State of Illinois
92nd General Assembly
Legislation

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92_HB0063ham004

 










                                           LRB9201187SMmbam01

 1                     AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 63

 2        AMENDMENT NO.     .  Amend House Bill 63, AS AMENDED,  by
 3    replacing the title with the following:

 4        "AN ACT in relation to natural resources."; and

 5    by  replacing  everything  after the enacting clause with the
 6    following:

 7                             "ARTICLE 5

 8        Section 5-1.  Short title.  This Article may be cited  as
 9    the  Clean  Air  and  Development Law, and references in this
10    Article to "this Act" mean this Article.

11        Section 5-5.  Definitions.  For the purposes of this Act:
12        "Board" means the Clean Air and Development Board.
13        "Department"  means  the  Department  of   Commerce   and
14    Community Affairs.
15        "Fund" means the Clean Air and Development Fund.
16        "Generating  unit"  means  any fossil fuel-fired electric
17    generating plant subject to the provisions of  Subpart  W  of
18    Section 217 of Title 35 of the Illinois Administrative Code.
19        "Project"  means  any  proposal submitted to the Board in
20    response to a request for project proposals that  includes  a
 
                            -2-            LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    technology  that  will  enhance  the  use of Illinois coal in
 2    Illinois while enhancing environmental protection.  "Project"
 3    may include the cost of  transmission  facilities  needed  to
 4    transmit  the  electricity  generated  from a site using such
 5    technology or the costs of coal handling.  These technologies
 6    include but are not limited to, flue gas desulfurization  (or
 7    "scrubbing"),   limestone   injection   multistage   burners,
 8    selective   catalytic   reduction,   selective  non-catalytic
 9    reduction, coal re-burning, staged combustion  (or  "overfire
10    air"),  low-NOx  burners,  ammonia reagent injection systems,
11    repowering, fluidized-bed combustion, integrated gasification
12    combined cycle, coal liquefaction, and coal gasification.
13        "Qualified  personnel"  means  employees   who   install,
14    operate,    and   maintain   generation,   transmission,   or
15    distribution  facilities  within  the  State  and  have   the
16    requisite  knowledge, skills, and competence to perform those
17    functions in a  safe  and  responsible  manner  in  order  to
18    provide safe and reliable service.

19        Section  5-7.   Findings.  The General Assembly finds and
20    declares that:
21             (1)  fossil fuel-fired  electric  generating  plants
22        are  a  significant source of air emissions in this State
23        and have become the subject of a number of important  new
24        studies of their effects on the public health;
25             (2)  existing state and federal policies, that allow
26        older  plants  that  meet  federal  standards  to operate
27        without   meeting   the   more   stringent   requirements
28        applicable to new plants, are  being  questioned  on  the
29        basis  of  their  environmental  impacts and the economic
30        distortions such policies cause in a  deregulated  energy
31        market;
32             (3)  fossil  fuel-fired  electric  generating plants
33        are, or may  be,  affected  by  a  number  of  regulatory
 
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 1        programs,  some  of which are under review or development
 2        on the state and national levels, and to a certain extent
 3        the international level, including the federal acid  rain
 4        program,  ozone,  mercury  and  other hazardous pollutant
 5        control requirements, regional haze, and global warming;
 6             (4)  scientific uncertainty regarding the  formation
 7        of  certain  components  of  regional  haze  and  the air
 8        quality modeling that predict impacts of control measures
 9        requires careful  consideration  of  the  timing  of  the
10        control  of some of the pollutants from these facilities,
11        particularly sulfur dioxides  and  nitrogen  oxides  that
12        each  interact  with  ammonia and other substances in the
13        atmosphere;
14             (5)  the development of energy policies to promote a
15        safe, sufficient, reliable, and affordable energy  supply
16        on the state and national levels is being affected by the
17        on-going  deregulation  of  the power generation industry
18        and the evolving energy markets;
19             (6)  the Governor's formation of an  Energy  Cabinet
20        and  the  development  of a State energy policy calls for
21        actions by the Environmental Protection  Agency  and  the
22        Illinois Pollution Control Board that are in harmony with
23        the   energy   needs  and  policy  of  the  State,  while
24        protecting the public health and the environment;
25             (7)  Illinois coal is an abundant  resource  and  an
26        important component of Illinois' economy whose use should
27        be  encouraged to the greatest extent possible consistent
28        with protecting the public health and the environment;
29             (8)  renewable forms of energy should be promoted as
30        an important element  of  the  energy  and  environmental
31        policies  of the State and that it is a goal of the State
32        that at least 5% of the State's energy production and use
33        be derived from renewable forms of energy by 2010 and  at
34        least 15% from renewable forms of energy by 2020;
 
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 1             (9)  efforts  on  the  state  and federal levels are
 2        underway   to   consider   the   multiple   environmental
 3        regulations affecting electric generating plants in order
 4        to improve the ability of  government  and  the  affected
 5        industry  to engage in effective planning through the use
 6        of multi-pollutant strategies; and
 7             (10)  these  issues,  taken  together,  call  for  a
 8        comprehensive review of the impact of these facilities on
 9        the public health, considering also  the  energy  supply,
10        reliability,  and  costs,  the role of renewable forms of
11        energy,  and  the  developments  in   federal   law   and
12        regulations  that  may affect any state actions, prior to
13        making final decisions in Illinois.

14        Section 5-10.  Clean Air and Development Board.
15        (a)  The Clean Air and Development Board  is  established
16    as  an  advisory  board to the Department. The Board shall be
17    composed  of  the  following  15  voting  members   and   one
18    non-voting   member:  one  member  of  the  General  Assembly
19    appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives, one
20    member of the General  Assembly  appointed  by  the  Minority
21    Leader  of  the  House  of Representatives; one member of the
22    General Assembly appointed by the President  of  the  Senate,
23    one  member of the General Assembly appointed by the Minority
24    Leader of the Senate; one member appointed by  the  Governor;
25    one  member  selected  by  the  International  Brotherhood of
26    Electrical Workers; one member selected by  the  United  Mine
27    Workers; 3 members selected by the Illinois Coal Association;
28    3 members selected by the Illinois Environmental Council; one
29    member  selected  by  the Sierra Club; one member selected by
30    the American Lung  Association;  and  one  non-voting  member
31    selected  by  the  Illinois  Energy Association. The Governor
32    shall select one of the 15 Board members to  serve  as  Chair
33    pending the first election of officers by Board members.
 
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 1        The  member  appointed  by the Governor shall serve for a
 2    term  of  4  years,  unless  otherwise   provided   in   this
 3    subsection.  The initial term of the original appointee shall
 4    expire on January 15, 2005.  The term of the member appointed
 5    by the Governor to fill a  vacancy  created  on  January  15,
 6    2005,  shall  expire  on  January  15, 2009.  The term of the
 7    member appointed by the Governor to fill a vacancy created on
 8    January 15, 2009, shall expire on January 15, 2013 or January
 9    15, 2017, as determined by the Governor.
10        A member appointed by a legislative leader shall serve  a
11    term   of   5   years,  unless  otherwise  provided  in  this
12    subsection.  The initial term of  a  member  appointed  by  a
13    legislative  leader  shall  expire  on January 15, 2006.  The
14    term of a member appointed by a legislative leader to fill  a
15    vacancy  created on January 15, 2006, shall expire on January
16    15,  2011  or  January  15,  2017,  as  determined   by   the
17    legislative leader.
18        The  members  chosen  by the International Brotherhood of
19    Electrical  Workers,  United  Mine  Workers,  Illinois   Coal
20    Association,  Illinois  Environmental  Council,  Sierra Club,
21    American Lung Association, and  Illinois  Energy  Association
22    shall  serve  for  terms  of  6  years.  The initial terms of
23    original appointees shall expire on January  15,  2007.   The
24    term  of  a member chosen by the International Brotherhood of
25    Electrical  Workers,  United  Mine  Workers,  Illinois   Coal
26    Association,  Illinois  Environmental  Council,  Sierra Club,
27    American Lung Association, or Illinois Energy Association  to
28    fill  a  vacancy  created on January 15, 2007 shall expire as
29    follows:  5 on January 15, 2013 and 6 on January 15, 2017, as
30    determined by lot.
31        Board members shall not receive compensation.  All  Board
32    members  shall  be  entitled  to reimbursement for reasonable
33    expenses incurred in the performance of their duties as Board
34    members.
 
                            -6-            LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1        The Board shall meet at least annually or at the call  of
 2    the  Chair  for  a  meeting  of  the  Board.   At any time, a
 3    majority of the Board may petition the Chair for a meeting of
 4    the Board. A quorum shall be defined as a majority  of  those
 5    voting members appointed to the Board.
 6        (b)  The    Board   shall   provide   advice   and   make
 7    recommendations  on  the  following  Department  powers   and
 8    duties:
 9             (1)  To   develop   a   program   to   increase  the
10        utilization of Illinois coal.
11             (2)  To approve projects and funding, if  the  owner
12        of the generating unit receiving the funding agrees to:
13                  (A)  burn    Illinois    coal    to    generate
14             electricity,
15                  (B)  employ  qualified  personnel  to  install,
16             operate,  and  maintain generation, transmission, or
17             distribution facilities within the State, and
18                  (C)  reduce its emissions of sulfur dioxide  or
19             nitrogen oxides or both as described in subdivisions
20             (c)(3) and (c)(4) of Section 5-15 of this Act.
21             (3)  To  cooperate  to  the  fullest extent possible
22        with  State  and  federal   agencies   and   departments,
23        independent  organizations,  and other interested groups,
24        public  and  private,  for  the  purposes  of   promoting
25        Illinois coal resources.
26             (4)  To  submit an annual report to the Governor and
27        the  General  Assembly   outlining   the   progress   and
28        accomplishments  made  in  the  year, providing an annual
29        accounting of funds received and disbursed, and reviewing
30        the status of the program.
31             (5)  To adopt, amend, and repeal rules, regulations,
32        and bylaws governing the Board's organization and conduct
33        of business.
34             (6)  To   recommend   the   authorization   of   the
 
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 1        expenditure  of  moneys  for   coal   mining   and   coal
 2        development  projects  from the Clean Air and Development
 3        Fund.  The  expenditures  shall  be  used   to   fund   a
 4        recommended  amount  of  up  to  50%  of  the  costs of a
 5        proposed project.  However, the  Board  may  exceed  this
 6        amount if the merits of the project are determined by the
 7        Board  to  warrant  additional funding and the project is
 8        approved by a two-thirds vote of  a  quorum.   All  other
 9        projects  shall  be approved by vote of a simple majority
10        of a quorum.  The Board may use  grants,  loans,  or  any
11        other  financial  mechanism or any combination thereof to
12        fund such proposed projects consistent with this Act.
13             (7)  To develop strategies and to  propose  policies
14        to  promote  environmentally responsible uses of Illinois
15        coal for meeting electric power supply  requirements  and
16        for other purposes.
17             (8)  To   develop  and  propose  strategies  to  the
18        Illinois Environmental Protection Agency for inclusion in
19        the State implementation plan  for  nitrogen  oxide  that
20        would  allow  the transfer of ozone season nitrogen oxide
21        credits from the transportation and area  source  sectors
22        of  the  Illinois  SIP  Call  NOx  budget to the electric
23        generating unit sector for the purpose of offsetting  any
24        nitrogen  oxide  emission  increases  associated  with  a
25        funded project.
26             (9)  The   Board   may   consider  using  stockpiled
27        emission credits or the  value  of  those  credits  as  a
28        factor in considering proposed projects.
29             (10)  Projects  on  which  construction  had not yet
30        commenced prior to January 1, 2001,  and  that  otherwise
31        qualify,  shall  be eligible for funding assistance under
32        this Act.

33        Section  5-15.   Board  evaluation  and   recommendations
 
                            -8-            LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    concerning project proposals.
 2        (a)  The  Board shall evaluate project proposals based on
 3    the following primary criteria:
 4             (1)  Incremental increase or retention  in  tons  of
 5        Illinois  coal  that would be used over the proposed term
 6        of the proposed project.
 7             (2)  Incremental tons of sulfur dioxide  that  would
 8        be  reduced  over  the  proposed  term  of  the  proposed
 9        project.
10             (3)  Amount of funding required from the Fund.
11        (b)  The  primary  criteria shall be used by the Board to
12    prioritize  the  proposed  projects.   Both  the  incremental
13    increase  or  retention  in  Illinois  coal   use   and   the
14    incremental  reduction  of  sulfur dioxide emissions over the
15    term of the proposed project shall be  divided  by  requested
16    funding  amount.  The Board shall use the resultant values to
17    rank the proposals.
18             (1)  Projects  shall  be  initially   ranked,   from
19        highest  to  lowest,  based on their ratio of incremental
20        increase or retention of Illinois coal  use  per  million
21        dollars   expended   from  the  Fund  and  the  ratio  of
22        incremental tons of sulfur dioxide reduction per  million
23        dollars expended from the Fund.
24             (2)  The  ratios of both the incremental increase or
25        retention of Illinois coal use and  incremental  tons  of
26        sulfur  dioxide reduced per million dollars expended from
27        the Fund shall be used in a bi-axial matrix.  The  matrix
28        shall  be  divided into at least 16 linearly proportional
29        quadrants.   Those  projects  that  are  plotted  in  the
30        quadrants farthest from the origin  of  the  matrix  will
31        receive the highest overall rankings.
32        (c)  The Board shall consider secondary criteria prior to
33    making   its   recommendations   to  the  Department.   These
34    secondary criteria shall be used to amend the overall project
 
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 1    rankings.  The secondary criteria may include the following:
 2             (1)  The incremental tons of  nitrogen  oxides  that
 3        will be reduced over the proposed term of the project.
 4             (2)  The  incremental  tons of nitrogen oxides to be
 5        reduced over the proposed term of the project divided  by
 6        the requested funding from the Fund.
 7             (3)  Whether  the  proposed  project  will result in
 8        that unit's annual average sulfur dioxide  emission  rate
 9        being  below  the  proposing company's most recent annual
10        average sulfur dioxide emission rate  of  its  coal-fired
11        units  as  reported  in  the  United States Environmental
12        Protection Agency's acid rain emissions database.
13             (4)  Whether the proposed  project  will  result  in
14        that  unit's  annual average nitrogen oxide emission rate
15        being below the proposing company's  most  recent  annual
16        average  nitrogen  oxide  emission  rate for similar type
17        coal-fired boilers (i.e.  tangential  boiler,  wall-fired
18        boiler,  or  cyclone  boiler)  as  reported in the United
19        States  Environmental  Protection  Agency's   acid   rain
20        emissions database.
21             (5)  The   technical  feasibility  of  the  proposed
22        project.
23        (d)  The Board shall provide its overall project rankings
24    to the Department within 6 months after it issues  a  request
25    for  project proposals.  Requests for proposed projects shall
26    be issued by the Board a minimum of twice per year.

27        Section  5-20.    Department   consideration   of   Board
28    recommendations; notice to Board in cases of disagreement.
29        (a)  The    Department   shall   consider   the   Board's
30    recommendations in making  its  decision  to  distribute  the
31    grant  moneys provided for in this Act.  The Department shall
32    make its decision to distribute  the  grant  moneys  for  the
33    project   within   6   months   after   the  board's  written
 
                            -10-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    recommendation.
 2        (b)  If the Department decides to deviate from any of the
 3    Board's recommendations, then the Department shall  give  the
 4    Board  written  notice  and  a copy of this decision, with an
 5    explanation of the reasons causing  the  deviation  from  the
 6    Board's recommendations, within 15 days after issuance of the
 7    Department  decision.   Forty-five  days from the issuance of
 8    the Department decision, a public hearing shall  be  convened
 9    at  which  the  Director  of  the  Department  or  his or her
10    designee shall appear and testify before the Board to explain
11    the  Department's  decision  to  deviate  from  the   Board's
12    recommendations.   The  Department  shall  not proceed with a
13    distribution of grant funds under this Act  until  the  above
14    notice  is  provided  to  the  Board  and a public hearing is
15    conducted as described in this Section.

16        Section 5-25.  Rules. The  Department  is  authorized  to
17    promulgate rules to implement the provisions of this Act.

18        Section   5-30.  Bonds.    The   State   of  Illinois  is
19    authorized to issue, sell, and provide for the retirement  of
20    general  obligation  bonds  of  the  State of Illinois in the
21    aggregate  principal  amount  of  $500,000,000,   hereinafter
22    called "Bonds", for the purposes consistent with this Act.

23        Section  5-35.  Bond proceeds.  The proceeds of the bonds
24    shall be deposited into a separate fund known  as  the  Clean
25    Air and Development Fund, which is hereby created.

26        Section  5-40.  Expenditure  of Funds.  At all times, the
27    proceeds from the sale of Bonds are subject to  appropriation
28    by  the  General Assembly and may be expended in such amounts
29    and at such times as the Department  may  deem  necessary  or
30    desirable for the purposes of this Act.
 
                            -11-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1                             ARTICLE 10

 2        Section 10-1.  Short title.  This Article may be cited as
 3    the  Empower  Illinois Law, and references in this Article to
 4    "this Act" mean this Article.

 5        Section 10-5.  Purpose.  The purpose of this  Act  is  to
 6    use abundant coal reserves to turn Southern Illinois into the
 7    State's  "power  plant",  providing power for Chicago and its
 8    suburbs,  and  reducing   the   need   for   peaker   plants.
 9    Implementation  of  this Act will provide good paying jobs in
10    mining, construction,  power  generation,  and  trucking  for
11    thousands  of Southern Illinois residents.  At the same time,
12    implementation of this Act will secure Illinois'  power  base
13    and  enhance  economic  development  efforts  in Illinois for
14    generations to come.

15        Section 10-10.  Empower Illinois  Commission.   There  is
16    created the Empower Illinois Commission to study the problems
17    related  to  reliable  energy  production  in  Illinois.  The
18    Commission shall be  appointed  by  the  Governor  and  shall
19    consist of all members of the Governor's Energy Cabinet.  The
20    members  of  the  Commission shall serve without compensation
21    but shall be reimbursed for their  reasonable  and  necessary
22    expenses.   The  Commission shall consider the most effective
23    way to use Illinois coal to resolve the energy issues  facing
24    the  State.   The  Commission shall issue a report containing
25    its recommendations to the Governor and the General  Assembly
26    on or before January 30, 2002.

27        Section  10-15.   Single  point  of  review process.  The
28    Department  of  Natural  Resources  shall  develop,  in   its
29    Division  of  Mines  and  Minerals,  a single point of review
30    process for entities interested in building mine-mouth  power
 
                            -12-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    plants  and  related  power  transmission  lines.  The single
 2    point of  review  process  must  coordinate  reviews  by  all
 3    involved State agencies and federal agencies.  The Department
 4    of Natural Resources must make the arrangements necessary for
 5    prospective  applicants  to obtain all approvals necessary to
 6    build a mine-mouth power plant and related power transmission
 7    lines  through  the  Department's  single  point  of   review
 8    process.

 9                             ARTICLE 15

10        Section 15-905.  The Department of Commerce and Community
11    Affairs  Law  of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is
12    amended by adding Section 605-331 as follows:

13        (20 ILCS 605/605-331 new)
14        Sec. 605-331.  Mine-mouth power plants and related  power
15    transmission   lines;  definitions.   For  purposes  of  this
16    Section, "mine-mouth power plant" means  a  coal-fired  power
17    plant  sited  adjacent  to  a  coal mine.  The Department, by
18    rule, must establish  the  standards  that  must  be  met  to
19    qualify  as a related power transmission line for purposes of
20    the Clean Air and Development Law, the Empower Illinois  Law,
21    and the amendatory provisions of this Act of the 92nd General
22    Assembly.

