SB0018 EngrossedLRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1    AN ACT concerning energy.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4
Article 5. Energy Transition

 
5    Section 5-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the
6Energy Transition Act. As used in this Article, "this Act"
7refers to this Article.
 
8    Section 5-5. Definitions. As used in this Act:
9    "Apprentice" means a participant in an apprenticeship
10program approved by and registered with the United States
11Department of Labor's Bureau of Apprenticeship and Training.
12    "Apprenticeship program" means an apprenticeship and
13training program approved by and registered with the United
14States Department of Labor's Bureau of Apprenticeship and
15Training.
16    "Black, indigenous, and people of color" or "BIPOC" means
17people who are members of the groups described in
18subparagraphs (a) through (e) of paragraph (A) of subsection
19(1) of Section 2 of the Business Enterprise for Minorities,
20Women, and Persons with Disabilities Act.
21    "Community-based organizations" means an organization
22that: (1) provides employment, skill development, or related

 

 

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1services to members of the community; (2) includes community
2colleges, nonprofits, and local governments; (3) has at least
3one main operating office in the community or region it
4serves; and (4) demonstrates relationships with local
5residents and other organizations serving the community.
6    "Department" means the Department of Commerce and Economic
7Opportunity, unless the text solely specifies a particular
8Department.
9    "Director" means the Director of Commerce and Economic
10Opportunity.
11    "Equity eligible contractor" or "eligible contractor"
12means:
13        (1) a business that is majority-owned by equity
14    investment eligible individuals or persons who are or have
15    been participants in the Clean Jobs Workforce Network
16    Program, Clean Energy Contractor Incubator Program,
17    Returning Residents Clean Jobs Training Program, Illinois
18    Climate Works Preapprenticeship Program, or Clean Energy
19    Primes Contractor Accelerator Program;
20        (2) a nonprofit or cooperative that is
21    majority-governed by equity investment eligible
22    individuals or persons who are or have been participants
23    in the Clean Jobs Workforce Network Program, Clean Energy
24    Contractor Incubator Program, Returning Residents Clean
25    Jobs Training Program, Illinois Climate Works
26    Preapprenticeship Program, or Clean Energy Primes

 

 

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1    Contractor Accelerator Program; or
2        (3) an equity investment eligible person or an
3    individual who is or has been a participant in the Clean
4    Jobs Workforce Network Program, Clean Energy Contractor
5    Incubator Program, Returning Residents Clean Jobs Training
6    Program, Illinois Climate Works Preapprenticeship Program,
7    or Clean Energy Primes Contractor Accelerator Program and
8    who is offering personal services as an independent
9    contractor.
10    "Equity focused populations" means (i) low-income persons;
11(ii) persons residing in equity investment eligible
12communities; (iii) persons who identify as black, indigenous,
13and people of color; (iv) formerly convicted persons; (v)
14persons who are or were in the child welfare system; (vi)
15energy workers; (vii) dependents of displaced energy workers;
16(viii) women; (ix) LGBTQ+, transgender, or gender
17nonconforming persons; (x) persons with disabilities; and (xi)
18members of any of these groups who are also youth.
19    "Equity investment eligible community" and "eligible
20community" are synonymous and mean the geographic areas
21throughout Illinois which would most benefit from equitable
22investments by the State designed to combat discrimination and
23foster sustainable economic growth. Specifically, the eligible
24community means the following areas:
25        (1) R3 Areas as established pursuant to Section 10-40
26    of the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act, where residents

 

 

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1    have historically been excluded from economic
2    opportunities, including opportunities in the energy
3    sector; and
4        (2) Environmental justice communities, as defined by
5    the Illinois Power Agency pursuant to the Illinois Power
6    Agency Act, but excluding racial and ethnic indicators,
7    where residents have historically been subject to
8    disproportionate burdens of pollution, including pollution
9    from the energy sector.
10    "Equity investment eligible person" and "eligible person"
11are synonymous and mean the persons who would most benefit
12from equitable investments by the State designed to combat
13discrimination and foster sustainable economic growth.
14Specifically, eligible persons means the following people:
15        (1) persons whose primary residence is in an equity
16    investment eligible community;
17        (2) persons who are graduates of or currently enrolled
18    in the foster care system; or
19        (3) persons who were formerly incarcerated.
20    "Climate Works Hub" means a nonprofit organization
21selected by the Department to act as a workforce intermediary
22and to participate in the Illinois Climate Works
23Preapprenticeship Program. To qualify as a Climate Works Hub,
24the organization must demonstrate the following:
25        (1) the ability to effectively serve diverse and
26    underrepresented populations, including by providing

 

 

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1    employment services to such populations;
2        (2) experience with the construction and building
3    trades;
4        (3) the ability to recruit, prescreen, and provide
5    preapprenticeship training to prepare workers for
6    employment in the construction and building trades; and
7        (4) a plan to provide the following:
8            (A) preparatory classes;
9            (B) workplace readiness skills, such as resume
10        preparation and interviewing techniques;
11            (C) strategies for overcoming barriers to entry
12        and completion of an apprenticeship program; and
13            (D) any prerequisites for acceptance into an
14        apprenticeship program.
 
15    Section 5-10. Findings. The General Assembly finds that
16the clean energy sector is a growing area of the economy in the
17State of Illinois. The General Assembly further finds that
18State investment in the clean energy economy in Illinois can
19be a vehicle for expanding equitable access to public health,
20safety, a cleaner environment, quality jobs, and economic
21opportunity.
22    It is in the public policy interest of the State to ensure
23that Illinois residents from communities disproportionately
24impacted by climate change, communities facing coal plant or
25coal mine closures, and economically disadvantaged communities

 

 

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1and individuals experiencing barriers to employment have
2access to State programs and good jobs and career
3opportunities in growing sectors of the State economy. To
4promote those interests in the growing clean energy sector,
5the General Assembly hereby creates this Act to increase
6access to and opportunities for education, training, and
7support services these individuals need to succeed in the
8labor market generally and the clean energy sector
9specifically. The General Assembly further finds that the
10programs included in this Act are essential to equitable,
11statewide access to quality training, jobs, and economic
12opportunities across the clean energy sector.
 
13    Section 5-15. Regional Administrators.
14    (a) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall select
153 unique Regional Administrators: one Regional Administrator
16for coordination of the work in the Northern Illinois Program
17Delivery Area, one Regional Administrator for coordination of
18the work in the Central Illinois Program Delivery Area, and
19one Regional Administrator for coordination of the work in the
20Southern Illinois Program Delivery Area.
21    (b) The Regional Administrators shall have strong
22capabilities, experience, and knowledge related to program
23development and fiscal management; cultural and language
24competency needed to be effective in their respective
25communities to be served; expertise in working in and with

 

 

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1BIPOC and environmental justice communities; knowledge and
2experience in working with employer or sectoral partnerships,
3if applicable, in clean energy or related sectors; and
4awareness of industry trends and activities, workforce
5development best practices, regional workforce development
6needs, regional and industry employers, and community
7development. The Regional Administrators shall demonstrate a
8track record of strong partnerships with community-based
9organizations and labor organizations.
10    (c) The Regional Administrators shall work together to
11administer the implementation of the Clean Jobs Workforce
12Network Program, the Illinois Climate Works Preapprenticeship
13Program, the Clean Energy Contractor Incubator Program, and
14the Returning Resident Clean Jobs Training Program.
 
15    Section 5-20. Clean Jobs Workforce Network Program.
16    (a) As used in this Section, "Program" means the Clean
17Jobs Workforce Network Program.
18    (b) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall develop
19and, through Regional Administrators, administer the Clean
20Jobs Workforce Network Program to create a network of 13
21Program delivery Hub Sites with program elements delivered by
22community-based organizations and their subcontractors
23geographically distributed across the State including at least
24one Hub Site located in or near each of the following areas:
25Chicago (South Side), Chicago (Southwest and West Sides),

 

 

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1Waukegan, Rockford, Aurora, Joliet, Peoria, Champaign,
2Danville, Decatur, Carbondale, East St. Louis, and Alton.
3    (c) In admitting program participants, for each workforce
4Hub Site, the Regional Administrators shall:
5        (1) in each Hub Site where the applicant pool allows:
6            (A) dedicate at least one-third of program
7        placements to applicants who reside in a geographic
8        area that is impacted by economic and environmental
9        challenges, defined as an area that is both (i) an R3
10        Area, as defined pursuant to Section 10-40 of the
11        Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act, and (ii) an
12        environmental justice community, as defined by the
13        Illinois Power Agency, excluding any racial or ethnic
14        indicators used by the agency unless and until the
15        constitutional basis for their inclusion in
16        determining program admissions is established. Among
17        applicants that satisfy these criteria, preference
18        shall be given to applicants who face barriers to
19        employment, such as low educational attainment, prior
20        involvement with the criminal legal system, and
21        language barriers; and applicants that are graduates
22        of or currently enrolled in the foster care system;
23        and
24            (B) dedicate at least two-thirds of program
25        placements to applicants that satisfy the criteria in
26        paragraph (1) or who reside in a geographic area that

 

 

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1        is impacted by economic or environmental challenges,
2        defined as an area that is either (i) an R3 Area, as
3        defined pursuant to Section 10-40 of the Cannabis
4        Regulation and Tax Act, or (ii) an environmental
5        justice community, as defined by the Illinois Power
6        Agency, excluding any racial or ethnic indicators used
7        by the agency unless and until the constitutional
8        basis for their inclusion in determining program
9        admissions is established. Among applicants that
10        satisfy these criteria, preference shall be given to
11        applicants who face barriers to employment, such as
12        low educational attainment, prior involvement with the
13        criminal legal system, and language barriers; and
14        applicants that are graduates of or currently enrolled
15        in the foster care system; and
16        (2) prioritize the remaining program placements for:
17    applicants who are displaced energy workers as defined in
18    the Energy Community Reinvestment Act; persons who face
19    barriers to employment, including low educational
20    attainment, prior involvement with the criminal legal
21    system, and language barriers; and applicants who are
22    graduates of or currently enrolled in the foster care
23    system, regardless of the applicant's area of residence.
24    The Department and Regional Administrators shall protect
25the confidentiality of any personal information provided by
26program applicants regarding the applicant's status as a

 

 

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1formerly incarcerated person or foster care recipient;
2however, the Department or Regional Administrators may publish
3aggregated data on the number of participants that were
4formerly incarcerated or foster care recipients so long as
5that publication protects the identities of those persons.
6    Any person who applies to the program may elect not to
7share with the Department or Regional Administrators whether
8he or she is a graduate or currently enrolled in the foster
9care system or was formerly convicted.
10    (d) Program elements for each Hub Site shall be provided
11by a community-based organization. The Department shall
12initially select a community-based organization in each Hub
13Site and shall subsequently select a community-based
14organization in each Hub Site every 3 years. Community-based
15organizations delivering program elements outlined in
16subsection (e) may provide all elements required or may
17subcontract to other entities for provision of portions of
18program elements, including, but not limited to,
19administrative soft and hard skills for program participants,
20delivery of specific training in the core curriculum, or
21provision of other support functions for program delivery
22compliance.
23    (e) The Clean Jobs Workforce Hubs Network shall:
24        (1) coordinate with Energy Transition Navigators: (i)
25    to increase participation in the Clean Jobs Workforce
26    Network Program and clean energy and related sector

 

 

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1    workforce and training opportunities; (ii) coordinate
2    recruitment, communications, and ongoing engagement with
3    potential employers, including, but not limited to,
4    activities such as job matchmaking initiatives, hosting
5    events such as job fairs, and collaborating with other Hub
6    Sites to identify and implement best practices for
7    employer engagement; and (iii) leverage community-based
8    organizations, educational institutions, and
9    community-based and labor-based training providers to
10    ensure program-eligible individuals across the State have
11    dedicated and sustained support to enter and complete the
12    career pipeline for clean energy and related sector jobs;
13        (2) develop formal partnerships, including formal
14    sector partnerships between community-based organizations
15    and entities that provide clean energy jobs, including
16    businesses, nonprofit organizations, and worker-owned
17    cooperatives, to ensure that Program participants have
18    priority access to employment training and hiring
19    opportunities; and
20        (3) implement the Clean Jobs Curriculum to provide,
21    including, but not limited to, training, certification
22    preparation, job readiness, and skill development,
23    including soft skills, math skills, technical skills,
24    certification test preparation, and other development
25    needed, to Program participants.
26    (f) Funding for the Program is subject to appropriation

 

 

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1from the Energy Transition Assistance Fund.
2    (g) The Department shall require submission of quarterly
3reports, including program performance metrics by each Hub
4Site to the Regional Administrator of their Program Delivery
5Area. Program performance metrics include, but are not limited
6to:
7        (1) demographic data, including racial, gender,
8    residency in eligible communities, and geographic
9    distribution data, on Program trainees entering and
10    graduating the Program;
11        (2) demographic data, including racial, gender,
12    residency in eligible communities, and geographic
13    distribution data, on Program trainees who are placed in
14    employment, including the percentages of trainees by race,
15    gender, and geographic categories in each individual job
16    type or category and whether employment is union,
17    nonunion, or nonunion via temporary agency;
18        (3) trainee job acquisition and retention statistics,
19    including the duration of employment (start and end dates
20    of hires) by race, gender, and geography;
21        (4) hourly wages, including hourly overtime pay rate,
22    and benefits of trainees placed into employment by race,
23    gender, and geography;
24        (5) percentage of jobs by race, gender, and geography
25    held by Program trainees or graduates that are full-time
26    equivalent positions, meaning that the position held is

 

 

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1    full-time, direct, and permanent based on 2,080 hours
2    worked per year (paid directly by the employer, whose
3    activities, schedule, and manner of work the employer
4    controls, and receives pay and benefits in the same manner
5    as permanent employees); and
6        (6) qualitative data consisting of open-ended
7    reporting on pertinent issues, including, but not limited
8    to, qualitative descriptions accompanying metrics or
9    identifying key successes and challenges.
10    (h) Within 3 years after the effective date of this Act,
11the Department shall select an independent evaluator to review
12and prepare a report on the performance of the Program and
13Regional Administrators.
 
14    Section 5-25. Clean Jobs Curriculum.
15    (a) As used in this Section, "clean energy jobs", subject
16to administrative rules, means jobs in the solar energy, wind
17energy, energy efficiency, energy storage, solar thermal,
18green hydrogen, geothermal, electric vehicle industries, other
19renewable energy industries, industries achieving emission
20reductions, and other related sectors including related
21industries that manufacture, develop, build, maintain, or
22provide ancillary services to renewable energy resources or
23energy efficiency products or services, including the
24manufacture and installation of healthier building materials
25that contain fewer hazardous chemicals. "Clean energy jobs"

 

 

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1includes administrative, sales, other support functions within
2these industries and other related sector industries.
3    (b) The Department shall convene a comprehensive
4stakeholder process that includes representatives from the
5State Board of Education, the Illinois Community College
6Board, the Department of Labor, community-based organizations,
7workforce development providers, labor unions, building
8trades, educational institutions, residents of BIPOC and
9low-income communities, residents of environmental justice
10communities, clean energy businesses, nonprofit organizations,
11worker-owned cooperatives, other groups that provide clean
12energy jobs opportunities, groups that provide construction
13and building trades job opportunities, and other participants
14to identify the career pathways and training curriculum needed
15for participants to be skilled, work ready, and able to enter
16clean energy jobs. The curriculum shall:
17        (1) identify the core training curricular competency
18    areas needed to prepare workers to enter clean energy and
19    related sector jobs;
20        (2) identify a set of required core cross-training
21    competencies provided in each training area for clean
22    energy jobs with the goal of enabling any trainee to
23    receive a standard set of skills common to multiple
24    training areas that would provide a foundation for
25    pursuing a career composed of multiple clean energy job
26    types;

 

 

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1        (3) include approaches to integrate broad occupational
2    training to provide career entry into the general
3    construction and building trades sector and any remedial
4    education and work readiness support necessary to achieve
5    educational and professional eligibility thresholds; and
6        (4) identify on-the-job training formats, where
7    relevant, and identify suggested trainer certification
8    standards, where relevant.
9    (c) The Department shall publish a report that includes
10the findings, recommendations, and core curriculum identified
11by the stakeholder group and shall post a copy of the report on
12its public website. The Department shall convene the process
13described to update and modify the recommended curriculum
14every 3 years to ensure the curriculum contents are current to
15the evolving clean energy industries, practices, and
16technologies.
17    (d) Organizations that receive funding to provide training
18under the Clean Jobs Workforce Network Program, including, but
19not limited to, community-based and labor-based training
20providers, and educational institutions must use the core
21curriculum that is developed under this Section.
 
22    Section 5-30. Energy Transition Barrier Reduction Program.
23    (a) As used in this Section, "Program" means the Energy
24Transition Barrier Reduction Program.
25    (b) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall create

 

 

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1and administer an Energy Transition Barrier Reduction Program.
2The Program shall be used to provide supportive services for
3individuals impacted by the energy transition. Services
4allowed are intended to help eligible individuals overcome
5financial and other barriers to participation in the Clean
6Jobs Workforce Network Program and the Illinois Climate Works
7Preapprenticeship Program.
8    (c) The Program shall be available to individuals eligible
9for participation in the Clean Jobs Workforce Network Program
10or Illinois Climate Works Preapprenticeship Program.
11    (d) The Department shall determine appropriate allowable
12program costs, elements, and financial supports to reduce
13barriers to successful participation in the Clean Jobs
14Workforce Program and the Illinois Climate Works
15Preapprenticeship Program for individuals eligible for these
16programs.
17    (e) Community-based organizations and other nonprofits
18selected by the Department shall provide supportive services
19described in this Section to eligible individuals
20participating in the Clean Jobs Workforce Network Program and
21Illinois Climate Works Preapprenticeship Program.
22    (f) The community-based organizations that provide support
23services under this Section shall coordinate with the Energy
24Transition Navigators to ensure eligible individuals have
25access to these services.
26    (g) Funding for the Program is subject to appropriation

 

 

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1from the Energy Transition Assistance Fund.
 
2    Section 5-35. Energy Transition Navigators.
3    (a) As used in this Section:
4    "Community-based provider" means a not-for-profit
5organization that has a history of serving low-wage or
6low-skilled workers or individuals from economically
7disadvantaged communities.
8    "Economically disadvantaged community" means areas of one
9or more census tracts where the average household income does
10not exceed 80% of the area median income.
11    (b) In order to engage eligible individuals to participate
12in the Clean Jobs Workforce Network Program, the Illinois
13Climate Works Preapprenticeship Program, Returning Residents
14Clean Jobs Program, Clean Energy Contractor Incubator Program,
15and Clean Energy Primes Contractor Accelerator Program and
16utilize the services offered under the Energy Transition
17Barrier Reduction Program, the Department shall, subject to
18appropriation, contract with community-based providers to
19serve as Energy Transition Navigators. Energy Transition
20Navigators shall provide education, outreach, and recruitment
21services to equity focused populations, prioritizing
22individuals eligible for the Clean Jobs Workforce Network
23Program or Illinois Climate Works Preapprenticeship Program,
24to make sure they are aware of and engaged in the statewide and
25local workforce development systems. Additional strategies may

 

 

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1include, but are not limited to, recruitment activities and
2events.
3    (c) For members of equity focused populations,
4prioritizing individuals eligible for the Clean Jobs Workforce
5Network Program or Illinois Climate Works Preapprenticeship
6Program, who may be interested in entrepreneurial pursuits,
7Energy Transition Navigators may connect these individuals
8with their area Small Business Development Center, Procurement
9Technical Assistance Centers, or economic development
10organization to engage in services, including, but not limited
11to, business consulting, business planning, regulatory
12compliance, marketing, training, accessing capital, government
13bid, and certification assistance.
14    (d) Energy Transition Navigators shall engage equity
15focused populations, prioritizing individuals eligible for the
16Clean Jobs Workforce Network Program or Illinois Climate Works
17Preapprenticeship Program, organizations working with these
18populations, local workforce innovation boards, and other
19relevant stakeholders to coordinate outreach initiatives to
20promote information regarding programs and services offered
21under the Clean Jobs Workforce Network Program, the Illinois
22Climate Works Preapprenticeship Program, and the Energy
23Transition Barrier Reduction Program. Energy Transition
24Navigators shall provide support where reasonable to
25individuals and entities applying for these services and
26programs.

 

 

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1    (e) Community education, outreach, and recruitment
2regarding the Clean Jobs Workforce Network Program, the
3Illinois Climate Works Preapprenticeship Program, and Energy
4Transition Barrier Reduction Program shall be targeted to the
5equity focused populations, prioritizing individuals eligible
6for the Clean Jobs Workforce Network Program or Illinois
7Climate Works Preapprenticeship Program.
8    (f) Community-based providers shall partner with
9educational institutions or organizations working with equity
10focused populations, local employers, labor unions, and others
11to identify members of equity focused populations in eligible
12communities who are unable to advance in their careers due to
13inadequate skills. Community-based providers shall provide
14information and consultation to equity focused populations,
15prioritizing individuals eligible for the Clean Jobs Workforce
16Network Program or Illinois Climate Works Preapprenticeship
17Program, on various educational opportunities and supportive
18services available to them.
19    (g) Community-based providers shall establish partnerships
20with employers, educational institutions, local economic
21development organizations, environmental justice
22organizations, trades groups, labor unions, and entities that
23provide jobs, including businesses and other nonprofit
24organizations, to target the skill needs of local industry.
25The community-based provider shall work with local workforce
26innovation boards and other relevant partners to develop skill

 

 

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1curriculum and career pathway support for disadvantaged
2individuals in equity focused populations, prioritizing
3individuals eligible for the Clean Jobs Workforce Network
4Program or Illinois Climate Works Preapprenticeship Program,
5that meets local employers' needs and establishes job
6placement opportunities after training.
7    (h) Funding for the Program is subject to appropriation
8from the Energy Transition Assistance Fund. Priority in
9awarding grants under this Section will be given to
10organizations that also have experience serving populations
11impacted by climate change.
12    (i) Each community-based organization that receives
13funding from the Department as an Energy Transition Navigator
14shall provide an annual report to the Department by April 1 of
15each calendar year. The annual report shall include the
16following information:
17        (1) a description of the community-based
18    organization's recruitment, screening, and training
19    efforts;
20        (2) the number of individuals who apply to,
21    participate in, and complete programs offered through the
22    Energy Transition Workforce Program, broken down by race,
23    gender, age, and location; and
24        (3) any other information deemed necessary by the
25    Department.
 

 

 

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1    Section 5-40. Illinois Climate Works Preapprenticeship
2Program.
3    (a) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall
4develop, and through Regional Administrators administer, the
5Illinois Climate Works Preapprenticeship Program. The goal of
6the Illinois Climate Works Preapprenticeship Program is to
7create a network of hubs throughout the State that will
8recruit, prescreen, and provide preapprenticeship skills
9training, for which participants may attend free of charge and
10receive a stipend, to create a qualified, diverse pipeline of
11workers who are prepared for careers in the construction and
12building trades and clean energy jobs opportunities therein.
13Upon completion of the Illinois Climate Works
14Preapprenticeship Program, the candidates will be connected to
15and prepared to successfully complete an apprenticeship
16program.
17    (b) Each Climate Works Hub that receives funding from the
18Energy Transition Assistance Fund shall provide an annual
19report to the Illinois Works Review Panel by April 1 of each
20calendar year. The annual report shall include the following
21information:
22        (1) a description of the Climate Works Hub's
23    recruitment, screening, and training efforts, including a
24    description of training related to construction and
25    building trades opportunities in clean energy jobs;
26        (2) the number of individuals who apply to,

 

 

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1    participate in, and complete the Climate Works Hub's
2    program, broken down by race, gender, age, and veteran
3    status;
4        (3) the number of the individuals referenced in
5    paragraph (2) of this subsection who are initially
6    accepted and placed into apprenticeship programs in the
7    construction and building trades; and
8        (4) the number of individuals referenced in paragraph
9    (2) of this subsection who remain in apprenticeship
10    programs in the construction and building trades or have
11    become journeymen one calendar year after their placement,
12    as referenced in paragraph (3) of this subsection.
13    (c) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall provide
14funding to 3 Climate Works Hubs throughout the State,
15including one to the Illinois Department of Transportation
16Region 1, one to the Illinois Department of Transportation
17Regions 2 and 3, and one to the Illinois Department of
18Transportation Regions 4 and 5. The Department shall initially
19select a community-based provider in each region and shall
20subsequently select a community-based provider in each region
21every 3 years.
22    (d) The Climate Works Hubs shall recruit, prescreen, and
23provide preapprenticeship training to equity investment
24eligible persons. This training shall include information
25related to opportunities and certifications relevant to clean
26energy jobs in the construction and building trades.

 

 

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1    (e) Funding for the Program is subject to appropriation
2from the Energy Transition Assistance Fund.
3    (f) The Department shall adopt any rules deemed necessary
4to implement this Section.
 
5    Section 5-45. Clean Energy Contractor Incubator Program.
6    (a) As used in this Section, "community-based
7organization" means a nonprofit organization, including an
8accredited public college or university that:
9        (1) has a history of providing business-related
10    assistance and knowledge to help entrepreneurs start, run,
11    and grow their businesses;
12        (2) has knowledge of construction and clean energy
13    trades;
14        (3) demonstrates relationships with local residents
15    and other organizations serving the community; and
16        (4) demonstrates the ability to effectively serve
17    diverse and underrepresented populations.
18    (b) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall
19develop, and through the Regional Administrators, administer
20the Clean Energy Contractor Incubator Program ("Program") to
21create a network of 13 Program delivery Hub Sites with program
22elements delivered by community-based organizations and their
23subcontractors geographically distributed across the State,
24including at least one Hub Site located in or near each of the
25following areas: Chicago (South Side), Chicago (Southwest and

 

 

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1West Sides), Waukegan, Rockford, Aurora, Joliet, Peoria,
2Champaign, Danville, Decatur, Carbondale, East St. Louis, and
3Alton.
4    (c) In admitting program participants, for each Contractor
5Incubator Hub Site the Regional Administrators shall:
6        (1) in each Hub Site where the applicant pool allows:
7            (A) dedicate at least one-third of program
8        placements to the owners of clean energy contractor
9        businesses and nonprofits who reside in a geographic
10        area that is impacted by economic and environmental
11        challenges, defined as an area that is both (i) an R3
12        Area, as defined pursuant to Section 10-40 of the
13        Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act, and (ii) an
14        environmental justice community, as defined by the
15        Illinois Power Agency, excluding any racial or ethnic
16        indicators used by the agency unless and until the
17        constitutional basis for their inclusion in
18        determining program admissions is established. Among
19        applicants that satisfy these criteria, preference
20        shall be given to applicants who face barriers to
21        employment, such as low educational attainment, prior
22        involvement with the criminal legal system, and
23        language barriers; and applicants that are graduates
24        of or currently enrolled in the foster care system;
25        and
26            (B) dedicate at least two-thirds of program

 

 

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1        placements to the owners of clean energy contractor
2        businesses and nonprofits that satisfy the criteria in
3        paragraph (1) or who reside in eligible communities.
4        Among applicants who live in eligible communities,
5        preference shall be given to applicants who face
6        barriers to employment, such as low educational
7        attainment, prior involvement with the criminal legal
8        system, and language barriers; and applicants that are
9        graduates of or currently enrolled in the foster care
10        system; and
11        (2) prioritize the remaining program placements for:
12    applicants who are displaced energy workers as defined in
13    the Energy Community Reinvestment Act; persons who face
14    barriers to employment, including low educational
15    attainment, prior involvement with the criminal legal
16    system, and language barriers; and applicants who are
17    graduates of or currently enrolled in the foster care
18    system, regardless of the applicants' area of residence.
19    Consideration shall also be given to any current or past
20participant in the Clean Jobs Workforce Network Program,
21Illinois Climate Works Preapprenticeship Program, or Returning
22Residents Clean Energy Jobs Training Program.
23    The Department and Regional Administrators shall protect
24the confidentiality of any personal information provided by
25program applicants regarding the applicant's status as a
26formerly incarcerated person or foster care recipient;

 

 

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1however, the Department or Regional Administrators may publish
2aggregated data on the number of participants that were
3formerly incarcerated or foster care recipients so long as
4that publication protects the identities of those persons.
5    Any person who applies to the program may elect not to
6share with the Department or Regional Administrators whether
7he or she is a graduate or currently enrolled in the foster
8care system or was formerly convicted.
9    (d) Program elements at each Hub Site shall be provided by
10a local community-based organization. The Department shall
11initially select a community-based organization in each Hub
12Site and shall subsequently select a community-based
13organization in each Hub Site every 3 years. Community-based
14organizations delivering program elements outlined in
15subsection (e) may provide all elements required or may
16subcontract to other entities for provision of portions of
17program elements, including, but not limited to,
18administrative soft and hard skills for program participants,
19delivery of specific training in the core curriculum, or
20provision of other support functions for program delivery
21compliance.
22    (e) The Clean Energy Contractor Incubator Program shall:
23        (1) provide access to low-cost capital for small clean
24    energy businesses and contractors;
25        (2) provide support for obtaining financial assurance,
26    including, but not limited to: bonding; back office

 

 

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1    services; insurance, permits, training and certifications;
2    business planning; and low-interest loans;
3        (3) train, mentor, and provide other support needed to
4    allow participant contractors to: (i) build their
5    businesses and connect to specific projects, (ii) register
6    as approved vendors, (iii) engage in approved vendor
7    subcontracting and qualified installer opportunities, (iv)
8    develop partnering and networking skills, (v) compete for
9    capital and other resources, and (vi) execute clean
10    energy-related project installations and subcontracts;
11        (4) ensure that participant contractors, community
12    partners, and potential contractor clients are aware of
13    and engaged in the Program;
14        (5) provide prevailing wage compliance training and
15    back office support to implement prevailing wage
16    practices; and
17        (6) provide recruitment and ongoing engagement with
18    entities that hire contractors and subcontractors,
19    programs providing renewable energy resource-related
20    projects, incentive programs, and approved vendor and
21    qualified installer opportunities, including, but not
22    limited to, activities such as matchmaking, events, and
23    collaborating with other Hub Sites.
24    (f) Funding for the Program is subject to appropriation
25from the Energy Transition Assistance Fund.
26    (g) The Department shall require submission of quarterly

 

 

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1reports including program performance metrics by each Hub Site
2to the Regional Administrator of their Program Delivery Area.
3Program performance metrics include, but are not limited to:
4        (1) demographic data including: race, gender,
5    geographic location, R3 residency, Environmental Justice
6    Community residency, foster care system participation, and
7    justice-involvement for the owners of contractors
8    applying, accepted into, and graduating from the Program;
9        (2) the number of projects completed by participant
10    contractors, alone or in partnership, by race, gender,
11    geographic location, R3 residency, Environmental Justice
12    Community residency, foster care system participation, and
13    justice-involvement for the owners of contractors;
14        (3) the number of partnerships with participant
15    contractors that are expected to result in contracts for
16    work by the participant contractor, by race, gender,
17    geographic location, R3 residency, Environmental Justice
18    Community residency, foster care system participation, and
19    justice-involvement for the owners of contractors;
20        (4) changes in participant contractors' business
21    revenue, by race, gender, geographic location, R3
22    residency, Environmental Justice Community residency,
23    foster care system participation, and justice-involvement
24    for the owners of contractors;
25        (5) the number of new hires by participant
26    contractors, by race, gender, geographic location, R3

 

 

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1    residency, Environmental Justice Community residency,
2    foster care system participation, and justice-involvement;
3        (6) demographic data, including race, gender,
4    geographic location, R3 residency, Environmental Justice
5    Community residency, foster care system participation, and
6    justice-involvement, and average wage data, for new hires
7    by participant contractors;
8        (7) certifications held by participant contractors,
9    and number of participants holding each certification,
10    including, but not limited to, registration under the
11    Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women, and Persons
12    with Disabilities Act program and other programs intended
13    to certify BIPOC entities;
14        (8) the number of Program sessions attended by
15    participant contractors, aggregated by race; and
16        (9) indicators relevant for assessing the general
17    financial health of participant contractors.
18    (h) Within 3 years after the effective date of this Act,
19the Department shall select an independent evaluator to review
20and prepare a report on the performance of the Program and
21Regional Administrators. The report shall be posted publicly.
 
