State of Illinois
92nd General Assembly
Legislation

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[ Introduced ][ Engrossed ][ House Amendment 001 ]
[ House Amendment 002 ]


92_HB5557enr

 
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 1        AN ACT  to  implement  recommendations  of  the  Illinois
 2    Environmental Regulatory Review Commission.

 3        Be  it  enacted  by  the People of the State of Illinois,
 4    represented in the General Assembly:

 5        Section 5.  The Environmental Protection Act  is  amended
 6    by  changing  Sections 3, 3.32, 3.53, 4, 5, 7, 9.2, 9.3, 9.4,
 7    12, 13.1, 14.1, 14.2, 14.3, 14.4, 14.6, 17, 19.10, 21,  21.3,
 8    21.5,  22.2, 22.2b, 22.9, 22.15, 22.16, 22.16a, 22.22, 22.23,
 9    22.23a, 22.27, 22.33,  22.40,  22.43,  22.44,  22.45,  22.47,
10    22.48,  25b-5,  28.5, 30, 31, 39, 39.2, 39.3, 40, 40.1, 40.2,
11    45, 49, 55, 56.1, 56.2, 57.7, 57.8, 57.13, 58.7, 58.8, 58.14,
12    and 58.17 and  renumbering  Sections  3.01  through  3.94  as
13    follows:

14        (415 ILCS 5/3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1003)
15        Sec. 3. Definitions.
16        (a)  For  the  purposes  of this Act, the words and terms
17    defined in the Sections which follow this Section and precede
18    Section 4 shall have the meaning therein  given,  unless  the
19    context otherwise clearly requires.
20        (b)  This  amendatory  Act  of  the 92nd General Assembly
21    renumbers the definition Sections formerly included  in  this
22    Act  as Sections 3.01 through 3.94.  The new numbering scheme
23    is intended to alphabetize the defined  terms  and  to  leave
24    room  for  additional terms to be added in alphabetical order
25    in the future.   It  does  not  reuse  any  of  the  original
26    numbers.
27        In  the  bill  for  this  amendatory  Act, the renumbered
28    Sections are shown  in  the  manner  commonly  used  to  show
29    renumbering in revisory bills.  The Sections being renumbered
30    are  shown  as  existing  (rather  than  new)  text; only the
31    changes being made  to  the  existing  text  are  shown  with
 
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 1    striking  and  underscoring.   The original source lines have
 2    been retained.
 3        (c)  In a statute, rule, permit,  or  other  document  in
 4    existence on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
 5    92nd  General  Assembly, a reference to one of the definition
 6    Sections renumbered by this amendatory Act shall be deemed to
 7    refer to the corresponding  Section  as  renumbered  by  this
 8    amendatory Act.
 9    (Source: P.A. 84-1308; 84-1319; 84-1320; 84-1438.)

10        (415 ILCS 5/3.105 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.01)
11        Sec.  3.105. Agency. 3.01.  "Agency" is the Environmental
12    Protection Agency established by this Act.
13    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

14        (415 ILCS 5/3.110 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.77)
15        Sec. 3.110. Agrichemical facility.  3.77.   "Agrichemical
16    facility"  means  a  site used for commercial purposes, where
17    bulk pesticides are stored in a single container in excess of
18    300  gallons  of  liquid  pesticide  or  300  pounds  of  dry
19    pesticide for more than 30 days per year or where  more  than
20    300  gallons  of  liquid  pesticide  or  300  pounds  of  dry
21    pesticide are being mixed, repackaged or transferred from one
22    container  to  another within a 30 day period or a site where
23    bulk fertilizers are stored, mixed, repackaged or transferred
24    from one container to another.
25    (Source: P.A. 86-671.)

26        (415 ILCS 5/3.115 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.02)
27        Sec. 3.115. Air pollution. 3.02.  "Air pollution" is  the
28    presence  in  the  atmosphere  of one or more contaminants in
29    sufficient  quantities  and  of  such   characteristics   and
30    duration  as to be injurious to human, plant, or animal life,
31    to health, or to property, or to unreasonably interfere  with
 
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 1    the enjoyment of life or property.
 2    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

 3        (415 ILCS 5/3.120 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.03)
 4        Sec.  3.120. Air pollution control equipment. 3.03.  "Air
 5    pollution control equipment" means any equipment or  facility
 6    of  a  type intended to eliminate, prevent, reduce or control
 7    the emission of specified air contaminants to the atmosphere.
 8    Air pollution control equipment includes, but is not  limited
 9    to, landfill gas recovery facilities.
10    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

11        (415 ILCS 5/3.125 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.68)
12        Sec. 3.125. Biodeterioration; biodegradation. 3.68.
13        (a)  "Biodeterioration",  when  used  in  connection with
14    recycling or composting, means the biologically mediated loss
15    of utilitarian or physical characteristics of  a  plastic  or
16    hybrid material containing plastic as a major component.
17        (b)  "Biodegradation",   when  used  in  connection  with
18    recycling, means the conversion  of  all  constituents  of  a
19    plastic  or  hybrid  material  containing  plastic as a major
20    component  to  carbon  dioxide,  inorganic  salts,  microbial
21    cellular    components    and    miscellaneous    by-products
22    characteristically  formed  from  the  breakdown  of  natural
23    materials such as corn starch.
24    (Source: P.A. 85-1429.)

25        (415 ILCS 5/3.130 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.04)
26        Sec.  3.130.  Board.  3.04.   "Board"  is  the  Pollution
27    Control Board established by this Act.
28    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

29        (415 ILCS 5/3.135 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.94)
30        Sec. 3.135. Coal combustion by-product; CCB. 3.94.  "Coal
 
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 1    combustion by-product" (CCB) means coal combustion waste when
 2    used beneficially for any of the following purposes:
 3        (1)  The extraction or  recovery  of  material  compounds
 4    contained within CCB.
 5        (2)  The use of CCB as a raw ingredient or mineral filler
 6    in  the manufacture of cement; concrete and concrete mortars;
 7    concrete    products    including     block,     pipe     and
 8    precast/prestressed   components;  asphalt  or  cement  based
 9    roofing  shingles;  plastic  products  including  pipes   and
10    fittings; paints and metal alloys.
11        (3)  CCB  used in conformance with the specifications and
12    under the approval of the Department of Transportation.
13        (4)  Bottom  ash  used  as  antiskid  material,  athletic
14    tracks, or foot paths.
15        (5)  Use as a substitute for lime (CaO and  MgO)  in  the
16    lime  modification  of  soils  providing  the  CCB  meets the
17    Illinois Department of Transportation ("IDOT") specifications
18    for byproduct limes.
19        (6)  CCB used as a functionally equivalent substitute for
20    agricultural lime as a soil conditioner.
21        (7)  Bottom ash used  in  non-IDOT  pavement  base,  pipe
22    bedding, or foundation backfill.
23        (8)  Structural   fill,   when   used  in  an  engineered
24    application or  combined  with  cement,  sand,  or  water  to
25    produce  a controlled strength fill material and covered with
26    12 inches of soil unless infiltration  is  prevented  by  the
27    material itself or other cover material.
28        (9)  Mine  subsidence,  mine  fire control, mine sealing,
29    and mine reclamation.
30        (10)  Except to the extent that the  uses  are  otherwise
31    authorized by law without such restrictions, uses (7) through
32    (9) shall be subject to the following conditions:
33             (A)  CCB  shall  not  have been mixed with hazardous
34        waste prior to use;
 
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 1             (B)  CCB  shall  not  exceed  Class  I   Groundwater
 2        Standards  for  metals  when tested utilizing test method
 3        ASTM D3987-85;
 4             (C)  Unless otherwise exempted, users of  CCB  shall
 5        provide  notification  to  the  Agency  for  each project
 6        utilizing CCB documenting the quantity  of  CCB  utilized
 7        and  certification  of compliance with conditions (A) and
 8        (B).  Notification shall not  be  required  for  pavement
 9        base,   parking  lot  base,  or  building  base  projects
10        utilizing less  than  10,000  tons,  flowable  fill/grout
11        projects  utilizing  less than 1,000 cubic yards or other
12        applications utilizing less than 100 tons;
13             (D)  Fly ash shall  be  applied  in  a  manner  that
14        minimizes  the  generation of airborne particles and dust
15        using   techniques   such   as   moisture   conditioning,
16        granulating, inground application, or other  demonstrated
17        method; and
18             (E)  CCB  is  not  to  be accumulated speculatively.
19        CCB  is  not  accumulated  speculatively  if  during  the
20        calendar year, the CCB used is equal to 75% of the CCB by
21        weight or volume accumulated  at  the  beginning  of  the
22        period.
23    To encourage and promote the utilization of CCB in productive
24    and  beneficial  applications,  the Agency may make a written
25    determination that coal-combustion waste is CCB when used  in
26    a manner other than that specified in this Section if the use
27    has  been  shown  to  have  no  adverse  environmental impact
28    greater than the beneficial uses specified,  in  consultation
29    with the Department of Mines and Minerals, the Illinois Clean
30    Coal  Institute,  the  Department of Transportation, and such
31    other agencies as may be appropriate.
32    (Source: P.A. 89-93, eff. 7-6-95.)

33        (415 ILCS 5/3.140 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.76)
 
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 1        Sec.  3.140.  Coal   combustion   waste.   3.76.    "Coal
 2    combustion  waste"  means  any  fly ash, bottom ash, slag, or
 3    flue gas or  fluid  bed  boiler  desulfurization  by-products
 4    generated as a result of the combustion of:
 5        (1)  coal, or
 6        (2)  coal  in  combination with: (i) fuel grade petroleum
 7    coke, (ii) other  fossil  fuel,  or  (iii)  both  fuel  grade
 8    petroleum coke and other fossil fuel, or
 9        (3)  coal  (with  or  without:  (i)  fuel grade petroleum
10    coke, (ii) other  fossil  fuel,  or  (iii)  both  fuel  grade
11    petroleum  coke and other fossil fuel) in combination with no
12    more than 20% of tire derived fuel or wood or other materials
13    by weight of the materials combusted; provided that the  coal
14    is burned with other materials, the Agency has made a written
15    determination  that  the storage or disposal of the resultant
16    wastes in accordance with  the  provisions  of  item  (r)  of
17    Section  21  would  result in no environmental impact greater
18    than that of wastes generated as a result of  the  combustion
19    of  coal  alone,  and  the  storage disposal of the resultant
20    wastes would not violate applicable federal law.
21    (Source: P.A. 88-668, eff. 9-16-94; 89-93, eff. 7-6-95.)

22        (415 ILCS 5/3.145 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.05)
23        Sec. 3.145.  Community  water  supply.  3.05.  "Community
24    water  supply" means a public water supply which serves or is
25    intended to serve at least 15  service  connections  used  by
26    residents or regularly serves at least 25 residents.
27        "Non-community  water supply" means a public water supply
28    that is not a community water supply.   The  requirements  of
29    this Act shall not apply to non-community water supplies.
30    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

31        (415 ILCS 5/3.150 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.69)
32        Sec.  3.150.  Compost. 3.69.  "Compost" is defined as the
 
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 1    humus-like product of the process of composting waste,  which
 2    may be used as a soil conditioner.
 3    (Source: P.A. 85-1429.)

 4        (415 ILCS 5/3.155 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.70)
 5        Sec.  3.155.  Composting.  3.70.   "Composting" means the
 6    biological  treatment   process   by   which   microorganisms
 7    decompose the organic fraction of waste, producing compost.
 8    (Source: P.A. 85-1429.)

 9        (415 ILCS 5/3.160 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.78 and 3.78a)
10        Sec. 3.160. Construction or demolition debris. 3.78.
11        (a)  "General  construction  or  demolition debris" means
12    non-hazardous, uncontaminated materials  resulting  from  the
13    construction,   remodeling,   repair,   and   demolition   of
14    utilities,  structures,  and roads, limited to the following:
15    bricks, concrete, and other masonry  materials;  soil;  rock;
16    wood,  including  non-hazardous  painted, treated, and coated
17    wood and wood products; wall  coverings;   plaster;  drywall;
18    plumbing  fixtures; non-asbestos insulation; roofing shingles
19    and other roof coverings; reclaimed asphalt pavement;  glass;
20    plastics that are not sealed in a manner that conceals waste;
21    electrical  wiring  and  components  containing  no hazardous
22    substances; and piping or metals incidental to any  of  those
23    materials.
24        General   construction  or  demolition  debris  does  not
25    include uncontaminated soil  generated  during  construction,
26    remodeling,  repair, and demolition of utilities, structures,
27    and roads provided the uncontaminated soil is not  commingled
28    with  any  general construction or demolition debris or other
29    waste.
30        (b)  Sec.  3.78a.  "Clean  construction   or   demolition
31    debris"   means   uncontaminated   broken   concrete  without
32    protruding metal bars, bricks, rock, stone, reclaimed asphalt
 
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 1    pavement, or soil generated from construction  or  demolition
 2    activities.
 3        Clean  construction or demolition debris does not include
 4    uncontaminated   soil    generated    during    construction,
 5    remodeling,  repair, and demolition of utilities, structures,
 6    and roads provided the uncontaminated soil is not  commingled
 7    with  any  clean  construction  or demolition debris or other
 8    waste.
 9        To the extent allowed by federal law, clean  construction
10    or demolition debris shall not be considered "waste" if it is
11    (i)  used  as  fill material below grade outside of a setback
12    zone if covered by sufficient uncontaminated soil to  support
13    vegetation  within 30 days of the completion of filling or if
14    covered  by  a  road  or  structure,  or  (ii)  separated  or
15    processed and returned to the economic mainstream in the form
16    of raw materials or products,  if  it  is  not  speculatively
17    accumulated  and,  if  used as a fill material, it is used in
18    accordance with item (i), or  (iii)  solely  broken  concrete
19    without  protruding  metal  bars used for erosion control, or
20    (iv) generated from  the  construction  or  demolition  of  a
21    building,  road, or other structure and used to construct, on
22    the site where  the  construction  or  demolition  has  taken
23    place,  an  above-grade  area  shaped  so as to blend into an
24    extension of the surrounding  topography  or  an  above-grade
25    manmade functional structure not to exceed 20 feet in height,
26    provided  that  the  area  or structure shall be covered with
27    sufficient soil materials to sustain vegetation or by a  road
28    or  structure,  and  further  provided  that  no such area or
29    structure  shall  be   constructed   within   a   home   rule
30    municipality with a population over 500,000.
31    (Source:  P.A.  90-475,  eff.  8-17-97; 90-761, eff. 8-14-98;
32    91-909, eff. 7-7-00.)

33        (415 ILCS 5/3.165 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.06)
 
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 1        Sec. 3.165.  Contaminant.  3.06.   "Contaminant"  is  any
 2    solid,  liquid,  or  gaseous matter, any odor, or any form of
 3    energy, from whatever source.
 4    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

 5        (415 ILCS 5/3.170 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.63)
 6        Sec.    3.170.    Contamination;    contaminate.    3.63.
 7    "Contamination" or "contaminate",  when  used  in  connection
 8    with groundwater, means water pollution of such groundwater.
 9    (Source: P.A. 85-863.)

10        (415 ILCS 5/3.175 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.80)
11        Sec.  3.175.  Criterion.  3.80.   "Criterion"  means  the
12    numerical  concentration  of  one  or  more  toxic substances
13    calculated by the Agency as a basis for establishing a permit
14    limitation or violation of a water quality standard  pursuant
15    to   standards   and   procedures   provided   for  in  board
16    regulations.
17    (Source: P.A. 86-1409.)

18        (415 ILCS 5/3.180 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.07)
19        Sec.  3.180.  Department.  3.07.  "Department",  when   a
20    particular  entity is not specified, means (i) in the case of
21    a function to be performed on or  after  July  1,  1995  (the
22    effective  date  of the Department of Natural Resources Act),
23    either the Department of Natural Resources or the  Department
24    of Commerce and Community Affairs, whichever, in the specific
25    context,  is  the  successor  to the Department of Energy and
26    Natural Resources under the Department of  Natural  Resources
27    Act;  or (ii) in the case of a function performed before July
28    1, 1995, the former Illinois Department of Energy and Natural
29    Resources.
30    (Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
 
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 1        (415 ILCS 5/3.185 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.08)
 2        Sec.  3.185.  Disposal.  3.08.   "Disposal"   means   the
 3    discharge,  deposit, injection, dumping, spilling, leaking or
 4    placing of any waste or hazardous waste into or on  any  land
 5    or  water  or  into  any well so that such waste or hazardous
 6    waste or any constituent thereof may enter the environment or
 7    be emitted into  the  air  or  discharged  into  any  waters,
 8    including ground waters.
 9    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

10        (415 ILCS 5/3.190 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.09)
11        Sec.  3.190. Existing fuel combustion stationary emission
12    source. 3.09.  "Existing fuel combustion stationary  emission
13    source"  means  any  stationary  furnace,  boiler,  oven,  or
14    similar  equipment  used for the primary purpose of producing
15    heat or power, of a type capable of  emitting  specified  air
16    contaminants   to   the   atmosphere,   the  construction  or
17    modification of which commenced prior to April 13, 1972.
18    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

19        (415 ILCS 5/3.195 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.10)
20        Sec. 3.195.  Fluid.  3.10.   "Fluid"  means  material  or
21    substance  which  flows  or  moves  whether  in a semi-solid,
22    liquid, sludge, gas or any other form or state.
23    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

24        (415 ILCS 5/3.200 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.11)
25        Sec. 3.200. Garbage. 3.11.  "Garbage" is waste  resulting
26    from  the  handling,  processing,  preparation,  cooking, and
27    consumption  of  food,  and   wastes   from   the   handling,
28    processing, storage, and sale of produce.
29    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

30        (415 ILCS 5/3.205 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.12)
 
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 1        Sec.  3.205.  Generator.  3.12.    "Generator"  means any
 2    person whose act or process produces waste.
 3    (Source: P.A. 87-650.)

 4        (415 ILCS 5/3.210 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.64)
 5        Sec.  3.210.  Groundwater.  3.64.   "Groundwater"   means
 6    underground  water which occurs within the saturated zone and
 7    geologic materials where the fluid pressure in the pore space
 8    is equal to or greater than atmospheric pressure.
 9    (Source: P.A. 85-863.)

