Public Act 096-1333
 
SB2573 EnrolledLRB096 16631 JDS 31907 b

    AN ACT concerning State government.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Weights and Measures Act is amended by
changing Sections 2, 6, 7, 8, 8.1, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16,
19, 20, 21, 23, 26, 30, 40, 41, 52, 54, 55, 56, and 56.1 as
follows:
 
    (225 ILCS 470/2)  (from Ch. 147, par. 102)
    Sec. 2. Definitions. As used in this Act:
    "Person" means both singular and plural as the case
demands, and includes individuals, partnerships, corporations,
companies, societies and associations.
    "Weights and measures" means all weights and measures of
every kind, instruments and devices for weighing and measuring,
and any appliances and accessories associated with any or all
such instruments and devices, including all grain moisture
measuring devices, but does not include meters for the
measurement of electricity, gas (natural or manufactured) or
water operated in a public utility system. These electricity
meters, gas meters, and water meters, and their appliances or
accessories, and slo flo meters, are specifically excluded from
the scope and applicability of this Act.
    "Sell" and "sale" includes barter and exchange.
    "Director" means the Director of Agriculture.
    "Department" means the Department of Agriculture.
    "Inspector" means an inspector of weights and measures of
this State.
    "Sealer" and "deputy sealer" mean, respectively, a sealer
of weights and measures and a deputy sealer of weights and
measures of a city.
    "Intrastate commerce" means any and all commerce or trade
that is commenced, conducted and completed wholly within the
limits of this State, and the phrase "introduced into
intrastate commerce" means the time and place at which the
first sale and delivery being made either directly to the
purchaser or to a carrier for shipment to the purchaser.
    "Commodity in package form" means a commodity put up or
packaged in any manner in advance of sale in units suitable for
either wholesale or retail sale, excluding any auxiliary
shipping container enclosing packages which individually
conform to the requirements of this Act. An individual item or
lot of any commodity not in package form as defined in this
Section but on which there is marked a selling price based on
an established price per unit of weight or of measure shall be
deemed a commodity in package form.
    "Consumer package" and "package of consumer commodity"
mean any commodity in package form that is customarily produced
or distributed for sale through retail sales agencies or
instrumentalities for consumption by individuals or use by
individuals for the purposes of personal care or in the
performance of services ordinarily rendered in or about the
household or in connection with personal possessions, and which
usually is consumed or expended in the course of such
consumption or use.
    "Nonconsumer package" and "package of nonconsumer
commodity" mean any commodity in package form other than a
consumer package, and particularly a package designed solely
for industrial or institutional use or for wholesale
distribution only.
    "Certificate of Conformance" means a document issued by the
National Conference on Weights and Measures based on testing in
participating laboratories that indicates that the weights and
measures or weighing and measuring device conform with the
requirements of National Institute of Standards and
Technology's Handbooks 44, 105-1, 105-2, 105-3, or 105-4, or
105-8 and any subsequent revisions or supplements thereto.
    "Prepackage inspection violation" means that the majority
of the lots of prepackaged commodities inspected at a single
location are found to have one or more packages below the
maximum allowable variation as published in the National
Institute of Standards and Technology Handbook 133 or the
majority of the lots inspected at a single location are found
to be below the stated net weight declaration on an average.
(Source: P.A. 92-676, eff. 7-16-02.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/6)  (from Ch. 147, par. 106)
    Sec. 6. The Director shall be, ex officio, the director of
weights and measures for the State of Illinois. The Director
may designate or appoint qualified persons to represent him in
carrying out his responsibilities as set forth in this Act.
There shall be State inspectors of weights and measures and
necessary technical and clerical personnel, appointed by the
Director director in compliance with regulations of the
Department of Central Management Services to hold office during
good behavior, and to constitute the weights and measures
staff.
(Source: P.A. 82-789.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/7)  (from Ch. 147, par. 107)
    Sec. 7. The Director director shall maintain custody of the
State standards of weight and measure and of other standards
and equipment provided for by this Act and shall keep accurate
records thereof. The Director director shall enforce the
provisions of this Act, shall maintain general supervision of
weights and measures offered for sale, sold or in use in this
State, and shall submit an annual report to the Governor each
January, summarizing all activities of his office.
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 3433.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/8)  (from Ch. 147, par. 108)
    Sec. 8. Regulations; issuance; contents. The Director
shall from time to time issue reasonable regulations for
enforcement of this Act that shall have the force and effect of
law. In determining these regulations, he shall appoint,
consult with, and be advised by committees representative of
industries to be affected by the regulations. These regulations
may include (1) standards of net weight, measure or count, and
reasonable standards of fill, for any commodity in package
form, (2) rules governing the technical and reporting
procedures to be followed and the report and record forms and
marks of approval and rejection to be used by inspectors of
weights and measures in the discharge of their official duties,
and (3) exemptions from the sealing or marking requirements of
Section 14 of this Act with respect to weights and measures of
such character or size that such sealing or marking would be
inappropriate, impracticable, or damaging to the apparatus in
question. These regulations shall include specifications,
tolerances, and regulations for weights and measures, of the
character of those specified in Section 10 of this Act,
designed to eliminate from use (without prejudice to apparatus
that conforms as closely as practicable to the official
standards) such weights and measures as are (1) inaccurate, (2)
of faulty construction (that is, not reasonably permanent in
their adjustment or not capable of correct repetition of their
indications), or (3) conducive to the perpetration of fraud.
Specifications, tolerances, and regulations for commercial
weighing and measuring devices recommended by the National
Institute of Standards and Technology and published in National
Institute of Standards and Technology Handbook 44 and
supplements thereto or in any publication revising or
superseding Handbook 44, shall be the specifications,
tolerances, and regulations for commercial weighing and
measuring devices of this State, except insofar as specifically
modified, amended, or rejected by a regulation issued by the
Director.
