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Illinois Compiled Statutes
Information maintained by the Legislative Reference Bureau Updating the database of the Illinois Compiled Statutes (ILCS) is an ongoing process. Recent laws may not yet be included in the ILCS database, but they are found on this site as Public Acts soon after they become law. For information concerning the relationship between statutes and Public Acts, refer to the Guide. Because the statute database is maintained primarily for legislative drafting purposes, statutory changes are sometimes included in the statute database before they take effect. If the source note at the end of a Section of the statutes includes a Public Act that has not yet taken effect, the version of the law that is currently in effect may have already been removed from the database and you should refer to that Public Act to see the changes made to the current law.
ENVIRONMENTAL SAFETY (415 ILCS 55/) Illinois Groundwater Protection Act. 415 ILCS 55/1
(415 ILCS 55/1) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7451)
Sec. 1.
This Act shall be known as and may be cited
as the "Illinois Groundwater Protection Act".
(Source: P.A. 85-863.)
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415 ILCS 55/2
(415 ILCS 55/2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7452)
Sec. 2.
(a) The General Assembly finds that:
(i) a large portion of Illinois' citizens rely on groundwater for
personal consumption, and industries use a significant amount of groundwater;
(ii) contamination of Illinois groundwater will adversely impact the
health and welfare of its citizens and adversely impact the economic
viability of the State;
(iii) contamination of Illinois' groundwater is occurring;
(iv) protection of groundwater is a necessity for future economic
development in this State.
(b) Therefore, it is the policy of the State of Illinois to
restore, protect,
and enhance the groundwaters of the State, as a natural and public
resource. The State recognizes the essential and pervasive role of
groundwater in the social and economic well-being of the people of
Illinois, and its vital importance to the general health, safety, and
welfare. It is further recognized as consistent with this policy that the
groundwater resources of the State be utilized for beneficial and
legitimate purposes; that waste and degradation of the resources be prevented;
and that the underground water resource be managed
to allow for maximum benefit of the people of the State of Illinois.
(Source: P.A. 85-863.)
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415 ILCS 55/3
(415 ILCS 55/3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7453)
Sec. 3.
As used in this Act, unless the context
clearly requires otherwise:
(a) "Agency" means the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency.
(b) "Aquifer" means saturated (with groundwater) soils and geologic
materials which are sufficiently permeable to readily yield economically
useful quantities of water to wells, springs, or streams under ordinary
hydraulic gradients.
(c) "Board" means the Illinois Pollution Control Board.
(d) "Committee" means the Interagency Coordinating Committee on
Groundwater as hereinafter created.
(e) "Council" means the Groundwater Advisory Council.
(f) "Department" means the Department of Natural
Resources.
(g) "Groundwater" means underground water which occurs within the
saturated zone and geologic materials where the fluid pressure in the pore
space is equal to or greater than atmospheric pressure.
(h) "Potable" means generally fit for human consumption in accordance
with accepted water supply principles and practices.
(i) "Regulated recharge area" means a compact geographic area, as
determined by the Board, the geology of which renders a potable resource
groundwater particularly susceptible to contamination.
(j) "Resource groundwater" means
groundwater that is presently being or in the future capable of
being put to beneficial use by reason of being of suitable quality.
(k) "Underground water" means all water beneath the land surface.
(Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
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415 ILCS 55/4
(415 ILCS 55/4) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7454)
Sec. 4. Interagency Coordinating Committee on Groundwater. (a) There shall be established within State government an
interagency committee
which shall be known as the Interagency Coordinating Committee on
Groundwater. The Committee shall be composed of the Director, or his
designee, of the following agencies:
(1) The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, who | | shall chair the Committee.
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(2) The Illinois Department of Natural Resources.
(3) The Illinois Department of Public Health.
(4) The Office of Mines and Minerals within the
| | Department of Natural Resources.
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(5) The Office of the State Fire Marshal.
(6) The Division of Water Resources of the Department
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(7) The Illinois Department of Agriculture.
(8) The Illinois Emergency Management Agency.
(9) The Illinois Department of Nuclear Safety.
(b) The Committee shall meet not less than
twice each calendar year and shall:
(1) Review and coordinate the State's policy on
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(2) Review and evaluate State laws, regulations and
| | procedures that relate to groundwater protection.