23        Section  15-910.   The  Illinois  Enterprise  Zone Act is
24    amended by changing Section 5.3 as follows:

25        (20 ILCS 655/5.3) (from Ch. 67 1/2, par. 608)
26        Sec. 5.3.  Certification of Enterprise  Zones;  Effective
27    date.
28        (a)  Approval  of  designated  Enterprise  Zones shall be
29    made by the Department by certification  of  the  designating
 
                            -13-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    ordinance.  The Department shall promptly issue a certificate
 2    for each Enterprise Zone upon its approval.  The  certificate
 3    shall be signed by the Director of the Department, shall make
 4    specific  reference to the designating ordinance, which shall
 5    be attached thereto, and shall be filed in the office of  the
 6    Secretary  of  State. A certified copy of the Enterprise Zone
 7    Certificate,  or  a  duplicate  original  thereof,  shall  be
 8    recorded in the office of recorder of deeds of the county  in
 9    which the Enterprise Zone lies.
10        (b)  An  Enterprise  Zone  shall  be  effective  upon its
11    certification. The Department shall transmit a  copy  of  the
12    certification  to  the  Department  of  Revenue,  and  to the
13    designating municipality or county.
14        Upon certification of an Enterprise Zone, the  terms  and
15    provisions  of  the designating ordinance shall be in effect,
16    and may not be amended or repealed except in accordance  with
17    Section 5.4.
18        (c)  An  Enterprise  Zone  shall  be  in  effect  for  30
19    calendar  years, or for a lesser number of years specified in
20    the certified designating ordinance. Enterprise  Zones  shall
21    terminate  at  midnight  of December 31 of the final calendar
22    year of the certified term, except  as  provided  in  Section
23    5.4.   In Vermilion County, however, an enterprise zone shall
24    be in effect for 30 calendar years or for a lesser number  of
25    years  specified in the certified designating ordinance.  The
26    Whiteside County/Carroll  County  Enterprise  Zone,  however,
27    solely with respect to industrial purposes and uses, shall be
28    in  effect  for  30  calendar years or for a lesser number of
29    years specified in the certified designating  ordinance.
30        (d)  No more than 12 Enterprise Zones may be certified by
31    the Department  in  calendar  year  1984,  no  more  than  12
32    Enterprise  Zones  may  be  certified  by  the  Department in
33    calendar year 1985, no more than 13 Enterprise Zones  may  be
34    certified  by  the  Department in calendar year 1986, no more
 
                            -14-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    than 15 Enterprise Zones may be certified by  the  Department
 2    in  calendar  year 1987, and no more than 20 Enterprise Zones
 3    may be certified by the Department in calendar year 1990.  In
 4    other calendar years, no more than 13 Enterprise Zones may be
 5    certified   by   the  Department.  The  Department  may  also
 6    designate up to 8 additional  Enterprise  Zones  outside  the
 7    regular   application  cycle  if  warranted  by  the  extreme
 8    economic circumstances as determined by the Department.   The
 9    Department  may also designate one additional Enterprise Zone
10    outside  the  regular  application  cycle  if   an   aircraft
11    manufacturer  agrees  to  locate  an  aircraft  manufacturing
12    facility in the proposed Enterprise Zone.  The Department may
13    also  designate  12  additional  Enterprise Zones outside the
14    regular application cycle for the construction of  mine-mouth
15    power  plants (coal-fired power plants sited adjacent to coal
16    mines).  The Department shall establish by rule the  criteria
17    for  eligibility  for  certification  of  the  12  additional
18    Enterprise  Zones  authorized  by  this amendatory Act of the
19    92nd General Assembly. Notwithstanding any other provision of
20    this Act, no more than 89 Enterprise Zones may  be  certified
21    by  the  Department for the 10 calendar years commencing with
22    1983. The 7 additional Enterprise Zones authorized by  Public
23    Act   86-15   shall   not   lie   within   municipalities  or
24    unincorporated areas of counties that abut or are  contiguous
25    to  Enterprise Zones certified pursuant to this Section prior
26    to  June  30,  1989.   The  7  additional  Enterprise   Zones
27    (excluding  the  additional  Enterprise  Zone  which  may  be
28    designated  outside the regular application cycle) authorized
29    by Public Act 86-1030 shall not lie within municipalities  or
30    unincorporated  areas of counties that abut or are contiguous
31    to Enterprise Zones certified pursuant to this Section  prior
32    to  February  28,  1990. In any calendar year, the Department
33    may not certify more than 3 Zones  located  within  the  same
34    municipality.  The Department may certify Enterprise Zones in
 
                            -15-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    each of the 10  calendar  years  commencing  with  1983.  The
 2    Department may not certify more than a total of 18 Enterprise
 3    Zones   located   within  the  same  county  (whether  within
 4    municipalities or within unincorporated territory) for the 10
 5    calendar  years  commencing  with   1983.   Thereafter,   the
 6    Department  may  not certify any additional Enterprise Zones,
 7    but  may  amend  and  rescind  certifications   of   existing
 8    Enterprise Zones in accordance with Section 5.4.
 9        (e)  Notwithstanding  any  other provision of law, if (i)
10    the county board of any county in which  a  current  military
11    base  is located, in part or in whole, or in which a military
12    base that has been closed within 20 years  of  the  effective
13    date of this amendatory Act of 1998 is located, in part or in
14    whole,  adopts  a  designating  ordinance  in accordance with
15    Section 5 of this Act to designate the military base in  that
16    county  as an enterprise zone and (ii) the property otherwise
17    meets the qualifications for an enterprise zone as prescribed
18    in Section 4 of this Act, then the Department may certify the
19    designating ordinance or ordinances, as the case may be.
20    (Source: P.A. 90-657, eff.  7-30-98;  91-567,  eff.  8-14-99;
21    91-937, eff. 1-11-01; revised 1-15-01.)

22        Section 15-915.  The Renewable Energy, Energy Efficiency,
23    and  Coal  Resources  Development  Law  of 1997 is amended by
24    changing Section 6-3 as follows:

25        (20 ILCS 687/6-3)
26        (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 16, 2007)
27        Sec. 6-3. Renewable energy resources program.
28        (a)  The Department of Commerce and Community Affairs, to
29    be called the "Department" hereinafter  in  this  Law,  shall
30    administer  the Renewable Energy Resources Program to provide
31    grants, loans, and other incentives to foster  investment  in
32    and the development and use of renewable energy resources.
 
                            -16-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1        (b)  The  Department shall establish eligibility criteria
 2    for grants, loans, and other incentives to foster  investment
 3    in and the development and use of renewable energy resources.
 4    These  criteria  shall  be  reviewed annually and adjusted as
 5    necessary. The criteria should promote the goal of  fostering
 6    investment  in  and  the development and use, in Illinois, of
 7    renewable energy resources.
 8        (c)  The Department shall accept applications for grants,
 9    loans, and other incentives to foster investment in  and  the
10    development and use of renewable energy resources.
11        (d)  To   the   extent   that  funds  are  available  and
12    appropriated, the Department shall provide grants, loans, and
13    other  incentives  to  applicants  that  meet  the   criteria
14    specified by the Department.
15        (e)  The  Department shall conduct an annual study on the
16    use  and  availability  of  renewable  energy  resources   in
17    Illinois.  Each year, the Department shall submit a report on
18    the study to the General Assembly. This report shall  include
19    suggestions   for   legislation   which  will  encourage  the
20    development and use of renewable energy resources.
21        (f)  As used in this Law,  "renewable  energy  resources"
22    includes energy from wind, solar thermal energy, photovoltaic
23    cells and panels, dedicated crops grown for energy production
24    and  organic  waste biomass, hydropower that does not involve
25    new construction or significant expansion of hydropower dams,
26    and  other  such  alternative  sources   of   environmentally
27    preferable  energy.  "Renewable  energy  resources"  does not
28    include, however, energy from the  incineration,  burning  or
29    heating  of  waste  wood,  tires, garbage, general household,
30    institutional and commercial waste, industrial  lunchroom  or
31    office  waste, landscape waste, or construction or demolition
32    debris.
33        (g)  The Department shall establish a  pilot  project  to
34    fund  a  biomass-to-fuels  research facility in Illinois that
 
                            -17-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    uses agricultural feedstocks  and  advances  technologies  to
 2    develop   a  new  environmentally  friendly  and  sustainable
 3    industry.  The Clean Air and Development Board, created under
 4    the Clean Air and Development Law,  shall  recommend  to  the
 5    Department a site for the facility.
 6        (h)  There  is  created  the Energy Efficiency Investment
 7    Fund  as  a  special  fund  in  the  State  Treasury,  to  be
 8    administered by the Department to support the development  of
 9    technologies for wind, biomass, and solar power in Illinois.
10    The  Clean Air and Development Board, created under the Clean
11    Air and Development Law,  shall  recommend  projects  to  the
12    Department  for  funding.   The Department may accept private
13    and public funds, including federal funds, for  deposit  into
14    the Fund.
15    (Source: P.A. 90-561, eff. 12-16-97.)

16        Section 15-920.  The Illinois Coal and Energy Development
17    Bond Act is amended by changing Section 6 as follows:

18        (20 ILCS 1110/6) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 4106)
19        Sec. 6.  The Department of Commerce and Community Affairs
20    is  authorized to use $120,000,000 for the purposes specified
21    in this Act.  These funds shall be expended only for a  grant
22    to  the owner of a generating station located in Illinois and
23    having  at  least  three  coal-fired  generating  units  with
24    accredited summer capacity greater than 500 megawatts each at
25    such generating station as specifically  authorized  by  this
26    paragraph.   Notwithstanding  any  of the other provisions of
27    this Act, in considering  the  approval  of  projects  to  be
28    funded  under  this  Act,  the  Department  of  Commerce  and
29    Community   Affairs   shall  give  special  consideration  to
30    projects which  are  designed  to  remove  sulfur  and  other
31    pollutants in the preparation and utilization of coal, and in
32    the  use  and operation of electric utility generating plants
 
                            -18-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    and industrial facilities  which  utilize  Illinois  coal  as
 2    their primary source of fuel.  The Department of Commerce and
 3    Community  Affairs  is directed to enter into a contract with
 4    the owner of a generating station  located  in  Illinois  and
 5    having  at  least  three  coal-fired  generating  units  with
 6    accredited  summer capability greater than 500 megawatts each
 7    at such generating station for a grant of $35,000,000  to  be
 8    made by the State of Illinois to such owner to be used to pay
 9    costs  of  designing, acquiring, constructing, installing and
10    testing facilities to reduce sulfur dioxide emissions at  one
11    such   generating  unit  to  allow  that  unit  to  meet  the
12    requirements of the Federal Clean Air Act Amendments of  1990
13    (P.L. 101-549) while continuing to use coal mined in Illinois
14    as its source of fuel.
15    (Source: P.A. 91-583, eff. 1-1-00.)

16        Section   15-925.    The   Illinois  Development  Finance
17    Authority Act is amended by changing  Section  7  and  adding
18    Sections  7.90,  7.91,  7.92,  7.93,  7.94, 7.95, 7.96, 7.97,
19    7.98, and 7.99 as follows:

20        (20 ILCS 3505/7) (from Ch. 48, par. 850.07)
21        Sec. 7.  In addition to the powers  otherwise  authorized
22    by  law  and  in  addition to the foregoing general corporate
23    powers,  the  Authority  shall  also   have   the   following
24    additional  specific powers to be exercised in furtherance of
25    the purposes of this Act.
26        (a)  The Authority shall have power (i) to accept grants,
27    loans or appropriations from the Federal  government  or  the
28    State,  or  any agency or instrumentality thereof, to be used
29    for the operating expenses  of  the  Authority,  or  for  any
30    purposes  of  the  Authority,  including the making of direct
31    loans of such funds with respect to  projects,  and  (ii)  to
32    enter  into  any agreement with the Federal government or the
 
                            -19-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    State,  or  any  agency  or   instrumentality   thereof,   in
 2    relationship to such grants, loans or appropriations.
 3        (b)  The  Authority shall have power to procure and enter
 4    into contracts  for  any  type  of  insurance  and  indemnity
 5    agreements  covering  loss  or  damage  to  property from any
 6    cause, including loss of use and occupancy, or  covering  any
 7    other insurable risk.
 8        (c)  The  Authority  shall  have  the continuing power to
 9    issue bonds for its corporate  purposes  including,  but  not
10    limited  to,  (i)  the  purpose  of developing, constructing,
11    acquiring,  improving  or   financing   projects,   including
12    industrial projects established by business entities locating
13    or expanding property in an Enterprise Zone created under the
14    provisions  of  the  Illinois  Enterprise  Zone Act, (ii) the
15    purpose of acquiring qualified securities in an enterprise as
16    defined  in  this  Act  and  entering  into  venture  capital
17    agreements with businesses locating or  expanding  within  an
18    Enterprise  Zone,  and  acquiring  and improving any property
19    necessary and  useful  in  connection  therewith,  (iii)  the
20    purposes  of  the Employee Ownership Assistance Act, (iv) the
21    purpose  of  acquiring  bonds  issued  by  units   of   local
22    government as provided in Sections 7.50  through 7.61 of this
23    Act,  (v) for financing the costs of the production of motion
24    pictures, and (vi) with the written approval of the Governor,
25    the purpose of implementation  of  a  financially  distressed
26    city  assistance  program under Sections 7.80 through 7.87 of
27    this Act, and (vii) for the purpose of the implementation  of
28    the  loan  program  under  Sections 7.90 through 7.99 of this
29    Act.  Bonds may be issued by the Authority  in  one  or  more
30    series and may provide for the payment of any interest deemed
31    necessary  on  such  bonds,  of the costs of issuance of such
32    bonds, of any premium on any insurance, or of the cost of any
33    guarantees, letters of credit or other similar documents, may
34    provide for the funding of any reserves deemed  necessary  in
 
                            -20-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    connection with such bonds, and may provide for the refunding
 2    or  advance  refunding  of  any  bonds or for accounts deemed
 3    necessary in connection with any purpose  of  the  Authority.
 4    The  bonds may bear interest payable at any time or times and
 5    at any rate or rates, notwithstanding any other provision  of
 6    law   to  the  contrary,  and  such  rate  or  rates  may  be
 7    established by an index or formula which may  be  implemented
 8    or  established  by persons appointed or retained therefor by
 9    the Authority, or may bear no interest or may  bear  interest
10    payable at maturity or upon redemption prior to maturity, may
11    bear such date or dates, may be payable at such time or times
12    and  at such place or places, may mature at any time or times
13    not later than 40 years from the date  of  issuance,  may  be
14    sold  at  public or private sale at such time or times and at
15    such price  or  prices,  may  be  secured  by  such  pledges,
16    reserves,  guarantees, letters of credit, insurance contracts
17    or other similar credit support or liquidity instruments, may
18    be executed in such manner,  may  be  subject  to  redemption
19    prior  to  maturity,  may provide for the registration of the
20    bonds, and may be subject to such other terms and  conditions
21    all  as  may  be  provided  by  the  resolution  or indenture
22    authorizing the  issuance  of  such  bonds.   The  holder  or
23    holders  of any bonds issued by the Authority may bring suits
24    at law or proceedings in equity to compel the performance and
25    observance by any person or by the Authority or  any  of  its
26    agents or employees of any contract or covenant made with the
27    holders  of  such  bonds  and  to  compel  such person or the
28    Authority and any of its agents or employees to  perform  any
29    duties  required  to  be  performed  for  the  benefit of the
30    holders of any such bonds by the provision of the  resolution
31    authorizing  their issuance, and to enjoin such person or the
32    Authority and any of its agents or employees from taking  any
33    action in conflict with any such contract or covenant.
34        Notwithstanding  the form and tenor of any such bonds and
 
                            -21-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    in the absence of any express recital  on  the  face  thereof
 2    that it is non-negotiable, all such bonds shall be negotiable
 3    instruments.  Pending  the  preparation  and execution of any
 4    such bonds, temporary bonds may be issued as provided by  the
 5    resolution.
 6        The  bonds  shall be sold by the Authority in such manner
 7    as it shall determine.
 8        The bonds may be secured as provided in  the  authorizing
 9    resolution  by  the  receipts,  revenues,  income  and  other
10    available  funds  of  the Authority by any amounts derived by
11    the Authority from the loan agreement or lease agreement with
12    respect to the project or projects.  The Authority may  grant
13    a  specific  pledge  or assignment of and lien on or security
14    interest in such rights, revenues, income, or amounts and may
15    grant a specific pledge or  assignment  of  and  lien  on  or
16    security   interest   in  any  reserves,  funds  or  accounts
17    established in the resolution  authorizing  the  issuance  of
18    bonds.    Any  such  pledge,  assignment,  lien  or  security
19    interest  for  the  benefit of the holders of the Authority's
20    bonds shall be valid and binding from the time the bonds  are
21    issued  without  any  physical  delivery  or further act, and
22    shall be valid and binding as against and prior to the claims
23    of all other parties having claims against the  Authority  or
24    any  other  person  irrespective of whether the other parties
25    have notice of  the  pledge,  assignment,  lien  or  security
26    interest.   As  evidence of such pledge, assignment, lien and
27    security interest, the Authority may execute  and  deliver  a
28    mortgage, trust agreement, indenture or security agreement or
29    an assignment thereof.
30        A  remedy  for  any breach or default of the terms of any
31    such  agreement  by  the  Authority  may   be   by   mandamus
32    proceedings  in any court of competent jurisdiction to compel
33    the performance and compliance therewith, but  the  agreement
34    may  prescribe  by whom or on whose behalf such action may be
 
                            -22-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    instituted.
 2        It is expressly understood that the  Authority  may,  but
 3    need  not, acquire title to any project with respect to which
 4    it exercises its authority.
 5        (d)  With respect to the powers granted by this Act,  the
 6    Authority  may  adopt  rules  and regulations prescribing the
 7    procedures by which persons may apply  for  assistance  under
 8    this Act.
 9        Nothing herein shall be deemed to preclude the Authority,
10    prior   to   the  filing  of  any  formal  application,  from
11    conducting preliminary discussions  and  investigations  with
12    respect to the subject matter of any prospective application.
13        (e)  The   Authority  shall  have  power  to  acquire  by
14    purchase, lease, gift or otherwise  any  property  or  rights
15    therein  from  any  person  useful  for its purposes, whether
16    improved for the purposes  of  any  prospective  project,  or
17    unimproved.  The  Authority  may  also accept any donation of
18    funds for its purposes from any such  source.  The  Authority
19    shall  have  no  independent  power  of  condemnation but may
20    acquire  any  property  or  rights  therein   obtained   upon
21    condemnation  by  any other authority, governmental entity or
22    unit of local government with such power.
23        (f)  The Authority shall have power to develop, construct
24    and improve  either  under  its  own  direction,  or  through
25    collaboration  with  any  approved  applicant,  or to acquire
26    through purchase or otherwise, any project,  using  for  such
27    purpose  the  proceeds  derived from the sale of its bonds or
28    from governmental loans or grants, and to hold title  in  the
29    name of the Authority to such projects.
30        (g)  The  Authority shall have power to lease pursuant to
31    a lease agreement any project so developed and constructed or
32    acquired to the approved tenant on such terms and  conditions
33    as may be appropriate to further the purposes of this Act and
34    to  maintain  the credit of the Authority. Any such lease may
 
