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Public Act 103-0383 |
SB1555 Enrolled | LRB103 24786 CPF 51115 b |
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AN ACT concerning safety.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
Statewide Recycling Needs Assessment Act. |
Section 5. Findings and purpose. The General Assembly |
finds that: |
(1) Recycling rates have been stagnant in Illinois for |
over 15 years. Many Illinois counties continue to fall short |
of the long-standing recycling goal of 25% established in 1988 |
in the Solid Waste Planning and Recycling Act. |
(2) In Illinois, more than 40% (over 7,000,000 tons per |
year) of municipal solid waste disposed of in landfills is |
comprised of packaging and paper products. Of this amount, |
nearly 80% consists of materials commonly collected in |
curbside recycling programs in areas of the State with mature |
recycling programs. The remainder includes packaging products |
such as polystyrene, #3-#7 plastics, plastic bags, flexible |
pouches, and other plastic films which are not currently |
acceptable in curbside recycling and for which limited |
drop-off recycling options exist.
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(3) Consumers have limited sustainable purchasing choices. |
Illinois residents are generating packaging and paper waste |
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that is beyond their ability to reuse or recycle. Consumers |
are also given confusing, inconsistent messages through |
various means about which materials can be recycled, and thus |
inadvertently create contamination in recycling streams. There |
is widespread recycling fatigue and public skepticism about |
the efficacy of recycling in Illinois.
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(4) Volatility in global recycling markets due to import |
restrictions such as the China National Sword policy, as well |
as impacts on supply chains and material demand due to the |
COVID-19 pandemic, have further challenged markets for |
recycled materials and destabilized the recycling system in |
the State.
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(5) Significant and increasing quantities of plastics and |
packaging materials are seen in the environment, including in |
Illinois rivers, lakes, and streams. This pollution impacts |
the drinking water, wildlife, and recreational value of vital |
natural resources.
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(6) Consumer brands are solely responsible for choices |
about the types and amounts of packaging used to package |
products. Units of local government and residents have borne |
the costs of managing increasingly complex materials even |
though they have no input in designing or bringing these |
materials to market.
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(7) Units of local government are expected to fund |
collection and processing costs for an increasing volume of |
packaging and paper products, and the cost of recycling |
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programs continues to rise with the complexity of the material |
stream that material recycling facilities are required to |
manage. Furthermore, many multifamily residences and rural |
areas of the State do not have access to adequate recycling |
opportunities.
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(8) As materials continue to be landfilled and littered, |
lower-income and rural communities across the State bear |
environmental, health, and economic consequences.
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(9) By failing to reuse or recycle packaging and paper |
products, Illinois loses economic value and green sector jobs. |
Establishing postconsumer recycled content requirements for |
rigid plastics will increase markets for this increasingly |
common packaging material, reduce demand for natural |
resources, and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
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(10) An assessment of current recycling and materials |
management practices in the State, including evaluation of |
collections, access to service, capacity, costs, gaps, and |
needs associated with diverting packaging and paper products |
from disposal, will provide needed information on current |
conditions and support identification of future needs to |
manage packaging and paper products in a sustainable, |
environmentally protective, and cost-effective manner.
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(11) The Statewide Recycling Needs Assessment will provide |
data to facilitate future consideration of product stewardship |
legislation for packaging and paper products.
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Section 10. Definitions. In this Act: |
"Advisory Council" means the Statewide Recycling Needs |
Assessment Advisory Council established under Section 20.
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"Agency" means the Environmental Protection Agency.
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"Compost" has the meaning given to that term in Section |
3.150 of the Environmental Protection Act.
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"Compostable material" means a material that is designed |
to contact, contain, or carry a product that can be collected |
for composting and that is capable of undergoing aerobic |
biological decomposition in a controlled composting system as |
demonstrated by meeting ASTM D6400, ASTM D6868, or any |
successor standards.
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"Composting rate" means the percentage of discarded |
materials that are managed through composting. A composting |
rate is calculated by dividing the total weight of all |
packaging and paper products that are collected for composting |
by the total weight of all packaging and paper products sold, |
distributed, or served to consumers in the State during the |
study period.
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"Covered entity" means a person or entity responsible for: |
(1) a single or multifamily residence, either |
individually or jointly through a unit of local |
government;
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(2) a public or private school for grades kindergarten |
through 12th grade;
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(3) a State or local government facility; or
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(4) a public space, including, but not limited to, |
public spaces, such as parks, trails, transit stations, |
and pedestrian areas for which the State or a unit of local |
government is responsible.
