevention curriculum for students and faculty; and
26                  (C)  applied  toxic  pollution  prevention  and
27             recycling research.
28             (9)  Shall  emphasize  assistance to businesses that
29        have inadequate  technical  and  financial  resources  to
30        obtain  information  and  to  assess  and implement toxic
31        pollution prevention methods.
32             (10)  Shall publish a biannual report on  its  toxic
33        pollution prevention activities, achievements, identified
34        problems and future goals.
                            -46-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    (Source: P.A. 86-914; 86-1363.)
 2        Section  65.  The  Illinois  Pollution  Prevention Act is
 3    amended by changing Section 10 as follows:
 4        (415 ILCS 115/10)
 5        Sec. 10.  Definitions.  As used in this Act:
 6        "Agency"  means  the  Illinois  Environmental  Protection
 7    Agency.
 8        "Center"  means  the  Waste   Management   and   Research
 9    Hazardous Waste Research and Information Center.
10        "Person"     means     any    individual,    partnership,
11    co-partnership,  firm,  company,  corporation,   association,
12    joint  stock  company,  trust,  political  subdivision, State
13    agency,  or  any   other   legal   entity,   or   its   legal
14    representative, agent or assigns.
15        "Release" means emission to the air, discharge to surface
16    waters   or  off-site  wastewater  treatment  facilities,  or
17    on-site release to the land, including  but  not  limited  to
18    landfills, surface impoundments and injection wells.
19        "Toxic  or  hazardous  materials" means (i) any materials
20    that are reported to the Agency as released in Illinois under
21    Section 313 of the federal Emergency Planning  and  Community
22    Right  to  Know  Act  of 1986; and (ii) those wastes that are
23    reported as hazardous wastes by hazardous waste generators in
24    Illinois.
25    (Source: P.A. 87-1213.)
26        Section 70.  The Fish and Aquatic Life Code is amended by
27    changing Section 15-35 as follows:
28        (515 ILCS 5/15-35) (from Ch. 56, par. 15-35)
29        Sec. 15-35.  Mussels; open season. Mussels may  be  taken
30    only  during  the  period of April 1 15 to September 30, both
                            -47-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    inclusive, and then only from sunrise to sunset and  only  by
 2    means  of  crowfoot bars or hand picking, with or without the
 3    aid of air breathing apparatus; except that in  the  Illinois
 4    River  and  Mississippi River, including adjoining back water
 5    lakes,  mussels  may  be  taken  during  the  season  by  the
 6    additional means of hand rakes, hand forks, or hand  dredges.
 7    Mussels  may be taken from the Mississippi, Ohio, Wabash, and
 8    Illinois rivers.  Mussel fishing is permitted in other waters
 9    only upon written authorization from the Department.
10    (Source: P.A. 87-833.)
11        Section 75.  The Wildlife Code  is  amended  by  changing
12    Section 2.26 as follows:
13        (520 ILCS 5/2.26) (from Ch. 61, par. 2.26)
14        Sec.  2.26.  Any  person  attempting  to  take deer shall
15    first obtain a  "Deer  Hunting  Permit"  in  accordance  with
16    prescribed  regulations  set forth in an Administrative Rule.
17    Deer Hunting Permits shall be issued by the Department.   The
18    fee  for  a  Deer Hunting Permit to take deer with either bow
19    and arrow or gun shall not exceed $15.00 for residents of the
20    State.  The Department may by administrative rule provide for
21    non-resident deer hunting permits for which the fee will  not
22    exceed   $100  except  as  provided  below  for  non-resident
23    landowners.  Permits shall be issued without charge to:
24             (a)  Illinois landowners residing  in  Illinois  who
25        own  at  least 40 acres of Illinois land and wish to hunt
26        their land only,
27             (b)  resident  tenants  of  at  least  40  acres  of
28        commercial agricultural land where they will hunt, and
29             (c)  shareholders of a  corporation  which  owns  at
30        least  40  acres of land in a county in Illinois who wish
31        to hunt on the corporation's land only.  One permit shall
32        be issued without charge to one shareholder for  each  40
                            -48-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        acres  of  land  owned  by  the  corporation in a county;
 2        however, the number of permits issued without  charge  to
 3        shareholders  of  any corporation in any county shall not
 4        exceed 15.
