Rep. William Davis

Filed: 5/28/2014

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO SENATE BILL 3443

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend Senate Bill 3443, AS AMENDED,
3by replacing everything after the enacting clause with the
4following:
 
5    "Section 5. The Illinois Governmental Ethics Act is amended
6by changing Section 3A-40 as follows:
 
7    (5 ILCS 420/3A-40)
8    Sec. 3A-40. Appointees with expired terms; temporary and
9acting appointees.
10    (a) A person who is nominated by the Governor on or after
11August 26, 2011 (the effective date of Public Act 97-582) for
12any affected office to which appointment requires the advice
13and consent of the Senate, who is appointed pursuant to that
14advice and consent, and whose term of office expires on or
15after August 26, 2011 shall not continue in office longer than
1660 calendar days after the expiration of that term of office.

 

 

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1After that 60th day, each such office is considered vacant and
2shall be filled only pursuant to the law applicable to making
3appointments to that office, subject to the provisions of this
4Section.
5    A person who has been nominated by the Governor before
6August 26, 2011 (the effective date of Public Act 97-582) for
7any affected office to which appointment requires the advice
8and consent of the Senate, who has been appointed pursuant to
9that advice and consent, and whose term of office has expired
10shall not continue in office longer than 60 calendar days after
11the date upon which his or her term of office has expired.
12After that 60 days, each such office is considered vacant and
13shall be filled only pursuant to the law applicable to making
14appointments to that office, subject to the provisions of this
15Section. If the term of office of a person who is subject to
16this paragraph expires more than 60 calendar days prior to the
17effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General
18Assembly, then that office is considered vacant on the
19effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General
20Assembly, and that vacancy shall be filled only pursuant to the
21law applicable to making appointments to that office. For the
22purposes of this subsection (a), "affected office" means (i) an
23office in which one receives any form of compensation,
24including salary or per diem, but not including expense
25reimbursement, or (ii) membership on the board of trustees of a
26public university.

 

 

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1    (b) A person who is appointed by the Governor on or after
2August 26, 2011 (the effective date of Public Act 97-582) to
3serve as a temporary appointee during a recess of the Senate,
4pursuant to Article V, Section 9(b) of the Illinois
5Constitution or any other applicable statute, to any office to
6which appointment requires the advice and consent of the Senate
7shall not continue in office after the next meeting of the
8Senate unless the Governor has filed a message with the
9Secretary of the Senate nominating that person to fill that
10office on or before that meeting date. After that meeting date,
11each such office is considered vacant and shall be filled only
12pursuant to the law applicable to making appointments to that
13office, subject to the provisions of this Section. Any
14temporary appointment made pursuant to subsection (b) of
15Section 9 of Article V of the Illinois Constitution or any
16applicable statute shall be filed with the Secretary of State
17and the Secretary of the Senate. The form of the temporary
18appointment message shall be established by the Senate under
19its rules.
20    A person who has been appointed by the Governor before
21August 26, 2011 (the effective date of Public Act 97-582) to
22serve as a temporary appointee, pursuant to Article V, Section
239(b) of the Illinois Constitution or any other applicable
24statute, to any office to which appointment requires the advice
25and consent of the Senate shall not continue in office after
26August 26, 2011 or the next meeting of the Senate after August

 

 

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126, 2011, as applicable, unless the Governor has filed a
2message with the Secretary of the Senate nominating that person
3to fill that office on or before the next meeting of the Senate
4after that temporary appointment was made. After that effective
5date or meeting date, as applicable, each such office is
6considered vacant and shall be filled only pursuant to the law
7applicable to making appointments to that office, subject to
8the provisions of this Section.
9    For the purposes of this subsection (b), a meeting of the
10Senate does not include a perfunctory session day as designated
11by the Senate under its rules. For the purposes of this
12subsection (b), the Senate is in recess on a day in which it is
13not in session and does not include a perfunctory session day
14as designated by the Senate under its rules.
15    (c) A person who is designated by the Governor on or after
16August 26, 2011 (the effective date of Public Act 97-582) to
17serve as an acting appointee to any office to which appointment
18requires the advice and consent of the Senate shall not
19continue in office more than 60 calendar days unless the
20Governor files a message with the Secretary of the Senate
21nominating that person to fill that office within that 60 days.
22After that 60 days, each such office is considered vacant and
23shall be filled only pursuant to the law applicable to making
24appointments to that office, subject to the provisions of this
25Section. The Governor shall file with the Secretary of the
26Senate the name of any person who the Governor designates as an

 

 

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1acting appointee under this Section. The form of the message
2designating an appointee as acting shall be established by the
3Senate under its rules. No person who has been designated by
4the Governor to serve as an acting appointee to any office to
5which appointment requires the advice and consent of the Senate
6shall, except at the Senate's request, be designated again as
7an acting appointee for that office at the same session of that
8Senate, subject to the provisions of this Section.
9    A person who has been designated by the Governor before
10August 26, 2011 (the effective date of Public Act 97-582) to
11serve as an acting appointee to any office to which appointment
12requires the advice and consent of the Senate shall not
13continue in office longer than 60 calendar days after August
1426, 2011 unless the Governor has filed a message with the
15Secretary of the Senate nominating that person to fill that
16office on or before that 60 days. After that 60 days, each such
17office is considered vacant and shall be filled only pursuant
18to the law applicable to making appointments to that office,
19subject to the provisions of this Section. No person who has
20been designated by the Governor to serve as an acting appointee
21to any office to which appointment requires the advice and
22consent of the Senate shall, except at the Senate's request, be
23designated again as an acting appointee for that office at the
24same session of that Senate, subject to the provisions of this
25Section.
26    During the term of a General Assembly, the Governor may not

 

 

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1designate a person to serve as an acting appointee to any
2office to which appointment requires the advice and consent of
3the Senate if that person's nomination to serve as the
4appointee for the same office was rejected by the Senate of the
5same General Assembly.
6    For the purposes of this subsection (c), "acting appointee"
7means a person designated by the Governor to serve as an acting
8director or acting secretary pursuant to Section 5-605 of the
9Civil Administrative Code of Illinois. "Acting appointee" also
10means a person designated by the Governor pursuant to any other
11statute to serve as an acting holder of any office, to execute
12the duties and functions of any office, or both.
13    (d) The provisions of this Section apply notwithstanding
14any law to the contrary. However, the provisions of this
15Section do not apply to appointments made under Article 1A of
16the Election Code or to the appointment of any person to serve
17as Director of the Illinois Power Agency.
18(Source: P.A. 97-582, eff. 8-26-11; 97-719, eff. 6-29-12.)
 
19    Section 10. The Personnel Code is amended by changing
20Section 9 as follows:
 
21    (20 ILCS 415/9)  (from Ch. 127, par. 63b109)
22    Sec. 9. Director, powers and duties. The Director, as
23executive head of the Department, shall direct and supervise
24all its administrative and technical activities. In addition to

 

 

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1the duties imposed upon him elsewhere in this law, it shall be
2his duty:
3    (1) To apply and carry out this law and the rules adopted
4thereunder.
5    (2) To attend meetings of the Commission.
6    (3) To establish and maintain a roster of all employees
7subject to this Act, in which there shall be set forth, as to
8each employee, the class, title, pay, status, and other
9pertinent data.
10    (4) To appoint, subject to the provisions of this Act, such
11employees of the Department and such experts and special
12assistants as may be necessary to carry out effectively this
13law.
14    (5) Subject to such exemptions or modifications as may be
15necessary to assure the continuity of federal contributions in
16those agencies supported in whole or in part by federal funds,
17to make appointments to vacancies; to approve all written
18charges seeking discharge, demotion, or other disciplinary
19measures provided in this Act and to approve transfers of
20employees from one geographical area to another in the State,
21in offices, positions or places of employment covered by this
22Act, after consultation with the operating unit.
23    (6) To formulate and administer service wide policies and
24programs for the improvement of employee effectiveness,
25including training, safety, health, incentive recognition,
26counseling, welfare and employee relations. The Department

 

 

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1shall formulate and administer recruitment plans and testing of
2potential employees for agencies having direct contact with
3significant numbers of non-English speaking or otherwise
4culturally distinct persons. The Department shall require each
5State agency to annually assess the need for employees with
6appropriate bilingual capabilities to serve the significant
7numbers of non-English speaking or culturally distinct
8persons. The Department shall develop a uniform procedure for
9assessing an agency's need for employees with appropriate
10bilingual capabilities. Agencies shall establish occupational
11titles or designate positions as "bilingual option" for persons
12having sufficient linguistic ability or cultural knowledge to
13be able to render effective service to such persons. The
14Department shall ensure that any such option is exercised
15according to the agency's needs assessment and the requirements
16of this Code. The Department shall make annual reports of the
17needs assessment of each agency and the number of positions
18calling for non-English linguistic ability to whom vacancy
19postings were sent, and the number filled by each agency. Such
20policies and programs shall be subject to approval by the
21Governor. Such policies, program reports and needs assessment
22reports shall be filed with the General Assembly by January 1
23of each year and shall be available to the public.
24    The Department shall include within the report required
25above the number of persons receiving the bilingual pay
26supplement established by Section 8a.2 of this Code. The report

 

 

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1shall provide the number of persons receiving the bilingual pay
2supplement for languages other than English and for signing.
3The report shall also indicate the number of persons, by the
4categories of Hispanic and non-Hispanic, who are receiving the
5bilingual pay supplement for language skills other than
6signing, in a language other than English.
7    (7) To conduct negotiations affecting pay, hours of work,
8or other working conditions of employees subject to this Act.
9    (8) To make continuing studies to improve the efficiency of
10State services to the residents of Illinois, including but not
11limited to those who are non-English speaking or culturally
12distinct, and to report his findings and recommendations to the
13Commission and the Governor.
14    (9) To investigate from time to time the operation and
15effect of this law and the rules made thereunder and to report
16his findings and recommendations to the Commission and to the
17Governor.
18    (10) To make an annual report regarding the work of the
19Department, and such special reports as he may consider
20desirable, to the Commission and to the Governor, or as the
21Governor or Commission may request.
22    (11) (Blank). To conduct research and planning regarding
23the total manpower needs of all offices, including the
24Lieutenant Governor, Secretary of State, State Treasurer,
25State Comptroller, State Superintendent of Education, and
26Attorney General, and of all departments, agencies, boards, and

 

 

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1commissions of the executive branch, except state-supported
2colleges and universities, and for that purpose to prescribe
3forms for the reporting of such personnel information as the
4department may request both for positions covered by this Act
5and for those exempt in whole or in part.
6    (12) To prepare and publish a semi-annual statement showing
7the number of employees exempt and non-exempt from merit
8selection in each department. This report shall be in addition
9to other information on merit selection maintained for public
10information under existing law.
11    (13) To authorize in every department or agency subject to
12Jurisdiction C the use of flexible hours positions. A flexible
13hours position is one that does not require an ordinary work
14schedule as determined by the Department and includes but is
15not limited to: 1) a part time job of 20 hours or more per week,
162) a job which is shared by 2 employees or a compressed work
17week consisting of an ordinary number of working hours
18performed on fewer than the number of days ordinarily required
19to perform that job. The Department may define flexible time to
20include other types of jobs that are defined above.
21    The Director and the director of each department or agency
22shall together establish goals for flexible hours positions to
23be available in every department or agency.
24    The Department shall give technical assistance to
25departments and agencies in achieving their goals, and shall
26report to the Governor and the General Assembly each year on

 

 

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1the progress of each department and agency.
2    When a goal of 10% of the positions in a department or
3agency being available on a flexible hours basis has been
4reached, the Department shall evaluate the effectiveness and
5efficiency of the program and determine whether to expand the
6number of positions available for flexible hours to 20%.
7    When a goal of 20% of the positions in a department or
8agency being available on a flexible hours basis has been
9reached, the Department shall evaluate the effectiveness and
10efficiency of the program and determine whether to expand the
11number of positions available for flexible hours.
12    Each department shall develop a plan for implementation of
13flexible work requirements designed to reduce the need for day
14care of employees' children outside the home. Each department
15shall submit a report of its plan to the Department of Central
16Management Services and the General Assembly. This report shall
17be submitted biennially by March 1, with the first report due
18March 1, 1993.
19    (14) To perform any other lawful acts which he may consider
20necessary or desirable to carry out the purposes and provisions
21of this law.
22    The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall
23be satisfied by filing copies of the report with the Speaker,
24the Minority Leader and the Clerk of the House of
25Representatives and the President, the Minority Leader and the
26Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research Unit, as

 

 

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1required by Section 3.1 of "An Act to revise the law in
2relation to the General Assembly", approved February 25, 1874,
3as amended, and filing such additional copies with the State
4Government Report Distribution Center for the General Assembly
5as is required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State
6Library Act.
7(Source: P.A. 86-1004; 87-552; 87-1050.)
 
8    (20 ILCS 605/605-345 rep.)
9    Section 15. The Department of Commerce and Economic
10Opportunity Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is
11amended by repealing Section 605-345.
 
12    Section 20. The Illinois Commission on Volunteerism and
13Community Service Act is amended by changing Sections 1, 2, 4,
145.1, 6.1, and 7 and by adding Sections 4.1 and 4.2 as follows:
 
15    (20 ILCS 710/1)  (from Ch. 127, par. 3801)
16    Sec. 1. Creation. There is created in the Department of
17Public Health Human Services the Illinois Commission on
18Volunteerism and Community Service.
19(Source: P.A. 91-798, eff. 7-9-00.)
 
20    (20 ILCS 710/2)  (from Ch. 127, par. 3802)
21    Sec. 2. Purpose. The purpose of the Illinois Commission on
22Volunteerism and Community Service is to promote and support

 

 

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1community service in public and private programs to meet the
2needs of Illinois residents citizens; to stimulate new
3volunteerism and community service initiatives and
4partnerships; and to serve as a resource and advocate among all
5State agencies within the Department of Human Services for
6community service agencies, volunteers, and programs which
7utilize federal, State, and private volunteers.
8(Source: P.A. 91-798, eff. 7-9-00.)
 
9    (20 ILCS 710/4)  (from Ch. 127, par. 3804)
10    Sec. 4. Operation. The Governor shall appoint a Director of
11the Commission on Volunteerism and Community Service who shall
12serve at the Governor's pleasure and who shall receive such
13compensation as is determined by the Governor. The Director
14shall employ such staff as is necessary to carry out the
15purpose of this Act. The Commission, working in cooperation
16with State agencies, individuals, local groups, and
17organizations throughout the State, may undertake programs and
18activities which further the purposes of this Act, including,
19but not limited to, the following:
20        (a) providing technical assistance to programs which
21    depend upon volunteers;
22        (b) initiating community service programs to meet
23    previously unmet needs in Illinois;
24        (c) promoting and coordinating efforts to expand and
25    improve the statewide community service network;

 

 

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1        (d) recognizing outstanding community service
2    accomplishments;
3        (e) disseminating information to support community
4    service programs and to broaden community service
5    involvement throughout the State;
6        (f) implementing federally funded grant programs in
7    Illinois such as the National and Community Service Trust
8    Act, as amended by the Serve America Act; .
9        (g) taking an active role in the State's emergency
10    management plan to coordinate volunteers for disaster
11    preparedness and response;
12        (h) promoting intergenerational initiatives and
13    efforts to promote inclusion among diverse populations;
14    and
15        (i) fostering an environment that promotes social
16    innovation throughout the State.
17    The Commission may receive and expend funds, grants and
18services from any source for purposes reasonable and necessary
19to carry out a coordinated plan of community service throughout
20the State.
21(Source: P.A. 91-798, eff. 7-9-00.)
 
