Public Act 094-1041
Public Act 1041 94TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
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Public Act 094-1041 |
SB0929 Enrolled |
LRB094 04554 LJB 34583 b |
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| AN ACT concerning regulation.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, | represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Coal Mining Act is amended by changing | Sections 11.01, 19.11, 22.18, and 38.3 and the heading of | Article 29 and by adding Sections 1.19, 1.20, 1.21, 1.22, 1.23, | 1.24, 10.08, 11.07, 11.08, 11.09, 11.10, 11.11, 13.16, 13.17, | 13.18, 29.05, 29.06, 29.07, 38.4, and 38.5 as follows: | (225 ILCS 705/1.19 new)
| Sec. 1.19. "Lifeline cord" means a fire-retardant, nylon | line of at least one quarter inch thickness, with cone-shaped | directional indicators incorporated into it, that is | permanently installed in an escape way and gives a clear | indication of the direction out of a mine. | (225 ILCS 705/1.20 new)
| Sec. 1.20. "Self-contained self-rescue (SCSR) device" | means a breathing apparatus that contains a minimum of one hour | of oxygen for one person and is approved by the Mine Safety and | Health Administration of the U.S. Department of Labor and the | Mining Board. | (225 ILCS 705/1.21 new)
| Sec. 1.21. "Surface supervisor of an underground mine" | means a certified supervisor at a mine whose duties do not | include the extraction of coal, but do include other activities | resulting in the preparation of coal, supervision of | construction or demolition of mine buildings, earth moving, gob | moving projects, or other surface projects involving the | supervision of people and machinery. | (225 ILCS 705/1.22 new)
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| Sec. 1.22. "Tag-line" means a nylon line of at least one | quarter inch thickness that has mechanical clips or other | suitable connecting devices incorporated therein that are | spaced between 3 feet and 5 feet apart that allow a group of | persons underground to attach themselves together. | (225 ILCS 705/1.23 new)
| Sec. 1.23. "Rescue chamber" means a chamber within a mine | that is properly constructed to protect against potential | hazards in case of an emergency and is properly equipped with | first aid materials, an oxygen-generating device capable of | providing a minimum of 48 hours of oxygen for at least 10 | people, and proper accommodations for persons underground | awaiting rescue, as determined by the Mining Board.
| (225 ILCS 705/1.24 new)
| Sec. 1.24. "Cache" means a storage facility within a mine | that is properly constructed to store SCSR devices in case of | an emergency for use by persons underground in emergency | situations, as determined by the Mining Board. | (225 ILCS 705/10.08 new)
| Sec. 10.08. Use of telecommunications center. In order to | ensure a quick and efficient means of effectively disseminating | duties and responsibilities to those agencies involved in | mining emergency response, the Department shall use the | telecommunications center maintained by the Illinois Emergency | Management Agency to notify agents of the Department and other | State, federal, and local agencies in the event of an emergency | in or about any coal mine. The Illinois Emergency Management | Agency, in conjunction with the Mining Board, shall establish | procedures concerning the manner in which the Illinois | Emergency Management Agency shall record pertinent information | regarding a mining emergency, determine the urgency of a call, | and forward information to the Department.
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| (225 ILCS 705/11.01) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 1101)
| Sec. 11.01. Mine rescue stations. For the purpose of
| providing prompt and efficient means of fighting fires and of
| saving lives and property jeopardized by fires, explosions
or | other accidents in coal mines in Illinois, there shall be
| constructed, equipped and maintained at public expense 4
four
| mine rescue stations , certified by the Mine Safety and Health | Administration of the U.S. Department of Labor, to serve the | coal fields of the State.
Notwithstanding any other law of this | State, the primary responsibility for the control and | maintenance of the mine rescue stations shall be vested with | the Department. Each station shall be equipped with a mobile | mine rescue unit.
The Department may establish, equip and | maintain three additional
substations for preservation of | health and safety if the
conditions warrant. Temporary | certification may be issued by the Mining Board for a maximum | of 6 months after the effective date of this amendatory Act of | the 94th General Assembly.
| (Source: P.A. 87-895.)
| (225 ILCS 705/11.07 new) | Sec. 11.07. Rescue teams. Rescue teams shall be based out | of each mine rescue station to serve the Illinois coal industry | as either a primary or secondary responder. Every operator in | the State must provide employees to serve on a rescue team and | must compensate these employees who are serving as rescue team | members at their regular rate of pay. | (225 ILCS 705/11.08 new)
| Sec. 11.08. Self-contained self-rescuer (SCSR) devices; | caches; strobe lights; luminescent signs.
