Illinois General Assembly

  Bills & Resolutions  
  Compiled Statutes  
  Public Acts  
  Legislative Reports  
  IL Constitution  
  Legislative Guide  
  Legislative Glossary  

 Search By Number
 (example: HB0001)
Search Tips

Search By Keyword

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.

UTILITIES
(220 ILCS 5/) Public Utilities Act.

220 ILCS 5/4-502

    (220 ILCS 5/4-502)
    Sec. 4-502. Small public utility or telecommunications carrier; acquisition by capable utility; Commission determination; procedure.
    (a) The Commission may provide for the acquisition of a small public utility or telecommunications carrier by a capable public utility or telecommunications carrier, if the Commission, after notice and an opportunity to be heard, determines one or more of the following:
        (1) the small public utility or telecommunications
    
carrier is failing to provide safe, adequate, or reliable service;
        (2) the small public utility or telecommunications
    
carrier no longer possesses sufficient technical, financial, or managerial resources and abilities to provide the service or services for which its certificate was originally granted;
        (3) the small public utility or telecommunications
    
carrier has been actually or effectively abandoned by its owners or operators;
        (4) the small public utility or telecommunications
    
carrier has defaulted on a bond, note, or loan issued or guaranteed by a department, office, commission, board, authority, or other unit of State government;
        (5) the small public utility or telecommunications
    
carrier has wilfully failed to comply with any provision of this Act, any other provision of State or federal law, or any rule, regulation, order, or decision of the Commission; or
        (6) the small public utility or telecommunications
    
carrier has wilfully allowed property owned or controlled by it to be used in violation of this Act, any other provision of State or federal law, or any rule, regulation, order, or decision of the Commission.
    (b) As used in this Section, "small public utility or telecommunications carrier" means a public utility or telecommunications carrier that regularly provides service to fewer than 7,500 customers.
    (c) In making a determination under subsection (a), the Commission shall consider all of the following:
        (1) The financial, managerial, and technical ability
    
of the small public utility or telecommunications carrier.
        (2) The financial, managerial, and technical ability
    
of all proximate public utilities or telecommunications carriers providing the same type of service.
        (3) The expenditures that may be necessary to make
    
improvements to the small public utility or telecommunications carrier to assure compliance with applicable statutory and regulatory standards concerning the adequacy, efficiency, safety, or reasonableness of utility service.
        (4) The expansion of the service territory of the
    
acquiring capable public utility or telecommunications carrier to include the service area of the small public utility or telecommunications carrier to be acquired.
        (5) Whether the rates charged by the acquiring
    
capable public utility or telecommunications carrier to its acquisition customers will increase unreasonably because of the acquisition.
        (6) Any other matter that may be relevant.
    (d) For the purposes of this Section, a "capable public utility or telecommunications carrier" means a public utility, as defined under Section 3-105 of this Act, including those entities listed in items (1) through (5) of subsection (b) of Section 3-105, or a telecommunications carrier, as defined under Section 13-202 of this Act, including those entities listed in subsections (a) and (b) of Section 13-202, that:
        (1) regularly provides the same type of service as
    
the small public utility or telecommunications carrier, to 7,500 or more customers, and provides safe, adequate, and reliable service to those customers; however, public utility or telecommunications carrier that would otherwise be a capable public utility except for the fact that it has fewer than 7,500 customers may elect to be a capable public utility or telecommunications carrier for the purposes of this Section regardless of the number of its customers and regardless of whether or not it is proximate to the small public utility or telecommunications carrier to be acquired;
        (2) is not an affiliated interest of the small public
    
utility or telecommunications carrier;
        (3) agrees to acquire the small public utility or
    
telecommunications carrier that is the subject of the proceeding, under the terms and conditions contained in the Commission order approving the acquisition; and
        (4) is financially, managerially, and technically
    
capable of acquiring and operating the small public utility or telecommunications carrier in compliance with applicable statutory and regulatory standards.
    (e) The Commission may, on its own motion or upon petition, initiate a proceeding in order to determine whether an order of acquisition should be entered. Upon the establishment of a prima facie case that the acquisition of the small public utility or telecommunications carrier would be in the public interest and in compliance with the provisions of this Section all of the following apply:
        (1) The small public utility or telecommunications
    
carrier that is the subject of the acquisition proceedings has the burden of proving its ability to render safe, adequate, and reliable service at just and reasonable rates.
        (2) The small public utility or telecommunications
    