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"Curbside recycling" means the collection of recyclable |
materials from covered entities at the site where the |
recyclable materials are generated.
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"Director" means the Director of the Agency.
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"Drop-off recycling" means the collection of recyclable |
material from covered entities at one or more centralized |
sites.
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"Environmental justice community" means environmental |
justice community as defined by the Illinois Solar for All |
Program, as that definition is updated from time to time by the |
Illinois Power Agency and the Administrator of the Illinois |
Solar for All Program.
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"Hauler" means a person who collects recyclable or |
compostable materials and transports them to an MRF or compost |
facility, or to an intermediate facility from which materials |
are then transported to an MRF or compost facility.
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"Material recovery facility" or "MRF" means a facility |
where recyclable materials collected via curbside recycling or |
drop-off recycling are consolidated and sorted for return to |
the economic mainstream in the form of raw materials.
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"Packaging" means a discrete material or category of |
material, regardless of recyclability. "Packaging" includes, |
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but is not limited to, a material type, such as paper, plastic, |
glass, metal, or multi-material, that is:
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(1) used to protect, contain, transport, or serve a |
product;
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(2) sold or supplied to consumers expressly for the |
purpose of protecting, containing, transporting, or |
serving products;
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(3) attached to a product or its container for the |
purpose of marketing or communicating information about |
the product;
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(4) supplied at the point of sale to facilitate the |
delivery of the product; or
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(5) supplied to or purchased by consumers expressly |
for the purpose of facilitating food or beverage |
consumption and ordinarily disposed of after a single use |
or short-term use, whether or not it could be reused.
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"Packaging" does not include:
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(1) a medical device or packaging that is included |
with products regulated:
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(A) as a drug, medical device, or dietary |
supplement by the United States Food and Drug |
Administration under the Federal Food, Drug, and |
Cosmetic Act;
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(B) as a combination product as defined under 21 |
CFR 3.2(e); or
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(C) under the federal Dietary Supplement Health |
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and Education Act of 1994;
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(2) animal biologics, including, but not limited to, |
vaccines, bacterins, antisera, diagnostic kits, other |
products of biological origin, and other packaging and |
paper products regulated by the United States Department |
of Agriculture under the federal Virus, Serum, Toxin Act;
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(3) packaging regulated under the Federal Insecticide, |
Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act or another applicable |
federal law, rule, or regulation; and
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(4) beverage containers subject to a returnable |
container deposit, if applicable.
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"Paper product" means:
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(1) paper that can or has been printed on to create |
flyers, brochures, booklets, catalogs, greeting cards, |
telephone directories, newspapers, magazines; and
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(2) paper used for copying, writing, or any other |
general use.
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"Paper product" does not include:
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(1) paper that, by virtue of its anticipated use, |
could become unsafe or unsanitary to recycle; or
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(2) any form of bound book, including, but not limited |
to, bound books for literary, textual, or reference |
purposes.
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"Person" means any individual, partnership, copartnership, |
firm, company, limited liability company, corporation, |
association, joint-stock company, trust, estate, political |
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subdivision, State agency, any other legal entity, or their |
legal representative, agent, or assign.
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"Postconsumer material" means packaging or paper products |
that have served their intended end use as consumer items. |
"Postconsumer material" does not include a by-product or waste |
material generated during or after the completion of a |
manufacturing or converting process.
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"Postconsumer recycled content" means the portion of an |
item of packaging or paper product made from postconsumer |
material that has been recycled.
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"Recycling" has the meaning given to "recycling, |
reclamation or reuse" in Section 3.380 of the Environmental |
Protection Act. "Recycling" does not include landfill disposal |
of packaging or paper products or the residue resulting from |
the processing of packaging or paper products at an MRF, use as |
alternative daily cover or any other beneficial use at a |
landfill, incineration, energy recovery, or energy generation |
by means of combustion, or final conversion of packaging and |
paper products or their components and by-products to a fuel.
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"Recycling rate" means the percentage of packaging and |
paper products returned to the economic mainstream in the form |
of raw materials or products rather than being disposed of or |
discarded. The recycling rate is calculated by dividing the |
total weight of packaging and paper products that are |
collected for recycling by the total weight of packaging and |
paper products sold, distributed, or served to consumers in |
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the State during the study period, not including the residue |
that is landfilled after processing by an MRF.