10        (415 ILCS 5/3.215 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.14)
11        Sec.  3.215.  Hazardous  substance.  3.14.     "Hazardous
12    substance"  means:   (A) any substance designated pursuant to
13    Section 311(b)(2)(A) of the Federal Water  Pollution  Control
14    Act  (P.L.  92-500),  as  amended, (B) any element, compound,
15    mixture,  solution,  or  substance  designated  pursuant   to
16    Section  102  of  the  Comprehensive  Environmental Response,
17    Compensation, and Liability Act of  1980  (P.L.  96-510),  as
18    amended,  (C)  any  hazardous  waste, (D) any toxic pollutant
19    listed under Section 307(a) of the  Federal  Water  Pollution
20    Control  Act (P.L. 92-500), as amended, (E) any hazardous air
21    pollutant listed under Section 112 of the Clean Air Act (P.L.
22    95-95), as amended, (F)  any  imminently  hazardous  chemical
23    substance  or mixture with respect to which the Administrator
24    of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has taken  action
25    pursuant  to  Section  7  of the Toxic Substances Control Act
26    (P.L.  94-469),  as  amended.   The  term  does  not  include
27    petroleum, including crude oil or any fraction thereof  which
28    is  not  otherwise  specifically  listed  or  designated as a
29    hazardous substance under subparagraphs (A)  through  (F)  of
30    this  paragraph,  and  the term does not include natural gas,
31    natural gas liquids, liquefied natural gas, or synthetic  gas
32    usable for fuel or mixtures of natural gas and such synthetic
 
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 1    gas.
 2    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

 3        (415 ILCS 5/3.220 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.15)
 4        Sec.  3.220.  Hazardous  waste.  3.15.  "Hazardous waste"
 5    means a waste, or combination of wastes, which because of its
 6    quantity, concentration, or physical, chemical, or infectious
 7    characteristics may cause or significantly contribute  to  an
 8    increase   in   mortality   or   an   increase   in  serious,
 9    irreversible, or incapacitating reversible, illness; or  pose
10    a  substantial present or potential hazard to human health or
11    the environment when improperly treated, stored, transported,
12    or disposed of, or otherwise  managed,  and  which  has  been
13    identified,  by  characteristics  or  listing,  as  hazardous
14    pursuant  to  Section  3001  of the Resource Conservation and
15    Recovery Act of 1976,  P.L.  94-580,  or  pursuant  to  Board
16    regulations.  Potentially  infectious  medical waste is not a
17    hazardous waste,  except  for  those  potentially  infectious
18    medical  wastes  identified  by characteristics or listing as
19    hazardous under Section 3001 of the Resource Conservation and
20    Recovery Act of 1976,  P.L.  94-580,  or  pursuant  to  Board
21    regulations.
22    (Source: P.A. 87-752.)

23        (415 ILCS 5/3.225 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.16)
24        Sec.   3.225.   Hazardous   waste  disposal  site.  3.16.
25    "Hazardous waste disposal site" is a site at which  hazardous
26    waste is disposed.
27    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

28        (415 ILCS 5/3.230 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.89)
29        Sec.  3.230.  Household  waste.  3.89.  "Household waste"
30    means any solid waste (including garbage, trash, and sanitary
31    waste in septic tanks)  derived  from  households  (including
 
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 1    single   and   multiple   residences,   hotels   and  motels,
 2    bunkhouses,  ranger  stations,  crew  quarters,  campgrounds,
 3    picnic grounds, and day-use recreation areas).
 4    (Source: P.A. 88-496.)

 5        (415 ILCS 5/3.235 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.17)
 6        Sec. 3.235. Industrial process waste. 3.17.   "Industrial
 7    process  waste"  means  any  liquid,  solid,  semi-solid,  or
 8    gaseous waste generated as a direct or indirect result of the
 9    manufacture  of  a  product  or the performance of a service.
10    Any such waste which would pose a present or potential threat
11    to human health  or  to  the  environment  or  with  inherent
12    properties  which  make  the  disposal  of  such  waste  in a
13    landfill difficult to manage by normal means is an industrial
14    process waste.  "Industrial Process Waste"  includes  but  is
15    not limited to spent pickling liquors, cutting oils, chemical
16    catalysts,  distillation  bottoms,  etching  acids, equipment
17    cleanings, paint sludges, incinerator  ashes  (including  but
18    not  limited  to  ash  resulting  from  the  incineration  of
19    potentially  infectious  medical waste), core sands, metallic
20    dust  sweepings,  asbestos   dust,   and   off-specification,
21    contaminated   or  recalled  wholesale  or  retail  products.
22    Specifically excluded are uncontaminated packaging materials,
23    uncontaminated machinery components, general household waste,
24    landscape waste and construction or demolition debris.
25    (Source: P.A. 87-752.)

26        (415 ILCS 5/3.240 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.18)
27        Sec.   3.240.   Intermittent   control   system.    3.18.
28    "Intermittent  control system" is a system which provides for
29    the planned reduction of source emissions of  sulfur  dioxide
30    during  periods  when  meteorological conditions are such, or
31    are anticipated to be such, that sulfur dioxide  ambient  air
32    quality  standards may be violated unless such reductions are
 
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 1    made.
 2    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

 3        (415 ILCS 5/3.245 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.72)
 4        Sec. 3.245. Label.  3.72.   "Label"  means  the  written,
 5    printed  or graphic matter on or attached to the pesticide or
 6    device or any of its containers or wrappings.
 7    (Source: P.A. 86-820.)

 8        (415 ILCS 5/3.250 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.73)
 9        Sec. 3.250. Labeling. 3.73.  "Labeling" means  the  label
10    and all other written, printed or graphic matters: (a) on the
11    pesticide  or  device  or any of its containers or wrappings,
12    (b) accompanying the pesticide or device or referring  to  it
13    in  any  other  media  used to disseminate information to the
14    public, (c) to which reference is made to  the  pesticide  or
15    device  except  when  references are made to current official
16    publications of the U. S.  Environmental  Protection  Agency,
17    Departments  of  Agriculture,  Health  and  Human Services or
18    other Federal Government institutions, the  state  experiment
19    station  or  colleges  of  agriculture or other similar state
20    institution authorized to conduct research in  the  field  of
21    pesticides.
22    (Source: P.A. 86-820.)

23        (415 ILCS 5/3.255 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.79)
24        Sec. 3.255. Land form. 3.79.  "Land form" means a manmade
25    above-grade  mound, less than 50 feet in height, covered with
26    sufficient soil materials to sustain vegetation.
27    (Source: P.A. 86-633; 86-1028.)

28        (415 ILCS 5/3.260 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.19)
29        Sec.  3.260.  Landfill  gas  recovery   facility.   3.19.
30    "Landfill  gas  recovery  facility"  means any facility which
 
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 1    recovers and processes landfill gas from a sanitary  landfill
 2    or waste disposal site.
 3    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

 4        (415 ILCS 5/3.265 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.75)
 5        Sec.  3.265.  Landfill  waste. 3.75.  "Landfill waste" is
 6    waste  from  a  closed  pollution  control  facility,  closed
 7    dumping site, closed sanitary landfill,  or  a  closed  waste
 8    disposal  site;  provided however, "landfill waste" shall not
 9    include waste removed by or pursuant to the authority of  the
10    State  or  a  unit of local government from the public way or
11    household waste removed by or pursuant to  the  authority  of
12    the State or a unit of local government from any unauthorized
13    open dumping site.
14    (Source: P.A. 88-681, eff. 12-22-94.)

15        (415 ILCS 5/3.270 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.20)
16        Sec.  3.270.  Landscape  waste.  3.20.  "Landscape waste"
17    means all  accumulations  of  grass  or  shrubbery  cuttings,
18    leaves,  tree  limbs  and  other materials accumulated as the
19    result of the care of lawns, shrubbery, vines and trees.
20    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

21        (415 ILCS 5/3.275 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.88)
22        Sec. 3.275. Lateral expansion. 3.88. "Lateral  expansion"
23    means  a  horizontal expansion of the actual waste boundaries
24    of an existing MSWLF unit occurring on or  after  October  9,
25    1993.   For  purposes of this Section, a horizontal expansion
26    is any area where solid waste is placed for  the  first  time
27    directly  upon  the  bottom liner of the unit, excluding side
28    slopes, on or after October 9, 1993.
29    (Source: P.A. 88-496.)

30        (415 ILCS 5/3.280 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.92)
 
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 1        Sec. 3.280. Lawncare wash water containment  area.  3.92.
 2    "Lawncare wash water containment area" means an area utilized
 3    for  the capture of spills or washing or rinsing of pesticide
 4    residues  from  vehicles,   application   equipment,   mixing
 5    equipment, floors, loading areas, or other items used for the
 6    storage,   handling,   preparation  for  use,  transport,  or
 7    application of pesticides to land  areas  covered  with  turf
 8    kept closely mown or land area covered with turf and trees or
 9    shrubs.
10    (Source: P.A. 88-474; 88-670, eff. 12-2-94.)

11        (415  ILCS  5/3.285  new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.85, 3.86, and
12    3.87)
13        Sec. 3.285. Municipal Solid Waste  Landfill  Unit;  MSWLF
14    unit.  3.85.  "Municipal Solid Waste Landfill Unit" or "MSWLF
15    unit" means a contiguous area of land or an  excavation  that
16    receives  household waste, and that is not a land application
17    unit, surface impoundment, injection well,  or  any  pile  of
18    noncontainerized  accumulations  of  solid,  nonflowing waste
19    that is used for treatment or storage.  A MSWLF unit may also
20    receive other types  of  RCRA  Subtitle  D  wastes,  such  as
21    commercial  solid  waste, nonhazardous sludge, small quantity
22    generator waste and industrial solid waste.  Such a  landfill
23    may  be  publicly  or privately owned.  A MSWLF unit may be a
24    new  MSWLF  unit,  an  existing  MSWLF  unit,  or  a  lateral
25    expansion.  A sanitary landfill is subject to regulation as a
26    MSWLF unit if it receives household waste.
27        Sec. 3.86. "New MSWLF unit"  means  any  municipal  solid
28    waste landfill unit that receives household waste on or after
29    October 9, 1993, for the first time.
30        Sec.  3.87.  "Existing  MSWLF  unit"  means any municipal
31    solid waste landfill  unit  that  has  received  solid  waste
32    before October 9, 1993.
33    (Source: P.A. 88-496; 88-670, eff. 12-2-94.)
 
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 1        (415 ILCS 5/3.290 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.21)
 2        Sec.  3.290.  Municipal  waste.  3.21.  "Municipal waste"
 3    means  garbage,  general  household  and  commercial   waste,
 4    industrial  lunchroom  or  office waste, landscape waste, and
 5    construction or demolition debris.
 6    (Source: P.A. 87-650.)

 7        (415 ILCS 5/3.295 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.22)
 8        Sec. 3.295. Municipality. 3.22.  "Municipality" means any
 9    city, village or incorporated town.
10    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

11        (415 ILCS 5/3.300 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.23)
12        Sec. 3.300. Open burning. 3.23.  "Open  burning"  is  the
13    combustion of any matter in the open or in an open dump.
14    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

15        (415 ILCS 5/3.305 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.24)
16        Sec. 3.305. Open dumping. 3.24.  "Open dumping" means the
17    consolidation  of  refuse  from  one  or  more  sources  at a
18    disposal site that does not fulfill  the  requirements  of  a
19    sanitary landfill.
20    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

21        (415 ILCS 5/3.310 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.25)
22        Sec.  3.310.  Organized  amateur or professional sporting
23    activity. 3.25.  "Organized amateur or professional  sporting
24    activity"  means  an  activity  or  event  carried  out  at a
25    facility by  persons  who  engaged  in  that  activity  as  a
26    business  or  for education, charity or entertainment for the
27    general  public,  including   all   necessary   actions   and
28    activities associated with such an activity.  This definition
29    includes, but is not limited to, (i) rifle and pistol ranges,
30    licensed  shooting  preserves,  and  skeet,  trap or shooting
 
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 1    sports clubs in existence prior  to  January  1,  1994,  (ii)
 2    public hunting areas operated by a governmental entity, (iii)
 3    organized motor sports, and (iv) sporting events organized or
 4    controlled  by  school  districts, units of local government,
 5    state  agencies,  colleges,  universities,  or   professional
 6    sports clubs offering exhibitions to the public.
 7    (Source: P.A. 88-598, eff. 8-31-94.)

 8        (415 ILCS 5/3.315 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.26)
 9        Sec.  3.315.  Person.  3.26.  "Person" is any individual,
10    partnership, co-partnership, firm, company, limited liability
11    company,  corporation,  association,  joint  stock   company,
12    trust,  estate,  political  subdivision, state agency, or any
13    other legal entity, or their legal representative,  agent  or
14    assigns.
15    (Source: P.A. 88-480.)

16        (415 ILCS 5/3.320 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.71)
17        Sec.  3.320.  Pesticide.  3.71.   "Pesticide"  means  any
18    substance  or  mixture of substances intended for preventing,
19    destroying,  repelling,  or  mitigating  any  pest   or   any
20    substance  or  mixture  of  substances  intended for use as a
21    plant regulator, defoliant or desiccant.
22    (Source: P.A. 86-820.)

23        (415 ILCS 5/3.325 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.74)
24        Sec. 3.325. Pesticide release. 3.74.  "Pesticide release"
25    or "release of a pesticide" means any release resulting in  a
26    concentration  of  pesticides  in  waters  of the State which
27    exceeds levels for which: (1)  a  Maximum  Contaminant  Level
28    (MCL)  has  been  promulgated  by  the  U.  S.  Environmental
29    Protection  Agency or a Maximum Allowable Concentration (MAC)
30    has been promulgated  by  the  Board  pursuant  to  the  Safe
31    Drinking Water Act (P.L. 93-523), as amended; or (2) a Health
 
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 1    Advisory  used  on an interim basis has been issued by the U.
 2    S. Environmental Protection Agency; or  (3)  a  standard  has
 3    been   adopted   by   the  Board  pursuant  to  the  Illinois
 4    Groundwater Protection Act; or (4) in  the  absence  of  such
 5    advisories  or  standards, an action level has been developed
 6    by the Agency using guidance  or  procedures  issued  by  the
 7    federal government for developing health based levels.
 8    (Source: P.A. 86-820.)

 9        (415 ILCS 5/3.330 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.32)
10        Sec. 3.330. 3.32. Pollution control facility.
11        (a)  "Pollution  control  facility"  is any waste storage
12    site, sanitary landfill, waste disposal site, waste  transfer
13    station,  waste  treatment  facility,  or  waste incinerator.
14    This includes sewers, sewage treatment plants, and any  other
15    facilities  owned or operated by sanitary districts organized
16    under the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District Act.
17        The following are not pollution control facilities:
18             (1)  (Blank);
19             (2)  waste storage sites  regulated  under  40  CFR,
20        Part 761.42;
21             (3)  sites   or   facilities   used  by  any  person
22        conducting  a  waste  storage,  waste  treatment,   waste
23        disposal, waste transfer or waste incineration operation,
24        or  a  combination  thereof, for wastes generated by such
25        person's own activities, when  such  wastes  are  stored,
26        treated,  disposed  of, transferred or incinerated within
27        the site or facility owned,  controlled  or  operated  by
28        such  person,  or when such wastes are transported within
29        or between  sites  or  facilities  owned,  controlled  or
30        operated by such person;
31             (4)  sites  or  facilities  at  which  the  State is
32        performing removal or remedial action pursuant to Section
33        22.2 or 55.3;
 
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 1             (5)  abandoned quarries used solely for the disposal
 2        of concrete, earth materials, gravel, or aggregate debris
 3        resulting from road construction activities conducted  by
 4        a  unit  of  government or construction activities due to
 5        the construction and installation of  underground  pipes,
 6        lines,  conduit  or wires off of the premises of a public
 7        utility company which are conducted by a public utility;
 8             (6)  sites or  facilities  used  by  any  person  to
 9        specifically conduct a landscape composting operation;
10             (7)  regional  facilities  as defined in the Central
11        Midwest Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact;
12             (8)  the portion of a site or  facility  where  coal
13        combustion wastes are stored or disposed of in accordance
14        with subdivision (r)(2) or (r)(3) of Section 21;
15             (9)  the  portion of a site or facility used for the
16        collection, storage  or  processing  of  waste  tires  as
17        defined in Title XIV;
18             (10)  the  portion  of  a  site or facility used for
19        treatment  of   petroleum   contaminated   materials   by
20        application  onto  or incorporation into the soil surface
21        and any portion of that site or facility used for storage
22        of petroleum  contaminated  materials  before  treatment.
23        Only  those  categories  of petroleum listed in paragraph
24        (5) of subsection (a) of Section  57.9(a)(3)  22.18b  are
25        exempt under this subdivision (10);
26             (11)  the  portion  of a site or facility where used
27        oil is  collected  or  stored  prior  to  shipment  to  a
28        recycling  or energy recovery facility, provided that the
29        used  oil  is  generated  by  households  or   commercial
30        establishments,  and  the site or facility is a recycling
31        center or a business where oil or  gasoline  is  sold  at
32        retail;
33             (12)  the  portion  of  a site or facility utilizing
34        coal combustion waste for stabilization and treatment  of
 
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 1        only  waste  generated on that site or facility when used
 2        in connection  with  response  actions  pursuant  to  the
 3        federal     Comprehensive     Environmental     Response,
 4        Compensation,  and  Liability  Act  of  1980, the federal
 5        Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of  1976,  or  the
 6        Illinois Environmental Protection Act or as authorized by
 7        the Agency;
 8             (13)  the  portion  of  a site or facility accepting
 9        exclusively general construction  or  demolition  debris,
10        located  in  a county with a population over 700,000, and
11        operated and located in accordance with Section 22.38  of
12        this Act.
13        (b)  A new pollution control facility is:
14             (1)  a    pollution   control   facility   initially
15        permitted for development or construction after  July  1,
16        1981; or
17             (2)  the  area of expansion beyond the boundary of a
18        currently permitted pollution control facility; or
19             (3)  a   permitted   pollution    control   facility
20        requesting approval to store,  dispose  of,  transfer  or
21        incinerate,  for the first time, any special or hazardous
22        waste.
23    (Source: P.A. 89-93, eff. 7-6-95; 90-475, eff. 8-17-97.)

24        (415 ILCS 5/3.335 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.27)
25        Sec. 3.335. Pollution  control  waste.  3.27.  "Pollution
26    control waste" means any liquid, solid, semi-solid or gaseous
27    waste generated as a direct or indirect result of the removal
28    of contaminants from the air, water or land, and which pose a
29    present  or  potential  threat  to  human  health  or  to the
30    environment  or  with  inherent  properties  which  make  the
31    disposal of such waste in a landfill difficult to  manage  by
32    normal  means.  "Pollution control waste" includes but is not
33    limited to water  and  wastewater  treatment  plant  sludges,
 
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 1    baghouse dusts, landfill waste, scrubber sludges and chemical
 2    spill cleanings.
 3    (Source: P.A. 85-1428.)

 4        (415 ILCS 5/3.340 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.65)
 5        Sec. 3.340. Potable. 3.65.  "Potable" means generally fit
 6    for  human  consumption  in  accordance  with  accepted water
 7    supply principles and practices.
 8    (Source: P.A. 85-863.)

 9        (415 ILCS 5/3.345 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.59)
10        Sec. 3.345. Potential primary source.  3.59.   "Potential
11    primary  source"  means  any  unit  at a facility or site not
12    currently subject to a removal or remedial action which:
13             (1)  is utilized  for  the  treatment,  storage,  or
14        disposal  of any hazardous or special waste not generated
15        at the site; or
16             (2)  is utilized for the disposal of municipal waste
17        not generated at the site, other than landscape waste and
18        construction and demolition debris; or
19             (3)  is utilized for the landfilling, land treating,
20        surface impounding or piling of any hazardous or  special
21        waste  that  is  generated  on the site or at other sites
22        owned, controlled or operated by the same person; or
23             (4)  stores or accumulates at  any  time  more  than
24        75,000  pounds  above  ground,  or more than 7,500 pounds
25        below ground, of any hazardous substances.
26        A new potential primary source is:
27             (i)  a potential primary  source  which  is  not  in
28        existence  or for which construction has not commenced at
29        its location as of January 1, 1988; or
30             (ii)  a  potential  primary  source  which   expands
31        laterally  beyond the currently permitted boundary or, if
32        the primary source is  not  permitted,  the  boundary  in
 
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 1        existence as of January 1, 1988; or
 2             (iii)  a potential primary source which is part of a
 3        facility   that  undergoes  major  reconstruction.   Such
 4        reconstruction shall be deemed to have taken place  where
 5        the  fixed capital cost of the new components constructed
 6        within a 2-year period exceed 50% of  the  fixed  capital
 7        cost of a comparable entirely new facility.
 8        Construction shall be deemed commenced when all necessary
 9    federal,  State  and  local approvals have been obtained, and
10    work at the  site  has  been  initiated  and  proceeds  in  a
11    reasonably continuous manner to completion.
12    (Source: P.A. 85-863.)