                            -23-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    provide for either the Authority or the  approved  tenant  to
 2    assume   initially,  in  whole  or  in  part,  the  costs  of
 3    maintenance, repair and  improvements  during  the  leasehold
 4    period. In no case, however, shall the total rentals from any
 5    project during any initial leasehold period or the total loan
 6    repayments to be made pursuant to any loan agreement, be less
 7    than  an  amount  necessary to return over such lease or loan
 8    period  (1)  all  costs  incurred  in  connection  with   the
 9    development,  construction, acquisition or improvement of the
10    project and for repair, maintenance and improvements  thereto
11    during  the  period  of the lease or loan; provided, however,
12    that the rentals or loan repayments need  not  include  costs
13    met through the use of funds other than those obtained by the
14    Authority  through  the issuance of its bonds or governmental
15    loans; (2) a reasonable percentage additive to be agreed upon
16    by the Authority and  the  borrower  or  tenant  to  cover  a
17    properly   allocable   portion  of  the  Authority's  general
18    expenses,  including,  but  not  limited  to,  administrative
19    expenses, salaries and general insurance, and (3)  an  amount
20    sufficient  to  pay  when  due all principal of, interest and
21    premium, if any on, any bonds issued by  the  Authority  with
22    respect to the project.
23        The  portion of total rentals payable under clause (3) of
24    this subsection  (g)  shall  be  deposited  in  such  special
25    accounts,   including   all   sinking  fund,  acquisition  or
26    construction funds, debt service and other funds as  provided
27    by  any  resolution,  mortgage  or  trust  agreement  of  the
28    Authority pursuant to which any bond is issued.
29        (h)  The Authority has the power, upon the termination of
30    any  leasehold  period of any project, to sell or lease for a
31    further  term  or  terms  such  project  on  such  terms  and
32    conditions  as  the  Authority  shall  deem  reasonable   and
33    consistent  with  the  purposes  of the Act. The net proceeds
34    from all such sales and the  revenues  or  income  from  such
 
                            -24-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    leases  shall  be  used  to  satisfy  any indebtedness of the
 2    Authority with respect to such project and any balance may be
 3    used to pay any expenses of the Authority or be used for  the
 4    further development, construction, acquisition or improvement
 5    of projects.
 6        In  the event any project is vacated by a tenant prior to
 7    the  termination  of  the  initial  leasehold   period,   the
 8    Authority  shall  sell or lease the facilities of the project
 9    on the most advantageous terms available. The net proceeds of
10    any such disposition shall be treated in the same  manner  as
11    the proceeds from sales or the revenues or income from leases
12    subsequent  to  the  termination  of  any  initial  leasehold
13    period.
14        (i)  The  Authority shall have the power to make loans to
15    persons to finance a project, to enter into  loan  agreements
16    with  respect  thereto, and to accept guarantees from persons
17    of its loans or the resultant evidences of obligations to the
18    Authority.
19        (j)  The Authority may fix, determine, charge and collect
20    any premiums, fees, charges, costs and  expenses,  including,
21    without  limitation,  any  application fees, commitment fees,
22    program fees, financing charges or publication fees from  any
23    person in connection with its activities under this Act.
24        (k)  In  addition  to  the  funds established as provided
25    herein, the Authority shall have  the  power  to  create  and
26    establish such reserve funds and accounts as may be necessary
27    or desirable to accomplish its purposes under this Act and to
28    deposit its available monies into the funds and accounts.
29        (l)  At  the request of the governing body of any unit of
30    local government, the Authority is authorized to market  such
31    local  government's  industrial  revenue  bond  offerings  by
32    preparing  bond issues for sale, advertising for sealed bids,
33    receiving bids at its offices, making the award to the bidder
34    that  offers  the  most  favorable  terms  or  arranging  for
 
                            -25-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    negotiated placements or underwritings  of  such  securities.
 2    The  Authority  may,  at its discretion, offer for concurrent
 3    sale  the  industrial  revenue   bonds   of   several   local
 4    governments.  Sales  by  the  Authority of industrial revenue
 5    bonds  under  this  Section  shall  in  no  way  imply  State
 6    guarantee of such debt issue. The Authority may require  such
 7    financial information from participating local governments as
 8    it deems necessary in order to carry out the purposes of this
 9    subsection (l).
10        (m)  The Authority may make grants to any county to which
11    Division 5-37 of the Counties Code is applicable to assist in
12    the   financing  of  capital  development,  construction  and
13    renovation of new or existing facilities  for  hospitals  and
14    health  care facilities under that Act.  Such grants may only
15    be made from funds appropriated for such  purposes  from  the
16    Build Illinois Bond Fund or the Build Illinois Purposes Fund.
17        (n)  The  Authority  may  establish  an urban development
18    action  grant  program   for   the   purpose   of   assisting
19    municipalities  in  Illinois  which  are  experiencing severe
20    economic distress  to  help  stimulate  economic  development
21    activities needed to aid in economic recovery.  The Authority
22    shall  determine  the  types  of  activities and projects for
23    which the  urban  development  action  grants  may  be  used,
24    provided  that  such  projects  and  activities  are  broadly
25    defined to include all reasonable projects and activities the
26    primary  objectives  of  which  are the development of viable
27    urban communities, including decent housing  and  a  suitable
28    living  environment,  and  expansion of economic opportunity,
29    principally for persons of low  and  moderate  incomes.   The
30    Authority  shall  enter  into  grant  agreements  from monies
31    appropriated for such purposes from the Build  Illinois  Bond
32    Fund or the Build Illinois Purposes Fund. The Authority shall
33    monitor  the  use of the grants, and shall provide for audits
34    of the funds as well as recovery  by  the  Authority  of  any
 
                            -26-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    funds  determined  to  have  been  spent in violation of this
 2    subsection  (n)  or  any  rule  or   regulation   promulgated
 3    hereunder.   The Authority shall provide technical assistance
 4    with regard to the effective use  of  the  urban  development
 5    action  grants.  The Authority shall file an annual report to
 6    the General Assembly concerning the  progress  of  the  grant
 7    program.
 8        (o)  The  Authority  may  establish a Housing Partnership
 9    Program whereby the Authority provides zero-interest loans to
10    municipalities for the purpose of assisting in the  financing
11    of projects for the rehabilitation of affordable multi-family
12    housing for low and moderate income residents.  The Authority
13    may  provide  such loans only upon a municipality's providing
14    evidence  that  it  has  obtained  private  funding  for  the
15    rehabilitation project.  The Authority shall provide 3  State
16    dollars for every 7 dollars obtained by the municipality from
17    sources  other than the State of Illinois. The loans shall be
18    made from monies appropriated for such purpose from the Build
19    Illinois Bond Fund or the Build Illinois Purposes Fund.   The
20    total amount of loans available under the Housing Partnership
21    Program shall not exceed $30,000,000. State loan monies under
22    this  subsection  (o)  shall be used only for the acquisition
23    and rehabilitation of existing buildings containing 4 or more
24    dwelling  units.  The  terms  of  any  loan   made   by   the
25    municipality under this subsection shall require repayment of
26    the  loan to the municipality upon any sale or other transfer
27    of the project.
28        (p)  The Authority may award grants to  universities  and
29    research   institutions,   research   consortiums  and  other
30    not-for-profit entities for the purposes  of:  remodeling  or
31    otherwise physically altering existing laboratory or research
32    facilities,  expansion  or  physical  additions  to  existing
33    laboratory   or  research  facilities,  construction  of  new
34    laboratory or research facilities or  acquisition  of  modern
 
                            -27-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    equipment   to  support  laboratory  or  research  operations
 2    provided that such grants (i) be used solely  in  support  of
 3    project  and  equipment acquisitions which enhance technology
 4    transfer, and (ii) not constitute more than 60 percent of the
 5    total project or acquisition cost.
 6        (q)  Grants may be awarded by the Authority to  units  of
 7    local   government   for   the   purpose  of  developing  the
 8    appropriate infrastructure or defraying other  costs  to  the
 9    local   government  in  support  of  laboratory  or  research
10    facilities provided that such grants may not  exceed  40%  of
11    the cost to the unit of local government.
12        (r)  The Authority may establish a Direct Loan Program to
13    make  loans  to individuals, partnerships or corporations for
14    the purpose of an industrial project, as defined in Section 3
15    of this Act.  For the purposes of such program and not by way
16    of limitation on any other  program  of  the  Authority,  the
17    Authority  shall  have  the  power  to issue bonds, notes, or
18    other evidences of indebtedness  including  commercial  paper
19    for purposes of providing a fund of capital from which it may
20    make  such  loans.  The Authority shall have power to use any
21    appropriations  from  the  State  made  especially  for   the
22    Authority's  Direct  Loan  Program  for additional capital to
23    make such loans or for  the  purposes  of  reserve  funds  or
24    pledged  funds  which  secure  the Authority's obligations of
25    repayment of any bond, note or  other  form  of  indebtedness
26    established for the purpose of providing capital for which it
27    intends  to  make  such  loans under the Direct Loan Program.
28    For the purpose of obtaining such capital, the Authority  may
29    also  enter  into  agreements with financial institutions and
30    other persons for the purpose of selling loans and developing
31    a secondary market for such loans.
32        Loans made under the Direct Loan Program  may  be  in  an
33    amount not to exceed $300,000 and shall be made for a portion
34    of  an  industrial  project  which does not exceed 50% of the
 
                            -28-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    total project.  No loan may be made by the  Authority  unless
 2    approved by the affirmative vote of at least 8 members of the
 3    board.   The Authority shall establish procedures and publish
 4    rules which shall provide for  the  submission,  review,  and
 5    analysis  of  each  direct  loan  application and which shall
 6    preserve the  ability  of  each  board  member  to  reach  an
 7    individual  business  judgment  regarding  the  propriety  of
 8    making  each  direct  loan.  The collective discretion of the
 9    board  to  approve  or  disapprove   each   loan   shall   be
10    unencumbered.
11        The  Authority  may  establish  and collect such fees and
12    charges, determine and enforce such terms and conditions, and
13    charge such interest rates as it determines to  be  necessary
14    and  appropriate  to  the  successful  administration  of the
15    Direct  Loan  Program.   The  Authority  may   require   such
16    interests  in collateral and such guarantees as it determines
17    are necessary to protect  the  Authority's  interest  in  the
18    repayment  of  the  principal  and interest of each loan made
19    under the Direct Loan Program.
20        (s)  The Authority may guarantee private loans  to  third
21    parties  up  to a specified dollar amount in order to promote
22    economic development in this State.
23        (t)  The Authority may adopt rules and regulations as may
24    be necessary or advisable to implement the  powers  conferred
25    by this Act.
26        (u)  In  addition  to  any other bonds authorized by this
27    Act, the Authority shall  have  the  power  to  issue  up  to
28    $20,000,000   in   bonds,   notes   or   other  evidences  of
29    indebtedness, which may be used to make  loans  to  units  of
30    local  government  which  are  authorized  to enter into loan
31    agreements and other documents and to issue bonds, notes  and
32    other  evidences of indebtedness for the purpose of financing
33    the protection of storm sewer outfalls, the  construction  of
34    adequate  storm  sewer  outfalls, and the provision for flood
 
                            -29-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    protection of sanitary sewage treatment plants,  in  counties
 2    that   have  established  a  stormwater  management  planning
 3    committee in accordance with Section 5-1062 of  the  Counties
 4    Code.  Any  such loan shall be made by the Authority pursuant
 5    to the provisions of Sections 7.50 to 7.61 of this Act.   The
 6    unit  of local government shall pay back to the Authority the
 7    principal amount   of  the  loan,  plus  annual  interest  as
 8    determined  by  the  Authority.  The Authority shall have the
 9    power, subject to appropriations by the General Assembly,  to
10    subsidize  or  buy  down  a  portion  of the interest on such
11    loans, up to 4% per annum.
12        (v)  The  Authority  may  accept  security  interests  as
13    provided in Sections 11-3 and 11-3.3 of the  Illinois  Public
14    Aid Code.
15        (w)  The   Authority   may   enter   into  agreements  or
16    arrangements with Federal or State agencies to carry out  the
17    purposes of this Act.
18        (x)  The  Authority  may  use any funds in its possession
19    remaining unexpended  from  the  funds  appropriated  to  the
20    Authority  under Section 93 of Public Act 84-1108 as follows:
21    (1) to make a $1,000,000 ten-year, no-interest  loan  to  the
22    Illinois  Facilities  Fund  to  assist  in the development of
23    low-interest loans to nonprofit organizations; and (2) if and
24    only if the loan described in item (1) has been made, for any
25    of its general corporate purposes.
26    (Source: P.A. 90-587, eff. 7-1-98.)

27        (20 ILCS 3505/7.90 new)
28        Sec. 7.90.  Findings and declaration of  policy.   It  is
29    found and declared that Illinois has abundant coal resources.
30    At  the  same time, in the Chicago-area, at times, the demand
31    for power exceeds the generating  capacity.    Incentives  to
32    encourage  the construction of coal-fired electric generating
33    plants in Illinois to ensure power generating  capacity  into
 
                            -30-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    the  future  are in the best interests of all of the citizens
 2    of Illinois.  The Authority is  authorized,  as  provided  in
 3    Sections  7.90  through 7.99, to issue bonds to help fund the
 4    construction of mine-mouth power plants in Illinois  and  for
 5    the  construction  of  related  power  transmission lines, as
 6    determined  under  Section  605-331  of  the  Department   of
 7    Commerce   and   Community   Affairs   Law   of   the   Civil
 8    Administrative  Code  of  Illinois.   The  provisions of this
 9    amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly are  declared  to
10    be  in  the  public  interest  and benefit and a valid public
11    purpose.

12        (20 ILCS 3505/7.91 new)
13        Sec. 7.91.  Definition.  For  the  purposes  of  Sections
14    7.90   through   7.99,   "mine-mouth  power  plant"  means  a
15    coal-fired power plant sited adjacent to a coal mine.

16        (20 ILCS 3505/7.92 new)
17        Sec. 7.92.  Creation of reserve funds.  The Authority may
18    establish and maintain one or more  reserve  funds  in  which
19    there  may  be  one  or  more  accounts in which there may be
20    deposited:
21        (a)  any  proceeds  of  bonds  issued  by  the  Authority
22    required to be deposited therein by the terms of any contract
23    between the Authority and its bondholders or  any  resolution
24    of the Authority;
25        (b)  any  other  moneys or funds of the Authority that it
26    may determine to deposit therein from any other source; and
27        (c)  any other moneys or  funds  made  available  to  the
28    Authority.  Subject  to the terms of any pledge to the owners
29    of any bonds, moneys in any reserve  fund  may  be  held  and
30    applied  to  the payment of the interest, premium, if any, or
31    principal of bonds or for any other purpose authorized by the
32    Authority.
 
                            -31-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1        (20 ILCS 3505/7.93 new)
 2        Sec. 7.93.  Powers and duties.   The  Authority  has  the
 3    power:
 4        (a)  To issue bonds in one or more series pursuant to one
 5    or   more    resolutions   of  the  Authority for any purpose
 6    authorized under Sections 7.90 through 7.99 of this Act.
 7        (b)  To  provide for the funding of any reserves or other
 8    funds or  accounts  deemed  necessary  by  the  Authority  in
 9    connection with any bonds issued by the Authority.
10        (c)  To  pledge  any funds of the Authority or funds made
11    available to the  Authority  that  may  be  applied  to  such
12    purpose  as  security  for  any  bonds   or  any  guarantees,
13    letters of credit, insurance  contracts,  or  similar  credit
14    support or liquidity instruments securing the bonds.
15        (d)  To  enter  into  agreements  or contracts with third
16    parties,  whether  public  or  private,   including   without
17    limitation  the  United States of America, the  State, or any
18    department or agency thereof, to obtain  any  appropriations,
19    grants,  loans,  or  guarantees  that are deemed necessary or
20    desirable by the Authority.  Any such  guarantee,  agreement,
21    or  contract  may  contain  terms and provisions necessary or
22    desirable  in connection with the  program,  subject  to  the
23    requirements  established  by  Sections  7.90 through 7.99 of
24    this Act.
25        (e)  To exercise such other powers as  are  necessary  or
26    incidental to the foregoing.

27        (20 ILCS 3505/7.94 new)
28        Sec.  7.94.  Mine-mouth power plant and transmission line
29    bond authorization limits.  In addition to  any  other  bonds
30    authorized  to  be  issued  under this Act, the Authority may
31    have  outstanding,  at  any  time,  bonds  for  the  purposes
32    enumerated in Sections 7.90  through  7.99  in  an  aggregate
33    principal   amount  that  shall  not  exceed  $2,035,000,000,
 
                            -32-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    $1,770,000,000 of which is dedicated to the  construction  of
 2    mine-mouth   power   plants  and  $265,000,000  of  which  is
 3    dedicated to the construction of related  power  transmission
 4    lines.  An application for a loan financed from bond proceeds
 5    from  a  company  for  the construction of a mine-mouth power
 6    plant may  not  be  approved  for  an  amount  in  excess  of
 7    $450,000,000 for any one company.
 8        These  bonds  shall  not  constitute  an  indebtedness or
 9    obligation of the State of Illinois and it shall  be  plainly
10    stated  on  the face of each bond that it does not constitute
11    an indebtedness or obligation of the State of Illinois but is
12    payable solely from the revenues, income, or other assets  of
13    the Authority pledged therefor.

14        (20 ILCS 3505/7.95 new)
15        Sec.  7.95.   Criteria  for participation in the program.
16    If the Authority requires an application for participation in
17    the loan program, upon submission of  any  such  application,
18    the  Authority or any entity on behalf of the Authority shall
19    review such application for its completeness and may, at  its
20    discretion, accept or reject such application or request such
21    additional  information as it deems necessary or advisable to
22    aid its review.  The  terms  and  conditions  of  the  loans,
23    including   interest   rates,  shall  be  determined  by  the
24    Authority by rule.  The repayment of the loans  may  be  paid
25    only  from company profits and may not be paid by electricity
26    customers.

27        (20 ILCS 3505/7.96 new)
28        Sec. 7.96.  Investment of moneys.  Any moneys at any time
29    held  by the Authority pursuant to Sections 7.90 through 7.99
30    of this Act shall be held outside the State treasury  in  the
31    custody of either the Treasurer of the Authority or a trustee
32    or depository appointed by the Authority.  Such moneys may be
 
                            -33-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    invested  in  (a)  investments authorized in the Public Funds
 2    Investment Act, (b) obligations issued by any State, unit  of
 3    local  government, or school district, which obligations  are
 4    rated at the time of purchase by a  national  rating  service
 5    within   the  2   highest   rating   classifications  without
 6    regard to any rating refinement or gradation by numerical  or
 7    other  modifier,  or  (c)  equity securities of an investment
 8    company registered under the Investment Company Act  of  1940
 9    whose  sole  assets,  other  than  cash  and  other temporary
10    investments, are obligations that  are  eligible  investments
11    for the Authority. The interest, dividends, or other earnings
12    from  these  investments  may  be  used to pay administrative
13    costs  of  the  Authority  incurred  in  administering    the
14    program  or trustee or depository fees incurred in connection
15    with the program.