    The National Institute of Standards and Technology
Handbook 133 and its supplements, or any publication revising
or superseding Handbook 133, shall be the method for checking
the net contents of commodities in package form. The National
Institute of Standards and Technology Handbooks 105-1, 105-2,
105-3, 105-4, 105-8, and their supplements, or any publication
revising or superseding Handbooks 105-1, 105-2, 105-3, and
105-4, and 105-8 shall be specifications and tolerances for
reference standards and field standards weights and measures.
    For purposes of this Act, apparatus shall be deemed
"correct" when it conforms to all applicable requirements
promulgated as specified in this Section. Apparatus that does
not conform to all applicable requirements shall be deemed
"incorrect".
    The Director is authorized to prescribe by regulation,
after public hearings, container sizes for fluid dairy products
in addition to those sizes provided in Section 47 and container
sizes for ice cream, frozen desserts, and similar items.
    The Uniform Packaging and Labeling Regulation and the
Uniform Regulation for the Method of Sale of Commodities in the
National Institute of Standards and Technology Handbook 130,
and any of its subsequent supplements or revisions, shall be
the requirements and standards governing the packaging,
labeling, and method of sale of commodities for this State,
except insofar as specifically modified, amended, or rejected
by regulation issued by the Director.
(Source: P.A. 88-600, eff. 9-1-94.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/8.1)  (from Ch. 147, par. 108.1)
    Sec. 8.1. Registration of servicepersons, service agents,
and special sealers. No person, firm, or corporation shall
sell, install, service, recondition or repair a weighing or
measuring device used in trade or commerce without first
obtaining a certificate of registration. Applications by
individuals for a certificate of registration shall be made to
the Department, shall be in writing on forms prescribed by the
Department, and shall be accompanied by the required fee.
    Each application shall provide such information that will
enable the Department to pass on the qualifications of the
applicant for the certificate of registration. The information
requests shall include present residence, location of the
business to be licensed under this Act, whether the applicant
has had any previous registration under this Act or any
federal, state, county, or local law, ordinance, or regulation
relating to servicepersons and service Agencies, whether the
applicant has ever had a registration suspended or revoked,
whether the applicant has been convicted of a felony, and such
other information as the Department deems necessary to
determine if the applicant is qualified to receive a
certificate of registration.
    Before any certificate of registration is issued, the
Department shall require the registrant to meet the following
qualifications:
        (1) Has possession of or available for use weights and
    measures, standards, and testing equipment appropriate in
    design and adequate in amount to provide the services for
    which the person is requesting registration.
        (2) Passes a qualifying examination for each type of
    weighing or measuring device he intends to install,
    service, recondition, or repair.
        (3) Demonstrates a working knowledge of weighing and
    measuring devices for which he intends to be registered.
        (4) Has a working knowledge of all appropriate weights
    and measures laws and their rules and regulations.
        (5) Has available a current copy of National Institute
    of Standards and Technology Handbook 44.
        (6) Pays the prescribed registration fee for the type
    of registration:
            (A) The annual fee for a Serviceperson Certificate
        of Registration shall be $25.
            (B) The annual fee for a Special Sealer Certificate
        of Registration shall be $50.
            (C) The annual fee for a Service Agency Certificate
        of Registration shall be $50.
    "Registrant" means any individual, partnership,
corporation, agency, firm, or company registered by the
Department who installs, services, repairs, or reconditions,
for hire, award, commission, or any other payment of any kind,
any commercial weighing or measuring device.
    "Commercial weighing and measuring device" means any
weight or measure or weighing or measuring device commercially
used or employed (i) in establishing size, quantity, extent,
area, or measurement of quantities, things, produce, or
articles for distribution or consumption which are purchased,
offered, or submitted for sale, hire, or award, or (ii) in
computing any basic charge or payment for services rendered,
except as otherwise excluded by Section 2 of this Act, and
shall also include any accessory attached to or used in
connection with a commercial weighing or measuring device when
the accessory is so designed or installed that its operation
affects, or may affect, the accuracy of the device.
    "Serviceperson" means any individual who sells, installs,
services, repairs, or reconditions, for hire, award,
commission, or any other payment of kind, a commercial weighing
or measuring device.
    "Service agency" means any individual, agency, firm,
company, or corporation that, for hire, award, commission, or
any other payment of any kind, sells, installs, services,
repairs, or reconditions a commercial weighing or measuring
device.
    "Special sealer" means any serviceperson who is allowed to
service only one service agency's liquid petroleum meters or
liquid petroleum measuring devices.
    Each registered service agency and serviceperson shall
have report forms, known as "Placed in Service Reports". An
original and 2 copies of these These forms shall be executed
and in triplicate, shall include the assigned registration
number (in the case where a registered serviceperson is
representing a registered service agency both assigned
registration numbers shall be included), and shall be signed by
a registered serviceperson or by a registered serviceperson
representing a registered service agency for each rejected or
repaired device restored to service and for each newly
installed device placed in service. Whenever a registered
serviceperson or special sealer places into service a weighing
or measuring device, there shall be affixed to the device
indicator a decal provided by the Department that indicates the
device accuracy.
    Within 5 days after a device is restored to service or
placed in service, the original of a properly executed "Placed
in Service Report", together with any official rejection tag or
seal removed from the device, shall be mailed to the
Department. A The duplicate copy of the report shall be handed
to the owner or operator of the device and a the triplicate
copy of the report shall be retained by the service agency or
serviceperson.
    All field standards that are used for servicing and testing
weights and measures devices for which competence is registered
shall be submitted to the Director for initial and subsequent
verification and calibration at least once every 2 years or as
otherwise determined by the Director. When servicing
commercial weighing or measuring devices, a registered
serviceperson or registered service agency shall not use any
field standards or testing equipment that have not been
calibrated or verified by the Director. In lieu of submission
of physical standards, the Director may accept calibration
reports, verification reports, or both from any laboratory that
is formally accredited or recognized. The Director shall
maintain a list of organizations from which the Department will
accept calibration reports. The Department shall retain the
right to monitor periodically calibration results, to verify
field standard compliance to specifications and tolerance when
field standards are initially placed into service or at any
intermediate point between calibration, or both.