22    (20 ILCS 710/4.1 new)
23    Sec. 4.1. Illinois Service Education Award Grant. The
24Commission may, subject to appropriation, award an Illinois
25Service Education Award Grant to recipients of a national

 

 

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1service educational award established under 42 U.S.C. 12602 and
2awarded by the Corporation for National Community Service. The
3grant must be awarded only as a partial matching grant. An
4individual who successfully completes a required term of
5full-time national service in an approved national service
6position in this State may apply to receive an Illinois Service
7Education Award Grant. The Commission shall adopt rules to
8govern the process for applying for the grant and for
9determining the amount of the grant and any other rules
10necessary to implement and administer this Section.
11    An Illinois Service Education Award Grant may be used for
12any of the following purposes:
13        (1) To repay student loans associated with attending an
14    Illinois institution of higher learning, as defined in the
15    Higher Education Student Assistance Act.
16        (2) To pay all or part of the cost of attendance at an
17    Illinois institution of higher learning, as defined in the
18    Higher Education Student Assistance Act.
19        (3) To pay expenses incurred in participating in an
20    approved Illinois school-to-work program.
21        (4) Any other purpose for which the national service
22    educational award may lawfully be used.
 
23    (20 ILCS 710/4.2 new)
24    Sec. 4.2. Receiving and expending funds. The Commission may
25receive and expend funds, grants, and services from any source

 

 

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1for purposes reasonable and necessary to carry out a
2coordinated plan of community service throughout the State.
 
3    (20 ILCS 710/5.1)
4    Sec. 5.1. Commission. The Commission is established to
5encourage community service and volunteer participation as a
6means of community and State problem-solving; to promote and
7support voluntary resident citizen involvement in government
8and private programs throughout the State; to develop a
9long-term, comprehensive vision and plan of action for national
10volunteerism and community service initiatives in Illinois;
11and to serve as the State's liaison to national and State
12organizations that support its mission.
13    The Commission shall consist of 15 to 25 bipartisan voting
14members and up to 15 bipartisan nonvoting members. At least 25%
15of the members must be from the City of Chicago.
16    The Governor shall appoint up to 25 voting members and up
17to 15 nonvoting members. Of those initial 25 voting members, 10
18shall serve for 3 years, 8 shall serve for 2 years, and 7 shall
19serve for one year. Voting members appointed by the Governor
20shall include at least one representative of the following: an
21expert in the education, training, and development needs of
22youth; an expert in philanthropy the chairman of the City
23Colleges of a municipality having a population of more than 2
24million; a representative of labor organizations; a
25representative of business; a representative of

 

 

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1community-based the human services department of a
2municipality with a population of more than 2 million;
3community based organizations; the State Superintendent of
4Education; the Superintendent of Police of a municipality
5having a population of more than 2 million; a youth between 16
6and 25 years old who is a participant or supervisor in a
7community service program; the President of a County Board of a
8county having a population of more than 3 million; an expert in
9older adult volunteerism; a representative of persons with
10disabilities the public health commissioner of a municipality
11having a population of more than 2 million; a representative of
12local government; and a representative of a national service
13program. A representative of the federal Corporation for
14National Service shall be appointed as a nonvoting member.
15    Appointing authorities shall ensure, to the maximum extent
16practicable, that the Commission is diverse with respect to
17race, ethnicity, age, gender, geography, and disability. Not
18more than 50% of the Commission appointed by the Governor may
19be from the same political party.
20    Subsequent voting members of the Commission shall serve
213-year terms. Commissioners must be allowed to serve until new
22commissioners are appointed in order to maintain the federally
23required number of commissioners.
24    Each nonvoting member shall serve at the pleasure of the
25Governor.
26    Members of the Commission may not serve more than 3

 

 

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1consecutive terms. Vacancies shall be filled in the same manner
2as the original appointments and any member so appointed shall
3serve during the remainder of the term for which the vacancy
4occurred. The members shall not receive any compensation but
5shall be reimbursed for necessary expenses incurred in the
6performance of their duties.
7(Source: P.A. 91-798, eff. 7-9-00.)
 
8    (20 ILCS 710/6.1)
9    Sec. 6.1. Functions of Commission. The Commission shall
10meet at least quarterly and shall advise and consult with the
11Department of Public Health and the Governor's Office Human
12Services and the Director on all matters relating to community
13service in Illinois. In addition, the Commission shall have the
14following duties:
15    (a) prepare a 3-year State national and community service
16plan, developed through an open, public process and updated
17annually;
18    (b) prepare the financial assistance applications of the
19State under the National and Community Service Trust Fund Act
20of 1993, as amended by the Serve America Act;
21    (c) assist in the preparation of the application by the
22State Board of Education for assistance under that Act;
23    (d) prepare the State's application under that Act for the
24approval of national service positions;
25    (e) assist in the provision of health care and child care

 

 

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1benefits under that Act;
2    (f) develop a State recruitment, placement, and
3information dissemination system for participants in programs
4that receive assistance under the national service laws;
5    (g) administer the State's grant program including
6selection, oversight, and evaluation of grant recipients;
7    (h) make technical assistance available to enable
8applicants to plan and implement service programs and to apply
9for assistance under the national service laws;
10    (i) develop projects, training methods, curriculum
11materials, and other activities related to service;
12    (j) coordinate its functions with any division of the
13federal Corporation for National and Community Service
14outlined in the National and Community Service Trust Fund Act
15of 1993, as amended by the Serve America Act.
16    (k) publicize Commission services and promote community
17involvement in the activities of the Commission;
18    (l) promote increased visibility and support for
19volunteers of all ages, especially youth and senior citizens,
20and community service in meeting the needs of Illinois
21residents citizens; and
22    (m) represent the Department of Public Health and the
23Governor's Office Human Services on such occasions and in such
24manner as the Department may provide.
25(Source: P.A. 91-798, eff. 7-9-00.)
 

 

 

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1    (20 ILCS 710/7)
2    Sec. 7. Program transfer. On the effective date of this
3amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly this amendatory Act
4of the 91st General Assembly, the authority, powers, and duties
5in this Act of the Department of Human Services Commerce and
6Community Affairs (now Department of Commerce and Economic
7Opportunity) are transferred to the Department of Public Health
8Human Services.
9(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
 
10    Section 25. The Energy Conservation and Coal Development
11Act is amended by changing Section 3 as follows:
 
12    (20 ILCS 1105/3)  (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 7403)
13    Sec. 3. Powers and Duties.
14    (a) In addition to its other powers, the Department has the
15following powers:
16        (1) To administer for the State any energy programs and
17    activities under federal law, regulations or guidelines,
18    and to coordinate such programs and activities with other
19    State agencies, units of local government, and educational
20    institutions.
21        (2) To represent the State in energy matters involving
22    the federal government, other states, units of local
23    government, and regional agencies.
24        (3) To prepare energy contingency plans for

 

 

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1    consideration by the Governor and the General Assembly.
2    Such plans shall include procedures for determining when a
3    foreseeable danger exists of energy shortages, including
4    shortages of petroleum, coal, nuclear power, natural gas,
5    and other forms of energy, and shall specify the actions to
6    be taken to minimize hardship and maintain the general
7    welfare during such energy shortages.
8        (4) To cooperate with State colleges and universities
9    and their governing boards in energy programs and
10    activities.
11        (5) (Blank).
12        (6) To accept, receive, expend, and administer,
13    including by contracts and grants to other State agencies,
14    any energy-related gifts, grants, cooperative agreement
15    funds, and other funds made available to the Department by
16    the federal government and other public and private
17    sources.
18        (7) To investigate practical problems, seek and
19    utilize financial assistance, implement studies and
20    conduct research relating to the production, distribution
21    and use of alcohol fuels.
22        (8) To serve as a clearinghouse for information on
23    alcohol production technology; provide assistance,
24    information and data relating to the production and use of
25    alcohol; develop informational packets and brochures, and
26    hold public seminars to encourage the development and

 

 

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1    utilization of the best available technology.
2        (9) To coordinate with other State agencies in order to
3    promote the maximum flow of information and to avoid
4    unnecessary overlapping of alcohol fuel programs. In order
5    to effectuate this goal, the Director of the Department or
6    his representative shall consult with the Directors, or
7    their representatives, of the Departments of Agriculture,
8    Central Management Services, Transportation, and Revenue,
9    the Office of the State Fire Marshal, and the Environmental
10    Protection Agency.
11        (10) To operate, within the Department, an Office of
12    Coal Development and Marketing for the promotion and
13    marketing of Illinois coal both domestically and
14    internationally. The Department may use monies
15    appropriated for this purpose for necessary administrative
16    expenses.
17        The Office of Coal Development and Marketing shall
18    develop and implement an initiative to assist the coal
19    industry in Illinois to increase its share of the
20    international coal market.
21        (11) To assist the Department of Central Management
22    Services in establishing and maintaining a system to
23    analyze and report energy consumption of facilities leased
24    by the Department of Central Management Services.
25        (12) To consult with the Departments of Natural
26    Resources and Transportation and the Illinois

 

 

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1    Environmental Protection Agency for the purpose of
2    developing methods and standards that encourage the
3    utilization of coal combustion by-products as value added
4    products in productive and benign applications.
5        (13) To provide technical assistance and information
6    to sellers and distributors of storage hot water heaters
7    doing business in Illinois, pursuant to Section 1 of the
8    Hot Water Heater Efficiency Act.
9    (b) (Blank).
10    (c) (Blank).
11    (d) The Department shall develop a package of educational
12materials containing information regarding the necessity of
13waste reduction and recycling to reduce dependence on landfills
14and to maintain environmental quality. The Department shall
15make this information available to the public on its website
16and for schools to access for their development of materials.
17Those materials developed shall be suitable for instructional
18use in grades 3, 4 and 5. The Department shall distribute such
19instructional material to all public elementary and unit school
20districts no later than November 1, of each year.
21    (e) (Blank).
22    (f) (Blank).
23    (g) (Blank).
24    (h) (Blank).
25    (i) (Blank).
26(Source: P.A. 98-44, eff. 6-28-13.)
 

 

 

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1    (20 ILCS 2310/2310-373 rep.)
2    (20 ILCS 2310/2310-396 rep.)
3    Section 30. The Department of Public Health Powers and
4Duties Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is
5amended by repealing Sections 2310-373 and 2310-396.
 
6    Section 35. The Governor's Office of Management and Budget
7Act is amended by changing Section 7.3 as follows:
 
8    (20 ILCS 3005/7.3)
9    Sec. 7.3. Annual economic and fiscal policy report. No
10later than the 3rd business day in By January 1 of each year,
11the Governor's Office of Management and Budget shall submit an
12economic and fiscal policy report to the General Assembly. The
13report must outline the long-term economic and fiscal policy
14objectives of the State, the economic and fiscal policy
15intentions for the upcoming fiscal year, and the economic and
16fiscal policy intentions for the following 2 fiscal years. The
17report must highlight the total level of revenue, expenditure,
18deficit or surplus, and debt with respect to each of the
19reporting categories. The report must be posted on the Office's
20Internet website and allow members of the public to post
21comments concerning the report.
22(Source: P.A. 96-1354, eff. 7-28-10.)
 

 

 

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1    Section 40. The Capital Spending Accountability Law is
2amended by changing Section 805 as follows:
 
3    (20 ILCS 3020/805)
4    Sec. 805. Reports on capital spending. On the first day of
5each quarterly period in each fiscal year, the Governor's
6Office of Management and Budget shall provide to the
7Comptroller, the Treasurer, the President and the Minority
8Leader of the Senate, and the Speaker and the Minority Leader
9of the House of Representatives a report on the status of all
10capital projects in the State. The report may must be provided
11in both written and electronic format. The report must include
12all of the following:
13        (1) A brief description or stated purpose of each
14    capital project where applicable (as referred to in this
15    Section, "project").
16        (2) The amount and source of funds (whether from bond
17    funds or other revenues) appropriated for each project,
18    organized into categories including roads, mass transit,
19    schools, environment, civic centers and other categories
20    as applicable (as referred to in this Section, "category or
21    categories"), with subtotals for each category.
22        (3) The date the appropriation bill relating to each
23    project was signed by the Governor, organized into
24    categories.
25        (4) The date the written release of the Governor for

 

 

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1    each project was submitted to the Comptroller or is
2    projected to be submitted and, if a release for any project
3    has not been submitted within 6 months after its
4    appropriation became law, an explanation why the project
5    has not yet been released, all organized into categories.
6        (5) The amount of expenditures to date by the State
7    relating to each project and estimated amount of total
8    State expenditures and proposed schedule of future State
9    expenditures relating to each project, all organized into
10    categories.
11        (6) A timeline for completion of each project,
12    including the dates, if applicable, of execution by the
13    State of any grant agreement, any required engineering or
14    design work or environmental approvals, and the estimated
15    or actual dates of the start and completion of
16    construction, all organized into categories. Any
17    substantial variances on any project from this reported
18    timeline must be explained in the next quarterly report.
19        (7) A summary report of the status of all projects,
20    including the amount of undisbursed funds intended to be
21    held or used in the next quarter.
22(Source: P.A. 96-34, eff. 7-13-09.)
 
23    Section 45. The General Assembly Operations Act is amended
24by changing Section 2 as follows:
 

 

 

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1    (25 ILCS 10/2)  (from Ch. 63, par. 23.2)
2    Sec. 2. The Speaker of the House and the President of the
3Senate, and the Chairman and members of the Senate Committee on
4Committees shall be considered as holding continuing offices
5until their respective successors are elected and qualified.
6    In the event of death or resignation of the Speaker of the
7House or of the President of the Senate after the sine die
8adjournment of the session of the General Assembly at which he
9was elected, the powers held by him shall pass respectively to
10the Majority Leader of the House of Representatives or to the
11Assistant Majority Leader of the Senate who, for the purposes
12of such powers shall be considered as holding continuing
13offices until his respective successors are elected and
14qualified.
15(Source: P.A. 78-10.)
 
16    Section 50. The General Assembly Compensation Act is
17amended by changing Section 4.1 as follows:
 
18    (25 ILCS 115/4.1)  (from Ch. 63, par. 15.2)
19    Sec. 4.1. Payment techniques and procedures shall be
20according to rules made by the Senate Committee on Assignment
21of Bills Operations Commission or the Rules Committee of the
22House, as the case may be.
23(Source: P.A. 79-806; 79-1023; 79-1454.)
 