22    Section 5-50. Returning Residents Clean Jobs Training
23Program.
24    (a) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall develop
25and, in coordination with the Department of Corrections,

 

 

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1administer the Returning Residents Clean Jobs Training
2Program.
3    (b) As used in this Section:
4    "Commitment" means a judicially determined placement in
5the custody of the Department of Corrections on the basis of a
6conviction.
7    "Committed person" means a person committed to the
8Department of Corrections.
9    "Community-based organization" means an organization that:
10        (1) provides employment, skill development, or related
11    services to members of the community;
12        (2) includes community colleges, nonprofits, and local
13    governments; and
14        (3) has a history of serving inmates or formerly
15    convicted persons.
16    "Correctional institution or facility" means a Department
17of Corrections building or part of a Department of Corrections
18building where committed persons are detained in a secure
19manner.
20    "Department" means the Department of Corrections.
21    "Discharge" means the end of a sentence or the final
22termination of a detainee's physical commitment to and
23confinement in the Department of Corrections.
24    "Program" means the Returning Residents Clean Jobs
25Training Program.
26    "Program Administrator" means, for each Program Delivery

 

 

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1Area, the administrator selected by the Department pursuant to
2paragraph (1) of subsection (g) of this Section.
3    "Returning resident" means any United States resident who
4is: (i) 17 years of age or older; (ii) in the physical custody
5of the Department of Corrections; and (iii) scheduled to be
6re-entering society within 36 months.
7    (c) Returning Residents Clean Jobs Training Program.
8        (1) Connected services. The Program shall prepare
9    graduates to work in the solar power and energy efficiency
10    industries.
11        (2) Recruitment of participants. The Program
12    Administrators shall, in coordination with the Department
13    of Corrections, educate committed persons in both men's
14    and women's correctional institutions and facilities on
15    the benefits of the Program and how to enroll in the
16    Program.
17        (3) Connection to employers. The Program
18    Administrators shall, with assistance from the Regional
19    Administrators, connect Program graduates with potential
20    employers in the solar power and energy efficiency and
21    related industries.
22        (4) Graduation. Participants who successfully complete
23    all assignments in the Program shall receive a Program
24    graduation certificate and any certifications earned in
25    the process.
26        (5) Eligibility. A committed person in a correctional

 

 

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1    institution or facility is eligible if the committed
2    person:
3            (i) is within 36 months of expected release;
4            (ii) consented in writing to participation in the
5        Program;
6            (iii) meets all Program and testing requirements;
7            (iv) is willing to follow all Program
8        requirements; and
9            (v) does not pose a safety and security risk for
10        the facility or any person.
11    The Department of Corrections shall have sole discretion
12to determine whether a committed person's participation in the
13Program poses a safety and security risk for the facility or
14any person. The Department of Corrections shall determine
15whether a committed person is eligible to participate in the
16Program.
17    (d) Program entry and testing requirements. To enter the
18Returning Residents Clean Jobs Training Program, committed
19persons must complete a simple application, undergo an
20interview and coaching session, and must score a minimum of a
216.0 or above on the Test for Adult Basic Education. The
22Returning Residents Clean Jobs Training Program shall include
23a one-week pre-program orientation that ensures the candidates
24understand and are interested in continuing the Program.
25Candidates that successfully complete the orientation may
26continue to the full Program.

 

 

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1    (d-5) Once approved for the new program, candidates must
2receive essential employability skills training as part of
3vocational or occupational training. Training must lead to
4certifications or credentials that prepare candidates for
5employment.
6    (e) Removal from the Program. The Department of
7Corrections may remove a committed person enrolled in the
8Program for violation of institutional rules; failure to
9participate or meet expectations of the Program; failure of a
10drug test; disruptive behavior; or for reasons of safety,
11security, and order of the facility.
12    (f) Drug testing. A clean drug test is required to
13complete the Returning Residents Clean Jobs Training Program.
14A drug test shall be administered at least once prior to
15graduation. The Department of Corrections shall be responsible
16for the drug testing of applicants.
17    (g) Curriculum.
18        (1) The Department of Commerce and Economic
19    Opportunity shall design a curriculum for the Program that
20    is as similar as practical to the Clean Jobs Curriculum
21    and meets in-facility requirements. The curriculum shall
22    focus on preparing graduates for employment in the solar
23    power and energy efficiency industries. The Program shall
24    include structured hands-on activities in correctional
25    institutions or facilities, including classroom spaces and
26    outdoor spaces, to instruct participants in the core

 

 

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1    curriculum established in this Act. The Department shall
2    consult with the Department of Corrections to ensure all
3    curriculum elements may be available within Department of
4    Corrections facilities.
5        (2) The Program Administrators shall collaborate to
6    create and publish a guidebook that allows for the
7    implementation of the curriculum and provides information
8    on all necessary and useful resources for Program
9    participants and graduates.
10    (h) Program administration.
11        (1) The Department of Commerce and Economic
12    Opportunity shall establish and hire a Program
13    Administrator for each Program Delivery Area to administer
14    and coordinate the Program. The Program Administrators
15    shall have strong capabilities, experience, and knowledge
16    related to program development and economic management;
17    cultural and language competency needed to be effective in
18    the communities to be served; expertise in working in and
19    with equity investment eligible communities; knowledge and
20    experience in working with providers of clean energy jobs;
21    and awareness of solar power and energy efficiency
22    industry trends and activities, workforce development best
23    practices, regional workforce development needs, and
24    community development. The Program Administrators shall
25    demonstrate a track record of strong partnerships with
26    community-based organizations.

 

 

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1        The Program Administrator must pass a background check
2    administered by the Department of Corrections and be
3    approved by the Department of Corrections to work within a
4    secure facility prior to being hired by the Department of
5    Commerce and Economic Opportunity for a Program delivery
6    area.
7        (2) The Program Administrators shall:
8            (i) coordinate with Regional Administrators and
9        the Clean Jobs Workforce Network Program to ensure
10        that execution, performance, partnerships, marketing,
11        and Program access across the State consistent with
12        respecting regional differences;
13            (ii) work with community-based organizations
14        approved to provide industry-recognized credentials or
15        education institutions to deliver the Program;
16            (iii) collaborate to create and publish an
17        employer "Hiring Returning Residents" handbook that
18        includes benefits and expectations of hiring returning
19        residents, guidance on how to recruit, hire, and
20        retain returning residents, guidance on how to access
21        State and federal tax credits and incentives and State
22        and federal resources, guidance on how to update
23        company policies to support hiring and supporting
24        returning residents, and an understanding of the harm
25        in one-size-fits-all policies toward returning
26        residents. The handbook shall be updated every 5 years

 

 

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1        or more frequently if needed to ensure that its
2        contents are accurate. The handbook shall be made
3        available on the Department's website;
4            (iv) work with potential employers to promote
5        company policies to support hiring and supporting
6        returning residents via employee/employer liability,
7        coverage, insurance, bonding, training, hiring
8        practices, and retention support;
9            (v) provide services such as job coaching and
10        financial coaching to Program graduates to support
11        employment longevity; and
12            (vi) identify clean energy job opportunities and
13        assist participants in achieving employment. The
14        Program shall include at least one job fair; include
15        job placement discussions with clean energy employers;
16        establish a partnership with Illinois solar energy
17        businesses and trade associations to identify solar
18        employers that support and hire returning residents;
19        and involve the Department of Commerce and Economic
20        Opportunity, Regional Administrators, and the Advisory
21        Council in finding employment for participants and
22        graduates in the clean energy and related sector
23        industries.
24        (3) The Department shall select community-based
25    organizations to provide Program elements at each
26    facility. Community-based organizations shall be

 

 

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1    competitively selected by the Department of Commerce and
2    Economic Opportunity. Community-based organizations
3    delivering the Program elements outlined may provide all
4    elements required or may subcontract to other entities for
5    the provision of portions of Program elements. All
6    contractors who have regular interactions with committed
7    persons, regularly access a Department of Corrections
8    facility, or regularly access a committed person's
9    personal identifying information or other data elements
10    must pass a Department of Corrections background check
11    prior to being approved to administer the Program elements
12    at a facility.
13        (4) The Department shall aim to include training in
14    conjunction with other pre-release procedures and
15    movements. Delays in a workshop being provided shall not
16    cause delays in discharge.
17        (5) The Program Administrators may establish shortened
18    Returning Resident Clean Jobs Training Programs to prepare
19    and place graduates in the Clean Jobs Workforce Network
20    Program or the Illinois Climate Works Preapprenticeship
21    Program following the graduate's release from commitment.
22    Any graduate of these programs must be guaranteed
23    placement in a Clean Jobs Workforce Hubs training program
24    or the Illinois Climate Works Preapprenticeship Program.
25        (6) The Director of Corrections shall:
26            (i) Ensure that the wardens or superintendents of

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 38 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1        all correctional institutions and facilities visibly
2        post information on the Program in an accessible
3        manner for committed individuals.
4            (ii) Identify the institutions and facilities
5        within the Department of Corrections that will offer
6        the Program. The determination of which facility will
7        offer the Program shall be based on available
8        programming space, staffing, population, facility
9        mission, security concerns, and any other relevant
10        factor in determining suitable locations for the
11        Program.
12    (i) Performance metrics.
13        (1) The Program Administrators shall collect data to
14    evaluate and ensure Program and participant success,
15    including:
16            (i) the number of returning residents who enrolled
17        in the Program;
18            (ii) the number of returning residents who
19        completed the Program;
20            (iii) the total number of individuals discharged;
21            (iv) the demographics of each entering and
22        graduating class;
23            (v) the percentage of graduates employed at 6 and
24        12 months after release;
25            (vi) the recidivism rate of Program participants
26        at 3 and 5 years after release;

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 39 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1            (vii) the candidates interviewed and hiring
2        status;
3            (viii) the graduate employment status, such as
4        hire date, pay rates, whether full-time, part-time, or
5        seasonal, and separation date; and
6            (ix) continuing education and certifications
7        gained by Program graduates.
8        (2) The Department of Commerce and Economic
9    Opportunity shall publish an annual report containing
10    these performance metrics. Data may be disaggregated by
11    institution, discharge, or residence address of resident,
12    and other factors.
13    (j) Funding. Funding for the Program is subject to
14appropriation from the Energy Transition Assistance Fund.
15Funding may be made available from other lawful sources,
16including donations, grants, and federal incentives.
17    (k) Access. The Program instructors and staff must pass a
18background check administered by the Department of Corrections
19prior to entering a Department of Corrections institution or
20facility. The Warden or Superintendent shall have the
21authority to deny a Program instructor or staff member entry
22into an institution or facility for safety and security
23concerns or failure to follow all facility procedures or
24protocols. A Program instructor or staff member administering
25the Program may be terminated or have his or her contract
26canceled if the Program instructor or staff member is denied

 

 

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1entry into an institution or facility for safety and security
2concerns.
 
3    Section 5-55. Clean Energy Primes Contractor Accelerator
4Program.
5    (a) As used in this Section:
6    "Approved vendor" means the definition of that term used
7and as may be updated by the Illinois Power Agency.
8    "Minority business" means a minority-owned business as
9defined in Section 2 of the Business Enterprise for
10Minorities, Women, and Persons with Disabilities Act.
11    "Minority Business Enterprise certification" means the
12certification or recognition certification affidavit from the
13State of Illinois Department of Central Management Services
14Business Enterprise Program or a program with equivalent
15requirements.
16    "Program" means the Clean Energy Primes Contractor
17Accelerator Program.
18    "Returning resident" has the meaning given to that term in
19Section 5-50 of this Act.
20    (b) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall
21develop, and through a Primes Program Administrator and
22Regional Primes Program Leads described in this Section,
23administer the Clean Energy Primes Contractor Accelerator
24Program. The Program shall be administered in 3 program
25delivery areas: the Northern Illinois Program Delivery Area

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 41 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1covering Northern Illinois, the Central Illinois Program
2Delivery Area covering Central Illinois, and the Southern
3Illinois Program Delivery Area covering Southern Illinois.
4Prior to developing the Program, the Department shall solicit
5public comments, with a 30-day comment period, to gather input
6on Program implementation and associated community outreach
7options.
8    (c) The Program shall be available to selected contractors
9who best meet the following criteria:
10        (1) 2 or more years of experience in a clean energy or
11    a related contracting field;
12        (2) at least $5,000 in annual business; and
13        (3) a substantial and demonstrated commitment of
14    investing in and partnering with individuals and
15    institutions in equity investment eligible communities.
16    (c-5) The Department shall develop scoring criteria to
17select contractors for the Program, which shall consider:
18        (1) projected hiring and industry job creation,
19    including wage and benefit expectations;
20        (2) a clear vision of strategic business growth and
21    how increased capitalization would benefit the business;
22        (3) past project work quality and demonstration of
23    technical knowledge;
24        (4) capacity the applicant is anticipated to bring to
25    project development;
26        (5) willingness to assume risk;

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 42 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1        (6) anticipated revenues from future projects;
2        (7) history of commitment to advancing equity as
3    demonstrated by, among other things, employment of or
4    ownership by equity investment eligible persons and a
5    history of partnership with equity focused community
6    organizations or government programs; and
7        (8) business models that build wealth in the larger
8    underserved community.
9    Applicants for Program participation shall be allowed to
10reapply for a future cohort if they are not selected, and the
11Primes Program Administrator shall inform each applicant of
12this option.
13    (d) The Department, in consultation with the Primes
14Program Administrator and Regional Primes Program Leads, shall
15select a new cohort of participant contractors from each
16Program Delivery Area every 18 months. Each regional cohort
17shall include between 3 and 5 participants. The Program shall
18cap contractors in the energy efficiency sector at 50% of
19available cohort spots and 50% of available grants and loans,
20if possible.
21    (e) The Department shall hire a Primes Program
22Administrator with experience in leading a large
23contractor-based business in Illinois; coaching and mentoring;
24the Illinois clean energy industry; and working with equity
25investment eligible community members, organizations, and
26businesses.

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 43 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1    (f) The Department shall select 3 Regional Primes Program
2Leads who shall report directly to the Primes Program
3Administrator. The Regional Primes Program Leads shall be
4located within their Program Delivery Area and have experience
5in leading a large contractor-based business in Illinois;
6coaching and mentoring; the Illinois clean energy industry;
7developing relationships with companies in the Program
8Delivery Area; and working with equity investment eligible
9community members, organizations, and businesses.
10    (g) The Department may determine how Program elements will
11be delivered or may contract with organizations with
12experience delivering the Program elements described in
13subsection (h) of this Section.
14    (h) The Clean Energy Primes Contractor Accelerator Program
15shall provide participants with:
16        (1) a 5-year, 6-month progressive course of one-on-one
17    coaching to assist each participant in developing an
18    achievable 5-year business plan, including review of
19    monthly metrics, and advice on achieving participant's
20    goals;
21        (2) operational support grants not to exceed
22    $1,000,000 annually to support the growth of participant
23    contractors with access to capital for upfront project
24    costs and pre-development funding, among others. The
25    amount of the grant shall be based on anticipated project
26    size and scope;

 

 

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1        (3) business coaching based on the participant's
2    needs;
3        (4) a mentorship of approximately 2 years provided by
4    a qualified company in the participant's field;
5        (5) access to Clean Energy Contractor Incubator
6    Program services;
7        (6) assistance with applying for Minority Business
8    Enterprise certification and other relevant certifications
9    and approved vendor status for programs offered by
10    utilities or other entities;
11        (7) assistance with preparing bids and Request for
12    Proposal applications;
13        (8) opportunities to be listed in any relevant
14    directories and databases organized by the Department of
15    Central Management Services;
16        (9) opportunities to connect with participants in
17    other Department programs;
18        (10) assistance connecting with and initiating
19    participation in the Illinois Power Agency's Adjustable
20    Block program, the Illinois Solar for All Program, and
21    utility programs; and
22        (11) financial development assistance programs such as
23    zero-interest and low-interest loans with the Climate Bank
24    as established by Article 850 of the Illinois Finance
25    Authority Act or a comparable financing mechanism. The
26    Illinois Finance Authority shall retain authority to

 

 

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1    determine loan repayment terms and conditions.
2    (i) The Primes Program Administrator shall:
3        (1) collect and report performance metrics as
4    described in this Section;
5        (2) review and assess:
6            (i) participant work plans and annual goals; and
7            (ii) the mentorship program, including approved
8        mentor companies and their stipend awards; and
9        (3) work with the Regional Primes Program Leads to
10    publicize the Program; design and implement a mentorship
11    program; and ensure participants are quickly on-boarded.
12    (j) The Regional Primes Program Leads shall:
13        (1) publicize the Program; the budget shall include
14    funds to pay community-based organizations with a track
15    record of working with equity investment eligible
16    communities to complete this work;
17        (2) recruit qualified Program applicants;
18        (3) assist Program applicants with the application
19    process;
20        (4) introduce participants to the Program offerings;
21        (5) conduct entry and annual assessments with
22    participants to identify training, coaching, and other
23    Program service needs;
24        (6) assist participants in developing goals on entry
25    and annually, and assessing progress toward meeting the
26    goals;

 

 

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1        (7) establish a metric reporting system with each
2    participant and track the metrics for progress against the
3    contractor's work plan and Program goals;
4        (8) assist participants in receiving their Minority
5    Business Enterprise certification and any other relevant
6    certifications and approved vendor statuses;
7        (9) match participants with Clean Energy Contractor
8    Incubator Program offerings and individualized expert
9    coaching, including training on working with returning
10    residents and companies that employ them;
11        (10) pair participants with a mentor company;
12        (11) facilitate connections between participants and
13    potential subcontractors and employees;
14        (12) dispense a participant's awarded operational
15    grant funding;
16        (13) connect participants to zero-interest and
17    low-interest loans from the Climate Bank as established by
18    Article 850 of the Illinois Finance Authority Act or a
19    comparable financing mechanism;
20        (14) encourage participants to apply for appropriate
21    State and private business opportunities;
22        (15) review a participant's progress and make a
23    recommendation to the Department about whether the
24    participant should continue in the Program, be considered
25    a Program graduate, and whether adjustments should be made
26    to a participant's grant funding, loans, and related

 

 

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1    services;
2        (16) solicit information from participants, which
3    participants shall be required to provide, necessary to
4    understand the participant's business, including financial
5    and income information, certifications that the
6    participant is seeking to obtain, and ownership, employee,
7    and subcontractor data, including compensation, length of
8    service, and demographics; and
9        (17) other duties as required.
10    (k) Performance metrics. The Primes Program Administrator
11and Regional Primes Program Leads shall collaborate to collect
12and report the following metrics quarterly to the Department
13and Advisory Council:
14        (1) demographic information on cohort recruiting and
15    formation, including racial, gender, geographic
16    distribution data, and data on the number and percentage
17    of R3 residents, environmental justice community
18    residents, foster care alumni, and formerly convicted
19    persons who are cohort applicants and admitted
20    participants;
21        (2) participant contractor engagement in other
22    Illinois clean energy programs such as the Adjustable
23    Block program, Illinois Solar for All Program, and the
24    utility-run energy efficiency and electric vehicle
25    programs;
26        (3) retention of participants in each cohort;

 

 

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1        (4) total projects bid, started, and completed by
2    participants, including information about revenue, hiring,
3    and subcontractor relationships with projects;
4        (5) certifications issued;
5        (6) employment data for contractor hires and industry
6    jobs created, including demographic, salary, length of
7    service, and geographic data;
8        (7) grants and loans distributed; and
9        (8) participant satisfaction with the Program.
10    The metrics in paragraphs (2), (4), and (6) shall be
11collected from Program participants and graduates for 10 years
12from their entrance into the Program to help the Department
13and Program Administrators understand the Program's long-term
14effect.
15    Data should be anonymized where needed to protect
16participant privacy.
17    The Department shall make such reports publicly available
18on its website.
19    (l) Mentorship Program.
20        (1) The Regional Primes Program Leads shall recruit,
21    and the Primes Program Administrator shall select, with
22    approval from the Department, private companies with the
23    following qualifications to mentor participants and assist
24    them in succeeding in the clean energy industry:
25            (i) excellent standing with state clean energy
26        programs;

 

 

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1            (ii) 4 or more years of experience in their field;
2        and
3            (iii) a proven track record of success in their
4        field.
5        (2) Mentor companies may receive a stipend, determined
6    by the Department, for their participation. Mentor
7    companies may identify what level of stipend they require.
8        (3) The Primes Program Administrator shall develop
9    guidelines for mentor company-mentee profit sharing or
10    purchased services agreements.
11        (4) The Regional Primes Program Leads shall:
12            (i) collaborate with mentor companies and
13        participants to create a plan for ongoing contact such
14        as on-the-job training, site walkthroughs, business
15        process and structure walkthroughs, quality assurance
16        and quality control reviews, and other relevant
17        activities;
18            (ii) recommend the mentor company-mentee pairings
19        and associated mentor company stipends for approval;
20            (iii) conduct an annual review of each mentor
21        company-mentee pairing and recommend whether the
22        pairing continues for a second year and the level of
23        stipend that is appropriate. The review shall also
24        ensure that any profit sharing and purchased services
25        agreements adhere to the guidelines established by the
26        Primes Program Administrator.

 

 

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1        (5) Contractors may request reassignment to a new
2    mentor company.
3    (m) Disparity study. The Program Administrator shall
4cooperate with the Illinois Power Agency in the conduct of a
5disparity study, as described in subsection (c-15) of Section
61-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act, and in the effectuation
7of appropriate remedies necessary to address any
8discrimination that such study may find. Potential remedies
9shall include, but not be limited to, race-conscious remedies
10to rapidly eliminate discrimination faced by minority
11businesses and works in the industry this Program serves,
12consistent with the law. Remedies shall be developed through
13consultation with individuals, companies, and organizations
14that have expertise on discrimination faced in the market and
15potential legally permissible remedies for addressing it.
16Notwithstanding any other requirement of this Section, the
17Program Administrator shall modify program participation
18criteria or goals as soon as the report has been published, in
19such a way as is consistent with state and federal law, to
20rapidly eliminate discrimination on minority businesses and
21workers in the industry this Program serves by setting
22standards for Program participation. This study will be paid
23for with funds from the Energy Transition Assistance Fund or
24any other lawful source.
25    (n) Program budget.
26        (1) The Department may allocate up to $3,000,000

 

 

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1    annually to the Primes Program Administrator for each of
2    the 3 regional budgets from the Energy Transition
3    Assistance Fund.
4        (2) The Primes Program Administrator shall work with
5    the Illinois Finance Authority and the Climate Bank as
6    established by Article 850 of the Illinois Finance
7    Authority Act or comparable financing institution so that
8    loan loss reserves may be sufficient to underwrite
9    $7,000,000 in low-interest loans in each of the 3 Program
10    delivery areas.
11        (3) Any grant and loan funding shall be made available
12    to participants in a timely fashion.
 
13    Section 5-60. Jobs and Environmental Justice Grant
14Program.
15    (a) In order to provide upfront capital to support the
16development of projects, businesses, community organizations,
17and jobs creating opportunity for historically disadvantaged
18populations, and to provide seed capital to support community
19ownership of renewable energy projects, the Department of
20Commerce and Economic Opportunity shall create and administer
21a Jobs and Environmental Justice Grant Program. The grant
22program shall be designed to help remove barriers to project,
23community, and business development caused by a lack of
24capital.
25    (b) The grant program shall provide grant awards of up to

 

 

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1$1,000,000 per application to support the development of
2renewable energy resources as defined in Section 1-10 of the
3Illinois Power Agency Act, and energy efficiency measures as
4defined in Section 8-103B of the Public Utilities Act. The
5amount of a grant award shall be based on a project's size and
6scope. Grants shall be provided upfront, in advance of other
7incentives, to provide businesses, organizations, and
8community groups with capital needed to plan, develop, and
9execute a project. Grants shall be designed to coordinate with
10and supplement existing incentive programs, such as the
11Adjustable Block program, the Illinois Solar for All Program,
12the community renewable generation projects, and renewable
13energy procurements as described in the Illinois Power Agency
14Act, as well as utility energy efficiency measures as
15described in Section 8-103B of the Public Utilities Act.
16    (c) The Jobs and Environmental Justice Grant Program shall
17include 2 subprograms:
18        (1) the Equitable Energy Future Grant Program; and
19        (2) the Community Solar Energy Sovereignty Grant
20    Program.
21    (d) The Equitable Energy Future Grant Program is designed
22to provide seed funding and pre-development funding
23opportunities for disadvantaged contractors and to projects
24that earn Equitable Energy Future Certification under Section
251-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act.
26        (1) The Equitable Energy Future Grant shall be awarded

 

 

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1    to businesses and nonprofit organizations for costs
2    related to the following activities and project needs:
3            (i) planning and project development, including
4        costs for professional services such as architecture,
5        design, engineering, auditing, consulting, and
6        developer services;
7            (ii) project application, deposit, and approval;
8            (iii) purchasing and leasing of land;
9            (iv) permitting and zoning;
10            (v) interconnection application costs and fees,
11        studies, and expenses;
12            (vi) equipment and supplies;
13            (vii) community outreach, marketing, and
14        engagement; and
15            (viii) staff and operations expenses.
16        (2) Grants shall be awarded to projects that most
17    effectively provide opportunities for equity eligible
18    contractors and equity investment eligible communities,
19    and should consider the following criteria:
20            (i) projects that provide community benefits,
21        which are projects that have one or more of the
22        following characteristics: (A) greater than 50% of the
23        project's energy provided or saved benefits low-income
24        residents, or (B) the project benefits not-for-profit
25        organizations providing services to low-income
26        households, affordable housing owners, or

 

 

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1        community-based limited liability companies providing
2        services to low-income households;
3            (ii) projects that are located in equity
4        investment eligible communities;
5            (iii) projects that provide on-the-job training;
6            (iv) projects that contract with contractors who
7        are participating or have participated in the Clean
8        Energy Contractor Incubator Program, Clean Energy
9        Primes Contractor Accelerator Program, or similar
10        programs; and
11            (v) projects employ a minimum of 51% of its
12        workforce from participants and graduates of the Clean
13        Jobs Workforce Network Program, Illinois Climate Works
14        Preapprenticeship Program, and Returning Residents
15        Clean Jobs Training Program.
16        (3) Grants shall be awarded to applicants that meet
17    the following criteria:
18            (i) earn Equitable Energy Future Certification per
19        the equity accountability systems described in
20        subsection (c-10) of Section 1-75 of the Illinois
21        Power Agency Act, or meet the equity building criteria
22        in paragraph (9.5) of subsection (g) of Section 8-103B
23        of the Public Utilities Act; and
24            (ii) provide demonstrable proof of a historical or
25        future, and persisting, long-term partnership with the
26        community in which the project will be located.