16        (20 ILCS 3505/7.97 new)
17        Sec. 7.97.  Pledge of revenues  by  the  Authority.   Any
18    pledge   of    revenues or other moneys made by the Authority
19    shall be binding from the time the pledge is made.   Revenues
20    and  other  moneys  so  pledged  shall be held outside of the
21    State Treasury and in the custody of either the Treasurer  of
22    the  Authority  or a trustee or a depository appointed by the
23    Authority. Revenues or other moneys so pledged and thereafter
24    received by the Authority or such trustee or depository shall
25    immediately be subject to the lien of the pledge without  any
26    physical delivery thereof or further act, and the lien of any
27    pledge shall be binding against all parties having claims  of
28    any  kind  in  tort,   contract   or  otherwise  against  the
29    Authority, irrespective of whether the  parties  have  notice
30    thereof.  Neither the resolution nor any other instrument  by
31    which a pledge is created need be filed or recorded except in
32    the records of the Authority.
 
                            -34-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1        (20 ILCS 3505/7.98 new)
 2        Sec.  7.98.   Tax  exemption.  The exercise of the powers
 3    granted in Sections 7.90 through 7.99 of this Act are in  all
 4    respects  for  the  benefit  of the people of Illinois and in
 5    consideration thereof the bonds issued pursuant to the  those
 6    Sections  and  the  income  therefrom  shall be free from all
 7    taxation by the State or its political  subdivisions,  except
 8    for  estate, transfer, and inheritance taxes. For purposes of
 9    Section 250 of the Illinois Income Tax Act, the exemption  of
10    the  income  from bonds issued under the those Sections shall
11    terminate after all of the bonds have been paid.  The  amount
12    of such income that shall be added and then subtracted on the
13    Illinois  income   tax   return  of  a  taxpayer, pursuant to
14    Section 203 of the Illinois Income Tax  Act,   from   federal
15    adjusted    gross   income   or  federal  taxable  income  in
16    computing Illinois base income shall be the interest  net  of
17    any bond premium amortization.

18        (20 ILCS 3505/7.99 new)
19        Sec. 7.99.  Eligible investments.  Bonds, issued  by  the
20    Authority pursuant to the provisions of Sections 7.90 through
21    7.99 of this Act, shall be permissible investments within the
22    provisions of Section 12 of this Act.

23        Section  15-930.  The  State  Finance  Act  is amended by
24    adding Sections 5.545 and 5.546 as follows:

25        (30 ILCS 105/5.545 new)
26        Sec. 5.545.  The Clean Air and Development Fund.

27        (30 ILCS 105/5.546 new)
28        Sec. 5.546.  The Energy Efficiency Investment Fund.

29        Section  15-935.  The  General  Obligation  Bond  Act  is
 
                            -35-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    amended by changing Section 2 as follows:

 2        (30 ILCS 330/2) (from Ch. 127, par. 652)
 3        Sec. 2. Authorization for Bonds.  The State  of  Illinois
 4    is  authorized  to issue, sell and provide for the retirement
 5    of General Obligation Bonds of the State of Illinois for  the
 6    categories  and  specific  purposes  expressed  in Sections 2
 7    through 8 of this Act, in the total amount of $14,697,632,592
 8    $14,197,632,592.
 9        The bonds authorized in this Section 2 and in Section  16
10    of this Act are herein called "Bonds".
11        Of  the  total amount of Bonds authorized in this Act, up
12    to $2,200,000,000 in aggregate original principal amount  may
13    be  issued  and  sold  in  accordance  with the Baccalaureate
14    Savings Act in the form of General Obligation College Savings
15    Bonds.
16        Of the total amount of Bonds authorized in this  Act,  up
17    to $300,000,000 in aggregate original principal amount may be
18    issued and sold in accordance with the Retirement Savings Act
19    in the form of General Obligation Retirement Savings Bonds.
20        The  issuance  and  sale of Bonds pursuant to the General
21    Obligation Bond Act is an economical and efficient method  of
22    financing  the  capital  needs  of  the State.  This Act will
23    permit the issuance of  a  multi-purpose  General  Obligation
24    Bond  with  uniform  terms  and features.  This will not only
25    lower the cost of registration but also  reduce  the  overall
26    cost  of  issuing  debt  by  improving  the  marketability of
27    Illinois General Obligation Bonds.
28    (Source: P.A. 90-1, eff. 2-20-97; 90-8, eff. 12-8-97; 90-549,
29    eff. 12-8-97;  90-586,  eff.  6-4-98;  91-39,  eff.  6-15-99;
30    91-53, eff 6-30-99; 91-710, eff. 5-17-00.)

31        (30 ILCS 330/7) (from Ch. 127, par. 657)
32        Sec.  7.  Coal  and  Energy  Development.   The amount of
 
                            -36-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    $163,200,000 is authorized to be used by  the  Department  of
 2    Commerce   and   Community   Affairs   for  coal  and  energy
 3    development purposes, pursuant to Sections 2, 3  and  3.1  of
 4    the  Illinois  Coal  and Energy Development Bond Act, and for
 5    the  purposes  specified  in  Section  8.1  of   the   Energy
 6    Conservation  and  Coal  Development  Act.   Of  this  amount
 7    $115,000,000  is  for  the  specific purposes of acquisition,
 8    development,   construction,   reconstruction,   improvement,
 9    financing,   architectural   and   technical   planning   and
10    installation of capital facilities consisting  of  buildings,
11    structures,  durable  equipment,  and land for the purpose of
12    capital development of coal resources within  the  State  and
13    for  the  purposes  specified  in  Section  8.1 of the Energy
14    Conservation and Coal Development Act, $35,000,000 is for the
15    purposes specified in Section 8.1 of the Energy  Conservation
16    and  Coal Development Act, and making a grant to the owner of
17    a generating station located in Illinois and having at  least
18    three  coal-fired  generating  units  with  accredited summer
19    capability greater than 500 megawatts each at such generating
20    station as provided  in  Section  6  of  that  Bond  Act  and
21    $13,200,000 is for research, development and demonstration of
22    forms  of energy other than that derived from coal, either on
23    or off State property.
24        The amount of $500,000,000 is authorized to  be  used  by
25    the  Department  of  Commerce  and  Community Affairs for the
26    purposes consistent with the Clean Air and Development Law.
27        On or before May 1 each  year  until  the  principal  of,
28    interest  on,  and  premium,  if  any, on the $500,000,000 in
29    additional general obligation bonds authorized to  be  issued
30    under  this  amendatory  Act of the 92nd General Assembly for
31    coal development have been paid, the  Bureau  of  the  Budget
32    shall  certify the amount necessary to be appropriated in the
33    State fiscal year that begins on July 1 of that calendar year
34    to finance the principal of, interest  on,  and  premium,  if
 
                            -37-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    any,  on  the  $500,000,000  in additional general obligation
 2    bonds authorized to be issued under this  amendatory  Act  of
 3    the 92nd General Assembly for coal development.
 4    (Source:  P.A.  89-445,  eff.  2-7-96;  90-312,  eff. 8-1-97;
 5    90-549, eff. 12-8-97.)

 6        Section 15-940.  The Illinois Income Tax Act  is  amended
 7    by adding Section 213 as follows:

 8        (35 ILCS 5/213 new)
 9        Sec.  213.   Mine-mouth operator tax credit.  For taxable
10    years ending on or after December 31, 2001, each taxpayer who
11    operates a mine-mouth power plant is  entitled  to  a  credit
12    against the tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of Section
13    201  in  the amount of 1% of the taxes owed under this Act by
14    the taxpayer for the taxable year for  the  first  3  taxable
15    years of operation of the plant.  For taxable years ending on
16    or  after  December  31,  2001,  each  corporate taxpayer who
17    operates a mine-mouth power plant is  entitled  to  a  credit
18    against the tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of Section
19    201 in the amount of 1/2% of the taxes owed under this Act by
20    the  taxpayer  for  the taxable year for the fourth and fifth
21    taxable years of operation of the plant. For purposes of this
22    Section, "mine-mouth power plant" means  a  coal-fired  power
23    plant  sited adjacent to a coal mine.  This Section is exempt
24    from the provisions of Section 250.

25        Section 15-945.  The Use Tax Act is amended  by  changing
26    Section 3-5 as follows:

27        (35 ILCS 105/3-5) (from Ch. 120, par. 439.3-5)
28        Sec.  3-5.   Exemptions.   Use  of the following tangible
29    personal property is exempt from the tax imposed by this Act:
30        (1)  Personal  property  purchased  from  a  corporation,
 
                            -38-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    society,    association,    foundation,    institution,    or
 2    organization, other than a limited liability company, that is
 3    organized and operated as a not-for-profit service enterprise
 4    for the benefit of persons 65 years of age or  older  if  the
 5    personal property was not purchased by the enterprise for the
 6    purpose of resale by the enterprise.
 7        (2)  Personal  property  purchased  by  a  not-for-profit
 8    Illinois  county  fair  association  for  use  in conducting,
 9    operating, or promoting the county fair.
10        (3)  Personal property purchased by a not-for-profit arts
11    or cultural organization that establishes, by proof  required
12    by  the Department by rule, that it has received an exemption
13    under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that
14    is organized and operated for the presentation or support  of
15    arts or cultural programming, activities, or services.  These
16    organizations  include,  but  are  not  limited to, music and
17    dramatic arts organizations such as symphony  orchestras  and
18    theatrical  groups,  arts and cultural service organizations,
19    local arts councils, visual  arts  organizations,  and  media
20    arts organizations.
21        (4)  Personal  property purchased by a governmental body,
22    by  a  corporation,  society,  association,  foundation,   or
23    institution    organized   and   operated   exclusively   for
24    charitable, religious,  or  educational  purposes,  or  by  a
25    not-for-profit corporation, society, association, foundation,
26    institution, or organization that has no compensated officers
27    or employees and that is organized and operated primarily for
28    the recreation of persons 55 years of age or older. A limited
29    liability  company  may  qualify for the exemption under this
30    paragraph only if the limited liability company is  organized
31    and  operated  exclusively  for  educational purposes. On and
32    after July 1, 1987, however, no entity otherwise eligible for
33    this exemption shall make tax-free purchases unless it has an
34    active  exemption  identification  number   issued   by   the
 
                            -39-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    Department.
 2        (5)  A passenger car that is a replacement vehicle to the
 3    extent  that  the purchase price of the car is subject to the
 4    Replacement Vehicle Tax.
 5        (6)  Graphic  arts  machinery  and  equipment,  including
 6    repair  and  replacement  parts,  both  new  and  used,   and
 7    including  that  manufactured  on special order, certified by
 8    the  purchaser  to  be  used  primarily  for   graphic   arts
 9    production,  and  including machinery and equipment purchased
10    for lease.
11        (7)  Farm chemicals.
12        (8)  Legal  tender,  currency,  medallions,  or  gold  or
13    silver  coinage  issued  by  the  State  of   Illinois,   the
14    government of the United States of America, or the government
15    of any foreign country, and bullion.
16        (9)  Personal property purchased from a teacher-sponsored
17    student   organization   affiliated  with  an  elementary  or
18    secondary school located in Illinois.
19        (10)  A motor vehicle of  the  first  division,  a  motor
20    vehicle of the second division that is a self-contained motor
21    vehicle  designed  or permanently converted to provide living
22    quarters for  recreational,  camping,  or  travel  use,  with
23    direct  walk through to the living quarters from the driver's
24    seat, or a motor vehicle of the second division  that  is  of
25    the  van configuration designed for the transportation of not
26    less than 7 nor  more  than  16  passengers,  as  defined  in
27    Section  1-146 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, that is used for
28    automobile renting, as  defined  in  the  Automobile  Renting
29    Occupation and Use Tax Act.
30        (11)  Farm  machinery  and  equipment, both new and used,
31    including that manufactured on special  order,  certified  by
32    the purchaser to be used primarily for production agriculture
33    or   State   or   federal  agricultural  programs,  including
34    individual replacement parts for the machinery and equipment,
 
                            -40-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    including machinery and equipment purchased  for  lease,  and
 2    including implements of husbandry defined in Section 1-130 of
 3    the  Illinois  Vehicle  Code, farm machinery and agricultural
 4    chemical and fertilizer spreaders, and nurse wagons  required
 5    to  be registered under Section 3-809 of the Illinois Vehicle
 6    Code, but excluding  other  motor  vehicles  required  to  be
 7    registered  under  the  Illinois  Vehicle Code. Horticultural
 8    polyhouses or hoop houses used for propagating,  growing,  or
 9    overwintering  plants  shall be considered farm machinery and
10    equipment under this item (11). Agricultural chemical  tender
11    tanks  and dry boxes shall include units sold separately from
12    a motor vehicle  required  to  be  licensed  and  units  sold
13    mounted  on  a  motor  vehicle required to be licensed if the
14    selling price of the tender is separately stated.
15        Farm machinery  and  equipment  shall  include  precision
16    farming  equipment  that  is  installed  or  purchased  to be
17    installed on farm machinery and equipment including, but  not
18    limited   to,   tractors,   harvesters,  sprayers,  planters,
19    seeders, or spreaders. Precision farming equipment  includes,
20    but  is  not  limited  to,  soil  testing sensors, computers,
21    monitors, software, global positioning and  mapping  systems,
22    and other such equipment.
23        Farm  machinery  and  equipment  also includes computers,
24    sensors, software, and related equipment  used  primarily  in
25    the  computer-assisted  operation  of  production agriculture
26    facilities,  equipment,  and  activities  such  as,  but  not
27    limited to, the collection, monitoring,  and  correlation  of
28    animal  and  crop  data for the purpose of formulating animal
29    diets and agricultural chemicals.  This item (11)  is  exempt
30    from the provisions of Section 3-90.
31        (12)  Fuel  and  petroleum products sold to or used by an
32    air common carrier, certified by the carrier to be  used  for
33    consumption,  shipment,  or  storage  in  the  conduct of its
34    business as an air common carrier, for a flight destined  for
 
                            -41-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    or  returning from a location or locations outside the United
 2    States without regard  to  previous  or  subsequent  domestic
 3    stopovers.
 4        (13)  Proceeds  of  mandatory  service charges separately
 5    stated on customers' bills for the purchase  and  consumption
 6    of food and beverages purchased at retail from a retailer, to
 7    the  extent  that  the  proceeds of the service charge are in
 8    fact turned over as tips or as a substitute for tips  to  the
 9    employees  who  participate  directly  in preparing, serving,
10    hosting or cleaning up the food  or  beverage  function  with
11    respect to which the service charge is imposed.
12        (14)  Oil  field  exploration,  drilling,  and production
13    equipment, including (i) rigs and parts of rigs, rotary rigs,
14    cable tool rigs, and workover rigs,  (ii)  pipe  and  tubular
15    goods,  including  casing  and drill strings, (iii) pumps and
16    pump-jack units, (iv) storage tanks and flow lines,  (v)  any
17    individual   replacement  part  for  oil  field  exploration,
18    drilling, and production equipment, and  (vi)  machinery  and
19    equipment  purchased  for lease; but excluding motor vehicles
20    required to be registered under the Illinois Vehicle Code.
21        (15)  Photoprocessing machinery and equipment,  including
22    repair  and  replacement  parts, both new and used, including
23    that  manufactured  on  special  order,  certified   by   the
24    purchaser  to  be  used  primarily  for  photoprocessing, and
25    including photoprocessing machinery and  equipment  purchased
26    for lease.
27        (16)  Coal   exploration,   mining,  offhighway  hauling,
28    processing, maintenance, and reclamation equipment, including
29    replacement parts  and  equipment,  and  including  equipment
30    purchased for lease, but excluding motor vehicles required to
31    be registered under the Illinois Vehicle Code.
32        (17)  Distillation  machinery  and  equipment,  sold as a
33    unit  or  kit,  assembled  or  installed  by  the   retailer,
34    certified  by  the user to be used only for the production of
 
                            -42-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    ethyl alcohol that will be used for consumption as motor fuel
 2    or as a component of motor fuel for the personal use  of  the
 3    user, and not subject to sale or resale.
 4        (18)  Manufacturing    and   assembling   machinery   and
 5    equipment used primarily in the process of  manufacturing  or
 6    assembling tangible personal property for wholesale or retail
 7    sale or lease, whether that sale or lease is made directly by
 8    the  manufacturer  or  by  some  other  person,  whether  the
 9    materials  used  in the process are owned by the manufacturer
10    or some other person, or whether that sale or lease  is  made
11    apart  from or as an incident to the seller's engaging in the
12    service occupation of producing machines, tools, dies,  jigs,
13    patterns,  gauges,  or  other  similar items of no commercial
14    value on special order for a particular purchaser.
15        (19)  Personal  property  delivered  to  a  purchaser  or
16    purchaser's donee inside Illinois when the purchase order for
17    that personal property was  received  by  a  florist  located
18    outside  Illinois  who  has a florist located inside Illinois
19    deliver the personal property.
20        (20)  Semen used for artificial insemination of livestock
21    for direct agricultural production.
22        (21)  Horses, or interests in horses, registered with and
23    meeting the requirements of any of  the  Arabian  Horse  Club
24    Registry  of  America, Appaloosa Horse Club, American Quarter
25    Horse Association, United  States  Trotting  Association,  or
26    Jockey Club, as appropriate, used for purposes of breeding or
27    racing for prizes.
28        (22)  Computers and communications equipment utilized for
29    any  hospital  purpose  and  equipment used in the diagnosis,
30    analysis, or treatment of hospital patients  purchased  by  a
31    lessor who leases the equipment, under a lease of one year or
32    longer  executed  or  in  effect at the time the lessor would
33    otherwise be subject to the tax imposed by  this  Act,  to  a
34    hospital    that  has  been  issued  an  active tax exemption
 
                            -43-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    identification number by the Department under Section  1g  of
 2    the  Retailers'  Occupation  Tax  Act.   If  the equipment is
 3    leased in a manner that does not qualify for  this  exemption
 4    or  is  used in any other non-exempt manner, the lessor shall
 5    be liable for the tax imposed under this Act or  the  Service
 6    Use  Tax  Act,  as  the case may be, based on the fair market
 7    value of the property at  the  time  the  non-qualifying  use
 8    occurs.   No  lessor  shall  collect or attempt to collect an
 9    amount (however designated) that purports to  reimburse  that
10    lessor for the tax imposed by this Act or the Service Use Tax
11    Act,  as the case may be, if the tax has not been paid by the
12    lessor.  If a lessor improperly collects any such amount from
13    the lessee, the lessee shall have a legal right  to  claim  a
14    refund  of  that  amount  from the lessor.  If, however, that
15    amount is not refunded to the  lessee  for  any  reason,  the
16    lessor is liable to pay that amount to the Department.
17        (23)  Personal  property purchased by a lessor who leases
18    the property, under a lease of  one year or  longer  executed
19    or  in  effect  at  the  time  the  lessor would otherwise be
20    subject to the tax imposed by this  Act,  to  a  governmental
21    body  that  has  been  issued  an  active sales tax exemption
22    identification number by the Department under Section  1g  of
23    the  Retailers' Occupation Tax Act. If the property is leased
24    in a manner that does not qualify for this exemption or  used
25    in  any  other  non-exempt manner, the lessor shall be liable
26    for the tax imposed under this Act or  the  Service  Use  Tax
27    Act,  as  the  case may be, based on the fair market value of
28    the property at the time the non-qualifying use  occurs.   No
29    lessor shall collect or attempt to collect an amount (however
30    designated)  that  purports  to reimburse that lessor for the
31    tax imposed by this Act or the Service Use Tax  Act,  as  the
32    case  may be, if the tax has not been paid by the lessor.  If
33    a lessor improperly collects any such amount from the lessee,
34    the lessee shall have a legal right to claim a refund of that
 