 

 

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1    Section 55. The Legislative Commission Reorganization Act
2of 1984 is amended by changing Sections 1-5 and 8A-15 as
3follows:
 
4    (25 ILCS 130/1-5)  (from Ch. 63, par. 1001-5)
5    Sec. 1-5. Composition of agencies; directors.
6    (a)(1) Each legislative support services agency listed in
7Section 1-3 is hereafter in this Section referred to as the
8Agency.
9    (2) (Blank).
10    (2.1) (Blank).
11    (2.5) The Board of the Office of the Architect of the
12Capitol shall consist of the Secretary and Assistant Secretary
13of the Senate and the Clerk and Assistant Clerk of the House of
14Representatives. When the Board has cast a tied vote concerning
15the design, implementation, or construction of a project within
16the legislative complex, as defined in Section 8A-15, the
17Architect of the Capitol may cast the tie-breaking vote.
18    The Boards of the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules,
19the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability,
20the Legislative Audit Committee, and the Legislative Research
21Unit (3) The other legislative support services agencies shall
22each consist of 12 members of the General Assembly, of whom 3
23shall be appointed by the President of the Senate, 3 shall be
24appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate, 3 shall be
25appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and 3

 

 

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1shall be appointed by the Minority Leader of the House of
2Representatives. All appointments shall be in writing and filed
3with the Secretary of State as a public record.
4    Members shall serve a 2-year term, and must be appointed by
5the Joint Committee during the month of January in each
6odd-numbered year for terms beginning February 1. Any vacancy
7in an Agency shall be filled by appointment for the balance of
8the term in the same manner as the original appointment. A
9vacancy shall exist when a member no longer holds the elected
10legislative office held at the time of the appointment or at
11the termination of the member's legislative service.
12    During the month of February of each odd-numbered year, the
13Joint Committee on Legislative Support Services shall select
14from the members of the Board of each Agency 2 co-chairpersons
15and such other officers as the Joint Committee deems necessary.
16The co-chairpersons of each Board shall serve for a 2-year
17term, beginning February 1 of the odd-numbered year, and the 2
18co-chairpersons shall not be members of or identified with the
19same house or the same political party.
20    Each Board shall meet twice annually or more often upon the
21call of the chair or any 9 members. A quorum of the Board shall
22consist of a majority of the appointed members.
23    (b) The Board of each of the following legislative support
24agencies shall consist of the Secretary and Assistant Secretary
25of the Senate and the Clerk and Assistant Clerk of the House of
26Representatives: the Legislative Information System, the

 

 

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1Legislative Printing Unit, the Legislative Reference Bureau,
2and the Office of the Architect of the Capitol. The
3co-chairpersons of the Board of the Office of the Architect of
4the Capitol shall be the Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk
5of the House of Representatives, each ex officio. (Blank).
6    The Chairperson of each of the other Boards shall be the
7member who is affiliated with the same caucus as the then
8serving Chairperson of the Joint Committee on Legislative
9Support Services. Each Board shall meet twice annually or more
10often upon the call of the chair or any 3 members. A quorum of
11the Board shall consist of a majority of the appointed members.
12    When the Board of the Office of the Architect of the
13Capitol has cast a tied vote concerning the design,
14implementation, or construction of a project within the
15legislative complex, as defined in Section 8A-15, the Architect
16of the Capitol may cast the tie-breaking vote.
17    (c) (Blank). During the month of February of each
18odd-numbered year, the Joint Committee on Legislative Support
19Services shall select from the members of each agency, other
20than the Office of the Architect of the Capitol, 2 co-chairmen
21and such other officers as the Joint Committee deems necessary.
22The co-chairmen of each Agency shall serve for a 2-year term,
23beginning February 1 of the odd-numbered year, and the 2
24co-chairmen shall not be members of or identified with the same
25house or the same political party. The co-chairmen of the Board
26of the Office of the Architect of the Capitol shall be the

 

 

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1Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk of the House of
2Representatives, each ex officio.
3    Each Agency shall meet twice annually or more often upon
4the call of the chair or any 9 members (or any 3 members in the
5case of the Office of the Architect of the Capitol). A quorum
6of the Agency shall consist of a majority of the appointed
7members.
8    (d) Members of each Agency shall serve without
9compensation, but shall be reimbursed for expenses incurred in
10carrying out the duties of the Agency pursuant to rules and
11regulations adopted by the Joint Committee on Legislative
12Support Services.
13    (e) Beginning February 1, 1985, and every 2 years
14thereafter, the Joint Committee shall select an Executive
15Director who shall be the chief executive officer and staff
16director of each Agency. The Executive Director shall receive a
17salary as fixed by the Joint Committee and shall be authorized
18to employ and fix the compensation of necessary professional,
19technical and secretarial staff and prescribe their duties,
20sign contracts, and issue vouchers for the payment of
21obligations pursuant to rules and regulations adopted by the
22Joint Committee on Legislative Support Services. The Executive
23Director and other employees of the Agency shall not be subject
24to the Personnel Code.
25    The executive director of the Office of the Architect of
26the Capitol shall be known as the Architect of the Capitol.

 

 

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1(Source: P.A. 96-959, eff. 7-1-10.)
 
2    (25 ILCS 130/8A-15)
3    Sec. 8A-15. Master plan.
4    (a) The term "legislative complex" means (i) the buildings
5and facilities located in Springfield, Illinois, and occupied
6in whole or in part by the General Assembly or any of its
7support service agencies, (ii) the grounds, walkways, and
8tunnels surrounding or connected to those buildings and
9facilities, and (iii) the off-street parking areas serving
10those buildings and facilities.
11    (b) The Architect of the Capitol shall prepare and
12implement a long-range master plan of development for the State
13Capitol Building, and the remaining portions of the legislative
14complex, and the land and State buildings and facilities within
15the area bounded by Washington, Third, Cook, and Pasfield
16Streets that addresses the improvement, construction, historic
17preservation, restoration, maintenance, repair, and
18landscaping needs of these State buildings and facilities and
19the land the State Capitol Building and the remaining portions
20of the legislative complex. The Architect of the Capitol shall
21submit the master plan to the Capitol Historic Preservation
22Board for its review and comment. The Board must confine its
23review and comment to those portions of the master plan that
24relate to areas of the legislative complex other than the State
25Capitol Building. The Architect may incorporate suggestions of

 

 

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1the Board into the master plan. The master plan must be
2submitted to and approved by the Board of the Office of the
3Architect of the Capitol before its implementation.
4    The Architect of the Capitol may change the master plan and
5shall submit changes in the master plan that relate to areas of
6the legislative complex other than the State Capitol Building
7to the Capitol Historic Preservation Board for its review and
8comment. All changes in the master plan must be submitted to
9and approved by the Board of the Office of the Architect of the
10Capitol before implementation.
11    (c) The Architect of the Capitol must review the master
12plan every 5 years or at the direction of the Board of the
13Office of the Architect of the Capitol. Changes in the master
14plan resulting from this review must be made in accordance with
15the procedure provided in subsection (b).
16    (d) Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the
17Architect of the Capitol has the sole authority to contract for
18all materials and services necessary for the implementation of
19the master plan. The Architect (i) may comply with the
20procedures established by the Joint Committee on Legislative
21Support Services under Section 1-4 or (ii) upon approval of the
22Board of the Office of the Architect of the Capitol, may, but
23is not required to, comply with a portion or all of the
24Illinois Procurement Code when entering into contracts under
25this subsection. The Architect's compliance with the Illinois
26Procurement Code shall not be construed to subject the

 

 

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1Architect or any other entity of the legislative branch to the
2Illinois Procurement Code with respect to any other contract.
3    The Architect may enter into agreements with other State
4agencies for the provision of materials or performance of
5services necessary for the implementation of the master plan.
6    State officers and agencies providing normal, day-to-day
7repair, maintenance, or landscaping or providing security,
8commissary, utility, parking, banking, tour guide, event
9scheduling, or other operational services for buildings and
10facilities within the legislative complex immediately prior to
11the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General
12Assembly shall continue to provide that normal, day-to-day
13repair, maintenance, or landscaping or those services on the
14same basis, whether by contract or employees, that the repair,
15maintenance, landscaping, or services were provided
16immediately prior to the effective date of this amendatory Act
17of the 93rd General Assembly, subject to the provisions of the
18master plan and as otherwise directed by the Architect of the
19Capitol.
20    (e) The Architect of the Capitol shall monitor
21construction, preservation, restoration, maintenance, repair,
22and landscaping work in the legislative complex and
23implementation of the master plan, as well as all other
24activities that alter the historic integrity of the legislative
25complex and the other land and State buildings and facilities
26in the master plan.

 

 

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1(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
 
2    (30 ILCS 105/5.250 rep.)
3    Section 60. The State Finance Act is amended by repealing
4Section 5.250.
 
5    Section 65. The Property Tax Code is amended by changing
6Sections 8-35, 17-20, and 17-40 as follows:
 
7    (35 ILCS 200/8-35)
8    Sec. 8-35. Notification requirements; procedure on
9protest.
10    (a) Assessments made by the Department. Upon completion of
11its original assessments, the Department shall publish a
12complete list of the assessments on its official website. in
13the State "official newspaper." Any person feeling aggrieved by
14any such assessment may, within 10 days of the date of
15publication of the list, apply to the Department for a review
16and correction of that assessment. Upon review of the
17assessment, the Department shall make any correction as it
18considers just.
19    If review of an assessment has been made and notice has
20been given of the Department's decision, any party to the
21proceeding who feels aggrieved by the decision, may file an
22application for hearing. The application shall be in writing
23and shall be filed with the Department within 20 days after

 

 

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1notice of the decision has been given by certified mail.
2Petitions for hearing shall state concisely the mistakes
3alleged to have been made or the new evidence to be presented.
4    No action for the judicial review of any assessment
5decision of the Department shall be allowed unless the party
6commencing such action has filed an application for a hearing
7and the Department has acted upon the application.
8    The extension of taxes on an assessment shall not be
9delayed by any proceeding under this Section. In cases where
10the assessment is revised, the taxes extended upon the
11assessment, or that part of the taxes as may be appropriate,
12shall be abated or, if already paid, refunded.
13    (b) Exemption decisions made by the Department. Notice of
14each exemption decision made by the Department under Section
1515-25, 16-70, or 16-130 shall be given by certified mail to the
16applicant for exemption.
17    If an exemption decision has been made by the Department
18and notice has been given of the Department's decision, any
19party to the proceeding who feels aggrieved by the decision may
20file an application for hearing. The application shall be in
21writing and shall be filed with the Department within 60 days
22after notice of the decision has been given by certified mail.
23Petitions for hearing shall state concisely the mistakes
24alleged to have been made or the new evidence to be presented.
25    If a petition for hearing is filed, the Department shall
26reconsider the exemption decision and shall grant any party to

 

 

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1the proceeding a hearing. As soon as practical after the
2reconsideration and hearing, the Department shall issue a
3notice of decision by mailing the notice by certified mail. The
4notice shall set forth the Department's findings of fact and
5the basis of the decision.
6    Within 30 days after the mailing of a notice of decision,
7any party to the proceeding may file with the Director a
8written request for rehearing in such form as the Department
9may by rule prescribe, setting forth the grounds on which
10rehearing is requested. If rehearing or Departmental review is
11granted, as soon as practical after the rehearing or
12Departmental review has been held, the Department shall issue a
13revised decision to the party or the party's legal
14representative as a result of the rehearing. The action of the
15Department on a petition for hearing shall become final the
16later of (i) 30 days after issuance of a notice of decision, if
17no request for rehearing is made, or (ii) if a timely request
18for rehearing is made, upon the issuance of the denial of the
19request or the issuance of a notice of final decision.
20    No action for the judicial review of any exemption decision
21of the Department shall be allowed unless the party commencing
22the action has filed an application for a hearing and the
23Department has acted upon the application.
24    The extension of taxes on an assessment shall not be
25delayed by any proceeding under this Section. In cases when the
26exemption is granted, in whole or in part, the taxes extended

 

 

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1upon the assessment, or that part of the taxes as may be
2appropriate, shall be abated or, if already paid, refunded.
3(Source: P.A. 92-658, eff. 7-16-02.)
 
4    (35 ILCS 200/17-20)
5    Sec. 17-20. Hearing on tentative equalization factor. The
6Department shall, after publishing its tentative equalization
7factor and giving notice of hearing to the public on its
8official website in a newspaper of general circulation in the
9county, hold a hearing on its estimate not less than 10 days
10nor more than 30 days from the date of the publication. The
11notice shall state the date and time of the hearing, which
12shall be held in either Chicago or Springfield, the basis for
13the estimate of the Department, and further information as the
14Department may prescribe. The Department shall, after giving a
15hearing to all interested parties and opportunity for
16submitting testimony and evidence in support of or adverse to
17the estimate as the Department considers requisite, either
18confirm or revise the estimate so as to correctly represent the
19considered judgment of the Department respecting the estimated
20percentage to be added to or deducted from the aggregate
21assessment of all locally assessed property in the county
22except property assessed under Sections 10-110 through 10-140
23or 10-170 through 10-200. Within 30 days after the conclusion
24of the hearing the Department shall mail to the County Clerk,
25by certified mail, its determination with respect to such

 

 

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1estimated percentage to be added to or deducted from the
2aggregate assessment.
3(Source: P.A. 91-555, eff. 1-1-00.)
 
4    (35 ILCS 200/17-40)
5    Sec. 17-40. Publication of final equalization factor. The
6Department shall publish on its official website in each county
7the percentage and equalization factor certified to each county
8clerk under Section 17-30. If the percentage differs from the
9percentage derived from the initial estimate certified under
10Section 17-15, a statement as to the basis for the final
11percentage shall also be published. The Department shall
12provide the statement to any member of the public upon request.
13(Source: P.A. 79-703; 88-455.)
 
14    Section 70. The Adult Education Reporting Act is amended by
15changing Section 1 as follows:
 
16    (105 ILCS 410/1)  (from Ch. 122, par. 1851)
17    Sec. 1. As used in this Act, "agency" means: the
18Departments of Corrections, Public Aid, Commerce and Economic
19Opportunity, Human Services, and Public Health; the Secretary
20of State; the Illinois Community College Board; and the
21Administrative Office of the Illinois Courts. On and after July
221, 2001, "agency" includes the State Board of Education and
23does not include the Illinois Community College Board.

 

 

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1(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
 
2    Section 75. The Public Community College Act is amended by
3changing Section 2-10 as follows:
 
4    (110 ILCS 805/2-10)  (from Ch. 122, par. 102-10)
5    Sec. 2-10. The State Board shall make a thorough,
6comprehensive and continuous study of the status of community
7college education, its problems, needs for improvement, and
8projected developments and shall make a detailed report thereof
9to the General Assembly not later than March 1 of each
10odd-numbered year and shall submit recommendations for such
11legislation as it deems necessary.
12    The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall
13be satisfied by electronically filing copies of the report with
14the Speaker, the Minority Leader and the Clerk of the House of
15Representatives and the President, the Minority Leader and the
16Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research Unit, as
17required by Section 3.1 of "An Act to revise the law in
18relation to the General Assembly", approved February 25, 1874,
19as amended, and electronically filing such additional copies
20with the State Government Report Distribution Center for the
21General Assembly as is required under paragraph (t) of Section
227 of the State Library Act. A copy of the report shall also be
23posted on the State Board's website.
24(Source: P.A. 84-1438.)
 

 

 

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1    (215 ILCS 5/178 rep.)
2    Section 80. The Illinois Insurance Code is amended by
3repealing Section 178.
 
4    (215 ILCS 5/Art. XVI rep.)
5    (215 ILCS 5/Art. XIXB rep.)
6    Section 85. The Illinois Insurance Code is amended by
7repealing Articles XVI and XIXB.
 