 

 

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1    (e) The Community Solar Energy Sovereignty Grant Program
2shall be designed to support the pre-development and
3development of community solar projects that promote community
4ownership and energy sovereignty.
5        (1) Grants shall be awarded to applicants that best
6    demonstrate the ability and intent to create community
7    ownership and other local community benefits, including
8    local community wealth building via community renewable
9    generation projects. Grants shall be prioritized to
10    applicants for whom:
11            (i) the proposed project is located in and
12        supporting an equity investment eligible community or
13        communities; and
14            (ii) the proposed project provides additional
15        benefits for participating low-income households.
16        (2) Grant funds shall be awarded to support project
17    pre-development work and may also be awarded to support
18    the development of programs and entities to assist in the
19    long-term governance, management, and maintenance of
20    community solar projects, such as community solar
21    cooperatives. For example, funds may be awarded for:
22            (i) early stage project planning;
23            (ii) project team organization;
24            (iii) site identification;
25            (iv) organizing a project business model and
26        securing financing;

 

 

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1            (v) procurement and contracting;
2            (vi) customer outreach and enrollment;
3            (vii) preliminary site assessments;
4            (viii) development of cooperative or community
5        ownership model; and
6            (ix) development of project models that allocate
7        benefits to equity investment eligible communities.
8        (3) Grant recipients shall submit reports to the
9    Department at the end of the grant term on the activities
10    pursued under their grant and any lessons learned for
11    publication on the Department's website so that other
12    energy sovereignty projects may learn from their
13    experience.
14        (4) Eligible applicants shall include community-based
15    organizations, as defined in the Illinois Power Agency's
16    long-term renewable resources procurement plan, or
17    technical service providers working in direct partnership
18    with community-based organizations.
19        (5) The amount of a grant shall be based on a projects'
20    size and scope. Grants shall allow for a significant
21    portion, or the entirety, of the grant value to be made
22    upfront, in advance of other incentives, to ensure
23    businesses and organizations have the capital needed to
24    plan, develop, and execute a project.
25    (f) The application process for both subprograms shall not
26be burdensome on applicants, nor require extensive technical

 

 

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1knowledge, and shall be able to be completed on less than 4
2standard letter-sized pages.
3    (g) The Program shall coordinate its grant subprograms
4with the Clean Energy Jobs and Justice Fund to coordinate
5grants under this Program with low-interest and no-interest
6financing opportunities offered by the fund.
7    (h) The grant subprograms may have a budget of up to
8$34,000,000 per year. No more than 25% of the allocated budget
9shall go to the Community Solar Energy Sovereignty Grant
10Program.
 
11    Section 5-65. Energy Workforce Advisory Council.
12    (a) The Energy Workforce Advisory Council is hereby
13created within the Department.
14    (b) The Council shall consist of the following voting
15members appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent
16of the Senate, chosen to ensure diverse geographic
17representation:
18        (1) two members representing trade associations
19    representing companies active in the clean energy
20    industries;
21        (2) two members representing a labor union;
22        (3) one member who has participated in the workforce
23    development programs created under this Act;
24        (4) two members representing higher education;
25        (5) two members representing economic development

 

 

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1    organizations;
2        (6) two members representing local workforce
3    innovation boards;
4        (7) two residents of environmental justice
5    communities;
6        (8) three members from community-based organizations
7    in environmental justice communities and community-based
8    organizations serving low-income persons and families;
9        (9) two members who are policy or implementation
10    experts on small business development, contractor
11    incubation, or small business lending and financing needs;
12        (10) two members who are policy or implementation
13    experts on workforce development for populations and
14    individuals such as low-income persons and families,
15    environmental justice communities, BIPOC communities,
16    formerly convicted persons, persons who are or were in the
17    child welfare system, energy workers, gender nonconforming
18    and transgender individuals, and youth; and
19        (11) two representatives of clean energy businesses,
20    nonprofit organizations, or other groups that provide
21    clean energy.
22    The President of the Senate, the Minority Leader of the
23Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and the
24Minority Leader of the House of Representatives shall each
25appoint 2 nonvoting members of the Council.
26    (c) The Council shall:

 

 

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1        (1) coordinate and inform on worker and contractor
2    support priorities beyond current federal, State, local,
3    and private programs and resources;
4        (2) advise and produce recommendations for further
5    federal, State, and local programs and activities;
6        (3) fulfill other duties determined by the Council to
7    further the success of the Workforce Hubs, Incubators, and
8    Returning Residents Programs;
9        (4) review program performance metrics;
10        (5) provide recommendations to the Department on the
11    administration of the following programs:
12            (i) the Clean Jobs Workforce Network Program;
13            (ii) the Illinois Climate Works Preapprenticeship
14        Program;
15            (iii) the Clean Energy Contractor Incubator
16        Program;
17            (iv) the Returning Residents Clean Jobs Training
18        Program; and
19            (v) the Clean Energy Primes Contractor Accelerator
20        Program;
21        (6) recommend outreach opportunities to ensure that
22    program contracting, training, and other opportunities are
23    widely publicized;
24        (7) participate in independent program evaluations;
25    and
26        (8) assist the Department by providing insight into

 

 

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1    how relevant State, local, and federal programs are viewed
2    by residents, businesses, and institutions within their
3    respective communities.
4    (d) The Council shall conduct its first meeting within 30
5days after all members have been appointed. The Council shall
6meet quarterly after its first meeting. Additional hearings
7and public meetings are permitted at the discretion of the
8members. The Council may meet in person or through video or
9audio conference. Meeting times may be varied to accommodate
10Council member schedules.
11    (e) Members shall serve without compensation and shall be
12reimbursed for reasonable expenses incurred in the performance
13of their duties from funds appropriated for that purpose.
 
14    Section 5-90. Repealer. This Act is repealed 24 years
15after the effective date of this Act.
 
16    Section 5-95. The Illinois Finance Authority Act is
17amended by changing Sections 801-1, 801-5, 801-10, and 801-40
18and adding Article 850 as follows:
 
19    (20 ILCS 3501/801-1)
20    Sec. 801-1. Short Title. Articles 801 through 850 845 of
21this Act may be cited as the Illinois Finance Authority Act.
22References to "this Act" in Articles 801 through 850 845 are
23references to the Illinois Finance Authority Act.

 

 

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1(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
 
2    (20 ILCS 3501/801-5)
3    Sec. 801-5. Findings and declaration of policy. The
4General Assembly hereby finds, determines and declares:
5    (a) that there are a number of existing State authorities
6authorized to issue bonds to alleviate the conditions and
7promote the objectives set forth below; and to provide a
8stronger, better coordinated development effort, it is
9determined to be in the interest of promoting the health,
10safety, morals and general welfare of all the people of the
11State to consolidate certain of such existing authorities into
12one finance authority;
13    (b) that involuntary unemployment affects the health,
14safety, morals and general welfare of the people of the State
15of Illinois;
16    (c) that the economic burdens resulting from involuntary
17unemployment fall in part upon the State in the form of public
18assistance and reduced tax revenues, and in the event the
19unemployed worker and his family migrate elsewhere to find
20work, may also fall upon the municipalities and other taxing
21districts within the areas of unemployment in the form of
22reduced tax revenues, thereby endangering their financial
23ability to support necessary governmental services for their
24remaining inhabitants;
25    (d) that a vigorous growing economy is the basic source of

 

 

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1job opportunities;
2    (e) that protection against involuntary unemployment, its
3economic burdens and the spread of economic stagnation can
4best be provided by promoting, attracting, stimulating and
5revitalizing industry, manufacturing and commerce in the
6State;
7    (f) that the State has a responsibility to help create a
8favorable climate for new and improved job opportunities for
9its citizens by encouraging the development of commercial
10businesses and industrial and manufacturing plants within the
11State;
12    (g) that increased availability of funds for construction
13of new facilities and the expansion and improvement of
14existing facilities for industrial, commercial and
15manufacturing facilities will provide for new and continued
16employment in the construction industry and alleviate the
17burden of unemployment;
18    (h) that in the absence of direct governmental subsidies
19the unaided operations of private enterprise do not provide
20sufficient resources for residential construction,
21rehabilitation, rental or purchase, and that support from
22housing related commercial facilities is one means of
23stimulating residential construction, rehabilitation, rental
24and purchase;
25    (i) that it is in the public interest and the policy of
26this State to foster and promote by all reasonable means the

 

 

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1provision of adequate capital markets and facilities for
2borrowing money by units of local government, and for the
3financing of their respective public improvements and other
4governmental purposes within the State from proceeds of bonds
5or notes issued by those governmental units; and to assist
6local governmental units in fulfilling their needs for those
7purposes by use of creation of indebtedness;
8    (j) that it is in the public interest and the policy of
9this State to the extent possible, to reduce the costs of
10indebtedness to taxpayers and residents of this State and to
11encourage continued investor interest in the purchase of bonds
12or notes of governmental units as sound and preferred
13securities for investment; and to encourage governmental units
14to continue their independent undertakings of public
15improvements and other governmental purposes and the financing
16thereof, and to assist them in those activities by making
17funds available at reduced interest costs for orderly
18financing of those purposes, especially during periods of
19restricted credit or money supply, and particularly for those
20governmental units not otherwise able to borrow for those
21purposes;
22    (k) that in this State the following conditions exist: (i)
23an inadequate supply of funds at interest rates sufficiently
24low to enable persons engaged in agriculture in this State to
25pursue agricultural operations at present levels; (ii) that
26such inability to pursue agricultural operations lessens the

 

 

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1supply of agricultural commodities available to fulfill the
2needs of the citizens of this State; (iii) that such inability
3to continue operations decreases available employment in the
4agricultural sector of the State and results in unemployment
5and its attendant problems; (iv) that such conditions prevent
6the acquisition of an adequate capital stock of farm equipment
7and machinery, much of which is manufactured in this State,
8therefore impairing the productivity of agricultural land and,
9further, causing unemployment or lack of appropriate increase
10in employment in such manufacturing; (v) that such conditions
11are conducive to consolidation of acreage of agricultural land
12with fewer individuals living and farming on the traditional
13family farm; (vi) that these conditions result in a loss in
14population, unemployment and movement of persons from rural to
15urban areas accompanied by added costs to communities for
16creation of new public facilities and services; (vii) that
17there have been recurrent shortages of funds for agricultural
18purposes from private market sources at reasonable rates of
19interest; (viii) that these shortages have made the sale and
20purchase of agricultural land to family farmers a virtual
21impossibility in many parts of the State; (ix) that the
22ordinary operations of private enterprise have not in the past
23corrected these conditions; and (x) that a stable supply of
24adequate funds for agricultural financing is required to
25encourage family farmers in an orderly and sustained manner
26and to reduce the problems described above;

 

 

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1    (l) that for the benefit of the people of the State of
2Illinois, the conduct and increase of their commerce, the
3protection and enhancement of their welfare, the development
4of continued prosperity and the improvement of their health
5and living conditions it is essential that all the people of
6the State be given the fullest opportunity to learn and to
7develop their intellectual and mental capacities and skills;
8that to achieve these ends it is of the utmost importance that
9private institutions of higher education within the State be
10provided with appropriate additional means to assist the
11people of the State in achieving the required levels of
12learning and development of their intellectual and mental
13capacities and skills and that cultural institutions within
14the State be provided with appropriate additional means to
15expand the services and resources which they offer for the
16cultural, intellectual, scientific, educational and artistic
17enrichment of the people of the State;
18    (m) that in order to foster civic and neighborhood pride,
19citizens require access to facilities such as educational
20institutions, recreation, parks and open spaces, entertainment
21and sports, a reliable transportation network, cultural
22facilities and theaters and other facilities as authorized by
23this Act, and that it is in the best interests of the State to
24lower the costs of all such facilities by providing financing
25through the State;
26    (n) that to preserve and protect the health of the

 

 

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1citizens of the State, and lower the costs of health care, that
2financing for health facilities should be provided through the
3State; and it is hereby declared to be the policy of the State,
4in the interest of promoting the health, safety, morals and
5general welfare of all the people of the State, to address the
6conditions noted above, to increase job opportunities and to
7retain existing jobs in the State, by making available through
8the Illinois Finance Authority, hereinafter created, funds for
9the development, improvement and creation of industrial,
10housing, local government, educational, health, public purpose
11and other projects; to issue its bonds and notes to make funds
12at reduced rates and on more favorable terms for borrowing by
13local governmental units through the purchase of the bonds or
14notes of the governmental units; and to make or acquire loans
15for the acquisition and development of agricultural
16facilities; to provide financing for private institutions of
17higher education, cultural institutions, health facilities and
18other facilities and projects as authorized by this Act; and
19to grant broad powers to the Illinois Finance Authority to
20accomplish and to carry out these policies of the State which
21are in the public interest of the State and of its taxpayers
22and residents;
23    (o) that providing financing alternatives for projects
24that are located outside the State that are owned, operated,
25leased, managed by, or otherwise affiliated with, institutions
26located within the State would promote the economy of the

 

 

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1State for the benefit of the health, welfare, safety, trade,
2commerce, industry, and economy of the people of the State by
3creating employment opportunities in the State and lowering
4the cost of accessing healthcare, private education, or
5cultural institutions in the State by reducing the cost of
6financing or operating those projects; and
7    (p) that the realization of the objectives of the
8Authority identified in this Act including, without
9limitation, those designed (1) to assist and enable veterans,
10minorities, women and disabled individuals to own and operate
11small businesses; (2) to assist in the delivery of
12agricultural assistance; and (3) to aid, assist, and encourage
13economic growth and development within this State, will be
14enhanced by empowering the Authority to purchase loan
15participations from participating lenders; .
16    (q) that climate change threatens the health, welfare, and
17prosperity of all the residents of the State;
18    (r) combating climate change is necessary to preserve and
19enhance the health, welfare, and prosperity of all the
20residents of the State;
21    (s) that the promotion of the development and
22implementation of clean energy is necessary to combat climate
23change and is hereby declared to be the policy of the State;
24and
25    (t) that designating the Authority as the "Climate Bank"
26to aid in all respects with providing financial assistance,

 

 

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1programs, and products to finance and otherwise develop and
2implement equitable clean energy opportunities in the State to
3mitigate or adapt to the negative consequences of climate
4change in an equitable manner will further the clean energy
5policy of the State.
6(Source: P.A. 100-919, eff. 8-17-18.)
 
7    (20 ILCS 3501/801-10)
8    Sec. 801-10. Definitions. The following terms, whenever
9used or referred to in this Act, shall have the following
10meanings, except in such instances where the context may
11clearly indicate otherwise:
12    (a) The term "Authority" means the Illinois Finance
13Authority created by this Act.
14    (b) The term "project" means an industrial project, clean
15energy project, conservation project, housing project, public
16purpose project, higher education project, health facility
17project, cultural institution project, municipal bond program
18project, PACE Project, agricultural facility or agribusiness,
19and "project" may include any combination of one or more of the
20foregoing undertaken jointly by any person with one or more
21other persons.
22    (c) The term "public purpose project" means (i) any
23project or facility, including without limitation land,
24buildings, structures, machinery, equipment and all other real
25and personal property, which is authorized or required by law

 

 

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1to be acquired, constructed, improved, rehabilitated,
2reconstructed, replaced or maintained by any unit of
3government or any other lawful public purpose, including
4provision of working capital, which is authorized or required
5by law to be undertaken by any unit of government or (ii) costs
6incurred and other expenditures, including expenditures for
7management, investment, or working capital costs, incurred in
8connection with the reform, consolidation, or implementation
9of the transition process as described in Articles 22B and 22C
10of the Illinois Pension Code.
11    (d) The term "industrial project" means the acquisition,
12construction, refurbishment, creation, development or
13redevelopment of any facility, equipment, machinery, real
14property or personal property for use by any instrumentality
15of the State or its political subdivisions, for use by any
16person or institution, public or private, for profit or not
17for profit, or for use in any trade or business, including, but
18not limited to, any industrial, manufacturing, clean energy,
19or commercial enterprise that is located within or outside the
20State, provided that, with respect to a project involving
21property located outside the State, the property must be
22owned, operated, leased or managed by an entity located within
23the State or an entity affiliated with an entity located
24within the State, and which is (1) a capital project or clean
25energy project, including, but not limited to: (i) land and
26any rights therein, one or more buildings, structures or other

 

 

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1improvements, machinery and equipment, whether now existing or
2hereafter acquired, and whether or not located on the same
3site or sites; (ii) all appurtenances and facilities
4incidental to the foregoing, including, but not limited to,
5utilities, access roads, railroad sidings, track, docking and
6similar facilities, parking facilities, dockage, wharfage,
7railroad roadbed, track, trestle, depot, terminal, switching
8and signaling or related equipment, site preparation and
9landscaping; and (iii) all non-capital costs and expenses
10relating thereto or (2) any addition to, renovation,
11rehabilitation or improvement of a capital project or a clean
12energy project, or (3) any activity or undertaking within or
13outside the State, provided that, with respect to a project
14involving property located outside the State, the property
15must be owned, operated, leased or managed by an entity
16located within the State or an entity affiliated with an
17entity located within the State, which the Authority
18determines will aid, assist or encourage economic growth,
19development or redevelopment within the State or any area
20thereof, will promote the expansion, retention or
21diversification of employment opportunities within the State
22or any area thereof or will aid in stabilizing or developing
23any industry or economic sector of the State economy. The term
24"industrial project" also means the production of motion
25pictures.
26    (e) The term "bond" or "bonds" shall include bonds, notes

 

 

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1(including bond, grant or revenue anticipation notes),
2certificates and/or other evidences of indebtedness
3representing an obligation to pay money, including refunding
4bonds.
5    (f) The terms "lease agreement" and "loan agreement" shall
6mean: (i) an agreement whereby a project acquired by the
7Authority by purchase, gift or lease is leased to any person,
8corporation or unit of local government which will use or
9cause the project to be used as a project as heretofore defined
10upon terms providing for lease rental payments at least
11sufficient to pay when due all principal of, interest and
12premium, if any, on any bonds of the Authority issued with
13respect to such project, providing for the maintenance,
14insuring and operation of the project on terms satisfactory to
15the Authority, providing for disposition of the project upon
16termination of the lease term, including purchase options or
17abandonment of the premises, and such other terms as may be
18deemed desirable by the Authority, or (ii) any agreement
19pursuant to which the Authority agrees to loan the proceeds of
20its bonds issued with respect to a project or other funds of
21the Authority to any person which will use or cause the project
22to be used as a project as heretofore defined upon terms
23providing for loan repayment installments at least sufficient
24to pay when due all principal of, interest and premium, if any,
25on any bonds of the Authority, if any, issued with respect to
26the project, and providing for maintenance, insurance and

 

 

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1other matters as may be deemed desirable by the Authority.
2    (g) The term "financial aid" means the expenditure of
3Authority funds or funds provided by the Authority through the
4issuance of its bonds, notes or other evidences of
5indebtedness or from other sources for the development,
6construction, acquisition or improvement of a project.
7    (h) The term "person" means an individual, corporation,
8unit of government, business trust, estate, trust, partnership
9or association, 2 or more persons having a joint or common
10interest, or any other legal entity.
11    (i) The term "unit of government" means the federal
12government, the State or unit of local government, a school
13district, or any agency or instrumentality, office, officer,
14department, division, bureau, commission, college or
15university thereof.
16    (j) The term "health facility" means: (a) any public or
17private institution, place, building, or agency required to be
18licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act; (b) any public or
19private institution, place, building, or agency required to be
20licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act, the Specialized
21Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013, the ID/DD Community
22Care Act, or the MC/DD Act; (c) any public or licensed private
23hospital as defined in the Mental Health and Developmental
24Disabilities Code; (d) any such facility exempted from such
25licensure when the Director of Public Health attests that such
26exempted facility meets the statutory definition of a facility

 

 

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1subject to licensure; (e) any other public or private health
2service institution, place, building, or agency which the
3Director of Public Health attests is subject to certification
4by the Secretary, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
5under the Social Security Act, as now or hereafter amended, or
6which the Director of Public Health attests is subject to
7standard-setting by a recognized public or voluntary
8accrediting or standard-setting agency; (f) any public or
9private institution, place, building or agency engaged in
10providing one or more supporting services to a health
11facility; (g) any public or private institution, place,
12building or agency engaged in providing training in the
13healing arts, including, but not limited to, schools of
14medicine, dentistry, osteopathy, optometry, podiatry, pharmacy
15or nursing, schools for the training of x-ray, laboratory or
16other health care technicians and schools for the training of
17para-professionals in the health care field; (h) any public or
18private congregate, life or extended care or elderly housing
19facility or any public or private home for the aged or infirm,
20including, without limitation, any Facility as defined in the
21Life Care Facilities Act; (i) any public or private mental,
22emotional or physical rehabilitation facility or any public or
23private educational, counseling, or rehabilitation facility or
24home, for those persons with a developmental disability, those
25who are physically ill or disabled, the emotionally disturbed,
26those persons with a mental illness or persons with learning

 

 

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1or similar disabilities or problems; (j) any public or private
2alcohol, drug or substance abuse diagnosis, counseling
3treatment or rehabilitation facility, (k) any public or
4private institution, place, building or agency licensed by the
5Department of Children and Family Services or which is not so
6licensed but which the Director of Children and Family
7Services attests provides child care, child welfare or other
8services of the type provided by facilities subject to such
9licensure; (l) any public or private adoption agency or
10facility; and (m) any public or private blood bank or blood
11center. "Health facility" also means a public or private
12structure or structures suitable primarily for use as a
13laboratory, laundry, nurses or interns residence or other
14housing or hotel facility used in whole or in part for staff,
15employees or students and their families, patients or
16relatives of patients admitted for treatment or care in a
17health facility, or persons conducting business with a health
18facility, physician's facility, surgicenter, administration
19building, research facility, maintenance, storage or utility
20facility and all structures or facilities related to any of
21the foregoing or required or useful for the operation of a
22health facility, including parking or other facilities or
23other supporting service structures required or useful for the
24orderly conduct of such health facility. "Health facility"
25also means, with respect to a project located outside the
26State, any public or private institution, place, building, or

 

 

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1agency which provides services similar to those described
2above, provided that such project is owned, operated, leased
3or managed by a participating health institution located
4within the State, or a participating health institution
5affiliated with an entity located within the State.
6    (k) The term "participating health institution" means (i)
7a private corporation or association or (ii) a public entity
8of this State, in either case authorized by the laws of this
9State or the applicable state to provide or operate a health
10facility as defined in this Act and which, pursuant to the
11provisions of this Act, undertakes the financing, construction
12or acquisition of a project or undertakes the refunding or
13refinancing of obligations, loans, indebtedness or advances as
14provided in this Act.
15    (l) The term "health facility project", means a specific
16health facility work or improvement to be financed or
17refinanced (including without limitation through reimbursement
18of prior expenditures), acquired, constructed, enlarged,
19remodeled, renovated, improved, furnished, or equipped, with
20funds provided in whole or in part hereunder, any accounts
21receivable, working capital, liability or insurance cost or
22operating expense financing or refinancing program of a health
23facility with or involving funds provided in whole or in part
24hereunder, or any combination thereof.
25    (m) The term "bond resolution" means the resolution or
26resolutions authorizing the issuance of, or providing terms

 

 

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1and conditions related to, bonds issued under this Act and
2includes, where appropriate, any trust agreement, trust
3indenture, indenture of mortgage or deed of trust providing
4terms and conditions for such bonds.
5    (n) The term "property" means any real, personal or mixed
6property, whether tangible or intangible, or any interest
7therein, including, without limitation, any real estate,
8leasehold interests, appurtenances, buildings, easements,
9equipment, furnishings, furniture, improvements, machinery,
10rights of way, structures, accounts, contract rights or any
11interest therein.
12    (o) The term "revenues" means, with respect to any
13project, the rents, fees, charges, interest, principal
14repayments, collections and other income or profit derived
15therefrom.
16    (p) The term "higher education project" means, in the case
17of a private institution of higher education, an educational
18facility to be acquired, constructed, enlarged, remodeled,
19renovated, improved, furnished, or equipped, or any
20combination thereof.
21    (q) The term "cultural institution project" means, in the
22case of a cultural institution, a cultural facility to be
23acquired, constructed, enlarged, remodeled, renovated,
24improved, furnished, or equipped, or any combination thereof.
25    (r) The term "educational facility" means any property
26located within the State, or any property located outside the

 

 

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1State, provided that, if the property is located outside the
2State, it must be owned, operated, leased or managed by an
3entity located within the State or an entity affiliated with
4an entity located within the State, in each case constructed
5or acquired before or after the effective date of this Act,
6which is or will be, in whole or in part, suitable for the
7instruction, feeding, recreation or housing of students, the
8conducting of research or other work of a private institution
9of higher education, the use by a private institution of
10higher education in connection with any educational, research
11or related or incidental activities then being or to be
12conducted by it, or any combination of the foregoing,
13including, without limitation, any such property suitable for
14use as or in connection with any one or more of the following:
15an academic facility, administrative facility, agricultural
16facility, assembly hall, athletic facility, auditorium,
17boating facility, campus, communication facility, computer
18facility, continuing education facility, classroom, dining
19hall, dormitory, exhibition hall, fire fighting facility, fire
20prevention facility, food service and preparation facility,
21gymnasium, greenhouse, health care facility, hospital,
22housing, instructional facility, laboratory, library,
23maintenance facility, medical facility, museum, offices,
24parking area, physical education facility, recreational
25facility, research facility, stadium, storage facility,
26student union, study facility, theatre or utility.

 

 

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1    (s) The term "cultural facility" means any property
2located within the State, or any property located outside the
3State, provided that, if the property is located outside the
4State, it must be owned, operated, leased or managed by an
5entity located within the State or an entity affiliated with
6an entity located within the State, in each case constructed
7or acquired before or after the effective date of this Act,
8which is or will be, in whole or in part, suitable for the
9particular purposes or needs of a cultural institution,
10including, without limitation, any such property suitable for
11use as or in connection with any one or more of the following:
12an administrative facility, aquarium, assembly hall,
13auditorium, botanical garden, exhibition hall, gallery,
14greenhouse, library, museum, scientific laboratory, theater or
15zoological facility, and shall also include, without
16limitation, books, works of art or music, animal, plant or
17aquatic life or other items for display, exhibition or
18performance. The term "cultural facility" includes buildings
19on the National Register of Historic Places which are owned or
20operated by nonprofit entities.
21    (t) "Private institution of higher education" means a
22not-for-profit educational institution which is not owned by
23the State or any political subdivision, agency,
24instrumentality, district or municipality thereof, which is
25authorized by law to provide a program of education beyond the
26high school level and which:

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 79 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1        (1) Admits as regular students only individuals having
2    a certificate of graduation from a high school, or the
3    recognized equivalent of such a certificate;
4        (2) Provides an educational program for which it
5    awards a bachelor's degree, or provides an educational
6    program, admission into which is conditioned upon the
7    prior attainment of a bachelor's degree or its equivalent,
8    for which it awards a postgraduate degree, or provides not
9    less than a 2-year program which is acceptable for full
10    credit toward such a degree, or offers a 2-year program in
11    engineering, mathematics, or the physical or biological
12    sciences which is designed to prepare the student to work
13    as a technician and at a semiprofessional level in
14    engineering, scientific, or other technological fields
15    which require the understanding and application of basic
16    engineering, scientific, or mathematical principles or
17    knowledge;
18        (3) Is accredited by a nationally recognized
19    accrediting agency or association or, if not so
20    accredited, is an institution whose credits are accepted,
21    on transfer, by not less than 3 institutions which are so
22    accredited, for credit on the same basis as if transferred
23    from an institution so accredited, and holds an unrevoked
24    certificate of approval under the Private College Act from
25    the Board of Higher Education, or is qualified as a
26    "degree granting institution" under the Academic Degree

 

 

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1    Act; and
2        (4) Does not discriminate in the admission of students
3    on the basis of race or color. "Private institution of
4    higher education" also includes any "academic
5    institution".
6    (u) The term "academic institution" means any
7not-for-profit institution which is not owned by the State or
8any political subdivision, agency, instrumentality, district
9or municipality thereof, which institution engages in, or
10facilitates academic, scientific, educational or professional
11research or learning in a field or fields of study taught at a
12private institution of higher education. Academic institutions
13include, without limitation, libraries, archives, academic,
14scientific, educational or professional societies,
15institutions, associations or foundations having such
16purposes.
17    (v) The term "cultural institution" means any
18not-for-profit institution which is not owned by the State or
19any political subdivision, agency, instrumentality, district
20or municipality thereof, which institution engages in the
21cultural, intellectual, scientific, educational or artistic
22enrichment of the people of the State. Cultural institutions
23include, without limitation, aquaria, botanical societies,
24historical societies, libraries, museums, performing arts
25associations or societies, scientific societies and zoological
26societies.

