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92nd General Assembly

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Public Act 92-0618

HB1815 Enrolled                                LRB9205574LBmb

    AN ACT concerning the regulation of professions.

    Be it enacted by the People of  the  State  of  Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:

    Section  1.   Short  title.  This Act may be cited as the
Petroleum Equipment Contractors Licensing Act.

    Section 5.  Definitions.  For the purposes of this Act:
    "Employee" means a licensee or a person who is  currently
employed  by  a contractor licensed under this Act whose full
or part-time duties include any activity specified in Section
35 of this Act.
    "Person"  means  a  natural  person   or   any   company,
corporation, or other business entity.
    "Petroleum equipment contractor" means a person, company,
or corporation that installs, repairs, or removes underground
storage tanks.

    Section    10.     Licensure   requirement;   injunction.
Beginning 6 months after the effective date of this  Act,  no
person,  firm,  association,  or  corporation  shall act as a
petroleum equipment  contractor  or  employee,  advertise  or
assume   to  act  as  a  petroleum  equipment  contractor  or
employee, or use any title implying that  the  person,  firm,
association,  or  corporation  is engaged in such practice or
occupation, unless licensed by the State Fire Marshal.
    The State Fire  Marshal,  in  the  name  of  the  People,
through  the  Attorney  General,  the State's Attorney of any
county, any resident of the State, or any legal entity within
the State may apply for injunctive relief  in  any  court  to
enjoin  a  person  who has not been issued a license or whose
license has been suspended, revoked,  or  not  renewed,  from
practicing as a petroleum equipment contractor, and, upon the
filing  of  a  verified  petition, the court, if satisfied by
affidavit or  otherwise  that  the  person  is  or  has  been
practicing  in  violation  of this Act, may enter a temporary
restraining order or preliminary  injunction,  without  bond,
enjoining the defendant from further activity.  A copy of the
verified complaint shall be served upon the defendant and the
proceedings  shall  be conducted as in other civil cases.  If
it  is  established  that  the  defendant  has  been,  or  is
practicing in violation of this Act, the court  may  enter  a
judgment perpetually enjoining the defendant from any further
unlicensed  activity.   In  the  case  of  violation  of  any
injunctive  order or judgment entered under the provisions of
this Section, the court may  summarily  try  and  punish  the
offender  for  contempt of court.  Such injunctive proceeding
shall be in addition to all penalties and other  remedies  in
this Act.

    Section   15.   Deposit  of  fees.   All  fees  collected
pursuant to  this  Act  shall  be  deposited  into  the  Fire
Prevention Fund.

    Section  25.  Rules; report. The State Fire Marshal shall
promulgate rules consistent with the provisions of  this  Act
for  the  administration  and enforcement of this Act and may
prescribe forms that shall be issued in connection  with  the
rules  promulgated  under  this Act.  The rules shall include
standards  and  criteria   for   registration,   professional
conduct, and discipline.

    Section  30.   Investigators.  The State Fire Marshal may
employ,  in  conformity  with   the   Personnel   Code,   the
professional, technical, investigative, or clerical help that
may  be  necessary  for  the  enforcement  of this Act.  Each
investigator shall have a minimum of  2  years  investigative
experience out of the preceding 5 years.
    An  investigator  may  not  hold an active license issued
pursuant to this Act or have any fiduciary  interest  in  any
business  licensed under this Act.  This prohibition does not
prohibit the investigator from holding stock  in  a  publicly
traded   business  licensed  or  regulated  under  this  Act,
provided that the investigator does not hold more than 5%  of
the stock of the business.

    Section 35.  Licensure qualifications and fees.
    (a)  Applicants  for  a license must submit to the Office
all of the following:
         (1)  fees as established by the Office;
         (2)  evidence  of  registration   as   an   Illinois
    corporation  or  evidence  of compliance with the Assumed
    Business Name Act;
         (3)  evidence  of  financial  responsibility  in   a
    minimum amount of $1,000,000 through liability insurance,
    self-insurance, group insurance, group self-insurance, or
    risk   retention   groups  that  must  include  completed
    operations and environmental impairment; and
         (4)  evidence of compliance with the  qualifications
    and standards established by the Office.
    (b)  The  contractor  must  possess  a  license  from the
Office to perform the following types of activity:
         (1)  installation of underground storage tanks;
         (2)  repair   of   USTs,   which    shall    include
    retrofitting  and  installation  of  cathodic  protection
    systems;
         (3)  decommissioning  of  USTs including abandonment
    in place;
         (4)  relining of USTs;
         (5)  tank and piping tightness testing;
         (6)  testing of cathodic protection systems; and
         (7)  any other category established by the Office of
    the State Fire Marshal.
    (c)  The Office of the Fire  Marshal  shall  adopt  rules
outlining   the  minimum  amount  of  training  required  for
personnel  engaged  in  Underground  Storage  Tank   activity
regulated under this Act.