8    (225 ILCS 120/24 rep.)
9    Section 90. The Wholesale Drug Distribution Licensing Act
10is amended by repealing Section 24.
 
11    Section 95. The Solid Waste Site Operator Certification Law
12is amended by changing Section 1011 as follows:
 
13    (225 ILCS 230/1011)  (from Ch. 111, par. 7861)
14    Sec. 1011. Fees.
15    (a) Fees for the issuance or renewal of a Solid Waste Site
16Operator Certificate shall be as follows:
17        (1)(A) $400 for issuance or renewal for Class A Solid
18    Waste Site Operators; (B) $200 for issuance or renewal for
19    Class B Solid Waste Site Operators; and (C) $100 for
20    issuance or renewal for special waste endorsements.
21        (2) If the fee for renewal is not paid within the grace

 

 

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1    period the above fees for renewal shall each be increased
2    by $50.
3    (b) Before the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
498th General Assembly, all All fees collected by the Agency
5under this Section shall be deposited into the Hazardous Waste
6Occupational Licensing Fund. The Agency is authorized to use
7monies in the Hazardous Waste Occupational Licensing Fund to
8perform its functions, powers, and duties under this Section.
9    On and after the effective date of this amendatory Act of
10the 98th General Assembly, all fees collected by the Agency
11under this Section shall be deposited into the Environmental
12Protection Permit and Inspection Fund to be used in accordance
13with the provisions of Section 22.8 of the Environmental
14Protection Act.
15(Source: P.A. 86-1363.)
 
16    Section 100. The Illinois Athlete Agents Act is amended by
17changing Section 180 as follows:
 
18    (225 ILCS 401/180)
19    Sec. 180. Civil penalties.
20    (a) In addition to any other penalty provided by law, any
21person who violates this Act shall forfeit and pay a civil
22penalty to the Department in an amount not to exceed $10,000
23for each violation as determined by the Department. The civil
24penalty shall be assessed by the Department in accordance with

 

 

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1the provisions of this Act.
2    (b) The Department has the authority and power to
3investigate any and all unlicensed activity.
4    (c) The civil penalty shall be paid within 60 days after
5the effective date of the order imposing the civil penalty. The
6order shall constitute a judgment and may be filed and
7execution had thereon in the same manner as any judgment from
8any court of record.
9    (d) All moneys collected under this Section shall be
10deposited into the General Professions Dedicated Fund.
11(Source: P.A. 96-1030, eff. 1-1-11.)
 
12    Section 105. The Illinois Horse Racing Act of 1975 is
13amended by changing Section 30 as follows:
 
14    (230 ILCS 5/30)  (from Ch. 8, par. 37-30)
15    Sec. 30. (a) The General Assembly declares that it is the
16policy of this State to encourage the breeding of thoroughbred
17horses in this State and the ownership of such horses by
18residents of this State in order to provide for: sufficient
19numbers of high quality thoroughbred horses to participate in
20thoroughbred racing meetings in this State, and to establish
21and preserve the agricultural and commercial benefits of such
22breeding and racing industries to the State of Illinois. It is
23the intent of the General Assembly to further this policy by
24the provisions of this Act.

 

 

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1    (b) Each organization licensee conducting a thoroughbred
2racing meeting pursuant to this Act shall provide at least two
3races each day limited to Illinois conceived and foaled horses
4or Illinois foaled horses or both. A minimum of 6 races shall
5be conducted each week limited to Illinois conceived and foaled
6or Illinois foaled horses or both. No horses shall be permitted
7to start in such races unless duly registered under the rules
8of the Department of Agriculture.
9    (c) Conditions of races under subsection (b) shall be
10commensurate with past performance, quality, and class of
11Illinois conceived and foaled and Illinois foaled horses
12available. If, however, sufficient competition cannot be had
13among horses of that class on any day, the races may, with
14consent of the Board, be eliminated for that day and substitute
15races provided.
16    (d) There is hereby created a special fund of the State
17Treasury to be known as the Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders
18Fund.
19    Except as provided in subsection (g) of Section 27 of this
20Act, 8.5% of all the monies received by the State as privilege
21taxes on Thoroughbred racing meetings shall be paid into the
22Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders Fund.
23    (e) The Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders Fund shall be
24administered by the Department of Agriculture with the advice
25and assistance of the Advisory Board created in subsection (f)
26of this Section.

 

 

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1    (f) The Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders Fund Advisory Board
2shall consist of the Director of the Department of Agriculture,
3who shall serve as Chairman; a member of the Illinois Racing
4Board, designated by it; 2 representatives of the organization
5licensees conducting thoroughbred racing meetings, recommended
6by them; 2 representatives of the Illinois Thoroughbred
7Breeders and Owners Foundation, recommended by it; and 2
8representatives of the Horsemen's Benevolent Protective
9Association or any successor organization established in
10Illinois comprised of the largest number of owners and
11trainers, recommended by it, with one representative of the
12Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association to come from
13its Illinois Division, and one from its Chicago Division.
14Advisory Board members shall serve for 2 years commencing
15January 1 of each odd numbered year. If representatives of the
16organization licensees conducting thoroughbred racing
17meetings, the Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders and Owners
18Foundation, and the Horsemen's Benevolent Protection
19Association have not been recommended by January 1, of each odd
20numbered year, the Director of the Department of Agriculture
21shall make an appointment for the organization failing to so
22recommend a member of the Advisory Board. Advisory Board
23members shall receive no compensation for their services as
24members but shall be reimbursed for all actual and necessary
25expenses and disbursements incurred in the execution of their
26official duties.

 

 

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1    (g) No monies shall be expended from the Illinois
2Thoroughbred Breeders Fund except as appropriated by the
3General Assembly. Monies appropriated from the Illinois
4Thoroughbred Breeders Fund shall be expended by the Department
5of Agriculture, with the advice and assistance of the Illinois
6Thoroughbred Breeders Fund Advisory Board, for the following
7purposes only:
8        (1) To provide purse supplements to owners of horses
9    participating in races limited to Illinois conceived and
10    foaled and Illinois foaled horses. Any such purse
11    supplements shall not be included in and shall be paid in
12    addition to any purses, stakes, or breeders' awards offered
13    by each organization licensee as determined by agreement
14    between such organization licensee and an organization
15    representing the horsemen. No monies from the Illinois
16    Thoroughbred Breeders Fund shall be used to provide purse
17    supplements for claiming races in which the minimum
18    claiming price is less than $7,500.
19        (2) To provide stakes and awards to be paid to the
20    owners of the winning horses in certain races limited to
21    Illinois conceived and foaled and Illinois foaled horses
22    designated as stakes races.
23        (2.5) To provide an award to the owner or owners of an
24    Illinois conceived and foaled or Illinois foaled horse that
25    wins a maiden special weight, an allowance, overnight
26    handicap race, or claiming race with claiming price of

 

 

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1    $10,000 or more providing the race is not restricted to
2    Illinois conceived and foaled or Illinois foaled horses.
3    Awards shall also be provided to the owner or owners of
4    Illinois conceived and foaled and Illinois foaled horses
5    that place second or third in those races. To the extent
6    that additional moneys are required to pay the minimum
7    additional awards of 40% of the purse the horse earns for
8    placing first, second or third in those races for Illinois
9    foaled horses and of 60% of the purse the horse earns for
10    placing first, second or third in those races for Illinois
11    conceived and foaled horses, those moneys shall be provided
12    from the purse account at the track where earned.
13        (3) To provide stallion awards to the owner or owners
14    of any stallion that is duly registered with the Illinois
15    Thoroughbred Breeders Fund Program prior to the effective
16    date of this amendatory Act of 1995 whose duly registered
17    Illinois conceived and foaled offspring wins a race
18    conducted at an Illinois thoroughbred racing meeting other
19    than a claiming race. Such award shall not be paid to the
20    owner or owners of an Illinois stallion that served outside
21    this State at any time during the calendar year in which
22    such race was conducted.
23        (4) To provide $75,000 annually for purses to be
24    distributed to county fairs that provide for the running of
25    races during each county fair exclusively for the
26    thoroughbreds conceived and foaled in Illinois. The

 

 

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1    conditions of the races shall be developed by the county
2    fair association and reviewed by the Department with the
3    advice and assistance of the Illinois Thoroughbred
4    Breeders Fund Advisory Board. There shall be no wagering of
5    any kind on the running of Illinois conceived and foaled
6    races at county fairs.
7        (4.1) To provide purse money for an Illinois stallion
8    stakes program.
9        (5) No less than 80% of all monies appropriated from
10    the Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders Fund shall be expended
11    for the purposes in (1), (2), (2.5), (3), (4), (4.1), and
12    (5) as shown above.
13        (6) To provide for educational programs regarding the
14    thoroughbred breeding industry.
15        (7) To provide for research programs concerning the
16    health, development and care of the thoroughbred horse.
17        (8) To provide for a scholarship and training program
18    for students of equine veterinary medicine.
19        (9) To provide for dissemination of public information
20    designed to promote the breeding of thoroughbred horses in
21    Illinois.
22        (10) To provide for all expenses incurred in the
23    administration of the Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders Fund.
24    (h) Whenever the Governor finds that the amount in the
25Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders Fund is more than the total of
26the outstanding appropriations from such fund, the Governor

 

 

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1shall notify the State Comptroller and the State Treasurer of
2such fact. The Comptroller and the State Treasurer, upon
3receipt of such notification, shall transfer such excess amount
4from the Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders Fund to the General
5Revenue Fund.
6    (i) A sum equal to 12 1/2% of the first prize money of
7every purse won by an Illinois foaled or an Illinois conceived
8and foaled horse in races not limited to Illinois foaled horses
9or Illinois conceived and foaled horses, or both, shall be paid
10by the organization licensee conducting the horse race meeting.
11Such sum shall be paid from the organization licensee's share
12of the money wagered as follows: 11 1/2% to the breeder of the
13winning horse and 1% to the organization representing
14thoroughbred breeders and owners whose representative serves
15on the Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders Fund Advisory Board for
16verifying the amounts of breeders' awards earned, assuring
17their distribution in accordance with this Act, and servicing
18and promoting the Illinois thoroughbred horse racing industry.
19The organization representing thoroughbred breeders and owners
20shall cause all expenditures of monies received under this
21subsection (i) to be audited at least annually by a registered
22public accountant. The organization shall file copies of each
23annual audit with the Racing Board, the Clerk of the House of
24Representatives and the Secretary of the Senate, and shall make
25copies of each annual audit available to the public upon
26request and upon payment of the reasonable cost of photocopying

 

 

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1the requested number of copies. Such payments shall not reduce
2any award to the owner of the horse or reduce the taxes payable
3under this Act. Upon completion of its racing meet, each
4organization licensee shall deliver to the organization
5representing thoroughbred breeders and owners whose
6representative serves on the Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders
7Fund Advisory Board a listing of all the Illinois foaled and
8the Illinois conceived and foaled horses which won breeders'
9awards and the amount of such breeders' awards under this
10subsection to verify accuracy of payments and assure proper
11distribution of breeders' awards in accordance with the
12provisions of this Act. Such payments shall be delivered by the
13organization licensee within 30 days of the end of each race
14meeting.
15    (j) A sum equal to 12 1/2% of the first prize money won in
16each race limited to Illinois foaled horses or Illinois
17conceived and foaled horses, or both, shall be paid in the
18following manner by the organization licensee conducting the
19horse race meeting, from the organization licensee's share of
20the money wagered: 11 1/2% to the breeders of the horses in
21each such race which are the official first, second, third and
22fourth finishers and 1% to the organization representing
23thoroughbred breeders and owners whose representative serves
24on the Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders Fund Advisory Board for
25verifying the amounts of breeders' awards earned, assuring
26their proper distribution in accordance with this Act, and

 

 

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1servicing and promoting the Illinois thoroughbred horse racing
2industry. The organization representing thoroughbred breeders
3and owners shall cause all expenditures of monies received
4under this subsection (j) to be audited at least annually by a
5registered public accountant. The organization shall file
6copies of each annual audit with the Racing Board, the Clerk of
7the House of Representatives and the Secretary of the Senate,
8and shall make copies of each annual audit available to the
9public upon request and upon payment of the reasonable cost of
10photocopying the requested number of copies.
11    The 11 1/2% paid to the breeders in accordance with this
12subsection shall be distributed as follows:
13        (1) 60% of such sum shall be paid to the breeder of the
14    horse which finishes in the official first position;
15        (2) 20% of such sum shall be paid to the breeder of the
16    horse which finishes in the official second position;
17        (3) 15% of such sum shall be paid to the breeder of the
18    horse which finishes in the official third position; and
19        (4) 5% of such sum shall be paid to the breeder of the
20    horse which finishes in the official fourth position.
21    Such payments shall not reduce any award to the owners of a
22horse or reduce the taxes payable under this Act. Upon
23completion of its racing meet, each organization licensee shall
24deliver to the organization representing thoroughbred breeders
25and owners whose representative serves on the Illinois
26Thoroughbred Breeders Fund Advisory Board a listing of all the

 

 

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1Illinois foaled and the Illinois conceived and foaled horses
2which won breeders' awards and the amount of such breeders'
3awards in accordance with the provisions of this Act. Such
4payments shall be delivered by the organization licensee within
530 days of the end of each race meeting.
6    (k) The term "breeder", as used herein, means the owner of
7the mare at the time the foal is dropped. An "Illinois foaled
8horse" is a foal dropped by a mare which enters this State on
9or before December 1, in the year in which the horse is bred,
10provided the mare remains continuously in this State until its
11foal is born. An "Illinois foaled horse" also means a foal born
12of a mare in the same year as the mare enters this State on or
13before March 1, and remains in this State at least 30 days
14after foaling, is bred back during the season of the foaling to
15an Illinois Registered Stallion (unless a veterinarian
16certifies that the mare should not be bred for health reasons),
17and is not bred to a stallion standing in any other state
18during the season of foaling. An "Illinois foaled horse" also
19means a foal born in Illinois of a mare purchased at public
20auction subsequent to the mare entering this State prior to
21February 1 of the foaling year providing the mare is owned
22solely by one or more Illinois residents or an Illinois entity
23that is entirely owned by one or more Illinois residents.
24    (l) The Department of Agriculture shall, by rule, with the
25advice and assistance of the Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders
26Fund Advisory Board:

 

 

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1        (1) Qualify stallions for Illinois breeding; such
2    stallions to stand for service within the State of Illinois
3    at the time of a foal's conception. Such stallion must not
4    stand for service at any place outside the State of
5    Illinois during the calendar year in which the foal is
6    conceived. The Department of Agriculture may assess and
7    collect application fees for the registration of
8    Illinois-eligible stallions. All fees collected are to be
9    paid into the Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders Fund.
10        (2) Provide for the registration of Illinois conceived
11    and foaled horses and Illinois foaled horses. No such horse
12    shall compete in the races limited to Illinois conceived
13    and foaled horses or Illinois foaled horses or both unless
14    registered with the Department of Agriculture. The
15    Department of Agriculture may prescribe such forms as are
16    necessary to determine the eligibility of such horses. The
17    Department of Agriculture may assess and collect
18    application fees for the registration of Illinois-eligible
19    foals. All fees collected are to be paid into the Illinois
20    Thoroughbred Breeders Fund. No person shall knowingly
21    prepare or cause preparation of an application for
22    registration of such foals containing false information.
23    (m) The Department of Agriculture, with the advice and
24assistance of the Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders Fund Advisory
25Board, shall provide that certain races limited to Illinois
26conceived and foaled and Illinois foaled horses be stakes races

 

 

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1and determine the total amount of stakes and awards to be paid
2to the owners of the winning horses in such races.
3    In determining the stakes races and the amount of awards
4for such races, the Department of Agriculture shall consider
5factors, including but not limited to, the amount of money
6appropriated for the Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders Fund
7program, organization licensees' contributions, availability
8of stakes caliber horses as demonstrated by past performances,
9whether the race can be coordinated into the proposed racing
10dates within organization licensees' racing dates, opportunity
11for colts and fillies and various age groups to race, public
12wagering on such races, and the previous racing schedule.
13    (n) The Board and the organizational licensee shall notify
14the Department of the conditions and minimum purses for races
15limited to Illinois conceived and foaled and Illinois foaled
16horses conducted for each organizational licensee conducting a
17thoroughbred racing meeting. The Department of Agriculture
18with the advice and assistance of the Illinois Thoroughbred
19Breeders Fund Advisory Board may allocate monies for purse
20supplements for such races. In determining whether to allocate
21money and the amount, the Department of Agriculture shall
22consider factors, including but not limited to, the amount of
23money appropriated for the Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders Fund
24program, the number of races that may occur, and the
25organizational licensee's purse structure.
26    (o) (Blank). In order to improve the breeding quality of

 

 

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1thoroughbred horses in the State, the General Assembly
2recognizes that existing provisions of this Section to
3encourage such quality breeding need to be revised and
4strengthened. As such, a Thoroughbred Breeder's Program Task
5Force is to be appointed by the Governor by September 1, 1999
6to make recommendations to the General Assembly by no later
7than March 1, 2000. This task force is to be composed of 2
8representatives from the Illinois Thoroughbred Breeders and
9Owners Foundation, 2 from the Illinois Thoroughbred Horsemen's
10Association, 3 from Illinois race tracks operating
11thoroughbred race meets for an average of at least 30 days in
12the past 3 years, the Director of Agriculture, the Executive
13Director of the Racing Board, who shall serve as Chairman.
14(Source: P.A. 91-40, eff. 6-25-99.)
 