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 81 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1    (w) The term "affiliate" means, with respect to financing
2of an agricultural facility or an agribusiness, any lender,
3any person, firm or corporation controlled by, or under common
4control with, such lender, and any person, firm or corporation
5controlling such lender.
6    (x) The term "agricultural facility" means land, any
7building or other improvement thereon or thereto, and any
8personal properties deemed necessary or suitable for use,
9whether or not now in existence, in farming, ranching, the
10production of agricultural commodities (including, without
11limitation, the products of aquaculture, hydroponics and
12silviculture) or the treating, processing or storing of such
13agricultural commodities when such activities are customarily
14engaged in by farmers as a part of farming and which land,
15building, improvement or personal property is located within
16the State, or is located outside the State, provided that, if
17such property is located outside the State, it must be owned,
18operated, leased, or managed by an entity located within the
19State or an entity affiliated with an entity located within
20the State.
21    (y) The term "lender" with respect to financing of an
22agricultural facility or an agribusiness, means any federal or
23State chartered bank, Federal Land Bank, Production Credit
24Association, Bank for Cooperatives, federal or State chartered
25savings and loan association or building and loan association,
26Small Business Investment Company or any other institution

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 82 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1qualified within this State to originate and service loans,
2including, but without limitation to, insurance companies,
3credit unions and mortgage loan companies. "Lender" also means
4a wholly owned subsidiary of a manufacturer, seller or
5distributor of goods or services that makes loans to
6businesses or individuals, commonly known as a "captive
7finance company".
8    (z) The term "agribusiness" means any sole proprietorship,
9limited partnership, co-partnership, joint venture,
10corporation or cooperative which operates or will operate a
11facility located within the State or outside the State,
12provided that, if any facility is located outside the State,
13it must be owned, operated, leased, or managed by an entity
14located within the State or an entity affiliated with an
15entity located within the State, that is related to the
16processing of agricultural commodities (including, without
17limitation, the products of aquaculture, hydroponics and
18silviculture) or the manufacturing, production or construction
19of agricultural buildings, structures, equipment, implements,
20and supplies, or any other facilities or processes used in
21agricultural production. Agribusiness includes but is not
22limited to the following:
23        (1) grain handling and processing, including grain
24    storage, drying, treatment, conditioning, mailing and
25    packaging;
26        (2) seed and feed grain development and processing;

 

 

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1        (3) fruit and vegetable processing, including
2    preparation, canning and packaging;
3        (4) processing of livestock and livestock products,
4    dairy products, poultry and poultry products, fish or
5    apiarian products, including slaughter, shearing,
6    collecting, preparation, canning and packaging;
7        (5) fertilizer and agricultural chemical
8    manufacturing, processing, application and supplying;
9        (6) farm machinery, equipment and implement
10    manufacturing and supplying;
11        (7) manufacturing and supplying of agricultural
12    commodity processing machinery and equipment, including
13    machinery and equipment used in slaughter, treatment,
14    handling, collecting, preparation, canning or packaging of
15    agricultural commodities;
16        (8) farm building and farm structure manufacturing,
17    construction and supplying;
18        (9) construction, manufacturing, implementation,
19    supplying or servicing of irrigation, drainage and soil
20    and water conservation devices or equipment;
21        (10) fuel processing and development facilities that
22    produce fuel from agricultural commodities or byproducts;
23        (11) facilities and equipment for processing and
24    packaging agricultural commodities specifically for
25    export;
26        (12) facilities and equipment for forestry product

 

 

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1    processing and supplying, including sawmilling operations,
2    wood chip operations, timber harvesting operations, and
3    manufacturing of prefabricated buildings, paper, furniture
4    or other goods from forestry products;
5        (13) facilities and equipment for research and
6    development of products, processes and equipment for the
7    production, processing, preparation or packaging of
8    agricultural commodities and byproducts.
9    (aa) The term "asset" with respect to financing of any
10agricultural facility or any agribusiness, means, but is not
11limited to the following: cash crops or feed on hand;
12livestock held for sale; breeding stock; marketable bonds and
13securities; securities not readily marketable; accounts
14receivable; notes receivable; cash invested in growing crops;
15net cash value of life insurance; machinery and equipment;
16cars and trucks; farm and other real estate including life
17estates and personal residence; value of beneficial interests
18in trusts; government payments or grants; and any other
19assets.
20    (bb) The term "liability" with respect to financing of any
21agricultural facility or any agribusiness shall include, but
22not be limited to the following: accounts payable; notes or
23other indebtedness owed to any source; taxes; rent; amounts
24owed on real estate contracts or real estate mortgages;
25judgments; accrued interest payable; and any other liability.
26    (cc) The term "Predecessor Authorities" means those

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 85 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1authorities as described in Section 845-75.
2    (dd) The term "housing project" means a specific work or
3improvement located within the State or outside the State and
4undertaken to provide residential dwelling accommodations,
5including the acquisition, construction or rehabilitation of
6lands, buildings and community facilities and in connection
7therewith to provide nonhousing facilities which are part of
8the housing project, including land, buildings, improvements,
9equipment and all ancillary facilities for use for offices,
10stores, retirement homes, hotels, financial institutions,
11service, health care, education, recreation or research
12establishments, or any other commercial purpose which are or
13are to be related to a housing development, provided that any
14work or improvement located outside the State is owned,
15operated, leased or managed by an entity located within the
16State, or any entity affiliated with an entity located within
17the State.
18    (ee) The term "conservation project" means any project
19including the acquisition, construction, rehabilitation,
20maintenance, operation, or upgrade that is intended to create
21or expand open space or to reduce energy usage through
22efficiency measures. For the purpose of this definition, "open
23space" has the definition set forth under Section 10 of the
24Illinois Open Land Trust Act.
25    (ff) The term "significant presence" means the existence
26within the State of the national or regional headquarters of

 

 

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1an entity or group or such other facility of an entity or group
2of entities where a significant amount of the business
3functions are performed for such entity or group of entities.
4    (gg) The term "municipal bond issuer" means the State or
5any other state or commonwealth of the United States, or any
6unit of local government, school district, agency or
7instrumentality, office, department, division, bureau,
8commission, college or university thereof located in the State
9or any other state or commonwealth of the United States.
10    (hh) The term "municipal bond program project" means a
11program for the funding of the purchase of bonds, notes or
12other obligations issued by or on behalf of a municipal bond
13issuer.
14    (ii) The term "participating lender" means any trust
15company, bank, savings bank, credit union, merchant bank,
16investment bank, broker, investment trust, pension fund,
17building and loan association, savings and loan association,
18insurance company, venture capital company, or other
19institution approved by the Authority which provides a portion
20of the financing for a project.
21    (jj) The term "loan participation" means any loan in which
22the Authority co-operates with a participating lender to
23provide all or a portion of the financing for a project.
24    (kk) The term "PACE Project" means an energy project as
25defined in Section 5 of the Property Assessed Clean Energy
26Act.

 

 

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1    (ll) The term "clean energy" means energy generation that
2is substantially free (90% or more) of carbon dioxide
3emissions by design or operations, or that otherwise
4contributes to the reduction in emissions of environmentally
5hazardous materials or reduces the volume of environmentally
6dangerous materials.
7    (mm) The term "clean energy project" means the
8acquisition, construction, refurbishment, creation,
9development or redevelopment of any facility, equipment,
10machinery, real property, or personal property for use by the
11State or any unit of local government, school district, agency
12or instrumentality, office, department, division, bureau,
13commission, college, or university of the State, for use by
14any person or institution, public or private, for profit or
15not for profit, or for use in any trade or business, which the
16Authority determines will aid, assist, or encourage the
17development or implementation of clean energy in the State, or
18as otherwise contemplated by Article 850.
19    (nn) The term "Climate Bank" means the Authority in the
20exercise of those powers conferred on it by this Act related to
21clean energy or clean water, drinking water, or wastewater
22treatment.
23    (oo) "equity investment eligible community" and "eligible
24community" mean the geographic areas throughout Illinois that
25would most benefit from equitable investments by the State
26designed to combat discrimination. Specifically, the eligible

 

 

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1communities shall be defined as the following areas:
2        (1) R3 Areas as established pursuant to Section 10-40
3    of the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act, where residents
4    have historically been excluded from economic
5    opportunities, including opportunities in the energy
6    sector; and
7        (2) Environmental justice communities, as defined by
8    the Illinois Power Agency pursuant to the Illinois Power
9    Agency Act, where residents have historically been subject
10    to disproportionate burdens of pollution, including
11    pollution from the energy sector.
12    (pp) "Equity investment eligible person" and "eligible
13person" mean the persons who would most benefit from equitable
14investments by the State designed to combat discrimination.
15Specifically, eligible persons means the following people:
16        (1) persons whose primary residence is in an equity
17    investment eligible community;
18        (2) persons who are graduates of or currently enrolled
19    in the foster care system; or
20        (3) persons who were formerly incarcerated.
21    (qq) "Environmental justice community" means the
22definition of that term based on existing methodologies and
23findings used and as may be updated by the Illinois Power
24Agency and its program administrator in the Illinois Solar for
25All Program.
26(Source: P.A. 100-919, eff. 8-17-18; 101-610, eff. 1-1-20.)
 

 

 

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1    (20 ILCS 3501/801-40)
2    Sec. 801-40. In addition to the powers otherwise
3authorized by law and in addition to the foregoing general
4corporate powers, the Authority shall also have the following
5additional specific powers to be exercised in furtherance of
6the purposes of this Act.
7    (a) The Authority shall have power (i) to accept grants,
8loans or appropriations from the federal government or the
9State, or any agency or instrumentality thereof, or, in the
10case of clean energy projects, any not-for-profit
11philanthropic or other charitable organization, public or
12private, to be used for the operating expenses of the
13Authority, or for any purposes of the Authority, including the
14making of direct loans of such funds with respect to projects,
15and (ii) to enter into any agreement with the federal
16government or the State, or any agency or instrumentality
17thereof, in relationship to such grants, loans or
18appropriations.
19    (b) The Authority shall have power to procure and enter
20into contracts for any type of insurance and indemnity
21agreements covering loss or damage to property from any cause,
22including loss of use and occupancy, or covering any other
23insurable risk.
24    (c) The Authority shall have the continuing power to issue
25bonds for its corporate purposes. Bonds may be issued by the

 

 

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1Authority in one or more series and may provide for the payment
2of any interest deemed necessary on such bonds, of the costs of
3issuance of such bonds, of any premium on any insurance, or of
4the cost of any guarantees, letters of credit or other similar
5documents, may provide for the funding of the reserves deemed
6necessary in connection with such bonds, and may provide for
7the refunding or advance refunding of any bonds or for
8accounts deemed necessary in connection with any purpose of
9the Authority. The bonds may bear interest payable at any time
10or times and at any rate or rates, notwithstanding any other
11provision of law to the contrary, and such rate or rates may be
12established by an index or formula which may be implemented or
13established by persons appointed or retained therefor by the
14Authority, or may bear no interest or may bear interest
15payable at maturity or upon redemption prior to maturity, may
16bear such date or dates, may be payable at such time or times
17and at such place or places, may mature at any time or times
18not later than 40 years from the date of issuance, may be sold
19at public or private sale at such time or times and at such
20price or prices, may be secured by such pledges, reserves,
21guarantees, letters of credit, insurance contracts or other
22similar credit support or liquidity instruments, may be
23executed in such manner, may be subject to redemption prior to
24maturity, may provide for the registration of the bonds, and
25may be subject to such other terms and conditions all as may be
26provided by the resolution or indenture authorizing the

 

 

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1issuance of such bonds. The holder or holders of any bonds
2issued by the Authority may bring suits at law or proceedings
3in equity to compel the performance and observance by any
4person or by the Authority or any of its agents or employees of
5any contract or covenant made with the holders of such bonds
6and to compel such person or the Authority and any of its
7agents or employees to perform any duties required to be
8performed for the benefit of the holders of any such bonds by
9the provision of the resolution authorizing their issuance,
10and to enjoin such person or the Authority and any of its
11agents or employees from taking any action in conflict with
12any such contract or covenant. Notwithstanding the form and
13tenor of any such bonds and in the absence of any express
14recital on the face thereof that it is non-negotiable, all
15such bonds shall be negotiable instruments. Pending the
16preparation and execution of any such bonds, temporary bonds
17may be issued as provided by the resolution. The bonds shall be
18sold by the Authority in such manner as it shall determine. The
19bonds may be secured as provided in the authorizing resolution
20by the receipts, revenues, income and other available funds of
21the Authority and by any amounts derived by the Authority from
22the loan agreement or lease agreement with respect to the
23project or projects; and bonds may be issued as general
24obligations of the Authority payable from such revenues, funds
25and obligations of the Authority as the bond resolution shall
26provide, or may be issued as limited obligations with a claim

 

 

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1for payment solely from such revenues, funds and obligations
2as the bond resolution shall provide. The Authority may grant
3a specific pledge or assignment of and lien on or security
4interest in such rights, revenues, income, or amounts and may
5grant a specific pledge or assignment of and lien on or
6security interest in any reserves, funds or accounts
7established in the resolution authorizing the issuance of
8bonds. Any such pledge, assignment, lien or security interest
9for the benefit of the holders of the Authority's bonds shall
10be valid and binding from the time the bonds are issued without
11any physical delivery or further act, and shall be valid and
12binding as against and prior to the claims of all other parties
13having claims against the Authority or any other person
14irrespective of whether the other parties have notice of the
15pledge, assignment, lien or security interest. As evidence of
16such pledge, assignment, lien and security interest, the
17Authority may execute and deliver a mortgage, trust agreement,
18indenture or security agreement or an assignment thereof. A
19remedy for any breach or default of the terms of any such
20agreement by the Authority may be by mandamus proceedings in
21any court of competent jurisdiction to compel the performance
22and compliance therewith, but the agreement may prescribe by
23whom or on whose behalf such action may be instituted. It is
24expressly understood that the Authority may, but need not,
25acquire title to any project with respect to which it
26exercises its authority.

 

 

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1    (d) With respect to the powers granted by this Act, the
2Authority may adopt rules and regulations prescribing the
3procedures by which persons may apply for assistance under
4this Act. Nothing herein shall be deemed to preclude the
5Authority, prior to the filing of any formal application, from
6conducting preliminary discussions and investigations with
7respect to the subject matter of any prospective application.
8    (e) The Authority shall have power to acquire by purchase,
9lease, gift or otherwise any property or rights therein from
10any person useful for its purposes, whether improved for the
11purposes of any prospective project, or unimproved. The
12Authority may also accept any donation of funds for its
13purposes from any such source. The Authority shall have no
14independent power of condemnation but may acquire any property
15or rights therein obtained upon condemnation by any other
16authority, governmental entity or unit of local government
17with such power.
18    (f) The Authority shall have power to develop, construct
19and improve either under its own direction, or through
20collaboration with any approved applicant, or to acquire
21through purchase or otherwise, any project, using for such
22purpose the proceeds derived from the sale of its bonds or from
23governmental loans or grants, and to hold title in the name of
24the Authority to such projects.
25    (g) The Authority shall have power to lease pursuant to a
26lease agreement any project so developed and constructed or

 

 

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1acquired to the approved tenant on such terms and conditions
2as may be appropriate to further the purposes of this Act and
3to maintain the credit of the Authority. Any such lease may
4provide for either the Authority or the approved tenant to
5assume initially, in whole or in part, the costs of
6maintenance, repair and improvements during the leasehold
7period. In no case, however, shall the total rentals from any
8project during any initial leasehold period or the total loan
9repayments to be made pursuant to any loan agreement, be less
10than an amount necessary to return over such lease or loan
11period (1) all costs incurred in connection with the
12development, construction, acquisition or improvement of the
13project and for repair, maintenance and improvements thereto
14during the period of the lease or loan; provided, however,
15that the rentals or loan repayments need not include costs met
16through the use of funds other than those obtained by the
17Authority through the issuance of its bonds or governmental
18loans; (2) a reasonable percentage additive to be agreed upon
19by the Authority and the borrower or tenant to cover a properly
20allocable portion of the Authority's general expenses,
21including, but not limited to, administrative expenses,
22salaries and general insurance, and (3) an amount sufficient
23to pay when due all principal of, interest and premium, if any
24on, any bonds issued by the Authority with respect to the
25project. The portion of total rentals payable under clause (3)
26of this subsection (g) shall be deposited in such special

 

 

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1accounts, including all sinking funds, acquisition or
2construction funds, debt service and other funds as provided
3by any resolution, mortgage or trust agreement of the
4Authority pursuant to which any bond is issued.
5    (h) The Authority has the power, upon the termination of
6any leasehold period of any project, to sell or lease for a
7further term or terms such project on such terms and
8conditions as the Authority shall deem reasonable and
9consistent with the purposes of the Act. The net proceeds from
10all such sales and the revenues or income from such leases
11shall be used to satisfy any indebtedness of the Authority
12with respect to such project and any balance may be used to pay
13any expenses of the Authority or be used for the further
14development, construction, acquisition or improvement of
15projects. In the event any project is vacated by a tenant prior
16to the termination of the initial leasehold period, the
17Authority shall sell or lease the facilities of the project on
18the most advantageous terms available. The net proceeds of any
19such disposition shall be treated in the same manner as the
20proceeds from sales or the revenues or income from leases
21subsequent to the termination of any initial leasehold period.
22    (i) The Authority shall have the power to make loans, or to
23purchase loan participations in loans made, to persons to
24finance a project, to enter into loan agreements or agreements
25with participating lenders with respect thereto, and to accept
26guarantees from persons of its loans or the resultant

 

 

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1evidences of obligations of the Authority.
2    (j) The Authority may fix, determine, charge and collect
3any premiums, fees, charges, costs and expenses, including,
4without limitation, any application fees, commitment fees,
5program fees, financing charges or publication fees from any
6person in connection with its activities under this Act.
7    (k) In addition to the funds established as provided
8herein, the Authority shall have the power to create and
9establish such reserve funds and accounts as may be necessary
10or desirable to accomplish its purposes under this Act and to
11deposit its available monies into the funds and accounts.
12    (l) At the request of the governing body of any unit of
13local government, the Authority is authorized to market such
14local government's revenue bond offerings by preparing bond
15issues for sale, advertising for sealed bids, receiving bids
16at its offices, making the award to the bidder that offers the
17most favorable terms or arranging for negotiated placements or
18underwritings of such securities. The Authority may, at its
19discretion, offer for concurrent sale the revenue bonds of
20several local governments. Sales by the Authority of revenue
21bonds under this Section shall in no way imply State guarantee
22of such debt issue. The Authority may require such financial
23information from participating local governments as it deems
24necessary in order to carry out the purposes of this
25subsection (1).
26    (m) The Authority may make grants to any county to which

 

 

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1Division 5-37 of the Counties Code is applicable to assist in
2the financing of capital development, construction and
3renovation of new or existing facilities for hospitals and
4health care facilities under that Act. Such grants may only be
5made from funds appropriated for such purposes from the Build
6Illinois Bond Fund.
7    (n) The Authority may establish an urban development
8action grant program for the purpose of assisting
9municipalities in Illinois which are experiencing severe
10economic distress to help stimulate economic development
11activities needed to aid in economic recovery. The Authority
12shall determine the types of activities and projects for which
13the urban development action grants may be used, provided that
14such projects and activities are broadly defined to include
15all reasonable projects and activities the primary objectives
16of which are the development of viable urban communities,
17including decent housing and a suitable living environment,
18and expansion of economic opportunity, principally for persons
19of low and moderate incomes. The Authority shall enter into
20grant agreements from monies appropriated for such purposes
21from the Build Illinois Bond Fund. The Authority shall monitor
22the use of the grants, and shall provide for audits of the
23funds as well as recovery by the Authority of any funds
24determined to have been spent in violation of this subsection
25(n) or any rule or regulation promulgated hereunder. The
26Authority shall provide technical assistance with regard to

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 98 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1the effective use of the urban development action grants. The
2Authority shall file an annual report to the General Assembly
3concerning the progress of the grant program.
4    (o) The Authority may establish a Housing Partnership
5Program whereby the Authority provides zero-interest loans to
6municipalities for the purpose of assisting in the financing
7of projects for the rehabilitation of affordable multi-family
8housing for low and moderate income residents. The Authority
9may provide such loans only upon a municipality's providing
10evidence that it has obtained private funding for the
11rehabilitation project. The Authority shall provide 3 State
12dollars for every 7 dollars obtained by the municipality from
13sources other than the State of Illinois. The loans shall be
14made from monies appropriated for such purpose from the Build
15Illinois Bond Fund. The total amount of loans available under
16the Housing Partnership Program shall not exceed $30,000,000.
17State loan monies under this subsection shall be used only for
18the acquisition and rehabilitation of existing buildings
19containing 4 or more dwelling units. The terms of any loan made
20by the municipality under this subsection shall require
21repayment of the loan to the municipality upon any sale or
22other transfer of the project. In addition, the Authority may
23use any moneys appropriated for such purpose from the Build
24Illinois Bond Fund, including funds loaned under this
25subsection and repaid as principal or interest, and investment
26income on such funds, to make the loans authorized by

 

 

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1subsection (z), without regard to any restrictions or
2limitations provided in this subsection.
3    (p) The Authority may award grants to universities and
4research institutions, research consortiums and other
5not-for-profit entities for the purposes of: remodeling or
6otherwise physically altering existing laboratory or research
7facilities, expansion or physical additions to existing
8laboratory or research facilities, construction of new
9laboratory or research facilities or acquisition of modern
10equipment to support laboratory or research operations
11provided that such grants (i) be used solely in support of
12project and equipment acquisitions which enhance technology
13transfer, and (ii) not constitute more than 60 percent of the
14total project or acquisition cost.
15    (q) Grants may be awarded by the Authority to units of
16local government for the purpose of developing the appropriate
17infrastructure or defraying other costs to the local
18government in support of laboratory or research facilities
19provided that such grants may not exceed 40% of the cost to the
20unit of local government.
21    (r) In addition to the powers granted to the Authority
22under subsection (i), and in all cases supplemental to it, the
23Authority may establish a direct loan program to make loans
24to, or may purchase participations in loans made by
25participating lenders to, individuals, partnerships,
26corporations, or other business entities for the purpose of

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 100 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1financing an industrial project, as defined in Section 801-10
2of this Act. For the purposes of such program and not by way of
3limitation on any other program of the Authority, including,
4without limitation, programs established under subsection (i),
5the Authority shall have the power to issue bonds, notes, or
6other evidences of indebtedness including commercial paper for
7purposes of providing a fund of capital from which it may make
8such loans. The Authority shall have the power to use any
9appropriations from the State made especially for the
10Authority's direct loan program, or moneys at any time held by
11the Authority under this Act outside the State treasury in the
12custody of either the Treasurer of the Authority or a trustee
13or depository appointed by the Authority, for additional
14capital to make such loans or purchase such loan
15participations, or for the purposes of reserve funds or
16pledged funds which secure the Authority's obligations of
17repayment of any bond, note or other form of indebtedness
18established for the purpose of providing capital for which it
19intends to make such loans or purchase such loan
20participations. For the purpose of obtaining such capital, the
21Authority may also enter into agreements with financial
22institutions, participating lenders, and other persons for the
23purpose of administering a loan participation program, selling
24loans or developing a secondary market for such loans or loan
25participations. Loans made under the direct loan program
26specifically established under this subsection (r), including

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 101 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1loans under such program made by participating lenders in
2which the Authority purchases a participation, may be in an
3amount not to exceed $600,000 and shall be made for a portion
4of an industrial project which does not exceed 50% of the total
5project. No loan may be made by the Authority unless approved
6by the affirmative vote of at least 8 members of the board. The
7Authority shall establish procedures and publish rules which
8shall provide for the submission, review, and analysis of each
9direct loan and loan participation application and which shall
10preserve the ability of each board member and the Executive
11Director, as applicable, to reach an individual business
12judgment regarding the propriety of each direct loan or loan
13participation. The collective discretion of the board to
14approve or disapprove each loan shall be unencumbered. The
15Authority may establish and collect such fees and charges,
16determine and enforce such terms and conditions, and charge
17such interest rates as it determines to be necessary and
18appropriate to the successful administration of the direct
19loan program, including purchasing loan participations. The
20Authority may require such interests in collateral and such
21guarantees as it determines are necessary to protect the
22Authority's interest in the repayment of the principal and
23interest of each loan and loan participation made under the
24direct loan program. The restrictions established under this
25subsection (r) shall not be applicable to any loan or loan
26participation made under subsection (i) or to any loan or loan

 

 

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1participation made under any other Section of this Act.
2    (s) The Authority may guarantee private loans to third
3parties up to a specified dollar amount in order to promote
4economic development in this State.
5    (t) The Authority may adopt rules and regulations as may
6be necessary or advisable to implement the powers conferred by
7this Act.
8    (u) The Authority shall have the power to issue bonds,
9notes or other evidences of indebtedness, which may be used to
10make loans to units of local government which are authorized
11to enter into loan agreements and other documents and to issue
12bonds, notes and other evidences of indebtedness for the
13purpose of financing the protection of storm sewer outfalls,
14the construction of adequate storm sewer outfalls, and the
15provision for flood protection of sanitary sewage treatment
16plans, in counties that have established a stormwater
17management planning committee in accordance with Section
185-1062 of the Counties Code. Any such loan shall be made by the
19Authority pursuant to the provisions of Section 820-5 to
20820-60 of this Act. The unit of local government shall pay back
21to the Authority the principal amount of the loan, plus annual
22interest as determined by the Authority. The Authority shall
23have the power, subject to appropriations by the General
24Assembly, to subsidize or buy down a portion of the interest on
25such loans, up to 4% per annum.
26    (v) The Authority may accept security interests as

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 103 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1provided in Sections 11-3 and 11-3.3 of the Illinois Public
2Aid Code.
3    (w) Moral Obligation. In the event that the Authority
4determines that monies of the Authority will not be sufficient
5for the payment of the principal of and interest on its bonds
6during the next State fiscal year, the Chairperson, as soon as
7practicable, shall certify to the Governor the amount required
8by the Authority to enable it to pay such principal of and
9interest on the bonds. The Governor shall submit the amount so
10certified to the General Assembly as soon as practicable, but
11no later than the end of the current State fiscal year. This
12subsection shall apply only to any bonds or notes as to which
13the Authority shall have determined, in the resolution
14authorizing the issuance of the bonds or notes, that this
15subsection shall apply. Whenever the Authority makes such a
16determination, that fact shall be plainly stated on the face
17of the bonds or notes and that fact shall also be reported to
18the Governor. In the event of a withdrawal of moneys from a
19reserve fund established with respect to any issue or issues
20of bonds of the Authority to pay principal or interest on those
21bonds, the Chairperson of the Authority, as soon as
22practicable, shall certify to the Governor the amount required
23to restore the reserve fund to the level required in the
24resolution or indenture securing those bonds. The Governor
25shall submit the amount so certified to the General Assembly
26as soon as practicable, but no later than the end of the

 

 

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1current State fiscal year. The Authority shall obtain written
2approval from the Governor for any bonds and notes to be issued
3under this Section. In addition to any other bonds authorized
4to be issued under Sections 825-60, 825-65(e), 830-25 and
5845-5, the principal amount of Authority bonds outstanding
6issued under this Section 801-40(w) or under 20 ILCS 3850/1-80
7or 30 ILCS 360/2-6(c), which have been assumed by the
8Authority, shall not exceed $150,000,000. This subsection (w)
9shall in no way be applied to any bonds issued by the Authority
10on behalf of the Illinois Power Agency under Section 825-90 of
11this Act.
12    (x) The Authority may enter into agreements or contracts
13with any person necessary or appropriate to place the payment
14obligations of the Authority under any of its bonds in whole or
15in part on any interest rate basis, cash flow basis, or other
16basis desired by the Authority, including without limitation
17agreements or contracts commonly known as "interest rate swap
18agreements", "forward payment conversion agreements", and
19"futures", or agreements or contracts to exchange cash flows
20or a series of payments, or agreements or contracts, including
21without limitation agreements or contracts commonly known as
22"options", "puts", or "calls", to hedge payment, rate spread,
23or similar exposure; provided that any such agreement or
24contract shall not constitute an obligation for borrowed money
25and shall not be taken into account under Section 845-5 of this
26Act or any other debt limit of the Authority or the State of

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 105 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1Illinois.
2    (y) The Authority shall publish summaries of projects and
3actions approved by the members of the Authority on its
4website. These summaries shall include, but not be limited to,
5information regarding the:
6        (1) project;
7        (2) Board's action or actions;
8        (3) purpose of the project;
9        (4) Authority's program and contribution;
10        (5) volume cap;
11        (6) jobs retained;
12        (7) projected new jobs;
13        (8) construction jobs created;
14        (9) estimated sources and uses of funds;
15        (10) financing summary;
16        (11) project summary;
17        (12) business summary;
18        (13) ownership or economic disclosure statement;
19        (14) professional and financial information;
20        (15) service area; and
21        (16) legislative district.
22    The disclosure of information pursuant to this subsection
23shall comply with the Freedom of Information Act.
24    (z) Consistent with the findings and declaration of policy
25set forth in item (j) of Section 801-5 of this Act, the
26Authority shall have the power to make loans to the Police

 

 

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1Officers' Pension Investment Fund authorized by Section
222B-120 of the Illinois Pension Code and to make loans to the
3Firefighters' Pension Investment Fund authorized by Section
422C-120 of the Illinois Pension Code. Notwithstanding anything
5in this Act to the contrary, loans authorized by Section
622B-120 and Section 22C-120 of the Illinois Pension Code may
7be made from any of the Authority's funds, including, but not
8limited to, funds in its Illinois Housing Partnership Program
9Fund, its Industrial Project Insurance Fund, or its Illinois
10Venture Investment Fund.
11(Source: P.A. 100-919, eff. 8-17-18; 101-610, eff. 1-1-20.)
 