    Section 40.  Application.  Each application for a license
to  practice under this Act shall be in writing and signed by
the applicant on forms provided by the Office  of  the  State
Fire Marshal.

    Section 45.  Issuance of license; renewal.
    (a)  The  State  Fire Marshal shall, upon the applicant's
satisfactory completion of the requirements authorized  under
this  Act,  and upon receipt of the requisite fees, issue the
appropriate license and wallet  card  showing  the  name  and
business  location of the licensee, the dates of issuance and
expiration, and shall contain a photograph  of  the  licensee
provided to the State Fire Marshal.
    (b)  Each  licensee  may  apply for renewal of his or her
license upon payment of the requisite  fee.   The  expiration
date  and  renewal  period for each license issued under this
Act shall be set by rule.  Failure to renew within 60 days of
the date shall cause the license to lapse. A  lapsed  license
may  not  be reinstated until a written application is filed,
the renewal fee is paid, and a $50 reinstatement fee is paid.
The renewal  and  reinstatement  fees  shall  be  waived  for
persons  who  did  not  renew  while  on  active  duty in the
military and who file for renewal or restoration  within  one
year after discharge from the active duty service.
    (c)  All   fees   paid   pursuant   to   this   Act   are
non-refundable.
    Section  50.   Returned  checks.   Any  person  who  on 2
occasions issues or delivers a check or other  order  to  the
State  Fire  Marshal  that  is  not  honored by the financial
institution upon which it is drawn  because  of  insufficient
funds  in  his  or  her  account, shall pay to the State Fire
Marshal, in addition to the amount owing upon  the  check  or
other  order,  a fee of $50.  If the check or other order was
issued or delivered in payment  of  a  renewal  fee  and  the
licensee  whose  license  has  lapsed  continues  to practice
without paying the renewal fee and the $50 fee required under
this Section, an additional fee of $100 shall be imposed  for
practicing without a current license.  The State Fire Marshal
shall  notify the licensee whose license has lapsed within 30
days after the discovery by the State Fire Marshal  that  the
licensee  is  practicing  without a current license, that the
person is acting  as  a  petroleum  equipment  contractor  or
employee,  as  the  case  may  be, without a license, and the
amount due to the State Fire Marshal, which shall include the
lapsed renewal fee  and  all  other  fees  required  by  this
Section.  If after the expiration of 30 days from the date of
such  notification,  the  licensee  whose  license has lapsed
seeks a current license, he or she shall apply to  the  State
Fire  Marshal  for  reinstatement  of the license and pay all
fees due to the State Fire Marshal.  The State  Fire  Marshal
may  establish a fee for the processing of an application for
reinstatement of a license that allows the State Fire Marshal
to pay all costs and expenses incident to the  processing  of
this  application.  The State Fire Marshal may waive the fees
due under this Section in individual cases where  he  or  she
finds  that  the  fees would be unreasonable or unnecessarily
burdensome.

    Section  60.   License  renewal;  display   of   license;
inspection.
    (a)  As  a  condition  of renewal of a license, the State
Fire Marshal may require the licensee to  report  information
pertaining to his or her practice that the State Fire Marshal
determines to be in the interest of public safety.
    (b)  A  licensee  shall report a change in home or office
address within 10 days.
    (c)  Each licensee shall prominently display his  or  her
license  to practice at each place from which the practice is
being performed.  If more than one location is  used,  branch
office  certificates shall be issued upon payment of the fees
to be established by the State Fire Marshal.   Each  employee
shall  carry on his or her person a wallet card issued by the
State Fire Marshal.
    (d)  If a license or certificate  is  lost,  a  duplicate
shall  be  issued  upon  payment  of  the  required fee to be
established by the State Fire Marshal.  If a licensee  wishes
to change his or her name, the State Fire Marshal shall issue
a  license  in  the new name upon payment of the required fee
and upon receipt of satisfactory proof that  the  change  was
done in accordance with law.
    (e)  Each  licensee shall permit his or her facilities to
be inspected by representatives of the Office  of  the  State
Fire Marshal.