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(3) Review and evaluate the status of the State's
| | efforts to improve the quality of the groundwater and of the State enforcement efforts for protection of the groundwater and make recommendations on improving the State efforts to protect the groundwater.
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(4) Recommend procedures for better coordination
| | among State groundwater programs and with local programs related to groundwater protection.
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(5) Review and recommend procedures to coordinate the
| | State's response to specific incidents of groundwater pollution and coordinate dissemination of information between agencies responsible for the State's response.
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(6) Make recommendations for and prioritize the
| | State's groundwater research needs.
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(7) Review, coordinate and evaluate groundwater data
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(8) Beginning on January 1, 1990, report biennially
| | to the Governor and the General Assembly on groundwater quality, quantity, and the State's enforcement efforts.
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(c) The Chairman of the Committee shall propose a groundwater protection
regulatory agenda for consideration by the Committee and the Council. The
principal purpose of the agenda shall be to systematically consider the
groundwater protection aspects of relevant federal and State regulatory
programs and to identify any areas where improvements may be warranted. To
the extent feasible, the agenda may also serve to facilitate a more
uniform and coordinated approach toward protection of groundwaters in
Illinois. Upon adoption of the final agenda by the Committee, the Chairman
of the Committee shall assign a lead agency and any support agencies to
prepare a regulatory assessment report for each item on the agenda. Each
regulatory assessment report shall specify the nature of the
groundwater protection
provisions being implemented and shall evaluate the results achieved
therefrom. Special attention shall be given to any preventive measures
being utilized for protection of groundwaters. The reports shall be
completed in a timely manner. After review and consideration by the
Committee, the reports shall become the basis for recommending further
legislative or regulatory action.
(d) No later than January 1, 1992, the Interagency Coordinating
Committee on Groundwater shall provide a comprehensive status report to
the Governor and the General Assembly concerning implementation of this Act.
(e) The Committee shall consider findings and recommendations that are
provided by the Council, and
respond in writing regarding such matters. The Chairman of the Committee
shall designate a liaison person to serve as a facilitator of
communications with the Council.
(Source: P.A. 102-1071, eff. 6-10-22.)
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415 ILCS 55/5
(415 ILCS 55/5) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7455)
Sec. 5.
(a) There shall be established a Groundwater Advisory Council.
The Council shall be composed of 9 public members appointed by the
Governor, including 2 persons representing environmental interests, 2
persons representing industrial and commercial interests, one person
representing agricultural interests, one person representing local
government interests, one person representing a regional planning agency,
one person representing
public water supplies, and one person representing the water well driller
industry. From among these members, a chairperson shall be selected by
majority vote and shall preside for a one-year term. The terms of
memberships in the Council shall be for 3 years. The Council shall:
(1) review, evaluate and make recommendations regarding State laws,
regulations and procedures that relate to groundwater protection;
(2) review, evaluate and make recommendations regarding the State's
efforts to implement this Act and to generally protect the groundwater of the State;
(3) make recommendations relating to the State's needs for groundwater research; and
(4) review, evaluate and make recommendations regarding groundwater data
collection and analyses.
(b) Members of the Groundwater Advisory Council shall be reimbursed for
ordinary and necessary expenses incurred in the performance of their
duties, except such reimbursement shall be limited to expenses associated
with no more than 3 meetings per calendar year. The Agency shall
provide the Council with such supporting services as are reasonable for the
performance of its duties.
(Source: P.A. 85-863.)