12    (20 ILCS 3501/Art. 850 heading new)
13
ARTICLE 850
14
GENERAL PROVISIONS

 
15    (20 ILCS 3501/850-5 new)
16    Sec. 850-5. Climate Bank. The General Assembly designates
17the Authority as the Climate Bank to aid in all respects with
18providing financial assistance, programs, and products to
19finance and otherwise develop and facilitate opportunities to
20develop clean energy and provide clean water, drinking water,
21and wastewater treatment in the State. Nothing in this Section
22shall be deemed to supersede powers and regulatory duties
23conferred to other State agencies or governmental units.
 

 

 

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1    (20 ILCS 3501/850-10 new)
2    Sec. 850-10. Powers and duties.
3    (a) The Authority shall have the powers enumerated in this
4Act to assist in the development and implementation of clean
5energy in the State. The powers enumerated in this Article
6shall be in addition to all other powers of the Authority
7conferred in this Act, including those related to clean energy
8and the provision of clean water, drinking water, and
9wastewater treatment. The powers of the Authority to issue
10bonds, notes, and other obligations to finance loans
11administered by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
12under the Public Water Supply Loan Program or the Water
13Pollution Control Loan Program or other similar programs shall
14not be limited or otherwise affected by this amendatory Act of
15the 102nd General Assembly.
16    (b) In its role as the Climate Bank of the State, the
17Authority shall have the power to: (i) administer programs and
18funds appropriated by the General Assembly for clean energy
19projects in eligible communities and environmental justice
20communities or owned by eligible persons, (ii) support
21investment in the clean energy and clean water, drinking
22water, and wastewater treatment, (iii) support and otherwise
23promote investment in clean energy projects to foster the
24growth, development, and commercialization of clean energy
25projects and related enterprises, and (iv) stimulate demand
26for clean energy and the development of clean energy projects.

 

 

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1    (c) In addition to, and not in limitation of, any other
2power of the Authority set forth in this Section or any other
3provisions of the general statutes, the Authority shall have
4and may exercise the following powers in furtherance of or in
5carrying out its clean energy powers and purposes:
6        (1) To enter into joint ventures and invest in and
7    participate with any person, including, without
8    limitation, government entities and private corporations,
9    engaged primarily in the development of clean energy
10    projects, provided that members of the Authority or
11    officers may serve as directors, members, or officers of
12    any such business entity, and such service shall be deemed
13    to be in the discharge of the duties or within the scope of
14    the employment of any such member or officer, or Authority
15    or officers, as the case may be, so long as such member or
16    officer does not receive any compensation or direct or
17    indirect financial benefit as a result of serving in such
18    role.
19        (2) To utilize funding sources, including, but not
20    limited to:
21            (A) funds repurposed from existing programs
22        providing financing support for clean energy projects,
23        provided any transfer of funds from such existing
24        programs shall be subject to approval by the General
25        Assembly and shall be used for expenses of financing,
26        grants, and loans;

 

 

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1            (B) any federal funds that can be used for clean
2        energy purposes;
3            (C) charitable gifts, grants, and contributions as
4        well as loans from individuals, corporations,
5        university endowment funds, and philanthropic
6        foundations for clean energy projects or for the
7        provision of clean water, drinking water, and
8        wastewater treatment; and
9            (D) earnings and interest derived from financing
10        support activities for clean energy projects financed
11        by the Authority.
12        (3) To enter into contracts with private sources to
13    raise capital.
14    (d) The Authority may finance working capital, refinance
15outstanding indebtedness of any person, and otherwise assist
16in the investment of equity from any source, public or
17private, in connection with clean energy projects or any other
18projects authorized by this Act.
19    (e) The Authority may assess reasonable fees on its
20financing activities to cover its reasonable costs and
21expenses, as determined by the Authority.
22    (f) The Authority shall make information regarding the
23rates, terms and conditions for all of its financing support
24transactions available to the public for inspection, including
25formal annual reviews by both a private auditor and the
26Comptroller, and providing details to the public on the

 

 

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1Internet, provided public disclosure shall be restricted for
2patentable ideas, trade secrets, and proprietary or
3confidential commercial or financial information, disclosure
4of which may cause commercial harm to a nongovernmental
5recipient of such financing support and for other information
6exempt from public records disclosure pursuant to Section
71-210.
 
8    (20 ILCS 3501/850-15 new)
9    Sec. 850-15. Purposes; Climate Bank. In its role as the
10Climate Bank for the State, the Authority shall consider the
11following purposes:
12        (1) the distribution of the benefits of clean energy
13    in an equitable manner, including by evaluating benefits
14    to eligible communities and equity investment eligible
15    persons;
16        (2) making clean energy accessible to all, especially
17    eligible persons, through financing opportunities and
18    grants for minority-owned businesses, as defined in the
19    Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women, and Persons
20    with Disabilities Act, and for low-income communities,
21    eligible communities, environmental justice communities,
22    and the businesses that serve these communities; and
23        (3) accelerating the investment of private capital
24    into clean energy projects in a manner reflective of the
25    geographic, racial, ethnic, gender, and income-level

 

 

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1    diversity of the State.
 
2
Article 10. Energy Community Reinvestment Act

 
3    Section 10-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as
4the Energy Community Reinvestment Act. References in this
5Article to "this Act" mean this Article.
 
6    Section 10-5. Findings. The General Assembly finds that,
7as part of putting Illinois on a path to 100% renewable energy,
8the State of Illinois should ensure a just transition to that
9goal, providing support for the transition of Illinois'
10communities and workers impacted by closures or reduced use of
11fossil fuel power plants, nuclear power plants, or coal mines
12by allocating new economic development resources for business
13tax incentives, workforce training, site clean-up and reuse,
14and local tax revenue replacement.
15    The General Assembly finds and declares that the health,
16safety, and welfare of the people of this State are dependent
17upon a healthy economy and vibrant communities; that the
18closure of fossil fuel power plants, nuclear power plants, and
19coal mines across this State have a significant impact on
20their surrounding communities; that the expansion of renewable
21energy creates job growth and contributes to the health,
22safety, and welfare of the people of this State; that the
23continual encouragement, development, growth, and expansion of

 

 

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1renewable energy within this State requires a cooperative and
2continuous partnership between government and the renewable
3energy sector; and that there are certain areas in this State
4that have lost, or will lose, jobs due to the closure of fossil
5fuel power plants, nuclear power plants, and coal mines and
6need the particular attention of government, labor, and the
7residents of Illinois to help attract new investment into
8these areas and directly aid the local community and its
9residents.
10    Therefore, it is declared to be the purpose of this Act to
11explore ways of stimulating the growth of new private
12investment, including renewable energy investment, in this
13State and to foster job growth in areas impacted by the closure
14of coal energy plants, coal mines, and nuclear energy plants.
 
15    Section 10-10. Definitions. As used in this Act, unless
16the context otherwise requires:
17    "Agencies" or "State agencies" has the same meaning as
18"State agencies" under Section 1-7 of the Illinois State
19Auditing Act.
20    "Commission" means the Energy Transition Workforce
21Commission created in Section 10-15.
22    "Department" means the Department of Commerce and Economic
23Opportunity.
24    "Displaced energy worker" means an energy worker who has
25lost employment, or is anticipated by the Department to lose

 

 

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1employment within the next 5 years, due to the reduced
2operation or closure of a fossil fuel power plant, nuclear
3power plant, or coal mine.
4    "Energy worker" means a person who has been employed
5full-time for a period of one year or longer, and within the
6previous 5 years, at a fossil fuel power plant, a nuclear power
7plant, or a coal mine located within the State of Illinois,
8whether or not they are employed by the owner of the power
9plant or mine. Energy workers are considered to be full-time
10if they work at least 35 hours per week for 45 weeks a year or
11the 1,820 work-hour equivalent with vacations, paid holidays,
12and sick time, but not overtime, included in this computation.
13Classification of an individual as an energy worker continues
14for 5 years from the latest date of employment or the effective
15date of this Act, whichever is later.
16    "Environmental justice communities" shall have the meaning
17set forth in Section 1-56 of the Illinois Power Agency Act and
18the most recent Commission-approved long-term renewable
19resources procurement plan of the Illinois Power Agency.
20    "Fossil fuel power plant" means an electric generating
21facility powered by gas, coal, other fossil fuels, or a
22combination thereof.
23    "Local labor market area" means an economically integrated
24area within which individuals reside and find employment
25within a reasonable distance of their places of residence or
26can readily change jobs without changing their places of

 

 

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1residence.
2    "Low-income" means persons and families whose income does
3not exceed 80% of area median income, adjusted for family size
4and revised every 2 years.
5    "Renewable energy enterprise" means a company that is
6engaged in the production, manufacturing, distribution, or
7development of renewable energy resources and associated
8technologies.
9    "Renewable energy project" means a project conducted by a
10renewable energy enterprise for the purpose of generating
11renewable energy resources or energy storage.
12    "Renewable energy resources" has the meaning set forth in
13Section 1-10 of the Illinois Power Agency Act.
14    "Rule" has the meaning set forth in Section 1-70 of the
15Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
 
16    Section 10-15. Energy Transition Workforce Commission.
17    (a) The Energy Transition Workforce Commission is hereby
18created within the Department of Commerce and Economic
19Opportunity.
20    (b) The Commission shall consist of the following members:
21        (1) the Director of Commerce and Economic Opportunity;
22        (2) the Director of Labor, or his or her designee, who
23    shall serve as chairperson;
24        (3) 5 members appointed by the Governor, with the
25    advice and consent of the Senate, of which at least one

 

 

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1    shall be a representative of a local labor organization,
2    at least one shall be a resident of an environmental
3    justice community, at least one shall be a representative
4    of a national labor organization, and at least one shall
5    be a representative of the administrator of workforce
6    training programs created by this Act. Designees shall be
7    appointed within 60 days after a vacancy; and
8        (4) the 3 Regional Administrators selected under
9    Section 5-15 of the Energy Transition Act.
10    (c) Members of the Commission shall serve without
11compensation, but may be reimbursed for necessary expenses
12incurred in the performance of their duties from funds
13appropriated for that purpose. The Department of Commerce and
14Economic Opportunity shall provide administrative support to
15the Commission.
16    (d) Within 240 days after the effective date of this Act,
17the Commission shall produce an Energy Transition Workforce
18Report regarding the anticipated impact of the energy
19transition and a comprehensive set of recommendations to
20address changes to the Illinois workforce during the period of
212020 through 2050, or a later year. The report shall contain
22the following elements, designed to be used for the programs
23created in this Act:
24        (1) Information related to the impact on current
25    workers, including:
26            (A) a comprehensive accounting of all employees

 

 

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1        who currently work in fossil fuel energy generation,
2        nuclear energy generation, and coal mining in the
3        State; upon receipt of the employee's written
4        authorization for the employer's release of such
5        information to the Commission, this shall include
6        information on their location, employer, salary
7        ranges, full-time or part-time status, nature of their
8        work, educational attainment, union status, and other
9        factors the Commission finds relevant;
10            (B) the anticipated schedule of closures of fossil
11        fuel power plants, nuclear power plants, and coal
12        mines across the State; when information is
13        unavailable to provide exact data, the report shall
14        include approximations based upon the best available
15        information;
16            (C) an estimate of worker impacts due to scheduled
17        closures, including layoffs, early retirements, salary
18        changes, and other factors the Commission finds
19        relevant; and
20            (D) the likely outcome for workers who are
21        employed by facilities that are anticipated to close
22        or have significant layoffs during their tenure or
23        lifetime.
24        (2) Information regarding impact on communities and
25    local governments, including:
26            (A) changes in the revenue for units of local

 

 

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1        government in areas that currently or recently have
2        had a closure or reduction in operation of a fossil
3        fuel power plant, nuclear power plant, coal mine, or
4        related industry;
5            (B) environmental impacts in areas that currently
6        or recently have had fossil fuel power plants, coal
7        mines, nuclear power plants, or related industry; and
8            (C) economic impacts of the energy transition,
9        including, but not limited to, the supply chain
10        impacts of the energy transition shift toward new
11        energy sources across the State.
12        (3) Information on emerging industries and State
13    economic development opportunities in regions that have
14    historically been the site of fossil fuel power plants,
15    nuclear power plants, or coal mining.
16    (e) The Department shall periodically review its findings
17in the developed reports and make modifications to the report
18and programs based on new findings. The Department shall
19conduct a comprehensive reevaluation of the report, and
20publish a modified version, on each of the following years
21following initial publication: 2023; 2027; 2030; 2035; 2040;
22and any year thereafter which the Department determines is
23necessary or prudent.
 
24    Section 10-20. Energy Transition Community Grants.
25    (a) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall

 

 

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1establish an Energy Transition Community Grant Program to
2award grants to promote economic development in eligible
3communities.
4    (b) Funds shall be made available from the Energy
5Transition Assistance Fund to the Department to provide these
6grants.
7    (c) Communities eligible to receive these grants must meet
8one or more of the following:
9        (1) the area contains a fossil fuel or nuclear power
10    plant that was retired from service or has significantly
11    reduced service within 6 years before the application for
12    designation or will be retired or have service
13    significantly reduced within 6 years following the
14    application for designation;
15        (2) the area contains a coal mine that was closed or
16    had operations significantly reduced within 6 years before
17    the application for designation or is anticipated to be
18    closed or have operations significantly reduced within 6
19    years following the application for designation; or
20        (3) the area contains a nuclear power plant that was
21    decommissioned, but continued storing nuclear waste before
22    the effective date of this Act.
23    (d) Local units of governments in eligible areas may join
24with any other local unit of government, economic development
25organization, local educational institutions, community-based
26groups, or with any number or combination thereof to apply for

 

 

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1the Energy Transition Community Grant.
2    (e) To receive grant funds, an eligible community must
3submit an application to the Department, using a form
4developed by the Department.
5    (f) For grants awarded to counties or other entities that
6are not the city that hosts or has hosted the investor-owned
7electric generating plant, a resolution of support for the
8project from the city or cities that hosts or has hosted the
9investor-owned electric generating plant is required to be
10submitted with the application.
11    (g) Grants must be used to plan for or address the economic
12and social impact on the community or region of plant
13retirement or transition.
14    (h) Project applications shall include community input and
15consultation with a diverse set of stakeholders, including,
16but not limited to: Regional Planning Councils, where
17applicable; economic development organizations; low-income or
18environmental justice communities; educational institutions;
19elected and appointed officials; organizations representing
20workers; and other relevant organizations.
21    (i) Grant costs are authorized to procure third-party
22vendors for grant writing and implementation costs, including
23for guidance and opportunities to apply for additional
24federal, State, local, and private funding resources. If the
25application is approved for pre-award, one-time reimbursable
26costs to apply for the Energy Transition Community Grant are

 

 

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1authorized up to 3% of the award.
 
2    Section 10-25. Displaced Energy Workers Bill of Rights.
3    (a) The Department, in collaboration with the Department
4of Employment Security, shall have the authority to implement
5the Displaced Energy Workers Bill of Rights, and shall be
6responsible for the implementation of the Displaced Energy
7Workers Bill of Rights programs and rights created under this
8Section. The Department shall provide the following benefits
9to displaced energy workers listed in paragraphs (1) through
10(4) of this subsection:
11        (1) Advance notice of power plant or coal mine
12    closure.
13            (A) The Department shall notify all energy workers
14        of the upcoming closure of any qualifying facility as
15        far in advance of the scheduled closing date as it can.
16        The Department shall engage the employer and energy
17        workers no later than within 30 days of a closure or
18        deactivation notice being filed by the plant owner to
19        the Regional Transmission Organization of
20        jurisdiction, within 30 days of the announced closure
21        of a coal mine, within 30 days of a WARN notice being
22        filed with the Department, or within 30 days of an
23        announcement or requirement of cessation of operations
24        of a plant or mine from another authoritative source,
25        whichever is first.

 

 

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1            (B) In providing the advance notice described in
2        this paragraph (1), the Department shall take
3        reasonable steps to ensure that all displaced energy
4        workers are educated on the various programs available
5        through the Department to assist with the energy
6        transition.
7        (2) Education on programs. The Department shall take
8    reasonable steps to ensure that all displaced energy
9    workers are educated on the various programs available
10    through the Department to assist with the energy
11    transition, including, but not limited to, the Illinois
12    Dislocated Worker and Rapid Response programs. The
13    Department will develop an outreach strategy, workforce
14    toolkit and quick action plan to deploy when closures are
15    announced. This strategy will include identifying any
16    additional resources that may be needed to aid worker
17    transitions that would require contracting services.
18        (3) The Department shall provide information and
19    consultation to displaced energy workers on various
20    employment and educational opportunities available to
21    them, supportive services, and advise workers on which
22    opportunities meet their skills, needs, and preferences.
23            (A) Available services will include reemployment
24        services, training services, work-based learning
25        services, and financial and retirement planning
26        support.

 

 

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1            (B) The Department will provide skills matching as
2        part of career counseling services to enable
3        assessment of the displaced energy worker's skills and
4        map those skills to emerging occupations in the region
5        or nationally, or both, depending on the displaced
6        worker's preferences.
7            (C) For energy workers who may be interested in
8        entrepreneurial pursuits, the Department will connect
9        these individuals with their area Small Business
10        Development Center, procurement technical assistance
11        centers, and economic development organization to
12        engage in services, including, but not limited to,
13        business consulting, business planning, regulatory
14        compliance, marketing, training, accessing capital,
15        and government bid certification assistance.
16        (4) Financial planning services. Displaced energy
17    workers shall be entitled to services as described in the
18    energy worker programs in this subsection, including
19    financial planning services.
20    (b) Plant owners and the owners of coal mines located in
21Illinois shall be required to comply with the requirements set
22out in this subsection (b). The owners shall be required to
23take the following actions:
24        (1) Provide written notice of deactivation or closure
25    filing with the Regional Transmission Organization of
26    jurisdiction to the Department within 48 hours, if

 

 

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1    applicable.
2        (2) Provide employment information for energy workers;
3    90 days prior to the closure of an electric generating
4    unit or mine, the owners of the power plant or mine shall
5    provide energy workers information on whether there are
6    employment opportunities provided by their employer.
7        (3) Annually report to the Department on announced
8    closures of qualifying facilities. The report must include
9    information on expected closure date, number of employees,
10    planning processes, services offered for employees (such
11    as training opportunities) leading up to the closure,
12    efforts made to retain employees through other employment
13    opportunities within the company, and any other
14    information that the Department requires in order to
15    implement this Section.
16        (4) Ninety days prior to closure date, provide a final
17    closure report to the Department that includes expected
18    closure date, number of employees and salaries, transition
19    support the company is providing to employee and
20    timelines, including assistance for training
21    opportunities, transportation support or child care
22    resources to attend training, career counseling, resume
23    support, and others. The closure report will be made
24    available to the chief elected official of each municipal
25    and county government within which the employment loss,
26    relocation, or mass layoff occurs. It shall not be made

 

 

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1    publicly available.
2        (5) Ninety days prior to closure date, provide job
3    descriptions for each employee at the plant or mine to the
4    Department and the entity providing career and training
5    counseling.
6        (6) Ninety days prior to closure date, make available
7    to the Department and the entity providing career and
8    training counseling any industry-related certifications
9    and on-the-job training the employee earned to allow union
10    training programs, community colleges, or other
11    certification programs to award credit for life
12    experiences in order to reduce the amount of time to
13    complete training, certificates, or degrees for the
14    dislocated employee.
15        (7) Maintain responsible retirement account
16    portfolios.
 
17    Section 10-30. Displaced Energy Worker Dependent
18Transition Scholarship.
19    (a) Subject to appropriation, the benefits of this Section
20shall be administered by and paid for out of funds made
21available to the Illinois Student Assistance Commission.
22    (b) Any natural child, legally adopted child, or stepchild
23of an eligible displaced energy worker who possesses all
24necessary entrance requirements shall, upon application and
25proper proof, be awarded a transition scholarship consisting

 

 

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1of the equivalent of one calendar year of full-time
2enrollment, including summer terms, to the State-supported
3Illinois institution of higher learning of his or her choice.
4    (c) As used in this Section, "eligible displaced energy
5worker" means an energy worker who has lost employment due to
6the reduced operation or closure of a fossil fuel power plant
7or coal mine.
8    (d) Full-time enrollment means 12 or more semester hours
9of courses per semester, or 12 or more quarter hours of courses
10per quarter, or the equivalent thereof per term. Scholarships
11utilized by dependents enrolled in less than full-time study
12shall be computed in the proportion which the number of hours
13so carried bears to full-time enrollment.
14    (e) Scholarships awarded under this Section may be used by
15a child without regard to his or her age. The holder of a
16Scholarship awarded under this Section shall be subject to all
17examinations and academic standards, including the maintenance
18of minimum grade levels, that are applicable generally to
19other enrolled students at the Illinois institution of higher
20learning where the scholarship is being used.
21    (f) An applicant is eligible for a scholarship under this
22Section when the Commission finds the applicant:
23        (1) is the natural child, legally adopted child, or
24    stepchild of an eligible displaced energy worker; and
25        (2) in the absence of transition scholarship
26    assistance, will be deterred by financial considerations

 

 

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1    from completing an educational program at the
2    State-supported Illinois institution of higher learning of
3    his or her choice.
4    (g) Funds may be made available from the Energy Transition
5Assistance Fund to the Commission to provide these grants.
6    (h) The scholarship shall only cover tuition and fees at
7the rates offered to students residing within the State or in
8the district, but shall not exceed the cost equivalent of one
9calendar year of full-time enrollment, including summer terms,
10at the University of Illinois. The Commission shall determine
11the grant amount for each student.
 
12    Section 10-35. Consideration of energy worker employment.
13    (a) All State departments and agencies shall conduct a
14review of the Department of Commerce and Economic
15Opportunity's registry of energy workers to determine whether
16any qualified candidates are displaced energy workers before
17making a final hiring decision for a position in State
18employment.
19    (b) The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity
20shall inform all State agencies and departments of the
21obligations created by this Section and take steps to ensure
22compliance.
23    (c) Nothing in this Section shall be interpreted to
24indicate that the State is required to hire displaced energy
25workers for any position.

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 127 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1    (d) No part of this Section shall be interpreted to be in
2conflict with federal or State civil rights or employment law.
 
3    Section 10-40. Energy Community Reinvestment Report.
4Beginning 365 days after the effective date of this Act, and at
5least once each calendar year thereafter, the Department shall
6create or commission the creation of a report on the energy
7worker and transition programs created in this Act and publish
8the report on its website. The report shall, at a minimum,
9contain information on program metrics, the demographics of
10participants, program impact, and recommendations for future
11modifications to the services provided by the Department under
12these programs.
 
13    Section 10-70. Administrative review. All final
14administrative decisions, including, but not limited to,
15funding allocation and rules issued by the Department under
16this Act are subject to judicial review under the
17Administrative Review Law. No action may be commenced under
18this Section prior to 60 days after the complainant has given
19notice in writing of the action to the Department.
 
20    Section 10-90. Repealer. This Act is repealed 24 years
21after the effective date of this Act.
 
22
Article 15. Community Energy, Climate, and Jobs Planning Act

 

 

 

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1    Section 15-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as
2the Community Energy, Climate, and Jobs Planning Act.
3References in this Article to "this Act" mean this Article.
 
4    Section 15-5. Findings. The General Assembly makes the
5following findings:
6        (1) The health, welfare, and prosperity of Illinois
7    residents require that Illinois take all steps possible to
8    combat climate change, address harmful environmental
9    impacts deriving from the generation of electricity,
10    maximize quality job creation in the emerging clean energy
11    economy, ensure affordable utility service, equitable and
12    affordable access to transportation, and clean, safe, and
13    affordable housing.
14        (2) The achievement of these goals will depend on
15    strong community engagement to ensure that programs and
16    policy solutions meet the needs of disparate communities.
17        (3) Ensuring that these goals are met without adverse
18    impacts on utility bill affordability, housing
19    affordability, and other essential services will depend on
20    the coordination of policies and programs within local
21    communities.
 
22    Section 15-10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
23    "Alternative energy improvement" means the installation or

 

 

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1upgrade of electrical wiring, outlets, or charging stations to
2charge a motor vehicle that is fully or partially powered by
3electricity; photovoltaic, energy storage, or thermal
4resource; or any combination thereof.
5    "Disadvantaged worker" means an individual who is defined
6as: (1) being homeless; (2) being a custodial single parent;
7(3) being a recipient of public assistance; (4) lacking a high
8school diploma or high school equivalency; (5) having a
9criminal record or other involvement in the criminal justice
10system; (6) suffering from chronic unemployment; (7) being
11previously in the child welfare system; or (8) being a
12veteran.
13    "Energy efficiency improvement" means equipment, devices,
14or materials intended to decrease energy consumption or
15promote a more efficient use of electricity, natural gas,
16propane, or other forms of energy on property, including, but
17not limited to:
18        (1) insulation in walls, roofs, floors, foundations,
19    or heating and cooling distribution systems;
20        (2) storm windows and doors, multi-glazed windows and
21    doors, heat-absorbing or heat-reflective glazed and coated
22    window and door systems, and additional glazing,
23    reductions in glass area, and other window and door system
24    modifications that reduce energy consumption;
25        (3) automated energy control systems;
26        (4) high efficiency heating, ventilating, or

 

 

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1    air-conditioning and distribution system modifications or
2    replacements;
3        (5) caulking, weather-stripping, and air sealing;
4        (6) replacement or modification of lighting fixtures
5    to reduce the energy use of the lighting system;
6        (7) energy controls or recovery systems;
7        (8) day lighting systems;
8        (9) any energy efficiency project, as defined in
9    Section 825-65 of the Illinois Finance Authority Act; and
10        (10) any other installation or modification of
11    equipment, devices, or materials approved as a utility
12    cost-saving measure by the governing body.
13    "Energy project" means the installation or modification of
14an alternative energy improvement, energy efficiency
15improvement, or water use improvement, or the acquisition,
16installation, or improvement of a renewable energy system that
17is affixed to a stabilized existing property, including new
18construction.
19    "Environmental justice communities" means the proposed
20definition of that term based on existing methodologies and
21findings used by the Illinois Power Agency and its
22Administrator in its Illinois Solar for All Program.
23    "Equity investment eligible community" or "eligible
24community" are synonymous and mean the geographic areas
25throughout Illinois which would most benefit from equitable
26investments by the State designed to combat discrimination and

 

 

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1foster sustainable economic growth. Specifically, eligible
2communities shall be defined as the following areas:
3        (1) R3 Areas as established pursuant to Section 10-40
4    of the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act, where residents
5    have historically been excluded from economic
6    opportunities, including opportunities in the energy
7    sector; and
8        (2) Environmental justice communities, as defined by
9    the Illinois Power Agency pursuant to the Illinois Power
10    Agency Act, where residents have historically been subject
11    to disproportionate burdens of pollution, including
12    pollution from the energy sector.
13    "Equity investment eligible person" or "eligible person"
14are synonymous and mean the persons who would most benefit
15from equitable investments by the State designed to combat
16discrimination and foster sustainable economic growth.
17Specifically, "eligible person" means the following people:
18        (1) a person whose primary residence is in an equity
19    investment eligible community;
20        (2) a person who is a graduate of or currently
21    enrolled in the foster care system; or
22        (3) a person who was formerly incarcerated.
23    "Governing body" means the county board or board of county
24commissioners of a county, the city council of a municipality,
25or the board of trustees of a village.
26    "Local Employment Plan" means a bidding option that public

 

 

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1agencies may include in requests for proposals to incentivize
2bidders to voluntarily plan to retain and create high-skilled
3local manufacturing jobs; invest in preapprenticeship,
4apprenticeship, and training opportunities; and develop
5family-sustaining career pathways into clean energy industries
6for disadvantaged workers in a specified local area. The Local
7Employment Plan only applies to work that is not financed with
8federal money.
9    "Local unit of government" means a county, municipality,
10or village.
11    "Natural climate solutions" means conservation,
12restoration, or improved land management actions that increase
13carbon storage or avoid greenhouse gas emissions on natural
14and working lands.
15    "Nature-based approaches for climate adaptation" means
16actions that preserve, enhance, or expand functions provided
17by nature that increase capacity to manage adverse conditions
18created or exacerbated by climate change. "Nature-based
19approaches for climate adaptation" includes, but is not
20limited to, the restoration of native ecosystems, especially
21floodplains; installation of bioswales, rain gardens, and
22other green stormwater infrastructure; and practices that
23increase soil health and reduce urban heat island effects.
24    "Public agency" means the State of Illinois or any of its
25government bodies and subdivisions, including the various
26counties, townships, municipalities, school districts,

 

 

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1educational service regions, special road districts, public
2water supply districts, drainage districts, levee districts,
3sewer districts, housing authorities, and transit agencies.
4    "Renewable energy resource" includes energy and its
5associated renewable energy credit or renewable energy credits
6from wind energy, solar thermal energy, geothermal energy,
7photovoltaic cells and panels, biodiesel, anaerobic digestion,
8and hydropower that does not involve new construction or
9significant expansion of hydropower dams. For purposes of this
10Act, landfill gas produced in the State is considered a
11renewable energy resource. "Renewable energy resource" does
12not include the incineration or burning of any solid material.
13    "Renewable energy system" means a fixture, product,
14device, or interacting group of fixtures, products, or devices
15on the customer's side of the meter that use one or more
16renewable energy resources to generate electricity, and
17specifically includes any renewable energy project, as defined
18in Section 825-65 of the Illinois Finance Authority Act.
19    "U.S. Employment Plan" means a bidding option that public
20agencies may include in requests for proposals to incentivize
21bidders to voluntarily plan to retain and create high-skilled
22U.S. manufacturing jobs; invest in preapprenticeship,
23apprenticeship, and training opportunities; and develop
24family-sustaining career pathways into clean energy industries
25for disadvantaged workers throughout the U.S. The U.S.
26Employment Plan only applies to work financed with federal

 

 

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1Money.
2    "Water use improvement" means any fixture, product,
3system, device, or interacting group thereof for or serving
4any property that has the effect of conserving water resources
5through improved water management, efficiency, or thermal
6resource.
 