carrier that is the subject of the acquisition proceedings may present evidence to demonstrate the practicality and feasibility of the following alternatives to acquisition:
            (A) the reorganization of the small public
        
utility or telecommunications carrier under new management;
            (B) the entering of a contract with another
        
public utility, telecommunications carrier, or a management or service company to operate the small public utility or telecommunications carrier;
            (C) the appointment of a receiver to operate the
        
small public utility or telecommunications carrier, in accordance with the provisions of Section 4-501 of this Act; or
            (D) the merger of the small public utility or
        
telecommunications carrier with one or more other public utilities or telecommunications carriers.
        (3) A public utility or telecommunications carrier
    
that desires to acquire the small public utility or telecommunications carrier has the burden of proving that it is a capable public utility or telecommunications carrier.
    (f) Subject to the determinations and considerations required by subsections (a), (b), (c), (d) and (e) of this Section, the Commission shall issue an order concerning the acquisition of the small public utility or telecommunications carrier by a capable public utility or telecommunications carrier. If the Commission finds that the small public utility or telecommunications carrier should be acquired by the capable public utility or telecommunications carrier, the order shall also provide for the extension of the service area of the acquiring capable public utility or telecommunications carrier.
    (g) The price for the acquisition of the small public utility or telecommunications carrier shall be determined by agreement between the small public utility or telecommunications carrier and the acquiring capable public utility or telecommunications carrier subject to a determination by the Commission that the price is reasonable. If the small public utility or telecommunications carrier and the acquiring capable public utility or telecommunications carrier are unable to agree on the acquisition price or the Commission disapproves the acquisition price upon which they have agreed, the Commission shall issue an order directing the acquiring capable public utility or telecommunications carrier to acquire the small public utility or telecommunications carrier by following the procedure prescribed for the exercise of the powers of eminent domain under Section 8-509 of this Act.
    (h) The Commission may, in its discretion and for a reasonable period of time after the date of acquisition, allow the acquiring capable public utility or telecommunications carrier to charge and collect rates from the customers of the acquired small public utility or telecommunications carrier under a separate tariff.
    (i) A capable public utility or telecommunications carrier ordered by the Commission to acquire a small public utility or telecommunications carrier shall submit to the Commission for approval before the acquisition a plan, including a timetable, for bringing the small public utility or telecommunications carrier into compliance with applicable statutory and regulatory standards.
(Source: P.A. 95-481, eff. 8-28-07.)

220 ILCS 5/4-601

    (220 ILCS 5/4-601)
    Sec. 4-601. Consumer protection laws.
    (a) The General Assembly finds that consumer protection is vital to the health, safety, and welfare of Illinois consumers.
    (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Commission and its staff shall:
        (1) work cooperatively with law enforcement
    
authorities, including the Attorney General and State's Attorneys, in their enforcement of consumer protection laws, including the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act;
        (2) provide any materials or documents already in the
    
Commission's possession requested by the Attorney General or a State's Attorney pertaining to the enforcement of consumer protection laws; any materials or documents that are proprietary shall not be made public unless the designation as proprietary has been removed by a court or legal body of competent jurisdiction, or the agreement of the parties; and
        (3) upon written request, forward any complaints
    
regarding alleged violations of any consumer protection law to the Attorney General and the State's Attorney of the appropriate county or counties.
    (c) Subject to subdivision (1) of Section 10b of the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act, the Attorney General and the State's Attorney of any county shall have available all remedies and authority granted to them by the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act. The remedies for violations of this Act and its rules are not intended to replace other remedies that may be imposed for violations of the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act and are in addition to, and not in substitution for, such other remedies, nor is this Act intended to remove any statutorily defined defenses.
(Source: P.A. 93-881, eff. 1-1-05.)

220 ILCS 5/4-602

    (220 ILCS 5/4-602)
    Sec. 4-602. Electric utility workforce study.
    (a) The Commission shall conduct a comprehensive workforce analysis study of each electric utility to determine the adequacy of the total in-house staffing in each job classification or job title critical to maintaining quality reliability and restoring service in each electric utility's service territory. Each report shall contain a yearly detailed comparison beginning with 1995 and ending in 2006 of each electric utility's ratio of:
        (1) in-house workers, commonly referred to as
    
"linemen", to customers;
        (2) customer service call-center employees to
    
customers; and
        (3) meter service or repair employees to customers.
    The ratios shall be reported from each utility's named service area, district, division, outlying area, village, municipality, reporting point, or region. The analysis shall determine the total number of contractor employees for the same time frame and shall be conducted in the same manner as the in-house analysis.
    (b) The Commission may hold public hearings while conducting the analysis to assist in the adequacy of the study. The Commission must hold public hearings on the study and present the results to the General Assembly no later than January 1, 2009.
    (c) An electric utility shall bear the costs of issuing any reports required by this Section and it shall not be entitled to recovery of any costs incurred in complying with this Section.
(Source: P.A. 95-81, eff. 8-13-07.)