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"Reusable" means:
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(1) designed to be refilled or used repeatedly for its |
original intended purpose and is returnable;
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(2) safe for washing and sanitizing according to |
applicable State food safety laws; and
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(3) with the exception of ceramic products, capable of |
being recycled at the end of use.
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"Reuse" means the return of packaging to the economic |
stream for use in the same kind of application intended for the |
original packaging without effectuating a change in the |
original composition of the package, the identity of the |
product, or the components thereof.
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"Rigid plastic" means packaging made of plastic that has a |
relatively inflexible finite shape or form and is capable of |
maintaining its shape while empty or while holding other |
products.
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"Service provider" means a hauler, an MRF, or a composting |
facility.
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"Single-use packaging or product" means a packaging or |
product that is supplied to or purchased by consumers |
expressly for the purpose of facilitating food or beverage |
consumption and that is ordinarily disposed of after a single |
use or short-term use, whether or not it could be reused.
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"Study period" means the period represented by the data |
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compiled and analyzed in the completion of the Statewide |
Recycling Needs Assessment. The study period shall be a |
minimum of a one-year calendar period not earlier than 2022 |
and shall be clearly defined in the scope of work. If more than |
one year of data is used, data shall be presented on an annual |
basis.
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Section 15. Statewide Recycling Needs Assessment Advisory |
Council. |
(a) The Statewide Recycling Needs Assessment Advisory |
Council shall be appointed by the Agency. On or before January |
1, 2024, the Director shall appoint members to the Advisory |
Council to provide advice and recommendations to the Agency in |
the drafting, amendment, and finalization of the Statewide |
Recycling Needs Assessment.
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(b) In appointing members to the Advisory Council under |
subsection (a), the Director shall consider representatives |
from all geographic regions of the State, all sizes of |
communities in the State, all supply chain participants in the |
recycling system, and the racial and gender diversity of this |
State. |
(c) Members of the Advisory Council shall include, but |
shall not be limited to, the following voting members:
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(1) four individuals representing material recovery |
facilities in the State, no more than 2 of whom shall |
represent an MRF that accepts recyclables from Cook County |
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or the collar counties;
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(2) four individuals representing haulers, one of whom |
shall represent a statewide organization representing |
haulers, one of whom shall represent a publicly traded |
hauler, one of whom shall represent a privately owned |
hauler, and one of whom shall operate a recycling drop-off |
facility;
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(3) one individual representing compost collection and |
processing facilities;
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(4) eight individuals representing rural and urban |
units of local government, one of whom shall represent a |
county with a population of less than 50,000, one of whom |
shall represent a county with a population of more than |
50,000 and less than 1,000,000, one of whom shall |
represent a county with a population of more than |
1,000,000, two of whom shall represent municipalities with |
a population of less than 1,000,000, one of whom shall |
represent a statewide organization of municipalities as |
authorized by Section 1-8-1 of the Illinois Municipal |
Code, one of whom shall represent a municipal joint action |
agency, and one of whom shall represent a municipality |
with a population of 1,000,000 or more;
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(5) two individuals representing retailers, one of |
whom shall represent a statewide association of retailers;
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(6) two individuals representing environmental |
organizations; |
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(7) two individuals representing environmental justice |
advocacy organizations or environmental justice |
communities; |
(8) one individual representing a statewide |
manufacturing association;
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(9) one individual representing manufacturers of |
products containing postconsumer material, or one or more |
associations of such manufacturers;
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(10) one individual representing manufacturers of |
packaging and paper products utilizing virgin materials, |
or one or more associations of suppliers of substrates of |
packaging and paper products; and |
(11) four individuals representing producers of |
consumer products. |
(d) An individual may be appointed to only one position on |
the Advisory Council. Upon completion of the duties of the |
Advisory Council, appointments to the Advisory Council shall |
be terminated and the Advisory Council shall be dissolved. |
(e) The duties of the Advisory Council are as follows:
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(1) to provide guidance on the scope of work for the |
Statewide Recycling Needs Assessment required under |
Section 25;
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(2) to assist in the provision of data required to |
complete the needs assessment;
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(3) to review and comment on the needs assessment |
prior to completion; |
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(4) to review packaging and paper products legislation |
enacted in other states, including identifying the main |
components of the legislation, its implementation steps, |
and its implementation status; |
(5) to evaluate and make recommendations, including |
legislative recommendations, on how to effectively |
establish and implement a producer responsibility program |
in the State for packaging and paper products, including |
recommendations regarding the responsibilities of |
producers under a producer responsibility program; and
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(6) on or before December 1, 2026, to prepare and |
submit a report of its findings and recommendations to the |
General Assembly and the Governor, which shall include an |
opportunity for a minority report.