    Section  65.   Disciplinary  actions.  Licensees shall be
subject to disciplinary action for any of the following:
         (1)  obtaining or renewing a license by the  use  of
    fraud or material deception;
         (2)  being  professionally incompetent as manifested
    by poor standards of service;
         (3)  engaging   in   dishonorable,   unethical,   or
    unprofessional conduct of a character likely to  deceive,
    defraud, or harm the public in the course of professional
    services or activities;
         (4)  being   convicted   of   a  crime  that  has  a
    substantial relationship to his or  her  practice  or  an
    essential  element  of  which  is misstatement, fraud, or
    dishonesty, being convicted in this or another  state  of
    any  crime that is a felony under the laws of Illinois or
    of that state, or  being  convicted  of  a  felony  in  a
    federal  court,  unless the licensee demonstrates that he
    or she has been sufficiently rehabilitated to warrant the
    public trust;
         (5)  performing any service in a  grossly  negligent
    manner  or  permitting  any  licensed employee to perform
    services in a grossly  negligent  manner,  regardless  of
    whether   actual  damage  or  damage  to  the  public  is
    established;
         (6)  being a habitual drunk  or  having  a  habitual
    addiction  to  the  use  of morphine, cocaine, controlled
    substances, or other habit-forming drugs;
         (7)  willfully receiving compensation,  directly  or
    indirectly,  for  any  professional  service not actually
    rendered;
         (8)  having disciplinary action taken against his or
    her license in another State;
         (9)  contracting or assisting unlicensed persons  to
    perform  services  for  which a license is required under
    this Act;
         (10)  permitting the use of his or  her  license  to
    enable  an  unlicensed  person  or agency to operate as a
    licensee;
         (11)  performing and charging for  services  without
    having  authorization  to  do  so  from the member of the
    public being served; or
         (12)  failing to comply with any provision  of  this
    Act or the rules adopted under this Act.
    Section   70.   Complaints.   All  complaints  concerning
violations regarding licensees or unlicensed  activity  shall
be received and logged by the State Fire Marshal.

    Section 75. Formal charges; hearings.
    (a)  Following  the investigative process, the State Fire
Marshal may file formal charges against  the  licensee.   The
formal  charges  shall,  at a minimum, inform the licensee of
the facts that comprise the basis of the charge and that  are
specific  enough  to enable the licensee to defend himself or
herself.
    (b)  Each licensee whose conduct  is  the  subject  of  a
formal  charge  that  seeks  to  impose  disciplinary  action
against  the  licensee  shall  be served notice of the formal
charge at least 30 days before the date of the hearing, which
shall be presided over by a hearing officer authorized by the
State Fire Marshal.  Service shall be considered to have been
given if the notice was personally received by  the  licensee
or  if  the notice was sent by certified mail, return receipt
requested, to the  licensee  at  the  licensee's  last  known
address as listed with the State Fire Marshal.
    (c)  The  notice  of  formal  charges  shall  inform  the
licensee  (i)  of  the  time, date, and place of the hearing;
(ii) that the licensee shall appear personally at the hearing
and may be represented by counsel; (iii)  that  the  licensee
shall have the right to produce witnesses and evidence in his
or  her  behalf  and  shall  have  the right to cross-examine
witnesses and examine evidence produced against him  or  her;
(iv)  that  the  hearing  could result in disciplinary action
being taken against his or her license; (v)  that  rules  for
the  conduct  of  these  hearings  exist and it may be in the
licensee's best interest  to  obtain  a  copy;  (vi)  that  a
hearing  officer  authorized  by the State Fire Marshal shall
preside at the hearing and following the  conclusion  of  the
hearing  shall make findings of fact, conclusions of law, and
recommendations  to  the  State  Fire  Marshal  as  to   what
disciplinary  action,  if  any,  should  be  imposed  on  the
licensee;  and (vii) that the State Fire Marshal may continue
the hearing.
    (d)  The hearing officer authorized  by  the  State  Fire
Marshal  shall  hear  the evidence produced in support of the
formal charges and any  contrary  evidence  produced  by  the
licensee.   At  the  conclusion  of  the hearing, the hearing
officer shall make findings of fact, conclusions of law,  and
recommendations and submit them to the State Fire Marshal and
to all parties to the proceeding.  Submission to the licensee
shall  be considered as having been made if done in a similar
fashion as service of the notice of formal  charges.   Within
20  days  after such service, any party to the proceeding may
present to the State Fire Marshal a motion, in writing, for a
rehearing that specifies the grounds for rehearing.
    (e)  The State Fire Marshal, following the  time  allowed
for  filing  a motion for rehearing, shall review the hearing
officer's  findings  of  fact,  conclusions   of   law,   and
recommendations  and  any  motions  filed  subsequent  to the
findings, conclusions, and recommendations.  After  reviewing
this  information,  the  State  Fire  Marshal  may  hear oral
arguments, prior to issuing an order.  The report of findings
of fact, conclusions  of  law,  and  recommendations  of  the
hearing  officer  shall  be  the  basis  for  the  State Fire
Marshal's order.
    If the State Fire Marshal finds that substantial  justice
was  not  done, he or she may issue an order in contravention
to  the  findings  of   fact,   conclusions   of   law,   and
recommendations  of  the  hearing officer. The finding is not
admissible in evidence  against  the  person  in  a  criminal
prosecution brought for the violation of this Act.
    (f)  All proceedings pursuant to this Section are matters
of public record and shall be preserved.