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415 ILCS 55/5-5 (415 ILCS 55/5-5) Sec. 5-5. Mahomet Aquifer Council. (a) There shall be established a Mahomet Aquifer Council. The Council shall be composed of the following members: (1) one member of the Senate, appointed by the | | (2) one member of the House of Representatives,
| | appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives;
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| (3) one member of the Senate, appointed by the
| | Minority Leader of the Senate;
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| (4) one member of the House of Representatives,
| | appointed by the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives;
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| (5) one member representing the Illinois
| | Environmental Protection Agency, appointed by the Director of the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency;
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| (6) two members representing a national waste and
| | recycling organization, appointed by the Governor;
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| (7) one member representing a statewide environmental
| | organization, appointed by the Governor;
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| (8) three members representing a nonprofit consortium
| | dedicated to the sustainability of the Mahomet Aquifer, appointed by the Governor;
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| (9) one member representing the Illinois State Water
| | Survey of the Prairie Research Institute of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, appointed by the Governor;
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| (10) one member representing a statewide association
| | representing the pipe trades, appointed by the Governor;
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| (11) one member representing the State's largest
| | general farm organization, appointed by the Governor;
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| (12) one member representing a statewide trade
| | association representing manufacturers, appointed by the Governor;
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| (13) one member representing a community health care
| | organization located over the Mahomet Aquifer, appointed by the Governor;
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| (14) seven members representing local government
| | bodies located over the Mahomet Aquifer, appointed by the Governor;
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| (15) one member representing a State labor
| | organization that represents employees in the solid waste, recycling, and related industries, appointed by the Governor; and
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| (16) one member representing a statewide business
| | association with a focus on environmental issues, appointed by the Governor.
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| (b) From among the Council's members, a chairperson shall be selected by majority vote and shall preside for a one-year term. The term of membership in the Council shall be for 3 years.
(c) The Council shall:
(1) review, evaluate, and make recommendations
| | regarding State laws, regulations, and procedures that relate to the Mahomet Aquifer;
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| (2) review, evaluate, and make recommendations
| | regarding the State's efforts to implement this Act that relate to the quality of the Mahomet Aquifer;
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| (3) review, evaluate, and make recommendations
| | regarding current and potential contamination threats to the water quality of the Mahomet Aquifer; and
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| (4) make recommendations relating to actions that
| | might be taken to ensure the long-term protection of the Mahomet Aquifer.
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| (d) Members of the Mahomet Aquifer Council shall be reimbursed for ordinary and necessary expenses incurred in the performance of their duties, except that such reimbursement shall be limited to expenses associated with no more than 4 meetings per calendar year. The Agency shall provide the Council with such supporting services as are reasonable for the performance of the Council's duties.
(Source: P.A. 102-381, eff. 8-13-21.)
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415 ILCS 55/6
(415 ILCS 55/6) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7456)
Sec. 6.
(a) The Department with the cooperation of the Agency, the
Department of Public Health, the Department of Agriculture and others as
needed, shall develop, coordinate and conduct an education program for
groundwater protection. The program shall include, but not be limited to,
education for the general public, business, agriculture, government, and
private water supply owners, users and operators.
(b) The education program shall address at least the following topics:
hydrogeologic principles, groundwater protection issues, State groundwater
policy,
potential contamination sources, potential water
quality problems, well protection measures, and the need for periodic well tests.
(c) The Department shall cooperate with local governments and regional
planning agencies and committees to coordinate local and regional education programs and
workshops, and to expedite the exchange of technical information.
(Source: P.A. 85-863.)
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415 ILCS 55/7
(415 ILCS 55/7) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7457)
Sec. 7.
(a) The Department, with the advice of the Committee and the
Council, shall develop a coordinated groundwater data collection and
automation program. The collected and automated data shall include but need
not be limited to groundwater monitoring results, well logs, pollution
source permits and water quality assessments. The Department shall act as
the repository for such data and shall automate this data in a manner that
is accessible and usable by all State agencies.
(b) The Department, in consultation with the Agency, the Committee and
the Council, shall develop and administer an ongoing program of basic and
applied research relating to groundwater. Information generated from this
program will be made available to local governments seeking technical
assistance from the Department. The research program shall include but
need not be limited to:
(1) Long-term statewide groundwater quality | | monitoring. A statewide monitoring well network shall be composed of public water supply wells sampled by the Agency, non-community wells sampled by the Department of Public Health, and a representative sampling of other existing private wells and newly constructed, dedicated monitoring wells. The monitoring program shall be operated for the following purposes: to evaluate, over time, the appropriateness and effectiveness of groundwater quality protection measures; to determine regional trends in groundwater quality which may affect public health and welfare; and to help identify the need for corrective action. The Department shall periodically publish the results of groundwater quality monitoring activities.