    A registered service agency and a registered serviceperson
shall submit, at least once every 2 years to the Department for
examination and certification, any standards and testing
equipment that are used, or are to be used, in the performance
of the service and testing functions with respect to weighing
and measuring devices for which competence is registered. A
registered serviceperson or agency shall not use in servicing
commercial weighing and measuring devices any standards or
testing equipment that have not been certified by the
Department.
    When a serviceperson's or service agency's weights and
measures are carried to a National Institute of Standards and
Technology approved out-of-state weights and measures
laboratory for inspection and testing, the serviceperson or
service agency shall be responsible for providing the
Department a copy of the current certification of all weights
and measures used in the repair, service, or testing of
weighing or measuring devices within the State of Illinois.
    All registered servicepersons placing into service scales
in excess of 30,000 pounds shall have a minimum of 10,000
pounds of State approved certified test weights to accurately
test a scale.
    Persons working as apprentices are not subject to
registration if they work with and under the supervision of a
registered serviceperson.
    The Director is authorized to promulgate, after public
hearing, rules and regulations necessary to enforce the
provisions of this Section.
    For good cause and after a hearing upon reasonable notice,
the Director may deny any application for registration or any
application for renewal of registration, or may revoke or
suspend the registration of any registrant.
    The Director may publish from time to time as he deems
appropriate, and may supply upon request, lists of registered
servicepersons and registered service agencies.
    All final administrative decisions of the Director under
this Section shall be subject to judicial review under the
Administrative Review Law. The term "administrative decision"
is defined as in Section 1 of the Administrative Review Law.
(Source: P.A. 93-32, eff. 7-1-03.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/10)  (from Ch. 147, par. 110)
    Sec. 10. Inspection. Unless otherwise provided by law, the
Director may inspect and test all weights and measures held,
offered, or exposed for sale to ascertain if they are correct.
The Except as otherwise provided in Section 43, the Director
shall, within each period of 12 months or more frequently if
necessary, inspect and test all law enforcement scales used to
determine vehicle weights and all weights and measures
commercially used (1) in determining the weight, measurement,
or count of commodities or things sold or offered or exposed
for sale on the basis of weight, measure, or count or (2) in
computing the basic charge or payment for services rendered on
the basis of weight, measure, or count to ascertain if they are
correct. However, with respect to single-service devices
(meaning those designed to be used commercially only once and
then discarded) and devices uniformly mass-produced, as by
means of a mold or die, and not susceptible to individual
adjustment, such tests may be made on representative samples of
these devices. The lots of which such samples are
representative shall be held to be correct or incorrect upon
the basis of the results of the inspections and tests on the
samples.
(Source: P.A. 88-600, eff. 9-1-94.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/11)  (from Ch. 147, par. 111)
    Sec. 11. The Director director shall investigate
complaints received by him concerning violations of the
provisions of this Act and shall conduct such investigations as
he deems appropriate and advisable to develop information on
prevailing procedures in commercial quantity determination and
on possible violations of the provisions of this Act and to
promote the general objective of accuracy in the determination
and representation of quantity in commercial transactions.
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 3433.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/12)  (from Ch. 147, par. 112)
    Sec. 12. The Director director shall from time to time
weigh or measure and inspect packages or amounts of commodities
held, offered or exposed for sale or sold or in the process of
delivery, to determine whether they contain the amounts
represented and are being held, offered or exposed for sale or
were sold in accordance with law. When such packages or amounts
of commodities are thus determined not to contain the amounts
represented or are found to be kept, offered or exposed for
sale in violation of law, the Director director may restrain
such offer, exposure or sale by order and may so mark or
identify them to indicate the illegality thereof. In carrying
out the provisions of this Section, the Director director may
employ recognized sampling procedures under which the
compliance of a given lot of packages will be determined on the
basis of the result obtained on a sample selected from and
representative of such lot. No person shall (1) sell, or keep,
offer or expose for sale in intrastate commerce any package or
amount of commodity that has been ordered off sale or marked or
identified as provided in this Section unless and until such
package or amount of commodity fully complies with all legal
requirements, or (2) dispose of any package or amount of
commodity that has been ordered off sale or marked or
identified as provided in this Section and that does not comply
with legal requirements in any manner except with the specific
approval of the Director director.
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 3433.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/13)  (from Ch. 147, par. 113)
    Sec. 13. The Director director may issue stop-use orders,
stop-removal orders and removal orders with respect to weights
and measures being or susceptible of being commercially used,
and may issue stop-removal orders and removal orders with
respect to packages or amounts of commodities kept, offered or
exposed for sale or sold or in process of delivery, whenever in
the course of his enforcement of the provisions of this Act he
deems it necessary or expedient to issue such orders. No person
shall use, remove or fail to remove from the premises specified
any weight, measure or package or amount of commodity contrary
to the terms of a stop-use order, stop-removal order or removal
order issued pursuant to this Section.
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 3433.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/14)  (from Ch. 147, par. 114)
    Sec. 14. Upon inspection and test, the Director director
shall approve for use and may seal or mark with appropriate
devices such weights and measures as he finds to be "correct"
and shall reject and mark or tag as "rejected" such weights and
measures as he finds to be "incorrect" (but susceptible of
satisfactory repair), as defined in Section 8 of this Act. Such
sealing or marking is unnecessary with respect to such weights
and measures as may be exempted therefrom by a regulation of
the Director director issued pursuant to Section 8 of this Act.
The Director director shall condemn and may seize and may
destroy weights and measures found to be "incorrect" which, in
his best judgment, are not susceptible of satisfactory repair.