220 ILCS 5/4-603

    (220 ILCS 5/4-603)
    Sec. 4-603. Adequate employment for in-house utility employees. The staff of the Commission shall develop benchmarks for employee staffing levels for each classification and employee training for each classification, subject to the requirements of Section 4-602 of this Act, within one year after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly.
(Source: P.A. 95-81, eff. 8-13-07; 96-582, eff. 8-18-09.)

220 ILCS 5/4-604

    (220 ILCS 5/4-604)
    Sec. 4-604. Electric and gas public utilities ethical conduct and transparency.
    (a) It is the policy of this State that, as regulated, monopoly entities providing essential services, public utilities must adhere to the highest standards of ethical conduct. It is in the public interest to ensure ethical public utility conduct of the highest standards. It is therefore necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare of the State and of public utility customers to develop rigorous ethical standards and scrutinize and limit public utility actions, expenditures, and contracting. It is also necessary to provide increased transparency to ensure ethical public utility conduct.
    (b) The standards set forth in this Section and the Illinois Administrative Code rules implementing this Section shall apply, to the extent practicable, to electric and gas public utilities and their energy-related affiliates.
    (c) Public Utility Ethics and Compliance Monitor. To ensure that public utilities meet the highest level of ethical standards, including, but not limited to, those standards established in this Section, the Commission shall, within 60 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, establish an Ethics and Accountability Division at the Commission and shall create a new position of Public Utility Ethics and Compliance Monitor who reports to the Executive Director of the Commission. The role of the Public Utility Ethics and Compliance Monitor shall be to oversee electric and gas public utilities' compliance with the standards established in this Section, the Illinois Administrative Code, and any other regulatory or statutory obligation regarding standards of ethical conduct. The responsibilities of the Public Utility Ethics and Compliance Monitor shall include:
        (1) Hiring additional staff for the Ethics and
    
Accountability Division, as deemed necessary to fulfill the duties imposed under this Section.
        (2) Overseeing each public utility's Chief
    
Compliance and Ethics Officer's monitoring, auditing, investigation, enforcement, reporting, disciplinary activities, and any other actions required of the Chief Compliance and Ethics Officer pursuant to subsection (d) of this Section. If the Public Utility Ethics and Compliance Monitor finds a public utility has not complied with the standards set forth in this Section, or with administrative rules implementing this Section, the Public Utility Ethics and Compliance Monitor shall detail such deficiencies in a report to the Commission and shall include a recommendation for Commission action.
        (3) Documenting violations of the standards in this
    
Section or in related Sections of the Illinois Administrative Code and, in coordination with the utility's Chief Compliance and Ethics Officer, ensuring each public utility administers appropriate internal disciplinary actions and provides transparent reporting to the Commission. If there are violations of the standards in this Section or in related Sections of the Illinois Administrative Code where the public utility does not take disciplinary action or where that action is not aligned with the recommendation of the Public Utility Ethics and Compliance Monitor, the Public Utility Ethics and Compliance Monitor shall, within 30 days, report the violation, the recommended disciplinary action, and the public utility's actual disciplinary action, to the Executive Director of the Commission. Such reports shall be included in the annual ethics report required by paragraph (5) of this subsection (c) and must describe the violation and related recommendations.
        (4) Reviewing and keeping informed regarding
    
internal controls, code of ethical conduct, practices, procedures, and conduct of each public utility. The Public Utilities Ethics and Compliance Monitor may recommend any new internal controls, policies, practices or procedures the public utility should undertake in order to ensure compliance with this Section and with relevant Sections of the Illinois Administrative Code.
        (5) Publishing an annual ethics audit for each
    
electric and gas public utility describing the public utility's internal controls, policies, practices, and procedures to comply with statutes, rules, court orders, or other applicable authority. The report shall include a record of any disciplinary actions taken related to unethical conduct as well as any recommendations made by the Public Utility Ethics and Compliance Monitor and the public utility's response to each recommendation. This report must be made public and the Commission may make necessary redactions.
        (6) Monitoring, auditing, and subpoenaing all
    