    Section 80.  Sanctions.
    (a)  The  State  Fire  Marshal  shall  impose  any of the
following sanctions, singly or in combination, when he or she
finds that a licensee is guilty of any offense  described  in
Section 65:
         (1)  revocation;
         (2)  suspension for any period of time;
         (3)  reprimand or censure;
         (4)  placement    on    probationary    status   and
    requirement  that  the  licensee  submit   any   of   the
    following:
              (A)  report regularly to the State Fire Marshal
         upon matters that are the basis of the probation;
              (B)  continue  or  renew professional education
         until  a  satisfactory  degree  of  skill  has  been
         attained in those areas that are the  basis  of  the
         probation; or
              (C)  any   other   reasonable  requirements  or
         restrictions as are proper;
         (5)  refusal to issue, renew, or restore; or
         (6)  revocation of probation that has  been  granted
    and imposition of any other discipline in this subsection
    (a)  when  the  requirements  of  probation have not been
    fulfilled or have been violated.
    (b)  The State  Fire  Marshal  may  summarily  suspend  a
license  under  this  Act,  without a hearing, simultaneously
with the filing of  a  formal  complaint  and  notice  for  a
hearing,  if  the State Fire Marshal finds that the continued
operations of the individual would  constitute  an  immediate
danger  to  the  public.  In the event the State Fire Marshal
suspends a license under this subsection, a  hearing  by  the
hearing officer designated by the State Fire Marshal shall be
held  within  20  days  after  the  suspension begins, unless
continued at the request of the licensee.
    (c)  Disposition may be made of any formal  complaint  by
consent   order  between  the  State  Fire  Marshal  and  the
licensee.
    (d)  The State Fire Marshal shall reinstate a license  to
good  standing  under  this  Act,  upon recommendation to the
State Fire  Marshal,  after  a  hearing  before  the  hearing
officer  authorized by the State Fire Marshal. The State Fire
Marshal shall  be  satisfied  that  the  applicant's  renewed
practice is not contrary to the public interest.
    (e)  The  State  Fire  Marshal  may  conduct hearings and
issue cease and  desist  orders  to  persons  who  engage  in
activities  prohibited  by  this  Act  without having a valid
license,  certificate,  or  registration.   Any   person   in
violation  of  a  cease and desist order entered by the State
Fire Marshal shall be subject to all of the remedies provided
by law and, in addition, shall be subject to a civil  penalty
payable to the party injured by the violation.
    (f)  The   State  Fire  Marshal  shall  seek  to  achieve
consistency in the application of the foregoing sanctions and
consent orders and significant departure from prior decisions
involving similar conduct shall be  explained  in  the  State
Fire Marshal's orders.
    (g)  Upon  the  suspension  or  revocation  of  a license
issued under this Act, a licensee shall surrender the license
to the State Fire Marshal and, upon failure  to  do  so,  the
State Fire Marshal shall seize the same.
    (g-5)  Any person, business, or corporation whose license
has  been  revoked  under  the  provisions  of  this  Act  is
prohibited,  for  a  period  of  2  years  from  the  date of
revocation, from owning more than 7 1/2%  of  a  business  or
corporation licensed under this Act.
    (h)  The  State  Fire  Marshal may refuse to issue or may
suspend the license of any person who fails to file a return,
to pay the tax, penalty, or interest shown in a filed return,
or to pay any final assessment of tax, penalty, or  interest,
as  required  by  any  tax  Act  administered by the Illinois
Department of Revenue, until the time that  the  requirements
of any such tax Act are satisfied.