                            -44-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    amount from the lessor.  If,  however,  that  amount  is  not
 2    refunded  to  the lessee for any reason, the lessor is liable
 3    to pay that amount to the Department.
 4        (24)  Beginning with taxable years  ending  on  or  after
 5    December  31, 1995 and ending with taxable years ending on or
 6    before December 31, 2004, personal property that  is  donated
 7    for  disaster  relief  to  be  used  in  a State or federally
 8    declared disaster area in Illinois or bordering Illinois by a
 9    manufacturer or retailer that is registered in this State  to
10    a   corporation,   society,   association,   foundation,   or
11    institution  that  has  been  issued  a  sales  tax exemption
12    identification number by the Department that assists  victims
13    of the disaster who reside within the declared disaster area.
14        (25)  Beginning  with  taxable  years  ending on or after
15    December 31, 1995 and ending with taxable years ending on  or
16    before  December  31, 2004, personal property that is used in
17    the performance of  infrastructure  repairs  in  this  State,
18    including  but  not  limited  to municipal roads and streets,
19    access roads, bridges,  sidewalks,  waste  disposal  systems,
20    water  and  sewer  line  extensions,  water  distribution and
21    purification facilities, storm water drainage  and  retention
22    facilities, and sewage treatment facilities, resulting from a
23    State or federally declared disaster in Illinois or bordering
24    Illinois  when  such  repairs  are  initiated  on  facilities
25    located  in  the declared disaster area within 6 months after
26    the disaster.
27        (26)  Beginning  July  1,  1999,  game  or   game   birds
28    purchased  at  a "game breeding and hunting preserve area" or
29    an "exotic game hunting area" as those terms are used in  the
30    Wildlife  Code  or  at  a  hunting enclosure approved through
31    rules adopted by the Department of Natural  Resources.   This
32    paragraph is exempt from the provisions of Section 3-90.
33        (27)  A motor vehicle, as that term is defined in Section
34    1-146  of  the  Illinois  Vehicle  Code, that is donated to a
 
                            -45-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    corporation, limited liability company, society, association,
 2    foundation,  or  institution  that  is  determined   by   the
 3    Department  to  be  organized  and  operated  exclusively for
 4    educational purposes.  For purposes  of  this  exemption,  "a
 5    corporation, limited liability company, society, association,
 6    foundation, or institution organized and operated exclusively
 7    for  educational  purposes"  means  all  tax-supported public
 8    schools, private schools that offer systematic instruction in
 9    useful branches of  learning  by  methods  common  to  public
10    schools  and  that  compare  favorably  in  their  scope  and
11    intensity with the course of study presented in tax-supported
12    schools,  and  vocational  or technical schools or institutes
13    organized and operated exclusively to  provide  a  course  of
14    study  of  not  less  than  6  weeks duration and designed to
15    prepare individuals to follow a trade or to pursue a  manual,
16    technical,  mechanical,  industrial,  business, or commercial
17    occupation.
18        (28)  Beginning  January  1,  2000,   personal  property,
19    including food, purchased through fundraising events for  the
20    benefit  of  a  public  or  private  elementary  or secondary
21    school, a group of those  schools,  or  one  or  more  school
22    districts if the events are sponsored by an entity recognized
23    by  the school district that consists primarily of volunteers
24    and includes parents and teachers  of  the  school  children.
25    This  paragraph  does not apply to fundraising events (i) for
26    the benefit of private home instruction or (ii) for which the
27    fundraising entity purchases the personal  property  sold  at
28    the  events  from  another individual or entity that sold the
29    property for the purpose of resale by the fundraising  entity
30    and  that  profits  from  the sale to the fundraising entity.
31    This paragraph is exempt from the provisions of Section 3-90.
32        (29)  Beginning January 1, 2000, new  or  used  automatic
33    vending   machines  that  prepare  and  serve  hot  food  and
34    beverages, including  coffee,  soup,  and  other  items,  and
 
                            -46-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    replacement  parts  for  these  machines.   This paragraph is
 2    exempt from the provisions of Section 3-90.
 3        (30)  Food for human consumption that is to  be  consumed
 4    off  the  premises  where  it  is  sold (other than alcoholic
 5    beverages, soft drinks, and food that has been  prepared  for
 6    immediate  consumption)  and prescription and nonprescription
 7    medicines, drugs,  medical  appliances,  and  insulin,  urine
 8    testing  materials,  syringes, and needles used by diabetics,
 9    for human use, when purchased for use by a  person  receiving
10    medical assistance under Article 5 of the Illinois Public Aid
11    Code  who  resides  in a licensed long-term care facility, as
12    defined in the Nursing Home Care Act.
13        (31)  Beginning on January 1,  2002,  production  related
14    tangible  personal  property  and  machinery  and  equipment,
15    including  repair  and  replacement parts, both new and used,
16    and including those items manufactured on  special  order  or
17    purchased  for  lease,  certified  by  the  purchaser  to  be
18    essential  to  and  used  in  the  integrated  process of the
19    construction of a mine-mouth power plant  located  within  an
20    Enterprise  Zone  and  related  power  transmission lines, as
21    determined  under  Section  605-331  of  the  Department   of
22    Commerce   and   Community   Affairs   Law   of   the   Civil
23    Administrative   Code  of  Illinois.   For  purpose  of  this
24    Section, "mine-mouth power plant" means  a  coal-fired  power
25    plant sited adjacent to a coal mine.
26    (Source:  P.A.  90-14,  eff.  7-1-97;  90-552, eff. 12-12-97;
27    90-605, eff.  6-30-98;  91-51,  eff.  6-30-99;  91-200,  eff.
28    7-20-99;  91-439,  eff. 8-6-99; 91-637, eff. 8-20-99; 91-644,
29    eff. 8-20-99; 91-901, eff. 1-1-01.)

30        Section 15-950.  The Service Use Tax Act  is  amended  by
31    changing Section 3-5 as follows:

32        (35 ILCS 110/3-5) (from Ch. 120, par. 439.33-5)
 
                            -47-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1        Sec.  3-5.   Exemptions.   Use  of the following tangible
 2    personal property is exempt from the tax imposed by this Act:
 3        (1)  Personal  property  purchased  from  a  corporation,
 4    society,    association,    foundation,    institution,    or
 5    organization, other than a limited liability company, that is
 6    organized and operated as a not-for-profit service enterprise
 7    for the benefit of persons 65 years of age or  older  if  the
 8    personal property was not purchased by the enterprise for the
 9    purpose of resale by the enterprise.
10        (2)  Personal property purchased by a non-profit Illinois
11    county  fair association for use in conducting, operating, or
12    promoting the county fair.
13        (3)  Personal property purchased by a not-for-profit arts
14    or cultural organization that establishes, by proof  required
15    by  the Department by rule, that it has received an exemption
16    under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that
17    is organized and operated for the presentation or support  of
18    arts or cultural programming, activities, or services.  These
19    organizations  include,  but  are  not  limited to, music and
20    dramatic arts organizations such as symphony  orchestras  and
21    theatrical  groups,  arts and cultural service organizations,
22    local arts councils, visual  arts  organizations,  and  media
23    arts organizations.
24        (4)  Legal  tender,  currency,  medallions,  or  gold  or
25    silver   coinage   issued  by  the  State  of  Illinois,  the
26    government of the United States of America, or the government
27    of any foreign country, and bullion.
28        (5)  Graphic  arts  machinery  and  equipment,  including
29    repair  and  replacement  parts,  both  new  and  used,   and
30    including that manufactured on special order or purchased for
31    lease,  certified  by  the purchaser to be used primarily for
32    graphic arts production.
33        (6)  Personal property purchased from a teacher-sponsored
34    student  organization  affiliated  with  an   elementary   or
 
                            -48-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    secondary school located in Illinois.
 2        (7)  Farm  machinery  and  equipment,  both new and used,
 3    including that manufactured on special  order,  certified  by
 4    the purchaser to be used primarily for production agriculture
 5    or   State   or   federal  agricultural  programs,  including
 6    individual replacement parts for the machinery and equipment,
 7    including machinery and equipment purchased  for  lease,  and
 8    including implements of husbandry defined in Section 1-130 of
 9    the  Illinois  Vehicle  Code, farm machinery and agricultural
10    chemical and fertilizer spreaders, and nurse wagons  required
11    to  be registered under Section 3-809 of the Illinois Vehicle
12    Code, but excluding  other  motor  vehicles  required  to  be
13    registered  under  the  Illinois  Vehicle Code. Horticultural
14    polyhouses or hoop houses used for propagating,  growing,  or
15    overwintering  plants  shall be considered farm machinery and
16    equipment under this item (7). Agricultural  chemical  tender
17    tanks  and dry boxes shall include units sold separately from
18    a motor vehicle  required  to  be  licensed  and  units  sold
19    mounted  on  a  motor  vehicle required to be licensed if the
20    selling price of the tender is separately stated.
21        Farm machinery  and  equipment  shall  include  precision
22    farming  equipment  that  is  installed  or  purchased  to be
23    installed on farm machinery and equipment including, but  not
24    limited   to,   tractors,   harvesters,  sprayers,  planters,
25    seeders, or spreaders. Precision farming equipment  includes,
26    but  is  not  limited  to,  soil  testing sensors, computers,
27    monitors, software, global positioning and  mapping  systems,
28    and other such equipment.
29        Farm  machinery  and  equipment  also includes computers,
30    sensors, software, and related equipment  used  primarily  in
31    the  computer-assisted  operation  of  production agriculture
32    facilities,  equipment,  and  activities  such  as,  but  not
33    limited to, the collection, monitoring,  and  correlation  of
34    animal  and  crop  data for the purpose of formulating animal
 
                            -49-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    diets and agricultural chemicals.  This item  (7)  is  exempt
 2    from the provisions of Section 3-75.
 3        (8)  Fuel  and  petroleum  products sold to or used by an
 4    air common carrier, certified by the carrier to be  used  for
 5    consumption,  shipment,  or  storage  in  the  conduct of its
 6    business as an air common carrier, for a flight destined  for
 7    or  returning from a location or locations outside the United
 8    States without regard  to  previous  or  subsequent  domestic
 9    stopovers.
10        (9)  Proceeds  of  mandatory  service  charges separately
11    stated on customers' bills for the purchase  and  consumption
12    of food and beverages acquired as an incident to the purchase
13    of  a  service  from  a  serviceman,  to  the extent that the
14    proceeds of the service charge are in  fact  turned  over  as
15    tips  or  as  a  substitute  for  tips  to  the employees who
16    participate  directly  in  preparing,  serving,  hosting   or
17    cleaning  up  the  food  or beverage function with respect to
18    which the service charge is imposed.
19        (10)  Oil field  exploration,  drilling,  and  production
20    equipment, including (i) rigs and parts of rigs, rotary rigs,
21    cable  tool  rigs,  and  workover rigs, (ii) pipe and tubular
22    goods, including casing and drill strings,  (iii)  pumps  and
23    pump-jack  units,  (iv) storage tanks and flow lines, (v) any
24    individual  replacement  part  for  oil  field   exploration,
25    drilling,  and  production  equipment, and (vi) machinery and
26    equipment purchased for lease; but excluding  motor  vehicles
27    required to be registered under the Illinois Vehicle Code.
28        (11)  Proceeds from the sale of photoprocessing machinery
29    and  equipment,  including repair and replacement parts, both
30    new and used, including that manufactured on  special  order,
31    certified   by   the  purchaser  to  be  used  primarily  for
32    photoprocessing, and including photoprocessing machinery  and
33    equipment purchased for lease.
34        (12)  Coal   exploration,   mining,  offhighway  hauling,
 
                            -50-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    processing, maintenance, and reclamation equipment, including
 2    replacement parts  and  equipment,  and  including  equipment
 3    purchased for lease, but excluding motor vehicles required to
 4    be registered under the Illinois Vehicle Code.
 5        (13)  Semen used for artificial insemination of livestock
 6    for direct agricultural production.
 7        (14)  Horses, or interests in horses, registered with and
 8    meeting  the  requirements  of  any of the Arabian Horse Club
 9    Registry of America, Appaloosa Horse Club,  American  Quarter
10    Horse  Association,  United  States  Trotting Association, or
11    Jockey Club, as appropriate, used for purposes of breeding or
12    racing for prizes.
13        (15)  Computers and communications equipment utilized for
14    any hospital purpose and equipment  used  in  the  diagnosis,
15    analysis,  or  treatment  of hospital patients purchased by a
16    lessor who leases the equipment, under a lease of one year or
17    longer executed or in effect at the  time  the  lessor  would
18    otherwise  be  subject  to  the tax imposed by this Act, to a
19    hospital  that  has  been  issued  an  active  tax  exemption
20    identification number by the Department under Section  1g  of
21    the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act. If the equipment is leased
22    in  a  manner  that does not qualify for this exemption or is
23    used in any other non-exempt  manner,  the  lessor  shall  be
24    liable for the tax imposed under this Act or the Use Tax Act,
25    as  the  case  may  be, based on the fair market value of the
26    property at the  time  the  non-qualifying  use  occurs.   No
27    lessor shall collect or attempt to collect an amount (however
28    designated)  that  purports  to reimburse that lessor for the
29    tax imposed by this Act or the Use Tax Act, as the  case  may
30    be,  if the tax has not been paid by the lessor.  If a lessor
31    improperly collects any such  amount  from  the  lessee,  the
32    lessee  shall  have  a  legal right to claim a refund of that
33    amount from the lessor.  If,  however,  that  amount  is  not
34    refunded  to  the lessee for any reason, the lessor is liable
 
                            -51-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    to pay that amount to the Department.
 2        (16)  Personal property purchased by a lessor who  leases
 3    the property, under a lease of one year or longer executed or
 4    in  effect  at the time the lessor would otherwise be subject
 5    to the tax imposed by this Act, to a governmental  body  that
 6    has been issued an active tax exemption identification number
 7    by   the  Department  under  Section  1g  of  the  Retailers'
 8    Occupation Tax Act.  If the property is leased  in  a  manner
 9    that  does  not  qualify for this exemption or is used in any
10    other non-exempt manner, the lessor shall be liable  for  the
11    tax  imposed  under  this Act or the Use Tax Act, as the case
12    may be, based on the fair market value of the property at the
13    time the non-qualifying use occurs.  No lessor shall  collect
14    or  attempt  to  collect  an amount (however designated) that
15    purports to reimburse that lessor for the tax imposed by this
16    Act or the Use Tax Act, as the case may be, if  the  tax  has
17    not been paid by the lessor.  If a lessor improperly collects
18    any  such  amount  from  the  lessee, the lessee shall have a
19    legal right to claim a refund of that amount from the lessor.
20    If, however, that amount is not refunded to  the  lessee  for
21    any  reason,  the  lessor is liable to pay that amount to the
22    Department.
23        (17)  Beginning with taxable years  ending  on  or  after
24    December  31, 1995 and ending with taxable years ending on or
25    before December 31, 2004, personal property that  is  donated
26    for  disaster  relief  to  be  used  in  a State or federally
27    declared disaster area in Illinois or bordering Illinois by a
28    manufacturer or retailer that is registered in this State  to
29    a   corporation,   society,   association,   foundation,   or
30    institution  that  has  been  issued  a  sales  tax exemption
31    identification number by the Department that assists  victims
32    of the disaster who reside within the declared disaster area.
33        (18)  Beginning  with  taxable  years  ending on or after
34    December 31, 1995 and ending with taxable years ending on  or
 
                            -52-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    before  December  31, 2004, personal property that is used in
 2    the performance of  infrastructure  repairs  in  this  State,
 3    including  but  not  limited  to municipal roads and streets,
 4    access roads, bridges,  sidewalks,  waste  disposal  systems,
 5    water  and  sewer  line  extensions,  water  distribution and
 6    purification facilities, storm water drainage  and  retention
 7    facilities, and sewage treatment facilities, resulting from a
 8    State or federally declared disaster in Illinois or bordering
 9    Illinois  when  such  repairs  are  initiated  on  facilities
10    located  in  the declared disaster area within 6 months after
11    the disaster.
12        (19)  Beginning  July  1,  1999,  game  or   game   birds
13    purchased  at  a "game breeding and hunting preserve area" or
14    an "exotic game hunting area" as those terms are used in  the
15    Wildlife  Code  or  at  a  hunting enclosure approved through
16    rules adopted by the Department of Natural  Resources.   This
17    paragraph is exempt from the provisions of Section 3-75.
18        (20)  (19)  A  motor  vehicle, as that term is defined in
19    Section 1-146 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, that  is  donated
20    to   a   corporation,  limited  liability  company,  society,
21    association, foundation, or institution that is determined by
22    the Department to be organized and operated  exclusively  for
23    educational  purposes.   For  purposes  of this exemption, "a
24    corporation, limited liability company, society, association,
25    foundation, or institution organized and operated exclusively
26    for educational  purposes"  means  all  tax-supported  public
27    schools, private schools that offer systematic instruction in
28    useful  branches  of  learning  by  methods  common to public
29    schools  and  that  compare  favorably  in  their  scope  and
30    intensity with the course of study presented in tax-supported
31    schools, and vocational or technical  schools  or  institutes
32    organized  and  operated  exclusively  to provide a course of
33    study of not less than  6  weeks  duration  and  designed  to
34    prepare  individuals to follow a trade or to pursue a manual,
 
                            -53-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    technical, mechanical, industrial,  business,  or  commercial
 2    occupation.
 3        (21) (20)  Beginning January 1, 2000,  personal property,
 4    including  food, purchased through fundraising events for the
 5    benefit of  a  public  or  private  elementary  or  secondary
 6    school,  a  group  of  those  schools,  or one or more school
 7    districts if the events are sponsored by an entity recognized
 8    by the school district that consists primarily of  volunteers
 9    and  includes  parents  and  teachers of the school children.
10    This paragraph does not apply to fundraising events  (i)  for
11    the benefit of private home instruction or (ii) for which the
12    fundraising  entity  purchases  the personal property sold at
13    the events from another individual or entity  that  sold  the
14    property  for the purpose of resale by the fundraising entity
15    and that profits from the sale  to  the  fundraising  entity.
16    This paragraph is exempt from the provisions of Section 3-75.
17        (22)   (19)  Beginning  January  1,  2000,  new  or  used
18    automatic vending machines that prepare and  serve  hot  food
19    and  beverages,  including coffee, soup, and other items, and
20    replacement parts for these  machines.    This  paragraph  is
21    exempt from the provisions of Section 3-75.
22        (23)  Beginning  on  January  1, 2002, production related
23    tangible  personal  property  and  machinery  and  equipment,
24    including repair and replacement parts, both  new  and  used,
25    and  including  those  items manufactured on special order or
26    purchased  for  lease,  certified  by  the  purchaser  to  be
27    essential to and  used  in  the  integrated  process  of  the
28    construction  of  a  mine-mouth power plant located within an
29    Enterprise Zone and  related  power  transmission  lines,  as
30    determined   under  Section  605-331  of  the  Department  of
31    Commerce   and   Community   Affairs   Law   of   the   Civil
32    Administrative  Code  of  Illinois.   For  purpose  of   this
33    Section,  "mine-mouth  power  plant" means a coal-fired power
34    plant sited adjacent to a coal mine.
 