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(2) Statewide groundwater assessment. The Department
| | shall conduct assessments to enhance the State's data base concerning groundwater resources. The assessments shall include location of groundwater resources, mapping of aquifers, identification of appropriate recharge areas, and evaluation of baseline groundwater quality. The Department shall complete the statewide mapping of appropriate recharge areas within 18 months after the enactment of this Act at a level of detail suitable for guiding the Agency in establishing priority groundwater protection planning regions.
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(3) Evaluation of pesticide impacts upon groundwater.
| | Such evaluation shall include the general location and extent of any contamination of groundwaters resulting from pesticide use, determination of any practices which may contribute to contamination of groundwaters, and recommendations regarding measures which may help prevent degradation of groundwater quality by pesticides. Priority shall be given to those areas of the State where pesticides are utilized most intensively. The Department shall prepare an initial report by January 1, 1990.
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(4) Other basic and applied research. The Department
| | may conduct research in at least the following areas: groundwater hydrology and hydraulics, movement of contaminants through geologic materials, aquifer restoration, and remediation technologies.
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(c) The Department is authorized to accept and expend, subject
to appropriation by the General Assembly, any and all grants, matching
funds, appropriations from whatever source, or other items of value from
the federal or state governments or from any institution, person,
partnership, joint venture, or corporation, public or private, for the
purposes of fulfilling its obligations under this Act.
(d) Southern Illinois University is authorized to conduct basic and
applied research relating to chemical contamination of groundwater. It may
assist the Department in conducting research on any of the subjects
included in subsection (b) of this Section, and may accept and expend
grants and other support from the Department or other sources for that purpose.
(Source: P.A. 87-479.)
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415 ILCS 55/8
(415 ILCS 55/8) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7458)
Sec. 8.
(a) The Agency, after consultation with the Committee and the
Council, shall propose regulations establishing comprehensive water quality
standards which are specifically for the protection of groundwater. In
preparing such regulations, the Agency shall address, to the extent feasible,
those contaminants which have been found in the groundwaters of the State and
which are known to cause, or are suspected of causing, cancer, birth
defects, or any other adverse effect on human health according to nationally
accepted guidelines. Such regulations shall be submitted to the Board by July
1, 1989.
(b) Within 2 years after the date upon which the Agency files the
proposed regulations, the Board shall promulgate the water quality
standards for groundwater. In promulgating these regulations, the Board
shall, in addition to the factors set forth in Title VII of the
Environmental Protection Act, consider the following:
(1) recognition that groundwaters differ in many | | important respects from surface waters, including water quality, rate of movement, direction of flow, accessibility, susceptibility to pollution, and use;
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(2) classification of groundwaters on an appropriate
| | basis, such as their utility as a resource or susceptibility to contamination;
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(3) preference for numerical water quality standards,
| | where possible, over narrative standards, especially where specific contaminants have been commonly detected in groundwaters or where federal drinking water levels or advisories are available;
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(4) application of nondegradation provisions for
| | appropriate groundwaters, including notification limitations to trigger preventive response activities;
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(5) relevant experiences from other states where
| | groundwater protection programs have been implemented; and
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(6) existing methods of detecting and quantifying
| | contaminants with reasonable analytical certainty.
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(c) To provide a process to expedite promulgation of
groundwater quality standards, the provisions of this Section shall be
exempt from the requirements of subsection (b) of Section 27 of the Environmental Protection Act; and
shall be exempt from the provisions of Sections 4 and 5 of "An Act in
relation to natural resources, research, data collection and environmental
studies", approved July 1, 1978, as amended.
(d) The Department of
Natural Resources, with the cooperation of the Committee and the Agency,
shall conduct a study of the economic impact of the regulations developed
pursuant to this Section. The study shall include, but need not be limited
to, consideration of the criteria established in subsection (a) of Section 4 of
"An Act in
relation to natural resources, research, data collection and environmental
studies", approved July 1, 1978, as amended. This study shall be conducted
concurrently with the development of the regulations developed pursuant to
this Section. Work on this study shall commence as soon as
is administratively practicable after the Agency begins development of the
regulations. The study shall be submitted to the
Board no later than 60 days after the proposed regulations are filed with the
Board.
