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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.
() 65 ILCS 5/11-141-2
(65 ILCS 5/11-141-2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11-141-2)
Sec. 11-141-2.
Every municipality may construct or acquire, and may improve, extend,
and operate a sewerage system either within or without the corporate limits
thereof. Every municipality also may, when determined by its corporate
authorities to be in the public interest and necessary for the protection
of the public health, enter into and perform contracts, whether long-term
or short-term, with any industrial establishment for the provision and
operation by the municipality of sewerage facilities to abate or reduce the
pollution of waters caused by discharges of industrial wastes by the
industrial establishment and the payment periodically by the industrial
establishment to the municipality of amounts at least sufficient, in the
determination of such corporate authorities, to compensate the municipality
for the cost of providing (including payment of principal and interest
charges, if any), and of operating and maintaining the sewerage facilities
serving such industrial establishment.
Every municipality may borrow money from the United States Government or
any agency thereof, or from any other source, for the purpose of improving
or extending or for the purpose of constructing or acquiring and improving
and extending a sewerage system and, as evidence thereof, may issue its
revenue bonds, payable solely from the revenue derived from the operation
of the sewerage system by that municipality. These bonds may be issued with
maturities not exceeding 40 years from the date of the bonds, and in such
amounts as may be necessary to provide sufficient funds to pay all the
costs of the improvement or extension or construction or acquisition and
improvement and extension of the sewerage system, including engineering,
legal, and other expenses, together with interest, to a date 6 months
subsequent to the estimated date of completion. These bonds shall bear
interest at a rate of not more than
the maximum rate authorized by the Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the
time of the making of the contract, payable semi-annually, may
be made registerable as to principal, and may be made callable on any
interest payment date at a price of par and accrued interest under such
terms and conditions as may be fixed by the ordinance authorizing the
issuance of the bonds. Bonds issued under this Division 141 are negotiable
instruments. They shall be executed by the mayor or president of the
municipality and by the municipal clerk and shall be sealed with the
corporate seal of the municipality. In case any officer whose signature
appears on the bonds or coupons ceases to hold that office before the bonds
are delivered, his signature, nevertheless, shall be valid and sufficient
for all purposes, the same as though he had remained in office until the
bonds were delivered. The bonds shall be sold in such manner and upon such
terms as the corporate authorities shall determine, except that the selling
price shall be such that the interest cost to the municipality of the
proceeds of the bonds shall not exceed
the maximum rate authorized by the Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the
time of the making of the contract, payable semi-annually,
computed to maturity according to the standard table of bond values.
With respect to instruments for the payment of money issued under this
Section either before, on, or after the effective date of this amendatory
Act of 1989, it is and always has been the intention of the General
Assembly (i) that the Omnibus Bond Acts are and always have been
supplementary grants of power to issue instruments in accordance with the
Omnibus Bond Acts, regardless of any provision of this Act that may appear
to be or to have been more restrictive than those Acts, (ii) that the
provisions of this Section are not a limitation on the supplementary
authority granted by the Omnibus Bond Acts, and (iii) that instruments
issued under this Section within the supplementary authority granted
by the Omnibus Bond Acts are not invalid because of any provision of
this Act that may appear to be or to have been more restrictive than
those Acts.
The amendatory Acts of 1971, 1972 and 1973 are not a limit upon any
municipality which is a home rule unit.
(Source: P.A. 86-4.)
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65 ILCS 5/11-141-3
(65 ILCS 5/11-141-3) (from Ch. 24, par. 11-141-3)
Sec. 11-141-3.
Whenever the corporate authorities of a municipality determine to
improve or extend or to construct or acquire and improve and extend a
sewerage system and to issue bonds, under this Division 141, for the
payment of the cost thereof, the corporate authorities shall adopt an
ordinance describing, in a general way, the contemplated project. It is
not necessary that the ordinance refer to plans and specifications nor
that there be on file for public inspection prior to the adoption of
such ordinance detailed plans and specifications of the project.