    Section 85.  Depositions; witnesses; judicial review.
    (a)  The State Fire Marshal has the power to subpoena and
bring  before him or her any person in this State and to take
testimony either orally or by deposition, or both,  with  the
same fees and mileage and in the same manner as is prescribed
by  law  for  judicial proceedings in civil cases.  The State
Fire Marshal and the hearing officer approved  by  the  State
Fire  Marshal  have  the  power  to  administer  oaths at any
hearing that the State Fire Marshal is authorized to conduct.
    (b)  A  circuit  court,  upon  the  application  of   the
licensee or the State Fire  Marshal, may order the attendance
of  witnesses and the production of relevant books and papers
in any hearing conducted pursuant to this Act.  The court may
compel obedience to its order by proceedings for contempt.
    (c)  The State Fire Marshal,  at  the  Office's  expense,
shall  provide  a  stenographer  or  a   mechanical recording
device to record the testimony and preserve a record  of  all
proceedings  at the hearing of any case wherein a license may
be revoked, suspended,  placed  on  probationary  status,  or
other  disciplinary  action taken with regard to the license.
The notice of hearing, the complaint, and all other documents
in the nature of pleadings and written motions filed  in  the
proceedings,  the  transcript of testimony, the report of the
hearing officer, and the orders of  the  State  Fire  Marshal
constitute  the  record  of  the proceedings.  The State Fire
Marshal shall furnish a  transcript  of  the  record  to  any
interested  person  upon  payment of the costs of copying and
transmitting the record.
    (d)  All final administrative decisions of the State Fire
Marshal are  subject  to  judicial  review  pursuant  to  the
provisions  of  the  Administrative  Review Law and the rules
adopted pursuant thereto.  Proceedings  for  judicial  review
shall  be  commenced  in  the  Circuit Court of the county in
which the party applying for review  resides.  If  the  party
applying  for review is not a resident of Illinois, the venue
shall be in Sangamon County. The State Fire Marshal shall not
be required to certify any record  to  the  court,  file  any
answer  in  court,  or  otherwise  appear  in  any court in a
judicial review proceeding, unless  there  is  filed  in  the
court  with  the  complaint  a  receipt  from  the State Fire
Marshal acknowledging payment of the costs of furnishing  and
certifying  the  record, which costs shall be computed at the
cost of preparing such record.  Exhibits shall  be  certified
without  cost.   Failure  on the part of the licensee to file
the receipt in court shall be grounds for  dismissal  of  the
action.
    During  all judicial proceedings incident to disciplinary
action, the sanctions  imposed upon the accused by the  State
Fire  Marshal  shall remain in effect, unless the court feels
justice requires a stay of the order.

    Section 90.  Order; prima facie proof.   An  order  or  a
certified  copy  of  an  order, bearing the seal of the State
Fire Marshal and purporting to be signed by  the  State  Fire
Marshal, is prima facie proof that:
         (1)  the   signature  is  that  of  the  State  Fire
    Marshal;
         (2)  the State Fire Marshal is qualified to act; and
         (3)  the hearing officer  is  qualified  to  act  on
    behalf of the State Fire Marshal.
    Such proof may be rebutted.
    Section  95.   Publication  of  records.   The State Fire
Marshal shall, upon request, publish a list of the names  and
addresses of all licensees under the provisions of this Act.

    Section  100.  Criminal penalties.  A person who violates
any of the provisions of this Act shall be guilty of a  Class
A  misdemeanor for the first offense and shall be guilty of a
Class 4 felony for a second or subsequent offense.


    Section 105.  Home rule.  The regulation and licensing of
petroleum equipment  contractors  are  exclusive  powers  and
functions of the State.  A home rule unit may not regulate or
license  petroleum  equipment contractors.  This Section is a
denial and limitation of home rule powers and functions under
subsection (h) of Section 6 of Article VII  of  the  Illinois
Constitution.  However,  nothing  in this Act shall limit the
authority of the Office of  the  State  Fire  Marshal  and  a
municipality  with  a  population  over 500,000 to enter into
contracts pursuant to paragraph  (b)  of  subsection  (2)  of
Section 2 of the Gasoline Storage Act.

    Section  900.   The  Regulatory  Sunset Act is amended by
adding Section 4.22 as follows:

    (5 ILCS 80/4.22 new)
    Sec.  4.22.   Act  repealed  on  January  1,  2012.   The
following Act is repealed on January 1, 2012:
    The Petroleum Equipment Contractors Licensing Act.