13        (415 ILCS 5/3.350 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.58)
14        Sec.  3.350.  Potential  route.  3.58.  "Potential route"
15    means abandoned and improperly plugged wells  of  all  kinds,
16    drainage  wells,  all  injection wells, including closed loop
17    heat pump  wells,  and  any  excavation  for  the  discovery,
18    development or production of stone, sand or gravel.
19        A new potential route is:
20             (1)  a  potential route which is not in existence or
21        for which construction has not commenced at its  location
22        as of January 1, 1988, or
23             (2)  a   potential  route  which  expands  laterally
24        beyond  the  currently  permitted  boundary  or,  if  the
25        potential  route  is  not  permitted,  the  boundary   in
26        existence as of January 1, 1988.
27        Construction shall be deemed commenced when all necessary
28    federal,  State  and  local approvals have been obtained, and
29    work at the  site  has  been  initiated  and  proceeds  in  a
30    reasonably continuous manner to completion.
31    (Source: P.A. 85-863.)

32        (415 ILCS 5/3.355 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.60)
 
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 1        Sec. 3.355. Potential secondary source. 3.60.  "Potential
 2    secondary  source" means any unit at a facility or a site not
 3    currently subject to a removal or remedial action, other than
 4    a potential primary source, which:
 5             (1)  is utilized for the landfilling, land treating,
 6        or surface impounding of waste that is generated  on  the
 7        site  or  at other sites owned, controlled or operated by
 8        the same  person,  other  than  livestock  and  landscape
 9        waste, and construction and demolition debris; or
10             (2)  stores  or  accumulates  at  any time more than
11        25,000 but not more than 75,000 pounds above  ground,  or
12        more  than  2,500  but  not  more than 7,500 pounds below
13        ground, of any hazardous substances; or
14             (3)  stores or accumulates at  any  time  more  than
15        25,000  gallons  above  ground,  or more than 500 gallons
16        below ground, of petroleum, including crude  oil  or  any
17        fraction  thereof  which  is  not  otherwise specifically
18        listed or designated as a hazardous substance; or
19             (4)  stores or accumulates pesticides,  fertilizers,
20        or  road  oils  for purposes of commercial application or
21        for distribution to retail sales outlets; or
22             (5)  stores or accumulates at  any  time  more  than
23        50,000 pounds of any de-icing agent; or
24             (6)  is utilized for handling livestock waste or for
25        treating  domestic  wastewaters other than private sewage
26        disposal  systems  as  defined  in  the  "Private  Sewage
27        Disposal Licensing Act".
28        A new potential secondary source is:
29             (i)  a potential secondary source which  is  not  in
30        existence  or for which construction has not commenced at
31        its location as of July 1, 1988; or
32             (ii)  a potential  secondary  source  which  expands
33        laterally  beyond the currently permitted boundary or, if
34        the secondary source is not permitted,  the  boundary  in
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -25-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1        existence as of July 1, 1988, other than an expansion for
 2        handling  of  livestock  waste  or  for treating domestic
 3        wastewaters; or
 4             (iii)  a potential secondary source which is part of
 5        a facility that  undergoes  major  reconstruction.   Such
 6        reconstruction  shall be deemed to have taken place where
 7        the fixed capital cost of the new components  constructed
 8        within  a  2-year  period exceed 50% of the fixed capital
 9        cost of a comparable entirely new facility.
10        Construction shall be deemed commenced when all necessary
11    federal, State and local approvals have  been  obtained,  and
12    work  at  the  site  has  been  initiated  and  proceeds in a
13    reasonably continuous manner to completion.
14    (Source: P.A. 85-863.)

15        (415 ILCS 5/3.360 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.84)
16        Sec. 3.360.  Potentially infectious medical waste. 3.84.
17        (a)  "Potentially infectious  medical  waste"  means  the
18    following  types  of  waste  generated in connection with the
19    diagnosis, treatment (i.e., provision of  medical  services),
20    or   immunization   of  human  beings  or  animals;  research
21    pertaining to the  provision  of  medical  services;  or  the
22    production or testing of biologicals:
23             (1)  Cultures  and stocks.  This waste shall include
24        but not be limited  to  cultures  and  stocks  of  agents
25        infectious   to   humans,   and  associated  biologicals;
26        cultures  from  medical  or  pathological   laboratories;
27        cultures  and  stocks  of infectious agents from research
28        and industrial laboratories; wastes from  the  production
29        of biologicals; discarded live or attenuated vaccines; or
30        culture  dishes  and devices used to transfer, inoculate,
31        or mix cultures.
32             (2)  Human pathological wastes.   This  waste  shall
33        include  tissue, organs, and body parts (except teeth and
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -26-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1        the contiguous structures of bone and gum);  body  fluids
 2        that  are  removed  during  surgery,  autopsy,  or  other
 3        medical procedures; or specimens of body fluids and their
 4        containers.
 5             (3)  Human  blood  and  blood  products.  This waste
 6        shall include discarded  human  blood,  blood  components
 7        (e.g.,   serum   and   plasma),   or  saturated  material
 8        containing free flowing blood or blood components.
 9             (4)  Used sharps.  This waste shall include but  not
10        be  limited  to  discarded sharps used in animal or human
11        patient  care,   medical   research,   or   clinical   or
12        pharmaceutical  laboratories; hypodermic, intravenous, or
13        other  medical   needles;   hypodermic   or   intravenous
14        syringes;  Pasteur  pipettes;  scalpel  blades;  or blood
15        vials.  This waste shall also include but not be  limited
16        to  other  types  of  broken or unbroken glass (including
17        slides  and  cover  slips)  in  contact  with  infectious
18        agents.
19             (5)  Animal waste.   Animal  waste  means  discarded
20        materials,  including carcasses, body parts, body fluids,
21        blood, or bedding  originating  from  animals  inoculated
22        during    research,   production   of   biologicals,   or
23        pharmaceutical testing with agents infectious to humans.
24             (6)  Isolation  waste.   This  waste  shall  include
25        discarded materials contaminated with blood,  excretions,
26        exudates, and secretions from humans that are isolated to
27        protect   others   from   highly  communicable  diseases.
28        "Highly  communicable  diseases"  means  those   diseases
29        identified by the Board in rules adopted under subsection
30        (e) of Section 56.2 of this Act.
31             (7)  Unused  sharps.   This  waste shall include but
32        not be limited to the following unused, discarded sharps:
33        hypodermic, intravenous, or other needles; hypodermic  or
34        intravenous syringes; or scalpel blades.
 
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 1        (b)  Potentially   infectious   medical  waste  does  not
 2    include:
 3             (1)  waste generated as general household waste;
 4             (2)  waste  (except  for  sharps)  for   which   the
 5        infectious potential has been eliminated by treatment; or
 6             (3)  sharps   that   meet   both  of  the  following
 7        conditions:
 8                  (A)  the   infectious   potential   has    been
 9             eliminated from the sharps by treatment; and
10                  (B)  the  sharps are rendered unrecognizable by
11             treatment.
12    (Source: P.A. 87-752; 87-895; 87-1097.)

13        (415 ILCS 5/3.365 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.28)
14        Sec. 3.365. Public water  supply.  3.28.   "Public  water
15    supply"  means  all mains, pipes and structures through which
16    water is obtained and distributed to  the  public,  including
17    wells   and  well  structures,  intakes  and  cribs,  pumping
18    stations, treatment plants,  reservoirs,  storage  tanks  and
19    appurtenances,  collectively  or  severally, actually used or
20    intended for use for the  purpose  of  furnishing  water  for
21    drinking  or general domestic use and which serve at least 15
22    service connections or which  regularly  serve  at  least  25
23    persons  at least 60 days per year.  A public water supply is
24    either a "community water supply" or a  "non-community  water
25    supply".
26    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

27        (415 ILCS 5/3.370 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.29)
28        Sec.  3.370.  RCRA  permit.  3.29.  "RCRA permit" means a
29    permit  issued  by  the  Agency  pursuant  to   authorization
30    received  by  the Agency from the United States Environmental
31    Protection  Agency  under  Subtitle   C   of   the   Resource
32    Conservation  and  Recovery Act of 1976, (P.L. 94-580) (RCRA)
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -28-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    and which meets the requirements of Section 3005 of RCRA  and
 2    of this Act.
 3    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

 4        (415 ILCS 5/3.375 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.81)
 5        Sec.  3.375.  Recycling center. 3.81.  "Recycling center"
 6    means a  site  or  facility  that  accepts  only  segregated,
 7    nonhazardous,    nonspecial,    homogeneous,   nonputrescible
 8    materials, such as dry paper, glass, cans  or  plastics,  for
 9    subsequent use in the secondary materials market.
10    (Source: P.A. 87-650.)

11        (415 ILCS 5/3.380 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.30)
12        Sec.   3.380.  Recycling,  reclamation  or  reuse.  3.30.
13    "Recycling, reclamation or reuse" means a method,  technique,
14    or  process  designed to remove any contaminant from waste so
15    as to render such waste reusable, or  any  process  by  which
16    materials  that  would  otherwise be disposed of or discarded
17    are collected, separated or processed  and  returned  to  the
18    economic mainstream in the form of raw materials or products.
19    (Source: P.A. 87-650.)

20        (415 ILCS 5/3.385 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.31)
21        Sec. 3.385. Refuse. 3.31.  "Refuse" means waste.
22    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

23        (415 ILCS 5/3.390 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.67)
24        Sec.  3.390.  Regulated  recharge area. 3.67.  "Regulated
25    recharge area" means a compact geographic area, as determined
26    by the Board, the geology of which renders a potable resource
27    groundwater particularly susceptible to contamination.
28    (Source: P.A. 85-863.)

29        (415 ILCS 5/3.395 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.33)
 
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 1        Sec. 3.395. Release. 3.33.  "Release" means any spilling,
 2    leaking, pumping, pouring, emitting,  emptying,  discharging,
 3    injecting, escaping, leaching, dumping, or disposing into the
 4    environment,  but  excludes (a) any release which results  in
 5    exposure to persons solely within a workplace,  with  respect
 6    to a claim which such persons may assert against the employer
 7    of  such  persons; (b) emissions from the engine exhaust of a
 8    motor vehicle, rolling stock, aircraft, vessel,  or  pipeline
 9    pumping  station engine; (c) release of source, byproduct, or
10    special nuclear material from a nuclear  incident,  as  those
11    terms  are  defined in the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, if such
12    release is subject to requirements with respect to  financial
13    protection  established  by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission
14    under Section 170 of such Act; and (d) the normal application
15    of fertilizer.
16    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

17        (415 ILCS 5/3.400 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.34)
18        Sec. 3.400. Remedial  action.  3.34.   "Remedial  action"
19    means  those  actions  consistent with permanent remedy taken
20    instead of or in addition to removal actions in the event  of
21    a release or threatened release of a hazardous substance into
22    the  environment,  to  prevent  or  minimize  the  release of
23    hazardous substances so that they do  not  migrate  to  cause
24    substantial  danger  to  present  or  future public health or
25    welfare or the environment.  The term includes,  but  is  not
26    limited  to,  such  actions at the location of the release as
27    storage,  confinement,  perimeter  protection  using   dikes,
28    trenches,  or ditches, clay cover, neutralization, cleanup of
29    released  hazardous  substances  or  contaminated  materials,
30    recycling or reuse,  diversion  destruction,  segregation  of
31    reactive   wastes,   dredging   or   excavations,  repair  or
32    replacement of leaking containers, collection of leachate and
33    runoff,  onsite  treatment  or  incineration,  provision   of
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -30-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    alternative  water  supplies,  and  any monitoring reasonably
 2    required to assure  that  such  actions  protect  the  public
 3    health  and  welfare  and the environment.  The term includes
 4    the costs of permanent relocation of residents and businesses
 5    and community facilities where the Governor and the  Director
 6    determine  that, alone or in combination with other measures,
 7    such   relocation   is   more   cost-effective    than    and
 8    environmentally  preferable  to  the transportation, storage,
 9    treatment, destruction,  or  secure  disposition  offsite  of
10    hazardous  substances,  or  may  otherwise  be  necessary  to
11    protect  the  public  health  or  welfare.  The term includes
12    offsite transport of hazardous substances,  or  the  storage,
13    treatment, destruction, or secure disposition offsite of such
14    hazardous substances or contaminated materials.
15    (Source: P.A. 86-671.)

16        (415 ILCS 5/3.405 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.35)
17        Sec. 3.405. Remove; removal. 3.35.  "Remove" or "removal"
18    means the cleanup or removal of released hazardous substances
19    from  the  environment,  actions as may be necessary taken in
20    the event of the threat of release of  hazardous   substances
21    into the environment, actions as may be necessary to monitor,
22    assess,  and  evaluate  the  release  or threat of release of
23    hazardous substances, the disposal of  removed  material,  or
24    the  taking  of other actions as may be necessary to prevent,
25    minimize, or mitigate damage to the public health or  welfare
26    or  the environment, that may otherwise result from a release
27    or threat  of  release.   The  term  includes,  in  addition,
28    without  being limited to, security fencing or other measures
29    to limit access, provision  of  alternative  water  supplies,
30    temporary  evacuation  and housing of threatened individuals,
31    and any emergency assistance that may be provided  under  the
32    Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act or any other law.
33    (Source: P.A. 87-168.)
 
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 1        (415 ILCS 5/3.410 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.36)
 2        Sec. 3.410. Re-refined oil. 3.36.  "Re-refined oil" means
 3    any  oil  which  has  been  refined  from  used  oil  meeting
 4    substantially the same standards as new oil.
 5    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

 6        (415 ILCS 5/3.415 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.37)
 7        Sec.  3.415.  Resident.  3.37.  "Resident" means a person
 8    who dwells or has a place of abode which is occupied by  that
 9    person for 60 days or more each calendar year.
10    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

11        (415 ILCS 5/3.420 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.38)
12        Sec.   3.420.  Resource  conservation.  3.38.   "Resource
13    conservation" means reduction of the amounts  of  waste  that
14    are  generated, reduction of overall resource consumption and
15    the utilization of recovered resources.
16    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

17        (415 ILCS 5/3.425 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.90)
18        Sec. 3.425. Resource Conservation and Recovery Act; RCRA.
19    3.90. "Resource Conservation  and  Recovery  Act"  or  "RCRA"
20    means  the  Resource  Conservation  and  Recovery Act of 1976
21    (P.L. 94-580), as amended.
22    (Source: P.A. 88-496.)

23        (415 ILCS 5/3.430 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.66)
24        Sec.  3.430.  Resource  groundwater.   3.66.    "Resource
25    groundwater"  means groundwater that is presently being or in
26    the future capable of being put to beneficial use  by  reason
27    of being of suitable quality.
28    (Source: P.A. 85-863.)

29        (415 ILCS 5/3.435 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.39)
 
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 1        Sec. 3.435. Resource recovery. 3.39.  "Resource recovery"
 2    means the recovery of material or energy from waste.
 3    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

 4        (415 ILCS 5/3.440 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.40)
 5        Sec.   3.440.  Respond;  response.  3.40.   "Respond"  or
 6    "response"  means  remove,  removal,  remedy,  and   remedial
 7    action.
 8    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

 9        (415 ILCS 5/3.445 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.41)
10        Sec. 3.445. Sanitary landfill. 3.41.  "Sanitary landfill"
11    means  a facility permitted by the Agency for the disposal of
12    waste on  land  meeting  the  requirements  of  the  Resource
13    Conservation  and  Recovery Act, P.L. 94-580, and regulations
14    thereunder, and without  creating  nuisances  or  hazards  to
15    public  health  or  safety,  by  confining  the refuse to the
16    smallest practical volume and covering it  with  a  layer  of
17    earth  at  the conclusion of each day's operation, or by such
18    other methods and intervals  as  the  Board  may  provide  by
19    regulation.
20    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

21        (415 ILCS 5/3.450 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.61)
22        Sec.  3.450.  Setback zone. 3.61.  "Setback zone" means a
23    geographic area, designated pursuant to this Act,  containing
24    a  potable  water  supply  well  or  a  potential  source  or
25    potential  route,  having  a  continuous boundary, and within
26    which certain prohibitions or regulations are  applicable  in
27    order to protect groundwaters.
28    (Source: P.A. 85-863.)

29        (415 ILCS 5/3.455 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.42)
30        Sec.  3.455.  Sewage  works.  3.42.  "Sewage works" means
 
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 1    individually or collectively those constructions  or  devices
 2    used  for  collecting,  pumping,  treating,  and disposing of
 3    sewage, industrial waste or other wastes or for the  recovery
 4    of by-products from such wastes.
 5    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

 6        (415 ILCS 5/3.460 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.43)
 7        Sec.  3.460.  Site.  3.43.    "Site"  means any location,
 8    place, tract of  land,  and  facilities,  including  but  not
 9    limited  to  buildings,  and  improvements  used for purposes
10    subject to regulation or control by this Act  or  regulations
11    thereunder.
12    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

13        (415 ILCS 5/3.465 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.44)
14        Sec.  3.465.  Sludge.  3.44.   "Sludge"  means any solid,
15    semi-solid, or  liquid  waste  generated  from  a  municipal,
16    commercial,  or  industrial wastewater treatment plant, water
17    supply treatment plant, or air pollution control facility  or
18    any  other  such  waste  having  similar  characteristics and
19    effects.
20    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

21        (415 ILCS 5/3.470 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.82)
22        Sec. 3.470.  Solid  waste.  3.82.   "Solid  waste"  means
23    waste.
24    (Source: P.A. 87-650.)