The Department shall consult with the Economic Technical Advisory
Committee during the development of the regulations and the economic impact
study required in this Section and shall consider the comments of the
Committee in the study.
(e) The Board may combine public hearings
on the economic impact study conducted by the Department with any hearings
required under Board rules.
(Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96; 90-655, eff. 7-30-98 .)
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415 ILCS 55/9
(415 ILCS 55/9) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7459)
Sec. 9.
(a) As used in this Section, unless the context clearly requires
otherwise:
(1) "Community water system" means a public water | | system which serves at least 15 service connections used by residents or regularly serves at least 25 residents for at least 60 days per year.
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(2) "Contaminant" means any physical, chemical,
| | biological, or radiological substance or matter in water.
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(3) "Department" means the Illinois Department of
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(4) "Non-community water system" means a public water
| | system which is not a community water system, and has at least 15 service connections used by nonresidents, or regularly serves 25 or more nonresident individuals daily for at least 60 days per year.
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(4.5) "Non-transient, non-community water system"
| | means a non-community water system that regularly serves the same 25 or more persons at least 6 months per year.
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(5) "Private water system" means any supply which
| | provides water for drinking, culinary, and sanitary purposes and serves an owner-occupied single family dwelling.
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(6) "Public water system" means a system for the
| | provision to the public of water for human consumption through pipes or other constructed conveyances, if the system has at least 15 service connections or regularly serves an average of at least 25 individuals daily at least 60 days per year. A public water system is either a community water system (CWS) or a non-community water system (non-CWS). The term "public water system" includes any collection, treatment, storage or distribution facilities under control of the operator of such system and used primarily in connection with such system and any collection or pretreatment storage facilities not under such control which are used primarily in connection with such system.
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(7) "Semi-private water system" means a water supply
| | which is not a public water system, yet which serves a segment of the public other than an owner-occupied single family dwelling.
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(8) "Supplier of water" means any person who owns or
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(b) No non-community water system may be constructed, altered, or extended
until plans, specifications, and other information relative to such system are
submitted to and reviewed by the Department for conformance with the rules
promulgated under this Section, and until a permit for such activity is issued
by the Department. As part of the permit application, all new non-transient,
non-community water
systems must
demonstrate technical, financial, and managerial capacity consistent with the
federal Safe
Drinking Water Act.
(c) All private and semi-private water systems shall be constructed in
accordance with the rules promulgated by the Department under this Section.
(d) The Department shall promulgate rules for the construction
and operation of all non-community and semi-private water systems. Such rules
shall include but need not be limited to: the establishment of maximum
contaminant levels no more stringent than federally established standards
where such standards exist; the maintenance of records; the establishment
of requirements for
the submission and frequency of submission of water samples by suppliers of
water to determine the water quality; and the capacity
demonstration requirements
to ensure compliance with technical, financial, and managerial capacity
provisions of the federal Safe Drinking Water Act.
(e) Borings, water monitoring wells, and wells subject to this Act
shall, at a minimum, be abandoned and plugged in accordance with the
requirements of Sections 16 and 19 of the Illinois Oil and Gas Act, and such
rules as are promulgated thereunder. Nothing herein shall preclude the
Department from adopting plugging and abandonment requirements which are more
stringent than the rules of the Department of Natural Resources where necessary
to protect the public health.
(f) The Department shall inspect all non-community water systems
for the purpose of determining compliance with the provisions of this
Section and the regulations promulgated hereunder.
(g) The Department may inspect semi-private and private water systems for
the purpose of determining compliance with the provisions of this Section and
the regulations promulgated hereunder.
(h) The supplier of water shall be given written notice of all
violations of this Section or the rules promulgated hereunder and all such
violations shall be corrected in a manner and time specified by the Department.
(i) The Department may conduct inspections to investigate the construction
or water quality of non-community or semi-private water systems, or the
construction of private water systems. Upon request of the owner or user, the
Department may also conduct investigations of the water quality of private
water systems.
(j) The supplier of water for a private, semi-private, or
non-community water system shall allow the Department and its authorized
agents access to such premises at all reasonable times for the purpose of
inspection.
(k) The Department may designate full-time county or multiple-county health
departments as its agents to facilitate the implementation of this Section.