Whenever a municipality has been directed by an order issued under
"An Act to establish a Sanitary Water Board and to control, prevent and
abate pollution of the streams, lakes, ponds and other surface and
underground waters in the State, and to repeal an Act named therein",
approved July 12, 1951, as now or hereafter amended, or the
"Environmental Protection Act", enacted by the 76th
General Assembly, to abate its discharge of untreated or inadequately
treated sewage, this fact shall be set out in the ordinance, unless the
order to abate the discharge has been reversed on appeal.
The ordinance shall set out the estimated cost of the project,
determine the period of usefulness thereof, and fix the amount of
revenue bonds proposed to be issued, the maturity or maturities, the
interest rate, which shall not exceed
the maximum rate authorized by the Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the
time of the making of the contract, and all the details
in connection with the bonds. The ordinance may contain such covenants
and restrictions upon the issuance of additional revenue bonds
thereafter, which will share equally the revenue of the sewerage system,
as may be deemed necessary or advisable for the assurance of the payment
of the bonds first issued. Any municipality may also provide in the
ordinance authorizing the issuance of bonds under this Division 141 that
the bonds, or such ones thereof as may be specified, shall, to the
extent and in the manner prescribed, be subordinated and be junior in
standing, with respect to the payment of principal and interest and the
security thereof, to such other bonds as are designated in the
ordinance.
The ordinance shall pledge the revenue derived from the operation of
the sewerage system for the purpose of paying the cost of operation and
maintenance of the system, providing an adequate depreciation fund, and
paying the principal and interest on the bonds of the municipality
issued under this Division 141.
This amendatory Act (Public Act 76-1983) applies to bonds which are
authorized but not sold on its effective date.
With respect to instruments for the payment of money issued under this
Section either before, on, or after the effective date of this amendatory
Act of 1989, it is and always has been the intention of the General
Assembly (i) that the Omnibus Bond Acts are and always have been
supplementary grants of power to issue instruments in accordance with the
Omnibus Bond Acts, regardless of any provision of this Act that may appear
to be or to have been more restrictive than those Acts, (ii) that the
provisions of this Section are not a limitation on the supplementary
authority granted by the Omnibus Bond Acts, and (iii) that instruments
issued under this Section within the supplementary authority granted
by the Omnibus Bond Acts are not invalid because of any provision of
this Act that may appear to be or to have been more restrictive than
those Acts.
The amendatory Acts of 1971, 1972 and 1973 are not a limit upon any
municipality which is a home rule unit.
(Source: P.A. 86-4.)
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65 ILCS 5/11-141-4
(65 ILCS 5/11-141-4) (from Ch. 24, par. 11-141-4)
Sec. 11-141-4.
Within 10 days after this ordinance has been passed,
it shall be published at least once in one or more newspapers published
in the municipality, or, if no newspaper is published therein, then in
one or more newspapers with a general circulation within the
municipality. In municipalities with less than 500 population in which
no newspaper is published, publication may instead be made by posting a
notice in 3 prominent places within the municipality.
If the ordinance specifies that the municipality has been directed by
an order issued under the provisions of "An Act to establish a Sanitary
Water Board and to control, prevent and abate pollution of the streams,
lakes, ponds and other surface and underground waters in the State, and
to repeal an Act named therein", approved July 12, 1951, as heretofore
and hereafter amended, and the Environmental Protection Act, to abate its
discharge of untreated or inadequately treated sewage, the ordinance
authorizing the issuance of those revenue bonds shall be in effect
immediately upon its adoption and publication, or posting, as provided in
this section, notwithstanding any provision in this Code or any other law
to the contrary.
In all other cases, if no petition is filed with the municipal clerk
as hereinafter provided in this section, within 30 days after the
publication or posting of the ordinance, the ordinance shall be in
effect after the expiration of that 30 day period. In such cases
the publication or posting of the ordinance shall be accompanied by a
notice of (1) the specific number of voters required to sign a petition
requesting the question of improving or extending or of construction or
acquiring and improving and extending a sewerage system and of issuing
revenue bonds to be submitted to the electors; (2) the time in which such
petition must be filed; and (3) the date of the prospective referendum.