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(f) The Advisory Council:
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(1) shall meet at the call of the Chair, except for the |
first meeting, which shall be called by the Director;
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(2) shall meet at least quarterly or as determined by |
the Advisory Council Chair;
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(3) shall elect a Chair from among Advisory Council |
members by a simple majority vote;
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(4) may adopt bylaws and a charter for the operation |
of its business for the purposes of this Act;
and |
(5) shall be provided administrative support by the |
Agency and Agency staff.
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(g) The Agency may select and hire a third-party |
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facilitator for the Advisory Council.
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Section 20. Statewide needs assessment. |
(a) The Agency shall issue a competitive solicitation in |
accordance with the Illinois Procurement Code to select a |
qualified consultant to conduct a statewide needs assessment |
to assess recycling, composting, and reuse conditions in the |
State for packaging and paper products, including identifying |
current conditions and an evaluation of the capacity, costs, |
gaps, and needs associated with recycling and the diversion of |
packaging and paper products. The Agency shall select the |
consultant on or before July 1, 2024. The needs assessment |
shall be funded by an appropriation from the Agency's Solid |
Waste Management Fund or other appropriated funding.
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(b) All packaging and paper products sold, offered for |
sale, distributed, or imported into the State shall be |
included in the needs assessment. |
(c) The needs assessment shall address, at a minimum, the |
following factors for covered entities:
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(1) the quantity, by weight and type, of packaging and |
paper products sold, offered for sale, distributed, or |
served to consumers in the State by material type and |
format;
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(2) current collection systems for packaging and paper |
products in the State, including for reuse, recycling, |
composting, and disposal;
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(3) the quantity, by weight, of municipal waste |
disposed on a county-by-county basis for all counties in |
the State; |
(4) the processing capacity and infrastructure for |
reusable, recyclable, and compostable packaging and paper |
products collected in the State, including capacity and |
infrastructure outside the State which serves or may serve |
the State;
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(5) current reuse, recycling, and composting rates for |
packaging and paper products in the State by material |
type;
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(6) current postconsumer recycled content use by |
material type for all packaging and paper products sold in |
the State;
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(7) current reusability, recyclability, or |
compostability of packaging and paper products, by |
material type, for all packaging and paper products sold, |
offered for sale, distributed, or served in the State; |
(8) current system-wide costs for the collection, |
reuse, recycling, and composting of packaging and paper |
products;
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(9) current operational and capital funding |
limitations impacting reuse, recycling, and composting |
access and availability for packaging and paper products |
throughout the State;
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(10) collection and processing system needs to provide |
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access to curbside recycling services for all covered |
entities within municipalities with a population of 1,500 |
or more based on the most recent United States Census, |
with collection provided no less frequently than every 2 |
weeks, and at least one drop-off location for recyclable |
materials within 15 miles of the municipal boundary for |
municipalities with a population less than 1,500, with |
needs identified on a county-by-county basis for all |
counties in the State, and the estimated costs to meet the |
access requirements;
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(11) program costs and capital investments required to |
achieve a 35%, 50%, and 65% recycling rate by December 31, |
2035 for each material type, including paper, plastic, |
glass, and metal, and including investment into existing |
and future reuse, recycling, and composting infrastructure |
for packaging and paper products;
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(12) the market conditions and opportunities for |
reusable, recyclable, and compostable packaging and paper |
products in the State and regionally; |
(13) multilingual public education needs for the |
reduction, reuse, recycling, and composting of packaging |
and paper products, including, but not limited to, a |
scientific survey of current awareness among residents of |
this State of proper end-of-life management for packaging |
and paper products and the needs associated with the |
reduction of contamination rates at MRFs in the State; and |
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(14) an assessment of environmental justice and |
recycling equity in the State, including, but not limited |
to:
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(A) an evaluation of current access to and the |
performance of curbside and drop-off recycling |
programs in units of local government designated as |
environmental justice areas;
and |
(B) a comparison of the location of MRFs and |
compost facilities in units of local government that |
have been designated as environmental justice areas |
with units of local government that are not so |
designated. |
(d) Persons with data or information required to complete |
the statewide needs assessment shall provide the Agency with |
such data or information in a timely fashion to assist in |
completing the statewide needs assessment. |
(e) On or before December 31, 2025, the Agency shall |
provide the draft needs assessment to the Advisory Council. |
The Advisory Council shall provide written comments to the |
Agency within 60 days after receipt of the needs assessment. |
The Agency's consultant shall include an assessment of |
comments received in the revised draft needs assessment |
submitted to the Agency and shall provide a summary and an |
analysis of any issues raised by the Advisory Council and |
significant changes suggested by any such comments, a |
statement of the reasons why any significant changes were not |
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incorporated into the results of the study, and a description |
of any changes made to the results of the needs assessment as a |
result of such comments. The needs assessment shall be |
finalized by the Agency on or before May 1, 2026.