25        (415 ILCS 5/3.475 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.45)
26        Sec.  3.475. 3.45.  Special waste.  "Special waste" means
27    any of the following:
28        (a)  potentially infectious medical waste;
29        (b)  hazardous waste, as determined in  conformance  with
30    RCRA  hazardous waste determination requirements set forth in
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -34-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    Section 722.111 of Title 35 of  the  Illinois  Administrative
 2    Code,   including   a  residue  from  burning  or  processing
 3    hazardous waste in a boiler or industrial furnace unless  the
 4    residue has been tested in accordance with Section 726.212 of
 5    Title 35 of the Illinois Administrative Code and proven to be
 6    nonhazardous;
 7        (c)  industrial process waste or pollution control waste,
 8    except:
 9             (1)  any  such  waste  certified  by  its generator,
10        pursuant to Section 22.48 of this Act, not to be  any  of
11        the following:
12                  (A)  a  liquid,  as  determined using the paint
13             filter test  set  forth  in  subdivision  (3)(A)  of
14             subsection (m) of Section 811.107 of Title 35 of the
15             Illinois Administrative Code;
16                  (B)  regulated     asbestos-containing    waste
17             materials, as defined under  the  National  Emission
18             Standards  for  Hazardous  Air  Pollutants in 40 CFR
19             Section 61.141;
20                  (C)  polychlorinated     biphenyls      (PCB's)
21             regulated pursuant to 40 CFR Part 761;
22                  (D)  an  industrial  process waste or pollution
23             control waste subject  to  the  waste  analysis  and
24             recordkeeping  requirements  of  Section  728.107 of
25             Title 35 of the Illinois Administrative  Code  under
26             the  land disposal restrictions of Part 728 of Title
27             35 of the Illinois Administrative Code; and
28                  (E)  a waste material generated  by  processing
29             recyclable  metals  by  shredding and required to be
30             managed as a special waste under  Section  22.29  of
31             this Act;
32             (2)  any   empty   portable   device  or  container,
33        including but not limited to a drum, in which  a  special
34        waste has been stored, transported, treated, disposed of,
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -35-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1        or  otherwise  handled,  provided  that the generator has
 2        certified that the device or container is empty and  does
 3        not  contain a liquid, as determined pursuant to item (A)
 4        of subdivision (1) of this subsection.  For  purposes  of
 5        this  subdivision,  "empty  portable device or container"
 6        means a device or container in which removal  of  special
 7        waste,  except  for  a  residue that shall not exceed one
 8        inch in thickness, has been accomplished  by  a  practice
 9        commonly  employed  to remove materials of that type.  An
10        inner liner used to prevent contact between  the  special
11        waste and the container shall be removed and managed as a
12        special waste; or
13             (3)  as  may  otherwise  be determined under Section
14        22.9 of this Act.
15        "Special  waste"  does  not  mean  fluorescent  and  high
16    intensity discharge lamps as defined  in  subsection  (a)  of
17    Section  22.23a  of  this  Act,  waste  that  is  managed  in
18    accordance with the universal waste requirements set forth in
19    Title  35  of  the  Illinois Administrative Code, Subtitle G,
20    Chapter I, Subchapter c, Part 733, or waste that  is  subject
21    to  rules  adopted  pursuant  to subsection (c)(2) of Section
22    22.23a of this Act.
23    (Source: P.A. 89-619, eff. 1-1-97; 90-502, eff. 8-19-97.)

24        (415 ILCS 5/3.480 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.46)
25        Sec.  3.480.  Storage.   3.46.    "Storage"   means   the
26    containment  of  waste,  either on a temporary basis or for a
27    period of years, in  such  a  manner  as  not  to  constitute
28    disposal.
29    (Source: P.A. 87-650.)

30        (415 ILCS 5/3.485 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.47)
31        Sec. 3.485. Storage site. 3.47.  "Storage site" is a site
32    at  which  waste is stored.  "Storage site" includes transfer
 
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 1    stations but does not include (i)  a  site  that  accepts  or
 2    receives  waste  in  transfer  containers unless the waste is
 3    removed from the transfer container or  unless  the  transfer
 4    container   becomes  stationary,  en  route  to  a  disposal,
 5    treatment, or storage facility for more than 5 business days,
 6    or (ii) a site  that  accepts  or  receives  open  top  units
 7    containing  only clean construction and demolition debris, or
 8    (iii) a site that stores waste on a refuse motor  vehicle  or
 9    in  the  vehicle's  detachable refuse receptacle  for no more
10    than 24 hours, excluding Saturdays,  Sundays,  and  holidays,
11    but  only  if  the detachable refuse receptacle is completely
12    covered or enclosed and is stored on the  same  site  as  the
13    refuse  motor  vehicle that transported the receptacle to the
14    site.
15        Nothing in this Section shall be  construed  to  be  less
16    stringent  than  or  inconsistent  with the provisions of the
17    federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976  (P.L.
18    94-480) or regulations adopted under it.
19    (Source: P.A. 89-122, eff. 7-7-95.)

20        (415 ILCS 5/3.490 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.48)
21        Sec. 3.490. Trade secret. 3.48.  "Trade secret" means the
22    whole  or any portion or phase of any scientific or technical
23    information,  design,  process  (including  a   manufacturing
24    process), procedure, formula or improvement, or business plan
25    which  is  secret  in  that  it  has  not  been  published or
26    disseminated or otherwise become a matter of  general  public
27    knowledge,  and  which has competitive value.  A trade secret
28    is presumed  to  be  secret  when  the  owner  thereof  takes
29    reasonable  measures to prevent it from becoming available to
30    persons other than those selected by the owner to have access
31    thereto for limited purposes.
32    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)
 
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 1        (415 ILCS 5/3.495 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.48-5)
 2        Sec.  3.495.   Transfer   container.   3.48-5.  "Transfer
 3    container"  means a reusable transportable shipping container
 4    that is completely covered or enclosed, that has a volume  of
 5    not   less   than  250  cubic  feet  based  on  the  external
 6    dimensions, and that is constructed and maintained to protect
 7    the container contents (which may include smaller  containers
 8    that  are  or  are not transfer containers) from water, rain,
 9    and wind, to prevent the free movement of rodents and vectors
10    into or out of the container, and to prevent leaking from the
11    container.
12    (Source: P.A. 89-122, eff. 7-7-95.)

13        (415 ILCS 5/3.500 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.83)
14        Sec. 3.500. Transfer station. 3.83.   "Transfer  station"
15    means  a  site  or  facility that accepts waste for temporary
16    storage or consolidation and  further  transfer  to  a  waste
17    disposal,  treatment or storage facility.  "Transfer station"
18    includes a site where waste is transferred from  (1)  a  rail
19    carrier  to  a  motor  vehicle  or water carrier; (2) a water
20    carrier to a rail carrier  or  motor  vehicle;  (3)  a  motor
21    vehicle  to  a  rail carrier, water carrier or motor vehicle;
22    (4) a rail carrier to a rail carrier, if the waste is removed
23    from a rail car; or (5) a water carrier to a  water  carrier,
24    if the waste is removed from a vessel.
25        "Transfer  station"  does  not  include  (i) a site where
26    waste is not removed from the transfer container, or  (ii)  a
27    site  that accepts or receives open top units containing only
28    clean construction and demolition debris,  or  (iii)  a  site
29    that  stores  waste  on  a  refuse  motor  vehicle  or in the
30    vehicle's detachable refuse receptacle  for no more  than  24
31    hours,  excluding  Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays, but only
32    if the detachable refuse receptacle is completely covered  or
33    enclosed  and  is stored on the same site as the refuse motor
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -38-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    vehicle that transported the receptacle to the site.
 2        Nothing in this Section shall be  construed  to  be  less
 3    stringent  than  or  inconsistent  with the provisions of the
 4    federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976  (P.L.
 5    94-480) or regulations adopted under it.
 6    (Source: P.A. 89-122, eff. 7-7-95.)

 7        (415 ILCS 5/3.505 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.49)
 8        Sec.  3.505.  Treatment.  3.49.   "Treatment"  means  any
 9    method,   technique  or  process,  including  neutralization,
10    designed to change  the  physical,  chemical,  or  biological
11    character  or composition of any waste so as to neutralize it
12    or render it nonhazardous, safer for transport, amenable  for
13    recovery,  amenable  for storage, or reduced in volume.  Such
14    term includes any activity or processing designed  to  change
15    the  physical form or chemical composition of hazardous waste
16    so as to render it nonhazardous.
17    (Source: P.A. 87-650.)

18        (415 ILCS 5/3.510 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.50)
19        Sec. 3.510. Underground  injection.  3.50.   "Underground
20    injection" means the subsurface emplacement of fluids by well
21    injection.
22    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

23        (415 ILCS 5/3.515 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.62)
24        Sec.   3.515.  Unit.  3.62.   "Unit"  means  any  device,
25    mechanism, equipment, or area  (exclusive  of  land  utilized
26    only   for  agricultural  production).   This  term  includes
27    secondary  containment  structures  and  their  contents   at
28    agrichemical facilities.
29    (Source: P.A. 87-1108.)

30        (415 ILCS 5/3.520 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.51)
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -39-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1        Sec.  3.520.  Used  oil.  3.51.  "Used oil" means any oil
 2    which has been refined from crude oil or  refined  from  used
 3    oil,  has  been  used,  and  as a result of such use has been
 4    contaminated by physical or chemical impurities, except  that
 5    "used  oil"  shall  not include that type of oil generated on
 6    farmland property devoted to agricultural  use  and  used  on
 7    that property for heating or burning.
 8    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

 9        (415 ILCS 5/3.525 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.91)
10        Sec.  3.525.  Vegetable  by-products.  3.91.   "Vegetable
11    by-products" means any waste consisting solely of the  unused
12    portion  of  fruits  and  vegetables,  associated solids, and
13    process  water  resulting  from   any   commercial   canning,
14    freezing,  preserving  or  other  processing  of  fruits  and
15    vegetables. Vegetable by-products are not special wastes.
16    (Source: P.A. 88-454; 88-670, eff. 12-2-94.)

17        (415 ILCS 5/3.530 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.52)
18        Sec. 3.530. Virgin oil. 3.52.  "Virgin oil" means any oil
19    which  has  been  refined from crude oil which may or may not
20    contain additives and has not been used.
21    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

22        (415 ILCS 5/3.535 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.53)
23        Sec. 3.535. Waste. 3.53.    "Waste"  means  any  garbage,
24    sludge  from  a waste treatment plant, water supply treatment
25    plant, or air pollution control facility or  other  discarded
26    material,  including  solid, liquid, semi-solid, or contained
27    gaseous  material  resulting  from  industrial,   commercial,
28    mining   and  agricultural  operations,  and  from  community
29    activities, but does not include solid or dissolved  material
30    in  domestic  sewage,  or  solid  or  dissolved  materials in
31    irrigation return flows, or coal  combustion  by-products  as
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -40-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    defined in Section 3.135 3.94, or industrial discharges which
 2    are point sources subject to permits under Section 402 of the
 3    Federal  Water  Pollution  Control  Act,  as now or hereafter
 4    amended, or source, special nuclear, or by-product  materials
 5    as  defined  by the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended (68
 6    Stat. 921) or  any  solid  or  dissolved  material  from  any
 7    facility  subject  to  the Federal Surface Mining Control and
 8    Reclamation Act  of  1977  (P.L.  95-87)  or  the  rules  and
 9    regulations  thereunder  or  any  law  or  rule or regulation
10    adopted by the State of Illinois pursuant thereto.
11    (Source: P.A. 89-93, eff. 7-6-95.)

12        (415 ILCS 5/3.540 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.54)
13        Sec. 3.540. Waste disposal site. 3.54.   "Waste  disposal
14    site" is a site on which solid waste is disposed.
15    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

16        (415 ILCS 5/3.545 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.55)
17        Sec.  3.545. Water pollution. 3.55.  "Water pollution" is
18    such  alteration  of   the   physical,   thermal,   chemical,
19    biological  or  radioactive  properties  of any waters of the
20    State, or such discharge of any contaminant into  any  waters
21    of  the  State,  as will or is likely to create a nuisance or
22    render such waters harmful or  detrimental  or  injurious  to
23    public health, safety or welfare, or to domestic, commercial,
24    industrial,  agricultural,  recreational, or other legitimate
25    uses, or to livestock, wild animals, birds,  fish,  or  other
26    aquatic life.
27    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

28        (415 ILCS 5/3.550 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.56)
29        Sec.   3.550.   Waters.   3.56.    "Waters"   means   all
30    accumulations of water, surface and underground, natural, and
31    artificial,  public  and private, or parts thereof, which are
 
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 1    wholly or partially within, flow through, or border upon this
 2    State.
 3    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

 4        (415 ILCS 5/3.555 new) (was 415 ILCS 5/3.57)
 5        Sec. 3.555. Well. 3.57.  "Well" means a bored, drilled or
 6    driven shaft, or dug hole, the depth of which is greater than
 7    the largest surface dimension.
 8    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

 9        (415 ILCS 5/4) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1004)
10        Sec. 4. Environmental Protection  Agency;  establishment;
11    duties.
12        (a)  There  is established in the Executive Branch of the
13    State Government an agency to be known as  the  Environmental
14    Protection   Agency.    This   Agency   shall  be  under  the
15    supervision  and  direction  of  a  Director  who  shall   be
16    appointed  by the Governor with the advice and consent of the
17    Senate.  The term of office of the Director shall  expire  on
18    the  third  Monday of January in odd numbered years, provided
19    that he or she shall hold his office until a his successor is
20    appointed and has qualified.  The Director shall  receive  an
21    annual  salary as set by the Governor from time to time or as
22    set by the Compensation Review Board, whichever  is  greater.
23    If  set by the Governor, the Director's annual salary may not
24    exceed 85% of the Governor's annual salary.  The Director, in
25    accord with the Personnel Code, shall employ and direct  such
26    personnel,  and  shall  provide for such laboratory and other
27    facilities, as may be necessary to carry out the purposes  of
28    this  Act.  In addition, the Director may by agreement secure
29    such services as he or she may deem necessary from any  other
30    department,  agency, or unit of the State Government, and may
31    employ  and  compensate  such   consultants   and   technical
32    assistants as may be required.
 
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 1        (b)  The  Agency  shall  have  the  duty  to  collect and
 2    disseminate such information, acquire  such  technical  data,
 3    and  conduct such experiments as may be required to carry out
 4    the purposes of this  Act,  including  ascertainment  of  the
 5    quantity and nature of discharges from any contaminant source
 6    and data on those sources, and to operate and arrange for the
 7    operation  of  devices  for  the  monitoring of environmental
 8    quality.
 9        (c)  The Agency shall have authority to conduct a program
10    of  continuing  surveillance  and  of  regular  or   periodic
11    inspection  of  actual  or  potential  contaminant  or  noise
12    sources,  of  public  water  supplies, and of refuse disposal
13    sites.
14        (d)  In accordance with constitutional  limitations,  the
15    Agency  shall have authority to enter at all reasonable times
16    upon any private or public property for the purpose of:
17        (1)  Inspecting and investigating to  ascertain  possible
18    violations  of  the  Act  or of regulations thereunder, or of
19    permits or terms or conditions thereof; or
20        (2)  In accordance  with  the  provisions  of  this  Act,
21    taking  whatever  preventive  or corrective action, including
22    but not limited  to  removal  or  remedial  action,  that  is
23    necessary  or  appropriate  whenever  there is a release or a
24    substantial threat of a release of (A) a hazardous  substance
25    or  pesticide  or  (B)  petroleum from an underground storage
26    tank.
27        (e)  The  Agency  shall  have  the  duty  to  investigate
28    violations of this Act or of regulations adopted  thereunder,
29    or  of  permits  or  terms  or  conditions  thereof, to issue
30    administrative citations as provided in Section 31.1 of  this
31    Act,  and  to  take  such  summary  enforcement  action as is
32    provided for by Section 34 of this Act.
33        (f)  The Agency shall appear  before  the  Board  in  any
34    hearing upon a petition for variance, the denial of a permit,
 
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 1    or  the  validity  or  effect  of a rule or regulation of the
 2    Board, and shall have the  authority  to  appear  before  the
 3    Board in any hearing under the Act.
 4        (g)  The  Agency  shall  have  the duty to administer, in
 5    accord  with  Title  X  of  this   Act,   such   permit   and
 6    certification systems as may be established by this Act or by
 7    regulations  adopted  thereunder.   The Agency may enter into
 8    written delegation agreements with any department, agency, or
 9    unit of State or local government under which all or portions
10    of this duty may be delegated for public water supply storage
11    and  transport  systems,  sewage  collection  and   transport
12    systems,  air  pollution  control  sources  with uncontrolled
13    emissions of 100 tons per year or  less  and  application  of
14    algicides to waters of the State.  Such delegation agreements
15    will require that the work to be performed thereunder will be
16    in accordance with Agency criteria, subject to Agency review,
17    and  shall include such financial and program auditing by the
18    Agency as may be required.
19        (h)  The Agency  shall  have  authority  to  require  the
20    submission  of  complete  plans  and  specifications from any
21    applicant for a permit required by this Act or by regulations
22    thereunder, and to require the  submission  of  such  reports
23    regarding  actual  or  potential  violations of the Act or of
24    regulations thereunder, or of permits or terms or  conditions
25    thereof, as may be necessary for purposes of this Act.
26        (i)  The    Agency   shall   have   authority   to   make
27    recommendations to the Board for the adoption of  regulations
28    under Title VII of the Act.
29        (j)  The  Agency  shall  have  the  duty to represent the
30    State of Illinois in any and all matters pertaining to plans,
31    procedures, or negotiations for interstate compacts or  other
32    governmental    arrangements    relating   to   environmental
33    protection.
34        (k)  The Agency  shall  have  the  authority  to  accept,
 