The municipal clerk shall provide a petition form to any individual
requesting one. But if within that 30 day period a petition is filed with
the municipal clerk signed by electors of the municipality numbering 10% or
more of the number of registered voters in the municipality, asking that
the question of improving or extending or of construction or acquiring
and improving and extending a sewerage system and of issuing revenue
bonds to pay the cost thereof be submitted to the electors of the
municipality, the municipal clerk of the municipality shall certify the
question for submission at an election.
If a majority of the electors voting upon the question
voted in favor thereof, the ordinance shall be in effect, but if a
majority of the electors voting upon the questions are not in favor
thereof, the ordinance shall not take effect.
(Source: P.A. 87-767.)
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65 ILCS 5/11-141-5
(65 ILCS 5/11-141-5) (from Ch. 24, par. 11-141-5)
Sec. 11-141-5.
All bonds issued under this Division 141 are payable solely
from the revenue derived from the operation of the sewerage system;
provided, that bonds issued under this Division 141 may also be
payable from funds pledged by the municipality issuing such bonds pursuant
to the Illinois Finance Authority
Act.
Notwithstanding any such pledge or any other matter, these
bonds shall not, in any event, constitute an indebtedness of the
municipality within the meaning of any constitutional or statutory
limitation. It shall be plainly stated on the face of each bond that the
bond has been issued under this Division 141 and that it does not
constitute an indebtedness of the municipality within any constitutional or
statutory limitation.
(Source: P.A. 93-205, eff. 1-1-04.)
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65 ILCS 5/11-141-6
(65 ILCS 5/11-141-6) (from Ch. 24, par. 11-141-6)
Sec. 11-141-6.
So long as any revenue bonds of the municipality under the
provisions of this Division 141 are outstanding, all revenue derived from
the operation of such a sewerage system shall be set aside as collected,
and deposited in a special fund of the municipality, and this revenue shall
be used only for the purpose of paying the cost of operating and
maintaining the sewerage system, providing an adequate depreciation fund,
and paying the principal of and interest on the bonds issued by the
municipality under the provisions of this Division 141. When no such
revenue bonds are outstanding, such revenue shall be used for the purpose
of paying the principal of and interest on any other bonds or indebtedness
issued or incurred by the municipality for the construction, acquisition,
improvement, extension, operation or improvement of the sewerage system, or
for paying for the construction, acquisition, improvement, extension,
operation or improvement of the sewerage system.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
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65 ILCS 5/11-141-7
(65 ILCS 5/11-141-7) (from Ch. 24, par. 11-141-7)
Sec. 11-141-7.
Powers.
The corporate authorities of any municipality that
owns and operates or that may hereafter own and operate a sewerage system
constructed or acquired under the provisions of any law of this state may
make, enact, and enforce all needful rules, regulations, and ordinances for
the improvement, care, and protection of its sewerage system and any other
sewer or sewerage system, located outside the corporate boundary of the
municipality and not owned by it, that directly or indirectly connects with
the municipality's sewerage system, which may be conducive to the
preservation of the public health, comfort, and convenience, and may render
the sewage carried in the sewerage system of the municipality harmless in
so far as it is reasonably possible to do so.
The corporate authorities of such a municipality may, by ordinance,
charge the inhabitants thereof for the use and service of its sewerage
system whether by direct or indirect connection therewith within or without
the corporate boundary, and to establish charges or rates for that purpose.
The corporate authorities of such a municipality may by ordinance charge
the users thereof, whether they be inside of or outside of the
municipality, for the use and service of its sewerage system whether by
direct or indirect connection therewith, within or without the corporate
boundary, and may establish charges or rates for that purpose, provided
however that where such users are residents of another municipality with
whom there is a contract for use and service of the sewerage system, then
such charges or rates shall be made in accordance with the terms of the
contract, either directly to the users or to the contracting municipality
as may be provided by the provisions of the contract. In making such rates
and charges the municipality may provide for a rate to the outside users in
excess of the rate fixed for the inhabitants of said municipality as may be
reasonable. Where bonds are issued as provided in Sections 11-141-2 and
11-141-3, the corporate authorities shall establish rates or charges as
provided in this section, and these charges or rates shall be sufficient at
all times to pay the cost of operation and maintenance, to provide an
adequate depreciation fund, and to pay the principal of and interest upon
all revenue bonds issued under Sections 11-141-2 and 11-141-3.