    Section 905.  The Gasoline  Storage  Act  is  amended  by
changing Sections 2 and 7 as follows:

    (430 ILCS 15/2) (from Ch. 127 1/2, par. 154)
    Sec. 2.  Jurisdiction; regulation of tanks.
    (1) (a)  Except  as  otherwise  provided in this Act, the
jurisdiction of the Office of the State  Fire  Marshal  under
this  Act shall be concurrent with that of municipalities and
other political subdivisions.  The Office of the  State  Fire
Marshal  has  power  to  promulgate, pursuant to the Illinois
Administrative   Procedure   Act,   reasonable   rules    and
regulations  governing  the keeping, storage, transportation,
sale or use of gasoline and volatile  oils,  including  rules
requiring  that  underground  storage tank contractors file a
bond or a  certificate  of  insurance  with  the  State  Fire
Marshal,  and  rules  governing  the dismantling of abandoned
bulk storage plants.  Nothing in this Act shall  relieve  any
person,  corporation, or other entity from complying with any
zoning ordinance of a municipality or home rule unit  enacted
pursuant to Section 11-13-1 of the Illinois Municipal Code or
any  ordinance  enacted  pursuant  to  Section  11-8-4 of the
Illinois Municipal Code.
    (b)  The rulemaking power  shall  include  the  power  to
promulgate rules providing for the issuance and revocation of
permits  allowing  the self service dispensing of motor fuels
as such term is defined in the Motor Fuel Tax Law  in  retail
service  stations  or any other place of business where motor
fuels are dispensed into the fuel tanks  of  motor  vehicles,
internal  combustion  engines  or  portable containers.  Such
rules shall specify the requirements that must  be  met  both
prior and subsequent to the issuance of such permits in order
to  insure the safety and welfare of the general public.  The
operation of such service stations without a permit shall  be
unlawful.   The Office of the State Fire Marshal shall revoke
such permit if the self service operation of such  a  service
station is found to pose a significant risk to the safety and
welfare of the general public.
    (c)  However,  except  in any county with a population of
1,000,000 or more, the Office of the State Fire Marshal shall
not have the authority to prohibit the operation of a service
station  solely  on  the  basis  that  it  is  an  unattended
self-service station which  utilizes  key  or  card  operated
self-service  motor fuel dispensing devices.  Nothing in this
paragraph shall prohibit the Office of the State Fire Marshal
from adopting reasonable rules and regulations governing  the
safety of self-service motor fuel dispensing devices.
    (d)  The  State  Fire  Marshal  shall  not  prohibit  the
dispensing  or  delivery  of  flammable  or combustible motor
vehicle fuels directly into the fuel tanks of  vehicles  from
tank trucks, tank wagons, or other portable tanks.  The State
Fire  Marshal  shall  adopt  rules  (i)  for  the issuance of
permits for the dispensing of  motor  vehicle  fuels  in  the
manner  described  in this paragraph (d), (ii) that establish
fees for permits and inspections, and provide for those  fees
to  be  deposited  into  the Fire Prevention Fund, (iii) that
require the dispensing of motor fuel in the manner  described
in  this  paragraph  (d)  to  meet conditions consistent with
nationally  recognized  standards  such  as  those   of   the
National  Fire Protection Association, and (iv) that restrict
the dispensing of motor vehicle fuels in the manner described
in this paragraph (d) to the following:
         (A)  agriculture sites for agricultural purposes,
         (B)  construction sites for  refueling  construction
    equipment used at the construction site,
         (C)  sites  used  for  the  parking,  operation,  or
    maintenance  of  a  commercial vehicle fleet, but only if
    the site is located in a county with  3,000,000  or  more
    inhabitants  or  a  county  contiguous  to  a county with
    3,000,000  or  more  inhabitants  and  the  site  is  not
    normally accessible to the public, and
         (D)  sites used for the refueling of  police,  fire,
    or  emergency medical services vehicles or other vehicles
    that are owned, leased, or operated by (or operated under
    contract with) the State, a unit of local government,  or
    a  school  district,  or any agency of the State and that
    are not normally accessible to the public.
    (2) (a)  The Office of the State Fire Marshal shall adopt
rules and regulations regarding underground storage tanks and
associated piping and  no  municipality  or  other  political
subdivision   shall   adopt  or  enforce  any  ordinances  or
regulations regarding such underground tanks and piping other
than those which are identical to the rules  and  regulations
of  the  Office of the State Fire Marshal.  It is declared to
be the law of this State, pursuant to paragraphs (h) and  (i)
of  Section  6  of  Article VII of the Illinois Constitution,
that the establishment and enforcement of standards regarding
underground storage tanks and associated  piping  within  the
jurisdiction  of  the  Office of the State Fire Marshal is an
exclusive  State  function  which  may   not   be   exercised
concurrently   by  a  home  rule  unit  except  as  expressly
permitted in this Act.
    (b)  The Office of the State Fire Marshal may enter  into
written  contracts  with  municipalities  of  over 500,000 in
population to enforce the rules and regulations adopted under
this subsection.
    (3) (a)  The Office of the State Fire Marshal shall  have
authority  over underground storage tanks which contain, have
contained, or are designed to  contain  petroleum,  hazardous
substances  and  regulated substances as those terms are used
in Subtitle I of the Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments  of
1984  (P.L.  98-616),  as amended by the Superfund Amendments
and Reauthorization Act of 1986 (P.L.  99-499).   The  Office
shall have the power with regard to underground storage tanks
to require any person who tests, installs, repairs, replaces,
relines,  or  removes  any  underground  storage  tank system
containing, formerly containing,  or  which  is  designed  to
contain   petroleum  or  other  regulated  substances  to  be
certified to perform that activity, to  obtain  a  permit  to
install,  repair,  replace,  reline, or remove the particular
tank system, to pay an annual certification fee of  $100  per
year, and to pay a fee set by the Office of $100 per site for
a  permit to install, repair, replace, reline, upgrade, test,
or remove any portion of an underground storage tank  system.
All  persons  who do repairs above grade level for themselves