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 1    receive,  and  administer  on behalf of the State any grants,
 2    gifts, loans, indirect cost reimbursements,  or  other  funds
 3    made  available  to the State from any source for purposes of
 4    this Act or for air or water pollution control, public  water
 5    supply,  solid  waste  disposal,  noise  abatement,  or other
 6    environmental protection activities,  surveys,  or  programs.
 7    Any  federal  funds  received  by the Agency pursuant to this
 8    subsection shall be deposited in a trust fund with the  State
 9    Treasurer  and  held  and disbursed by him in accordance with
10    Treasurer as Custodian  of  Funds  Act,  provided  that  such
11    monies shall be used only for the purposes for which they are
12    contributed  and  any  balance remaining shall be returned to
13    the contributor.
14        The Agency is authorized to promulgate  such  regulations
15    and  enter  into  such contracts as it may deem necessary for
16    carrying out the provisions of this subsection.
17        (l)  The Agency is hereby designated as  water  pollution
18    agency  for  the  state for all purposes of the Federal Water
19    Pollution Control Act, as amended; as implementing agency for
20    the State for all purposes of the Safe  Drinking  Water  Act,
21    Public  Law  93-523,  as  now  or  hereafter  amended, except
22    Section 1425 of that Act; as air  pollution  agency  for  the
23    state  for  all purposes of the Clean Air Act of 1970, Public
24    Law 91-604, approved December 31, 1970, as  amended;  and  as
25    solid  waste  agency  for  the  state for all purposes of the
26    Solid Waste Disposal Act, Public Law 89-272, approved October
27    20, 1965, and amended by the Resource Recovery Act  of  1970,
28    Public Law 91-512, approved October 26, 1970, as amended, and
29    amended  by  the  Resource  Conservation  and Recovery Act of
30    1976, (P.L. 94-580) approved October 21, 1976, as amended; as
31    noise control agency for the state for all  purposes  of  the
32    Noise  Control  Act  of  1972,  Public  Law  92-574, approved
33    October 27, 1972, as amended; and as implementing agency  for
34    the State for all purposes of the Comprehensive Environmental
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -45-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    Response,  Compensation,  and  Liability  Act  of  1980 (P.L.
 2    96-510), as  amended;  and  otherwise  as  pollution  control
 3    agency for the State pursuant to federal laws integrated with
 4    the foregoing laws, for financing purposes or otherwise.  The
 5    Agency  is  hereby authorized to take all action necessary or
 6    appropriate to secure to  the  State  the  benefits  of  such
 7    federal  Acts, provided that the Agency shall transmit to the
 8    United States without change any  standards  adopted  by  the
 9    Pollution Control Board pursuant to Section 5(c) of this Act.
10    This  subsection  (l)  of Section 4 shall not be construed to
11    bar or  prohibit  the  Environmental  Protection  Trust  Fund
12    Commission  from  accepting, receiving, and  administering on
13    behalf of the State any grants, gifts, loans or  other  funds
14    for   which  the  Commission  is  eligible  pursuant  to  the
15    Environmental Protection  Trust  Fund  Act.   The  Agency  is
16    hereby  designated  as  the  State agency for all purposes of
17    administering the requirements of Section 313 of the  federal
18    Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act of 1986.
19        Any  municipality,  sanitary district, or other political
20    subdivision, or any Agency of the State or interstate Agency,
21    which makes  application  for  loans  or  grants  under  such
22    federal Acts shall notify the Agency of such application; the
23    Agency  may  participate  in  proceedings  under such federal
24    Acts.
25        (m)  The Agency shall  have  authority,  consistent  with
26    Section  5(c)  and  other  provisions  of  this  Act, and for
27    purposes of Section 303(e) of  the  Federal  Water  Pollution
28    Control  Act,  as  now  or  hereafter  amended,  to engage in
29    planning processes and activities and  to  develop  plans  in
30    cooperation  with  units  of local government, state agencies
31    and officers, and other  appropriate  persons  in  connection
32    with  the  jurisdiction  or duties of each such unit, agency,
33    officer or person.  Public hearings  shall  be  held  on  the
34    planning  process,  at which any person shall be permitted to
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -46-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    appear and  be  heard,  pursuant  to  procedural  regulations
 2    promulgated by the Agency.
 3        (n)  In  accordance  with  the  powers conferred upon the
 4    Agency by Sections 10(g), 13(b), 19, 22(d)  and  25  of  this
 5    Act, the Agency shall have authority to establish and enforce
 6    minimum  standards for the operation of laboratories relating
 7    to analyses and laboratory tests  for  air  pollution,  water
 8    pollution,  noise emissions, contaminant discharges onto land
 9    and  sanitary,  chemical,  and  mineral  quality   of   water
10    distributed  by  a public water supply.  The Agency may enter
11    into formal working  agreements  with  other  departments  or
12    agencies  of  state government under which all or portions of
13    this authority may be delegated to the cooperating department
14    or agency.
15        (o)  The  Agency  shall  have  the  authority  to   issue
16    certificates   of  competency  to  persons  and  laboratories
17    meeting the minimum standards established by  the  Agency  in
18    accordance  with  Section  4(n) of this Act and to promulgate
19    and enforce regulations relevant to the issuance and  use  of
20    such  certificates.  The Agency may enter into formal working
21    agreements  with  other  departments  or  agencies  of  state
22    government under which all or portions of this authority  may
23    be delegated to the cooperating department or agency.
24        (p)  Except as provided in Section 17.7, the Agency shall
25    have the duty to analyze samples as required from each public
26    water  supply  to  determine  compliance with the contaminant
27    levels specified by the Pollution Control Board.  The maximum
28    number of samples which  the  Agency  shall  be  required  to
29    analyze for microbiological quality shall be 6 per month, but
30    the  Agency  may, at its option, analyze a larger number each
31    month  for  any  supply.   Results  of  sample  analyses  for
32    additional  required  bacteriological   testing,   turbidity,
33    residual chlorine and radionuclides are to be provided to the
34    Agency  in  accordance  with  Section  19.   Owners  of water
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -47-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    supplies may enter into agreements with the Agency to provide
 2    for reduced Agency participation in sample analyses.
 3        (q)  The Agency  shall  have  the  authority  to  provide
 4    notice  to  any  person who may be liable pursuant to Section
 5    22.2(f) of this Act for a release or a substantial threat  of
 6    a release of a hazardous substance or pesticide.  Such notice
 7    shall   include   the   identified  response  action  and  an
 8    opportunity for such person to perform the response action.
 9        (r)  The  Agency  may  enter  into   written   delegation
10    agreements  with  any unit of local government under which it
11    may delegate all or portions of its inspecting, investigating
12    and enforcement functions.  Such delegation agreements  shall
13    require  that work performed thereunder be in accordance with
14    Agency   criteria   and    subject    to    Agency    review.
15    Notwithstanding  any  other provision of law to the contrary,
16    no unit of local government shall be liable  for  any  injury
17    resulting from the exercise of its authority pursuant to such
18    a  delegation  agreement  unless  the  injury  is proximately
19    caused by the willful and wanton negligence of  an  agent  or
20    employee  of  the unit of local government, and any policy of
21    insurance coverage issued to a unit of local  government  may
22    provide  for  the  denial  of liability and the nonpayment of
23    claims based upon  injuries  for  which  the  unit  of  local
24    government is not liable pursuant to this subsection (r).
25        (s)  The  Agency  shall  have  authority to take whatever
26    preventive or corrective action is necessary or  appropriate,
27    including   but   not   limited   to  expenditure  of  monies
28    appropriated from the Build Illinois Bond Fund and the  Build
29    Illinois  Purposes  Fund  for  removal  or  remedial  action,
30    whenever  any hazardous substance or pesticide is released or
31    there is a substantial threat of  such  a  release  into  the
32    environment.  The State, the Director, and any State employee
33    shall be indemnified for any damages or injury arising out of
34    or  resulting  from  any  action taken under this subsection.
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -48-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    The Director of the Agency is authorized to enter  into  such
 2    contracts  and  agreements  as are necessary to carry out the
 3    Agency's duties under this subsection.
 4        (t)  The  Agency  shall  have  authority  to   distribute
 5    grants, subject to appropriation by the General Assembly, for
 6    financing    and   construction   of   municipal   wastewater
 7    facilities.  With respect to all monies appropriated from the
 8    Build Illinois Bond Fund and the Build Illinois Purposes Fund
 9    for  wastewater  facility  grants,  the  Agency  shall   make
10    distributions  in  conformity  with the rules and regulations
11    established pursuant to the Anti-Pollution Bond Act,  as  now
12    or hereafter amended.
13        (u)  Pursuant  to  the  Illinois Administrative Procedure
14    Act, the Agency shall have the authority to adopt such  rules
15    as  are  necessary or appropriate for the Agency to implement
16    Section 31.1 of this Act.
17        (v)  (Blank.)
18        (w)  Neither the State, nor the Director, nor the  Board,
19    nor  any  State  employee  shall be liable for any damages or
20    injury arising out of or  resulting  from  any  action  taken
21    under subsection (s) or subsection (v).
22        (x)(1)  The  Agency  shall  have  authority to distribute
23    grants, subject to appropriation by the General Assembly,  to
24    units  of  local government for financing and construction of
25    public water supply facilities.  With respect to  all  monies
26    appropriated  from  the Build Illinois Bond Fund or the Build
27    Illinois Purposes Fund for public water supply  grants,  such
28    grants  shall be made in accordance with rules promulgated by
29    the Agency.  Such rules shall include  a  requirement  for  a
30    local  match  of  30%  of the total project cost for projects
31    funded through such grants.
32        (2)  The Agency shall not terminate a grant to a unit  of
33    local government for the financing and construction of public
34    water  supply  facilities  unless and until the Agency adopts
 
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 1    rules that set forth precise and complete standards, pursuant
 2    to Section 5-20 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act,
 3    for the termination of such grants.   The  Agency  shall  not
 4    make  determinations on whether specific grant conditions are
 5    necessary to ensure the integrity of a project or on  whether
 6    subagreements  shall  be  awarded, with respect to grants for
 7    the  financing  and  construction  of  public  water   supply
 8    facilities, unless and until the Agency adopts rules that set
 9    forth  precise  and  complete  standards, pursuant to Section
10    5-20 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, for making
11    such determinations.  The Agency shall not issue a  stop-work
12    order  in relation to such grants unless and until the Agency
13    adopts precise and complete standards,  pursuant  to  Section
14    5-20  of  the  Illinois  Administrative  Procedure  Act,  for
15    determining whether to issue a stop-work order.
16        (y)  The  Agency  shall  have  authority  to  release any
17    person  from  further  responsibility   for   preventive   or
18    corrective   action   under  this  Act  following  successful
19    completion of preventive or corrective action  undertaken  by
20    such person upon written request by the person.
21    (Source: P.A. 91-25, eff. 6-9-99.)

22        (415 ILCS 5/5) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1005)
23        Sec. 5. Pollution Control Board.
24        (a)  There  is  hereby created an independent board to be
25    known  as  the  Pollution  Control  Board,  consisting  of  7
26    technically qualified members, no more than 4 of whom may  be
27    of  the same political party, to be appointed by the Governor
28    with the advice and consent of the Senate. One of the members
29    of the Board  first  appointed  shall  be  appointed  for  an
30    initial  term  expiring  July  1,  1971; two members shall be
31    appointed for  initial  terms  expiring  July  1,  1972;  two
32    members shall be appointed for initial terms expiring July 1,
33    1973;   and  the  two  members  appointed  pursuant  to  this
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -50-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    amendatory Act of 1983 shall be appointed for  initial  terms
 2    expiring on July 1, 1986.
 3        Notwithstanding  any  provision  of  this  Section to the
 4    contrary, the term of office of each member of the  Board  is
 5    abolished  on  the  effective  date of this amendatory Act of
 6    1985, but the incumbent members shall  continue  to  exercise
 7    all  of  the  powers  and  be subject to all of the duties of
 8    members of the Board until their  respective  successors  are
 9    appointed  and qualified.  Thereafter, 3 members of the Board
10    shall be appointed to initial terms expiring July 1, 1986;  2
11    members  of  the  Board  shall  be appointed to initial terms
12    expiring July 1, 1987; and 2 members of the  Board  shall  be
13    appointed to initial terms expiring July 1, 1988.
14        All  members  successors  shall  hold  office for 3 three
15    years from the first day of July in the year  in  which  they
16    were  appointed,  except  in case of an appointment to fill a
17    vacancy.  In case of a vacancy in the office when the  Senate
18    is  not  in  session,  the  Governor  may  make  a  temporary
19    appointment  until the next meeting of the Senate, when he or
20    she shall nominate some person to fill such office;  and  any
21    person  so  nominated,  who is confirmed by the Senate, shall
22    hold the his office during the remainder of the term.  If the
23    Senate is not in session at the time this Act  takes  effect,
24    the  Governor shall make temporary appointments as in case of
25    vacancies.
26        Members of  the  Board  shall  hold  office  until  their
27    respective  successors have been appointed and qualified. Any
28    member may resign from his office, such resignation  to  take
29    effect  when  a  his  successor  has  been  appointed and has
30    qualified.
31        Board members shall be paid $30,000 per year  until  July
32    1,  1979;  $33,000 from July 1, 1979 to July 1, 1980; $34,900
33    from July 1, 1980 to July  1,  1981;  and  $37,000  per  year
34    thereafter,  or  an  amount  set  by  the Compensation Review
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -51-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    Board, whichever is greater, and the Chairman shall  be  paid
 2    $35,000  per  year  until  July 1, 1979; $38,500 from July 1,
 3    1979 to July 1, 1980; $40,800 from July 1, 1980  to  July  1,
 4    1981 and $43,000 per year thereafter, or an amount set by the
 5    Compensation Review Board, whichever is greater.  Each member
 6    shall  be reimbursed for expenses necessarily incurred, shall
 7    devote full time to the performance of his or her duties  and
 8    shall  make  a  financial  disclosure upon appointment.  Each
 9    Board member may employ one secretary and one assistant,  and
10    the  Chairman  one secretary and 2 two assistants.  The Board
11    also may employ and compensate hearing officers to preside at
12    hearings under this Act, and such other personnel as  may  be
13    necessary.   Hearing  officers shall be attorneys licensed to
14    practice law in Illinois.
15        The Governor shall  designate  one  Board  member  to  be
16    Chairman, who shall serve at the pleasure of the Governor.
17        The  Board shall hold at least one meeting each month and
18    such additional meetings as may be prescribed by Board rules.
19    In addition, special meetings may be called by  the  Chairman
20    or  by  any  2  two  Board members, upon delivery of 24 hours
21    written notice to the  office  of  each  member.   All  Board
22    meetings  shall  be  open to the public, and public notice of
23    all meetings shall be given at least 24 hours in  advance  of
24    each meeting.  In emergency situations in which a majority of
25    the  Board  certifies  that  exigencies  of  time require the
26    requirements of public notice and of 24 hour  written  notice
27    to  members  may  be  dispensed with, and Board members shall
28    receive such notice as is reasonable under the circumstances.
29        Four members of the Board shall constitute a quorum,  and
30    4  votes shall be required for any final determination by the
31    Board,  except  in  a  proceeding  to  remove  a  seal  under
32    paragraph (d) of Section 34 of this  Act.   The  Board  shall
33    keep a complete and accurate record of all its meetings.
34        (b)  The  Board shall determine, define and implement the
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -52-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    environmental control standards applicable in  the  State  of
 2    Illinois  and  may  adopt rules and regulations in accordance
 3    with Title VII of this Act.
 4        (c)  The Board shall have authority to act for the  State
 5    in  regard to the adoption of standards for submission to the
 6    United States under any federal law respecting  environmental
 7    protection.   Such  standards  shall be adopted in accordance
 8    with Title  VII  of  the  Act  and  upon  adoption  shall  be
 9    forwarded   to   the   Environmental  Protection  Agency  for
10    submission to the United States pursuant to  subsections  (l)
11    and  (m) of Section 4 of this Act.  Nothing in this paragraph
12    shall limit  the  discretion  of  the  Governor  to  delegate
13    authority granted to the Governor him under any federal law.
14        (d)  The   Board   shall   have   authority   to  conduct
15    proceedings hearings upon complaints charging  violations  of
16    this  Act,  any rule or regulation adopted under this Act, or
17    any  permit  or  term  or  condition  of   a   permit;   upon
18    administrative  citations  or of regulations thereunder; upon
19    petitions for variances or adjusted standards; upon petitions
20    for review of the Agency's final determinations on denial  of
21    a permit applications in accordance with Title X of this Act;
22    upon  petitions petition to remove seals a seal under Section
23    34 of this Act; and upon other petitions for review of  final
24    determinations  which  are  made  pursuant to this the Act or
25    Board rule and which involve a subject  which  the  Board  is
26    authorized to regulate.  The Board may also conduct; and such
27    other  proceedings hearings as may be provided by this Act or
28    any other statute or rule.
29        (e)  In connection with any proceeding  hearing  pursuant
30    to  subsection  subsections  (b)  or (d) of this Section, the
31    Board may subpoena and compel the attendance of witnesses and
32    the production of evidence reasonably necessary to resolution
33    of the matter under consideration.   The  Board  shall  issue
34    such  subpoenas upon the request of any party to a proceeding
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -53-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    under subsection (d) of this Section or upon its own motion.
 2        (f)  The Board may prescribe reasonable fees for  permits
 3    required  pursuant  to  this Act.  Such fees in the aggregate
 4    may  not  exceed  the  total  cost  to  the  Agency  for  its
 5    inspection and permit systems.  The Board may  not  prescribe
 6    any  permit  fees  which  are  different in amount from those
 7    established by this Act.
 8    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

 9        (415 ILCS 5/7) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1007)
10        Sec. 7. Public inspection; fees.
11        (a)  All files, records, and  data  of  the  Agency,  the
12    Board,  and the Department shall be open to reasonable public
13    inspection and may be copied upon payment of reasonable  fees
14    to be established where appropriate by the Agency, the Board,
15    or the Department, except for the following:
16             (i)  information which constitutes a trade secret;
17             (ii)  information privileged against introduction in
18        judicial proceedings;
19             (iii)  internal   communications   of   the  several
20        agencies;
21             (iv)  information  concerning  secret  manufacturing
22        processes or confidential data submitted  by  any  person
23        under this Act.
24        (b)  Notwithstanding   subsection   (a)   above,   as  to
25    information from  or  concerning  persons  subject  to  NPDES
26    permit requirements:
27             (i)  effluent  data  may  under  no circumstances be
28        kept confidential; and
29             (ii)  the Agency, the Board, and the Department  may
30        make  available  to the public for inspection and copying
31        any required records, reports, information, permits,  and
32        permit  applications  obtained  from  contaminant sources
33        subject to the provisions of Section 12 (f) of this  Act;
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -54-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1        provided  that upon a showing satisfactory to the Agency,
 2        the Board or the Department, as the case may be,  by  any
 3        person  that such information, or any part thereof (other
 4        than  effluent  data)  would,  if  made  public,  divulge
 5        methods or processes  entitled  to  protection  as  trade
 6        secrets  of  such  person,  the Agency, the Board, or the
 7        Department,  as  the  case  may  be,  shall  treat   such
 8        information as confidential.
 9        (c)  Notwithstanding any other provision of this Title or
10    any  other law to the contrary, all emission data reported to
11    or otherwise  obtained  by  the  Agency,  the  Board  or  the
12    Department  in connection with any examination, inspection or
13    proceeding under this Act shall be available to the public to
14    the extent required by the federal Clean Air Act,  Amendments
15    of 1977 (P.L. 95-95) as amended.
16        (d)  Notwithstanding  subsection  (a) above, the quantity
17    and identity of substances being placed or to  be  placed  in
18    landfills  or  hazardous waste treatment, storage or disposal
19    facilities, and the name of the generator of such  substances
20    may under no circumstances be kept confidential.
21        (e)  Notwithstanding  any other provisions of this Title,
22    or any other law to the contrary,  any  information  accorded
23    confidential  treatment  may  be  disclosed or transmitted to
24    other officers, employees or  authorized  representatives  of
25    this  State or of the United States concerned with or for the
26    purposes of carrying out this Act  or  federal  environmental
27    statutes   and  regulations;  provided,  however,  that  such
28    information  shall  be  identified  as  confidential  by  the
29    Agency, the Board, or the Department, as  the  case  may  be.
30    Any  confidential  information disclosed or transmitted under
31    this provision shall be used for the purposes stated herein.
32        (f)  Except as provided in this Act neither  the  Agency,
33    the  Board,  nor  the Department shall charge any fee for the
34    performance of its respective duties under this Act.
 
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 1        (g)  All files, records and data of the Agency, the Board
 2    and the Department shall be made available to the  Department
 3    of   Public  Health  pursuant  to  the  Illinois  Health  and
 4    Hazardous Substances Registry Act.  Expenses incurred in  the
 5    copying  and transmittal of files, records and data requested
 6    pursuant to this subsection (g) shall be  the  responsibility
 7    of the Department of Public Health.
 8    (Source: P.A. 85-1331.)