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Section 25. Severability. The provisions of this Act shall |
be severable and if any phrase, clause, sentence, or provision |
of this Act or the applicability thereof to any person or |
circumstance shall be held invalid, the remainder of this Act |
and the application thereof shall not be affected thereby. |
Section 30. The Environmental Protection Act is amended by |
changing Section 22.15 as follows:
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(415 ILCS 5/22.15)
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Sec. 22.15. Solid Waste Management Fund; fees.
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(a) There is hereby created within the State Treasury a
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special fund to be known as the Solid Waste Management Fund, to |
be
constituted from the fees collected by the State pursuant |
to this Section,
from repayments of loans made from the Fund |
for solid waste projects, from registration fees collected |
pursuant to the Consumer Electronics Recycling Act, and from |
amounts transferred into the Fund pursuant to Public Act |
100-433.
Moneys received by either the Agency or the |
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity
in repayment |
of loans made pursuant to the Illinois Solid Waste Management
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Act shall be deposited into the General Revenue Fund.
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(b) The Agency shall assess and collect a
fee in the amount |
set forth herein from the owner or operator of each sanitary
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landfill permitted or required to be permitted by the Agency |
to dispose of
solid waste if the sanitary landfill is located |
off the site where such waste
was produced and if such sanitary |
landfill is owned, controlled, and operated
by a person other |
than the generator of such waste. The Agency shall deposit
all |
fees collected into the Solid Waste Management Fund. If a site |
is
contiguous to one or more landfills owned or operated by the |
same person, the
volumes permanently disposed of by each |
landfill shall be combined for purposes
of determining the fee |
under this subsection. Beginning on July 1, 2018, and on the |
first day of each month thereafter during fiscal years 2019 |
through 2023, the State Comptroller shall direct and State |
Treasurer shall transfer an amount equal to 1/12 of $5,000,000 |
per fiscal year from the Solid Waste Management Fund to the |
General Revenue Fund.
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(1) If more than 150,000 cubic yards of non-hazardous |
solid waste is
permanently disposed of at a site in a |
calendar year, the owner or operator
shall either pay a |
fee of 95 cents per cubic yard or,
alternatively, the |
owner or operator may weigh the quantity of the solid |
waste
permanently disposed of with a device for which |
certification has been obtained
under the Weights and |
Measures Act and pay a fee of $2.00 per
ton of solid waste |
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permanently disposed of. In no case shall the fee |
collected
or paid by the owner or operator under this |
paragraph exceed $1.55 per cubic yard or $3.27 per ton.
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(2) If more than 100,000 cubic yards but not more than |
150,000 cubic
yards of non-hazardous waste is permanently |
disposed of at a site in a calendar
year, the owner or |
operator shall pay a fee of $52,630.
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(3) If more than 50,000 cubic yards but not more than |
100,000 cubic
yards of non-hazardous solid waste is |
permanently disposed of at a site
in a calendar year, the |
owner or operator shall pay a fee of $23,790.
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(4) If more than 10,000 cubic yards but not more than |
50,000 cubic
yards of non-hazardous solid waste is |
permanently disposed of at a site
in a calendar year, the |
owner or operator shall pay a fee of $7,260.
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(5) If not more than 10,000 cubic yards of |
non-hazardous solid waste is
permanently disposed of at a |
site in a calendar year, the owner or operator
shall pay a |
fee of $1050.
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(c) (Blank).
