Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of SB3429
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Full Text of SB3429  100th General Assembly

SB3429 100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY

  
  

 


 
100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2017 and 2018
SB3429

 

Introduced 2/16/2018, by Sen. Jacqueline Y. Collins

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
New Act

    Creates the Administration of Antibiotics to Food-Producing Animals Act. Provides that a medically important antibiotic may be administered to a food-producing animal only if prescribed by a veterinarian licensed under the Veterinary Medicine and Surgery Practice Act of 2004 who has visited the farm operation within the previous 6 months and only if deemed necessary for specified purposes. Provides that a producer may provide a medically important antibiotic to a food-producing animal only for the period necessary to accomplish the specified purposes. Provides that in that case, antibiotics should be used on the smallest number of animals and for the shortest time possible. Provides that the use of medically important antibiotics shall not exceed a duration of 21 days. Provides that a producer shall keep a record of the specific beginning and ending dates for the provision of an antibiotic. Provides that provisions concerning the administration of antibiotics to food-producing animals take effect on January 1, 2020. Requires a producer that operates a large concentrated animal feeding operation, as defined by the United States Environmental Protection Agency, to file an annual report containing specified information in a form and manner required by the Department of Public Health by rule. Provides that the Department may take the actions necessary to prepare to implement the provisions of the Act in advance of the effective date of the other provisions of the Act. Provides that the Attorney General has the exclusive authority to enforce the Act, shall issue a civil penalty of $1,000 for a violation of the Act, and may seek an injunction to prevent a violation of the Act.


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FISCAL NOTE ACT MAY APPLY

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

SB3429LRB100 20725 MJP 36199 b

1    AN ACT concerning health.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
5Administration of Antibiotics to Food-Producing Animals Act.
 
6    Section 5. Findings; purpose.
7    (a) The General Assembly finds and declares that:
8        (1) the World Health Organization has stated that
9    "without urgent, coordinated action by many stakeholders,
10    the world is headed for a post-antibiotic era, in which
11    common infections and minor injuries which have been
12    treatable for decades can once again kill";
13        (2) the United States Food and Drug Administration and
14    the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have stated
15    that there is a definitive link between the routine use of
16    antibiotics on industrial farms and the crisis of
17    antibiotic resistance in humans;
18        (3) the issue of antibiotics overuse, whether on humans
19    or animals, is a significant and urgent human health
20    matter;
21        (4) the World Health Organization recommends "complete
22    restriction of use of all classes of medically important
23    antimicrobials in food-producing animals for prevention of

 

 

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1    infectious diseases that have not yet been clinically
2    diagnosed";
3        (5) approximately 70% of medically important
4    antibiotics sold in the United States are given to
5    food-producing animals, often in a routine manner for
6    promoting growth or to compensate for the effects of
7    unsanitary and overcrowded living conditions;
8        (6) many of the antibiotics provided to food-producing
9    animals are identical to, or from the same family as, drugs
10    used in human medicine to cure serious diseases; therefore,
11    bacterial resistance to these drugs poses a threat to human
12    health because these drugs may not work to treat human
13    disease when needed; and
14        (7) passing this Act is necessary to protect the health
15    and safety of Illinois consumers from antibiotic resistant
16    bacteria spreading through the food supply.
17    (b) The purpose of this Act is to protect public health by
18preserving the effectiveness of antibiotics now and for future
19generations by eliminating the routine use of those important
20medicines in food-producing animals for growth promotion, feed
21efficiency, and prophylaxis, in order to reduce the rise and
22spread of antibiotic resistant bacteria.
 
23    Section 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
24    "Control the spread of a disease or infection" means the
25use of a medically important antibiotic to stop the

 

 

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1transmission of a documented disease or infection present in:
2        (1) a group of animals in contact with each other; or
3        (2) a barn or equivalent animal housing unit.
4    "Department" means the Department of Public Health.
5    "Food-producing animal" means:
6        (1) cattle, swine, or poultry, regardless of whether
7    the specific animal is raised for the purpose of producing
8    food for human consumption; or
9        (2) any type of animal that the Department identifies
10    by rule as livestock typically used to produce food for
11    human consumption.
12    "Producer" means a person or entity that establishes
13management and production standards for the maintenance, care,
14and raising of food-producing animals and that:
15        (1) operates a business raising food-producing animals
16    that are used to produce any product group sold by a
17    grocer; or
18        (2) purchases or otherwise obtains live food-producing
19    animals that it slaughters, or sells for slaughter, for
20    production of any product group sold by a grocer.
21    "Medically important antibiotic" means a drug that is
22composed in whole or in part of a drug from an antimicrobial
23class that is categorized as critically important, highly
24important, or important in the World Health Organization list
25of Critically Important Antimicrobials for Human Medicine (5th
26Revision, 2017), or a subsequent revision or successor document