(l) The Department shall promulgate and publish rules necessary
for the enforcement of this Section.
(m) Whenever a non-community or semi-private water system fails
to comply with an applicable maximum contaminant level at the point of use,
the supplier of water shall give public notification by the conspicuous posting
of notice of such failure as long as the failure continues. The notice shall
be written in a manner reasonably designed to fully inform users of the system
that a drinking water regulation has been violated, and shall disclose all
material facts.
All non-transient, non-community water systems must demonstrate technical,
financial, and
managerial capacity consistent with the federal Safe Drinking Water Act.
(n) The provisions of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, are hereby
expressly adopted and shall apply to all administrative rules and procedures of
the Department of Public Health under this Section, except that in case of
conflict between the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act and this Section the
provisions of this Section shall control; and except that Section 5-35 of the
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act relating to procedures for rulemaking
shall not apply to the adoption of any rule required by federal law in
connection with which the Department is precluded by law from exercising any
discretion.
(o) All final administrative decisions of the Department issued pursuant to
this Section shall be subject to judicial review pursuant to the provisions of
the Administrative Review Law and the rules adopted pursuant thereto. The term
"administrative decision" is defined as in Section 3-101 of the Code of Civil
Procedure.
(p) The Director, after notice and opportunity for hearing to
the applicant, may deny, suspend, or revoke a permit in any case in which
he or she finds that there has been a substantial failure to comply with
the provisions of this Section or the standards, rules and regulations
established by virtue thereof.
Such notice shall be effected by certified mail or by personal service
setting forth the particular reasons for the proposed action and fixing a
date, not less than 15 days from the date of such mailing or service, at
which time the applicant shall be given an opportunity to request hearing.
The hearing shall be conducted by the Director or by an individual
designated in writing by the Director as Hearing Officer to conduct the
hearing. On the basis of any such hearing, or upon default of the
applicant, the Director shall make a determination specifying his or her
findings and conclusions. A copy of such determination shall be sent by
certified mail or served personally upon the applicant.
(q) The procedure governing hearings authorized by this Section shall be in
accordance with rules promulgated by the Department. A full and complete
record shall be kept of all proceedings, including the notice of hearing,
complaint and all other documents in the nature of pleadings, written
motions filed in the proceedings, and the report and orders of the Director
and Hearing Officer. All testimony shall be reported but need not be
transcribed unless review of the decision is sought pursuant to the
Administrative Review Law. Copies of the transcript may be
obtained by any interested party on payment of the cost of preparing such
copies. The Director or Hearing Officer shall, upon his or her own
motion or on the written request of any party to the proceeding,
issue subpoenas requiring the attendance and the giving of testimony by
witnesses, and subpoenas duces tecum requiring the production of books,
papers, records or memoranda. All subpoenas and subpoenas duces tecum
issued under the terms of this Section may be served by any person of legal
age. The fees of witnesses for attendance and travel shall be the same as
the fees of witnesses before the circuit courts of this State, such fees to
be paid when the witness is excused from further attendance. When the
witness is subpoenaed at the instance of the Director or Hearing Officer,
such fees shall be paid in the same manner as other expenses of the
Department, and when the witness is subpoenaed at the instance of any other
party to any such proceeding, the Department may require that the cost of
service of the subpoena or subpoena duces tecum and the fee of the witness
be borne by the party at whose instance the witness is summoned. In such
case, the Department, in its discretion, may require a deposit to cover the
cost of such service and witness fees. A subpoena or subpoena duces tecum
so issued shall be served in the same manner as a subpoena issued by a
circuit court.
(r) Any circuit court of this State, upon the application of the Director or
upon the application of any other party to the proceeding, may, in its
discretion, compel the attendance of witnesses, the production of books,
papers, records or memoranda and the giving of testimony before the
Director or Hearing Officer conducting an investigation or holding a
hearing authorized by this Section, by an attachment for contempt or
otherwise, in the same manner as production of evidence may be compelled
before the court.
(s) The Director or Hearing Officer, or any party in an investigation or
hearing before the Department, may cause the depositions of witnesses
within the State to be taken in the manner prescribed by law for like
depositions in civil actions in courts of this State, and to that end
compel the attendance of witnesses and the production of books, papers,
records, or memoranda.