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(d) The Agency shall establish rules relating to the |
collection of the
fees authorized by this Section. Such rules |
shall include, but not be
limited to:
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(1) necessary records identifying the quantities of |
solid waste received
or disposed;
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(2) the form and submission of reports to accompany |
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the payment of fees
to the Agency;
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(3) the time and manner of payment of fees to the |
Agency, which payments
shall not be more often than |
quarterly; and
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(4) procedures setting forth criteria establishing |
when an owner or
operator may measure by weight or volume |
during any given quarter or other
fee payment period.
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(e) Pursuant to appropriation, all monies in the Solid |
Waste Management
Fund shall be used by the Agency for the |
purposes set forth in this Section and in the Illinois
Solid |
Waste Management Act, including for the costs of fee |
collection and
administration, and for the administration of |
the Consumer Electronics Recycling Act , and the Drug Take-Back |
Act , and the Statewide Recycling Needs Assessment Act .
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(f) The Agency is authorized to enter into such agreements |
and to
promulgate such rules as are necessary to carry out its |
duties under this
Section and the Illinois Solid Waste |
Management Act.
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(g) On the first day of January, April, July, and October |
of each year,
beginning on July 1, 1996, the State Comptroller |
and Treasurer shall
transfer $500,000 from the Solid Waste |
Management Fund to the Hazardous Waste
Fund. Moneys |
transferred under this subsection (g) shall be used only for |
the
purposes set forth in item (1) of subsection (d) of Section |
22.2.
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(h) The Agency is authorized to provide financial |
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assistance to units of
local government for the performance of |
inspecting, investigating , and
enforcement activities pursuant |
to subsection (r) of Section 4 Section 4(r) at nonhazardous |
solid
waste disposal sites.
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(i) The Agency is authorized to conduct household waste |
collection and
disposal programs.
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(j) A unit of local government, as defined in the Local |
Solid Waste Disposal
Act, in which a solid waste disposal |
facility is located may establish a fee,
tax, or surcharge |
with regard to the permanent disposal of solid waste.
All |
fees, taxes, and surcharges collected under this subsection |
shall be
utilized for solid waste management purposes, |
including long-term monitoring
and maintenance of landfills, |
planning, implementation, inspection, enforcement
and other |
activities consistent with the Solid Waste Management Act and |
the
Local Solid Waste Disposal Act, or for any other |
environment-related purpose,
including, but not limited to, an |
environment-related public works project, but
not for the |
construction of a new pollution control facility other than a
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household hazardous waste facility. However, the total fee, |
tax or surcharge
imposed by all units of local government |
under this subsection (j) upon the
solid waste disposal |
facility shall not exceed:
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(1) 60¢ per cubic yard if more than 150,000 cubic |
yards of non-hazardous
solid waste is permanently disposed |
of at the site in a calendar year, unless
the owner or |
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operator weighs the quantity of the solid waste received |
with a
device for which certification has been obtained |
under the Weights and Measures
Act, in which case the fee |
shall not exceed $1.27 per ton of solid waste
permanently |
disposed of.
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(2) $33,350 if more than 100,000
cubic yards, but not |
more than 150,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous waste
is |
permanently disposed of at the site in a calendar year.
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(3) $15,500 if more than 50,000 cubic
yards, but not |
more than 100,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous solid |
waste is
permanently disposed of at the site in a calendar |
year.
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(4) $4,650 if more than 10,000 cubic
yards, but not |
more than 50,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous solid waste
|
is permanently disposed of at the site in a calendar year.
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(5) $650 if not more than 10,000 cubic
yards of |
non-hazardous solid waste is permanently disposed of at |
the site in
a calendar year.
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The corporate authorities of the unit of local government
|
may use proceeds from the fee, tax, or surcharge to reimburse a |
highway
commissioner whose road district lies wholly or |
partially within the
corporate limits of the unit of local |
government for expenses incurred in
the removal of |
nonhazardous, nonfluid municipal waste that has been dumped
on |
public property in violation of a State law or local |
ordinance.