7    Section 15-15. Community Energy, Climate, and Jobs Plans;
8creation.
9    (a) Pursuant to the procedures in Section 15-20, a local
10unit of government may establish Community Energy, Climate,
11and Jobs Plans and identify boundaries and areas covered by
12the Plans.
13    (b) Community Energy, Climate, and Jobs Plans are intended
14to aid local governments in developing a comprehensive
15approach to combining different energy, climate, and jobs
16programs and funding resources to achieve complementary
17impact. An effective planning process may:
18        (1) help communities discover ways that their local
19    government, businesses, and residents can control their
20    energy use and lower their bills;
21        (2) ensure a cost-effective transition away from
22    fossil fuels in the transportation sector;
23        (3) expand access to workforce development and job
24    training opportunities for disadvantaged workers in the
25    emerging clean energy economy;

 

 

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1        (4) incentivize the creation and retention of quality
2    Illinois jobs (when federal funds are not involved) in the
3    emerging clean energy economy;
4        (5) incentivize the creation and retention of quality
5    U.S. jobs in the emerging clean energy economy;
6        (6) promote economic development through improvements
7    in community infrastructure, transit, and support for
8    local business;
9        (7) improve the health of Illinois communities,
10    especially eligible communities, by reducing emissions,
11    addressing existing brownfield areas, and promoting the
12    integration of distributed energy resources;
13        (8) enable greater customer engagement, empowerment,
14    and options for energy services, and ultimately reduce
15    utility bills for Illinoisans;
16        (9) bring the benefits of grid modernization and the
17    deployment of distributed energy resources to economically
18    disadvantaged communities and eligible communities
19    throughout Illinois;
20        (10) support existing Illinois policy goals promoting
21    energy efficiency, demand response, and investments in
22    renewable energy resources;
23        (11) enable communities to better respond to extreme
24    heat and cold emergencies;
25        (12) explore opportunities to expand and improve
26    recreational amenities, wildlife habitat, flood

 

 

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1    mitigation, agricultural production, tourism, and similar
2    co-benefits by deploying natural climate solutions and
3    nature-based approaches for climate adaptation; and
4        (13) ensure eligible persons, minorities, women,
5    people with disabilities, and veterans meaningfully
6    participate in the transition to a clean energy economy.
7    (c) A Community Energy, Climate, and Jobs Plan may include
8discussion of:
9        (1) the demographics of the community, including
10    information on the mix of residential and commercial areas
11    and populations, ages, languages, education, and workforce
12    training, including an examination of the average utility
13    bills paid within the community by class and zip code, the
14    percentage and locations of individuals requiring energy
15    assistance, and participation of community members in
16    other assistance programs;
17        (2) an examination of the community's energy use, for
18    electricity, natural gas, transportation, and other fuels;
19        (3) the geography of the community, including the
20    amount of green space, brownfield sites, farmland,
21    waterways, flood zones, heat islands, areas for potential
22    development, location of critical infrastructure such as
23    emergency response facilities, health care and education
24    facilities, and public transportation routes;
25        (4) information on economic development opportunities,
26    commercial usage, and employment opportunities;

 

 

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1        (5) the current status of zero emission vehicles
2    operated by or on behalf of public agencies within the
3    community; and
4        (6) other topics deemed applicable by the community.
5    (d) A Community Energy, Climate, and Jobs Plan may address
6the following areas:
7        (1) distributed energy resources, including energy
8    efficiency, demand response, dynamic pricing, energy
9    storage, and solar (thermal, rooftop, and community);
10        (2) building codes, both commercial and residential;
11        (3) alternative transportation funding;
12        (4) transit options, including individual car
13    ownership, ridesharing, buses, trains, bicycles, and
14    pedestrian walkways;
15        (5) community assets related to extreme heat and cold
16    emergencies, such as cooling and warming centers;
17        (6) public agency procurements of zero emission,
18    electric vehicles; and
19        (7) networks of natural resources and infrastructure.
20    (e) A Community Energy, Climate, and Jobs Plan may
21conclude with proposals to:
22        (1) increase the use of electricity as a
23    transportation fuel at multi-unit dwellings;
24        (2) maximize the system-wide benefits of
25    transportation electrification;
26        (3) direct public agencies to implement tools, such as

 

 

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1    the U.S. Employment Plan or a Local Employment Plan, to
2    incentivize manufacturers in clean energy industries to
3    create and retain quality jobs and invest in training,
4    workforce development, and apprenticeship programs in
5    connection to a major contract;
6        (4) test innovative load management programs or rate
7    structures associated with the use of electric vehicles by
8    residential customers to achieve customer fuel cost
9    savings relative to gasoline or diesel fuels and to
10    optimize grid efficiency;
11        (5) increase the integration of distributed energy
12    resources in the community;
13        (6) significantly expand the percentage of net-zero
14    housing and net-zero buildings in the community;
15        (7) improve utility bill affordability;
16        (8) increase mass transit ridership;
17        (9) decrease vehicle miles traveled;
18        (10) reduce local emissions of greenhouse gases, NOx,
19    SOx, particulate matter, and other air pollutants;
20        (11) improve community assets that help residents
21    respond to extreme heat and cold emergencies; and
22        (12) expand opportunities for eligible persons,
23    minorities, women, people with disabilities, and veterans
24    to meaningfully participate in the transition to a clean
25    energy economy.
26    (f) A Community Energy, Climate, and Jobs Plan may be

 

 

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1administered by one or more program administrators or the
2local unit of government.
 
3    Section 15-20. Community Energy, Climate, and Jobs
4Planning process.
5    (a) An effective planning process shall engage a diverse
6set of stakeholders in local communities, including:
7environmental justice organizations; economic development
8organizations; faith-based nonprofit organizations;
9educational institutions; interested residents; health care
10institutions; tenant organizations; housing institutions,
11developers, and owners; elected and appointed officials; and
12representatives reflective of each local community.
13    (b) An effective planning process shall engage individual
14members of the community to the extent possible to ensure that
15the Plans receive input from as diverse a set of perspectives
16as possible.
17    (c) Plan materials and meetings related to the Plan shall
18be translated into languages that reflect the makeup of the
19local community.
20    (d) The planning process shall be conducted in an ethical,
21transparent fashion, and continually review its policies and
22practices to determine how best to meet its objectives.
23    (e) The Community, Energy, and Climate Plans shall take
24into account other applicable or relevant economic development
25plans, such as a Comprehensive Economic Development Strategy,

 

 

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1developed by a local unit of government, economic development
2organization, or Regional Planning Council.
 
3    Section 15-25. Joint Community Energy, Climate, and Jobs
4Plans. A local unit of government may join with any other local
5unit of government, or with any public or private person, or
6with any number or combination thereof, under the
7Intergovernmental Cooperation Act, by contract or otherwise as
8may be permitted by law, for the implementation of a Community
9Energy, Climate, and Jobs Plan, in whole or in part.
 
10    Section 15-90. Repealer. This Act is repealed 24 years
11after the effective date of this Act.
 
12
Article 20. Illinois Clean Energy
13
Jobs and Justice Fund Act

 
14    Section 20-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as
15the Clean Energy Jobs and Justice Fund Act. References in this
16Article to "this Act" mean this Article.
 
17    Section 20-5. Purpose. The purpose of this Act is to
18promote the health, welfare, and prosperity of all the
19residents of this State by ensuring access to financial
20products that allow Illinois residents and businesses to
21invest in clean energy. Furthermore, the Clean Energy Jobs and

 

 

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1Justice Fund, is designed to fill the following purposes:
2        (1) ensure that the benefits of the clean energy
3    economy are equitably distributed;
4        (2) make clean energy accessible to all through the
5    provision of innovative financing opportunities and grants
6    for Minority Business Enterprises (MBE) and other
7    contractors of color, and for low-income, environmental
8    justice, and BIPOC communities and the businesses that
9    serve these communities;
10        (3) prioritize the provision of public and private
11    capital for clean energy investment to MBEs and other
12    contractors of color, and to businesses serving
13    low-income, environmental justice, and BIPOC communities;
14        (4) accelerate the flow of private capital into clean
15    energy markets;
16        (5) assist low-income, environmental justice, and
17    BIPOC community utility customers in paying for solar and
18    energy efficiency upgrades through energy cost savings;
19        (6) increase access to no-cost and low-cost loans for
20    MBE and other contractors of color;
21        (7) develop financing products designed to compensate
22    for historical and structural barriers preventing
23    low-income, environmental justice, and BIPOC communities
24    from accessing traditional financing;
25        (8) leverage private investment in clean energy
26    projects and in projects developed by MBEs and other

 

 

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1    contractors of color; and
2        (9) pursue financial self-sustainability through
3    innovative financing products.
 
4    Section 20-10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
5    "Black, indigenous, and people of color" or "BIPOC" means
6people who are members of the groups described in
7subparagraphs (a) through (e) of paragraph (A) of subsection
8(1) of Section 2 of the Business Enterprise for Minorities,
9Women, and Persons with Disabilities Act.
10    "Board" means the Board of Directors of the Clean Energy
11Jobs and Justice Fund.
12    "Contractor of color" means a business entity that is at
13least 51% owned by one or more BIPOC persons, or in the case of
14a corporation, at least 51% of the corporation's stock is
15owned by one or more BIPOC persons, and the management and
16daily business operations of which are controlled by one or
17more of the BIPOC persons who own it. A contractor of color may
18also be a nonprofit entity with a board of directors composed
19of at least 51% BIPOC persons or a nonprofit entity certified
20by the State of Illinois to be minority-led.
21    "Environmental justice communities" means the definition
22of that term based on existing methodologies and findings used
23by the Illinois Power Agency and its Administrator of the
24Illinois Solar for All Program.
25    "Fund" means the Clean Energy Jobs and Justice Fund.

 

 

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1    "Low-income" means households whose income does not exceed
280% of Area Median Income (AMI), adjusted for family size and
3revised every 5 years.
4    "Low-income community" means a census tract where at least
5half of households are low-income.
6    "Minority-owned business enterprise" or "MBE" means a
7business certified as such by an authorized unit of government
8or other authorized entity in Illinois.
9    "Municipality" means a city, village, or incorporated
10town.
11    "Person" means any natural person, firm, partnership,
12corporation, either domestic or foreign, company, association,
13limited liability company, joint stock company, or association
14and includes any trustee, receiver, assignee, or personal
15representative thereof.
 
16    Section 20-15. Clean Energy Jobs and Justice Fund.
17    (a) Not later than 30 days after the effective date of this
18Act, there shall be incorporated a nonprofit corporation to be
19known as the "Clean Energy Jobs and Justice Fund".
20    (b) The Fund shall not be an agency or instrumentality of
21the State Government.
22    (c) The full faith and credit of the State of Illinois
23shall not extend to the Fund.
24    (d) The Fund shall:
25        (1) Be an organization described in subsection (c) of

 

 

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1    Section 501 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 and
2    exempt from taxation under subsection (a) of Section 501
3    of that Code;
4        (2) Ensure that no part of the income or assets of the
5    Fund shall inure to the benefit of any director, officer,
6    or employee, except as reasonable compensation for
7    services or reimbursement for expenses; and
8        (3) Not contribute to or otherwise support any
9    political party or candidate for elective office.
 
10    Section 20-20. Board of Directors.
11    (a) The Fund shall be managed by, and its powers,
12functions, and duties shall be exercised through, a Board to
13be composed of 11 members. The initial members of the Board
14shall be appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent
15of the Senate within 60 days after the effective date of this
16Act. Members of the Board shall be broadly representative of
17the communities that the Fund is designed to serve. Of such
18members:
19        (1) at least one member shall be selected from each of
20    the following geographic regions in the State: northeast,
21    northwest, central, and southern;
22        (2) at least 2 members shall have experience in
23    providing energy-related services to low-income,
24    environmental justice, or BIPOC communities;
25        (3) at least one member shall own or be employed by an

 

 

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1    MBE or BIPOC-owned business focused on the deployment of
2    clean energy;
3        (4) at least one member shall be a policy or
4    implementation expert in serving low-income, environmental
5    justice or BIPOC communities or individuals, including
6    environmental justice communities, BIPOC communities,
7    formerly convicted persons, persons who are or were in the
8    child welfare system, displaced energy workers, gender
9    nonconforming and transgender individuals, or youth; and
10        (5) at least one member shall be from a
11    community-based organization with a specific mission to
12    support racially and socioeconomically diverse
13    environmental justice communities.
14    (a-5) The terms of the initial members of the Board shall
15be as follows:
16        (1) 5 members appointed and confirmed shall have
17    initial 5-year terms;
18        (2) 3 members appointed and confirmed shall have
19    initial 4-year terms; and
20        (3) 3 members appointed and confirmed shall have
21    initial 3-year terms.
22    (b) Subsequent composition and terms.
23        (1) Except for the selection of the initial members of
24    the Board for their initial terms under paragraph (1) of
25    subsection (a) of this Section, the members of the Board
26    shall be elected by the members of the Board.

 

 

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1        (2) A member of the Board shall be disqualified from
2    voting for any position on the Board for which such member
3    is a candidate.
4        (3) All members elected pursuant to paragraph (2) of
5    subsection (a) of this Section shall have a term of 5
6    years.
7    (c) The members of the Board shall be broadly
8representative of the communities that the Fund is designed to
9serve and shall collectively have expertise in environmental
10justice, energy efficiency, distributed renewable energy,
11workforce development, finance and investments, clean
12transportation, and climate resilience. Of such members:
13        (1) not fewer than 2 shall be selected from each of the
14    following geographic regions in the State: northeast,
15    northwest, central, and southern;
16        (2) not fewer than 2 shall be from an MBE or
17    BIPOC-owned business focused on the deployment of clean
18    energy;
19        (3) not fewer than 2 shall be from a community-based
20    organization with a specific mission to support racially
21    and socioeconomically diverse environmental justice
22    communities; and
23        (4) not fewer than 2 shall be from an organization
24    specializing in providing energy-related services to
25    low-income, environmental justice, or BIPOC communities.
26        (5) Members of the Board can fulfill multiple

 

 

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1    criteria, such as representing the southern region and an
2    MBE or BIPOC-owned business focused on the deployment of
3    clean energy.
4    (d) No officer or employee of the State or any other level
5of government may be appointed or elected as a member of the
6Board.
7    (e) Seven members of the Board shall constitute a quorum.
8    (f) The Board shall adopt, and may amend, such bylaws as
9are necessary for the proper management and functioning of the
10Fund. Such bylaws shall include designation of officers of the
11Fund and the duties of such officers.
12    (g) No person who is an employee in any managerial or
13supervisory capacity, director, officer or agent or who is a
14member of the immediate family of any such employee, director,
15officer, or agent of any public utility is eligible to be a
16director. No director may hold any elective position, be a
17candidate for any elective position, be a State public
18official, be employed by the Illinois Commerce Commission, or
19be employed in a governmental position exempt from the
20Illinois Personnel Code.
21    (h) No director, nor member of his or her immediate family
22shall, either directly or indirectly, be employed for
23compensation as a staff member or consultant of the Fund.
24    (i) The Board shall hold regular meetings at least once
25every 3 months on such dates and at such places as it may
26determine. Meetings may be held by teleconference or

 

 

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1videoconference. Special meetings may be called by the
2president or by a majority of the directors upon at least 7
3days' advance written notice. The act of the majority of the
4directors, present at a meeting at which a quorum is present,
5shall be the act of the Board of Directors unless the act of a
6greater number is required by this Act or bylaws. A summary of
7the minutes of every Board meeting shall be made available to
8each public library in the State upon request and to
9individuals upon request. Board of Directors meeting minutes
10shall be posted on the Fund's website within 14 days after
11Board approval of the minutes.
12    (j) A director may not receive any compensation for his or
13her services but shall be reimbursed for necessary expenses,
14including travel expenses incurred in the discharge of duties.
15The Board shall establish standard allowances for mileage,
16room and meals and the purposes for which such allowances may
17be made and shall determine the reasonableness and necessity
18for such reimbursements.
19    (k) In the event of a vacancy on the Board, the Board of
20Directors shall appoint a temporary member, consistent with
21the requirements of the Board composition, to serve the
22remainder of the term for the vacant seat.
23    (l) The Board shall adopt rules for its own management and
24government, including bylaws and a conflict of interest
25policy.
26    (m) The Board of Directors of the Fund shall adopt written

 

 

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1procedures for:
2        (1) adopting an annual budget and plan of operations,
3    including a requirement of Board approval before the
4    budget or plan may take effect;
5        (2) hiring, dismissing, promoting, and compensating
6    employees of the Fund, including an affirmative action
7    policy and a requirement of Board approval before a
8    position may be created or a vacancy filled;
9        (3) acquiring real and personal property and personal
10    services, including a requirement of Board approval for
11    any non-budgeted expenditure in excess of $5,000;
12        (4) contracting for financial, legal, bond
13    underwriting and other professional services, including
14    requirements that the Fund (i) solicit proposals at least
15    once every 3 years for each such service that it uses, and
16    (ii) ensure equitable contracting with diverse suppliers;
17        (5) issuing and retiring bonds, bond anticipation
18    notes, and other obligations of the Fund; and
19        (6) awarding loans, grants and other financial
20    assistance, including (i) eligibility criteria, the
21    application process and the role played by the Fund's
22    staff and Board of Directors, and (ii) ensuring racial
23    equity in the awarding of loans, grants, and other
24    financial assistance.
25    (n) The Board shall develop a robust set of metrics to
26measure the degree to which the program is meeting the

 

 

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1purposes set forth in Section 20-5 of this Act, and especially
2measuring adherence to the racial equity purposes set forth
3there, and a reporting format and schedule to be adhered to by
4the Fund officers and staff. These metrics and reports shall
5be posted quarterly on the Fund's website.
6    (o) The Board of Directors has the responsibility to make
7program adjustments necessary to ensure that the Clean Energy
8Jobs and Justice Fund is meeting the purposes set forth in this
9Act. Fund officers and staff and the Board of Directors are
10responsible for ensuring capital providers and Fund officers
11and staff, partners, and financial institutions are held to
12state and federal standards for ethics and predatory lending
13practices and shall immediately remove any offending products
14and sponsoring organizations from Fund participation.
15    (p) The Board shall issue annually a report reviewing the
16activities of the Fund in detail and shall provide a copy of
17such report to the joint standing committees of the General
18Assembly having cognizance of matters relating to energy and
19commerce. The report shall be published on the Fund's website
20within 3 days after its submission to the General Assembly.
 
21    Section 20-25. Powers and duties.
22    (a) The Fund shall endeavor to perform the following
23actions, but is not limited to these specified actions:
24        (1) Develop programs to finance and otherwise support
25    clean energy investment and projects as determined by the

 

 

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1    Fund in keeping with the purposes of this Act.
2        (2) Support financing or other expenditures that
3    promote investment in clean energy sources in order to (i)
4    foster the development and commercialization of clean
5    energy projects, including projects serving low-income,
6    environmental justice, and BIPOC communities, and (ii)
7    support project development by MBE and other contractors
8    of color.
9        (3) Prioritize the provision of public and private
10    capital for clean energy investment to MBEs and other
11    contractors of color, and to clean energy investment in
12    low-income, environmental justice, and BIPOC communities.
13        (4) Provide access to grants, no-cost, and low-cost
14    loans to MBEs and other contractors of color, including
15    those participating in the Clean Energy Primes Contractor
16    Accelerator Program.
17        (5) Provide financial assistance in the form of
18    grants, loans, loan guarantees or debt and equity
19    investments, as approved in accordance with written
20    procedures.
21        (6) Assume or take title to any real property, convey
22    or dispose of its assets and pledge its revenues to secure
23    any borrowing, convey or dispose of its assets and pledge
24    its revenues to secure any borrowing, for the purpose of
25    developing, acquiring, constructing, refinancing,
26    rehabilitating or improving its assets or supporting its

 

 

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1    programs, provided each such borrowing or mortgage, unless
2    otherwise provided by the Board or the Fund, shall be a
3    special obligation of the Fund, which obligation may be in
4    the form of bonds, bond anticipation notes, or other
5    obligations that evidence an indebtedness to the extent
6    permitted under this Act to fund, refinance and refund the
7    same and provide for the rights of holders thereof, and to
8    secure the same by pledge of revenues, notes and mortgages
9    of others, and which shall be payable solely from the
10    assets, revenues and other resources of the Fund and such
11    bonds may be secured by a special capital reserve fund
12    contributed to by the State.
13        (7) Contract with community-based organizations to
14    design and implement program marketing, communications,
15    and outreach to potential users of the Fund's products,
16    particularly potential users in low-income, environmental
17    justice, and BIPOC communities. These contracts shall
18    include funding to ensure that the contracted
19    community-based organizations provide materials and
20    outreach support, including payments for time and
21    expenses, to other community organizations, professional
22    organizations, and subcontractors that have an interest in
23    the Fund's financial products.
24        (8) Collect the following data and perform monthly and
25    quarterly reporting to the Board in accordance with the
26    reporting format and schedule developed by the Board of

 

 

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1    Directors:
2            (A) baseline data on capital sources or providers,
3        loan recipients, projects funded, loan terms, and
4        other relevant financial data;
5            (B) diversity and equity data, including race,
6        gender, socioeconomic, and geographic region; and
7            (C) program administration and servicing data.
8        These reports shall be published to the Fund's website
9        monthly and quarterly. Reports published to the
10        website may be anonymized to protect the data of
11        individual program participants.
12        (9) Have the purposes as provided by resolution of the
13    Fund's Board of Directors, which purposes shall be
14    consistent with this Section and Section 20-5 of this Act.
15    No further action is required for the establishment of the
16    Fund, except the adoption of a resolution for the Fund.
17    (b) In addition to, and not in limitation of, any other
18power of the Fund set forth in this Section or any other
19provision of the general statutes, the Fund shall have and may
20exercise the following powers in furtherance of or in carrying
21out its purposes:
22        (1) have perpetual succession as a body corporate and
23    to adopt bylaws, policies, and procedures for the
24    regulation of its affairs and the conduct of its business;
25        (2) make and enter into all contracts and agreements
26    that are necessary or incidental to the conduct of its

 

 

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1    business;
2        (3) invest in, acquire, lease, purchase, own, manage,
3    hold, sell, and dispose of real or personal property or
4    any interest therein;
5        (4) borrow money or guarantee a return to investors or
6    lenders;
7        (5) hold patents, copyrights, trademarks, marketing
8    rights, licenses, or other rights in intellectual
9    property;
10        (6) employ such assistants, agents, and employees as
11    may be necessary or desirable; establish all necessary or
12    appropriate personnel practices and policies, including
13    those relating to hiring, promotion, compensation and
14    retirement, and engage consultants, attorneys, financial
15    advisers, appraisers, and other professional advisers as
16    may be necessary or desirable;
17        (7) invest any funds not needed for immediate use or
18    disbursement pursuant to investment policies adopted by
19    the Fund's Board of Directors;
20        (8) procure insurance against any loss or liability
21    with respect to its property or business of such types, in
22    such amounts and from such insurers as it deems desirable;
23        (9) enter into joint ventures and invest in, and
24    participate with any person, including, without
25    limitation, government entities and private corporations,
26    in the formation, ownership, management and operation of

 

 

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1    business entities, including stock and nonstock
2    corporations, limited liability companies and general or
3    limited partnerships, formed to advance the purposes of
4    the Fund, provided members of the Board of Directors or
5    officers or employees of the Fund may serve as directors,
6    members or officers of any such business entity, and such
7    service shall be deemed to be in the discharge of the
8    duties or within the scope of the employment of any such
9    director, officer or employee, as the case may be, so long
10    as such director, officer or employee does not receive any
11    compensation or financial benefit as a result of serving
12    in such role; and
13        (10) all other acts necessary or convenient to carry
14    out the purposes of this Act.
15    (c) Before making any loan, loan guarantee, or such other
16form of financing support or risk management for a clean
17energy project, the Fund shall develop standards to govern the
18administration of the Fund through rules, policies, and
19procedures that specify borrower eligibility, terms, and
20conditions of support, and other relevant criteria, standards,
21or procedures.
22    (d) Funding sources specifically authorized include, but
23are not limited to:
24        (1) funds repurposed from existing programs providing
25    financing support for clean energy projects, provided any
26    transfer of funds from such existing programs shall be

 

 

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1    subject to approval by the General Assembly and shall be
2    used for expenses of financing, grants, and loans;
3        (2) any federal funds that can be used for the
4    purposes specified in this Act;
5        (3) charitable gifts, grants, contributions, as well
6    as loans from individuals, corporations, university
7    endowment funds, and philanthropic foundations; and
8        (4) earnings and interest derived from financing
9    support activities for clean energy projects backed by the
10    Fund.
11    (e) The Fund may enter into agreements with private
12sources to raise capital.
13    (f) The Fund may assess reasonable fees on its financing
14activities to cover its reasonable costs and expenses, as
15determined by the Board.
16    (g) The Fund shall make information regarding the rates,
17terms and conditions for all of its financing support
18transactions available to the public for inspection, including
19formal annual reviews by both a private auditor conducted
20pursuant this Section and the Comptroller, and provide details
21to the public on the Internet, provided public disclosure
22shall be restricted for patentable ideas, trade secrets,
23proprietary or confidential commercial or financial
24information, disclosure of which may cause commercial harm to
25a nongovernmental recipient of such financing support and for
26other information exempt from public records disclosure.

 

 

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1    (h) The powers enumerated in this Section shall be
2interpreted broadly to effectuate the purposes established in
3this Section and shall not be construed as a limitation of
4powers.
 
5    Section 20-30. Primary responsibilities in early program
6development.
7    (a) Consistent with the goals of this Act, the Fund has the
8authority to pursue a broad range of financial products and
9services. In early development of products and services
10offered, the Fund should consider the following programs as
11its initial set of investment initiatives:
12        (1) a solar lease, power-purchase agreement, or
13    loan-to-own product specifically designed to complement
14    and grow the Illinois Solar for All Program;
15        (2) direct capitalization of contractors of color
16    participating in or graduating from the workforce and
17    business development programs established in the Energy
18    Transition Act;
19        (3) providing direct capitalization of community-based
20    projects in environmental justice communities through
21    upfront grants. Project applications should provide a
22    community benefit, align with environmental justice
23    communities, be in support of this Act's contractor and
24    workforce development goals, and support upfront planning,
25    development, and start up costs that often are not covered

 

 

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1    prior to applying for program incentives and other loan
2    products;
3        (4) providing loan loss reserve products to secure
4    stable and low-interest financing for individual projects
5    and portfolios consistent with the goals of this Act that
6    would be otherwise unable to receive financing; and
7        (5) offering financing and administrative services for
8    municipal utilities and rural electric cooperatives to
9    create their own version of the on-bill Equitable Energy
10    Upgrade Program such as the Pay As You Save program
11    developed by the Energy Efficiency Institute.
 