15    Section 110. The Liquor Control Act of 1934 is amended by
16changing Section 6-15 as follows:
 
17    (235 ILCS 5/6-15)  (from Ch. 43, par. 130)
18    Sec. 6-15. No alcoholic liquors shall be sold or delivered
19in any building belonging to or under the control of the State
20or any political subdivision thereof except as provided in this
21Act. The corporate authorities of any city, village,
22incorporated town, township, or county may provide by
23ordinance, however, that alcoholic liquor may be sold or
24delivered in any specifically designated building belonging to

 

 

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1or under the control of the municipality, township, or county,
2or in any building located on land under the control of the
3municipality, township, or county; provided that such township
4or county complies with all applicable local ordinances in any
5incorporated area of the township or county. Alcoholic liquor
6may be delivered to and sold under the authority of a special
7use permit on any property owned by a conservation district
8organized under the Conservation District Act, provided that
9(i) the alcoholic liquor is sold only at an event authorized by
10the governing board of the conservation district, (ii) the
11issuance of the special use permit is authorized by the local
12liquor control commissioner of the territory in which the
13property is located, and (iii) the special use permit
14authorizes the sale of alcoholic liquor for one day or less.
15Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at any airport
16belonging to or under the control of a municipality of more
17than 25,000 inhabitants, or in any building or on any golf
18course owned by a park district organized under the Park
19District Code, subject to the approval of the governing board
20of the district, or in any building or on any golf course owned
21by a forest preserve district organized under the Downstate
22Forest Preserve District Act, subject to the approval of the
23governing board of the district, or on the grounds within 500
24feet of any building owned by a forest preserve district
25organized under the Downstate Forest Preserve District Act
26during times when food is dispensed for consumption within 500

 

 

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1feet of the building from which the food is dispensed, subject
2to the approval of the governing board of the district, or in a
3building owned by a Local Mass Transit District organized under
4the Local Mass Transit District Act, subject to the approval of
5the governing Board of the District, or in Bicentennial Park,
6or on the premises of the City of Mendota Lake Park located
7adjacent to Route 51 in Mendota, Illinois, or on the premises
8of Camden Park in Milan, Illinois, or in the community center
9owned by the City of Loves Park that is located at 1000 River
10Park Drive in Loves Park, Illinois, or, in connection with the
11operation of an established food serving facility during times
12when food is dispensed for consumption on the premises, and at
13the following aquarium and museums located in public parks: Art
14Institute of Chicago, Chicago Academy of Sciences, Chicago
15Historical Society, Field Museum of Natural History, Museum of
16Science and Industry, DuSable Museum of African American
17History, John G. Shedd Aquarium and Adler Planetarium, or at
18Lakeview Museum of Arts and Sciences in Peoria, or in
19connection with the operation of the facilities of the Chicago
20Zoological Society or the Chicago Horticultural Society on land
21owned by the Forest Preserve District of Cook County, or on any
22land used for a golf course or for recreational purposes owned
23by the Forest Preserve District of Cook County, subject to the
24control of the Forest Preserve District Board of Commissioners
25and applicable local law, provided that dram shop liability
26insurance is provided at maximum coverage limits so as to hold

 

 

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1the District harmless from all financial loss, damage, and
2harm, or in any building located on land owned by the Chicago
3Park District if approved by the Park District Commissioners,
4or on any land used for a golf course or for recreational
5purposes and owned by the Illinois International Port District
6if approved by the District's governing board, or at any
7airport, golf course, faculty center, or facility in which
8conference and convention type activities take place belonging
9to or under control of any State university or public community
10college district, provided that with respect to a facility for
11conference and convention type activities alcoholic liquors
12shall be limited to the use of the convention or conference
13participants or participants in cultural, political or
14educational activities held in such facilities, and provided
15further that the faculty or staff of the State university or a
16public community college district, or members of an
17organization of students, alumni, faculty or staff of the State
18university or a public community college district are active
19participants in the conference or convention, or in Memorial
20Stadium on the campus of the University of Illinois at
21Urbana-Champaign during games in which the Chicago Bears
22professional football team is playing in that stadium during
23the renovation of Soldier Field, not more than one and a half
24hours before the start of the game and not after the end of the
25third quarter of the game, or in the Pavilion Facility on the
26campus of the University of Illinois at Chicago during games in

 

 

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1which the Chicago Storm professional soccer team is playing in
2that facility, not more than one and a half hours before the
3start of the game and not after the end of the third quarter of
4the game, or in the Pavilion Facility on the campus of the
5University of Illinois at Chicago during games in which the
6WNBA professional women's basketball team is playing in that
7facility, not more than one and a half hours before the start
8of the game and not after the 10-minute mark of the second half
9of the game, or by a catering establishment which has rented
10facilities from a board of trustees of a public community
11college district, or in a restaurant that is operated by a
12commercial tenant in the North Campus Parking Deck building
13that (1) is located at 1201 West University Avenue, Urbana,
14Illinois and (2) is owned by the Board of Trustees of the
15University of Illinois, or, if approved by the District board,
16on land owned by the Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater
17Chicago and leased to others for a term of at least 20 years.
18Nothing in this Section precludes the sale or delivery of
19alcoholic liquor in the form of original packaged goods in
20premises located at 500 S. Racine in Chicago belonging to the
21University of Illinois and used primarily as a grocery store by
22a commercial tenant during the term of a lease that predates
23the University's acquisition of the premises; but the
24University shall have no power or authority to renew, transfer,
25or extend the lease with terms allowing the sale of alcoholic
26liquor; and the sale of alcoholic liquor shall be subject to

 

 

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1all local laws and regulations. After the acquisition by
2Winnebago County of the property located at 404 Elm Street in
3Rockford, a commercial tenant who sold alcoholic liquor at
4retail on a portion of the property under a valid license at
5the time of the acquisition may continue to do so for so long
6as the tenant and the County may agree under existing or future
7leases, subject to all local laws and regulations regarding the
8sale of alcoholic liquor. Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to
9and sold at Memorial Hall, located at 211 North Main Street,
10Rockford, under conditions approved by Winnebago County and
11subject to all local laws and regulations regarding the sale of
12alcoholic liquor. Each facility shall provide dram shop
13liability in maximum insurance coverage limits so as to save
14harmless the State, municipality, State university, airport,
15golf course, faculty center, facility in which conference and
16convention type activities take place, park district, Forest
17Preserve District, public community college district,
18aquarium, museum, or sanitary district from all financial loss,
19damage or harm. Alcoholic liquors may be sold at retail in
20buildings of golf courses owned by municipalities or Illinois
21State University in connection with the operation of an
22established food serving facility during times when food is
23dispensed for consumption upon the premises. Alcoholic liquors
24may be delivered to and sold at retail in any building owned by
25a fire protection district organized under the Fire Protection
26District Act, provided that such delivery and sale is approved

 

 

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1by the board of trustees of the district, and provided further
2that such delivery and sale is limited to fundraising events
3and to a maximum of 6 events per year. However, the limitation
4to fundraising events and to a maximum of 6 events per year
5does not apply to the delivery, sale, or manufacture of
6alcoholic liquors at the building located at 59 Main Street in
7Oswego, Illinois, owned by the Oswego Fire Protection District
8if the alcoholic liquor is sold or dispensed as approved by the
9Oswego Fire Protection District and the property is no longer
10being utilized for fire protection purposes.
11    Alcoholic liquors may be served or sold in buildings under
12the control of the Board of Trustees of the University of
13Illinois for events that the Board may determine are public
14events and not related student activities. The Board of
15Trustees shall issue a written policy within 6 months of the
16effective date of this amendatory Act of the 95th General
17Assembly concerning the types of events that would be eligible
18for an exemption. Thereafter, the Board of Trustees may issue
19revised, updated, new, or amended policies as it deems
20necessary and appropriate. In preparing its written policy, the
21Board of Trustees shall, among other factors it considers
22relevant and important, give consideration to the following:
23(i) whether the event is a student activity or student related
24activity; (ii) whether the physical setting of the event is
25conducive to control of liquor sales and distribution; (iii)
26the ability of the event operator to ensure that the sale or

 

 

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1serving of alcoholic liquors and the demeanor of the
2participants are in accordance with State law and University
3policies; (iv) regarding the anticipated attendees at the
4event, the relative proportion of individuals under the age of
521 to individuals age 21 or older; (v) the ability of the venue
6operator to prevent the sale or distribution of alcoholic
7liquors to individuals under the age of 21; (vi) whether the
8event prohibits participants from removing alcoholic beverages
9from the venue; and (vii) whether the event prohibits
10participants from providing their own alcoholic liquors to the
11venue. In addition, any policy submitted by the Board of
12Trustees to the Illinois Liquor Control Commission must require
13that any event at which alcoholic liquors are served or sold in
14buildings under the control of the Board of Trustees shall
15require the prior written approval of the Office of the
16Chancellor for the University campus where the event is
17located. The Board of Trustees shall submit its policy, and any
18subsequently revised, updated, new, or amended policies, to the
19Illinois Liquor Control Commission, and any University event,
20or location for an event, exempted under such policies shall
21apply for a license under the applicable Sections of this Act.
22    Alcoholic liquors may be served or sold in buildings under
23the control of the Board of Trustees of Northern Illinois
24University for events that the Board may determine are public
25events and not student-related activities. The Board of
26Trustees shall issue a written policy within 6 months after

 

 

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1June 28, 2011 (the effective date of Public Act 97-45)
2concerning the types of events that would be eligible for an
3exemption. Thereafter, the Board of Trustees may issue revised,
4updated, new, or amended policies as it deems necessary and
5appropriate. In preparing its written policy, the Board of
6Trustees shall, in addition to other factors it considers
7relevant and important, give consideration to the following:
8(i) whether the event is a student activity or student-related
9activity; (ii) whether the physical setting of the event is
10conducive to control of liquor sales and distribution; (iii)
11the ability of the event operator to ensure that the sale or
12serving of alcoholic liquors and the demeanor of the
13participants are in accordance with State law and University
14policies; (iv) the anticipated attendees at the event and the
15relative proportion of individuals under the age of 21 to
16individuals age 21 or older; (v) the ability of the venue
17operator to prevent the sale or distribution of alcoholic
18liquors to individuals under the age of 21; (vi) whether the
19event prohibits participants from removing alcoholic beverages
20from the venue; and (vii) whether the event prohibits
21participants from providing their own alcoholic liquors to the
22venue.
23    Alcoholic liquors may be served or sold in buildings under
24the control of the Board of Trustees of Chicago State
25University for events that the Board may determine are public
26events and not student-related activities. The Board of

 

 

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1Trustees shall issue a written policy within 6 months after
2August 2, 2013 (the effective date of Public Act 98-132) this
3amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly concerning the
4types of events that would be eligible for an exemption.
5Thereafter, the Board of Trustees may issue revised, updated,
6new, or amended policies as it deems necessary and appropriate.
7In preparing its written policy, the Board of Trustees shall,
8in addition to other factors it considers relevant and
9important, give consideration to the following: (i) whether the
10event is a student activity or student-related activity; (ii)
11whether the physical setting of the event is conducive to
12control of liquor sales and distribution; (iii) the ability of
13the event operator to ensure that the sale or serving of
14alcoholic liquors and the demeanor of the participants are in
15accordance with State law and University policies; (iv) the
16anticipated attendees at the event and the relative proportion
17of individuals under the age of 21 to individuals age 21 or
18older; (v) the ability of the venue operator to prevent the
19sale or distribution of alcoholic liquors to individuals under
20the age of 21; (vi) whether the event prohibits participants
21from removing alcoholic beverages from the venue; and (vii)
22whether the event prohibits participants from providing their
23own alcoholic liquors to the venue.
24    Alcoholic liquors may be served or sold in buildings under
25the control of the Board of Trustees of Illinois State
26University for events that the Board may determine are public

 

 

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1events and not student-related activities. The Board of
2Trustees shall issue a written policy within 6 months after the
3effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General
4Assembly concerning the types of events that would be eligible
5for an exemption. Thereafter, the Board of Trustees may issue
6revised, updated, new, or amended policies as it deems
7necessary and appropriate. In preparing its written policy, the
8Board of Trustees shall, in addition to other factors it
9considers relevant and important, give consideration to the
10following: (i) whether the event is a student activity or
11student-related activity; (ii) whether the physical setting of
12the event is conducive to control of liquor sales and
13distribution; (iii) the ability of the event operator to ensure
14that the sale or serving of alcoholic liquors and the demeanor
15of the participants are in accordance with State law and
16University policies; (iv) the anticipated attendees at the
17event and the relative proportion of individuals under the age
18of 21 to individuals age 21 or older; (v) the ability of the
19venue operator to prevent the sale or distribution of alcoholic
20liquors to individuals under the age of 21; (vi) whether the
21event prohibits participants from removing alcoholic beverages
22from the venue; and (vii) whether the event prohibits
23participants from providing their own alcoholic liquors to the
24venue.
25    Alcoholic liquor may be delivered to and sold at retail in
26the Dorchester Senior Business Center owned by the Village of

 

 