|
|
For the disposal of solid waste from general construction
|
or demolition debris recovery facilities as defined in |
subsection (a-1) of Section 3.160, the total fee, tax, or |
surcharge imposed by
all units of local government under this |
subsection (j) upon
the solid waste disposal facility shall |
not exceed 50% of the
applicable amount set forth above. A unit |
of local government,
as defined in the Local Solid Waste |
Disposal Act, in which a
general construction or demolition |
debris recovery facility is
located may establish a fee, tax, |
or surcharge on the general construction or demolition debris |
recovery facility with
regard to the permanent disposal of |
solid waste by the
general construction or demolition debris |
recovery facility at
a solid waste disposal facility, provided |
that such fee, tax,
or surcharge shall not exceed 50% of the |
applicable amount set
forth above, based on the total amount |
of solid waste transported from the general construction or |
demolition debris recovery facility for disposal at solid |
waste disposal facilities, and the unit of local government |
and fee shall be
subject to all other requirements of this |
subsection (j). |
A county or Municipal Joint Action Agency that imposes a |
fee, tax, or
surcharge under this subsection may use the |
proceeds thereof to reimburse a
municipality that lies wholly |
or partially within its boundaries for expenses
incurred in |
the removal of nonhazardous, nonfluid municipal waste that has |
been
dumped on public property in violation of a State law or |
|
local ordinance.
|
If the fees are to be used to conduct a local sanitary |
landfill
inspection or enforcement program, the unit of local |
government must enter
into a written delegation agreement with |
the Agency pursuant to subsection
(r) of Section 4. The unit of |
local government and the Agency shall enter
into such a |
written delegation agreement within 60 days after the
|
establishment of such fees. At least annually,
the Agency |
shall conduct an audit of the expenditures made by units of |
local
government from the funds granted by the Agency to the |
units of local
government for purposes of local sanitary |
landfill inspection and enforcement
programs, to ensure that |
the funds have been expended for the prescribed
purposes under |
the grant.
|
The fees, taxes or surcharges collected under this |
subsection (j) shall
be placed by the unit of local government |
in a separate fund, and the
interest received on the moneys in |
the fund shall be credited to the fund. The
monies in the fund |
may be accumulated over a period of years to be
expended in |
accordance with this subsection.
|
A unit of local government, as defined in the Local Solid |
Waste Disposal
Act, shall prepare and post on its website, in |
April of each year, a
report that details spending plans for |
monies collected in accordance with
this subsection. The |
report will at a minimum include the following:
|
(1) The total monies collected pursuant to this |
|
subsection.
|
(2) The most current balance of monies collected |
pursuant to this
subsection.
|
(3) An itemized accounting of all monies expended for |
the previous year
pursuant to this subsection.
|
(4) An estimation of monies to be collected for the |
following 3
years pursuant to this subsection.
|
(5) A narrative detailing the general direction and |
scope of future
expenditures for one, 2 and 3 years.
|
The exemptions granted under Sections 22.16 and 22.16a, |
and under
subsection (k) of this Section, shall be applicable |
to any fee,
tax or surcharge imposed under this subsection |
(j); except that the fee,
tax or surcharge authorized to be |
imposed under this subsection (j) may be
made applicable by a |
unit of local government to the permanent disposal of
solid |
waste after December 31, 1986, under any contract lawfully |
executed
before June 1, 1986 under which more than 150,000 |
cubic yards (or 50,000 tons)
of solid waste is to be |
permanently disposed of, even though the waste is
exempt from |
the fee imposed by the State under subsection (b) of this |
Section
pursuant to an exemption granted under Section 22.16.
|
(k) In accordance with the findings and purposes of the |
Illinois Solid
Waste Management Act, beginning January 1, 1989 |
the fee under subsection
(b) and the fee, tax or surcharge |
under subsection (j) shall not apply to:
|
(1) waste which is hazardous waste;
|
|
(2) waste which is pollution control waste;
|
(3) waste from recycling, reclamation or reuse |
processes which have been
approved by the Agency as being |
designed to remove any contaminant from
wastes so as to |
render such wastes reusable, provided that the process
|
renders at least 50% of the waste reusable; the exemption |
set forth in this paragraph (3) of this subsection (k) |
shall not apply to general construction or demolition |
debris recovery
facilities as defined in subsection (a-1) |
of Section 3.160;
|
(4) non-hazardous solid waste that is received at a |
sanitary landfill
and composted or recycled through a |
process permitted by the Agency; or
|
(5) any landfill which is permitted by the Agency to |
receive only
demolition or construction debris or |
landscape waste.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-10, eff. 6-5-19; 101-636, eff. 6-10-20; |
102-16, eff. 6-17-21; 102-310, eff. 8-6-21; 102-444, eff. |
8-20-21; 102-699, eff. 4-19-22; 102-813, eff. 5-13-22; |
102-1055, eff. 6-10-22; revised 8-25-22.)
|
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
|