| (a) An operator must require each person underground to | carry a SCSR device on his or her person or, alternatively, a | SCSR device must be kept within 25 feet of the person | underground or may be kept more than 25 feet from the person | underground if done according to a plan approved by the Mining |
| Board. | (b) An operator must provide for each person who is | underground at least one SCSR device, in addition to the device | required under subsection (a), that provides protection for a | period of one hour or longer, to cover all persons in the mine. | This additional SCSR device must be kept within 25 feet of the | person underground or may be kept more than 25 feet from the | person underground if done according to a plan approved by the | Mining Board. | (c) If a mantrip or mobile equipment is used to enter or | exit the mine, additional SCSR devices, each of which must | provide protection for a period of one hour or longer, must be | available for all persons who use such transportation from | portal to portal. | (d) If the SCSR devices required under subsections (a), | (b), and (c) are not adequate to provide enough oxygen for all | persons to safely evacuate the mine under mine emergency | conditions, the mine operator must provide additional SCSR | devices in the primary and alternate escapeways to ensure safe | evacuation for all persons underground through both primary and | alternate escapeways. The Mining Board must determine the time | needed for safe evacuation under emergency conditions from each | of those locations at 1,000 foot intervals. The mine operator | must submit a SCSR storage plan to the Mining Board for | approval. The mine operator must include in the SCSR storage | plan the location, quantity, and type of additional SCSR | devices, each of which must provide protection for a period of | one hour or longer, that are stored in the primary and | alternate escapeways. The SCSR storage plan must also show how | each storage location in the primary and alternate escapeways | was determined. The Mining Board must require the mine operator | to demonstrate that the location, quantity, and type of the | additional SCSRs provide protection to all persons to safely | evacuate the mine. The SCSR storage plan must be kept current | by the mine operator and made available for inspection by an | authorized representative of the Mining Board and by the |
| miners' representative.
| (e) All SCSR devices required under this Section shall be | stored in caches that are conspicuous and readily accessible by | each person in the mine.
| (f) An operator must require luminescent direction signs | leading to each cache and rescue chamber to be posted in a | mine, and a luminescent sign with the words "SELF-CONTAINED | SELF-RESCUER" or "SELF-CONTAINED SELF-RESCUERS" must be | conspicuously posted at each cache and rescue chamber. | (g) Intrinsically safe, battery-powered strobe lights must | be affixed to each cache and rescue chamber and must be capable | of automatic activation in the event of an emergency.
| (h) The Mining Board must adopt and impose a plan for the | daily inspection of SCSR devices required under subsections | (a), (b), and (c) of this Section in order to ensure that the | devices perform their designated functions each working day. | Additional SCSR devices required under subsection (d) must be | inspected every 90 days to ensure that the devices perform | their designated functions, in addition to meeting all federal | Mine Safety and Health Administration requirements. | (i) Any person who, without the authorization of the | operator or the Mining Board, knowingly removes or attempts to | remove any self-contained self-rescue device or | battery-powered strobe light approved by the Department from a | mine or mine site with the intent to permanently deprive the | operator of the device or light or who knowingly tampers with | or attempts to tamper with the device or light is guilty of a | Class 4 felony. | (j) Beginning January 31, 2007, in addition to the SCSR | devices required under subsections (a), (b), and (c), an | operator must provide a minimum of 30 SCSR devices in each | cache located within a mine, in addition to federal Mine Safety | and Health Administration requirements. Caches must be located | no more than 4,000 feet apart throughout a mine.
| (k) An operator must submit for approval a plan addressing | the requirements of subsection (j) of this Section to the |
| Mining Board within 3 months after the effective date of this | amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly. | (225 ILCS 705/11.09 new)
| Sec. 11.09. Rescue chambers.
| (a) Rescue chambers approved by the Mining Board must be | provided at suitable locations throughout a mine. | (b) Beginning January 31, 2007, rescue chambers approved by | the Mining Board must be provided and located within 3,000 feet | of each working section of a mine.
| (c) An operator must submit a plan for approval concerning | the construction and maintenance of rescue chambers required | under this Section to the Mining Board within 3 months after | the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General | Assembly. | (225 ILCS 705/11.10 new)
| Sec. 11.10. Materials for barricade. Each working section | of a mine must have an emergency sled or wagon located no more | than 1,000 feet from the working faces of the mine with the | following materials and amounts in constant supply: | (1) 8 timbers of suitable length or roof jacks of equal | capability; | (2) 200 linear feet of brattice cloth of adequate | height to the coal seam; | (3) 2 hand saws; | (4) 20 1 x 6 brattice boards at least 12 feet long | each; | (5) 10 pounds of 10d nails; | (6) 10 pounds of 16d nails; | (7) 10 pounds of spads; | (8) 25 cap boards; | (9) 20 header boards; | (10) 2 axes; | (11) 2 claw hammers; | (12) one sledge hammer; |
| (13) one shovel; | (14) 10 bags of wood fiber plaster or 5 bags of cement | or the equivalent; | (15) 4 sets of rubber gloves; and | (16) 5 gallons of sealed, distilled drinking water. | (225 ILCS 705/11.11 new)
| Sec. 11.11. Rulemaking. The Mining Board shall adopt all | rules necessary for the administration of this Article. | (225 ILCS 705/13.16 new) | Sec. 13.16. Tag-lines. Tag-lines must be provided in every | working section of a mine and on any vehicle capable of hauling | 4 or more people within the mine. | (225 ILCS 705/13.17 new) | Sec. 13.17. Methane extraction.