 9        (415 ILCS 5/9.2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1009.2)
10        Sec. 9.2. Sulfur dioxide emission standards.
11        (a)  (Blank.) The Agency shall review all Illinois sulfur
12    dioxide  emission  standards  for  existing  fuel  combustion
13    stationary  emission  sources located within the Chicago, St.
14    Louis (Illinois), and Peoria major metropolitan areas and, if
15    appropriate following such review, propose amendments to such
16    standards to the Board by July 1, 1980, or within 90 days  of
17    receipt  of  the initial reports required pursuant to Section
18    6.1 of this Act, whichever is later.  The standards  proposed
19    by  the  Agency  shall  be  designed  to  enhance  the use of
20    Illinois  coal,  consistent  with  the  need  to  attain  and
21    maintain the  National  Ambient  Air  Quality  Standards  for
22    sulfur dioxide and particulate matter.
23        (b)  In  granting  any  alternative  emission standard or
24    variance  relating  to  sulfur  dioxide  emissions   from   a
25    coal-burning stationary source, the Board may require the use
26    of  Illinois coal as a condition of such alternative standard
27    or variance, provided that the Board determines that Illinois
28    coal of the proper quality is available  and  competitive  in
29    price;  such determination shall include consideration of the
30    cost of pollution control equipment and the  economic  impact
31    on the Illinois coal mining industry.
32    (Source: P.A. 84-585.)
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -56-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1        (415 ILCS 5/9.3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1009.3)
 2        Sec. 9.3. Alternative control strategies.
 3        (a)  The  General Assembly finds that control strategies,
 4    including    emission    limitations,     alternative     but
 5    environmentally   equivalent   to  those  required  by  Board
 6    regulations or the terms of this Act, can  assure  equivalent
 7    protection  of  the  environment  and  that  the  use of such
 8    alternative control strategies  can  encourage  technological
 9    innovation,  reduce  the  likelihood  of  shutdown  of  older
10    sources,  and can result in decreased costs of compliance and
11    increased availability of resources  for  use  in  productive
12    capital investments.
13        (b)  (Blank.) Within 120 days after the effective date of
14    this  amendatory  Act  of 1981, the Board shall adopt interim
15    rules pursuant to the Illinois Administrative  Procedure  Act
16    for  the  standards  of  issuance of permits to sources under
17    Section 39.1, provided,  that  processing  of  permits  under
18    Section  39.1  is  of  vital  benefit  to  the State, and may
19    proceed  immediately  upon  the  effective   date   of   this
20    amendatory  Act  of  1981.   Such  interim  rules shall be in
21    effect  until  the  effective  date  of   Board   regulations
22    promulgated pursuant to subsection (c), below.
23        (c)  On  or  before  December  31,  1982, the Board shall
24    adopt regulations establishing a permit program  pursuant  to
25    Section 39.1 in accordance with Title VII of this Act.
26        (d)  Board  rules  pursuant to this Section 9.3 shall set
27    forth reasonable requirements for issuance of an  alternative
28    control  strategy  permit,  provided  that  the Board may not
29    impose any  condition  or  requirement  more  stringent  than
30    required by the Clean Air Act or for compliance with this Act
31    or  other  Board  regulations  thereunder.  The  Agency shall
32    promptly   adopt   any   necessary   procedures    for    the
33    administration   of  such  permit  programs.  The  burden  of
34    establishing that any  procedure,  condition  or  requirement
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -57-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    imposed  by  the Agency in or for the issuance of a permit is
 2    more stringent than required by applicable law shall be  upon
 3    the permit applicant.
 4    (Source: P.A. 88-45.)

 5        (415 ILCS 5/9.4) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1009.4)
 6        Sec.   9.4.    Municipal   waste   incineration  emission
 7    standards.
 8        (a)  The General Assembly finds:
 9             (1)  That  air  pollution   from   municipal   waste
10        incineration  may  constitute  a threat to public health,
11        welfare and the environment. The  amounts  and  kinds  of
12        pollutants  depend  on  the  nature  of the waste stream,
13        operating  conditions  of  the   incinerator,   and   the
14        effectiveness   of   emission   controls.   Under  normal
15        operating  conditions,   municipal   waste   incinerators
16        produce  pollutants  such  as organic compounds, metallic
17        compounds and acid gases which may be a threat to  public
18        health, welfare and the environment.
19             (2)  That  a combustion and flue-gas control system,
20        which is properly designed, operated and maintained,  can
21        substantially  reduce the emissions of organic materials,
22        metallic compounds and acid gases  from  municipal  waste
23        incineration.
24        (b)  It  is  the  purpose  of this Section to insure that
25    emissions from new municipal  waste  incineration  facilities
26    which  burn a total of 25 tons or more of municipal waste per
27    day are adequately controlled.
28        Such facilities shall be subject to emissions limits  and
29    operating  standards  based  upon  the  application  of  Best
30    Available  Control  Technology,  as determined by the Agency,
31    for emissions of the following categories of pollutants:
32             (1)  particulate matter, sulfur dioxide and nitrogen
33        oxides;
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -58-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1             (2)  acid gases;
 2             (3)  heavy metals; and
 3             (4)  organic materials.
 4        (c)  The Agency shall issue permits, pursuant to  Section
 5    39,  to  new  municipal waste incineration facilities only if
 6    the  Agency  finds  that  such   facilities   are   designed,
 7    constructed   and   operated   so   as  to  comply  with  the
 8    requirements prescribed by this Section.
 9        Prior to adoption of Board regulations  under  subsection
10    (d)  of  this  Section  the  Agency may issue permits for the
11    construction of new municipal waste incineration  facilities.
12    The Agency determination of Best Available Control Technology
13    shall  be based upon consideration of the specific pollutants
14    named in subsection (d), and emissions of particulate matter,
15    sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides.
16        Nothing in this Section shall limit the applicability  of
17    any  other  Sections  of  this  Act, or of other standards or
18    regulations  adopted  by  the  Board,  to   municipal   waste
19    incineration facilities.  In issuing such permits, the Agency
20    may prescribe those conditions necessary to assure continuing
21    compliance  with  the emission limits and operating standards
22    determined pursuant to subsection (b);  such  conditions  may
23    include the monitoring and reporting of emissions.
24        (d)  Within  one  year  after  July 1, 1986 the effective
25    date of this amendatory Act of 1985, the  Board  shall  adopt
26    regulations  pursuant  to Title VII of this Act, which define
27    the terms in items (2), (3) and (4) of subsection (b) of this
28    Section which are to be used by  the  Agency  in  making  its
29    determination  pursuant  to  this Section.  The provisions of
30    Section 27(b) of this Act shall not apply to this rulemaking.
31        Such regulations shall be written so that the  categories
32    of  pollutants  include,  but  need  not  be  limited to, the
33    following specific pollutants:
34             (1)  hydrogen chloride in  the  definition  of  acid
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -59-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1        gases;
 2             (2)  arsenic, cadmium, mercury, chromium, nickel and
 3        lead in the definition of heavy metals; and
 4             (3)  polychlorinated              dibenzo-p-dioxins,
 5        polychlorinated  dibenzofurans  and  polynuclear aromatic
 6        hydrocarbons in the definition of organic materials.
 7        (e)  For the purposes of this  Section,  the  term  "Best
 8    Available  Control  Technology"  means an emission limitation
 9    (including a visible emission standard) based on the  maximum
10    degree   of  pollutant  reduction  which  the  Agency,  on  a
11    case-by-case basis, taking into account energy, environmental
12    and economic impacts, determines is  achievable  through  the
13    application  of  production  processes  or available methods,
14    systems and techniques, including fuel cleaning or  treatment
15    or  innovative  fuel  combustion  techniques.   If the Agency
16    determines that technological or economic limitations on  the
17    application  of measurement methodology to a particular class
18    of sources would make the imposition of an emission  standard
19    not  feasible,  it may instead prescribe a design, equipment,
20    work  practice  or  operational  standard,   or   combination
21    thereof, to require the application of best available control
22    technology.  Such standard shall, to the degree possible, set
23    forth  the emission reduction achievable by implementation of
24    such design, equipment, work practice or operation and  shall
25    provide  for  compliance  by  means  which achieve equivalent
26    results.
27        (f)  "Municipal waste incineration" means the burning  of
28    municipal  waste  or  fuel  derived therefrom in a combustion
29    apparatus designed to burn municipal waste that  may  produce
30    electricity or steam as a by-product.  A "new municipal waste
31    incinerator"   is  an  incinerator  initially  permitted  for
32    development or construction after January 1, 1986.
33        (g)  The provisions of this Section shall  not  apply  to
34    industrial  incineration facilities that burn waste generated
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -60-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    at the same site.
 2    (Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99.)

 3        (415 ILCS 5/12) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1012)
 4        Sec. 12. Actions prohibited.  No person shall:
 5        (a)  Cause or threaten or  allow  the  discharge  of  any
 6    contaminants into the environment in any State so as to cause
 7    or tend to cause water pollution in Illinois, either alone or
 8    in  combination  with  matter from other sources, or so as to
 9    violate regulations or standards  adopted  by  the  Pollution
10    Control Board under this Act.
11        (b)  Construct,   install,   or  operate  any  equipment,
12    facility,  vessel,  or  aircraft  capable   of   causing   or
13    contributing to water pollution, or designed to prevent water
14    pollution,  of  any  type  designated  by  Board regulations,
15    without a permit granted by the Agency, or  in  violation  of
16    any conditions imposed by such permit.
17        (c)  Increase  the  quantity or strength of any discharge
18    of contaminants into the waters, or construct or install  any
19    sewer  or  sewage  treatment  facility  or any new outlet for
20    contaminants into the waters of this State, without a  permit
21    granted by the Agency.
22        (d)  Deposit any contaminants upon the land in such place
23    and manner so as to create a water pollution hazard.
24        (e)  Sell, offer, or use any article in any area in which
25    the Board has by regulation forbidden its sale, offer, or use
26    for reasons of water pollution control.
27        (f)  Cause,  threaten  or  allow  the  discharge  of  any
28    contaminant  into the waters of the State, as defined herein,
29    including but not limited to, waters to any sewage works,  or
30    into  any  well  or  from  any point source within the State,
31    without an NPDES permit for point source discharges issued by
32    the Agency under Section 39(b) of this Act, or  in  violation
33    of  any  term  or  condition  imposed  by  such permit, or in
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -61-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    violation of any NPDES permit filing requirement  established
 2    under  Section  39(b),  or  in  violation  of any regulations
 3    adopted by the Board or of any order  adopted  by  the  Board
 4    with respect to the NPDES program.
 5        No  permit  shall  be  required under this subsection and
 6    under Section 39(b) of this Act for any discharge for which a
 7    permit is not required  under  the  Federal  Water  Pollution
 8    Control  Act,  as  now  or hereafter amended, and regulations
 9    pursuant thereto.
10        For all purposes of this Act,  a  permit  issued  by  the
11    Administrator  of  the United States Environmental Protection
12    Agency under Section  402  of  the  Federal  Water  Pollution
13    Control  Act, as now or hereafter amended, shall be deemed to
14    be a permit issued by the Agency pursuant to Section 39(b) of
15    this Act.  However, this shall not  apply  to  the  exclusion
16    from  the  requirement  of an operating permit provided under
17    Section 13(b)(i).
18        Compliance with the terms and conditions  of  any  permit
19    issued  under  Section  39(b)  of  this  Act  shall be deemed
20    compliance with this subsection except that it shall  not  be
21    deemed  compliance  with  any standard or effluent limitation
22    imposed for a toxic pollutant injurious to human health.
23        In any case where a permit has been  timely  applied  for
24    pursuant   to   Section   39(b)   of   this   Act  but  final
25    administrative disposition of such application has  not  been
26    made,  it  shall  not  be  a  violation of this subsection to
27    discharge without such permit unless the  complainant  proves
28    that  final  administrative  disposition  has  not  been made
29    because  of  the  failure  of  the   applicant   to   furnish
30    information  reasonably  required  or  requested  in order to
31    process the application.  For  purposes  of  this  provision,
32    until  implementing requirements have been established by the
33    Board and the Agency, all applications deemed filed with  the
34    Administrator  of  the United States Environmental Protection
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -62-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    Agency pursuant  to  the  provisions  of  the  Federal  Water
 2    Pollution  Control Act, as now or hereafter amended, shall be
 3    deemed filed with the Agency.
 4        (g)  Cause, threaten or allow the  underground  injection
 5    of  contaminants  without  a  UIC permit issued by the Agency
 6    under Section 39(d) of this Act, or in violation of any  term
 7    or  condition  imposed by such permit, or in violation of any
 8    regulations or standards adopted by the Board or of any order
 9    adopted by the Board with respect to the UIC program.
10        No permit shall be required  under  this  subsection  and
11    under Section 39(d) of this Act for any underground injection
12    of contaminants for which a permit is not required under Part
13    C  of  the Safe Drinking Water Act (P.L. 93-523), as amended,
14    unless a permit is authorized or required  under  regulations
15    adopted by the Board pursuant to Section 13 of this Act.
16        (h)  Introduce  contaminants into a sewage works from any
17    nondomestic source except in compliance with the  regulations
18    and standards adopted by the Board under this Act.
19    (Source: P.A. 86-671.)

20        (415 ILCS 5/13.1) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1013.1)
21        Sec. 13.1. Groundwater monitoring network.
22        (a)  (Blank.)  The  Department,  in  cooperation with the
23    Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of  Public
24    Health,  shall  complete  a  study  of groundwater quality in
25    Illinois.    Such  study,  at  a  minimum,  shall  include  a
26    compilation  of  currently  available  data  on   groundwater
27    quality  and  a limited amount of taking of new water samples
28    from existing wells to fill in major data gaps to  provide  a
29    preliminary  assessment of current levels of contamination of
30    the groundwaters in the State by hazardous substances, and an
31    identification  of  the  location  of  critical   underground
32    resources such as recharge zones and high water tables.  Such
33    study  shall  give  priority to the assessment of groundwater
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -63-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    quality near hazardous waste  facilities  and  shall  include
 2    recommendations on priorities for future studies and research
 3    necessary  to  administer  a  groundwater protection program.
 4    The Agency and the Department of Public Health and any  other
 5    State  agency shall provide to the Department any information
 6    relating to groundwater quality  necessary  to  complete  the
 7    study.   The  Department  shall complete its study by July 1,
 8    1985 and shall report its findings to the  Pollution  Control
 9    Board, the Agency, the General Assembly and the Governor.
10        (b)  The  Agency  shall establish a Statewide groundwater
11    monitoring network. Such network shall include  a  sufficient
12    number  of  testing  wells  to  assess  the current levels of
13    contamination in the groundwaters of the State and to  detect
14    any   future   degradation  of  groundwater  resources.   The
15    monitoring network shall give special  emphasis  to  critical
16    groundwater  areas  and  to  locations  near  hazardous waste
17    disposal facilities.  To the  extent  possible,  the  network
18    shall   utilize   existing  publicly  or  privately  operated
19    drinking water or monitoring wells.
20        (c)  (Blank.)  By  January  1,  1986,  the  Agency  shall
21    formulate a groundwater protection  plan.   Such  plan  shall
22    identify   critical   groundwaters  that  have  been  or  are
23    particularly  susceptible  to  contamination   by   hazardous
24    substances  and  probable  sources of such contamination, and
25    shall  recommend  the  steps  to  be  taken  to  prevent  the
26    degradation of the water quality of such areas.    Such  plan
27    may   also   recommend  the  establishment  of  a  system  of
28    classifying groundwaters based on their quality and  use  and
29    for  the establishment of groundwater quality standards.  The
30    Agency shall hold at least  3  public  hearings,  each  at  a
31    different  location  within  the State, before finalizing the
32    plan.  By January 1, 1986, the Agency  shall  report  on  its
33    plan  to the Governor, the General Assembly and the Pollution
34    Control   Board,   along   with   recommendations   for   any
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -64-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    legislation, regulations or administrative changes  necessary
 2    to implement the groundwater protection plan.
 3        (d)  (Blank.) Following the completion of the groundwater
 4    quality  study  and  the  groundwater  protection  plan,  the
 5    Pollution  Control Board shall conduct public hearings on the
 6    results and recommendations as provided in Title VII of  this
 7    Act.   Upon  conclusion  of  such  hearings,  the Board shall
 8    publish its findings and conclusions on the areas covered  by
 9    the study and the plan and the testimony received.
10    (Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)

11        (415 ILCS 5/14.1) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1014.1)
12        Sec. 14.1. Community water supply; minimum setback zone.
13    A  minimum  setback  zone  is established for the location of
14    each new community water supply well as follows:
15        (a)  No new community water supply well  may  be  located
16    within  200  feet  of  any  potential  primary  or  potential
17    secondary source or any potential route.
18        (b)  No  new  community  water supply well deriving water
19    from  fractured  or  highly  permeable  bedrock  or  from  an
20    unconsolidated and unconfined sand and gravel  formation  may
21    be  located  within  400  feet  of  any  potential primary or
22    potential secondary source or any potential route.  Such  400
23    foot  setback  is  not  applicable to any new community water
24    supply  well  where  the  potential  primary   or   potential
25    secondary   source   is  located  within  a  site  for  which
26    certification is currently  in  effect  pursuant  to  Section
27    14.5.
28        (c)  Nothing  in  this  Section shall affect any location
29    and construction requirement imposed  in  Section  6  of  the
30    "Illinois  Water Well Construction Code", approved August 20,
31    1965, as amended, and the regulations promulgated thereunder.
32        (d)  For the purposes of this Section, a community  water
33    supply well is "new" if it is constructed after September 24,
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -65-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    1987 the effective date of this Section.
 2        (e)  Nothing  in  this  Section  shall affect the minimum
 3    distance requirements for new community  water  supply  wells
 4    relative to common sources of sanitary pollution as specified
 5    by rules adopted under Section 17 of this Act.
 6    (Source: P.A. 85-863.)

 7        (415 ILCS 5/14.2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1014.2)
 8        Sec. 14.2. New potential source or route; minimum setback
 9    zone.  A minimum setback zone is established for the location
10    of  each  new  potential  source  or  new  potential route as
11    follows:
12        (a)  Except as provided in subsections (b), (c)  and  (h)
13    of  this Section, no new potential route or potential primary
14    source or potential secondary source may be placed within 200
15    feet of any existing or permitted community water supply well
16    or other potable water supply well.
17        (b)  The owner of a new potential  primary  source  or  a
18    potential  secondary source or a potential route may secure a
19    waiver from the requirement of subsection (a) of this Section
20    for a potable water supply well other than a community  water
21    supply well.  A written request for a waiver shall be made to
22    the  owner  of  the  water  well and the Agency. Such request
23    shall identify  the  new  or  proposed  potential  source  or
24    potential route, shall generally describe the possible effect
25    of  such  potential  source or potential route upon the water
26    well and any applicable technology-based controls which  will
27    be  utilized to minimize the potential for contamination, and
28    shall state whether, and under what conditions, the requestor
29    will provide an alternative potable water supply.  Waiver may
30    be granted by the owner of the water well  no  less  than  90
31    days  after  receipt of the request unless prior to such time
32    the Agency notifies the well owner that it  does  not  concur
33    with the request.
 