 

 

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1issued by the World Health Organization.
2    "Prophylaxis" means the administration of a medically
3important antibiotic to an animal or multiple animals in the
4absence of contact with animals with a clinically diagnosed
5disease for the purpose of avoiding illness.
6    "Treat a disease" means administering a medically
7important antibiotic to infected individual animals or
8populations of animals to resolve clinical signs of infection
9or illness.
 
10    Section 15. Administration of antibiotics to
11food-producing animals.
12    (a) This Section applies to the provision of medically
13important antibiotics to food-producing animals on or after
14January 1, 2020.
15    (b) A medically important antibiotic may be administered to
16a food-producing animal only if prescribed by a veterinarian
17licensed under the Veterinary Medicine and Surgery Practice Act
18of 2004 who has visited the farm operation within the previous
196 months and only if deemed necessary:
20        (1) to treat a disease;
21        (2) to control the spread of a disease or infection; or
22        (3) in relation to a surgical or other medical
23    procedure that exposes normally sterile body sites to
24    infection.
25    (c) A producer may provide a medically important antibiotic

 

 

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1to a food-producing animal only for the period necessary to
2accomplish a purpose described in subsection (b). In that case,
3antibiotics should be used on the smallest number of animals
4and for the shortest time possible. The use of medically
5important antibiotics shall not exceed a duration of 21 days.
6In addition to any information described in Section 20, the
7producer shall keep a record of the specific beginning and
8ending dates for the provision of an antibiotic.
9    (d) A medically important antibiotic may not be
10administered to food-producing animals solely for the purpose
11of:
12        (1) promoting weight gain;
13        (2) improving feed efficiency; or
14        (3) prophylaxis.
 
15    Section 20. Annual report.
16    (a) A producer that operates a large concentrated animal
17feeding operation, as defined by the United States
18Environmental Protection Agency, must file an annual report
19under this Section in a form and manner required by the
20Department by rule. If the producer and a contracting entity
21enter into an agreement for the contracting entity to assume
22the annual report filing duty, the contracting entity shall
23include in the annual report the name and address of the
24producer on whose behalf the contracting entity is submitting
25the annual report. If any medically important antibiotics were

 

 

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1provided to food-producing animals during the reporting
2period, then the annual report must contain the following
3information:
4        (1) the location of the facility where the
5    antimicrobial was used;
6        (2) the antimicrobial and class of antimicrobial used;
7        (3) the duration of use, including the number of
8    treatment days;
9        (4) the species and production class of animals
10    receiving the antimicrobial;
11        (5) the number of animals receiving the antimicrobial;
12        (6) the total number of animals raised at the facility,
13    this data is key to understanding variations in use and
14    benchmarking performance;
15        (7) the indication and purpose for which the
16    veterinarian prescribed the antimicrobial;
17        (8) the dosage of the antimicrobial; and
18        (9) any other information required to be kept pursuant
19    to U.S. Food and Drug Administration regulations 21 CFR
20    558.6(b)(3) and 21 CFR 558.6(b)(4).
21    (b) Information provided under paragraph (7) of subsection
22(a) must include whether a medically-important antibiotic was
23provided to a food-producing animal for the purpose of:
24        (1) surgery or a medical procedure;
25        (2) disease control; or
26        (3) disease treatment.

 

 

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1    (c) Information reported under this Section is a public
2record and is not subject to exemption from disclosure. The
3Department may not redact, withhold, or delay the release of
4information reported under this Section.
5    (d) The Department of Public Health shall consult with the
6Department of Agriculture as necessary to fulfill the
7requirements of this Section.
 
8    Section 25. Implementation. The Department may take the
9actions necessary to prepare to implement the provisions of
10this Act in advance of the effective date of the other
11provisions of this Act.
 
12    Section 30. Violations. The Attorney General has exclusive
13authority to enforce the provisions of this Act. Each violation
14of this Act is punishable by a civil penalty not to exceed
15$1,000. The Attorney General may also seek injunctive relief to
16prevent further violations of this Act.