| (a) In this Section: | "Blowout preventer" means an emergency shut-off valve | installed on the wellhead during the drilling or testing of | a well that incorporates hydraulic pipe rams capable of | closing the space around the drillpipe against very high | pressure. | "Conductor pipe" means a short string of | large-diameter casing used to keep the top of the wellbore | open and to provide a means of conveying the up-flowing | drilling fluid from the wellbore to the mud pit. | "Gas detector" means a mechanical, electrical, or | chemical device that automatically identifies and records | or registers the levels of various gases. | (b) Methane extraction from sealed areas of active mines or | abandoned mines that are attached to active working mines must | include a conductor pipe cemented in place, a blowout | preventer, and a gas detector. | (225 ILCS 705/13.18 new)
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| Sec. 13.18. Non-production related bore holes exempt. | Non-production related bore holes that are drilled or operated | by an operator and are intended for the safety or maintenance | of a mine are exempt from this Act.
| (225 ILCS 705/19.11) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 1911)
| Sec. 19.11. Travelable passageways; obstructions; | ventilation of escape ways.
There shall be at least two | travelable passageways, to be
designated as escape ways, from | each working section to the surface whether
the mine openings | are shafts, slopes, or drifts. At least one of these | passageways must be equipped with a lifeline cord. Escape ways
| They shall be kept in safe
condition for travel and reasonably | free from standing water and other
obstructions. One of the | designated escape ways may be the haulage road.
One of the | escape ways shall be ventilated with intake air. At mines now
| operating with only one free passageway to the surface, | immediate action
shall be taken to provide a second passageway. | The return air passageway to the surface must be marked with | reflectors or other appropriate signage, as approved by the | Department.
| (Source: Laws 1953, p. 701.)
| (225 ILCS 705/22.18) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 2218)
| Sec. 22.18. Vehicle for transporting workforce and injured | persons.
A vehicle suitable for transporting all persons | underground working on a unit and injured
persons shall be | maintained in
on each underground working section where
workers | are working for use in case of accident .
| (Source: P.A. 79-460.)
| (225 ILCS 705/Art. 29 heading) | ARTICLE 29. TELEPHONE AND WIRELESS COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
| (225 ILCS 705/29.05 new) | Sec. 29.05. Wireless emergency communication devices. A |
| wireless emergency communication device approved by the Mining | Board must be worn by each person underground. The operator | shall provide these devices. The wireless emergency | communication device must, at a minimum, be capable of | receiving emergency communications from the surface at any | location throughout the mine. Each operator must provide for | the training of each underground employee in the use of the | device and, annually, provide a refresher training course for | all underground employees. The operator must install in or | around the mine any and all equipment necessary to transmit | emergency communications from the surface to each wireless | emergency communication device at any location throughout the | mine. | An operator must submit for approval a plan concerning the | implementation of the wireless emergency communication devices | required under this Section to the Mining Board within 3 months | after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 94th | General Assembly. | Any person who, without the authorization of the operator | or the Mining Board, knowingly removes or attempts to remove | any wireless emergency communication device or related | equipment approved by the Mining Board from the mine or mine | site with the intent to permanently deprive the operator of the | device or equipment or who knowingly tampers with or attempts | to tamper with the device or equipment is guilty of a Class 4 | felony. | (225 ILCS 705/29.06 new)
| Sec. 29.06. Wireless tracking devices. A wireless tracking | device approved by the Mining Board must be worn by each person | underground. The operator shall provide these devices. The | tracking device must be capable of providing real-time | monitoring of the physical location of each person underground | in the event of an accident or other emergency. No person may | discharge or discriminate against any underground employee | based on information gathered by a wireless tracking device |
| during non-emergency monitoring. Each operator must provide | for the training of each underground employee in the use of the | device and provide refresher training courses for all | underground employees during each calendar year. The operator | must install in or around the mine all equipment necessary to | provide real-time emergency monitoring of the physical | location of each person underground. | An operator must submit for approval a plan concerning the | implementation of the wireless tracking devices required under | this Section to the Mining Board within 3 months after the | effective date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General | Assembly. | Any person who, without the authorization of the operator | or the Mining Board, knowingly removes or attempts to remove | any wireless tracking device or related equipment approved by | the Mining Board from a mine or mine site with the intent to | permanently deprive the operator of the device or equipment or | who knowingly tampers with or attempts to tamper with the | device or equipment is guilty of a Class 4 felony. | (225 ILCS 705/29.07 new)
| Sec. 29.07. Mine Technology Task Force; provision of rescue | chambers and wireless devices.