12    Section 20-35. Executive director and fund management.
13    (a) The executive director hired by the Board shall have
14the same qualifications as a director pursuant to subsections
15(d), (g), and (h) of Section 20-20 of this Act. The executive
16director may not be a candidate for the Board of Directors
17while serving as executive director. The executive director
18must have 5 or more years of experience in equitable and
19inclusive financing serving racially and socioeconomically
20diverse communities.
21    (b) To hire the executive director, the Board shall adhere
22to any applicable State or federal law prohibiting
23discrimination in employment.
24    (c) The Board shall require all applicants for the
25position of executive director of the Fund to file a financial

 

 

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1statement consistent with requirements established by the
2Board. The Board shall require the executive director to file
3a current statement annually.
4    (d) The Fund shall be administered by the executive
5director and the staff and overseen by the Board of Directors.
6Fund officers and staff shall receive training in how to best
7provide services and support to low-income, environmental
8justice, and BIPOC communities and on supporting borrowers
9with loan applications, loan underwriting, and loan services.
 
10    Section 20-40. Dissolution. The Fund may dissolve or be
11dissolved under the General Not for Profit Corporation Act.
 
12    Section 20-90. Repealer. This Act is repealed 24 years
13after the effective date of this Act.
 
14
Article 90.

 
15    Section 90-1. Legislative findings. The General Assembly
16finds and declares:
17        (1) The overall objectives of regulation of the
18    electric utility industry in this State, as expressed by
19    the General Assembly in the Illinois Power Agency Act and
20    the Public Utilities Act, include the provision of
21    adequate, efficient, reliable, environmentally safe, and
22    least-cost utility services at prices that accurately

 

 

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1    reflect the long-term cost of such services and that are
2    equitable to all citizens.
3        (2) For many years, a significant portion of the
4    electricity consumed by consumers and businesses in this
5    State, particularly in the downstate region, has been
6    produced by large coal-fueled electric generating stations
7    located in the downstate region. However, in recent years,
8    the prices for electric generating capacity and energy
9    available to coal-fueled electric generating stations
10    located in the downstate region of this State have been
11    insufficient to enable many electric generating facilities
12    located within the downstate region to remain in
13    operation, and have placed other electric generating
14    stations at risk of closure. Changes in environmental
15    regulations and, significantly, increasing concerns about
16    the effects of carbon emissions on the climate, have also
17    contributed to the retirement of coal-fueled generating
18    stations in the downstate region. As a result, the vast
19    majority of the coal-fueled generation located in
20    Illinois, and particularly in the downstate region, has
21    recently been retired or will be retired by no later than
22    the end of 2027.
23        (3) Reliable electric service at all times is
24    essential to the functioning of a modern economy and of
25    society in general. The health, welfare, and prosperity of
26    Illinois citizens, including the attractiveness of the

 

 

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1    State of Illinois to business and industry, requires the
2    availability of sufficient electric generating capacity,
3    including energy storage capacity, to meet the demands of
4    consumers and businesses in this State at all times.
5    However, to a significant extent, electricity, when
6    generated, cannot be stored for future use in any
7    significant amount relative to the total amount of
8    electricity that existing generating facilities can
9    produce. Rather, for the most part, electricity must be
10    produced instantaneously at the time and in the amount
11    that it is demanded by residential and business consumers.
12    The development of energy storage facilities provides some
13    opportunity to store some amounts of electricity for use
14    at later times; but energy storage facilities with
15    sufficient capacity to deliver electricity to meet the
16    demands of consumers in this State, 24 hours per day, 7
17    days per week on every day of the year, have not yet been
18    built.
19        (4) Both the Midcontinent Independent System Operator,
20    Inc., which is the independent transmission system
21    operator for downstate Illinois, and its Independent
22    Market Monitor, have expressed concerns about the
23    sufficiency of electric generating resources in downstate
24    Illinois over the next several years, due primarily to the
25    announced and anticipated retirements of coal-fueled
26    electric generating facilities and concerns about how

 

 

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1    quickly and extensively new wind and solar generating
2    facilities will be placed into service. Concerns have also
3    been expressed, based on the intermittent nature of wind
4    and solar generating facilities, as to whether the grid
5    can operate reliably without sufficient dispatchable
6    generation resources or significant additions of energy
7    storage facilities to balance the output of renewable
8    generating facilities. The General Assembly believes that
9    the State cannot afford to find itself in a situation of
10    insufficient electric generating resources to meet the
11    needs of Illinois residential and business consumers 24
12    hours a day, 7 days a week. Thus, consistent with the
13    overall objectives of the regulation of the electric
14    utility industry in this State and the interests of the
15    State in protecting the health and welfare of its
16    residents, regulation should ensure that sufficient
17    generating resources, including energy storage resources,
18    are available to enable the electric utility grid to meet
19    the demands of Illinois electricity consumers at all
20    times.
21        (5) Through previous enactments beginning in 2007, the
22    General Assembly has provided financial incentives for the
23    construction and operation of wind, solar, and other types
24    of renewable energy facilities to serve load in Illinois.
25    In such enactments, the General Assembly has recognized
26    that providing opportunities to enter into long-term

 

 

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1    contracts for the purchase of renewable energy credits
2    from renewable energy facilities creates incentives, and
3    in fact is necessary, for the construction and operation
4    of such resources. Developers typically cannot,
5    financially, develop new, large-scale renewable energy
6    generating resources without having secured long-term
7    contracts for the renewable energy credits that the new
8    facilities will produce.
9        (6) The permitting and siting of new wind and solar
10    generating facilities in Illinois are subject to local
11    governmental control, and in many areas of this State,
12    there has been strong opposition to the siting and
13    construction of new utility-scale wind and solar
14    generating facilities, which in turn has resulted in the
15    denial of, or withdrawal of requests for, necessary
16    approvals for some projects and the enactment of local
17    zoning ordinances imposing requirements and restrictions
18    that increase the costs and reduce the economic
19    attractiveness of such projects. This has resulted in
20    delay or cancellation of a number of renewable energy
21    projects. This experience demonstrates the advantages of
22    targeting the installation of new utility-scale renewable
23    energy facilities at sites that are already suitable for
24    installation of such facilities and can be readily
25    permitted.
26        (7) In light of the intermittent nature of many types

 

 

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1    of renewable energy facilities, such as wind and solar
2    generation, the installation and operation of electricity
3    storage facilities in conjunction with the installation
4    and operation of renewable generation facilities can
5    enhance the value of renewable energy resources to the
6    electric grid.
7        (8) The sites of many of the large coal-fueled
8    electric generating stations located in the downstate
9    region of this State that have recently been retired or
10    announced for retirement, or are at risk of retirement,
11    have existing infrastructure and other characteristics
12    which make them suitable potential sites for development
13    of new renewable energy generating facilities and
14    electricity storage facilities. This infrastructure and
15    other characteristics include large amounts of available
16    land situated at a suitable distance from populated areas,
17    suitable levels of exposure to sunlight, and high voltage
18    interconnections to nearby bulk electric system
19    transmission grid facilities at strategic locations.
20    Development of these generating plant sites for
21    large-scale renewable energy generating facilities,
22    particularly photovoltaic facilities which require large
23    amounts of space, and electricity storage facilities, can
24    help advance this State's objective of increasing the
25    portion of the State's total electricity usage that is
26    supplied by zero emission resources, and reducing the

 

 

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1    proportion of the electricity produced in this State that
2    is produced by carbon-emitting resources, while supporting
3    the reliability of electric service in the downstate
4    region. Accordingly, the General Assembly finds that it is
5    in the public interest to encourage the redevelopment of
6    the sites of retired and still-operating coal-fueled
7    electric generating stations as locations for renewable
8    energy generating facilities and electricity storage
9    facilities.
10        (9) Many, if not all, of the coal-fueled electric
11    generating plants in this State that have recently been
12    retired or announced for retirement, or are at near-term
13    risk of retirement, were at one time owned, at whole or in
14    part, by a public utility as defined in Section 3-105 of
15    the Public Utilities Act and were thereby devoted to
16    public service and the public use in Illinois, with their
17    costs paid for by rates paid by public utility ratepayers
18    in Illinois. The General Assembly finds that it is
19    appropriate to provide incentives to the owners of the
20    sites of coal-fueled electric generating facilities in
21    this State that were once owned by public utilities, to
22    repurpose those sites in a manner that continues to
23    benefit the public by providing for the generation of
24    carbon-free, non-emitting electricity and reliable bulk
25    electric service.
26        (10) The General Assembly finds it is appropriate for

 

 

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1    the State of Illinois to establish a program to provide
2    incentives for the installation and operation of new
3    renewable energy facilities, along with energy storage
4    facilities, at the sites of retired and at-risk
5    coal-fueled electric generating facilities in this State,
6    to help expedite the transition of this State's electric
7    generation fleet to lower-emitting resources while
8    ensuring the availability of sufficient electric energy
9    resources to meet the demands of residential and business
10    electricity consumers in this State.
11        (11) In light of the foregoing findings, the purpose
12    of the program established in subsection (c-5) of Section
13    1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act is to incentivize
14    and support conversion and development of unused (or to be
15    unused) sites of recently retired and soon to-be-retired
16    coal-fueled power plants in this State to productive new
17    uses as sites for the generation and provision of
18    electricity from renewable energy facilities and energy
19    storage facilities, thereby contributing to the State's
20    efforts to reduce carbon emissions from facilities in this
21    State and increase the production of the State's
22    electricity needs from clean energy resources. The
23    provisions of this Act also will support the reliability
24    of the bulk power grid in this State by incentivizing and
25    supporting installation of new generating facilities and
26    energy storage facilities at locations on the grid where

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 167 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1    synchronous generation was formerly located.
 
2    Section 90-3. The Illinois Administrative Procedure Act is
3amended by adding 5-45.9 as follows:
 
4    (5 ILCS 100/5-45.9 new)
5    Sec. 5-45.9. Emergency rulemaking; Multi-Year Integrated
6Grid Plans. To provide for the expeditious and timely
7implementation of Section 16-105.17 of the Public Utilities
8Act, emergency rules implementing Section 16-105.17 of the
9Public Utilities Act may be adopted in accordance with Section
105-45 by the Illinois Commerce Commission. The adoption of
11emergency rules authorized by Section 5-45 and this Section is
12deemed to be necessary for the public interest, safety, and
13welfare.
14    This Section is repealed one year after the effective date
15of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly.
 
16    Section 90-5. The Illinois Governmental Ethics Act is
17amended by adding Section 1-121 and by changing Sections
184A-102 and 4A-103 as follows:
 
19    (5 ILCS 420/1-121 new)
20    Sec. 1-121. Public utility. "Public utility" has the
21meaning provided in Section 3-105 of the Public Utilities Act.
 

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 168 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1    (5 ILCS 420/4A-102)  (from Ch. 127, par. 604A-102)
2    Sec. 4A-102. The statement of economic interests required
3by this Article shall include the economic interests of the
4person making the statement as provided in this Section. The
5interest (if constructively controlled by the person making
6the statement) of a spouse or any other party, shall be
7considered to be the same as the interest of the person making
8the statement. Campaign receipts shall not be included in this
9statement.
10        (a) The following interests shall be listed by all
11    persons required to file:
12            (1) The name, address and type of practice of any
13        professional organization or individual professional
14        practice in which the person making the statement was
15        an officer, director, associate, partner or
16        proprietor, or served in any advisory capacity, from
17        which income in excess of $1200 was derived during the
18        preceding calendar year;
19            (2) The nature of professional services (other
20        than services rendered to the unit or units of
21        government in relation to which the person is required
22        to file) and the nature of the entity to which they
23        were rendered if fees exceeding $5,000 were received
24        during the preceding calendar year from the entity for
25        professional services rendered by the person making
26        the statement.

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 169 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1            (3) The identity (including the address or legal
2        description of real estate) of any capital asset from
3        which a capital gain of $5,000 or more was realized in
4        the preceding calendar year.
5            (4) The name of any unit of government which has
6        employed the person making the statement during the
7        preceding calendar year other than the unit or units
8        of government in relation to which the person is
9        required to file.
10            (5) The name of any entity from which a gift or
11        gifts, or honorarium or honoraria, valued singly or in
12        the aggregate in excess of $500, was received during
13        the preceding calendar year.
14        (b) The following interests shall also be listed by
15    persons listed in items (a) through (f), item (l), item
16    (n), and item (p) of Section 4A-101:
17            (1) The name and instrument of ownership in any
18        entity doing business in the State of Illinois, in
19        which an ownership interest held by the person at the
20        date of filing is in excess of $5,000 fair market value
21        or from which dividends of in excess of $1,200 were
22        derived during the preceding calendar year. (In the
23        case of real estate, location thereof shall be listed
24        by street address, or if none, then by legal
25        description). No time or demand deposit in a financial
26        institution, nor any debt instrument need be listed;

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 170 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1            (2) Except for professional service entities, the
2        name of any entity and any position held therein from
3        which income of in excess of $1,200 was derived during
4        the preceding calendar year, if the entity does
5        business in the State of Illinois. No time or demand
6        deposit in a financial institution, nor any debt
7        instrument need be listed.
8            (3) The identity of any compensated lobbyist with
9        whom the person making the statement maintains a close
10        economic association, including the name of the
11        lobbyist and specifying the legislative matter or
12        matters which are the object of the lobbying activity,
13        and describing the general type of economic activity
14        of the client or principal on whose behalf that person
15        is lobbying.
16        (c) The following interests shall also be listed by
17    persons listed in items (a) through (c) and item (e) of
18    Section 4A-101.5:
19            (1) The name and instrument of ownership in any
20        entity doing business with a unit of local government
21        in relation to which the person is required to file if
22        the ownership interest of the person filing is greater
23        than $5,000 fair market value as of the date of filing
24        or if dividends in excess of $1,200 were received from
25        the entity during the preceding calendar year. (In the
26        case of real estate, location thereof shall be listed

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 171 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1        by street address, or if none, then by legal
2        description). No time or demand deposit in a financial
3        institution, nor any debt instrument need be listed.
4            (2) Except for professional service entities, the
5        name of any entity and any position held therein from
6        which income in excess of $1,200 was derived during
7        the preceding calendar year if the entity does
8        business with a unit of local government in relation
9        to which the person is required to file. No time or
10        demand deposit in a financial institution, nor any
11        debt instrument need be listed.
12            (3) The name of any entity and the nature of the
13        governmental action requested by any entity which has
14        applied to a unit of local government in relation to
15        which the person must file for any license, franchise
16        or permit for annexation, zoning or rezoning of real
17        estate during the preceding calendar year if the
18        ownership interest of the person filing is in excess
19        of $5,000 fair market value at the time of filing or if
20        income or dividends in excess of $1,200 were received
21        by the person filing from the entity during the
22        preceding calendar year.
23        (d) The following interest shall also be listed by
24    persons listed in items (a) through (f) of Section 4A-101:
25    the name of any spouse or immediate family member living
26    with such person employed by a public utility in this

 

 

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1    State and the name of the public utility that employs such
2    person.
3    For the purposes of this Section, the unit of local
4government in relation to which a person is required to file
5under item (e) of Section 4A-101.5 shall be the unit of local
6government that contributes to the pension fund of which such
7person is a member of the board.
8(Source: P.A. 101-221, eff. 8-9-19.)
 
9    (5 ILCS 420/4A-103)  (from Ch. 127, par. 604A-103)
10    Sec. 4A-103. The statement of economic interests required
11by this Article to be filed with the Secretary of State or
12county clerk shall be filled in by typewriting or hand
13printing, shall be verified, dated, and signed by the person
14making the statement and shall contain substantially the
15following:
 
16
STATEMENT OF ECONOMIC INTERESTS

 
17INSTRUCTIONS:
18    You may find the following documents helpful to you in
19completing this form:
20        (1) federal income tax returns, including any related
21    schedules, attachments, and forms; and
22        (2) investment and brokerage statements.
23    To complete this form, you do not need to disclose

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 173 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1specific amounts or values or report interests relating either
2to political committees registered with the Illinois State
3Board of Elections or to political committees, principal
4campaign committees, or authorized committees registered with
5the Federal Election Commission.
6    The information you disclose will be available to the
7public.
8    You must answer all 6 questions. Certain questions will
9ask you to report any applicable assets or debts held in, or
10payable to, your name; held jointly by, or payable to, you with
11your spouse; or held jointly by, or payable to, you with your
12minor child. If you have any concerns about whether an
13interest should be reported, please consult your department's
14ethics officer, if applicable.
15    Please ensure that the information you provide is complete
16and accurate. If you need more space than the form allows,
17please attach additional pages for your response. If you are
18subject to the State Officials and Employees Ethics Act, your
19ethics officer must review your statement of economic
20interests before you file it. Failure to complete the
21statement in good faith and within the prescribed deadline may
22subject you to fines, imprisonment, or both.
 
23BASIC INFORMATION:
24Name:........................................................
25Job title:...................................................

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 174 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1Office, department, or agency that requires you to file this
2form:........................................................
3Other offices, departments, or agencies that require you to
4file a Statement of Economic Interests form: ................
5Full mailing address:........................................
6Preferred e-mail address (optional):.........................
 
7QUESTIONS:
8    1. If you have any single asset that was worth more than
9$10,000 as of the end of the preceding calendar year and is
10held in, or payable to, your name, held jointly by, or payable
11to, you with your spouse, or held jointly by, or payable to,
12you with your minor child, list such assets below. In the case
13of investment real estate, list the city and state where the
14investment real estate is located. If you do not have any such
15assets, list "none" below.
16.............................................................
17.............................................................
18.............................................................
19.............................................................
20.............................................................
21    2. Excluding the position for which you are required to
22file this form, list the source of any income in excess of
23$7,500 required to be reported during the preceding calendar
24year. If you sold an asset that produced more than $7,500 in
25capital gains in the preceding calendar year, list the name of

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 175 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1the asset and the transaction date on which the sale or
2transfer took place. If you had no such sources of income or
3assets, list "none" below.
 
4Source of Income / Name of Date Sold (if applicable)
5Asset
6............................... ...............................
7............................... ...............................
8............................... ...............................
9    3. Excluding debts incurred on terms available to the
10general public, such as mortgages, student loans, and credit
11card debts, if you owed any single debt in the preceding
12calendar year exceeding $10,000, list the creditor of the debt
13below. If you had no such debts, list "none" below.
14    List the creditor for all applicable debts owed by you,
15owed jointly by you with your spouse, or owed jointly by you
16with your minor child. In addition to the types of debts listed
17above, you do not need to report any debts to or from financial
18institutions or government agencies, such as debts secured by
19automobiles, household furniture or appliances, as long as the
20debt was made on terms available to the general public, debts
21to members of your family, or debts to or from a political
22committee registered with the Illinois State Board of
23Elections or any political committee, principal campaign
24committee, or authorized committee registered with the Federal
25Election Commission.

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 176 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1.............................................................
2.............................................................
3.............................................................
4.............................................................
5    4. List the name of each unit of government of which you or
6your spouse were an employee, contractor, or office holder
7during the preceding calendar year other than the unit or
8units of government in relation to which the person is
9required to file and the title of the position or nature of the
10contractual services.
 
11Name of Unit of GovernmentTitle or Nature of Services
12............................... ...............................
13............................... ...............................
14............................... ...............................
15    5. If you maintain an economic relationship with a
16lobbyist or if a member of your family is known to you to be a
17lobbyist registered with any unit of government in the State
18of Illinois, list the name of the lobbyist below and identify
19the nature of your relationship with the lobbyist. If you do
20not have an economic relationship with a lobbyist or a family
21member known to you to be a lobbyist registered with any unit
22of government in the State of Illinois, list "none" below.
 
23Name of LobbyistRelationship to Filer
24............................... ...............................

 

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 177 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1............................... ...............................
2............................... ...............................
3    6. List the name of each person, organization, or entity
4that was the source of a gift or gifts, or honorarium or
5honoraria, valued singly or in the aggregate in excess of $500
6received during the preceding calendar year and the type of
7gift or gifts, or honorarium or honoraria, excluding any gift
8or gifts from a member of your family that was not known to be
9a lobbyist registered with any unit of government in the State
10of Illinois. If you had no such gifts, list "none" below.
11.............................................................
12.............................................................
13.............................................................
14    7. List the name of any spouse or immediate family member
15living with the person making this statement employed by a
16public utility in this State and the name of the public utility
17that employs the relative.
18Name and Relation Public Utility
19............................... ...............................
20..............................................................
21..............................................................
22VERIFICATION:
23    "I declare that this statement of economic interests
24(including any attachments) has been examined by me and to the
25best of my knowledge and belief is a true, correct and complete

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 178 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1statement of my economic interests as required by the Illinois
2Governmental Ethics Act. I understand that the penalty for
3willfully filing a false or incomplete statement is a fine not
4to exceed $2,500 or imprisonment in a penal institution other
5than the penitentiary not to exceed one year, or both fine and
6imprisonment."
7Printed Name of Filer:.......................................
8Date:........................................................
9Signature:...................................................
 
10If this statement of economic interests requires ethics
11officer review prior to filing, the applicable ethics officer
12must complete the following:
 
13CERTIFICATION OF ETHICS OFFICER REVIEW:
14    "In accordance with law, as Ethics Officer, I reviewed
15this statement of economic interests prior to its filing."
 
16Printed Name of Ethics Officer:..............................
17Date:........................................................
18Signature:...................................................
19Preferred e-mail address (optional):.........................
20
STATEMENT OF ECONOMIC INTEREST
21
(TYPE OR HAND PRINT)
22.............................................................
23(name)

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 179 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1.............................................................
2(each office or position of employment for which this
3statement is filed)
4.............................................................
5(full mailing address)
6GENERAL DIRECTIONS:
7    The interest (if constructively controlled by the person
8making the statement) of a spouse or any other party, shall be
9considered to be the same as the interest of the person making
10the statement.
11    Campaign receipts shall not be included in this statement.
12    If additional space is needed, please attach supplemental
13listing.
14    1. List the name and instrument of ownership in any entity
15doing business in the State of Illinois, in which the
16ownership interest held by the person at the date of filing is
17in excess of $5,000 fair market value or from which dividends
18in excess of $1,200 were derived during the preceding calendar
19year. (In the case of real estate, location thereof shall be
20listed by street address, or if none, then by legal
21description.) No time or demand deposit in a financial
22institution, nor any debt instrument need be listed.
23Business EntityInstrument of Ownership
24..............................................................
25..............................................................
26..............................................................

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 180 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1..............................................................
2    2. List the name, address and type of practice of any
3professional organization in which the person making the
4statement was an officer, director, associate, partner or
5proprietor or served in any advisory capacity, from which
6income in excess of $1,200 was derived during the preceding
7calendar year.
8NameAddressType of Practice
9.............................................................
10.............................................................
11.............................................................
12    3. List the nature of professional services rendered
13(other than to the State of Illinois) to each entity from which
14income exceeding $5,000 was received for professional services
15rendered during the preceding calendar year by the person
16making the statement.
17.............................................................
18.............................................................
19    4. List the identity (including the address or legal
20description of real estate) of any capital asset from which a
21capital gain of $5,000 or more was realized during the
22preceding calendar year.
23.............................................................
24.............................................................
25    5. List the identity of any compensated lobbyist with whom
26the person making the statement maintains a close economic

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 181 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1association, including the name of the lobbyist and specifying
2the legislative matter or matters which are the object of the
3lobbying activity, and describing the general type of economic
4activity of the client or principal on whose behalf that
5person is lobbying.
6LobbyistLegislative MatterClient or Principal
7.............................................................
8.............................................................
9    6. List the name of any entity doing business in the State
10of Illinois from which income in excess of $1,200 was derived
11during the preceding calendar year other than for professional
12services and the title or description of any position held in
13that entity. (In the case of real estate, location thereof
14shall be listed by street address, or if none, then by legal
15description). No time or demand deposit in a financial
16institution nor any debt instrument need be listed.
17EntityPosition Held
18..............................................................
19..............................................................
20..............................................................
21    7. List the name of any unit of government which employed
22the person making the statement during the preceding calendar
23year other than the unit or units of government in relation to
24which the person is required to file.
25.............................................................
26.............................................................

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 182 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1    8. List the name of any entity from which a gift or gifts,
2or honorarium or honoraria, valued singly or in the aggregate
3in excess of $500, was received during the preceding calendar
4year.
5.............................................................
6VERIFICATION:
7    "I declare that this statement of economic interests
8(including any accompanying schedules and statements) has been
9examined by me and to the best of my knowledge and belief is a
10true, correct and complete statement of my economic interests
11as required by the Illinois Governmental Ethics Act. I
12understand that the penalty for willfully filing a false or
13incomplete statement shall be a fine not to exceed $1,000 or
14imprisonment in a penal institution other than the
15penitentiary not to exceed one year, or both fine and
16imprisonment."
17................ ..........................................
18(date of filing) (signature of person making the statement)
19(Source: P.A. 95-173, eff. 1-1-08.)
 
20    Section 90-10. The State Officials and Employees Ethics
21Act is amended by changing Section 5-50 as follows:
 
22    (5 ILCS 430/5-50)
23    Sec. 5-50. Ex parte communications; special government
24agents.

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 183 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1    (a) This Section applies to ex parte communications made
2to any agency listed in subsection (e).
3    (b) "Ex parte communication" means any written or oral
4communication by any person that imparts or requests material
5information or makes a material argument regarding potential
6action concerning regulatory, quasi-adjudicatory, investment,
7or licensing matters pending before or under consideration by
8the agency. "Ex parte communication" does not include the
9following: (i) statements by a person publicly made in a
10public forum; (ii) statements regarding matters of procedure
11and practice, such as format, the number of copies required,
12the manner of filing, and the status of a matter; and (iii)
13statements made by a State employee of the agency to the agency
14head or other employees of that agency.
15    (b-5) An ex parte communication received by an agency,
16agency head, or other agency employee from an interested party
17or his or her official representative or attorney shall
18promptly be memorialized and made a part of the record.
19    (c) An ex parte communication received by any agency,
20agency head, or other agency employee, other than an ex parte
21communication described in subsection (b-5), shall immediately
22be reported to that agency's ethics officer by the recipient
23of the communication and by any other employee of that agency
24who responds to the communication. The ethics officer shall
25require that the ex parte communication be promptly made a
26part of the record. The ethics officer shall promptly file the

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 184 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1ex parte communication with the Executive Ethics Commission,
2including all written communications, all written responses to
3the communications, and a memorandum prepared by the ethics
4officer stating the nature and substance of all oral
5communications, the identity and job title of the person to
6whom each communication was made, all responses made, the
7identity and job title of the person making each response, the
8identity of each person from whom the written or oral ex parte
9communication was received, the individual or entity
10represented by that person, any action the person requested or
11recommended, and any other pertinent information. The
12disclosure shall also contain the date of any ex parte
13communication.
14    (d) "Interested party" means a person or entity whose
15rights, privileges, or interests are the subject of or are
16directly affected by a regulatory, quasi-adjudicatory,
17investment, or licensing matter. For purposes of an ex parte
18communication received by either the Illinois Commerce
19Commission or the Illinois Power Agency, "interested party"
20also includes: (1) an organization comprised of 2 or more
21businesses, persons, nonprofit entities, or any combination
22thereof, that are working in concert to advance public policy
23advocated by the organization, or (2) any party selling
24renewable energy resources procured by the Illinois Power
25Agency pursuant to Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities
26Act and Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency Act.

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 185 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1    (e) This Section applies to the following agencies:
2Executive Ethics Commission
3Illinois Commerce Commission
4Illinois Power Agency 
5Educational Labor Relations Board
6State Board of Elections
7Illinois Gaming Board
8Health Facilities and Services Review Board 
9Illinois Workers' Compensation Commission
10Illinois Labor Relations Board
11Illinois Liquor Control Commission
12Pollution Control Board
13Property Tax Appeal Board
14Illinois Racing Board
15Illinois Purchased Care Review Board
16Department of State Police Merit Board
17Motor Vehicle Review Board
18Prisoner Review Board
19Civil Service Commission
20Personnel Review Board for the Treasurer
21Merit Commission for the Secretary of State
22Merit Commission for the Office of the Comptroller
23Court of Claims
24Board of Review of the Department of Employment Security
25Department of Insurance
26Department of Professional Regulation and licensing boards

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 186 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1  under the Department
2Department of Public Health and licensing boards under the
3  Department
4Office of Banks and Real Estate and licensing boards under
5  the Office
6State Employees Retirement System Board of Trustees
7Judges Retirement System Board of Trustees
8General Assembly Retirement System Board of Trustees
9Illinois Board of Investment
10State Universities Retirement System Board of Trustees
11Teachers Retirement System Officers Board of Trustees
12    (f) Any person who fails to (i) report an ex parte
13communication to an ethics officer, (ii) make information part
14of the record, or (iii) make a filing with the Executive Ethics
15Commission as required by this Section or as required by
16Section 5-165 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act
17violates this Act.
18(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 96-31, eff. 6-30-09.)
 