Weights and measures that have been rejected may be confiscated
and destroyed by the Director director if not corrected
pursuant to, or if used or disposed of contrary to, Section 22
of this Act.
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 3433.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/15)  (from Ch. 147, par. 115)
    Sec. 15. To enforce this Act and other Acts dealing with
weights and measures and enforceable by him, the Director
director is vested with special police powers, and may without
formal warrant both arrest any violator of such Acts and seize
for use as evidence incorrect or unsealed weights and measures
or amounts or packages of commodity found to be used, retained,
offered or exposed for sale or sold in violation of law. In
performance of his official duties, the Director director may
enter and go into or upon any structure or premises without
formal warrant and may stop any person and require him to
proceed, with or without any vehicle of which he may be in
control, to a place specified by the Director director.
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 3433.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/16)  (from Ch. 147, par. 116)
    Sec. 16. The powers and duties given to and imposed upon
the Director director by Sections 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 21
and 56 of this Act shall also be conferred upon the designated
or appointed qualified persons, whenever they act under the
instructions and at the direction of the Director director.
(Source: P.A. 79-551.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/19)  (from Ch. 147, par. 119)
    Sec. 19. Subject to the annual training provisions of
Section 17, the The sealer of a city, and each of his deputy
sealers when acting under his instructions and at his
direction, has the same powers and duties within the city for
which appointed as are conferred upon the director by Sections
10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 and 56 of this Act. With respect to
Section 10, in cities of less than 200,000 population, the
powers and duties shall be strictly limited to weighing and
measuring devices used in retail trade including, for example,
weighing scales of a nominal capacity not greater than 400
pounds, retail liquid-measuring devices, taximeters,
odometers, fabric-measuring devices and cordage-measuring
devices.
    The city inspector of weights and measures shall keep a
complete record of all his official acts and shall submit an
annual report to the council of the city, and an annual report
(by January 15 on July 1) under oath to the Director of
Agriculture on blanks furnished by him, and any special reports
that the Director of Agriculture may request. Failure of a city
sealer of weights and measures and each of his or her deputy
sealers to attend annual training workshops conducted by the
Department or to provide an annual report to the Director or
any other special report that the Director requests may
invalidate the authority of a city sealer to enforce any
provision of this Act or its regulations.
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 3433.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/20)  (from Ch. 147, par. 120)
    Sec. 20. The common or legislative council of each city for
which a sealer has been appointed pursuant to Section 17 of
this Act shall (1) procure at the expense of the city such
standards of weight and measure and such additional equipment,
to be used for the enforcement of the provisions of this Act in
such city, as may be prescribed by the Director director, (2)
provide a suitable office for the sealer, and (3) make
provision for the necessary clerical services, supplies and
transportation and for defraying contingent expenses incident
to the official activities of the sealer in carrying out the
provisions of this Act. When the standards of weight and
measure thus required to be provided by a city have been
examined and approved by the Director director, they shall be
the official standards for such city. The sealer shall make or
cause to be made at least annual comparisons between his field
standards and appropriate standards of a higher order belonging
to his city or to the State, in order to maintain such field
standards in accurate condition.
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 3433.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/21)  (from Ch. 147, par. 121)
    Sec. 21. In cities for which sealers of weights and
measures have been appointed pursuant to this Act, the Director
director shall have concurrent authority to enforce the
provisions of this Act. The legislative body of each such city
may, by ordinance, prescribe the duties of the sealer and enact
regulatory measures more restrictive than, but otherwise
consistent with, the provisions of this Act.
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 3433.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/23)  (from Ch. 147, par. 123)
    Sec. 23. Commodities in liquid form shall be sold only by
liquid measure or by weight, and, except as otherwise provided
in this Act, commodities not in liquid form shall be sold only
by weight, by measure of length or area, or by count. However,
liquid commodities may be sold by weight and commodities not in
liquid form may be sold by count only if such methods give
accurate information as to the quantity of commodity sold.
    The provisions of this Section do not apply (1) to
commodities sold for immediate consumption upon the premises
where sold, (2) to vegetables sold by the head or bunch, (3) to
commodities in containers standardized by a law of this State
or by Federal law, (4) to commodities in package form when
there exists a general consumer usage to express the quantity
in some other manner, (5) to concrete aggregates, concrete
mixtures and loose solid materials such as earth, soil, gravel,
crushed stone and the like, when sold by cubic measure, or (6)
to unprocessed vegetable and animal fertilizer sold by cubic
measure. The Director director may issue such reasonable
regulations as are necessary to assure that amounts of
commodity sold are determined in accordance with good
commercial practice and are so determined and represented as to
be accurate and informative to all parties at interest.
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 3433.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/26)  (from Ch. 147, par. 126)
    Sec. 26. No commodity in package form shall be so wrapped,
nor shall it be in a container so made, formed or filled, as to
mislead the purchaser as to the quantity of the contents of the
package, and the contents of a container shall not fall below
such reasonable standard of fill as may have been prescribed
for the commodity in question by the Director director.
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 3433.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/30)  (from Ch. 147, par. 130)
    Sec. 30. National Institute of Standards and Technology
requirements and specifications. Each type of new weight and
measure or weighing and measuring device manufactured,
offered, or exposed for sale or sold or given away for the use
in trade or commerce, or used in trade and commerce in this
State, shall conform with the requirements and specifications
in the National Institute of Standards and Technology Handbook
44, 105-1, 105-2, 105-3, or 105-4, or 105-8 and any of their
revisions or supplements. A Certificate of Conformance must be
issued prior to the use of such new weight and measure or
weighing and measuring device for commercial or law enforcement
purposes. Pending the issuance of a Certificate of Conformance,
the Department may permit such new weight and measure or
weighing and measuring device to be used, provided it meets the
specifications and tolerances for that particular weight and
measure or weighing and measuring device as set forth in the
National Institute of Standards and Technology Handbook 44,
105-1, 105-2, 105-3, or 105-4, or 105-8.