(t) Any person who violates this Section or any rule or
regulation adopted by the Department, or who violates any determination or
order of the Department under this Section, shall be guilty of a Class A
misdemeanor and shall be fined a sum not less than $100. Each day's
violation constitutes a separate offense. The State's Attorney of the
county in which the violation occurs, or the Attorney General of the State
of Illinois, may bring such actions in the name of the People of the State
of Illinois; or may in addition to other remedies provided in this Section,
bring action for an injunction to restrain such violation, or to enjoin the
operation of any establishment.
(u) The State of Illinois, and all of its agencies, institutions, offices
and subdivisions shall comply with all requirements, prohibitions and other
provisions of this Section and regulations adopted thereunder.
(v) No agency of the State shall authorize, permit or license the
construction or operation of any potential route, potential primary source,
or potential secondary source, as those terms are defined in the Environmental
Protection Act, in violation of any provision of this Section or the
regulations adopted hereunder.
(w) This Section shall not apply to any water supply which is connected
to a community water supply which is regulated under the Environmental
Protection Act, except as provided in Section 9.1.
(Source: P.A. 92-369, eff. 8-15-01; 92-652, eff. 7-11-02.)
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415 ILCS 55/9.1
(415 ILCS 55/9.1)
Sec. 9.1.
Notification of actual or potential contamination.
(a) Whenever the
Agency identifies any volatile organic compound in excess of the Board's
Groundwater Quality Standards or the Safe Drinking Water Act maximum
contaminant
level while performing its obligations under Section 7 of this Act, Section
13.1 of the Environmental Protection Act, or the federal Safe Drinking
Water Act, the Agency shall notify the Department, unless notification has
already been provided, and the unit of local government affected.
(b) Within 60 days of receipt of notice provided for in subsection (a) of
this
Section,
the Department, or the Department in coordination with the delegated county
health department, shall provide notice to the public identifying the
contaminants of concern. The notice shall be provided by means of
electronic or
print media and must be designed to inform the owner of any private water
system,
semi-private water system, or non-community public water system within an area
potentially affected by the identified contamination of the need for the system
owner to test the system for possible contamination. The notice shall
appear
in the media for 3 consecutive weeks.
(c) A unit of local government shall take any action that it deems
appropriate, such as informing any homeowner who potentially could be adversely
affected, within
a reasonable time after notification by the Agency under subsection (a) of this
Section.
(Source: P.A. 92-652, eff. 7-11-02.)
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415 ILCS 55/10 (415 ILCS 55/10) Sec. 10. Pekin Metro Landfill; pilot projects. (a) Subject to appropriation, the Agency shall design and implement up to 2 pilot studies of landfills that overlie the Mahomet Aquifer to identify threats to surface and groundwater resources that are posed by the landfills. One of the pilot projects shall be conducted at the Pekin Metro Landfill in Tazewell County. In conducting the pilot projects, the Agency shall: (1) inspect and identify potential and current | | contamination threats to the water quality of aquifers in the same watershed as the landfill (for the Pekin Metro Landfill, the Mahomet Aquifer);
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| (2) use geographic information systems and remote
| | sensing technology to track defects, structures, appliances, and wells for routine inspection and sustainable management;
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| (3) install or repair groundwater monitoring
| | mechanisms necessary to identify whether contaminants from the landfill are affecting water quality in the Mahomet Aquifer; and
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| (4) identify and provide cost estimates for any
| | additional response actions necessary or appropriate to reduce or minimize potential threats to human health and the environment resulting from current landfill conditions.
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| (b) Following the completion of the pilot project response actions, the Agency shall:
(1) evaluate, in consultation with the Prairie
| | Research Institute, the use of aerial photography and other remote sensing technologies, such as Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR), to identify land erosion, landslides, barren areas, leachate seeps, vegetation, and other relevant surface and subsurface features of landfills to aid in the inspection and investigation of landfills; and
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| (2) identify additional procedures, requirements, or
| | authorities that may be appropriate or necessary to address threats to human health and the environment from other unregulated or underregulated landfills throughout the State.
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(Source: P.A. 101-573, eff. 1-1-20 .)
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