records necessary for the Public Utility Ethics and Compliance Monitor to meet the responsibilities imposed under this Section and related rules, including, but not limited to, contracts with third party entities, accounting records, communication with public officials or their staff, lobbying activities, expenses on lobbyists and consultants, legal expenses, and internal compliance policies.
    (d)(1) No later than 60 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, each public utility shall establish a position of Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer if such position does not already exist within the utility or at an affiliated company, provided that if the position exists at an affiliated company such individual may be designated to serve in this role for the utility. The Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer shall be responsible for ensuring that the public utility complies with the highest standards of ethical conduct, including, but not limited to, complying with the standards imposed under this Section, those adopted pursuant to a rulemaking authorized by this Section, and other applicable requirements of Illinois law and rules.
    (2) Each public utility's Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer shall:
        (A) oversee creation and implementation of a code
    
of ethical conduct for the public utility, applicable to all directors, officers, employees, and lobbyists of the public utility, as well as to all contractors, consultants, agents, vendors, and business partners of the public utility in connection with their activities with or on behalf of the public utility;
        (B) oversee training for public utility directors,
    
officers, and employees, as well as contractors, consultants, lobbyists and political consultants, on the public utility's code of ethical conduct, practices, and procedures to advise agents, vendors, and business partners of the public utility of the applicability of the code of ethical conduct to their activities with or on behalf of the public utility;
        (C) oversee the ongoing monitoring of all
    
contractors, consultants, and vendors who are contracted for the purpose of carrying out lobbying activities to ensure their continued compliance with applicable ethical standards;
        (D) at least annually, oversee a review of the
    
public utility's internal controls, code of ethical conduct, practices, and procedures to assess their continued effectiveness to ensure the highest standards of ethical conduct among the public utility's directors, officers, employees, contractors, consultants, lobbyists, vendors, agents and business partners; and
        (E) maintain records of all conduct determined to
    
be in violation of Illinois law, rules, and regulations, and the utility's response to that conduct, and make such records available for inspection by the Public Utility Ethics and Compliance Monitor.
    (e) In addition to those standards established under this Section, those adopted pursuant to a rulemaking authorized by this Section, and other applicable requirements of Illinois law and rules, each public utility Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer shall oversee and ensure the development and implementation of internal controls, policies, and procedures to achieve the objectives set forth in paragraphs (1) through (3) of this subsection. Such implementation shall begin no later than 90 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly.
        (1) The hiring of contractors, consultants and
    
vendors for the purpose of carrying out lobbying pursuant to the Lobbyist Registration Act shall be reviewed and approved by the Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer.
        (2) No agreement between a public utility and a
    
contractor, consultant, or vendor engaged for the purpose of carrying out lobbying pursuant to the Lobbyist Registration Act shall permit that contractor, consultant, or vendor to subcontract any portion of that work.
        (3) Public utilities shall require contractors,
    
consultants, and vendors who are contracted for the purpose of carrying out lobbying pursuant to the Lobbyist Registration Act to provide detailed invoices and reports describing activities taken and amounts billed for such activities, including all persons involved and anything of value requested or solicited or provided to public officials or their staff, including hiring requests. No such contractor, consultant, or vendor shall be paid without having first submitted a detailed invoice or report.
        For purposes of this Section, "anything of value"
    
includes, but is not limited to, money, gifts, entertainment, hiring referrals and recommendations to the public utility, campaign contributions, vendor referrals, and contributions to charitable organizations solicited by or on behalf of the public official.
    (f) Each public utility shall be required to submit an annual ethics and compliance report to the Commission no later than May 1 of each year, beginning May 1, 2022. The utility's Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer shall oversee the preparation and submission of the report and shall certify it. Each report shall describe in detail the public utility's internal controls, codes of ethical conduct, practices, and procedures. The reporting implemented during the reporting period to comply with the standards set forth in this Section, rules adopted by the Commission, and other applicable requirements of Illinois law and rules. Each report shall also identify any material changes implemented to such internal controls, code of ethical conduct, practices, and procedures during the reporting period, as well as any material changes implemented, or anticipated to be implemented, in the calendar year in which the report is filed. Each report shall, for the applicable reporting period include at least the following information:
        (1) a summary and description of the public
    
utility's system of financial and accounting procedures, internal controls, and practices, including an explanation of how this system is reasonably designed to ensure the maintenance of fair and accurate books, records, and accounts and to provide reasonable assurances that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles and Commission requirements and to maintain accountability for assets;
        (2) a summary and description of the public
    