(Source: P.A. 92-676, eff. 7-16-02.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/40)  (from Ch. 147, par. 140)
    Sec. 40. Inspection fee; Weights and Measures Fund. The
Except as otherwise provided in Section 43, the Director and
each sealer shall collect and receive from the user of weights
and measures a commercial weighing or measuring device
inspection fee. For the use of its Metrology Laboratory, the
testings of weights and measures and such other inspection and
services performed, the Department shall set a fee, the amount
of which shall be according to a Schedule of Weights and
Measures Inspection Fees established and published by the
Director. The fees so collected and received by the State shall
be deposited into a special fund to be known as the Weights and
Measures Fund. All weights and measures inspection fees,
metrology fees, weights and measures registrations, and
weights and measures penalties collected by the Department
under this Act shall be deposited into the Weights and Measures
Fund. The amount annually collected shall be used by the
Department for activities related to the enforcement of this
Act and the Motor Fuel and Petroleum Standards Act, and for the
State's share of the costs of the Field Automation Information
Management project. No person shall be required to pay more
than 2 inspection fees for any one weighing or measuring device
in any one year when found to be accurate. When an inspection
is made upon a weighing or measuring device because of a
complaint by a person other than the owner of such weighing or
measuring device, and the device is found accurate as set forth
in Section 8 of this Act, no inspection fee shall be paid by
the complainant. Any time a weighing or measuring device is
found to be inaccurate, the user shall pay the inspection fee.
    If any person fails or refuses to pay a fee authorized by
this Section, the Department may prohibit that person from
using commercial weighing and measuring devices. In addition to
prohibiting the use of the device, the Department may also
recover interest at the rate of 1% per month from the time the
payment is owed to the Department until the time the Department
recovers the fee.
(Source: P.A. 92-676, eff. 7-16-02; 93-198, eff. 1-1-04.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/41)  (from Ch. 147, par. 141)
    Sec. 41. No person shall operate, upon the streets or
highways of this State any vehicle tank used for commercial
purposes unless such tank either is equipped with a meter or
other device for measuring deliveries from the tank or has been
calibrated for capacity and sealed by the Director director.
When a vehicle tank has been calibrated for capacity by the
Director director, he shall issue to the owner or operator a
certificate of calibration in which is shown the calibrated
capacity of each compartment. A copy of this certificate shall
accompany the vehicle tank at all times or kept on file
available for examination either at the plant out of which the
vehicle tank is operated or at a regional or principal Illinois
office of the owner of the vehicle tank. Each compartment of a
vehicle tank shall be marked with a statement of its capacity
as defined by its indicator, located in a conspicuous place in
letters and figures not less than one inch in height.
Enforcement of this Section is reserved to the Director
director or to the sealer in a city having a population of
200,000 or greater according to the latest official United
States census.
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 3433.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/52)  (from Ch. 147, par. 152)
    Sec. 52. The Director director may by regulation establish
a standard weight per bushel for any agricultural commodity,
and any such weight per bushel shall prevail when such
commodity is contracted for, bought or sold, if no special
contract or written and signed agreement exists to the
contrary.
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 3433.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/54)  (from Ch. 147, par. 154)
    Sec. 54. A person who in any way hinders or obstructs the
Director director, his authorized representative, any one of
the inspectors or a sealer, deputy sealer or special sealer, in
the performance of his official duties is guilty of a Class B
misdemeanor.
(Source: P.A. 79-551.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/55)  (from Ch. 147, par. 155)
    Sec. 55. A person who in any way impersonates the Director
director, his authorized representative, any one of the
inspectors or a sealer, deputy sealer or special sealer, by the
use of his seal or a counterfeit of his seal or in any other
manner, is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
(Source: P.A. 79-551.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/56)  (from Ch. 147, par. 156)
    Sec. 56.
    (1) A person who, by himself or herself or by his or her
employee or agent or as the employee or agent of another
person, performs any of the acts enumerated in subparagraphs
(A) through (J) of this Section is guilty of a business offense
and shall be fined not less than $1,000 $500 for the first
offense; not less than $1,500 on a second offense; and not less
than $2,500 for a third offense.
        (A) Use or possess for the purpose of using for any
    commercial purpose specified in Section 10 of this Act,
    sell, offer, or expose for sale or hire, or possess for the
    purpose of selling or hiring, an incorrect weight or
    measure or any device or instrument used to or calculated
    to falsify any weight or measure.
        (B) Use or possess for the purpose of current use for
    any commercial purpose specified in Section 10 of this Act,
    a weight or measure without a seal or mark as required by
    Section 14 or Section 43, unless such weight or measure has
    been exempted from testing by the provisions of Section 10,
    or by a regulation of the Director director issued under
    the authority of Section 8, of this Act.
        (C) Dispose of any rejected or condemned weight or
    measure in a manner contrary to law or regulation.
        (D) Remove from any weight or measure, contrary to law
    or regulation, any tag, seal or mark placed thereon by the
    appropriate authority.
        (E) Sell or offer or expose for sale less than the
    quantity he or she represents of any commodity, thing or
    service.
        (F) Take more than the quantity he represents of any
    commodity, thing or service, when, as buyer, he or she
    furnishes the weight or measure by means of which the
    amount of the commodity, thing or service is determined.
        (G) Retain for the purpose of sale, advertise, or offer
    or expose for sale, or sell, any commodity, thing or
    service in a condition or manner contrary to law or
    regulation.
        (H) Use in retail trade, except in preparation of
    packages put up in advance of sale and of medical
    prescriptions, a weight or measure that is not so
    positioned that its indications may be accurately read and
    the weighing or measuring operation observed from a
    position which may reasonably be assumed by a customer.