need not pay a fee or be certified.  All fees received by the
Office from certification and permits shall be  deposited  in
the  Fire Prevention Fund for the exclusive use of the Office
in administering the Underground Storage Tank program.
    (b) (i)  Within  120  days  after  the  promulgation   of
regulations or amendments thereto by the Administrator of the
United  States  Environmental  Protection Agency to implement
Section 9003 of Subtitle I of the Hazardous and  Solid  Waste
Amendments of 1984 (P.L. 98-616) of the Resource Conservation
and  Recovery  Act  of  1976  (P.L.  95-580), as amended, the
Office of the State Fire Marshal shall adopt  regulations  or
amendments  thereto  which  are  identical  in substance. The
rulemaking  provisions  of  Section  5-35  of  the   Illinois
Administrative  Procedure  Act shall not apply to regulations
or amendments thereto adopted pursuant to  this  subparagraph
(i).
    (ii)  The  Office  of  the  State  Fire Marshal may adopt
additional regulations relating  to  an  underground  storage
tank  program  that are not inconsistent with and at least as
stringent as Section 9003 of Subtitle I of the Hazardous  and
Solid  Waste Amendments of 1984 (P.L. 98-616) of the Resource
Conservation and Recovery  Act  of  1976  (P.L.  94-580),  as
amended,   or   regulations  adopted  thereunder.  Except  as
provided otherwise in subparagraph (i) of this paragraph (b),
the  Office  of  the  State  Fire  Marshal  shall  not  adopt
regulations relating  to  corrective  action  at  underground
storage   tanks.    Regulations   adopted  pursuant  to  this
subsection shall be adopted in accordance with the procedures
for rulemaking in Section 5-35 of the Illinois Administrative
Procedure Act.
    (c)  The Office of the State Fire Marshal  shall  require
any   person,  corporation  or  other  entity  who  tests  an
underground tank or its piping  or  cathodic  protection  for
another,  except  a lessor for his or her lessee, to register
with the Office, and pay an annual registration fee of  $100,
to  be  deposited  in the Fire Prevention Fund, and to report
the results of such test to the Office.
    (d)  In accordance with constitutional  limitations,  the
Office  shall have authority to enter at all reasonable times
upon any private or public property for the purpose of:
         (i)  Inspecting  and  investigating   to   ascertain
    possible   violations   of   this   Act,  of  regulations
    thereunder or of permits or terms or conditions  thereof;
    or
         (ii)  In accordance with the provisions of this Act,
    taking  whatever  emergency  action, that is necessary or
    appropriate, to assure that the public health  or  safety
    is  not  threatened  whenever  there  is  a  release or a
    substantial  threat  of  a  release  of  petroleum  or  a
    regulated substance from an underground storage tank.
    (e)  The Office of the State Fire Marshal  may  issue  an
Administrative Order to any person who it reasonably believes
has  violated the rules and regulations governing underground
storage  tanks,  including  the  installation,  repair,  leak
detection,  cathodic  protection  tank  testing,  removal  or
release notification.  Such  an  order  shall  be  served  by
registered or certified mail or in person.  Any person served
with  such  an  order  may appeal such order by submitting in
writing any such appeal to the Office within 10 days  of  the
date  of  receipt of such order.  The Office shall conduct an
administrative   hearing    governed    by    the    Illinois
Administrative  Procedure  Act and enter an order to sustain,
modify or revoke such order. Any appeal from such order shall
be to the circuit court of the county in which the  violation
took place and shall be governed by the Administrative Review
Law.
    (f)  The  Office  of  the  State  Fire  Marshal shall not
require the removal of an underground tank system  taken  out
of  operation  before  January 2, 1974, except in the case in
which the office of the State  Fire  Marshal  has  determined
that  a  release  from  the  underground  tank system poses a
current  or  potential  threat  to  human  health   and   the
environment.  In that case, and upon receipt of an Order from
the  Office  of the State Fire Marshal, the owner or operator
of the nonoperational underground tank  system  shall  assess
the  excavation  zone and close the system in accordance with
regulations promulgated by  the  Office  of  the  State  Fire
Marshal.
    (4) (a)  The Office of the State Fire Marshal shall adopt
rules and regulations regarding aboveground storage tanks and
associated  piping  and  no  municipality  or other political
subdivision  shall  adopt  or  enforce  any   ordinances   or
regulations regarding such aboveground tanks and piping other
than  those  which are identical to the rules and regulations
of the Office of  the  State  Fire  Marshal  unless,  in  the
interest of fire safety, the Office of the State Fire Marshal
delegates   such   authority   to  municipalities,  political
subdivisions or home rule units.  It is declared  to  be  the
law  of  this  State,  pursuant  to paragraphs (h) and (i) of
Section 6 of Article VII of the Illinois  Constitution,  that
the  establishment of standards regarding aboveground storage
tanks and associated piping within the  jurisdiction  of  the
Office  of  the  State  Fire  Marshal  is  an exclusive State
function which may not be exercised concurrently  by  a  home
rule unit except as expressly permitted in this Act.
    (b)  The  Office  of the State Fire Marshal shall enforce
its rules  and  regulations  concerning  aboveground  storage
tanks  and  associated  piping;  however,  municipalities may
enforce any of their zoning ordinances or zoning  regulations
regarding  aboveground  tanks.   The Office of the State Fire
Marshal may issue an administrative order to any owner of  an
aboveground  storage tank and associated piping it reasonably
believes to be in violation of such rules and regulations  to
remedy  or remove any such violation.  Such an order shall be
served by registered or certified mail  or  in  person.   Any
person  served  with  such  an order may appeal such order by
submitting in writing any such appeal to the Office within 10
days of the date of receipt of such order.  The Office  shall
conduct  an  administrative  hearing governed by the Illinois
Administrative Procedure Act and enter an order  to  sustain,
modify  or  revoke  such  order.   Any appeal from such order
shall be to the circuit court of  the  county  in  which  the
violation   took   place   and   shall  be  governed  by  the
Administrative Review Law.
(Source: P.A. 91-851, eff. 1-1-01.)