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1Dolton if the alcoholic liquor is sold or dispensed only in
2connection with organized functions for which the planned
3attendance is 20 or more persons, and if the person or facility
4selling or dispensing the alcoholic liquor has provided dram
5shop liability insurance in maximum limits so as to hold
6harmless the Village of Dolton and the State from all financial
7loss, damage and harm.
8    Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at retail in
9any building used as an Illinois State Armory provided:
10        (i) the Adjutant General's written consent to the
11    issuance of a license to sell alcoholic liquor in such
12    building is filed with the Commission;
13        (ii) the alcoholic liquor is sold or dispensed only in
14    connection with organized functions held on special
15    occasions;
16        (iii) the organized function is one for which the
17    planned attendance is 25 or more persons; and
18        (iv) the facility selling or dispensing the alcoholic
19    liquors has provided dram shop liability insurance in
20    maximum limits so as to save harmless the facility and the
21    State from all financial loss, damage or harm.
22    Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at retail in
23the Chicago Civic Center, provided that:
24        (i) the written consent of the Public Building
25    Commission which administers the Chicago Civic Center is
26    filed with the Commission;

 

 

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1        (ii) the alcoholic liquor is sold or dispensed only in
2    connection with organized functions held on special
3    occasions;
4        (iii) the organized function is one for which the
5    planned attendance is 25 or more persons;
6        (iv) the facility selling or dispensing the alcoholic
7    liquors has provided dram shop liability insurance in
8    maximum limits so as to hold harmless the Civic Center, the
9    City of Chicago and the State from all financial loss,
10    damage or harm; and
11        (v) all applicable local ordinances are complied with.
12    Alcoholic liquors may be delivered or sold in any building
13belonging to or under the control of any city, village or
14incorporated town where more than 75% of the physical
15properties of the building is used for commercial or
16recreational purposes, and the building is located upon a pier
17extending into or over the waters of a navigable lake or stream
18or on the shore of a navigable lake or stream. In accordance
19with a license issued under this Act, alcoholic liquor may be
20sold, served, or delivered in buildings and facilities under
21the control of the Department of Natural Resources during
22events or activities lasting no more than 7 continuous days
23upon the written approval of the Director of Natural Resources
24acting as the controlling government authority. The Director of
25Natural Resources may specify conditions on that approval,
26including but not limited to requirements for insurance and

 

 

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1hours of operation. Notwithstanding any other provision of this
2Act, alcoholic liquor sold by a United States Army Corps of
3Engineers or Department of Natural Resources concessionaire
4who was operating on June 1, 1991 for on-premises consumption
5only is not subject to the provisions of Articles IV and IX.
6Beer and wine may be sold on the premises of the Joliet Park
7District Stadium owned by the Joliet Park District when written
8consent to the issuance of a license to sell beer and wine in
9such premises is filed with the local liquor commissioner by
10the Joliet Park District. Beer and wine may be sold in
11buildings on the grounds of State veterans' homes when written
12consent to the issuance of a license to sell beer and wine in
13such buildings is filed with the Commission by the Department
14of Veterans' Affairs, and the facility shall provide dram shop
15liability in maximum insurance coverage limits so as to save
16the facility harmless from all financial loss, damage or harm.
17Such liquors may be delivered to and sold at any property owned
18or held under lease by a Metropolitan Pier and Exposition
19Authority or Metropolitan Exposition and Auditorium Authority.
20    Beer and wine may be sold and dispensed at professional
21sporting events and at professional concerts and other
22entertainment events conducted on premises owned by the Forest
23Preserve District of Kane County, subject to the control of the
24District Commissioners and applicable local law, provided that
25dram shop liability insurance is provided at maximum coverage
26limits so as to hold the District harmless from all financial

 

 

09800SB3443ham005- 69 -LRB098 15945 OMW 60368 a

1loss, damage and harm.
2    Nothing in this Section shall preclude the sale or delivery
3of beer and wine at a State or county fair or the sale or
4delivery of beer or wine at a city fair in any otherwise lawful
5manner.
6    Alcoholic liquors may be sold at retail in buildings in
7State parks under the control of the Department of Natural
8Resources, provided:
9        a. the State park has overnight lodging facilities with
10    some restaurant facilities or, not having overnight
11    lodging facilities, has restaurant facilities which serve
12    complete luncheon and dinner or supper meals,
13        b. (blank), and consent to the issuance of a license to
14    sell alcoholic liquors in the buildings has been filed with
15    the commission by the Department of Natural Resources, and
16        c. the alcoholic liquors are sold by the State park
17    lodge or restaurant concessionaire only during the hours
18    from 11 o'clock a.m. until 12 o'clock midnight.
19    Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, alcoholic
20    liquor sold by the State park or restaurant concessionaire
21    is not subject to the provisions of Articles IV and IX.
22    Alcoholic liquors may be sold at retail in buildings on
23properties under the control of the Historic Sites and
24Preservation Division of the Historic Preservation Agency or
25the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum provided:
26        a. the property has overnight lodging facilities with

 

 

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1    some restaurant facilities or, not having overnight
2    lodging facilities, has restaurant facilities which serve
3    complete luncheon and dinner or supper meals,
4        b. consent to the issuance of a license to sell
5    alcoholic liquors in the buildings has been filed with the
6    commission by the Historic Sites and Preservation Division
7    of the Historic Preservation Agency or the Abraham Lincoln
8    Presidential Library and Museum, and
9        c. the alcoholic liquors are sold by the lodge or
10    restaurant concessionaire only during the hours from 11
11    o'clock a.m. until 12 o'clock midnight.
12    The sale of alcoholic liquors pursuant to this Section does
13not authorize the establishment and operation of facilities
14commonly called taverns, saloons, bars, cocktail lounges, and
15the like except as a part of lodge and restaurant facilities in
16State parks or golf courses owned by Forest Preserve Districts
17with a population of less than 3,000,000 or municipalities or
18park districts.
19    Alcoholic liquors may be sold at retail in the Springfield
20Administration Building of the Department of Transportation
21and the Illinois State Armory in Springfield; provided, that
22the controlling government authority may consent to such sales
23only if
24        a. the request is from a not-for-profit organization;
25        b. such sales would not impede normal operations of the
26    departments involved;

 

 

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1        c. the not-for-profit organization provides dram shop
2    liability in maximum insurance coverage limits and agrees
3    to defend, save harmless and indemnify the State of
4    Illinois from all financial loss, damage or harm;
5        d. no such sale shall be made during normal working
6    hours of the State of Illinois; and
7        e. the consent is in writing.
8    Alcoholic liquors may be sold at retail in buildings in
9recreational areas of river conservancy districts under the
10control of, or leased from, the river conservancy districts.
11Such sales are subject to reasonable local regulations as
12provided in Article IV; however, no such regulations may
13prohibit or substantially impair the sale of alcoholic liquors
14on Sundays or Holidays.
15    Alcoholic liquors may be provided in long term care
16facilities owned or operated by a county under Division 5-21 or
175-22 of the Counties Code, when approved by the facility
18operator and not in conflict with the regulations of the
19Illinois Department of Public Health, to residents of the
20facility who have had their consumption of the alcoholic
21liquors provided approved in writing by a physician licensed to
22practice medicine in all its branches.
23    Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and dispensed in
24State housing assigned to employees of the Department of
25Corrections. No person shall furnish or allow to be furnished
26any alcoholic liquors to any prisoner confined in any jail,

 

 

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1reformatory, prison or house of correction except upon a
2physician's prescription for medicinal purposes.
3    Alcoholic liquors may be sold at retail or dispensed at the
4Willard Ice Building in Springfield, at the State Library in
5Springfield, and at Illinois State Museum facilities by (1) an
6agency of the State, whether legislative, judicial or
7executive, provided that such agency first obtains written
8permission to sell or dispense alcoholic liquors from the
9controlling government authority, or by (2) a not-for-profit
10organization, provided that such organization:
11        a. Obtains written consent from the controlling
12    government authority;
13        b. Sells or dispenses the alcoholic liquors in a manner
14    that does not impair normal operations of State offices
15    located in the building;
16        c. Sells or dispenses alcoholic liquors only in
17    connection with an official activity in the building;
18        d. Provides, or its catering service provides, dram
19    shop liability insurance in maximum coverage limits and in
20    which the carrier agrees to defend, save harmless and
21    indemnify the State of Illinois from all financial loss,
22    damage or harm arising out of the selling or dispensing of
23    alcoholic liquors.
24    Nothing in this Act shall prevent a not-for-profit
25organization or agency of the State from employing the services
26of a catering establishment for the selling or dispensing of

 

 

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1alcoholic liquors at authorized functions.
2    The controlling government authority for the Willard Ice
3Building in Springfield shall be the Director of the Department
4of Revenue. The controlling government authority for Illinois
5State Museum facilities shall be the Director of the Illinois
6State Museum. The controlling government authority for the
7State Library in Springfield shall be the Secretary of State.
8    Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at retail or
9dispensed at any facility, property or building under the
10jurisdiction of the Historic Sites and Preservation Division of
11the Historic Preservation Agency or the Abraham Lincoln
12Presidential Library and Museum where the delivery, sale or
13dispensing is by (1) an agency of the State, whether
14legislative, judicial or executive, provided that such agency
15first obtains written permission to sell or dispense alcoholic
16liquors from a controlling government authority, or by (2) an
17individual or organization provided that such individual or
18organization:
19        a. Obtains written consent from the controlling
20    government authority;
21        b. Sells or dispenses the alcoholic liquors in a manner
22    that does not impair normal workings of State offices or
23    operations located at the facility, property or building;
24        c. Sells or dispenses alcoholic liquors only in
25    connection with an official activity of the individual or
26    organization in the facility, property or building;

 

 

09800SB3443ham005- 74 -LRB098 15945 OMW 60368 a

1        d. Provides, or its catering service provides, dram
2    shop liability insurance in maximum coverage limits and in
3    which the carrier agrees to defend, save harmless and
4    indemnify the State of Illinois from all financial loss,
5    damage or harm arising out of the selling or dispensing of
6    alcoholic liquors.
7    The controlling government authority for the Historic
8Sites and Preservation Division of the Historic Preservation
9Agency shall be the Director of the Historic Sites and
10Preservation, and the controlling government authority for the
11Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum shall be the
12Director of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and
13Museum.
14    Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at retail or
15dispensed for consumption at the Michael Bilandic Building at
16160 North LaSalle Street, Chicago IL 60601, after the normal
17business hours of any day care or child care facility located
18in the building, by (1) a commercial tenant or subtenant
19conducting business on the premises under a lease made pursuant
20to Section 405-315 of the Department of Central Management
21Services Law (20 ILCS 405/405-315), provided that such tenant
22or subtenant who accepts delivery of, sells, or dispenses
23alcoholic liquors shall procure and maintain dram shop
24liability insurance in maximum coverage limits and in which the
25carrier agrees to defend, indemnify, and save harmless the
26State of Illinois from all financial loss, damage, or harm

 

 

09800SB3443ham005- 75 -LRB098 15945 OMW 60368 a

1arising out of the delivery, sale, or dispensing of alcoholic
2liquors, or by (2) an agency of the State, whether legislative,
3judicial, or executive, provided that such agency first obtains
4written permission to accept delivery of and sell or dispense
5alcoholic liquors from the Director of Central Management
6Services, or by (3) a not-for-profit organization, provided
7that such organization:
8        a. obtains written consent from the Department of
9    Central Management Services;
10        b. accepts delivery of and sells or dispenses the
11    alcoholic liquors in a manner that does not impair normal
12    operations of State offices located in the building;
13        c. accepts delivery of and sells or dispenses alcoholic
14    liquors only in connection with an official activity in the
15    building; and
16        d. provides, or its catering service provides, dram
17    shop liability insurance in maximum coverage limits and in
18    which the carrier agrees to defend, save harmless, and
19    indemnify the State of Illinois from all financial loss,
20    damage, or harm arising out of the selling or dispensing of
21    alcoholic liquors.
22    Nothing in this Act shall prevent a not-for-profit
23organization or agency of the State from employing the services
24of a catering establishment for the selling or dispensing of
25alcoholic liquors at functions authorized by the Director of
26Central Management Services.

 

 

09800SB3443ham005- 76 -LRB098 15945 OMW 60368 a

1    Alcoholic liquors may be sold at retail or dispensed at the
2James R. Thompson Center in Chicago, subject to the provisions
3of Section 7.4 of the State Property Control Act, and 222 South
4College Street in Springfield, Illinois by (1) a commercial
5tenant or subtenant conducting business on the premises under a
6lease or sublease made pursuant to Section 405-315 of the
7Department of Central Management Services Law (20 ILCS
8405/405-315), provided that such tenant or subtenant who sells
9or dispenses alcoholic liquors shall procure and maintain dram
10shop liability insurance in maximum coverage limits and in
11which the carrier agrees to defend, indemnify and save harmless
12the State of Illinois from all financial loss, damage or harm
13arising out of the sale or dispensing of alcoholic liquors, or
14by (2) an agency of the State, whether legislative, judicial or
15executive, provided that such agency first obtains written
16permission to sell or dispense alcoholic liquors from the
17Director of Central Management Services, or by (3) a
18not-for-profit organization, provided that such organization:
19        a. Obtains written consent from the Department of
20    Central Management Services;
21        b. Sells or dispenses the alcoholic liquors in a manner
22    that does not impair normal operations of State offices
23    located in the building;
24        c. Sells or dispenses alcoholic liquors only in
25    connection with an official activity in the building;
26        d. Provides, or its catering service provides, dram

 

 

09800SB3443ham005- 77 -LRB098 15945 OMW 60368 a

1    shop liability insurance in maximum coverage limits and in
2    which the carrier agrees to defend, save harmless and
3    indemnify the State of Illinois from all financial loss,
4    damage or harm arising out of the selling or dispensing of
5    alcoholic liquors.
6    Nothing in this Act shall prevent a not-for-profit
7organization or agency of the State from employing the services
8of a catering establishment for the selling or dispensing of
9alcoholic liquors at functions authorized by the Director of
10Central Management Services.
11    Alcoholic liquors may be sold or delivered at any facility
12owned by the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority provided that
13dram shop liability insurance has been made available in a
14form, with such coverage and in such amounts as the Authority
15reasonably determines is necessary.
16    Alcoholic liquors may be sold at retail or dispensed at the
17Rockford State Office Building by (1) an agency of the State,
18whether legislative, judicial or executive, provided that such
19agency first obtains written permission to sell or dispense
20alcoholic liquors from the Department of Central Management
21Services, or by (2) a not-for-profit organization, provided
22that such organization:
23        a. Obtains written consent from the Department of
24    Central Management Services;
25        b. Sells or dispenses the alcoholic liquors in a manner
26    that does not impair normal operations of State offices

 

 

09800SB3443ham005- 78 -LRB098 15945 OMW 60368 a

1    located in the building;
2        c. Sells or dispenses alcoholic liquors only in
3    connection with an official activity in the building;
4        d. Provides, or its catering service provides, dram
5    shop liability insurance in maximum coverage limits and in
6    which the carrier agrees to defend, save harmless and
7    indemnify the State of Illinois from all financial loss,
8    damage or harm arising out of the selling or dispensing of
9    alcoholic liquors.
10    Nothing in this Act shall prevent a not-for-profit
11organization or agency of the State from employing the services
12of a catering establishment for the selling or dispensing of
13alcoholic liquors at functions authorized by the Department of
14Central Management Services.
15    Alcoholic liquors may be sold or delivered in a building
16that is owned by McLean County, situated on land owned by the
17county in the City of Bloomington, and used by the McLean
18County Historical Society if the sale or delivery is approved
19by an ordinance adopted by the county board, and the
20municipality in which the building is located may not prohibit
21that sale or delivery, notwithstanding any other provision of
22this Section. The regulation of the sale and delivery of
23alcoholic liquor in a building that is owned by McLean County,
24situated on land owned by the county, and used by the McLean
25County Historical Society as provided in this paragraph is an
26exclusive power and function of the State and is a denial and

 

 

09800SB3443ham005- 79 -LRB098 15945 OMW 60368 a

1limitation under Article VII, Section 6, subsection (h) of the
2Illinois Constitution of the power of a home rule municipality
3to regulate that sale and delivery.
4    Alcoholic liquors may be sold or delivered in any building
5situated on land held in trust for any school district
6organized under Article 34 of the School Code, if the building
7is not used for school purposes and if the sale or delivery is
8approved by the board of education.
9    Alcoholic liquors may be sold or delivered in buildings
10owned by the Community Building Complex Committee of Boone
11County, Illinois if the person or facility selling or
12dispensing the alcoholic liquor has provided dram shop
13liability insurance with coverage and in amounts that the
14Committee reasonably determines are necessary.
15    Alcoholic liquors may be sold or delivered in the building
16located at 1200 Centerville Avenue in Belleville, Illinois and
17occupied by either the Belleville Area Special Education
18District or the Belleville Area Special Services Cooperative.
19    Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at the Louis
20Joliet Renaissance Center, City Center Campus, located at 214
21N. Ottawa Street, Joliet, and the Food Services/Culinary Arts
22Department facilities, Main Campus, located at 1215 Houbolt
23Road, Joliet, owned by or under the control of Joliet Junior
24College, Illinois Community College District No. 525.
25    Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at Triton
26College, Illinois Community College District No. 504.