utility's process for conducting an assessment of ethics and compliance risks and a representation that an assessment was conducted in accordance with those risks and shared with the public utility's senior management and board of directors;
        (3) a summary of the public utility's
    
implementation of mechanisms, including, but not limited to, training programs designed to ensure that its internal controls, code of ethical conduct, practices, and procedures are effectively communicated to all directors, officers, employees, contractors, consultants, lobbyists, vendors, agents, and business partners;
        (4) a summary of the public utility's efforts to
    
ensure that its directors and senior management provide strong, explicit, and visible support and commitment to its corporate policy against violations of federal and State law;
        (5) a summary of the public utility's
    
implementation of mechanisms designed to effectively enforce its internal controls, code of ethical conduct, practices, and procedures, including appropriately providing incentives for compliance, disciplining violators, and applying such code, controls, policies, practices, and procedures consistently and fairly regardless of the position held by, or the importance of, the director, officer, or employee; and
        (6) a summary of the public utility's
    
implementation of procedures to ensure that, where misconduct is discovered, reasonable steps are taken to remedy the harm resulting from such misconduct, including disciplinary action, logging the conduct and the utility's response as required by item (E) of paragraph (2) of subsection (d) of this Section and assessing and modifying as appropriate the internal controls, code, policies, practices and procedures necessary to ensure that the compliance program is effective.
        For purposes of this Section, "reporting period"
    
means the most recent 12-month calendar year period preceding the applicable May 1 annual report filing date.
    (g) Notwithstanding the provisions of this Section, the Commission shall initiate a management audit pursuant to Section 8-102 of this Act by the later of 18 months after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly or 18 months after a conviction or a plea or agreement of each public utility that, on or after January 1, 2020, has been found guilty or entered a guilty plea regarding any felony offense or has entered into a Deferred Prosecution Agreement for a felony offense. Such audit shall address, at a minimum, the topics identified in paragraphs (1) through (6) of subsection (f).
    (h) Each public utility that files a report pursuant to subsection (f) must submit the specified filing fee at the time the Chief Clerk of the Commission accepts the filing. The filing fees applicable to each annual report are as follows: $15,000 for public utilities that serve fewer than 100,000 customers in the State; $75,000 for public utilities that serve at least 100,000 customers but not more than 500,000 customers in the State; $200,000 for public utilities that serve at least 500,000 customers in the State but not more than 3,000,000; and $500,000 for public utilities that serve at least 3,000,000 customers in the State.
    (i) In the event the Public Utility Ethics and Compliance Monitor finds a public utility does not comply with any portion of this Section, or with the rules adopted under this Section, the Public Utility Ethics and Compliance Monitor shall issue a Report to the Commission detailing the public utility's deficiencies. The Commission shall have authority to open an investigation and shall order remediation and penalties, including fines, as appropriate.
    (j) Each year, each public utility in the State shall remit amounts necessary for the Commission to pay the wages, overhead, travel expenses, and other costs of the Public Utility Ethics and Compliance Monitor. The public utility shall remit payment to the Commission in an amount determined by the Commission based on that public utility's proportional share, by number of customers.
    (k) The costs of a public utility that arise from a criminal investigation or result from an investigation initiated by the Commission as the result of an ethics violation are not costs of service and shall not be recoverable in rates.
    (l) The Commission shall have the authority to adopt rules and emergency rules where applicable to implement this Section.
(Source: P.A. 102-662, eff. 9-15-21.)