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 1        The  Agency  shall not concur with any such request which
 2    fails to accurately describe reasonably  foreseeable  effects
 3    of  the  potential  source  or potential route upon the water
 4    well  or  any  applicable  technology-based  controls.   Such
 5    notification by the Agency shall be  in  writing,  and  shall
 6    include a statement of reasons for the nonconcurrence. Waiver
 7    of  the minimum setback zone established under subsection (a)
 8    of this Section  shall  extinguish  the  water  well  owner's
 9    rights   under   Section   6b  of  the  Illinois  Water  Well
10    Construction Code but shall not preclude enforcement  of  any
11    law  regarding  water  pollution.   If the owner of the water
12    well has not granted a waiver within 120 days  after  receipt
13    of  the  request or the Agency has notified the owner that it
14    does not concur with the request, the owner  of  a  potential
15    source  or  potential  route  may  file  a  petition  for  an
16    exception   with   the  Board  and  the  Agency  pursuant  to
17    subsection (c) of this Section.
18        No waiver  under  this  Section  is  required  where  the
19    potable  water  supply well is part of a private water system
20    as defined in the Illinois Groundwater  Protection  Act,  and
21    the  owner  of  such  well  will  also  be the owner of a new
22    potential secondary source or a  potential  route.   In  such
23    instances, a prohibition of 75 feet shall apply and the owner
24    shall  notify  the  Agency of the intended action so that the
25    Agency  may  provide  information  regarding  the   potential
26    hazards  associated  with  location  of a potential secondary
27    source or potential route in close  proximity  to  a  potable
28    water supply well.
29        (c)  The  Board  may  grant an exception from the setback
30    requirements of this Section and subsection  (e)  of  Section
31    14.3  to  the owner of a new potential route, a new potential
32    primary source other than landfilling or land treating, or  a
33    new   potential  secondary  source.   The  owner  seeking  an
34    exception with respect to a community water supply well shall
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -67-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    file a petition with the Board  and  the  Agency.  The  owner
 2    seeking  an  exception with respect to a potable water supply
 3    well other than a community water supply well  shall  file  a
 4    petition with the Board and the Agency, and set forth therein
 5    the  circumstances  under  which a waiver has been sought but
 6    not obtained pursuant to subsection (b) of this  Section.   A
 7    petition shall be accompanied by proof that the owner of each
 8    potable  water  supply  well  for  which setback requirements
 9    would  be  affected  by  the  requested  exception  has  been
10    notified and been provided with a copy of  the  petition.   A
11    petition  shall  set  forth  such facts as may be required to
12    support an exception, including a general description of  the
13    potential impacts of such potential source or potential route
14    upon  groundwaters  and  the  affected  water  well,  and  an
15    explanation of the applicable technology-based controls which
16    will  be utilized to minimize the potential for contamination
17    of the potable water supply well.
18        The Board shall grant an exception, whenever it is  found
19    upon presentation of adequate proof, that compliance with the
20    setback  requirements of this Section would pose an arbitrary
21    and unreasonable  hardship  upon  the  petitioner,  that  the
22    petitioner   will   utilize  the  best  available  technology
23    controls economically achievable to minimize  the  likelihood
24    of  contamination  of the potable water supply well, that the
25    maximum feasible alternative setback will  be  utilized,  and
26    that the location of such potential source or potential route
27    will not constitute a significant hazard to the potable water
28    supply well.
29        Not  later  than  January  1, 1988, The Board shall adopt
30    procedural rules governing requests for exceptions under this
31    subsection.  The rulemaking provisions of Title VII  of  this
32    Act  and  of  Section  5-35  of  the  Illinois Administrative
33    Procedure Act shall not apply to such rules.  A decision made
34    by the Board pursuant to this subsection shall  constitute  a
 
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 1    final determination.
 2        The  granting  of  an  exception  by  the Board shall not
 3    extinguish the water well owner's rights under Section 6b  of
 4    the  Illinois Water Well Construction Code in instances where
 5    the owner has elected not to provide  a  waiver  pursuant  to
 6    subsection (b) of this Section.
 7        (d)  Except  as  provided  in  subsections (c) and (h) of
 8    this Section and Section 14.5,  no  new  potential  route  or
 9    potential primary source or potential secondary source may be
10    placed within 400 feet of any existing or permitted community
11    water  supply  well deriving water from an unconfined shallow
12    fractured or highly permeable bedrock formation  or  from  an
13    unconsolidated and unconfined sand and gravel formation.  The
14    Agency  shall  notify,  not  later  than January 1, 1988, the
15    owner and operator of each existing well  which  is  afforded
16    this setback protection and shall maintain a directory of all
17    community  water  supply  wells to which the 400 foot minimum
18    setback zone applies.
19        (e)  The  minimum   setback   zones   established   under
20    subsections  (a)  and  (b) of this Section shall not apply to
21    new  common  sources  of  sanitary  pollution  as   specified
22    pursuant to Section 17 and the regulations adopted thereunder
23    by the Agency; however, no such common sources may be located
24    within the applicable minimum distance from a community water
25    supply well specified by such regulations.
26        (f)  Nothing  in  this  Section  shall  be  construed  as
27    limiting  the  power  of  any county or municipality to adopt
28    ordinances which are consistent with but not  more  stringent
29    than the prohibitions herein.
30        (g)  Nothing   in   this   Section   shall  preclude  any
31    arrangement under which the owner or operator of a new source
32    or route does the following:
33             (1)  purchases an existing  water  supply  well  and
34        attendant   property   with   the  intent  of  eventually
 
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 1        abandoning or totally removing the well;
 2             (2)  replaces an existing water supply well  with  a
 3        new  water supply of substantially equivalent quality and
 4        quantity as a precondition to  locating  or  constructing
 5        such source or route;
 6             (3)  implements   any  other  arrangement  which  is
 7        mutually agreeable with the owner of a water supply well;
 8        or
 9             (4)  modifies the on-site  storage  capacity  at  an
10        agrichemical  facility  such that the volume of pesticide
11        storage does not exceed 125% of the available capacity in
12        existence on April 1, 1990, or the volume  of  fertilizer
13        storage does not exceed 150% of the available capacity in
14        existence  on  April  1,  1990;  provided  that a written
15        endorsement for an agrichemical  facility  permit  is  in
16        effect  under  Section  39.4  of this Act and the maximum
17        feasible setback is  maintained.   This  on-site  storage
18        capacity    includes    mini-bulk   pesticides,   package
19        agrichemical storage areas, liquid  or  dry  fertilizers,
20        and liquid or dry pesticides.
21        (h)  A  new  potential  route, which is an excavation for
22    stone, sand or gravel and which becomes active on lands which
23    were acquired or were being held as mineral reserves prior to
24    September 24, 1987, shall only  be  subject  to  the  setback
25    requirements  of subsections (a) and (d) of this Section with
26    respect to any community  water  supply  well,  non-community
27    water  system  well,  or  semi-private  water  system well in
28    existence prior to January 1, 1988.
29    (Source: P.A. 90-14, eff. 7-1-97.)

30        (415 ILCS 5/14.3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1014.3)
31        Sec. 14.3. Community water supply; maximum setback zone.
32    A maximum setback zone may be  established  for  a  community
33    water supply well as follows:
 
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 1        (a)  Owners of community water supplies which utilize any
 2    water  well,  or  any  county  or  municipality served by any
 3    community water supply well, may determine the  lateral  area
 4    of influence of the well under normal operational conditions.
 5    The   Agency   shall   adopt   procedures   by   which   such
 6    determinations  may  be  made  including,  where appropriate,
 7    pumping tests and estimation techniques.
 8        (b)  Where the results of any determination made pursuant
 9    to subsection (a) of this Section disclose that the  distance
10    from  the  well to the outermost boundary of the lateral area
11    of influence of the well under normal operational  conditions
12    exceeds  the  radius  of the minimum setback zone established
13    for that  well  pursuant  to  Section  14.2,  any  county  or
14    municipality  served  by  such  water  supply  may in writing
15    request the  Agency  to  review  and  confirm  the  technical
16    adequacy  of such determination.  The Agency shall, within 90
17    days of  the  request,  notify  the  county  or  municipality
18    whether   the   determination  is  technically  adequate  for
19    describing the outer boundary of  drawdown  of  the  affected
20    groundwater  by the well under normal operational conditions.
21    Any action by the Agency hereunder shall be  in  writing  and
22    shall constitute a final determination of the Agency.
23        (c)  Upon receipt of Agency confirmation of the technical
24    adequacy  of  such  determination, the county or municipality
25    may, after notice  and  opportunity  for  comment,  adopt  an
26    ordinance  setting  forth  the location of each affected well
27    and specifying the boundaries  of  a  maximum  setback  zone,
28    which  boundaries  may  be  irregular.  In no event, however,
29    shall any portion of such a boundary be in  excess  of  1,000
30    feet  from the wellhead, except as provided by subsection (f)
31    of this Section.   Such  ordinance  shall  include  the  area
32    within   the   applicable  minimum  setback  zone  and  shall
33    incorporate requirements which are consistent  with  but  not
34    more  stringent  than  the  prohibitions  of this Act and the
 
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 1    regulations promulgated by  the  Board  under  Section  14.4,
 2    except  as  provided  by subsection (f) of this Section. Upon
 3    adoption, the county or municipality shall provide a copy  of
 4    the  ordinance  to  the  Agency.   Any county or municipality
 5    which fails to adopt such an  ordinance  within  2  years  of
 6    receipt  of Agency confirmation of technical adequacy may not
 7    proceed under the authority of this Section without obtaining
 8    a new confirmation of  the  technical  adequacy  pursuant  to
 9    subsection (b) of this Section.
10        (d)  After  July  1, 1989, and upon written notice to the
11    county or municipality, the Agency may propose to the Board a
12    regulation establishing a maximum setback zone for  any  well
13    subject  to  this Section.  Such proposal shall be based upon
14    all reasonably available hydrogeologic  information,  include
15    the   justification   for  expanding  the  zone  of  wellhead
16    protection, and specify  the  boundaries  of  such  zone,  no
17    portion  of which boundaries shall be in excess of 1,000 feet
18    from the wellhead.  Such justification may include  the  need
19    to  protect  a sole source of public water supply or a highly
20    vulnerable source of groundwater, or an Agency  finding  that
21    the  presence  of  potential  primary  or potential secondary
22    sources or potential routes represents a  significant  hazard
23    to  the  public  health  or  the environment.  The Agency may
24    proceed with the filing of such a proposal unless the  county
25    or municipality, within 30 days of the receipt of the written
26    notice,  files  a  written  request for a conference with the
27    Agency.  Upon receipt of such a  request,  the  Agency  shall
28    schedule  a  conference to be held within 90 days thereafter.
29    At the conference, the Agency  shall  inform  the  county  or
30    municipality  regarding  the  proposal.  Within 30 days after
31    the conference, the affected unit  of  local  government  may
32    provide  written  notice  to  the  Agency  of  its  intent to
33    establish a maximum setback zone in lieu of the Agency acting
34    on a proposal.  Upon receipt of such a notice of intent,  the
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -72-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    Agency may not file a proposal with the Board for a period of
 2    6  months.   Rulemaking  proceedings  initiated by the Agency
 3    under  this  subsection  shall  be  conducted  by  the  Board
 4    pursuant to Title VII of this Act, except that subsection (b)
 5    of Section 27 shall not apply.
 6        Nothing in this Section shall be  construed  as  limiting
 7    the  general authority of the Board to promulgate regulations
 8    pursuant  to  Title  VII  of  this  Act.   Nothing  in   this
 9    subsection shall limit the right of any person to participate
10    in  rulemaking  proceedings conducted by the Board under this
11    subsection.
12        (e)  Except as provided  in  subsection  (c)  of  Section
13    14.2,  no new potential primary source shall be placed within
14    the maximum setback zone established for any community  water
15    supply  well  pursuant  to  subsection  (c)  or  (d) of  this
16    Section.  Nothing in this subsection shall  be  construed  as
17    limiting  the  power  of  any county or municipality to adopt
18    ordinances which are consistent with but not  more  stringent
19    than the prohibition as stated herein.
20        (f)  If   an   active  community  water  supply  well  is
21    withdrawing groundwater from within the alluvial deposits and
22    is located within 1000 feet of public waters, the  boundaries
23    of  a  maximum  setback zone adopted by ordinance pursuant to
24    subsection (c) may be established to a distance of 2,500 feet
25    from the wellhead.  No new potential route shall  be  placed,
26    operated   or   utilized  within  the  maximum  setback  zone
27    established for any community water supply well  pursuant  to
28    this  subsection.   Restrictions  provided  in subsection (e)
29    shall not be applied beyond 1,000 feet from the wellhead  for
30    maximum  setback  zones  adopted pursuant to this subsection.
31    An  ordinance  which  creates  a  maximum  setback  zone   as
32    described  by  this  subsection shall also be consistent with
33    subsections (a), (b)  and  (c)  of  this  Section,  including
34    incorporation  of  requirements which are consistent with but
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -73-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    no more stringent than the prohibitions  of  this  amendatory
 2    Act  of  1989.   For  purposes  of  this subsection, the term
 3    "public waters" means public waters as defined in Section  18
 4    of  the Rivers, Lakes, and Streams Act "An Act in relation to
 5    the regulation of the rivers, lakes and streams of the  State
 6    of  Illinois",  approved  June  10, 1911, as now or hereafter
 7    amended.
 8    (Source: P.A. 86-125.)

 9        (415 ILCS 5/14.4) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1014.4)
10        Sec. 14.4. Groundwater rules.
11        (a)  No later than January 1,  1989,  the  Agency,  after
12    consultation  with  the Interagency Coordinating Committee on
13    Groundwater  and  the  Groundwater  Advisory  Council,  shall
14    propose regulations to the Board  prescribing  standards  and
15    requirements for the following activities:
16             (1)  landfilling,  land treating, surface impounding
17        or piling of special waste and other wastes  which  could
18        cause   contamination   of   groundwater  and  which  are
19        generated on the site, other  than  hazardous,  livestock
20        and  landscape  waste,  and  construction  and demolition
21        debris;
22             (2)  storage of  special  waste  in  an  underground
23        storage  tank  for  which federal regulatory requirements
24        for the protection of groundwater are not applicable;
25             (3)  storage and related handling of pesticides  and
26        fertilizers  at  a facility for the purpose of commercial
27        application;
28             (4)  storage and related handling of road  oils  and
29        de-icing agents at a central location; and
30             (5)  storage  and related handling of pesticides and
31        fertilizers at a central  location  for  the  purpose  of
32        distribution to retail sales outlets.
33        In preparing such regulation, the Agency shall provide as
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -74-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    it  deems  necessary  for more stringent provisions for those
 2    activities  enumerated  in  this  subsection  which  are  not
 3    already in existence.  Any activity for which such  standards
 4    and  requirements  are  proposed  may be referred to as a new
 5    activity.   For  the  purposes  of  this  Section,  the  term
 6    "commercial   application"  shall  not  include  the  use  of
 7    pesticides or fertilizers  in  a  manner  incidental  to  the
 8    primary business activity.
 9        (b)  No  later  than  October  1,  1993,  the Board shall
10    promulgate appropriate regulations for  existing  activities.
11    In  promulgating  these  regulations,  the  Board  shall,  in
12    addition  to  the factors set forth in Title VII of this Act,
13    consider the following:
14             (1)  appropriate   programs   for   water    quality
15        monitoring;
16             (2)  reporting,  recordkeeping and remedial response
17        measures;
18             (3)  appropriate   technology-based   measures   for
19        pollution control; and
20             (4)  requirements for closure or  discontinuance  of
21        operations.
22        Such  regulations  as  are  promulgated  pursuant to this
23    subsection shall be for the  express  purpose  of  protecting
24    groundwaters.  The applicability of such regulations shall be
25    limited to any existing activity which is located:
26             (A)  within  a  setback  zone regulated by this Act,
27        other than an activity located on  the  same  site  as  a
28        non-community  water  system well and for which the owner
29        is the same for both the activity and the well; or
30             (B)  within a regulated recharge area as  delineated
31        by Board regulation, provided that:
32                  (i)  the   boundary  of  the  lateral  area  of
33             influence of a community water supply  well  located
34             within  the  recharge  area  includes  such activity
 
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 1             therein;
 2                  (ii)  the distance from  the  wellhead  of  the
 3             community  water  supply  to  the  activity does not
 4             exceed 2500 feet; and
 5                  (iii)  the community water supply well  was  in
 6             existence prior to January 1, 1988.
 7        In  addition, the Board shall ensure that the promulgated
 8    regulations are consistent with and not  pre-emptive  of  the
 9    certification  system  provided  by Section 14.5. Pursuant to
10    this amendatory Act of 1992,   The  Board  shall  modify  the
11    regulations  adopted  under  this  subsection  to  provide an
12    exception for existing activities subject  to  Section  14.6.
13    In  taking  this  action,  the  Board  shall  proceed  in  an
14    expeditious  manner to prevent affected activities from being
15    in noncompliance on or after January 1, 1993.
16        (c)  Concurrently with the action mandated by  subsection
17    (a),   the   Agency  shall  evaluate,  with  respect  to  the
18    protection of groundwater, the adequacy of  existing  federal
19    and  State  regulations  regarding  the disposal of hazardous
20    waste and  the offsite  disposal  of  special  and  municipal
21    wastes.    The   Agency  shall  then  propose,  as  it  deems
22    necessary,  additional  regulations  for  such  new  disposal
23    activities  as  may  be  necessary  to  achieve  a  level  of
24    groundwater  protection   that   is   consistent   with   the
25    regulations proposed under subsection (a) of this Section.
26        (d)  Following  receipt of proposed regulations submitted
27    by the Agency pursuant to subsection (a) of this Section, the
28    Board  shall  promulgate  appropriate  regulations  for   new
29    activities.   In  promulgating  these  regulations, the Board
30    shall, in addition to the factors set forth in Title  VII  of
31    this Act, consider the following:
32             (1)  appropriate    programs   for   water   quality
33        monitoring, including,  where  appropriate,  notification
34        limitations to trigger preventive response activities;
 
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 1             (2)  design  practices and technology-based measures
 2        appropriate for minimizing the potential for  groundwater
 3        contamination;
 4             (3)  reporting,  recordkeeping and remedial response
 5        measures; and
 6             (4)  requirements for closure or  discontinuance  of
 7        operations.
 8        Such  regulations  as  are  promulgated  pursuant to this
 9    subsection shall be for the  express  purpose  of  protecting
10    groundwaters.  The applicability of such regulations shall be
11    limited  to  any new activity which is to be located within a
12    setback zone regulated by this Act, or which is to be located
13    within a regulated  recharge  area  as  delineated  by  Board
14    regulation.    In  addition,  the Board shall ensure that the
15    promulgated  regulations  are   consistent   with   and   not
16    pre-emptive  of  the certification system provided by Section
17    14.5.  Pursuant to this amendatory Act  of  1992,  The  Board
18    shall modify the regulations adopted under this subsection to
19    provide  an  exception  for new activities subject to Section
20    14.6.  In taking this action, the Board shall proceed  in  an
21    expeditious  manner to prevent affected activities from being
22    in noncompliance on or after January 1, 1993.
23        (e)  Nothing  in  this  Section  shall  be  construed  as
24    prohibiting any person for whom regulations  are  promulgated
25    by  the  Board  pursuant  to  subsection  (b)  or (c) of this
26    Section, from proposing and obtaining, concurrently with  the
27    regulations proposed by the Agency pursuant to subsection (a)
28    of  this  Section,  a  rule specific to individual persons or
29    sites pursuant to  Title  VII  of  this  Act  which  codifies
30    alternative   groundwater  protection  methods  that  provide
31    substantially  equivalent  protection  for  community   water
32    supplies.
33        (f)  Nothing  in  this  Section  shall  be  construed  as
34    limiting  the  power  of  any county or municipality to adopt
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -77-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    ordinances, which are consistent with but not more  stringent
 2    than  the  regulations  adopted by the Board pursuant to this
 3    Section, for application of standards and requirements within
 4    such setback zones as are provided by this Act.
 5        (g)  The Agency shall prepare  a  groundwater  protection
 6    regulatory   agenda   for   submittal   to   the  Interagency
 7    Coordinating Committee on  Groundwater  and  the  Groundwater
 8    Advisory Council.  In preparing this agenda, the Agency shall
 9    consider  situations where gaps may exist in federal or State
10    regulatory  protection  for  groundwater,  or  where  further
11    refinements could be necessary to achieve adequate protection
12    of groundwater.
13        (h)  Nothing  in  this  Section  shall  be  construed  as
14    limiting the general authority of  the  Board  to  promulgate
15    regulations pursuant to Title VII of this Act.
16        (i)  The  Board's  rulemaking  with respect to subsection
17    (a)(3) of this Section shall take into account  the  relevant
18    aspects   of   the   Department  of  Agriculture's  Part  255
19    regulations which specify containment rules for  agrichemical
20    facilities.
21    (Source: P.A. 87-1108.)