A depreciation fund is a fund for such replacements as may be necessary
from time to time for the continued effective and efficient operation of
the system. The depreciation fund shall not be allowed to accumulate beyond
a reasonable amount necessary for that purpose, and shall not be used for
extensions to the system.
Charges or rates shall be established, revised, and maintained by
ordinance and become payable as the corporate authorities may determine by
ordinance.
Such charges or rates are liens upon the real estate upon or for which
sewerage service is supplied whenever the charges or rates become
delinquent as provided by the ordinance of the municipality fixing a
delinquency date. A lien is created under the preceding sentence only if the
municipality sends to the owner or owners of record, as referenced by the
taxpayer's identification number, of the real estate (i) a copy of each
delinquency notice sent to the person who is delinquent in paying the charges
or rates or other notice sufficient to inform the owner or owners of record, as
referenced by the taxpayer's identification number, that the charges or rates
have become delinquent and (ii) a notice that unpaid charges or rates may
create a lien on the real estate under this Section. However, the municipality
has no preference over the rights of any purchaser, mortgagee, judgment
creditor, or other lien holder arising prior to the filing of the notice of
such a lien in the office of the recorder of the county in which such real
estate is located, or in the office of the registrar of titles of such county
if the property affected is registered under "An Act concerning land titles",
approved May 1, 1897, as amended. This notice shall consist of a sworn
statement setting out (1) a description of such real estate sufficient for the
identification thereof, (2) the amount of money due for such sewerage service,
and (3) the date when such amount became delinquent. The municipality shall
send a copy of the notice of the lien to the owner or owners of
record of the real estate, as referenced by the taxpayer's identification
number. The municipality has the power to foreclose this lien in the same
manner and with the same effect as in the foreclosure of mortgages on real
estate.
Except in counties with a population of more than 250,000 where the majority
of the municipal sewerage system users are located outside of the
municipality's
corporate limits, the payment of delinquent charges for sewerage service to
any premises may be enforced by discontinuing either the water service or the
sewerage service to that premises, or both.
A rate or charge is delinquent if it is more than 30 days
overdue. Any public or municipal corporation
or political
subdivision of the State furnishing water service to a premises (i) shall
discontinue that service upon receiving written notice from the municipality
providing sewerage service that payment of the rate or charge for
sewerage
service to the premises has become delinquent and (ii) shall not resume water
service until receiving a similar notice that the delinquency has been removed.
The provider of sewerage service shall not request discontinuation of water
service before sending a notice of the delinquency to the sewer user and
affording the user an opportunity to be heard.
An investor-owned public utility providing water service within a municipality
that provides sewerage service may contract with the municipality to
discontinue
water service to a premises with respect to which the
payment of a rate or charge for sewerage service has become delinquent.
The municipality shall reimburse the privately owned public utility, public or
municipal corporation, or
political subdivision of the State for the reasonable cost of the
discontinuance and the resumption of water service, any
lost water service revenues, and the costs of discontinuing water service.
The municipality shall indemnify the privately owned public utility, public or
municipal corporation, or political subdivision of the State for any judgment
and related attorney's fees resulting from an action based on any provision of
this paragraph.
The municipality also has the power, from time to time, to sue the
occupant or user of that real estate in a civil action to recover money due
for sewerage services, plus a reasonable attorney's fee, to be fixed by the
court. However, whenever a judgment is entered in such a civil action, the
foregoing provisions in this section with respect to filing sworn
statements of such delinquencies in the office of the recorder and
creating a lien against the real estate shall not be effective as to the
charges sued upon and no lien shall exist thereafter against the real
estate for the delinquency. Judgment in such a civil action operates as a
release and waiver of the lien upon the real estate for the amount of the
judgment.
(Source: P.A. 93-500, eff. 6-1-04 .)
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