220 ILCS 5/4-604.5

    (220 ILCS 5/4-604.5)
    Sec. 4-604.5. Restitution for misconduct.
    (a) It is the policy of this State that public utility ethical and criminal misconduct shall not be tolerated. The General Assembly finds it necessary to collect restitution, to be distributed as described in subsection (e), from a public utility that has been found guilty of violations of criminal law or that has entered into a Deferred Prosecution Agreement that details violations of criminal law that result in harm to ratepayers.
    (b) In light of such violations, the Illinois Commerce Commission shall, within 150 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, initiate an investigation as to whether Commonwealth Edison collected, spent, allocated, transferred, remitted, or caused in any other way to be expended ratepayer funds in connection with the conduct detailed in the Deferred Prosecution Agreement of July 16, 2020 between the United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois and Commonwealth Edison. The investigation shall also determine whether any ratepayer funds were used to pay the criminal penalty agreed to in the Deferred Prosecution Agreement. The investigation shall determine whether the public utility collected, spent, allocated, transferred, remitted, or caused in any other way to be expended ratepayer funds that were not lawfully recoverable through rates, and which should accordingly be refunded to ratepayers and calculate such benefits to initiate a refund to ratepayers as a result of such conduct. The investigation shall conclude no later than 330 days following initiation and shall be conducted as a contested case, as defined in Section 1-30 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
    (c) If regulated entities are found guilty of criminal conduct, the Commission may initiate an investigation, impose penalties, order restitution and such other remedies it deems necessary, and initiate refunds to ratepayers as described in subsection (b). Such investigation and proceeding may commence within 150 days of a finding of guilt. Any funds collected pursuant to this subsection shall be distributed as described in subsection (e). The Commission may order any other remedies it deems necessary.
    (d) Pursuant to subsection (e), the investigation shall calculate a schedule for remittance to State funds and to ratepayers, over a period of no more than 4 years, to be paid by the public utility from profits, returns, or shareholder dollars. No costs related to the investigation or contested proceeding authorized by this Section, restitution, or refunds may be recoverable through rates.
    (e) Funds collected pursuant to this Section, for the purposes of restitution, shall be repaid by the public utility as a per therm or per-kilowatt-hour credit to the public utility's ratepayers as a separate line item on the utility bill.
    (f) No public utility may use ratepayer funds to pay a criminal penalty imposed by any local, State, or federal law enforcement entity or court.
    (g) Any penalties, restitution, refunds, or remedies provided for in this Section are in addition to and not a substitution for other remedies that may be provided for by law.
(Source: P.A. 102-662, eff. 9-15-21.)

220 ILCS 5/4-605

    (220 ILCS 5/4-605)
    Sec. 4-605. Reliability mitigation plan findings. The General Assembly finds that reducing carbon dioxide and copollutant emissions in a manner that does not threaten electric reliability and resource adequacy is essential to the health and safety of all Illinois citizens. Therefore, the Commission shall review reliability mitigation plans filed pursuant to Section 9.15 of the Environmental Protection Act to ensure adequate, reliable, affordable, efficient, and environmentally sustainable electric service is available to ratepayers by approving reliability mitigation plans that permit the Illinois Pollution Control Board to enforce emission reductions in a manner that preserves reliability and resource adequacy in wholesale and retail electricity markets.
(Source: P.A. 102-662, eff. 9-15-21.)

220 ILCS 5/4-610

    (220 ILCS 5/4-610)
    Sec. 4-610. Thermal energy networks.
    (a) The General Assembly finds that:
        (1) the State has an interest in decarbonizing
    
buildings in a manner that is affordable and accessible, preserves and creates living-wage jobs, and retains the knowledge and experience of the existing utility workforce;
        (2) thermal energy networks have the potential to
    
affordably decarbonize buildings at the community-scale and utility-scale and help achieve the goals of the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act (Public Act 102-662);
        (3) the construction industry is highly skilled and
    
labor intensive, and the installation of modern thermal energy networks involves particularly complex work, therefore effective qualification standards for craft labor personnel employed on these projects are critically needed to promote successful project delivery; and
        (4) it is the intent of the General Assembly to
    
establish a stakeholder workshop within the Commission to promote the successful planning and delivery of thermal energy networks in an equitable manner that reduces emissions, offers affordable building decarbonization, and provides opportunities for employment with fair labor standards and preapprenticeship and apprenticeship programs.
    (b) As used in this Section:
    "Thermal energy" means piped noncombustible fluids used for transferring heat into and out of buildings for the purpose of reducing any resultant onsite greenhouse gas emissions of all types of heating and cooling processes, including, but not limited to, comfort heating and cooling, domestic hot water, and refrigeration.
    "Thermal energy network" means all real estate, fixtures, and personal property operated, owned, used, or to be used for, in connection with, or to facilitate a utility-scale distribution infrastructure project that supplies thermal energy.
    (c) The Commission, in order to develop a regulatory structure for utility thermal energy networks that scale with affordable and accessible building electrification, protect utility customers, and promote the successful planning and delivery of thermal energy networks, shall convene a workshop process for the purpose of establishing an open, inclusive, and cooperative forum regarding such thermal energy networks. The workshops may be facilitated by an independent, third-party facilitator selected by the Commission. The series of workshops shall include no fewer than 3 workshops. After the conclusion of the workshops, the Commission shall open a comment period that allows interested and diverse stakeholders to submit comments and recommendations regarding the thermal energy networks. Based on the workshop process and stakeholder comments and recommendations offered verbally or in writing during the workshops and in writing during the comment period following the workshops, the Commission or, if applicable, the independent third-party facilitator, shall prepare a report, to be submitted to the Governor and the General Assembly no later than March 1, 2024, describing the stakeholders, discussions, proposals, and areas of consensus and disagreement from the workshop process, and making recommendations regarding thermal energy networks.
    (d) The workshop shall be designed to achieve the following objectives:
        (1) determine appropriate ownership, market, and rate
    