        (I) By himself or herself or by the person's agent, or
    as servant or agent of another person, fail to disclose to
    the Department of Agriculture any knowledge of information
    relating to, or observation of, any device or instrument
    added to or modifying any weight or measure for the purpose
    of selling, or offering or exposing for sale, less than the
    quantity represented of a commodity or calculated to
    falsify the weight or measure, if the person is an owner or
    employee of an entity involved in the installation, repair,
    sale, or inspection of weighing or measuring devices.
        (J) Violate a provision of this Act or of the
    regulations promulgated pursuant to this Act for which a
    specific penalty has not been prescribed.
    (2) A person who, by himself or herself or by the person's
servant or agent, or as a servant or agent of another person,
performs any of the following acts is guilty of a Class 3
felony and subject to a fine of not less than $1,000.00 or not
more than $10,000.00 or the total amount of any money gained
for each day on which a violation has been found, whichever is
greater, or by imprisonment, or both:
        (A) Adds to or modifies a commercial weight or measure
    by the addition of a device or instrument that would allow
    the sale, or the offering or exposure for sale, of less
    than the quantity represented of a commodity or
    falsification of the weight or measure.
        (B) Commits as a fourth or subsequent offense any of
    the acts listed in subsection (1) of this Section, violates
    a written notice from the Department, or removes a
    Department seal.
(Source: P.A. 85-436.)
 
    (225 ILCS 470/56.1)  (from Ch. 147, par. 156.1)
    Sec. 56.1. Administrative penalties; judicial review. When
an administrative hearing is held, the hearing officer, upon
determination of any violation of any Section of this Act shall
56(1), shall refer the violation to the States Attorney's
office in the county which the business is conducted for
prosecution or levy the following administrative monetary
penalties:
        (A) A penalty of $500 $100 for a first violation.
        (B) A penalty of $1,500 $750 for a second violation at
    the same location within 2 years of the first violation.
        (C) A penalty of $2,500 $1,500 for a third or
    subsequent violation at the same location within 2 years of
    the second violation.
    The penalty so levied shall be collected by the Department.
Any penalty not paid within 60 days of notice from the
Department shall be submitted to the Attorney General's office
for collection.
    All final administrative decisions of the Department are
subject to judicial review under the Administrative Review Law.
The term "administrative decision" is defined as in Section
4-101 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
(Source: P.A. 88-600, eff. 9-1-94.)
 
    Section 10. The Soil Conservation Domestic Allotment Act is
amended by changing Sections 3 and 7 as follows:
 
    (505 ILCS 125/3)  (from Ch. 5, par. 138c)
    Sec. 3. The Department is hereby authorized and , empowered
and may, at its discretion, directed to formulate and submit to
the Secretary of Agriculture, in conformity with the provisions
of said Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act, a State
plan for each year, beginning with the year 1953. It shall be
the purpose of each such plan and each such plan shall be
designed to promote such utilization of land and such farming
practices as the Department finds will tend, in conjunction
with the operation of such other plans as may be approved for
other states by the Secretary of Agriculture, to preserve and
improve soil fertility; to promote the economic use and
conservation of land; to diminish exploitation and wasteful and
unscientific use of natural soil resources; to protect rivers
and waterways against the results of soil erosion and aid in
flood control; and to re-establish and maintain the ratio
between the purchasing power of the net income per person on
farms and that of the income per person not on farms, as
defined in subsection (a) of Section 7 of the Soil Conservation
and Domestic Allotment Act. Each such plan may shall provide
for adjustments and utilization of land, and in farming
practices through agreements with producers or through other
voluntary methods, and for benefit payments in connection
therewith, and for such methods of administration not in
conflict with any law of the State, and for such reports as the
Secretary of Agriculture finds necessary for the effective
administration of the plan, and for ascertaining whether the
plan is being carried out according to its terms.
(Source: Laws 1951, p. 1680.)
 
    (505 ILCS 125/7)  (from Ch. 5, par. 138g)
    Sec. 7. The Department shall have no authority to incur any
obligation or liability against the State of Illinois under
this Act for the expenditure of funds other than the
expenditure of funds payable from the Soil Conservation Fund,
pursuant to appropriations made therefore therefor.
(Source: Laws 1951, p. 1680.)
 
    (505 ILCS 125/6 rep.)
    Section 15. The Soil Conservation Domestic Allotment Act is
amended by repealing Section 6.
 
    Section 20. The Motor Fuel and Petroleum Standards Act is
amended by changing Sections 3, 4, 4.1, 7, and 7.1 as follows:
 
    (815 ILCS 370/3)  (from Ch. 5, par. 1703)
    Sec. 3. As used in this Act, unless the context otherwise
requires:
    (1) "ASTM" means ASTM International the American Society
for Testing and Materials, an international, nonprofit,
technical, scientific and educational society devoted to the
promotion of knowledge of the materials of engineering, and the
standardization of specifications and methods of testing.
    (2) "Motor Fuel" shall have the meaning ascribed to that
term in Section 1.1 of the "Motor Fuel Tax Law", as now or
hereafter amended.
    (3) "Petroleum" means all illuminating oils, heating oils,
LP gas, kerosene, gasoline, diesel and all volatile and
inflammable liquids produced, blended or compounded for the
purpose of, or which are suitable or practicable for, operating
motor vehicles.
    (4) "Department" means the Illinois Department of
Agriculture.
    (5) "Person" means an individual, a corporation, company,
society, association, partnership or governmental entity.
    (6) "Distributor" shall have the meaning ascribed to that
term in Section 1.2 of the "Motor Fuel Tax Law", as now or
hereafter amended, and any person who either produces, refines,
blends, transports, compounds or manufactures petroleum in
this State for the purposes of resale.
    (7) "Director" means the Director of the Illinois
Department of Agriculture or authorized designee.
    (8) "Retailer" shall have the meaning ascribed to that term
in Section 2 of the "Use Tax Act", as now or hereafter amended
and any person engaged in the business of selling petroleum
directly to the ultimate consumer.