19    Section 90-15. The Department of Commerce and Economic
20Opportunity Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois
21is amended by adding Section 605-1075 as follows:
 
22    (20 ILCS 605/605-1075 new)
23    Sec. 605-1075. Energy Transition Assistance Fund.
24    (a) The General Assembly hereby declares that management

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 187 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1of several economic development programs requires a
2consolidated funding source to improve resource efficiency.
3The General Assembly specifically recognizes that properly
4serving communities and workers impacted by the energy
5transition requires that the Department of Commerce and
6Economic Opportunity have access to the resources required for
7the execution of the programs for workforce and contractor
8development, just transition investments and community
9support, and the implementation and administration of energy
10and justice efforts by the State.
11    (b) The Department shall be responsible for the
12administration of the Energy Transition Assistance Fund and
13shall allocate funding on the basis of priorities established
14in this Section. Each year, the Department shall determine the
15available amount of resources in the Fund that can be
16allocated to the programs identified in this Section, and
17allocate the funding accordingly. The Department shall, to the
18extent practical, consider both the short-term and long-term
19costs of the programs and allocate funding so that the
20Department is able to cover both the short-term and long-term
21costs of these programs using projected revenue.
22    The available funding for each year shall be allocated
23from the Fund in the following order of priority:
24        (1) for costs related to the Clean Jobs Workforce
25    Network Program, up to $21,000,000 annually prior to June
26    1, 2023 and $24,333,333 annually thereafter;

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 188 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1        (2) for costs related to the Clean Energy Contractor
2    Incubator Program, up to $21,000,000 annually;
3        (3) for costs related to the Clean Energy Primes
4    Contractor Accelerator Program, up to $9,000,000 annually;
5        (4) for costs related to the Barrier Reduction
6    Program, up to $21,000,000 annually;
7        (5) for costs related to the Jobs and Environmental
8    Justice Grant Program, up to $34,000,000 annually;
9        (6) for costs related to the Returning Residents Clean
10    Jobs Training Program, up to $6,000,000 annually;
11        (7) for costs related to Energy Transition Navigators,
12    up to $6,000,000 annually;
13        (8) for costs related to the Illinois Climate Works
14    Preapprenticeship Program, up to $10,000,000 annually;
15        (9) for costs related to Energy Transition Community
16    Support Grants, up to $40,000,000 annually;
17        (10) for costs related to the Displaced Energy Worker
18    Dependent Scholarship, upon request by the Illinois
19    Student Assistance Commission, up to $1,100,000 annually;
20        (11) up to $10,000,000 annually shall be transferred
21    to the Public Utilities Fund for use by the Illinois
22    Commerce Commission for costs of administering the changes
23    made to the Public Utilities Act by this amendatory Act of
24    the 102nd General Assembly;
25        (12) up to $4,000,000 annually shall be transferred to
26    the Illinois Power Agency Operations Fund for use by the

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 189 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1    Illinois Power Agency; and
2        (13) for costs related to the Clean Energy Jobs and
3    Justice Fund, up to $1,000,000 annually.
4    The Department is authorized to utilize up to 10% of the
5Energy Transition Assistance Fund for administrative and
6operational expenses to implement the requirements of this
7Act.
8    (c) Within 30 days after the effective date of this
9amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, each electric
10utility serving more than 500,000 customers in the State shall
11report to the Department its total kilowatt-hours of energy
12delivered during the 12 months ending on the immediately
13preceding May 31. By October 31, 2021 and each October 31
14thereafter, each electric utility serving more than 500,000
15customers in the State shall report to the Department its
16total kilowatt-hours of energy delivered during the 12 months
17ending on the immediately preceding May 31.
18    (d) The Department shall, within 60 days after the
19effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General
20Assembly:
21        (1) determine the amount necessary, but not more than
22    $180,000,000, to meet the funding needs of the programs
23    reliant upon the Energy Transition Assistance Fund as a
24    revenue source for the period between the effective date
25    of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly and
26    December 31, 2021;

 

 

SB0018 Engrossed- 190 -LRB102 12600 SPS 17938 b

1        (2) determine, based on the kilowatt-hour deliveries
2    for the 12 months ending May 31, 2021 reported by the
3    electric utilities under subsection (c), the total energy
4    transition assistance charge to be allocated to each
5    electric utility for the period between the effective date
6    of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly and
7    December 31, 2021; and
8        (3) report the total energy transition assistance
9    charge applicable until December 31, 2021 to each electric
10    utility serving more than 500,000 customers in the State
11    and the Illinois Commerce Commission for purposes of
12    filing the tariff pursuant to Section 16-108.30 of the
13    Public Utilities Act.
14    (e) The Department shall by November 30, 2021, and each
15November 30 thereafter:
16        (1) determine the amount necessary, but not more than
17    $180,000,000, to meet the funding needs of the programs
18    reliant upon the Energy Transition Assistance Fund as a
19    revenue source for the immediately following calendar
20    year;
21        (2) determine, based on the kilowatt-hour deliveries
22    for the 12 months ending on the immediately preceding May
23    31 reported to it by the electric utilities under
24    subsection (c), the total energy transition assistance
25    charge to be allocated to each electric utility for the
26    immediately following calendar year; and

 

 

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1        (3) report the energy transition assistance charge
2    applicable for the immediately following calendar year to
3    each electric utility serving more than 500,000 customers
4    in the State and the Illinois Commerce Commission for
5    purposes of filing the tariff pursuant to Section
6    16-108.30 of the Public Utilities Act.
7    (f) The energy transition assistance charge may not exceed
8$180,000,000 annually. If, at the end of the calendar year,
9any surplus remains in the Energy Transition Assistance Fund,
10the Department may allocate the surplus from the fund in the
11following order of priority:
12        (1) for costs related to the development of the
13    Stretch Energy Codes and other standards at the Capital
14    Development Board, up to $500,000 annually, at the request
15    of the Board;
16        (2) up to $7,000,000 annually shall be transferred to
17    the Energy Efficiency Trust Fund and Clean Air Act Permit
18    Fund for use by the Environmental Protection Agency for
19    costs related to energy efficiency and weatherization, and
20    costs of implementation, administration, and enforcement
21    of the Clean Air Act; and
22        (3) for costs related to State fleet electrification
23    at the Department of Central Management Services, up to
24    $10,000,000 annually, at the request of the Department.
 
25    Section 90-20. The Electric Vehicle Act is amended by

 

 

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1changing Section 15 and by adding Sections 40, 45, 50, 55, and
260 as follows:
 
3    (20 ILCS 627/15)
4    Sec. 15. Electric Vehicle Coordinator. The Governor, with
5the advice and consent of the Senate, shall appoint a person
6within the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency Department
7of Commerce and Economic Opportunity to serve as the Electric
8Vehicle Coordinator for the State of Illinois. This person may
9be an existing employee with other duties. The Coordinator
10shall act as a point person for electric vehicle-related and
11electric vehicle charging-related electric vehicle related
12policies and activities in Illinois, including, but not
13limited to, the issuance of electric vehicle rebates for
14consumers and electric vehicle charging rebates for
15organizations and companies.
16(Source: P.A. 97-89, eff. 7-11-11.)
 
17    (20 ILCS 627/40 new)
18    Sec. 40. Rulemaking; resources. The Agency shall adopt
19rules as necessary and dedicate sufficient resources to
20implement Sections 45 and 55.
 
21    (20 ILCS 627/45 new)
22    Sec. 45. Beneficial electrification.
23    (a) It is the intent of the General Assembly to decrease

 

 

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1reliance on fossil fuels, reduce pollution from the
2transportation sector, increase access to electrification for
3all consumers, and ensure that electric vehicle adoption and
4increased electricity usage and demand do not place
5significant additional burdens on the electric system and
6create benefits for Illinois residents.
7        (1) Illinois should increase the adoption of electric
8    vehicles in the State to 1,000,000 by 2030.
9        (2) Illinois should strive to be the best state in the
10    nation in which to drive and manufacture electric
11    vehicles.
12        (3) Widespread adoption of electric vehicles is
13    necessary to electrify the transportation sector,
14    diversify the transportation fuel mix, drive economic
15    development, and protect air quality.
16        (4) Accelerating the adoption of electric vehicles
17    will drive the decarbonization of Illinois' transportation
18    sector.
19        (5) Expanded infrastructure investment will help
20    Illinois more rapidly decarbonize the transportation
21    sector.
22        (6) Statewide adoption of electric vehicles requires
23    increasing access to electrification for all consumers.
24        (7) Widespread adoption of electric vehicles requires
25    increasing public access to charging equipment throughout
26    Illinois, especially in low-income and environmental

 

 

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1    justice communities, where levels of air pollution burden
2    tend to be higher.
3        (8) Widespread adoption of electric vehicles and
4    charging equipment has the potential to provide customers
5    with fuel cost savings and electric utility customers with
6    cost-saving benefits.
7        (9) Widespread adoption of electric vehicles can
8    improve an electric utility's electric system efficiency
9    and operational flexibility, including the ability of the
10    electric utility to integrate renewable energy resources
11    and make use of off-peak generation resources that support
12    the operation of charging equipment.
13        (10) Widespread adoption of electric vehicles should
14    stimulate innovation, competition, and increased choices
15    in charging equipment and networks and should also attract
16    private capital investments and create high-quality jobs
17    in Illinois.
18    (b) As used in this Section:
19    "Agency" means the Environmental Protection Agency.
20    "Beneficial electrification programs" means programs that
21lower carbon dioxide emissions, replace fossil fuel use,
22create cost savings, improve electric grid operations, reduce
23increases to peak demand, improve electric usage load shape,
24and align electric usage with times of renewable generation.
25All beneficial electrification programs shall provide for
26incentives such that customers are induced to use electricity

 

 

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1at times of low overall system usage or at times when
2generation from renewable energy sources is high. "Beneficial
3electrification programs" include a portfolio of the
4following:
5        (1) time-of-use electric rates;
6        (2) hourly pricing electric rates;
7        (3) optimized charging programs or programs that
8    encourage charging at times beneficial to the electric
9    grid;
10        (4) optional demand-response programs specifically
11    related to electrification efforts;
12        (5) incentives for electrification and associated
13    infrastructure tied to using electricity at off-peak
14    times;
15        (6) incentives for electrification and associated
16    infrastructure targeted to medium-duty and heavy-duty
17    vehicles used by transit agencies;
18        (7) incentives for electrification and associated
19    infrastructure targeted to school buses;
20        (8) incentives for electrification and associated
21    infrastructure for medium-duty and heavy-duty government
22    and private fleet vehicles;
23        (9) low-income programs that provide access to
24    electric vehicles for communities where car ownership or
25    new car ownership is not common;
26        (10) incentives for electrification in eligible

 

 

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1    communities;
2        (11) incentives or programs to enable quicker adoption
3    of electric vehicles by developing public charging
4    stations in dense areas, workplaces, and low-income
5    communities;
6        (12) incentives or programs to develop electric
7    vehicle infrastructure that minimizes range anxiety,
8    filling the gaps in deployment, particularly in rural
9    areas and along highway corridors;
10        (13) incentives to encourage the development of
11    electrification and renewable energy generation in close
12    proximity in order to reduce grid congestion;
13        (14) offer support to low-income communities who are
14    experiencing financial and accessibility barriers such
15    that electric vehicle ownership is not an option; and
16        (15) other such programs as defined by the Commission.
17    "Black, indigenous, and people of color" or "BIPOC" means
18people who are members of the groups described in
19subparagraphs (a) through (e) of paragraph (A) of subsection
20(1) of Section 2 of the Business Enterprise for Minorities,
21Women, and Persons with Disabilities Act.
22    "Commission" means the Illinois Commerce Commission.
23    "Coordinator" means the Electric Vehicle Coordinator.
24    "Electric vehicle" means a vehicle that is exclusively
25powered by and refueled by electricity, must be plugged in to
26charge, and is licensed to drive on public roadways. "Electric

 

 

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1vehicle" does not include electric motorcycles or hybrid
2electric vehicles and extended-range electric vehicles that
3are also equipped with conventional fueled propulsion or
4auxiliary engines.
5    "Electric vehicle charging station" means a station that
6delivers electricity from a source outside an electric vehicle
7into one or more electric vehicles.
8    "Environmental justice communities" means the definition
9of that term based on existing methodologies and findings,
10used and as may be updated by the Illinois Power Agency and its
11program administrator in the Illinois Solar for All Program.
12    "Equity investment eligible community" or "eligible
13community" means the geographic areas throughout Illinois
14which would most benefit from equitable investments by the
15State designed to combat discrimination and foster sustainable
16economic growth. Specifically, "eligible community" means the
17following areas:
18        (1) areas where residents have been historically
19    excluded from economic opportunities, including
20    opportunities in the energy sector, as defined pursuant to
21    Section 10-40 of the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act; and
22        (2) areas where residents have been historically
23    subject to disproportionate burdens of pollution,
24    including pollution from the energy sector, as established
25    by environmental justice communities as defined by the
26    Illinois Power Agency pursuant to Illinois Power Agency

 

 

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1    Act, excluding any racial or ethnic indicators.
2    "Equity investment eligible person" or "eligible person"
3means the persons who would most benefit from equitable
4investments by the State designed to combat discrimination and
5foster sustainable economic growth. Specifically, "eligible
6person" means the following people:
7        (1) persons whose primary residence is in an equity
8    investment eligible community;
9        (2) persons who are graduates of or currently enrolled
10    in the foster care system; or
11        (3) persons who were formerly incarcerated.
12    "Low-income" means persons and families whose income does
13not exceed 80% of the state median income for the current State
14fiscal year as established by the U.S. Department of Health
15and Human Services.
16    "Make-ready infrastructure" means the electrical and
17construction work necessary between the distribution circuit
18to the connection point of charging equipment.
19    "Optimized charging programs" mean programs whereby owners
20of electric vehicles can set their vehicles to be charged
21based on the electric system's current demand, retail or
22wholesale market rates, incentives, the carbon or other
23pollution intensity of the electric generation mix, the
24provision of grid services, efficient use of the electric
25grid, or the availability of clean energy generation.
26Optimized charging programs may be operated by utilities as

 

 

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1well as third parties.
2    (c) The Commission shall initiate a workshop process no
3later than November 30, 2021 for the purpose of soliciting
4input on the design of beneficial electrification programs
5that the utility shall offer. The workshop shall be
6coordinated by the Staff of the Commission, or a facilitator
7retained by Staff, and shall be organized and facilitated in a
8manner that encourages representation from diverse
9stakeholders, including stakeholders representing
10environmental justice and low-income communities, and ensures
11equitable opportunities for participation, without requiring
12formal intervention or representation by an attorney.
13    The stakeholder workshop process shall take into
14consideration the benefits of electric vehicle adoption and
15barriers to adoption, including:
16        (1) the benefit of lower bills for customers who do
17    not charge electric vehicles;
18        (2) benefits to the distribution system from electric
19    vehicle usage;
20        (3) the avoidance and reduction in capacity costs from
21    optimized charging and off-peak charging;
22        (4) energy price and cost reductions;
23        (5) environmental benefits, including greenhouse gas
24    emission and other pollution reductions;
25        (6) current barriers to mass-market adoption,
26    including cost of ownership and availability of charging

 

 

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1    stations;
2        (7) current barriers to increasing access among
3    populations that have limited access to electric vehicle
4    ownership, communities significantly impacted by
5    transportation-related pollution, and market segments that
6    create disproportionate pollution impacts;
7        (8) benefits of and incentives for medium-duty and
8    heavy-duty fleet vehicle electrification;
9        (9) opportunities for eligible communities to benefit
10    from electrification;
11        (10) geographic areas and market segments that should
12    be prioritized for electrification infrastructure
13    investment.
14    The workshops shall consider barriers, incentives,
15enabling rate structures, and other opportunities for the bill
16reduction and environmental benefits described in this
17subsection.
18    The workshop process shall conclude no later than February
1928, 2022. Following the workshop, the Staff of the Commission,
20or the facilitator retained by the Staff, shall prepare and
21submit a report, no later than March 31, 2022, to the
22Commission that includes, but is not limited to,
23recommendations for transportation electrification investment
24or incentives in the following areas:
25        (i) publicly accessible Level 2 and fast-charging
26    stations, with a focus on bringing access to

 

 

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1    transportation electrification in densely populated areas
2    and workplaces within eligible communities;
3        (ii) medium-duty and heavy-duty charging
4    infrastructure used by government and private fleet
5    vehicles that serve or travel through environmental
6    justice or eligible communities;
7        (iii) medium-duty and heavy-duty charging
8    infrastructure used in school bus operations, whether
9    private or public, that primarily serve governmental or
10    educational institutions, and also serve or travel through
11    environmental justice or eligible communities;
12        (iv) public transit medium-duty and heavy-duty
13    charging infrastructure, developed in consultation with
14    public transportation agencies; and
15        (v) publicly accessible Level 2 and fast-charging
16    stations targeted to fill gaps in deployment, particularly
17    in rural areas and along State highway corridors.
18    The report must also identify the participants in the
19process, program designs proposed during the process,
20estimates of the costs and benefits of proposed programs, any
21material issues that remained unresolved at the conclusions of
22such process, and any recommendations for workshop process
23improvements. The report shall be used by the Commission to
24inform and evaluate the cost effectiveness and achievement of
25goals within the submitted Beneficial Electrification Plans.
26    (d) No later than July 1, 2022, electric utilities serving

 

 

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1greater than 500,000 customers in the State shall file a
2Beneficial Electrification Plan with the Illinois Commerce
3Commission for programs that start no later than January 1,
42023. The plan shall take into consideration recommendations
5from the workshop report described in this Section. Within 45
6days after the filing of the Beneficial Electrification Plan,
7the Commission shall, with reasonable notice, open an
8investigation to consider whether the plan meets the
9objectives and contains the information required by this
10Section. The Commission shall determine if the proposed plan
11is cost-beneficial and in the public interest. When
12considering if the plan is in the public interest and
13determining appropriate levels of cost recovery for
14investments and expenditures related to programs proposed by
15an electric utility, the Commission shall consider whether the
16investments and other expenditures are designed and reasonably
17expected to:
18        (1) maximize total energy cost savings and rate
19    reductions so that nonparticipants can benefit;
20        (2) address environmental justice interests by
21    ensuring there are significant opportunities for residents
22    and businesses in eligible communities to directly
23    participate in and benefit from beneficial electrification
24    programs;
25        (3) support at least a 40% investment of make-ready
26    infrastructure incentives to facilitate the rapid

 

 

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1    deployment of charging equipment in or serving
2    environmental justice, low-income, and eligible
3    communities; however, nothing in this subsection is
4    intended to require a specific amount of spending in a
5    particular geographic area;
6        (4) support at least a 5% investment target in
7    electrifying medium-duty and heavy-duty school bus and
8    diesel public transportation vehicles located in or
9    serving environmental justice, low-income, and eligible
10    communities in order to provide those communities and
11    businesses with greater economic investment,
12    transportation opportunities, and a cleaner environment so
13    they can directly benefit from transportation
14    electrification efforts; however, nothing in this
15    subsection is intended to require a specific amount of
16    spending in a particular geographic area;
17        (5) stimulate innovation, competition, private
18    investment, and increased consumer choices in electric
19    vehicle charging equipment and networks;
20        (6) contribute to the reduction of carbon emissions
21    and meeting air quality standards, including improving air
22    quality in eligible communities who disproportionately
23    suffer from emissions from the medium-duty and heavy-duty
24    transportation sector;
25        (7) support the efficient and cost-effective use of
26    the electric grid in a manner that supports electric

 

 

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1    vehicle charging operations; and
2        (8) provide resources to support private investment in
3    charging equipment for uses in public and private charging
4    applications, including residential, multi-family, fleet,
5    transit, community, and corridor applications.
6    The plan shall be determined to be cost-beneficial if the
7total cost of beneficial electrification expenditures is less
8than the net present value of increased electricity costs
9(defined as marginal avoided energy, avoided capacity, and
10avoided transmission and distribution system costs) avoided by
11programs under the plan, the net present value of reductions
12in other customer energy costs, net revenue from all electric
13charging in the service territory, and the societal value of
14reduced carbon emissions and surface-level pollutants,
15particularly in environmental justice communities. The
16calculation of costs and benefits should be based on net
17impacts, including the impact on customer rates.
18    The Commission shall approve, approve with modifications,
19or reject the plan within 270 days from the date of filing. The
20Commission may approve the plan if it finds that the plan will
21achieve the goals described in this Section and contains the
22information described in this Section. Proceedings under this
23Section shall proceed according to the rules provided by
24Article IX of the Public Utilities Act. Information contained
25in the approved plan shall be considered part of the record in
26any Commission proceeding under Section 16-107.6 of the Public

 

 

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1Utilities Act, provided that a final order has not been
2entered prior to the initial filing date. The Beneficial
3Electrification Plan shall specifically address, at a minimum,
4the following:
5        (i) make-ready investments to facilitate the rapid
6    deployment of charging equipment throughout the State,
7    facilitate the electrification of public transit and other
8    vehicle fleets in the light-duty, medium-duty, and
9    heavy-duty sectors, and align with Agency-issued rebates
10    for charging equipment;
11        (ii) the development and implementation of beneficial
12    electrification programs, including time-of-use rates and
13    their benefit for electric vehicle users and for all
14    customers, optimized charging programs to achieve savings
15    identified, and new contracts and compensation for
16    services in those programs, through signals that allow
17    electric vehicle charging to respond to local system
18    conditions, manage critical peak periods, serve as a
19    demand response or peak resource, and maximize renewable
20    energy use and integration into the grid;
21        (iii) optional commercial tariffs utilizing
22    alternatives to traditional demand-based rate structures
23    to facilitate charging for light duty, heavy duty, and
24    fleet electric vehicles;
25        (iv) financial and other challenges to electric
26    vehicle usage in low-income communities, and strategies

 

 

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1    for overcoming those challenges, particularly in
2    communities and for people for whom car ownership is not
3    an option;
4        (v) methods of minimizing ratepayer impacts and
5    exempting or minimizing, to the extent possible,
6    low-income ratepayers from the costs associated with
7    facilitating the expansion of electric vehicle charging;
8        (vi) plans to increase access to Level 3 Public
9    Electric Vehicle Charging Infrastructure to serve vehicles
10    that need quicker charging times and vehicles of persons
11    who have no other access to charging infrastructure,
12    regardless of whether those projects participate in
13    optimized charging programs;
14        (vii) whether to establish charging standards for type
15    of plugs eligible for investment or incentive programs,
16    and if so, what standards;
17        (viii) opportunities for coordination and cohesion
18    with electric vehicle and electric vehicle charging
19    equipment incentives established by any agency,
20    department, board, or commission of the State, any other
21    unit of government in the State, any national programs, or
22    any unit of the federal government;
23        (ix) ideas for the development of online tools,
24    applications, and data sharing that provide essential
25    information to those charging electric vehicles, and
26    enable an automated charging response to price signals,

 

 

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1    emission signals, real-time renewable generation
2    production, and other Commission-approved or
3    customer-desired indicators of beneficial charging times;
4    and
5        (x) customer education, outreach, and incentive
6    programs that increase awareness of the programs and the
7    benefits of transportation electrification, including
8    direct outreach to eligible communities;
9    (e) Proceedings under this Section shall proceed according
10to the rules provided by Article IX of the Public Utilities
11Act. Information contained in the approved plan shall be
12considered part of the record in any Commission proceeding
13under Section 16-107.6 of the Public Utilities Act, provided
14that a final order has not been entered prior to the initial
15filing date.
16    (f) The utility shall file an update to the plan on July 1,
172024 and every 3 years thereafter. This update shall describe
18transportation investments made during the prior plan period,
19investments planned for the following 24 months, and updates
20to the information required by this Section. Beginning with
21the first update, the utility shall develop the plan in
22conjunction with the distribution system planning process
23described in Section 16-105.17, including incorporation of
24stakeholder feedback from that process.
25    (g) Within 35 days after the utility files its report, the
26Commission shall, upon its own initiative, open an

 

 

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1investigation regarding the utility's plan update to
2investigate whether the objectives described in this Section
3are being achieved. The Commission shall determine whether
4investment targets should be increased based on achievement of
5spending goals outlined in the Beneficial Electrification Plan
6and consistency with outcomes directed in the plan stakeholder
7workshop report. If the Commission finds, after notice and
8hearing, that the utility's plan is materially deficient, the
9Commission shall issue an order requiring the utility to
10devise a corrective action plan, subject to Commission
11approval, to bring the plan into compliance with the goals of
12this Section. The Commission's order shall be entered within
13270 days after the utility files its annual report. The
14contents of a plan filed under this Section shall be available
15for evidence in Commission proceedings. However, omission from
16an approved plan shall not render any future utility
17expenditure to be considered unreasonable or imprudent. The
18Commission may, upon sufficient evidence, allow expenditures
19that were not part of any particular distribution plan. The
20Commission shall consider revenues from electric vehicles in
21the utility's service territory in evaluating the retail rate
22impact. The retail rate impact from the development of
23electric vehicle infrastructure shall not exceed 1% per year
24of the total annual revenue requirements of the utility.
25    (h) In meeting the requirements of this Section, the
26utility shall demonstrate efforts to increase the use of

 

 

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1contractors and electric vehicle charging station installers
2that meet multiple workforce equity actions, including, but
3not limited to:
4        (1) the business is headquartered in or the person
5    resides in an eligible community;
6        (2) the business is majority owned by eligible person
7    or the contractor is an eligible person;
8        (3) the business or person is certified by another
9    municipal, State, federal, or other certification for
10    disadvantaged businesses;
11        (4) the business or person meets the eligibility
12    criteria for a certification program such as:
13            (A) certified under Section 2 of the Business
14        Enterprise for Minorities, Women, and Persons with
15        Disabilities Act;
16            (B) certified by another municipal, State,
17        federal, or other certification for disadvantaged
18        businesses;
19            (C) submits an affidavit showing that the vendor
20        meets the eligibility criteria for a certification
21        program such as those in items (A) and (B); or
22            (D) if the vendor is a nonprofit, meets any of the
23        criteria in those in item (A), (B), or (C) with the
24        exception that the nonprofit is not required to meet
25        any criteria related to being a for-profit entity, or
26        is controlled by a board of directors that consists of

 

 

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1        51% or greater individuals who are equity investment
2        eligible persons; or
3            (E) ensuring that program implementation
4        contractors and electric vehicle charging station
5        installers pay employees working on electric vehicle
6        charging installations at or above the prevailing wage
7        rate when such a wage rate has been published by the
8        Department of Labor and pay employees working on
9        energy efficiency programs at or above the median wage
10        rate for a similar job description in the nearest
11        metropolitan area when there is no applicable
12        published prevailing wage rate.
13    If necessary, utilities may conduct surveys to establish
14the median wage rate for a given job description. Utilities
15shall establish reporting procedures for vendors that ensure
16compliance with this subsection, but are structured to avoid,
17wherever possible, placing an undue administrative burden on
18vendors.
19    (i) Program data collection.
20        (1) In order to ensure that the benefits provided to
21    Illinois residents and business by the clean energy
22    economy are equitably distributed across the State, it is
23    necessary to accurately measure the applicants and
24    recipients of this Program. The purpose of this paragraph
25    is to require the implementing utilities to collect all
26    data from Program applicants and beneficiaries to track

 

 

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1    and improve equitable distribution of benefits across
2    Illinois communities. The further purpose is to measure
3    any potential impact of racial discrimination on the
4    distribution of benefits and provide the utilities the
5    information necessary to correct any discrimination
6    through methods consistent with State and federal law.
7        (2) The implementing utilities shall collect
8    demographic and geographic data for each applicant and
9    each person or business awarded benefits or contracts
10    under this Program.
11        (3) The implementing utilities shall collect the
12    following information from applicants and Program or
13    procurement beneficiaries where applicable:
14            (A) demographic information, including racial or
15        ethnic identity for real persons employed, contracted,
16        or subcontracted through the program;
17            (B) demographic information, including racial or
18        ethnic identity of business owners;
19            (C) geographic location of the residency of real
20        persons or geographic location of the headquarters for
21        businesses; and
22            (D) any other information necessary for the
23        purpose of achieving the purpose of this paragraph.
24        (4) The utility shall publish, at least annually,
25    aggregated information on the demographics of program and
26    procurement applicants and beneficiaries. The utilities

 

 

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1    shall protect personal and confidential business
2    information as necessary.
3        (5) The utilities shall conduct a regular review
4    process to confirm the accuracy of reported data.
5        (6) On a quarterly basis, utilities shall collect data
6    necessary to ensure compliance with this Section and shall
7    communicate progress toward compliance to program
8    implementation contractors and electric vehicle charging
9    station installation vendors.
10        (7) Utilities filing Beneficial Electrification Plans
11    under this Section shall report annually to the Illinois
12    Commerce Commission and the General Assembly on how
13    hiring, contracting, job training, and other practices
14    related to its Beneficial electrification programs enhance
15    the diversity of vendors working on such programs. These
16    reports must include data on vendor and employee
17    diversity.
18    (j) The provisions of this Section are severable under
19Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
 
20    (20 ILCS 627/55 new)
21    Sec. 55. Charging rebate program