                            -54-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    (Source: P.A. 90-14,  eff.  7-1-97;  90-552,  eff.  12-12-97;
 2    90-605,  eff.  6-30-98;  91-51,  eff.  6-30-99;  91-200, eff.
 3    7-20-99; 91-439, eff. 8-6-99; 91-637, eff.  8-20-99;  91-644,
 4    eff. 8-20-99; revised 9-29-99.)

 5        Section  15-955.   The  Service  Occupation  Tax  Act  is
 6    amended by changing Section 3-5 as follows:

 7        (35 ILCS 115/3-5) (from Ch. 120, par. 439.103-5)
 8        Sec.  3-5.   Exemptions.  The following tangible personal
 9    property is exempt from the tax imposed by this Act:
10        (1)  Personal property sold by  a  corporation,  society,
11    association,  foundation, institution, or organization, other
12    than a limited  liability  company,  that  is  organized  and
13    operated  as  a  not-for-profit  service  enterprise  for the
14    benefit of persons 65 years of age or older if  the  personal
15    property  was not purchased by the enterprise for the purpose
16    of resale by the enterprise.
17        (2)  Personal  property  purchased  by  a  not-for-profit
18    Illinois county  fair  association  for  use  in  conducting,
19    operating, or promoting the county fair.
20        (3)  Personal  property  purchased  by any not-for-profit
21    arts or cultural  organization  that  establishes,  by  proof
22    required  by  the Department by rule, that it has received an
23    exemption  under Section 501(c)(3) of  the  Internal  Revenue
24    Code  and that is organized and operated for the presentation
25    or support of arts or cultural  programming,  activities,  or
26    services.   These  organizations include, but are not limited
27    to, music and dramatic arts organizations  such  as  symphony
28    orchestras  and  theatrical groups, arts and cultural service
29    organizations,   local    arts    councils,    visual    arts
30    organizations, and media arts organizations.
31        (4)  Legal  tender,  currency,  medallions,  or  gold  or
32    silver   coinage   issued  by  the  State  of  Illinois,  the
 
                            -55-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    government of the United States of America, or the government
 2    of any foreign country, and bullion.
 3        (5)  Graphic  arts  machinery  and  equipment,  including
 4    repair  and  replacement  parts,  both  new  and  used,   and
 5    including that manufactured on special order or purchased for
 6    lease,  certified  by  the purchaser to be used primarily for
 7    graphic arts production.
 8        (6)  Personal  property  sold  by   a   teacher-sponsored
 9    student   organization   affiliated  with  an  elementary  or
10    secondary school located in Illinois.
11        (7)  Farm machinery and equipment,  both  new  and  used,
12    including  that  manufactured  on special order, certified by
13    the purchaser to be used primarily for production agriculture
14    or  State  or  federal   agricultural   programs,   including
15    individual replacement parts for the machinery and equipment,
16    including  machinery  and  equipment purchased for lease, and
17    including implements of husbandry defined in Section 1-130 of
18    the Illinois Vehicle Code, farm  machinery  and  agricultural
19    chemical  and fertilizer spreaders, and nurse wagons required
20    to be registered under Section 3-809 of the Illinois  Vehicle
21    Code,  but  excluding  other  motor  vehicles  required to be
22    registered under the  Illinois  Vehicle  Code.  Horticultural
23    polyhouses  or  hoop houses used for propagating, growing, or
24    overwintering plants shall be considered farm  machinery  and
25    equipment  under  this item (7). Agricultural chemical tender
26    tanks and dry boxes shall include units sold separately  from
27    a  motor  vehicle  required  to  be  licensed  and units sold
28    mounted on a motor vehicle required to  be  licensed  if  the
29    selling price of the tender is separately stated.
30        Farm  machinery  and  equipment  shall  include precision
31    farming equipment  that  is  installed  or  purchased  to  be
32    installed  on farm machinery and equipment including, but not
33    limited  to,  tractors,   harvesters,   sprayers,   planters,
34    seeders,  or spreaders. Precision farming equipment includes,
 
                            -56-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    but is not  limited  to,  soil  testing  sensors,  computers,
 2    monitors,  software,  global positioning and mapping systems,
 3    and other such equipment.
 4        Farm machinery and  equipment  also  includes  computers,
 5    sensors,  software,  and  related equipment used primarily in
 6    the computer-assisted  operation  of  production  agriculture
 7    facilities,  equipment,  and  activities  such  as,  but  not
 8    limited  to,  the  collection, monitoring, and correlation of
 9    animal and crop data for the purpose  of  formulating  animal
10    diets  and  agricultural  chemicals.  This item (7) is exempt
11    from the provisions of Section 3-55.
12        (8)  Fuel and petroleum products sold to or  used  by  an
13    air  common  carrier, certified by the carrier to be used for
14    consumption, shipment, or  storage  in  the  conduct  of  its
15    business  as an air common carrier, for a flight destined for
16    or returning from a location or locations outside the  United
17    States  without  regard  to  previous  or subsequent domestic
18    stopovers.
19        (9)  Proceeds of  mandatory  service  charges  separately
20    stated  on  customers' bills for the purchase and consumption
21    of food and beverages, to the extent that the proceeds of the
22    service charge are in fact  turned  over  as  tips  or  as  a
23    substitute for tips to the employees who participate directly
24    in  preparing,  serving,  hosting  or cleaning up the food or
25    beverage function with respect to which the service charge is
26    imposed.
27        (10)  Oil field  exploration,  drilling,  and  production
28    equipment, including (i) rigs and parts of rigs, rotary rigs,
29    cable  tool  rigs,  and  workover rigs, (ii) pipe and tubular
30    goods, including casing and drill strings,  (iii)  pumps  and
31    pump-jack  units,  (iv) storage tanks and flow lines, (v) any
32    individual  replacement  part  for  oil  field   exploration,
33    drilling,  and  production  equipment, and (vi) machinery and
34    equipment purchased for lease; but excluding  motor  vehicles
 
                            -57-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    required to be registered under the Illinois Vehicle Code.
 2        (11)  Photoprocessing  machinery and equipment, including
 3    repair and replacement parts, both new  and  used,  including
 4    that   manufactured   on  special  order,  certified  by  the
 5    purchaser to  be  used  primarily  for  photoprocessing,  and
 6    including  photoprocessing  machinery and equipment purchased
 7    for lease.
 8        (12)  Coal  exploration,  mining,   offhighway   hauling,
 9    processing, maintenance, and reclamation equipment, including
10    replacement  parts  and  equipment,  and  including equipment
11    purchased for lease, but excluding motor vehicles required to
12    be registered under the Illinois Vehicle Code.
13        (13)  Food for human consumption that is to  be  consumed
14    off  the  premises  where  it  is  sold (other than alcoholic
15    beverages, soft drinks and food that has  been  prepared  for
16    immediate  consumption) and prescription and non-prescription
17    medicines, drugs,  medical  appliances,  and  insulin,  urine
18    testing  materials,  syringes, and needles used by diabetics,
19    for human use, when purchased for use by a  person  receiving
20    medical assistance under Article 5 of the Illinois Public Aid
21    Code  who  resides  in a licensed long-term care facility, as
22    defined in the Nursing Home Care Act.
23        (14)  Semen used for artificial insemination of livestock
24    for direct agricultural production.
25        (15)  Horses, or interests in horses, registered with and
26    meeting the requirements of any of  the  Arabian  Horse  Club
27    Registry  of  America, Appaloosa Horse Club, American Quarter
28    Horse Association, United  States  Trotting  Association,  or
29    Jockey Club, as appropriate, used for purposes of breeding or
30    racing for prizes.
31        (16)  Computers and communications equipment utilized for
32    any  hospital  purpose  and  equipment used in the diagnosis,
33    analysis, or treatment of hospital patients sold to a  lessor
34    who leases the equipment, under a lease of one year or longer
 
                            -58-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    executed  or  in  effect  at  the  time of the purchase, to a
 2    hospital  that  has  been  issued  an  active  tax  exemption
 3    identification number by the Department under Section  1g  of
 4    the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act.
 5        (17)  Personal  property  sold to a lessor who leases the
 6    property, under a lease of one year or longer executed or  in
 7    effect  at  the  time of the purchase, to a governmental body
 8    that has been issued an active tax  exemption  identification
 9    number  by  the Department under Section 1g of the Retailers'
10    Occupation Tax Act.
11        (18)  Beginning with taxable years  ending  on  or  after
12    December  31, 1995 and ending with taxable years ending on or
13    before December 31, 2004, personal property that  is  donated
14    for  disaster  relief  to  be  used  in  a State or federally
15    declared disaster area in Illinois or bordering Illinois by a
16    manufacturer or retailer that is registered in this State  to
17    a   corporation,   society,   association,   foundation,   or
18    institution  that  has  been  issued  a  sales  tax exemption
19    identification number by the Department that assists  victims
20    of the disaster who reside within the declared disaster area.
21        (19)  Beginning  with  taxable  years  ending on or after
22    December 31, 1995 and ending with taxable years ending on  or
23    before  December  31, 2004, personal property that is used in
24    the performance of  infrastructure  repairs  in  this  State,
25    including  but  not  limited  to municipal roads and streets,
26    access roads, bridges,  sidewalks,  waste  disposal  systems,
27    water  and  sewer  line  extensions,  water  distribution and
28    purification facilities, storm water drainage  and  retention
29    facilities, and sewage treatment facilities, resulting from a
30    State or federally declared disaster in Illinois or bordering
31    Illinois  when  such  repairs  are  initiated  on  facilities
32    located  in  the declared disaster area within 6 months after
33    the disaster.
34        (20)  Beginning July 1, 1999, game or game birds sold  at
 
                            -59-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    a  "game  breeding  and  hunting preserve area" or an "exotic
 2    game hunting area" as those terms are used  in  the  Wildlife
 3    Code or at a hunting enclosure approved through rules adopted
 4    by  the  Department  of Natural Resources.  This paragraph is
 5    exempt from the provisions of Section 3-55.
 6        (21) (20)  A motor vehicle, as that term  is  defined  in
 7    Section  1-146  of the Illinois Vehicle Code, that is donated
 8    to  a  corporation,  limited  liability   company,   society,
 9    association, foundation, or institution that is determined by
10    the  Department  to be organized and operated exclusively for
11    educational purposes.  For purposes  of  this  exemption,  "a
12    corporation, limited liability company, society, association,
13    foundation, or institution organized and operated exclusively
14    for  educational  purposes"  means  all  tax-supported public
15    schools, private schools that offer systematic instruction in
16    useful branches of  learning  by  methods  common  to  public
17    schools  and  that  compare  favorably  in  their  scope  and
18    intensity with the course of study presented in tax-supported
19    schools,  and  vocational  or technical schools or institutes
20    organized and operated exclusively to  provide  a  course  of
21    study  of  not  less  than  6  weeks duration and designed to
22    prepare individuals to follow a trade or to pursue a  manual,
23    technical,  mechanical,  industrial,  business, or commercial
24    occupation.
25        (22) (21)  Beginning January 1, 2000,  personal property,
26    including food, purchased through fundraising events for  the
27    benefit  of  a  public  or  private  elementary  or secondary
28    school, a group of those  schools,  or  one  or  more  school
29    districts if the events are sponsored by an entity recognized
30    by  the school district that consists primarily of volunteers
31    and includes parents and teachers  of  the  school  children.
32    This  paragraph  does not apply to fundraising events (i) for
33    the benefit of private home instruction or (ii) for which the
34    fundraising entity purchases the personal  property  sold  at
 
                            -60-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    the  events  from  another individual or entity that sold the
 2    property for the purpose of resale by the fundraising  entity
 3    and  that  profits  from  the sale to the fundraising entity.
 4    This paragraph is exempt from the provisions of Section 3-55.
 5        (23)  (20)  Beginning  January  1,  2000,  new  or   used
 6    automatic  vending  machines  that prepare and serve hot food
 7    and beverages, including coffee, soup, and other  items,  and
 8    replacement  parts  for  these  machines.   This paragraph is
 9    exempt from the provisions of Section 3-55.
10        (24)  Beginning on January 1,  2002,  production  related
11    tangible  personal  property  and  machinery  and  equipment,
12    including  repair  and  replacement parts, both new and used,
13    and including those items manufactured on  special  order  or
14    purchased  for  lease,  certified  by  the  purchaser  to  be
15    essential  to  and  used  in  the  integrated  process of the
16    construction of a mine-mouth power plant  located  within  an
17    Enterprise  Zone  and  related  power  transmission lines, as
18    determined  under  Section  605-331  of  the  Department   of
19    Commerce   and   Community   Affairs   Law   of   the   Civil
20    Administrative   Code  of  Illinois.   For  purpose  of  this
21    Section, "mine-mouth power plant" means  a  coal-fired  power
22    plant sited adjacent to a coal mine.
23    (Source: P.A.  90-14,  eff.  7-1-97;  90-552,  eff. 12-12-97;
24    90-605, eff.  6-30-98;  91-51,  eff.  6-30-99;  91-200,  eff.
25    7-20-99;  91-439,  eff. 8-6-99; 91-533, eff. 8-13-99; 91-637,
26    eff. 8-20-99; 91-644, eff. 8-20-99; revised 9-29-99.)

27        Section 15-960.  The Retailers'  Occupation  Tax  Act  is
28    amended by changing Section 2-5 as follows:

29        (35 ILCS 120/2-5) (from Ch. 120, par. 441-5)
30        Sec. 2-5.  Exemptions.  Gross receipts from proceeds from
31    the  sale  of  the  following  tangible personal property are
32    exempt from the tax imposed by this Act:
 
                            -61-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1        (1)  Farm chemicals.
 2        (2)  Farm machinery and equipment,  both  new  and  used,
 3    including  that  manufactured  on special order, certified by
 4    the purchaser to be used primarily for production agriculture
 5    or  State  or  federal   agricultural   programs,   including
 6    individual replacement parts for the machinery and equipment,
 7    including  machinery  and  equipment purchased for lease, and
 8    including implements of husbandry defined in Section 1-130 of
 9    the Illinois Vehicle Code, farm  machinery  and  agricultural
10    chemical  and fertilizer spreaders, and nurse wagons required
11    to be registered under Section 3-809 of the Illinois  Vehicle
12    Code,  but  excluding  other  motor  vehicles  required to be
13    registered under the  Illinois  Vehicle  Code.  Horticultural
14    polyhouses  or  hoop houses used for propagating, growing, or
15    overwintering plants shall be considered farm  machinery  and
16    equipment  under  this item (2). Agricultural chemical tender
17    tanks and dry boxes shall include units sold separately  from
18    a  motor  vehicle  required  to  be  licensed  and units sold
19    mounted on a motor vehicle required to be  licensed,  if  the
20    selling price of the tender is separately stated.
21        Farm  machinery  and  equipment  shall  include precision
22    farming equipment  that  is  installed  or  purchased  to  be
23    installed  on farm machinery and equipment including, but not
24    limited  to,  tractors,   harvesters,   sprayers,   planters,
25    seeders,  or spreaders. Precision farming equipment includes,
26    but is not  limited  to,  soil  testing  sensors,  computers,
27    monitors,  software,  global positioning and mapping systems,
28    and other such equipment.
29        Farm machinery and  equipment  also  includes  computers,
30    sensors,  software,  and  related equipment used primarily in
31    the computer-assisted  operation  of  production  agriculture
32    facilities,  equipment,  and  activities  such  as,  but  not
33    limited  to,  the  collection, monitoring, and correlation of
34    animal and crop data for the purpose  of  formulating  animal
 
                            -62-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    diets  and  agricultural  chemicals.  This item (7) is exempt
 2    from the provisions of Section 2-70.
 3        (3)  Distillation machinery and equipment, sold as a unit
 4    or kit, assembled or installed by the retailer, certified  by
 5    the  user to be used only for the production of ethyl alcohol
 6    that will be used for consumption  as  motor  fuel  or  as  a
 7    component of motor fuel for the personal use of the user, and
 8    not subject to sale or resale.
 9        (4)  Graphic  arts  machinery  and  equipment,  including
10    repair   and  replacement  parts,  both  new  and  used,  and
11    including that manufactured on special order or purchased for
12    lease, certified by the purchaser to be  used  primarily  for
13    graphic arts production.
14        (5)  A  motor  vehicle  of  the  first  division, a motor
15    vehicle of the second division that is a self-contained motor
16    vehicle designed or permanently converted to  provide  living
17    quarters  for  recreational,  camping,  or  travel  use, with
18    direct walk through access to the living  quarters  from  the
19    driver's seat, or a motor vehicle of the second division that
20    is  of  the van configuration designed for the transportation
21    of not less than 7 nor more than 16 passengers, as defined in
22    Section 1-146 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, that is used  for
23    automobile  renting,  as  defined  in  the Automobile Renting
24    Occupation and Use Tax Act.
25        (6)  Personal  property  sold  by   a   teacher-sponsored
26    student   organization   affiliated  with  an  elementary  or
27    secondary school located in Illinois.
28        (7)  Proceeds of that portion of the selling price  of  a
29    passenger car the sale of which is subject to the Replacement
30    Vehicle Tax.
31        (8)  Personal  property  sold  to an Illinois county fair
32    association for use in conducting,  operating,  or  promoting
33    the county fair.
34        (9)  Personal  property  sold to a not-for-profit arts or
 
                            -63-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    cultural organization that establishes, by proof required  by
 2    the  Department  by  rule,  that it has received an exemption
 3    under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that
 4    is organized and operated for the presentation or support  of
 5    arts or cultural programming, activities, or services.  These
 6    organizations  include,  but  are  not  limited to, music and
 7    dramatic arts organizations such as symphony  orchestras  and
 8    theatrical  groups,  arts and cultural service organizations,
 9    local arts councils, visual  arts  organizations,  and  media
10    arts organizations.
11        (10)  Personal  property  sold by a corporation, society,
12    association, foundation, institution, or organization,  other
13    than  a  limited  liability  company,  that  is organized and
14    operated as  a  not-for-profit  service  enterprise  for  the
15    benefit  of  persons 65 years of age or older if the personal
16    property was not purchased by the enterprise for the  purpose
17    of resale by the enterprise.
18        (11)  Personal property sold to a governmental body, to a
19    corporation, society, association, foundation, or institution
20    organized and operated exclusively for charitable, religious,
21    or  educational purposes, or to a not-for-profit corporation,
22    society,    association,    foundation,    institution,    or
23    organization that has no compensated  officers  or  employees
24    and   that  is  organized  and  operated  primarily  for  the
25    recreation of persons 55 years of age  or  older.  A  limited
26    liability  company  may  qualify for the exemption under this
27    paragraph only if the limited liability company is  organized
28    and  operated  exclusively  for  educational purposes. On and
29    after July 1, 1987, however, no entity otherwise eligible for
30    this exemption shall make tax-free purchases unless it has an
31    active identification number issued by the Department.
32        (12)  Personal property sold to interstate  carriers  for
33    hire  for  use as rolling stock moving in interstate commerce
34    or to lessors under leases of one year or longer executed  or
 
                            -64-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    in  effect at the time of purchase by interstate carriers for
 2    hire for use as rolling stock moving in  interstate  commerce
 3    and  equipment  operated  by  a  telecommunications provider,
 4    licensed as a common carrier by  the  Federal  Communications
 5    Commission,  which  is permanently installed in or affixed to
 6    aircraft moving in interstate commerce.
 7        (13)  Proceeds from sales to owners, lessors, or shippers
 8    of tangible personal property that is utilized by  interstate
 9    carriers  for  hire  for  use  as  rolling  stock  moving  in
10    interstate    commerce    and   equipment   operated   by   a
11    telecommunications provider, licensed as a common carrier  by
12    the  Federal  Communications Commission, which is permanently
13    installed in or affixed  to  aircraft  moving  in  interstate
14    commerce.
15        (14)  Machinery  and  equipment  that will be used by the
16    purchaser, or a lessee of the  purchaser,  primarily  in  the
17    process  of  manufacturing  or  assembling  tangible personal
18    property for wholesale or retail sale or lease,  whether  the
19    sale or lease is made directly by the manufacturer or by some
20    other  person,  whether the materials used in the process are
21    owned by the manufacturer or some other  person,  or  whether
22    the sale or lease is made apart from or as an incident to the
23    seller's  engaging  in  the  service  occupation of producing
24    machines, tools,  dies,  jigs,  patterns,  gauges,  or  other
25    similar  items  of no commercial value on special order for a
26    particular purchaser.
27        (15)  Proceeds of mandatory  service  charges  separately
28    stated  on  customers'  bills for purchase and consumption of
29    food and beverages, to the extent that the  proceeds  of  the
30    service  charge  are  in  fact  turned  over  as tips or as a
31    substitute for tips to the employees who participate directly
32    in preparing, serving, hosting or cleaning  up  the  food  or
33    beverage function with respect to which the service charge is
34    imposed.
 