 5        Bona fide landowners or tenants who do not wish  to  hunt
 6    only  on the land they own, rent or lease or shareholders who
 7    do not wish to hunt only on the land owned by the corporation
 8    shall be charged the same fee as the applicant who is  not  a
 9    landowner,  tenant  or  shareholder. Nonresidents of Illinois
10    who own at least 40 acres of land and wish to hunt  on  their
11    land  only shall be charged a fee set by administrative rule.
12    The method for obtaining these permits shall be prescribed by
13    administrative rule.
14        The deer hunting permit issued without fee shall be valid
15    on all farm lands which the person to whom it is issued owns,
16    leases or rents, except that in the case of a  permit  issued
17    to  a  shareholder,  the  permit  shall be valid on all lands
18    owned by the corporation in the county.
19        The Department may set  aside,  in  accordance  with  the
20    prescribed regulations set forth in an administrative rule of
21    the  Department,  a limited number of Deer Hunting Permits to
22    be available to persons providing evidence of  a  contractual
23    arrangement  to  hunt on properties controlled by a bona fide
24    Illinois outfitter.  The number of available permits shall be
25    based on a percentage of unfilled permits remaining after the
26    previous year's lottery.  Eligible outfitters shall be  those
27    having  membership  in,  and  accreditation  conferred  by, a
28    professional  association  of  outfitters  approved  by   the
29    Department.  The association shall be responsible for setting
30    professional   standards   and   codes  of  conduct  for  its
31    membership, subject to Departmental approval.  In addition to
32    the  fee  normally  charged  for  resident  and   nonresident
33    permits,  a  reservation  fee  not  to  exceed  $200 shall be
34    charged to  the  outfitter  for  each  permit  set  aside  in
                            -49-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1    accordance  with  this  Act.   The  reservation  fee shall be
 2    deposited into the Wildlife and Fish Fund.
 3        The standards and specifications for use of guns and  bow
 4    and   arrow   for   deer  hunting  shall  be  established  by
 5    administrative rule.
 6        No person may have in his possession any other firearm or
 7    sidearm when taking deer by the use of either a shotgun,  bow
 8    and arrow or muzzle loading rifle.
 9        Persons  having  a  firearm  deer hunting permit shall be
10    permitted to take deer only during the period from  1/2  hour
11    before  sunrise  to  sunset,  and  only during those days for
12    which an open season is established for the taking of deer by
13    use of shotgun or muzzle loading rifle.
14        Persons having an archery deer hunting  permit  shall  be
15    permitted  to  take deer only during the period from 1/2 hour
16    before sunrise to 1/2 hour  after  sunset,  and  only  during
17    those  days  for  which an open season is established for the
18    taking of deer by use of bow and arrow.
19        It shall be unlawful for any person to take deer  by  use
20    of  dogs, horses, automobiles, aircraft or other vehicles, or
21    by the use  of  salt  or  bait  of  any  kind.   An  area  is
22    considered  as  baited  during  the  presence  of  and for 10
23    consecutive days following the removal of bait.
24        It shall be unlawful to possess  or  transport  any  wild
25    deer  which  has  been injured or killed in any manner upon a
26    public highway or public right-of-way of  this  State  unless
27    exempted by administrative rule.
28        Persons hunting deer must have gun unloaded and no or bow
29    and  arrow  cased, unstrung or otherwise made inoperable by a
30    locking device shall be carried with the arrow in the  nocked
31    position during hours when deer hunting is unlawful.
32        It  shall  be  unlawful  for any person, having taken the
33    legal limit of deer by gun, to further participate  with  gun
34    in any deer hunting party.
                            -50-           LRB9002358SMdvam01
 1        It  shall  be  unlawful  for any person, having taken the
 2    legal limit of deer by bow and arrow, to further  participate
 3    with bow and arrow in any deer hunting party.
 4        The  Department  may  prohibit upland game hunting during
 5    the gun deer season by administrative rule.
 6        It shall be legal for handicapped persons, as defined  in
 7    Section  2.33,  to  utilize  a crossbow device, as defined in
 8    Department rules, to take deer.
 9        Any person who violates any of  the  provisions  of  this
10    Section, including administrative rules, shall be guilty of a
11    Class B misdemeanor.
12    (Source: P.A.  88-45;  88-416;  88-670, eff. 12-2-94; 89-715,
13    eff. 2-21-97.)
14        Section 99.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect  upon
15    becoming law.".

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