structures for thermal energy networks and whether the provision of thermal energy services by thermal network energy providers is in the public interest;
        (2) consider project designs that could maximize the
    
value of existing State energy efficiency and weatherization programs and maximize federal funding opportunities to the extent practicable;
        (3) determine whether thermal energy network projects
    
further climate justice and emissions reductions and benefits to utility customers and society at large, including but not limited to public health benefits in areas with disproportionate environmental burdens, job retention and creation, reliability, and increased affordability of renewable thermal energy options;
        (4) consider approaches to thermal energy network
    
projects that advance financial and technical approaches to equitable and affordable building electrification, including access to thermal energy network benefits by low and moderate income households; and
        (5) consider approaches to promote the training and
    
transition of utility workers to work on thermal energy networks.
(Source: P.A. 103-580, eff. 12-8-23.)

220 ILCS 5/Art. V

 
    (220 ILCS 5/Art. V heading)
ARTICLE V. DUTIES OF PUBLIC UTILITIES
ACCOUNTS AND REPORTS

220 ILCS 5/5-101

    (220 ILCS 5/5-101) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 5-101)
    Sec. 5-101. Every public utility shall furnish to the Commission all information required by it to carry into effect the provisions of this Act, and shall make specific answers to all questions submitted by the Commission.
    Any public utility receiving from the Commission any blanks with directions to fill the same, shall cause the same to be properly filled out so as to answer fully and correctly each question therein propounded, and in case it is unable to answer any question, it shall give a good and sufficient reason for such failure; and said answer shall be verified under oath by the president, secretary, superintendent or general manager of such public utility and returned to the Commission at its office within the period fixed by the Commission.
    Whenever required by the Commission, every public utility shall deliver to the Commission, any or all maps, profiles, reports, documents, books, accounts, papers and records in its possession, or in any way relating to its property or affecting its business, and inventories of its property, in such form as the Commission may direct, or verified copies of any or all of the same.
    Every public utility shall obey and comply with each and every requirement of this Act and every order, decision, direction, rule or regulation made or prescribed by the Commission in the matters herein specified, or any other matter in any way relating to or affecting its business as a public utility, and shall do everything necessary or proper in order to secure compliance with and observance of this Act and every such order, decision, direction, rule or regulation by all of its officers, agents and employees.
(Source: P.A. 84-617.)

220 ILCS 5/5-102

    (220 ILCS 5/5-102) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 5-102)
    Sec. 5-102. The Commission shall have power to establish a uniform system of accounts to be kept by public utilities or to classify public utilities and to establish a uniform system of accounts for each class and to prescribe the manner in which such accounts shall be kept. It may also, in its discretion, prescribe the forms of accounts to be kept by public utilities, including records of service, as well as accounts of earnings and expenses, and any other forms, records and memoranda which in the judgment of the Commission may be necessary to carry out any of the provisions of this Act. Where the Commission has prescribed the forms of accounts to be kept by any public utility for any of its business, it shall thereafter be unlawful for such public utility to keep any accounts for such business other than those prescribed or approved by the Commission, or those prescribed by or under the authority of any other state or of the United States.
    The Commission may, from time to time, alter, amend or repeal, in whole or in part, any uniform system of accounts, or the form and manner of keeping accounts.
(Source: P.A. 100-840, eff. 8-13-18.)

220 ILCS 5/5-103

    (220 ILCS 5/5-103) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 5-103)
    Sec. 5-103. Such systems of accounts shall provide for forms showing all sources of incomes, the amounts due and received from each source and the amounts expended and due for each purpose, distinguishing clearly all payments for operating expenses from those for new construction, extensions and additions and for balance sheets showing assets and liabilities and various forms of proprietary interest.
(Source: P.A. 84-617.)