    (9) "Co-solvent" means an alcohol that is miscible with
methanol and has a molecular weight equal to or greater than
that of butanol.
(Source: P.A. 86-232.)
 
    (815 ILCS 370/4)  (from Ch. 5, par. 1704)
    Sec. 4. ASTM standards.
    (a) All motor fuel and petroleum sold or offered for sale
in the State of Illinois shall conform to the standards of this
Act. The standards set forth in the Annual Book of ASTM
Standards (ASTM) American Society for Testing and Materials
Section 5, Volumes 05.01, 05.02, 05.03, 05.04 and 05.05 and
supplements thereto, and revisions thereof are adopted unless
modified or rejected by a regulation adopted by the Department.
In addition, any advertised or labeled declarations regarding
the quality of a motor fuel which are more stringent than ASTM
standards shall be met.
    (a-5) The quality of gasoline-oxygenate blends sold or
offered for sale in this State shall meet the standards set
forth in Section 2.1.1.1 or Section 2.1.1.2 of the Uniform
Engine Fuels, Petroleum Products, and Automotive Lubricants
Regulation as provided under the National Institute of
Standards and Technology Handbook 130, and any of its
subsequent supplements or revisions, except as specifically
modified, amended, or rejected by regulation issued by the
Director.
    (b) Minimum Automotive Gasoline Octane Requirements.
    All leaded and unleaded gasoline sold in this State shall
meet or exceed the following minimum octane numbers:
    Regular Grade 87
    Midgrade or Plus 89
    Premium or Super Grade 91 90
    An octane number is determined by adding the research
octane number to the motor octane number and dividing by 2.
(RON + MON)/2. In addition, the motor octane number shall not
be less than 82.0. All gasoline products sold at retail shall
have an octane number displayed.
    (c) Each seller of a motor fuel shall notify the purchaser
of the type and quantity of motor fuel purchased. For gasoline,
the type shall indicate the octane number. This information
shall appear on the bill of lading, manifest, or delivery
ticket for the fuel. This subsection does not apply to sales at
retail.
    (d) All gasoline products shall meet the most recently
adopted ASTM standards for spark-ignition motor fuel, and those
standards adopted under the provisions of the federal Clean Air
Act by the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency shall be the
standards of this State in those areas in which the federal
Clean Air Act fuel standards apply.
    (e) All biodiesel with a numerical value of B99 or above
B100 that is sold or offered for sale in the State of Illinois
shall conform to the ASTM D6751 Standard Specification for
Biodiesel Fuel Blend Stock (B100) for Middle Distillate Fuels.
For the purposes of this subsection (e), "Biodiesel" means a
fuel that (i) is comprised of mono-alkyl esters of long-chain
fatty acids derived from vegetable oils or animal fats and (ii)
meets the requirements of the ASTM D6751 standards shall have
the same meaning ascribed to it as in the Illinois Renewable
Fuels Development Program Act.
(Source: P.A. 96-528, eff. 1-1-10.)
 
    (815 ILCS 370/4.1)  (from Ch. 5, par. 1704.1)
    Sec. 4.1. (a) Upon any retail motor fuel dispensing device
which is used to dispense a motor fuel containing at least 1%
by volume of ethanol, of methanol, or of a combination thereof,
there shall be displayed a label which identifies the maximum
percentage by volume, to the nearest whole percent, of ethanol,
of methanol, and of co-solvent contained in the motor fuel.
Such labelling shall be done in contrasting colors with block
letters at least 1/2 inch in height and 1/4 inch in width, and
not more than one inch in height and 1/2 inch in width, and
shall be visible to customers. The label shall be located on
the front or sides of the dispenser and within the top 30
percent of the height of the dispenser. On a dual-faced
dispenser, the label shall be affixed on each front or each
side in accordance with these requirements. Devices used to
dispense only motor fuels which contain a total of less than 1%
by volume of methanol and ethanol need not be so labelled.
    (a-5) (Blank).
    (a-10) (Blank). Upon any retail motor fuel dispensing
device that is used to dispense a motor fuel containing
biodiesel or biodiesel blends, the biodiesel and biodiesel
blends shall be identified by the capital letter "B" followed
by the numerical value representing the volume percentage of
biodiesel fuel, such as B10, B20, or B100, as follows:
        (1) Upon any retail motor fuel dispensing device that
    is used to dispense a motor fuel containing between 5% and
    up to and including 20% of biodiesel, there shall be
    displayed on each retail dispenser:
            (a) the capital letter "B" followed by the
        numerical value representing the maximum volume
        percentage of biodiesel fuel and ending with
        "biodiesel blend", such as B10 biodiesel fuel blend or
        B20 biodiesel fuel blend; or
            (b) the phrase "biodiesel blend between 5% and 20%"
        or similar words.
        (2) Upon any retail motor fuel dispensing device that
    is used to dispense a motor fuel containing more than 20%
    of biodiesel, there shall be displayed on each retail
    dispenser the capital letter "B" followed by the numerical
    value representing the volume percentage of biodiesel fuel
    and ending with either "biodiesel" or "biodiesel blend",
    such as B100 biodiesel or B60 biodiesel blend.
        (3) The label shall be done in contrasting colors with
    block letters at least 1/2 inch in height and 1/4 inch in
    width, and not more than one inch in height and 1/2 inch in
    width, and shall be visible to customers. The label shall
    be located on the front or sides of the dispenser and
    within the top 30% of the height of the dispenser. On a
    dual-faced dispenser, the label shall be affixed on each
    front or each side in accordance with these requirements.
    Devices used to dispense only motor fuels that contain a
    total of 5% or less by volume of biodiesel need not be
    labeled.