                            -65-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1        (16)  Petroleum  products  sold  to  a  purchaser  if the
 2    seller is prohibited by federal law from charging tax to  the
 3    purchaser.
 4        (17)  Tangible personal property sold to a common carrier
 5    by rail or motor that receives the physical possession of the
 6    property  in  Illinois  and  that transports the property, or
 7    shares with another common carrier in the  transportation  of
 8    the  property,  out of Illinois on a standard uniform bill of
 9    lading showing the seller of the property as the  shipper  or
10    consignor  of the property to a destination outside Illinois,
11    for use outside Illinois.
12        (18)  Legal tender,  currency,  medallions,  or  gold  or
13    silver   coinage   issued  by  the  State  of  Illinois,  the
14    government of the United States of America, or the government
15    of any foreign country, and bullion.
16        (19)  Oil field  exploration,  drilling,  and  production
17    equipment, including (i) rigs and parts of rigs, rotary rigs,
18    cable  tool  rigs,  and  workover rigs, (ii) pipe and tubular
19    goods, including casing and drill strings,  (iii)  pumps  and
20    pump-jack  units,  (iv) storage tanks and flow lines, (v) any
21    individual  replacement  part  for  oil  field   exploration,
22    drilling,  and  production  equipment, and (vi) machinery and
23    equipment purchased for lease; but excluding  motor  vehicles
24    required to be registered under the Illinois Vehicle Code.
25        (20)  Photoprocessing  machinery and equipment, including
26    repair and replacement parts, both new  and  used,  including
27    that   manufactured   on  special  order,  certified  by  the
28    purchaser to  be  used  primarily  for  photoprocessing,  and
29    including  photoprocessing  machinery and equipment purchased
30    for lease.
31        (21)  Coal  exploration,  mining,   offhighway   hauling,
32    processing, maintenance, and reclamation equipment, including
33    replacement  parts  and  equipment,  and  including equipment
34    purchased for lease, but excluding motor vehicles required to
 
                            -66-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    be registered under the Illinois Vehicle Code.
 2        (22)  Fuel and petroleum products sold to or used  by  an
 3    air  carrier,  certified  by  the  carrier  to  be  used  for
 4    consumption,  shipment,  or  storage  in  the  conduct of its
 5    business as an air common carrier, for a flight destined  for
 6    or  returning from a location or locations outside the United
 7    States without regard  to  previous  or  subsequent  domestic
 8    stopovers.
 9        (23)  A  transaction  in  which  the  purchase  order  is
10    received  by  a  florist who is located outside Illinois, but
11    who has a florist located in Illinois deliver the property to
12    the purchaser or the purchaser's donee in Illinois.
13        (24)  Fuel consumed or used in the  operation  of  ships,
14    barges,  or  vessels  that  are  used primarily in or for the
15    transportation of property or the conveyance of  persons  for
16    hire  on  rivers  bordering  on  this  State  if  the fuel is
17    delivered by the seller to the purchaser's  barge,  ship,  or
18    vessel while it is afloat upon that bordering river.
19        (25)  A motor vehicle sold in this State to a nonresident
20    even though the motor vehicle is delivered to the nonresident
21    in  this  State,  if the motor vehicle is not to be titled in
22    this State, and if a driveaway decal permit is issued to  the
23    motor  vehicle  as  provided in Section 3-603 of the Illinois
24    Vehicle Code or if  the  nonresident  purchaser  has  vehicle
25    registration  plates  to  transfer  to the motor vehicle upon
26    returning to his or her home  state.   The  issuance  of  the
27    driveaway   decal   permit   or   having   the   out-of-state
28    registration plates to be transferred is prima facie evidence
29    that the motor vehicle will not be titled in this State.
30        (26)  Semen used for artificial insemination of livestock
31    for direct agricultural production.
32        (27)  Horses, or interests in horses, registered with and
33    meeting  the  requirements  of  any of the Arabian Horse Club
34    Registry of America, Appaloosa Horse Club,  American  Quarter
 
                            -67-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    Horse  Association,  United  States  Trotting Association, or
 2    Jockey Club, as appropriate, used for purposes of breeding or
 3    racing for prizes.
 4        (28)  Computers and communications equipment utilized for
 5    any hospital purpose and equipment  used  in  the  diagnosis,
 6    analysis,  or treatment of hospital patients sold to a lessor
 7    who leases the equipment, under a lease of one year or longer
 8    executed or in effect at the  time  of  the  purchase,  to  a
 9    hospital  that  has  been  issued  an  active  tax  exemption
10    identification  number  by the Department under Section 1g of
11    this Act.
12        (29)  Personal property sold to a lessor who  leases  the
13    property,  under a lease of one year or longer executed or in
14    effect at the time of the purchase, to  a  governmental  body
15    that  has  been issued an active tax exemption identification
16    number by the Department under Section 1g of this Act.
17        (30)  Beginning with taxable years  ending  on  or  after
18    December  31, 1995 and ending with taxable years ending on or
19    before December 31, 2004, personal property that  is  donated
20    for  disaster  relief  to  be  used  in  a State or federally
21    declared disaster area in Illinois or bordering Illinois by a
22    manufacturer or retailer that is registered in this State  to
23    a   corporation,   society,   association,   foundation,   or
24    institution  that  has  been  issued  a  sales  tax exemption
25    identification number by the Department that assists  victims
26    of the disaster who reside within the declared disaster area.
27        (31)  Beginning  with  taxable  years  ending on or after
28    December 31, 1995 and ending with taxable years ending on  or
29    before  December  31, 2004, personal property that is used in
30    the performance of  infrastructure  repairs  in  this  State,
31    including  but  not  limited  to municipal roads and streets,
32    access roads, bridges,  sidewalks,  waste  disposal  systems,
33    water  and  sewer  line  extensions,  water  distribution and
34    purification facilities, storm water drainage  and  retention
 
                            -68-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    facilities, and sewage treatment facilities, resulting from a
 2    State or federally declared disaster in Illinois or bordering
 3    Illinois  when  such  repairs  are  initiated  on  facilities
 4    located  in  the declared disaster area within 6 months after
 5    the disaster.
 6        (32)  Beginning July 1, 1999, game or game birds sold  at
 7    a  "game  breeding  and  hunting preserve area" or an "exotic
 8    game hunting area" as those terms are used  in  the  Wildlife
 9    Code or at a hunting enclosure approved through rules adopted
10    by  the  Department  of Natural Resources.  This paragraph is
11    exempt from the provisions of Section 2-70.
12        (33) (32)  A motor vehicle, as that term  is  defined  in
13    Section  1-146  of the Illinois Vehicle Code, that is donated
14    to  a  corporation,  limited  liability   company,   society,
15    association, foundation, or institution that is determined by
16    the  Department  to be organized and operated exclusively for
17    educational purposes.  For purposes  of  this  exemption,  "a
18    corporation, limited liability company, society, association,
19    foundation, or institution organized and operated exclusively
20    for  educational  purposes"  means  all  tax-supported public
21    schools, private schools that offer systematic instruction in
22    useful branches of  learning  by  methods  common  to  public
23    schools  and  that  compare  favorably  in  their  scope  and
24    intensity with the course of study presented in tax-supported
25    schools,  and  vocational  or technical schools or institutes
26    organized and operated exclusively to  provide  a  course  of
27    study  of  not  less  than  6  weeks duration and designed to
28    prepare individuals to follow a trade or to pursue a  manual,
29    technical,  mechanical,  industrial,  business, or commercial
30    occupation.
31        (34) (33)  Beginning January 1, 2000,  personal property,
32    including food, purchased through fundraising events for  the
33    benefit  of  a  public  or  private  elementary  or secondary
34    school, a group of those  schools,  or  one  or  more  school
 
                            -69-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    districts if the events are sponsored by an entity recognized
 2    by  the school district that consists primarily of volunteers
 3    and includes parents and teachers  of  the  school  children.
 4    This  paragraph  does not apply to fundraising events (i) for
 5    the benefit of private home instruction or (ii) for which the
 6    fundraising entity purchases the personal  property  sold  at
 7    the  events  from  another individual or entity that sold the
 8    property for the purpose of resale by the fundraising  entity
 9    and  that  profits  from  the sale to the fundraising entity.
10    This paragraph is exempt from the provisions of Section 2-70.
11        (35)  (32)  Beginning  January  1,  2000,  new  or   used
12    automatic  vending  machines  that prepare and serve hot food
13    and beverages, including coffee, soup, and other  items,  and
14    replacement  parts  for  these  machines.   This paragraph is
15    exempt from the provisions of Section 2-70.
16        (36)  Beginning on January 1,  2002,  production  related
17    tangible  personal  property  and  machinery  and  equipment,
18    including  repair  and  replacement parts, both new and used,
19    and including those items manufactured on  special  order  or
20    purchased  for  lease,  certified  by  the  purchaser  to  be
21    essential  to  and  used  in  the  integrated  process of the
22    construction of a mine-mouth power plant  located  within  an
23    Enterprise  Zone  and  related  power  transmission lines, as
24    determined  under  Section  605-331  of  the  Department   of
25    Commerce   and   Community   Affairs   Law   of   the   Civil
26    Administrative   Code  of  Illinois.   For  purpose  of  this
27    Section, "mine-mouth power plant" means  a  coal-fired  power
28    plant sited adjacent to a coal mine.
29    (Source: P.A.   90-14,  eff.  7-1-97;  90-519,  eff.  6-1-98;
30    90-552, eff. 12-12-97;  90-605,  eff.  6-30-98;  91-51,  eff.
31    6-30-99;  91-200,  eff. 7-20-99; 91-439, eff. 8-6-99; 91-533,
32    eff. 8-13-99; 91-637, eff.  8-20-99;  91-644,  eff.  8-20-99;
33    revised 9-28-99.)
 
                            -70-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1        Section  15-965.   The  Property  Tax  Code is amended by
 2    adding Section 15-72 as follows:

 3        (35 ILCS 200/15-72 new)
 4        Sec. 15-72. Exemption for  mine-mouth  power  plants  and
 5    related transmission lines.  All property used exclusively to
 6    operate  a  mine-mouth  power  plant  is exempt. For 10 years
 7    following the completion of  construction,  all  property  on
 8    which  related  power transmission lines, as determined under
 9    Section 605-331 of the Department of Commerce  and  Community
10    Affairs Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois, are
11    sited  is  exempt.  For purposes of this Section, "mine-mouth
12    power plant" means a coal-fired power plant sited adjacent to
13    a coal mine.

14        Section 15-970.  The Public Utilities Act is  amended  by
15    changing Section 2-202 as follows:

16        (220 ILCS 5/2-202) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 2-202)
17        Sec. 2-202. (a) It is declared to be the public policy of
18    this State that in order to maintain and foster the effective
19    regulation   of  public  utilities  under  this  Act  in  the
20    interests of the People of the  State  of  Illinois  and  the
21    public  utilities  as  well,  the public utilities subject to
22    regulation under this Act and which enjoy  the  privilege  of
23    operating  as  public utilities in this State, shall bear the
24    expense of administering this Act by means of a tax  on  such
25    privilege measured by the annual gross revenue of such public
26    utilities  in  the  manner  provided  in  this  Section.  For
27    purposes of this Section, "expense of administering this Act"
28    includes  any  costs incident to studies, whether made by the
29    Commission or under contract entered into by the  Commission,
30    concerning   environmental   pollution   problems  caused  or
31    contributed  to  by  public  utilities  and  the  means   for
 
                            -71-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    eliminating or abating those problems. Such proceeds shall be
 2    deposited in the Public Utility Fund in the State treasury.
 3        (b)  All  of  the ordinary and contingent expenses of the
 4    Commission incident to the administration of this  Act  shall
 5    be   paid   out   of  the  Public  Utility  Fund  except  the
 6    compensation of the members of the Commission which shall  be
 7    paid  from  the  General  Revenue Fund. Notwithstanding other
 8    provisions of this Act to  the  contrary,  the  ordinary  and
 9    contingent   expenses  of  the  Commission  incident  to  the
10    administration of the Illinois Commercial Transportation  Law
11    may  be paid from appropriations from the Public Utility Fund
12    through the end of fiscal year 1986.
13        (c)  A tax is imposed upon each public utility subject to
14    the provisions of this Act equal to .08% of its gross revenue
15    for each calendar year  commencing  with  the  calendar  year
16    beginning January 1, 1982, except that the Commission may, by
17    rule,  establish  a  different rate no greater than 0.1%. For
18    purposes of this Section, "gross revenue" shall  not  include
19    revenue  from  the  production,  transmission,  distribution,
20    sale, delivery, or furnishing of electricity. "Gross revenue"
21    shall   not   include   amounts  paid  by  telecommunications
22    retailers    under    the    Telecommunications     Municipal
23    Infrastructure Maintenance Fee Act.
24        (d)  Annual  gross  revenue  returns  shall  be  filed in
25    accordance with paragraph (1) or (2) of this subsection (d).
26             (1)  Except as provided in  paragraph  (2)  of  this
27        subsection (d), on or before January 10 of each year each
28        public  utility  subject  to  the  provisions of this Act
29        shall file with the Commission an estimated annual  gross
30        revenue  return  containing  an estimate of the amount of
31        its  gross  revenue  for  the  calendar  year  commencing
32        January 1 of said year and a statement of the  amount  of
33        tax  due  for  said  calendar  year  on the basis of that
34        estimate.  Public utilities may also file revised returns
 
                            -72-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1        containing updated estimates and updated amounts  of  tax
 2        due  during  the calendar year. These revised returns, if
 3        filed, shall form the basis for  quarterly  payments  due
 4        during  the remainder of the calendar year.  In addition,
 5        on or before  February  15  of  each  year,  each  public
 6        utility  shall  file an amended return showing the actual
 7        amount of gross revenues shown by the company's books and
 8        records as of December 31 of the previous year. Forms and
 9        instructions for such  estimated,  revised,  and  amended
10        returns shall be devised and supplied by the Commission.
11             (2)  Beginning  January 1, 1993, the requirements of
12        paragraph (1) of this subsection (d) shall not  apply  to
13        any  public  utility  in  any calendar year for which the
14        total tax the public utility owes under this  Section  is
15        less than $1,000.  For such public utilities with respect
16        to  such  years,  the  public utility shall file with the
17        Commission, on or before  January  31  of  the  following
18        year,  an  annual gross revenue return for the year and a
19        statement of the amount of  tax due for that year on  the
20        basis  of  such a return. Forms and instructions for such
21        returns  and  corrected  returns  shall  be  devised  and
22        supplied by the Commission.
23        (e)  All returns submitted to the Commission by a  public
24    utility  as provided in this subsection (e) or subsection (d)
25    of this Section shall contain or be  verified  by  a  written
26    declaration  by  an appropriate officer of the public utility
27    that the return is made under the penalties of  perjury.  The
28    Commission  may  audit  each  such  return submitted and may,
29    under the provisions of Section 5-101 of this Act, take  such
30    measures as are necessary to ascertain the correctness of the
31    returns submitted. The Commission has the power to direct the
32    filing  of  a corrected return by any utility which has filed
33    an incorrect return and to direct the filing of a  return  by
34    any   utility  which  has  failed  to  submit  a  return.   A
 
                            -73-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    taxpayer's signing a fraudulent return under this Section  is
 2    perjury,  as  defined in Section 32-2 of the Criminal Code of
 3    1961.
 4        (f)  (1)  For all public utilities subject  to  paragraph
 5    (1)  of  subsection  (d),  at least one quarter of the annual
 6    amount of tax due under subsection (c) shall be paid  to  the
 7    Commission  on  or  before  the  tenth day of January, April,
 8    July, and October of the calendar year subject  to  tax.   In
 9    the  event that an adjustment in the amount of tax due should
10    be necessary as a result of  the  filing  of  an  amended  or
11    corrected  return  under  subsection (d) or subsection (e) of
12    this Section, the amount of any deficiency shall be  paid  by
13    the  public  utility  together  with the amended or corrected
14    return and the amount of any excess shall, after  the  filing
15    of  a  claim for credit by the public utility, be returned to
16    the public utility in the form of a credit memorandum in  the
17    amount of such excess or be refunded to the public utility in
18    accordance  with  the  provisions  of  subsection (k) of this
19    Section.  However, if such deficiency or excess is less  than
20    $1,  then  the public utility need not pay the deficiency and
21    may not claim a credit.
22        (2)  Any public  utility  subject  to  paragraph  (2)  of
23    subsection  (d)  shall  pay  the  amount  of  tax  due  under
24    subsection (c) on or before January 31 next following the end
25    of  the  calendar  year subject to tax.  In the event that an
26    adjustment in the amount of tax due should be necessary as  a
27    result  of  the filing of a corrected return under subsection
28    (e), the amount of any deficiency shall be paid by the public
29    utility at the time the corrected return is filed. Any excess
30    tax payment by the public utility shall  be  returned  to  it
31    after  the  filing  of  a  claim for credit, in the form of a
32    credit memorandum in the amount of the excess.   However,  if
33    such deficiency or excess is less than $1, the public utility
34    need not pay the deficiency and may not claim a credit.
 