 

 

09800SB3443ham005- 80 -LRB098 15945 OMW 60368 a

1    Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at the
2College of DuPage, Illinois Community College District No. 502.
3    Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at the
4building located at 446 East Hickory Avenue in Apple River,
5Illinois, owned by the Apple River Fire Protection District,
6and occupied by the Apple River Community Association if the
7alcoholic liquor is sold or dispensed only in connection with
8organized functions approved by the Apple River Community
9Association for which the planned attendance is 20 or more
10persons and if the person or facility selling or dispensing the
11alcoholic liquor has provided dram shop liability insurance in
12maximum limits so as to hold harmless the Apple River Fire
13Protection District, the Village of Apple River, and the Apple
14River Community Association from all financial loss, damage,
15and harm.
16    Alcoholic liquors may be delivered to and sold at the Sikia
17Restaurant, Kennedy King College Campus, located at 740 West
1863rd Street, Chicago, and at the Food Services in the Great
19Hall/Washburne Culinary Institute Department facility, Kennedy
20King College Campus, located at 740 West 63rd Street, Chicago,
21owned by or under the control of City Colleges of Chicago,
22Illinois Community College District No. 508.
23(Source: P.A. 97-33, eff. 6-28-11; 97-45, eff. 6-28-11; 97-51,
24eff. 6-28-11; 97-167, eff. 7-22-11; 97-250, eff. 8-4-11;
2597-395, eff. 8-16-11; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 97-1166, eff.
263-1-13; 98-132, eff. 8-2-13; 98-201, eff. 8-9-13; revised

 

 

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19-24-13.)
 
2    (320 ILCS 65/20 rep.)
3    Section 115. The Family Caregiver Act is amended by
4repealing Section 20.
 
5    (410 ILCS 3/10 rep.)
6    Section 120. The Atherosclerosis Prevention Act is amended
7by repealing Section 10.
 
8    (410 ILCS 425/Act rep.)
9    Section 125. The High Blood Pressure Control Act is
10repealed.
 
11    Section 130. The Environmental Protection Act is amended by
12changing Section 22.8 as follows:
 
13    (415 ILCS 5/22.8)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.8)
14    Sec. 22.8. Environmental Protection Permit and Inspection
15Fund.
16    (a) There is hereby created in the State Treasury a special
17fund to be known as the Environmental Protection Permit and
18Inspection Fund. All fees collected by the Agency pursuant to
19this Section, Section 9.6, 12.2, 16.1, 22.2 (j)(6)(E)(v)(IV),
2056.4, 56.5, 56.6, and subsection (f) of Section 5 of this Act,
21or pursuant to Section 22 of the Public Water Supply Operations

 

 

09800SB3443ham005- 82 -LRB098 15945 OMW 60368 a

1Act or Section 1011 of the Solid Waste Site Operator
2Certification Law, as well as and funds collected under
3subsection (b.5) of Section 42 of this Act, shall be deposited
4into the Fund. In addition to any monies appropriated from the
5General Revenue Fund, monies in the Fund shall be appropriated
6by the General Assembly to the Agency in amounts deemed
7necessary for manifest, permit, and inspection activities and
8for performing its functions, powers, and duties under the
9Solid Waste Site Operator Certification Law processing
10requests under Section 22.2 (j)(6)(E)(v)(IV).
11    The General Assembly may appropriate monies in the Fund
12deemed necessary for Board regulatory and adjudicatory
13proceedings.
14    (a-5) As soon as practicable after the effective date of
15this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, but no later
16than January 1, 2014, the State Comptroller shall direct and
17the State Treasurer shall transfer all monies in the Industrial
18Hygiene Regulatory and Enforcement Fund to the Environmental
19Protection Permit and Inspection Fund to be used in accordance
20with the terms of the Environmental Protection Permit and
21Inspection Fund.
22    (a-6) As soon as practicable after the effective date of
23this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, but no later
24than December 31, 2014, the State Comptroller shall order the
25transfer of, and the State Treasurer shall transfer, all moneys
26in the Hazardous Waste Occupational Licensing Fund into the

 

 

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1Environmental Protection Permit and Inspection Fund to be used
2in accordance with the terms of the Environmental Protection
3Permit and Inspection Fund.
4    (b) The Agency shall collect from the owner or operator of
5any of the following types of hazardous waste disposal sites or
6management facilities which require a RCRA permit under
7subsection (f) of Section 21 of this Act, or a UIC permit under
8subsection (g) of Section 12 of this Act, an annual fee in the
9amount of:
10        (1) $35,000 ($70,000 beginning in 2004) for a hazardous
11    waste disposal site receiving hazardous waste if the
12    hazardous waste disposal site is located off the site where
13    such waste was produced;
14        (2) $9,000 ($18,000 beginning in 2004) for a hazardous
15    waste disposal site receiving hazardous waste if the
16    hazardous waste disposal site is located on the site where
17    such waste was produced;
18        (3) $7,000 ($14,000 beginning in 2004) for a hazardous
19    waste disposal site receiving hazardous waste if the
20    hazardous waste disposal site is an underground injection
21    well;
22        (4) $2,000 ($4,000 beginning in 2004) for a hazardous
23    waste management facility treating hazardous waste by
24    incineration;
25        (5) $1,000 ($2,000 beginning in 2004) for a hazardous
26    waste management facility treating hazardous waste by a

 

 

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1    method, technique or process other than incineration;
2        (6) $1,000 ($2,000 beginning in 2004) for a hazardous
3    waste management facility storing hazardous waste in a
4    surface impoundment or pile;
5        (7) $250 ($500 beginning in 2004) for a hazardous waste
6    management facility storing hazardous waste other than in a
7    surface impoundment or pile; and
8        (8) Beginning in 2004, $500 for a large quantity
9    hazardous waste generator required to submit an annual or
10    biennial report for hazardous waste generation.
11    (c) Where two or more operational units are located within
12a single hazardous waste disposal site, the Agency shall
13collect from the owner or operator of such site an annual fee
14equal to the highest fee imposed by subsection (b) of this
15Section upon any single operational unit within the site.
16    (d) The fee imposed upon a hazardous waste disposal site
17under this Section shall be the exclusive permit and inspection
18fee applicable to hazardous waste disposal at such site,
19provided that nothing in this Section shall be construed to
20diminish or otherwise affect any fee imposed upon the owner or
21operator of a hazardous waste disposal site by Section 22.2.
22    (e) The Agency shall establish procedures, no later than
23December 1, 1984, relating to the collection of the hazardous
24waste disposal site fees authorized by this Section. Such
25procedures shall include, but not be limited to the time and
26manner of payment of fees to the Agency, which shall be

 

 

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1quarterly, payable at the beginning of each quarter for
2hazardous waste disposal site fees. Annual fees required under
3paragraph (7) of subsection (b) of this Section shall accompany
4the annual report required by Board regulations for the
5calendar year for which the report applies.
6    (f) For purposes of this Section, a hazardous waste
7disposal site consists of one or more of the following
8operational units:
9        (1) a landfill receiving hazardous waste for disposal;
10        (2) a waste pile or surface impoundment, receiving
11    hazardous waste, in which residues which exhibit any of the
12    characteristics of hazardous waste pursuant to Board
13    regulations are reasonably expected to remain after
14    closure;
15        (3) a land treatment facility receiving hazardous
16    waste; or
17        (4) a well injecting hazardous waste.
18    (g) The Agency shall assess a fee for each manifest
19provided by the Agency. For manifests provided on or after
20January 1, 1989 but before July 1, 2003, the fee shall be $1
21per manifest. For manifests provided on or after July 1, 2003,
22the fee shall be $3 per manifest.
23(Source: P.A. 98-78, eff. 7-15-13.)
 
24    Section 135. The Illinois Pesticide Act is amended by
25changing Sections 19.3 and 22.2 as follows:
 

 

 

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1    (415 ILCS 60/19.3)
2    Sec. 19.3. Agrichemical Facility Response Action Program.
3    (a) It is the policy of the State of Illinois that an
4Agrichemical Facility Response Action Program be implemented
5to reduce potential agrichemical pollution and minimize
6environmental degradation risk potential at these sites. In
7this Section, "agrichemical facility" means a site where
8agrichemicals are stored or handled, or both, in preparation
9for end use. "Agrichemical facility" does not include basic
10manufacturing or central distribution sites utilized only for
11wholesale purposes. As used in this Section, "agrichemical"
12means pesticides or commercial fertilizers at an agrichemical
13facility.
14    The program shall provide guidance for assessing the threat
15of soil agrichemical contaminants to groundwater and
16recommending which sites need to establish a voluntary
17corrective action program.
18    The program shall establish appropriate site-specific soil
19cleanup objectives, which shall be based on the potential for
20the agrichemical contaminants to move from the soil to
21groundwater and the potential of the specific soil agrichemical
22contaminants to cause an exceedence of a Class I or Class III
23groundwater quality standard or a health advisory level. The
24Department shall use the information found and procedures
25developed in the Agrichemical Facility Site Contamination

 

 

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1Study or other appropriate physical evidence to establish the
2soil agrichemical contaminant levels of concern to groundwater
3in the various hydrological settings to establish
4site-specific cleanup objectives.
5    No remediation of a site may be recommended unless (i) the
6agrichemical contamination level in the soil exceeds the
7site-specific cleanup objectives or (ii) the agrichemical
8contaminant level in the soil exceeds levels where physical
9evidence and risk evaluation indicates probability of the site
10causing an exceedence of a groundwater quality standard.
11    When a remediation plan must be carried out over a number
12of years due to limited financial resources of the owner or
13operator of the agrichemical facility, those soil agrichemical
14contaminated areas that have the greatest potential to
15adversely impact vulnerable Class I groundwater aquifers and
16adjacent potable water wells shall receive the highest priority
17rating and be remediated first.
18    (b) (Blank). The Agrichemical Facility Response Action
19Program Board ("the Board") is created. The Board members shall
20consist of the following:
21        (1) The Director or the Director's designee.
22        (2) One member who represents pesticide manufacturers.
23        (3) Two members who represent retail agrichemical
24    dealers.
25        (4) One member who represents agrichemical
26    distributors.

 

 

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1        (5) One member who represents active farmers.
2        (6) One member at large.
3    The public members of the Board shall be appointed by the
4Governor for terms of 2 years. Those persons on the Board who
5represent pesticide manufacturers, agrichemical dealers,
6agrichemical distributors, and farmers shall be selected from
7recommendations made by the associations whose membership
8reflects those specific areas of interest. The members of the
9Board shall be appointed within 90 days after the effective
10date of this amendatory Act of 1995. Vacancies on the Board
11shall be filled within 30 days. The Board may fill any
12membership position vacant for a period exceeding 30 days.
13    The members of the Board shall be paid no compensation, but
14shall be reimbursed for their expenses incurred in performing
15their duties. If a civil proceeding is commenced against a
16Board member arising out of an act or omission occurring within
17the scope of the Board member's performance of his or her
18duties under this Section, the State, as provided by rule,
19shall indemnify the Board member for any damages awarded and
20court costs and attorney's fees assessed as part of a final and
21unreversed judgement, or shall pay the judgment, unless the
22court or jury finds that the conduct or inaction that gave rise
23to the claim or cause of action was intentional, wilful or
24wanton misconduct and was not intended to serve or benefit
25interests of the State.
26    The chairperson of the Board shall be selected by the Board

 

 

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1from among the public members.
2    (c) (Blank). The Board has the authority to do the
3following:
4        (1) Cooperate with the Department and review and
5    approve an agrichemical facility remediation program as
6    outlined in the handbook or manual as set forth in
7    subdivision (d)(8) of this Section.
8        (2) Review and give final approval to each agrichemical
9    facility corrective action plan.
10        (3) Approve any changes to an agrichemical facility's
11    corrective action plan that may be necessary.
12        (4) Upon completion of the corrective action plan,
13    recommend to the Department that the site-specific cleanup
14    objectives have been met and that a notice of closure be
15    issued by the Department stating that no further remedial
16    action is required to remedy the past agrichemical
17    contamination.
18        (5) When a soil agrichemical contaminant assessment
19    confirms that remedial action is not required in accordance
20    with the Agrichemical Facility Response Action Program,
21    recommend that a notice of closure be issued by the
22    Department stating that no further remedial action is
23    required to remedy the past agrichemical contamination.
24        (6) Periodically review the Department's
25    administration of the Agrichemical Incident Response Trust
26    Fund and actions taken with respect to the Fund. The Board

 

 

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1    shall also provide advice to the Interagency Committee on
2    Pesticides regarding the proper handling of agrichemical
3    incidents at agrichemical facilities in Illinois.
4    (d) The Director has the authority to do the following:
5        (1) When requested by the owner or operator of an
6    agrichemical facility, may investigate the agrichemical
7    facility site contamination.
8        (2) After completion of the investigation under item
9    subdivision (d)(1) of this subsection Section, recommend
10    to the owner or operator of an agrichemical facility that a
11    voluntary assessment be made of the soil agrichemical
12    contaminant when there is evidence that the evaluation of
13    risk indicates that groundwater could be adversely
14    impacted.
15        (3) Review and make recommendations on any corrective
16    action plan submitted by the owner or operator of an
17    agrichemical facility to the Board for final approval.
18        (4) On approval by the Director Board, issue an order
19    to the owner or operator of an agrichemical facility that
20    has filed a voluntary corrective action plan that the owner
21    or operator may proceed with that plan.
22        (5) Provide remedial project oversight and , monitor
23    remedial work progress, and report to the Board on the
24    status of remediation projects.
25        (6) Provide staff to support program the activities of
26    the Board.