| (a) The Director shall establish a Mine Technology Task | Force composed of representatives of an organization | representing mine employees, coal operators, academia, and the | communications industry. Each group shall submit the name of | its representative to the Director. The task force shall review | and make recommendations to the Mining Board regarding the best | available mine safety technologies, including, but not limited | to, rescue chambers, wireless communications equipment, and | wireless tracking devices for use in underground mines. The | task force shall submit its initial findings to the Mining | Board within 3 months after the effective date of this | amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly. | (b) Rescue chambers, wireless emergency communications |
| devices, and wireless tracking devices must be provided in each | underground mine within 90 days after the equipment is approved | by the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration. To the | extent that any of these devices have already been approved by | the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration, the operator | shall provide the equipment in each underground mine within 90 | days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the | 94th General Assembly. | (c) A temporary waiver of the requirements of subsection | (b) of this Section of up to 90 days may be issued by the Mining | Board if (i) the mine operator submits to the Mining Board a | receipt of the product order and (ii) the manufacturer has | certified that the product will be delivered within 90 days of | the product order.
| (225 ILCS 705/38.3) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 3803)
| Sec. 38.3. Surface mine supervisor
Supervisors . On or after | September 1, 1977, it shall be unlawful
for any operator of a | surface coal mine to employ, in a supervisory
capacity listed | below any person who does not hold a certificate of
competency | issued by the Mining Board.
| Those persons assigned to supervise:
| (a) Overburden stripping
| (b) Drilling and shooting
| (c) The pit coal loading operation
| (d) Reclamation work at the mine. | Each applicant must have a
minimum of 2 years of surface | mining experience and pass an examination,
administered by the | Mining Board, based on Illinois State Mining Law as
it pertains | to his responsibilities. Temporary certification will be
| provided by the Mining Board for persons with at least 2 years | surface mining
experience up to the time of the next | examination or up to a maximum of
6 months.
| (Source: P.A. 79-460; 79-1505.)
| (225 ILCS 705/38.4 new) |
| Sec. 38.4. General surface supervisor of an underground | mine. On or after July 1, 2006, it shall be unlawful for an | operator of an underground coal mine surface facility or a coal | preparation plant or a contractor engaged in the construction, | demolition, or dismantling of an underground coal mine surface | facility or a coal preparation plant to employ, in a | supervisory capacity, any person who does not hold a | certificate of competency issued by the Mining Board to oversee | any of the following activities: | (1) Coal preparation and storage. | (2) Mine equipment storage and repair. | (3) Mobile equipment operation. | (4) Site construction, demolition, or dismantling | operations. | Each applicant for a certificate as a general surface | supervisor of an underground mine must have a minimum of 2 | years of work experience at a coal mine surface facility or | coal preparation plant. In addition to the work experience | requirement set forth in this Section, a contractor engaged in | the construction, demolition, or dismantling of surface | structures must successfully complete an examination | concerning the Department's health and safety regulations as | these regulations pertain to the contractor's | responsibilities, which shall be administered by the Mining | Board. Temporary certification may be issued by the Mining | Board for persons with at least 2 years of the required work | experience and shall be valid until the time of the next | examination or for a maximum of 6 months, whichever is shorter. | (225 ILCS 705/38.5 new) | Sec. 38.5. Independent contractor supervisor. On or after | July 1, 2006, it shall be unlawful for an operator of an | underground coal mine surface facility or a surface coal mine | facility to employ an independent contractor who does not have | an independent contractor supervisor certificate issued by the | Mining Board to oversee and supervise the work for which the |
| services of an independent contractor have been obtained, | including, but not limited to, work in the area of | construction, demolition, repair or maintenance, or major | renovations of existing facilities or other heavy or extensive | work planned for an extended period of time. | Each applicant for an independent contractor supervisor | certificate must provide proof of at least 2 years of | experience in independent contract work at surface mines or at | the surface of underground mines and successfully complete an | examination based on the mining laws of this State as these | laws pertain to the applicant's responsibilities, which shall | be administered by the Mining Board. Temporary certification | may be issued by the Mining Board for persons with at least 2 | years of the required work experience and shall be valid until | the time of the next examination or for a maximum of 6 months, | whichever is shorter. | Independent contractors employed to engage in routine | maintenance work within a facility, including, but not limited | to, plumbing repair, roof repair, and carpentry work, are not | required to possess an independent contractor supervisor | certificate to engage in such routine maintenance work within a | facility.
| Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | becoming law.
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Effective Date: 7/24/2006
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