                            -74-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1        (g)  Each  installment  or  required  payment  of the tax
 2    imposed by subsection (c) becomes delinquent at  midnight  of
 3    the  date  that  it  is  due.  Failure  to  make a payment as
 4    required by this Section shall result in the imposition of  a
 5    late payment penalty, an underestimation penalty, or both, as
 6    provided  by this subsection.  The late payment penalty shall
 7    be the greater of:
 8             (1)  $25 for each month or portion of a  month  that
 9        the installment or required payment is unpaid or
10             (2)  an  amount equal to the difference between what
11        should have been paid on the due  date,  based  upon  the
12        most recently filed estimate, and what was actually paid,
13        times  1%,  for each month or portion of a month that the
14        installment  or  required  payment  goes  unpaid.    This
15        penalty  may  be  assessed  as soon as the installment or
16        required payment becomes delinquent.
17        The underestimation penalty shall apply to  those  public
18    utilities  subject  to  paragraph  (1)  of subsection (d) and
19    shall be calculated after the filing of the  amended  return.
20    It shall be imposed if the amount actually paid on any of the
21    dates  specified  in  subsection (f) is not equal to at least
22    one-fourth of the amount actually due for the year, and shall
23    equal the greater of:
24             (1)  $25 for each month or portion of a  month  that
25        the amount due is unpaid or
26             (2)  an  amount equal to the difference between what
27        should have been paid, based on the amended  return,  and
28        what  was  actually  paid  as  of  the  date specified in
29        subsection (f), times a percentage equal to 1/12  of  the
30        sum  of  10% and the percentage most recently established
31        by the Commission for interest to  be  paid  on  customer
32        deposits  under  83 Ill. Adm. Code 280.70(e)(1), for each
33        month or portion of a month  that  the  amount  due  goes
34        unpaid,  except  that no underestimation penalty shall be
 
                            -75-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1        assessed if the amount actually paid on each of the dates
 2        specified in subsection (f) was based on an  estimate  of
 3        gross  revenues  at  least  equal  to  the  actual  gross
 4        revenues  for  the  previous  year.  The  Commission  may
 5        enforce  the  collection of any delinquent installment or
 6        payment, or portion thereof by legal  action  or  in  any
 7        other  manner  by  which  the collection of debts due the
 8        State of Illinois may be enforced under the laws of  this
 9        State.  The executive director or his designee may excuse
10        the payment of an assessed penalty if he determines  that
11        enforced collection of the penalty would be unjust.
12        (h)  All  sums  collected  by  the  Commission  under the
13    provisions of this Section shall be paid promptly  after  the
14    receipt  of  the  same,  accompanied  by a detailed statement
15    thereof, into the Public Utility Fund in the State treasury.
16        (i)  During the month of  October  of  each  odd-numbered
17    year the Commission shall:
18             (1)  determine the amount of all moneys deposited in
19        the  Public  Utility  Fund  during  the  preceding fiscal
20        biennium plus the balance, if any, in that  fund  at  the
21        beginning of that biennium;
22             (2)  determine the sum total of the following items:
23        (A)    all   moneys   expended   or   obligated   against
24        appropriations made from the Public Utility  Fund  during
25        the  preceding  fiscal  biennium, plus (B) the sum of the
26        credit memoranda  then  outstanding  against  the  Public
27        Utility Fund, if any; and
28             (3)  determine  the amount, if any, by which the sum
29        determined as provided in item  (1)  exceeds  the  amount
30        determined as provided in item (2).
31        If  the amount determined as provided in item (3) of this
32    subsection exceeds  $2,500,000,  the  Commission  shall  then
33    compute  the  proportionate amount, if any, which (x) the tax
34    paid hereunder by each utility during the preceding biennium,
 
                            -76-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    and (y) the amount paid into the Public Utility  Fund  during
 2    the  preceding biennium by the Department of Revenue pursuant
 3    to Sections 2-9 and 2-11 of the Electricity Excise  Tax  Law,
 4    bears  to  the  difference  between  the amount determined as
 5    provided in item (3) of this subsection (i)  and  $2,500,000.
 6    The   Commission   shall   cause   the  proportionate  amount
 7    determined  with  respect  to   payments   made   under   the
 8    Electricity Excise Tax Law to be transferred into the General
 9    Revenue  Fund  in  the State Treasury, and notify each public
10    utility that it may file during the 3 month period after  the
11    date of notification a claim for credit for the proportionate
12    amount  determined with respect to payments made hereunder by
13    the public utility. If the proportionate amount is less  than
14    $10,  no  notification will be sent by the Commission, and no
15    right to a claim exists as to that amount. Upon the filing of
16    a claim for credit within the period provided, the Commission
17    shall issue a credit memorandum in such amount to such public
18    utility. Any claim for credit filed after the period provided
19    for in this Section is void.
20        (i-5)  A public utility is entitled to a  credit  against
21    the tax imposed under this Section in the amount equal to the
22    amount  expended  by  the public utility during the reporting
23    period on use and occupation  taxes  for  the  purchase  coal
24    produced in Illinois.  The Commission shall establish by rule
25    the procedures to apply for the credit.  The Commission shall
26    issue, as provided by rule, a credit memorandum to the public
27    utility for the credit allowed under this subsection (i-5).
28        (j)  Credit  memoranda issued pursuant to subsection (f),
29    and credit memoranda issued  after  notification  and  filing
30    pursuant  to  subsection  (i),  and  credit  memoranda issued
31    pursuant to subsection (i-5) may be applied for  the  2  year
32    period  from the date of issuance, against the payment of any
33    amount due during  that  period  under  the  tax  imposed  by
34    subsection  (c),  or,  subject  to  reasonable  rule  of  the
 
                            -77-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    Commission  including  requirement  of  notification,  may be
 2    assigned to any other public utility  subject  to  regulation
 3    under this Act. Any application of credit memoranda after the
 4    period provided for in this Section is void.
 5        (k)  The  chairman  or executive director may make refund
 6    of fees, taxes or other charges whenever he  shall  determine
 7    that  the  person  or  public  utility will not be liable for
 8    payment of such fees, taxes or charges  during  the  next  24
 9    months  and  he  determines  that  the  issuance  of a credit
10    memorandum would be unjust.
11    (Source: P.A. 90-561, eff. 8-1-98; 90-562, 12-16-97;  90-655,
12    eff. 7-30-98.)

13        Section  15-975.   The  Environmental  Protection  Act is
14    amended by changing Section 9.9 and adding  Section  9.10  as
15    follows:

16        (415 ILCS 5/9.9)
17        Sec. 9.9.  Nitrogen oxides trading system.
18        (a)  The General Assembly finds:
19             (1)  That USEPA has issued a Final Rule published in
20        the  Federal  Register  on  October  27,  1998,  entitled
21        "Finding  of  Significant Contribution and Rulemaking for
22        Certain States in the Ozone  Transport  Assessment  Group
23        Region  for  Purposes  of  Reducing Regional Transport of
24        Ozone", hereinafter referred to as the  "NOx  SIP  Call",
25        compliance  with which will require reducing emissions of
26        nitrogen oxides ("NOx");
27             (2)  That reducing emissions of  NOx  in  the  State
28        helps  the State to meet the national ambient air quality
29        standard for ozone;
30             (3)  That  emissions  trading  is  a  cost-effective
31        means of obtaining reductions of NOx emissions.
32        (b)  The Agency shall propose and the Board  shall  adopt
 
                            -78-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    regulations  to  implement  an interstate NOx trading program
 2    (hereinafter referred to as the  "NOx  Trading  Program")  as
 3    provided  for  in  40 CFR Part 96, including incorporation by
 4    reference of appropriate provisions of 40  CFR  Part  96  and
 5    regulations  to  address  40  CFR  Section  96.4(b),  Section
 6    96.55(c),  Subpart E, and Subpart I.  In addition, the Agency
 7    shall propose  and  the  Board  shall  adopt  regulations  to
 8    implement  NOx  emission  reduction programs for cement kilns
 9    and stationary internal combustion engines.
10        (c)  Allocations of  NOx  allowances  to  large  electric
11    generating  units  ("EGUs") and large non-electric generating
12    units ("non-EGUs"), as defined by 40 CFR Part 96.4(a),  shall
13    not  exceed  the  State's  trading  budget  for  those source
14    categories to be included in the  State  Implementation  Plan
15    for NOx.
16        (d)  In adopting regulations to implement the NOx Trading
17    Program, the Board shall:
18             (1)  assure  that  the economic impact and technical
19        feasibility of NOx emissions  reductions  under  the  NOx
20        Trading   Program   are   considered   relative   to  the
21        traditional regulatory control requirements in the  State
22        for EGUs and non-EGUs;
23             (2)  provide  that  emission  units,  as  defined in
24        Section 39.5(1) of this Act, may opt into the NOx Trading
25        Program;
26             (3)  provide  for  voluntary   reductions   of   NOx
27        emissions  from  emission  units,  as  defined in Section
28        39.5(1)  of  this  Act,  not  otherwise  included   under
29        paragraph  (c)  or  (d)(2)  of  this  Section  to provide
30        additional  allowances  to  EGUs  and  non-EGUs   to   be
31        allocated  by  the Agency.  The regulations shall further
32        provide that such voluntary  reductions  are  verifiable,
33        quantifiable, permanent, and federally enforceable;
34             (4)  provide  that  the  Agency allocate to non-EGUs
 
                            -79-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1        allowances that are designated in the  rule,  unless  the
 2        Agency  has  been directed to transfer the allocations to
 3        another unit subject  to  the  requirements  of  the  NOx
 4        Trading Program, and that upon shutdown of a non-EGU, the
 5        unit  may  transfer  or  sell the NOx allowances that are
 6        allocated to such unit; and
 7             (5)  provide  that  the  Agency  shall   set   aside
 8        annually  a number of allowances, not to exceed 5% of the
 9        total EGU trading budget, to be  made  available  to  new
10        EGUs.
11                  (A)  Those   EGUs   that   commence  commercial
12             operation, as defined in 40 CFR Section 96.2,  at  a
13             time  that is more than half way through the control
14             period in 2003 2002 shall return to the  Agency  any
15             allowances  that were issued to it by the Agency and
16             were not used for compliance in 2004 2003.
17                  (B)  The Agency may charge EGUs  that  commence
18             commercial  operation,  as defined in 40 CFR Section
19             96.2,  on  or  after  January  1,  2003,   for   the
20             allowances it issues to them.
21        (e)  The Agency may adopt procedural rules, as necessary,
22    to   implement  the  regulations  promulgated  by  the  Board
23    pursuant  to  subsections  (b)  and  (d)  and  to   implement
24    subsection (i) of this Section.
25        (f)  Notwithstanding any provisions in subparts T, U, and
26    W  of  Section 217 of Title 35 of the Illinois Administrative
27    Code  to  the  contrary,  compliance  with  the   regulations
28    promulgated  by the Board pursuant to subsections (b) and (d)
29    of this Section is required by May 31, 2004. The  regulations
30    promulgated  by the Board pursuant to subsections (b) and (d)
31    of this Section shall not be enforced until the later of  May
32    1, 2003, or the first day of the control season subsequent to
33    the calendar year in which all of the other states subject to
34    the  provisions of the NOx SIP Call that are located in USEPA
 
                            -80-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    Region V or that are  contiguous  to  Illinois  have  adopted
 2    regulations  to  implement  NOx  trading  programs  and other
 3    required reductions of NOx emissions pursuant to the NOx  SIP
 4    Call,  and  such  regulations have received final approval by
 5    USEPA as part of the respective states' SIPS for ozone, or  a
 6    final  FIP  for  ozone  promulgated by USEPA is effective for
 7    such other states.
 8        (g)  To the extent that a court of competent jurisdiction
 9    finds  a  provision  of  40  CFR   Part   96   invalid,   the
10    corresponding  Illinois  provision shall be stayed until such
11    provision of 40 CFR Part 96  is  found  to  be  valid  or  is
12    re-promulgated.  To  the  extent  that  USEPA or any court of
13    competent  jurisdiction  stays  the  applicability   of   any
14    provision  of  the NOx SIP Call to any person or circumstance
15    relating to Illinois, during the period  of  that  stay,  the
16    effectiveness  of  the corresponding Illinois provision shall
17    be  stayed.  To  the  extent  that  the  invalidity  of   the
18    particular  requirement  or application does not affect other
19    provisions or applications of the NOx SIP Call pursuant to 40
20    CFR 51.121 or the NOx trading program pursuant to 40 CFR Part
21    96 or 40 CFR Part 97, this Section, and rules or  regulations
22    promulgated  hereunder,  will  be  given  effect  without the
23    invalid provisions or applications.
24        (h)  Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, any
25    source or other authorized person that  participates  in  the
26    NOx  Trading  Program  shall  be  eligible  to  exchange  NOx
27    allowances with other sources in accordance with this Section
28    and with regulations promulgated by the Board or the Agency.
29        (i)  There is hereby created within the State Treasury an
30    interest-bearing  special fund to be known as the NOx Trading
31    System Fund, which shall be  used  and  administered  by  the
32    Agency for the purposes stated below:
33             (1)  To  accept  funds from persons who purchase NOx
34        allowances from the Agency;
 
                            -81-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1             (2)  To disburse the proceeds of the NOx  allowances
 2        sales  pro-rata  to  the  owners or operators of the EGUs
 3        that received allowances from the Agency but not from the
 4        Agency's set-aside, in accordance with  regulations  that
 5        may be promulgated by the Agency; and
 6             (3)  To finance the reasonable costs incurred by the
 7        Agency in the administration of the NOx Trading System.
 8    (Source: P.A. 91-631, eff. 8-19-99.)

 9        (415 ILCS 5/9.10 new)
10        Sec. 9.10.  Fossil fuel-fired electric generating plants.
11        (a)  The General Assembly finds and declares that:
12             (1)  fossil  fuel-fired  electric  generating plants
13        are a significant source of air emissions in  this  State
14        and have become the subject of a number of important  new
15        studies of their effects on the public health;
16             (2)  existing state and federal policies, that allow
17        older  plants  that  meet  federal  standards  to operate
18        without   meeting   the   more   stringent   requirements
19        applicable to new plants, are  being  questioned  on  the
20        basis  of  their  environmental  impacts and the economic
21        distortions such policies cause in a  deregulated  energy
22        market;
23             (3)  fossil  fuel-fired  electric  generating plants
24        are, or may  be,  affected  by  a  number  of  regulatory
25        programs,  some  of which are under review or development
26        on the state and national levels, and to a certain extent
27        the international level, including the federal acid  rain
28        program,  tropospheric ozone, mercury and other hazardous
29        pollutant control requirements, regional haze, and global
30        warming;
31             (4)  scientific  uncertainty regarding the formation
32        of certain  components  of  regional  haze  and  the  air
33        quality modeling that predict impacts of control measures
 
                            -82-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1        requires  careful  consideration  of  the  timing  of the
 2        control of some of the pollutants from these  facilities,
 3        particularly sulfur dioxides  and  nitrogen  oxides  that
 4        each  interact  with  ammonia and other substances in the
 5        atmosphere;
 6             (5)  the development of energy policies to promote a
 7        safe, sufficient,  reliable, and affordable energy supply
 8        on the state and national levels is being affected by the
 9        on-going deregulation of the  power  generation  industry
10        and the evolving energy markets;
11             (6)  the Governor's formation of an  Energy  Cabinet
12        and  the  development  of a State energy policy calls for
13        actions by the Agency and the Board that are  in  harmony
14        with  the  energy  needs  and  policy of the State, while
15        protecting the public health and the environment;
16             (7)  Illinois coal is an abundant  resource  and  an
17        important component of Illinois' economy whose use should
18        be  encouraged to the greatest extent possible consistent
19        with protecting the public health and the environment;
20             (8)  renewable forms of energy should be promoted as
21        an important element  of  the  energy  and  environmental
22        policies  of the State and that it is a goal of the State
23        that at least 5% of the State's energy production and use
24        be derived from renewable forms of energy by 2010 and  at
25        least 15% from renewable forms of energy by 2020;
26             (9)  efforts  on  the  state  and federal levels are
27        underway   to   consider   the   multiple   environmental
28        regulations affecting electric generating plants in order
29        to improve the ability of  government  and  the  affected
30        industry  to engage in effective planning through the use
31        of multi-pollutant strategies; and
32             (10)  these  issues,  taken  together,  call  for  a
33        comprehensive review of the impact of these facilities on
34        the public health, considering also  the  energy  supply,
 
                            -83-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1        reliability,  and  costs,  the role of renewable forms of
 2        energy,  and  the  developments  in   federal   law   and
 3        regulations  that  may affect any state actions, prior to
 4        making final decisions in Illinois.
 5        (b)  Taking into account the findings and declarations of
 6    the General Assembly contained  in  subsection  (a)  of  this
 7    Section, the Agency shall, before September 30, 2004, but not
 8    before  September  30,  2003,  issue  to the House and Senate
 9    Committees on Environment and Energy  findings  that  address
10    the  potential need for the control or reduction of emissions
11    from fossil fuel-fired electric generating plants,  including
12    the following provisions:
13             (1)  reduction   of  nitrogen  oxide  emissions,  as
14        appropriate,  with  consideration   of   maximum   annual
15        emissions  rate  limits  or establishment of an emissions
16        trading   program   and   with   consideration   of   the
17        developments in federal  law  and  regulations  that  may
18        affect  any State action, prior to making final decisions
19        in Illinois;
20             (2)  reduction  of  sulfur  dioxide  emissions,   as
21        appropriate,   with   consideration   of  maximum  annual
22        emissions rate limits or establishment  of  an  emissions
23        trading   program   and   with   consideration   of   the
24        developments  in  federal  law  and  regulations that may
25        affect any State action, prior to making final  decisions
26        in Illinois;
27             (3)  incentives  to  promote  renewable  sources  of
28        energy  consistent  with    item (8) of subsection (a) of
29        this Section;
30             (4)     reduction   of   mercury   as   appropriate,
31        consideration of  the availability of control technology,
32        industry practice requirements, or incentive programs, or
33        some combination of these approaches that are  sufficient
34        to  prevent  unacceptable  local  impacts from individual
 
                            -84-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1        facilities, and with consideration of the developments in
 2        federal law and regulations that  may  affect  any  state
 3        action, prior to making final decisions in Illinois; and
 4             (5)  establishment  of  a banking system, consistent
 5        with the United States Department of  Energy's  voluntary
 6        reporting  system,  for  certifying credits for voluntary
 7        offsets of emissions of greenhouse gases,  as  identified
 8        by  the United States Environmental Protection Agency, or
 9        other voluntary reductions  of  greenhouse  gases.   Such
10        reduction  efforts  may  include, but are not limited to,
11        carbon sequestration, technology-based control  measures,
12        energy  efficiency  measures,  and  the  use of renewable
13        energy sources.
14        The Agency  shall  consider  the  impact  on  the  public
15    health,  considering  also    energy  supply, reliability and
16    costs,  the  role  of  renewable   forms   of   energy,   and
17    developments  in  federal law and regulations that may affect
18    any  state  actions,  prior  to  making  final  decisions  in
19    Illinois.
20        (c)  Nothing in this Section is intended to or should  be
21    interpreted in a manner to limit or restrict the authority of
22    the  Illinois Environmental Protection Agency to  propose, or
23    the  Illinois  Pollution  Control   Board   to   adopt,   any
24    regulations  applicable  or that may become applicable to the
25    facilities covered by  this  Section  that  are  required  by
26    federal law.
27        (d)  The Agency may file proposed rules with the Board to
28    effectuate  its  findings provided to the Senate Committee on
29    Environment and Energy and the House Committee on Environment
30    and Energy in accordance with subsection (b) of this Section.
31    Any such proposal shall not be submitted sooner than 90  days
32    after the issuance of the findings provided for in subsection
33    (b) of this Section.  The Board shall take action on any such
34    proposal  within  one  year  of  the  Agency's  filing of the
 
                            -85-           LRB9201187SMmbam01
 1    proposed rules.

 2        Section 99.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect  July
 3    1, 2001.".

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