    (430 ILCS 15/7) (from Ch. 127 1/2, par. 159)
    Sec. 7. (a)  A violation of:
         (1)  paragraph (a)  or  (b)  of  subsection  (3)  of
    Section 2 of this Act is a business offense punishable by
    a fine of not more than $10,000 per day;
         (2)  (blank);  paragraph  (c)  of  subsection (3) of
    Section 2 is a petty offense punishable by a fine of  not
    less than $100 nor more than $500 per tank tested;
         (3)  Section  Sections  4  and  5  of  this Act is a
    business offense punishable by a fine of  not  more  than
    $10,000 per day;
         (3.5)  Section 3.5 of this Act is a business offense
    punishable by fine of not more than $10,000 per offense;
         (4)  an   administrative   order   as  described  in
    paragraph (e) of subsection (3) of Section  2,  paragraph
    (b)  of  subsection (4) of Section 2 or subsection (c) of
    Section 6 after it has become final is a business offense
    punishable by a fine of not less  than  $1,000  nor  more
    than $25,000 per day;
         (5)  any other rule promulgated by the Office of the
    State  Fire Marshal is a business offense punishable by a
    fine of not less than $100 nor more than $1,000 for  each
    offense or each day of continued violation.
    (b)  (Blank).  The  State  Fire  Marshal  may  suspend or
revoke the registration of any person who  has  violated  the
rules  of the State Fire Marshal after notice and opportunity
for an Administrative hearing which shall be governed by  the
Illinois  Administrative Procedure Act.  Any appeal from such
suspension or revocation shall be to the circuit court of the
county in which the hearing was held and be governed  by  the
Administrative Review Law.
    (c)  A  civil action to recover such fines may be brought
by the Attorney General or the State's Attorney of the county
in which the violation occurred.
    (d)  Any monies received by the State under this  Section
shall be deposited into the Underground Storage Tank Fund.
(Source: P.A. 90-662, eff. 7-30-98.)

    Section 999.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.
    Passed in the General Assembly April 24, 2002.
    Approved July 11, 2002.
    Effective July 11, 2002.

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