    (b) Each seller of a motor fuel which contains methanol,
ethanol, or biodiesel shall notify the purchaser thereof of the
percentage by volume of ethanol, of methanol, of biodiesel, and
of co-solvent which have been added to such motor fuel, and
this information shall appear on the bill of lading, manifest
or delivery ticket for such motor fuel. However, this
subsection (b) shall not apply to sales at retail.
    (c) No motor fuel, whether or not it contains any lead or
lead compounds, may contain more ethanol or methanol than is
permitted, or contain less co-solvent than is required, by the
United States Environmental Protection Agency for unleaded
motor fuels under Section 211(f) of the federal Clean Air Act.
    (d) All motor fuel sold or offered for sale by the
distributor shall contain the percentage and type of alcohol as
stated on the bill of lading, manifest or delivery ticket.
    (e) (Blank).
    (f) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to require
or impose an obligation upon the owner or operator of a retail
motor fuel dispensing station, facility, or device to perform a
test on or measurement of a shipment of motor fuel received to
determine the specific content of ethanol, methanol, or
biodiesel.
(Source: P.A. 95-381, eff. 7-1-08.)
 
    (815 ILCS 370/7)  (from Ch. 5, par. 1707)
    Sec. 7. Administrative hearing and penalties. When an
administrative hearing is held, the hearing officer, upon
determination of a violation of this Act or rules, other than
violation of subsection (b) of Section 7.1, shall:
    (a) Levy the following administrative monetary penalties:
        (1) $500 $100 for a first violation;
        (2) $1,500 $750 for a second violation within 2 years
    of the first violation; and
        (3) $2,500 $1500 for a third or subsequent violation
    within 2 years of the second violation; or
    (b) (Blank). refer the violations to the States Attorney's
Office in the county where the violation occurred for
prosecution.
    Any penalty levied shall be collected by the Department and
paid into the Motor Fuel and Petroleum Standards Fund. Monetary
penalties not paid within 60 days of notice from the Department
shall be submitted to the Attorney General's Office for
collection.
    All decisions and actions of the Department are subject to
the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act and the Department's
Administrative Rules which pertain to administrative hearings,
petitions, proceedings, contested cases, declaratory rulings
and availability of Department files for public access.
    All final administrative decisions of the Department shall
be subject to judicial review pursuant to the provisions of the
Administrative Review Law, and all amendments and
modifications thereof, and the rules adopted pursuant thereto.
The term "administrative decision" is defined in Section 3-101
of the Code of Civil Procedure.
(Source: P.A. 88-582, eff. 1-1-95.)
 
    (815 ILCS 370/7.1)
    Sec. 7.1. Fuel rating Octane display standards;
administrative penalty.
    (a) Every retailer of motor fuel must display the octane
number or fuel rating of the fuel being dispensed on each motor
fuel device that is dispensing a motor fuel gasoline product.
The octane number or fuel rating shall be displayed on the fuel
dispensing device in a manner consistent with regulations
promulgated by the Federal Trade Commission in 16 CFR part 306.
It is a violation of this Section, (1) Sec. to display an
octane number that is greater than the octane number of the
gasoline being dispensed, (2) to display a fuel rating that is
not consistent with the percentage by volume of the principal
component of the alternative liquid automotive fuel being
dispensed, or (3) to display a fuel rating that is not
consistent with the percentage of biodiesel or biomass-based
diesel of the biodiesel blend being dispensed.
    (b) A hearing officer that, after an administrative hearing
held in accordance with the provisions of Section 7, determines
that a violation of this Section has been committed shall
impose a monetary penalty in accordance with the following
schedule:
        (1) For a first time violation if the actual octane
    number is found by the petroleum laboratory to be lower
    than the posted octane number by:
            (A) at least 0.6 0.8, but not more than 1.5 2.0
        octane numbers, $500 $100;
            (B) (blank) at least 2.1, but not more than 3.0
        octane numbers, $200;
            (C) (blank) at least 3.1, but not more than 4.0
        octane numbers, $300;
            (D) (blank) at least 4.1, but not more than 5.0
        octane numbers, $400;
            (E) (blank) at least 5.1, but not more than 6.0
        octane numbers, $500;
            (F) more than 1.5 6.0 octane numbers, $1,000.
        (2) For a second violation, at the same location under
    the same ownership, within 2 years of the first violation
    if the actual octane number is found by the petroleum
    testing laboratory to be lower than the posted octane
    number by:
            (A) at least 0.6 0.8, but not more than 1.5 2.0
        octane numbers, $1,000 $200;
            (B) (blank) at least 2.1, but not more than 3.0
        octane numbers, $400;
            (C) (blank) at least 3.1, but not more than 4.0
        octane numbers, $600;
            (D) (blank) at least 4.1, but not more than 5.0
        octane numbers, $800;
            (E) (blank) at least 5.1, but not more than 6.0
        octane numbers, $1,000;
            (F) more than 1.5 6.0 octane numbers, $2,000.
        (3) For a third or subsequent violation, at the same
    location under the same ownership, within 2 years of the
    second violation if the actual octane number is found by
    the petroleum testing laboratory to be lower than the
    posted octane number by:
            (A) at least 0.6 0.8, but not more than 1.5 2.0
        octane numbers, $2,000 $400;
            (B) (blank) at least 2.1, but not more than 3.0
        octane numbers, $800;
            (C) (blank) at least 3.1, but not more than 4.0
        octane numbers, $1,200;
            (D) (blank) at least 4.1, but not more than 5.0
        octane numbers, $1,600;
            (E) (blank) at least 5.1, but not more than 6.0
        octane numbers, $2,000;
            (F) more than 1.5 6.0 octane numbers, $4,000.
    (c) Any penalty levied under this Section shall be
collected and deposited in the manner provided for penalties
collected under Section 7. Actions and decisions of the
Department under this Section are subject to the administrative
procedures and review authorized under Section 7.
(Source: P.A. 88-582, eff. 1-1-95.)
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.