 

 

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1        (7) (Blank). Take appropriate action on the Board's
2    recommendations regarding policy needed to carry out the
3    Board's responsibilities under this Section.
4        (8) Incorporate In cooperation with the Board,
5    incorporate the following into a handbook or manual: the
6    procedures for site assessment; pesticide constituents of
7    concern and associated parameters; guidance on remediation
8    techniques, land application, and corrective action plans;
9    and other information or instructions that the Department
10    may find necessary.
11        (9) Coordinate preventive response actions at
12    agrichemical facilities pursuant to the Groundwater
13    Quality Standards adopted pursuant to Section 8 of the
14    Illinois Groundwater Protection Act to mitigate resource
15    groundwater impairment.
16    Upon completion of the corrective action plan and upon
17recommendation of the Board, the Department shall issue a
18notice of closure stating that site-specific cleanup
19objectives have been met and no further remedial action is
20required to remedy the past agrichemical contamination.
21    When a soil agrichemical contaminant assessment confirms
22that remedial action is not required in accordance with the
23Agrichemical Facility Response Action Program and upon the
24recommendation of the Board, a notice of closure shall be
25issued by the Department stating that no further remedial
26action is required to remedy the past agrichemical

 

 

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1contamination.
2    (e) Upon receipt of notification of an agrichemical
3contaminant in groundwater pursuant to the Groundwater Quality
4Standards, the Department shall evaluate the severity of the
5agrichemical contamination and shall submit to the
6Environmental Protection Agency an informational notice
7characterizing it as follows:
8        (1) An agrichemical contaminant in Class I or Class III
9    groundwater has exceeded the levels of a standard adopted
10    pursuant to the Illinois Groundwater Protection Act or a
11    health advisory established by the Illinois Environmental
12    Protection Agency or the United States Environmental
13    Protection Agency; or
14        (2) An agrichemical has been detected at a level that
15    requires preventive notification pursuant to a standard
16    adopted pursuant to the Illinois Groundwater Protection
17    Act.
18    (f) When agrichemical contamination is characterized as in
19subsection subdivision (e)(1) of this Section, a facility may
20elect to participate in the Agrichemical Facility Response
21Action Program. In these instances, the scope of the corrective
22action plans developed, approved, and completed under this
23program shall be limited to the soil agrichemical contamination
24present at the site unless implementation of the plan is
25coordinated with the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
26as follows:

 

 

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1        (1) Upon receipt of notice of intent to include
2    groundwater in an action by a facility, the Department
3    shall also notify the Illinois Environmental Protection
4    Agency.
5        (2) Upon receipt of the corrective action plan, the
6    Department shall coordinate a joint review of the plan with
7    the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency.
8        (3) The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency may
9    provide a written endorsement of the corrective action
10    plan.
11        (4) The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency may
12    approve a groundwater management zone for a period of 5
13    years after the implementation of the corrective action
14    plan to allow for groundwater impairment mitigation
15    results.
16        (5) (Blank). The Department, in cooperation with the
17    Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, shall recommend
18    a proposed corrective action plan to the Board for final
19    approval to proceed with remediation. The recommendation
20    shall be based on the joint review conducted under
21    subdivision (f)(2) of this Section and the status of any
22    endorsement issued under subdivision (f)(3) of this
23    Section.
24        (6) The Department, in cooperation with the Illinois
25    Environmental Protection Agency, shall provide remedial
26    project oversight, monitor remedial work progress, and

 

 

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1    report to the Board on the status of the remediation
2    project.
3        (7) The Department shall, upon completion of the
4    corrective action plan and recommendation of the Board,
5    issue a notice of closure stating that no further remedial
6    action is required to remedy the past agrichemical
7    contamination.
8    (g) When an owner or operator of an agrichemical facility
9initiates a soil contamination assessment on the owner's or
10operator's own volition and independent of any requirement
11under this Section 19.3, information contained in that
12assessment may be held as confidential information by the owner
13or operator of the facility.
14    (h) Except as otherwise provided by Department rule, on and
15after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 98th
16General Assembly, any Agrichemical Facility Response Action
17Program requirement that may be satisfied by an industrial
18hygienist licensed pursuant to the Industrial Hygienists
19Licensure Act repealed in this amendatory Act may be satisfied
20by a Certified Industrial Hygienist certified by the American
21Board of Industrial Hygiene.
22(Source: P.A. 98-78, eff. 7-15-13.)
 
23    (415 ILCS 60/22.2)  (from Ch. 5, par. 822.2)
24    Sec. 22.2. (a) There is hereby created a trust fund in the
25State Treasury to be known as the Agrichemical Incident

 

 

09800SB3443ham005- 95 -LRB098 15945 OMW 60368 a

1Response Trust Fund. Any funds received by the Director of
2Agriculture from the mandates of Section 13.1 shall be
3deposited with the Treasurer as ex-officio custodian and held
4separate and apart from any public money of this State, with
5accruing interest on the trust funds deposited into the trust
6fund. Disbursement from the fund for purposes as set forth in
7this Section shall be by voucher ordered by the Director and
8paid by a warrant drawn by the State Comptroller and
9countersigned by the State Treasurer. The Director shall order
10disbursements from the Agrichemical Incident Response Trust
11Fund only for payment of the expenses authorized by this Act.
12Monies in this trust fund shall not be subject to appropriation
13by the General Assembly but shall be subject to audit by the
14Auditor General. Should the program be terminated, all
15unobligated funds in the trust fund shall be transferred to a
16trust fund to be used for purposes as originally intended or be
17transferred to the Pesticide Control Fund. Interest earned on
18the Fund shall be deposited in the Fund. Monies in the Fund may
19be used by the Department of Agriculture for the following
20purposes:
21        (1) for payment of costs of response action incurred by
22    owners or operators of agrichemical facilities as provided
23    in Section 22.3 of this Act;
24        (2) for the Department to take emergency action in
25    response to a release of agricultural pesticides from an
26    agrichemical facility that has created an imminent threat

 

 

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1    to public health or the environment;
2        (3) for the costs of administering its activities
3    relative to the Fund as delineated in subsections (b) and
4    (c) of this Section; and
5        (4) for the Department to:
6            (A) (blank); and reimburse members of the
7        Agrichemical Facility Response Action Program Board
8        for their expenses incurred in performing their duties
9        as defined under Section 19.3 of this Act; and
10            (B) administer provide staff to support the
11        activities of the Agrichemical Facility Response
12        Action Program Board.
13        The total annual expenditures from the Fund for these
14    purposes under this paragraph (4) shall not be more than
15    $120,000, and no expenditure from the Fund for these
16    purposes shall be made when the Fund balance becomes less
17    than $750,000.
18    (b) The action undertaken shall be such as may be necessary
19or appropriate to protect human health or the environment.
20    (c) The Director of Agriculture is authorized to enter into
21contracts and agreements as may be necessary to carry out the
22Department's duties under this Section.
23    (d) Neither the State, the Director, nor any State employee
24shall be liable for any damages or injury arising out of or
25resulting from any action taken under this Section.
26    (e) (Blank). On a quarterly basis, the Department shall

 

 

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1advise and consult with the Agrichemical Facility Response
2Action Program Board as to the Department's administration of
3the Fund.
4(Source: P.A. 89-94, eff. 7-6-95.)
 
5    Section 140. The Hazardous Material Emergency Response
6Reimbursement Act is amended by changing Sections 3, 4, and 5
7as follows:
 
8    (430 ILCS 55/3)  (from Ch. 127 1/2, par. 1003)
9    Sec. 3. Definitions. As used in this Act:
10    (a) "Emergency action" means any action taken at or near
11the scene of a hazardous materials emergency incident to
12prevent or minimize harm to human health, to property, or to
13the environments from the unintentional release of a hazardous
14material.
15    (b) "Emergency response agency" means a unit of local
16government, volunteer fire protection organization, or the
17American Red Cross that provides:
18        (1) firefighting services;
19        (2) emergency rescue services;
20        (3) emergency medical services;
21        (4) hazardous materials response teams;
22        (5) civil defense;
23        (6) technical rescue teams; or
24        (7) mass care or assistance to displaced persons.

 

 

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1    (c) "Responsible party" means a person who:
2        (1) owns or has custody of hazardous material that is
3    involved in an incident requiring emergency action by an
4    emergency response agency; or
5        (2) owns or has custody of bulk or non-bulk packaging
6    or a transport vehicle that contains hazardous material
7    that is involved in an incident requiring emergency action
8    by an emergency response agency; and
9        (3) who causes or substantially contributed to the
10    cause of the incident.
11    (d) "Person" means an individual, a corporation, a
12partnership, an unincorporated association, or any unit of
13federal, State or local government.
14    (e) "Annual budget" means the cost to operate an emergency
15response agency excluding personnel costs, which include
16salary, benefits and training expenses; and costs to acquire
17capital equipment including buildings, vehicles and other such
18major capital cost items.
19    (f) "Hazardous material" means a substance or material in a
20quantity and form determined by the United States Department of
21Transportation to be capable of posing an unreasonable risk to
22health and safety or property when transported in commerce.
23    (g) "Fund" means the Fire Prevention Fund "Panel" means
24administrative panel.
25(Source: P.A. 93-159, eff. 1-1-04; 94-96, eff. 1-1-06.)
 

 

 

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1    (430 ILCS 55/4)  (from Ch. 127 1/2, par. 1004)
2    Sec. 4. Establishment. The Emergency Response
3Reimbursement Fund in the State Treasury, hereinafter called
4the Fund, is hereby created. Appropriations shall be made from
5the general revenue fund to the Fund. Monies in the Fund shall
6be used as provided in this Act.
7    The Emergency Response Reimbursement Fund is dissolved as
8of the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 98th
9General Assembly. Any moneys remaining in the fund shall be
10transferred to the Fire Prevention Fund.
11(Source: P.A. 86-972.)
 
12    (430 ILCS 55/5)  (from Ch. 127 1/2, par. 1005)
13    Sec. 5. Reimbursement to agencies.
14    (a) It shall be the duty of the responsible party to
15reimburse, within 60 days after the receipt of a bill for the
16hazardous material emergency incident, the emergency response
17agencies responding to a hazardous material emergency
18incident, and any private contractor responding to the incident
19at the request of an emergency response agency, for the costs
20incurred in the course of providing emergency action.
21    (b) In the event that the emergency response agencies are
22not reimbursed by a responsible party as required under
23subsection (a), monies in the Fund, subject to appropriation,
24shall be used to reimburse the emergency response agencies
25providing emergency action at or near the scene of a hazardous

 

 

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1materials emergency incident subject to the following
2limitations:
3        (1) Cost recovery from the Fund is limited to
4    replacement of expended materials including, but not
5    limited to, specialized firefighting foam, damaged hose or
6    other reasonable and necessary supplies.
7        (2) The applicable cost of supplies must exceed 2% of
8    the emergency response agency's annual budget.
9        (3) A minimum of $500 must have been expended.
10        (4) A maximum of $10,000 may be requested per incident.
11        (5) The response was made to an incident involving
12    hazardous materials facilities such as rolling stock which
13    are not in a terminal and which are not included on the
14    property tax roles for the jurisdiction where the incident
15    occurred.
16    (c) Application for reimbursement from the Fund shall be
17made to the State Fire Marshal or his designee. The State Fire
18Marshal shall, through rulemaking, promulgate a standard form
19for such application. The State Fire Marshal shall adopt rules
20for the administration of this Act.
21    (d) Claims against the Fund shall be reviewed by the
22Illinois Fire Advisory Commission at its normally scheduled
23meetings, as the claims are received. The Commission shall be
24responsible for:
25        (1) reviewing claims made against the Fund and
26    determining reasonable and necessary expenses to be

 

 

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1    reimbursed for an emergency response agency:
2        (2) affirming that the emergency response agency has
3    made a reasonable effort to recover expended costs from
4    involved parties; and
5        (3) advising the State Fire Marshal as to those claims
6    against the Fund which merit reimbursement.
7    (e) The State Fire Marshal shall either accept or reject
8the Commission's recommendations as to a claim's eligibility.
9The eligibility decision of the State Fire Marshal shall be a
10final administrative decision, and may be reviewed as provided
11under the Administrative Review Law.
12(Source: P.A. 93-989, eff. 1-1-05.)
 
13    (430 ILCS 55/7 rep.)
14    Section 145. The Hazardous Material Emergency Response
15Reimbursement Act is amended by repealing Section 7.
 
16    (510 ILCS 15/1 rep.)
17    Section 150. The Animal Gastroenteritis Act is amended by
18repealing Section 1.
 
19    Section 155. The Illinois Pseudorabies Control Act is
20amended by changing Section 5.1 as follows:
 
21    (510 ILCS 90/5.1)  (from Ch. 8, par. 805.1)
22    Sec. 5.1. Pseudorabies Advisory Committee. Upon the

 

 

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1detection of pseudorabies within the State, the The Director of
2Agriculture is authorized to establish within the Department an
3advisory committee to be known as the Pseudorabies Advisory
4Committee. The Committee Such committee shall consist of, but
5not be limited to, representatives of swine producers, general
6swine organizations within the State, licensed veterinarians,
7general farm organizations, auction markets, the packing
8industry and the University of Illinois. Members of the
9Committee shall only be appointed and meet during the timeframe
10of the detection. The Director shall, from time to time,
11consult with the Pseudorabies Advisory Committee on changes in
12the pseudorabies control program.
13    The Director shall appoint a Technical Committee from the
14membership of the Pseudorabies Advisory Committee, which shall
15be comprised of a veterinarian, a swine extension specialist,
16and a pork producer. This committee shall serve as resource
17persons for the technical aspects of the herd plans and may
18advise the Department on procedures to be followed, timetables
19for accomplishing the elimination of infection, assist in
20obtaining cooperation from swine herd owners, and recommend
21adjustments in the approved herd plan as necessary.
22    These Committee members shall be entitled to reimbursement
23of all necessary and actual expenses incurred in the
24performance of their duties.
25(Source: P.A. 89-154, eff. 7-19-95.)
 

 

 

09800SB3443ham005- 103 -LRB098 15945 OMW 60368 a

1    (525 ILCS 25/10 rep.)
2    Section 160. The Illinois Lake Management Program Act is
3amended by repealing Section 10.
 
4    (815 ILCS 325/6 rep.)
5    Section 165. The Recyclable Metal Purchase Registration
6Law is amended by repealing Section 6.
 
7    Section 995. Illinois Compiled Statutes reassignment.
8    The Legislative Reference Bureau shall reassign the
9following Act to the specified location in the Illinois
10Compiled Statutes and file appropriate documents with the Index
11Division of the Office of the Secretary of State in accordance
12with subsection (c) of Section 5.04 of the Legislative
13Reference Bureau Act:
14        Illinois Commission on Volunteerism and Community
15    Service Act, reassigned from 20 ILCS 710/ to 20 ILCS 2330/.
 
16    Section 999. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
17becoming law.".