220 ILCS 5/5-104

    (220 ILCS 5/5-104) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 5-104)
    Sec. 5-104. Depreciation accounts.
    (a) The Commission shall have power, after hearing, to require any or all public utilities, except electric public utilities, to keep such accounts as will adequately reflect depreciation, obsolescence and the progress of the arts. The Commission may, from time to time, ascertain and determine and by order fix the proper and adequate rate of depreciation of the several classes of property for each public utility; and each public utility shall conform its depreciation accounts to the rates so ascertained, determined and fixed.
    (b) The Commission shall have the power, after hearing, to require any or all electric public utilities to keep such accounts as will adequately reflect depreciation, obsolescence, and the progress of the arts. The Commission may, from time to time, ascertain and determine and by order fix the proper and adequate rate of depreciation of the several classes of property for each electric public utility; and each electric public utility shall thereafter, absent further order of the Commission, conform its depreciation accounts to the rates so ascertained, determined and fixed until at least the end of the first full calendar year following the date of such determination.
    (c) An electric public utility may from time to time alter the annual rates of depreciation, which for purposes of this subsection (c) and subsection (d) shall include amortization, that it applies to its several classes of assets so long as the rates are consistent with generally accepted accounting principles. The electric public utility shall file a statement with the Commission which shall set forth the new rates of depreciation and which shall contain a certification by an independent certified public accountant that the new rates of depreciation are consistent with generally accepted accounting principles. Upon the filing of such statement, the new rates of depreciation shall be deemed to be approved by the Commission as the rates of depreciation to be applied thereafter by the public utility as though an order had been entered pursuant to subsection (b).
    (d) In any proceeding conducted pursuant to Section 9-201 or 9-202 to set an electric public utility's rates for service, the Commission may determine not to use, in determining the depreciation expense component of the public utility's rates for service, the rates of depreciation established pursuant to subsection (c), if the Commission in that proceeding finds based on the record that different rates of depreciation are required to adequately reflect depreciation, obsolescence and the progress of the arts, and fixes by order and uses for purposes of that proceeding new rates of depreciation to be thereafter employed by the electric public utility until the end of the first full calendar year following the date of the determination and thereafter until altered in accordance with subsection (b) or (c) of this Section.
    (e) A gas public utility serving more than 1,600,000 customers as of January 1, 2013 may from time to time alter the annual rates of depreciation, which for purposes of this subsection (e) shall include amortization, that the gas public utility applies to its several classes of assets so long as the rates are consistent with generally accepted accounting principles. The gas public utility shall file testimony with the Commission setting forth the new rates of depreciation that shall include: (i) a summary of the causes for the change in depreciation rates; (ii) a certification by an independent certified public accountant that the new rates of depreciation are consistent with generally accepted accounting principles; (iii) the depreciation study; and (iv) the expected impact on depreciation expense from the new depreciation rates. The gas public utility shall also simultaneously submit to the Commission all work papers that support the filed depreciation study. No later than 120 days after the filing by the gas public utility under this subsection (e), the Commission shall ascertain and determine and, by order, fix the proper and adequate rate of depreciation of the several classes of property for the gas public utility. The gas public utility shall conform its depreciation accounts to the rates so ascertained, determined, and fixed. Rates of depreciation established by the Commission pursuant to this subsection (e) shall become effective upon the date of the gas public utility's filing.
(Source: P.A. 98-473, eff. 8-16-13.)

220 ILCS 5/5-105

    (220 ILCS 5/5-105) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 5-105)
    Sec. 5-105. The Commission may provide for the examination and audit of all accounts, and all items shall be allocated to the accounts in the manner prescribed by the Commission. The officers and employees of the Commission shall have authority under the direction of the Commission to inspect and examine any and all books, accounts, papers, records and memoranda kept by such public utilities.
(Source: P.A. 84-617.)

220 ILCS 5/5-106

    (220 ILCS 5/5-106) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 5-106)
    Sec. 5-106. Each public utility shall have an office in one of the cities, villages or incorporated towns in this State in which its property or some part thereof is located, and shall keep in said office all such books, accounts, papers, records and memoranda as shall be ordered by the Commission to be kept within the State. The address of such office shall be filed with the Commission. No books, accounts, papers, records or memoranda ordered by the Commission to be kept within the State shall be at any time removed from the State, except upon such conditions as may be prescribed by the Commission.
    Each public utility shall be liable for, and upon proper invoice from the Commission shall promptly reimburse the Commission for, the reasonable costs and expenses associated with the audit or inspection of any books, accounts, papers, records and memoranda kept outside the State.
(Source: P.A. 84-617.)