22        (415 ILCS 5/14.6) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1014.6)
23        Sec. 14.6. Agrichemical facilities.
24        (a)  Notwithstanding  the  provisions  of  Section  14.4,
25    groundwater  protection  for  storage and related handling of
26    pesticides and fertilizers at a facility for the  purpose  of
27    commercial  application  or  at  a  central  location for the
28    purpose of  distribution  to  retail  sales  outlets  may  be
29    provided by adherence to the provisions of this Section.  For
30    any  such  activity  to  be  subject  to  this  Section,  the
31    following action must be taken by an owner or operator:
32             (1)  with  respect  to  agrichemical  facilities, as
33        defined by  the  Illinois  Pesticide  Act,  the  Illinois
 
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 1        Fertilizer Act and regulations adopted thereunder, file a
 2        written  notice of intent to be subject to the provisions
 3        of this Section with the  Department  of  Agriculture  by
 4        January  1,  1993,  or  within 6 months after the date on
 5        which  a  maximum  setback  zone  is  established  or   a
 6        regulated   recharge  area  regulation  is  adopted  that
 7        affects such a facility;
 8             (2)  with respect to lawn care facilities  that  are
 9        subject  to  the  containment area provisions of the Lawn
10        Care  Products  Application  and  Notice  Act   and   its
11        regulations,  file  a  written  notice  of  intent  to be
12        subject to  the  provisions  of  this  Section  with  the
13        Department of Agriculture by January 1, 1993, or within 6
14        months  after the date on which a maximum setback zone is
15        established or a regulated recharge  area  regulation  is
16        adopted that affects such a facility;
17             (3)  with respect to a central distribution location
18        that  is  not an agrichemical facility, certify intent to
19        be subject to the  provisions  of  this  Section  on  the
20        appropriate license or renewal application form submitted
21        to the Department of Agriculture; or
22             (4)  with  respect  to  any other affected facility,
23        certify intent to be subject to the  provisions  of  this
24        Section  on  the  appropriate  renewal  application forms
25        submitted to  the  Department  of  Agriculture  or  other
26        appropriate agency.
27        An  owner or operator of a facility that takes the action
28    described  in  this  subsection  shall  be  subject  to   the
29    provisions  of  this Section and shall not be regulated under
30    the  provisions  of  Section  14.4,  except  as  provided  in
31    subsection (d)  of  this  Section  and  unless  a  regulatory
32    program  is  not  in  effect  by January 1, 1994, pursuant to
33    subsection (b) or (c) of this  Section.   The  Department  of
34    Agriculture  or other appropriate agency shall provide copies
 
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 1    of the written notices and certifications to the Agency.  For
 2    the  purposes  of  this  subsection,  the  term   "commercial
 3    application"  shall  not  include  the  use  of pesticides or
 4    fertilizers in a manner incidental to  the  primary  business
 5    activity.
 6        (b)  The  Agency  and  Department  of  Agriculture  shall
 7    cooperatively  develop  a  program for groundwater protection
 8    for  designated  facilities  or  sites  consistent  with  the
 9    activities specified in subsection (a) of  this  Section.  In
10    developing  such  a program, the Agency and the Department of
11    Agriculture shall consult with affected  interests  and  take
12    into  account  relevant  information.   Based  on such agreed
13    program,  the   Department   of   Agriculture   shall   adopt
14    appropriate  regulatory  requirements by January 1, 1994, for
15    the designated facilities or sites and administer a  program.
16    At a minimum, the following considerations must be adequately
17    addressed as part of such program:
18             (1)  a  facility  review  process,  using  available
19        information  when  appropriate,  to determine those sites
20        where groundwater monitoring will be implemented;
21             (2)  requirements for groundwater quality monitoring
22        for sites identified under item (1);
23             (3)  reporting, response,  and  operating  practices
24        for the types of designated facilities; and
25             (4)  requirements  for  closure or discontinuance of
26        operations.
27        (c)  The Agency may enter into a written  agreement  with
28    any  State  agency  to  operate  a  cooperative  program  for
29    groundwater  protection  for  designated  facilities or sites
30    consistent with the activities specified in subparagraph  (4)
31    of  subsection  (a) of this Section.  Such State agency shall
32    adopt appropriate regulatory requirements for the  designated
33    facilities or sites and necessary procedures and practices to
34    administer the program.
 
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 1        (d)  The  Agency  shall  ensure that any facility that is
 2    subject to this Section  is  in  compliance  with  applicable
 3    provisions  as  specified  in  subsection  (b) or (c) of this
 4    Section.  To fulfill this responsibility, the Agency may rely
 5    on information provided by  another  State  agency  or  other
 6    information that is obtained on a direct basis. If a facility
 7    is  not  in  compliance  with the applicable provisions, or a
 8    deficiency in the execution  of  a  program  affects  such  a
 9    facility,  the  Agency  may  so  notify  the facility of this
10    condition and shall provide 30 days for a written response to
11    be filed.  The response may describe any actions taken by the
12    owner which relate to the condition of noncompliance.  If the
13    response is deficient or untimely,  the  Agency  shall  serve
14    notice  upon  the  owner  that the facility is subject to the
15    applicable  provisions  of  Section  14.4  of  this  Act  and
16    regulations adopted thereunder.
17        (e)  (Blank.) After January 1, 1993, and  before  January
18    1,  1994,  an owner or operator of a facility that is subject
19    to the provisions of this Section  may  withdraw  the  notice
20    given  under  subsection  (a)  of  this  Section  by filing a
21    written  withdrawal  statement   with   the   Department   of
22    Agriculture.   Within  45  days  after  such filing and after
23    consultation with the Agency, the Department  of  Agriculture
24    shall  provide  written confirmation to the owner or operator
25    that the facility is no longer subject to the  provisions  of
26    this  Section  and must comply with the applicable provisions
27    of  Section  14.4  within  90  days  after  receipt  of   the
28    confirmation.  The  Department  of  Agriculture shall provide
29    copies of the written confirmations to the Agency.
30        (f)  After January 1, 1994, and before one year after the
31    date on which a maximum setback  zone  is  established  or  a
32    regulated  recharge area regulation is adopted that affects a
33    facility subject to the provisions of this Section, an  owner
34    or  operator of such a facility may withdraw the notice given
 
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 1    under subsection (a) of this  Section  by  filing  a  written
 2    withdrawal  statement  with  the  Department  of Agriculture.
 3    Within 45 days after such filing and after consultation  with
 4    the  Agency,  the  Department  of  Agriculture  shall provide
 5    written confirmation  to  the  owner  or  operator  that  the
 6    facility  is  no  longer  subject  to  the provisions of this
 7    Section and must comply with  the  applicable  provisions  of
 8    Section   14.4   within   90   days   after  receipt  of  the
 9    confirmation. The Department  of  Agriculture  shall  provide
10    copies of the written confirmations to the Agency.
11        (g)  On  or  after  August 11, the effective date of this
12    amendatory  Act  of  1994,  an  owner  or  operator   of   an
13    agrichemical  facility  that  is subject to the provisions of
14    Section  14.4  and  regulations  adopted  thereunder   solely
15    because  of  the  presence of an on-site potable water supply
16    well that is not a non-community  water  supply  may  file  a
17    written  notice with the Department of Agriculture by January
18    1,  1995  declaring  the  facility  to  be  subject  to   the
19    provisions  of  this Section.  When that action is taken, the
20    regulatory requirements of subsection  (b)  of  this  Section
21    shall  be  applicable  beginning  January 1, 1995. During the
22    period from January 1, 1993 through December  31,  1994,  any
23    facility described in this subsection shall not be subject to
24    regulation  under  Section  14.4  of  this Act.  Beginning on
25    January 1, 1995, such facilities shall be subject  to  either
26    Section  14.4  or  this Section depending on the action taken
27    under  this  subsection.   An  owner  or   operator   of   an
28    agrichemical facility that is subject to this Section because
29    a written notice was filed under this subsection shall do all
30    of the following:
31             (1)  File   a   facility   review  report  with  the
32        Department of Agriculture on or before February 28,  1995
33        consistent with the regulatory requirements of subsection
34        (b) of this Section.
 
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 1             (2)  Implement an approved monitoring program within
 2        120  days  of  receipt of the Department of Agriculture's
 3        determination or a notice to proceed from the  Department
 4        of   Agriculture.    The   monitoring  program  shall  be
 5        consistent with the requirements  of  subsection  (b)  of
 6        this Section.
 7             (3)  Implement applicable operational and management
 8        practice  requirements and submit a permit application or
 9        modification to  meet  applicable  structural  provisions
10        consistent  with  those in subsection (b) of this Section
11        on or before July 1, 1995 and  complete  construction  of
12        applicable  structural  requirements on or before January
13        1, 1996.
14    Notwithstanding the provisions of this subsection,  an  owner
15    or  operator  of  an agrichemical facility that is subject to
16    the  provisions  of  Section  14.4  and  regulations  adopted
17    thereunder solely because  of  the  presence  of  an  on-site
18    private  potable  water supply well may file a written notice
19    with the Department of Agriculture  before  January  1,  1995
20    requesting  a release from the provisions of Section 14.4 and
21    this Section.  Upon receipt of a  request  for  release,  the
22    Department  of  Agriculture  shall  conduct  a  site visit to
23    confirm the private potable use  of  the  on-site  well.   If
24    private  potable  use  is  confirmed,  the  Department  shall
25    provide  written  notice  to  the  owner  or  operator of the
26    agrichemical facility that  the  facility  is  released  from
27    compliance  with  the  provisions  of  Section  14.4 and this
28    Section.  If  private  potable  use  is  not  confirmed,  the
29    Department of Agriculture shall provide written notice to the
30    owner  or operator that a release cannot be given.  No action
31    in  this  subsection  shall  be  precluded  by  the   on-site
32    non-potable  use  of  water  from  an on-site private potable
33    water supply well.
34    (Source: P.A. 92-113, eff. 7-20-01.)
 
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 1        (415 ILCS 5/17) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1017)
 2        Sec. 17. Rules; chlorination requirements.
 3        (a)  The  Board  may  adopt  regulations  governing   the
 4    location,  design, construction, and continuous operation and
 5    maintenance of public water supply installations, changes  or
 6    additions  which  may affect the continuous sanitary quality,
 7    mineral quality, or adequacy  of  the  public  water  supply,
 8    pursuant to Title VII of this Act.
 9        (b)  The   Agency   shall   exempt   from  any  mandatory
10    chlorination requirement of the  Board  any  community  water
11    supply which meets all of the following conditions:
12        (1)  The  population  of the community served is not more
13    than 5,000;
14        (2)  Has as its only source of  raw  water  one  or  more
15    properly  constructed wells into confined geologic formations
16    not subject to contamination;
17        (3)  Has  no   history   of   persistent   or   recurring
18    contamination,  as  indicated  by sampling results which show
19    violations of finished water quality  requirements,  for  the
20    most recent five-year period;
21        (4)  Does  not provide any raw water treatment other than
22    fluoridation;
23        (5)  Has an active program  approved  by  the  Agency  to
24    educate  water  supply  consumers  on preventing the entry of
25    contaminants into the water system;
26        (6)  Has a certified operator of the proper class, or  if
27    it  is  an  exempt  community  public  water  supply,  has  a
28    registered  person  responsible in charge of operation of the
29    public water supply;
30        (7)  Submits  samples  for  microbiological  analysis  at
31    twice the frequency specified in the Board regulations; and
32        (8)  A unit of local government  seeking  to  exempt  its
33    public  water  supply from the chlorination requirement under
34    this subsection (b) on or after September  9,  the  effective
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -84-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    date  of  this  amendatory  Act  of 1983 shall be required to
 2    receive the approval of the voters of such local  government.
 3    The proposition to exempt the community water supply from the
 4    mandatory  chlorination  requirement  shall  be placed on the
 5    ballot if the governing body of the local  government  adopts
 6    an  ordinance  or resolution directing the clerk of the local
 7    government to place such question on the ballot.   The  clerk
 8    shall  cause  the election officials to place the proposition
 9    on the ballot at the next election at which such  proposition
10    may  be  voted  upon  if  a  certified  copy  of  the adopted
11    ordinance or resolution is filed in his office  at  least  90
12    days  before  such  election.   The proposition shall also be
13    placed on the ballot if a petition containing the  signatures
14    of  at least 10% of the eligible voters residing in the local
15    government is filed with the clerk at least  90  days  before
16    the next election at which the proposition may be voted upon.
17    The proposition shall be in substantially the following form:
18    -------------------------------------------------------------
19        Shall the community
20    water supply of ..... (specify     YES
21    the unit of local government)
22    be exempt from the mandatory    -----------------------------
23    chlorination requirement            NO
24    of the State of Illinois?
25    -------------------------------------------------------------
26        If  the  majority  of  the voters of the local government
27    voting  therein  vote  in  favor  of  the  proposition,   the
28    community  water  supply  of  that  local government shall be
29    exempt from the mandatory chlorination requirement,  provided
30    that  the  other  requirements  under this subsection (b) are
31    met.    If  the  majority  of  the  vote  is   against   such
32    proposition,  the  community  water  supply may not be exempt
33    from the mandatory chlorination requirement.
34        Agency  decisions   regarding   exemptions   under   this
 
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 1    subsection  may  be  appealed  to  the  Board pursuant to the
 2    provisions of Section 40(a) of this Act.
 3        (c)  Any supply showing contamination in its distribution
 4    system (including finished water storage) may be required  to
 5    chlorinate until the Agency has determined that the source of
 6    contamination   has   been   removed   and   all   traces  of
 7    contamination  in   the   distribution   system   have   been
 8    eliminated.   Standby  chlorination equipment may be required
 9    by the Agency if a supply otherwise exempt from  chlorination
10    shows frequent or gross episodes of contamination.
11    (Source: P.A. 83-273.)

12        (415 ILCS 5/19.10)
13        Sec.   19.10.   Re-enactment  of  Title  IV-A;  findings;
14    purpose; validation.
15        (a)  The General Assembly finds and declares that:
16             (1)  Title IV-A (consisting of Sections 19.1 through
17        19.9) was first added to the Environmental Protection Act
18        by Article III of Public Act 85-1135, effective September
19        1, 1988.  In its original form, Title  IV-A  created  the
20        Water Pollution Control Revolving Fund and authorized the
21        Illinois  Environmental  Protection Agency to establish a
22        program for providing  units  of  local  government  with
23        low-cost   loans  to  be  used  to  construct  wastewater
24        treatment works.  The loans are paid from  the  Revolving
25        Fund,  which  consists  primarily  of  a  combination  of
26        federal grant money, State matching money, and money that
27        has been repaid on past loans.
28             (2)  In  1995,  Title IV-A was amended by Public Act
29        89-27, effective January 1, 1997, which created the  Loan
30        Support Program and made other changes.  The Loan Support
31        Program  provides  financing  for  certain administrative
32        costs of the Agency.  It specifically includes the  costs
33        of  developing  a  loan  program  for public water supply
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -86-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1        projects.
 2             (3)  Title IV-A was amended by  Public  Act  90-121,
 3        effective  July  17,  1997, which changed the name of the
 4        Water Pollution  Control  Revolving  Fund  to  the  Water
 5        Revolving  Fund  and created the Public Water Supply Loan
 6        Program.  Under this program, the Agency is authorized to
 7        make low-interest loans to units of local government  for
 8        the construction of public water supply facilities.
 9             (4)  Title  IV-A has also been amended by Public Act
10        86-671,  effective  September  1,  1989;   P.A.   86-820,
11        effective  September  7, 1989; and P.A. 90-372, effective
12        July 1, 1998.
13             (5)  Article III, Section 6, of Public  Act  85-1135
14        amended the Build Illinois Bond Act.  Among other changes
15        to that Act, P.A. 85-1135 authorized the deposit of up to
16        $70,000,000  into  the  Water Pollution Control Revolving
17        Fund to be used for the Title IV-A loan program.
18             (6)  Article III of Public Act  85-1135  also  added
19        Section  5.237  to  the  State Finance Act.  This Section
20        added the Water Pollution Control Revolving Fund  to  the
21        list of special funds in the State Treasury.  The Section
22        was  renumbered  as  Section  5.238  by  a revisory bill,
23        Public Act 85-1440, effective February 1, 1989.  Although
24        the name of the Fund was changed by  Public  Act  90-121,
25        that Act did not make the corresponding change in Section
26        5.238.
27             (7)  Over  the  10  years  that  it has administered
28        Title IV-A programs, the Agency  has  entered  into  loan
29        agreements with hundreds of units of local government and
30        provided  hundreds  of  millions  of dollars of financial
31        assistance for water pollution control  projects.   There
32        are  currently  many  active  Title  IV-A  loans  in  the
33        disbursement  phase and many more that are in the process
34        of being repaid.  The Agency continues  to  receive  many
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -87-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1        new applications each year.
 2             (8)  Public  Act  85-1135, which created Title IV-A,
 3        also contained provisions  relating  to  tax  reform  and
 4        State bonds.
 5             (9)  On  August  26,  1998,  the Cook County Circuit
 6        Court entered an order in  the  case  of  Oak  Park  Arms
 7        Associates v. Whitley (No. 92 L 51045), in which it found
 8        that  Public  Act  85-1135  violates  the  single subject
 9        clause of the Illinois Constitution (Article IV,  Section
10        8(d)).   As  of  the time this amendatory Act of 1999 was
11        prepared, the order declaring P.A.  85-1135  invalid  has
12        been vacated but the case is subject to appeal.
13             (10)  The  projects  funded  under Title IV-A affect
14        the vital areas of wastewater  and  sewage  disposal  and
15        drinking water supply and are important for the continued
16        health, safety, and welfare of the people of this State.
17        (b)  It  is  the  purpose  of this amendatory Act of 1999
18    (Public Act 91-52) to prevent or minimize any  disruption  to
19    the  programs  administered  under Title IV-A that may result
20    from challenges to the constitutional validity of Public  Act
21    85-1135.
22        (c)  This  amendatory  Act of 1999 (P.A. 91-52) re-enacts
23    Title IV-A of the Environmental Protection Act as it has been
24    amended.   This  re-enactment  is  intended  to  ensure   the
25    continuation  of  the  programs administered under that Title
26    and,  if  necessary,  to  recreate  them.   The  material  in
27    Sections 19.1 through 19.9 is shown as existing  text  (i.e.,
28    without underscoring) because, as of the time this amendatory
29    Act  of  1999  was prepared, the order declaring P.A. 85-1135
30    invalid has been vacated.   Section  19.7  has  been  omitted
31    because  it was repealed by Public Act 90-372, effective July
32    1, 1998.
33        Section 4.1 is added to the Build Illinois  Bond  Act  to
34    re-authorize  the  deposit  of funds into the Water Pollution
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -88-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    Control Revolving Fund.
 2        Section 5.238 of the State Finance Act is both re-enacted
 3    and  amended  to  reflect  the  current  name  of  the  Water
 4    Revolving Fund.
 5        (d)  The re-enactment of Title IV-A of the  Environmental
 6    Protection Act by this amendatory Act of 1999 (P.A. 91-52) is
 7    intended to remove any question as to the validity or content
 8    of  Title  IV-A;  it  is  not intended to supersede any other
 9    Public Act that amends the text of a Section as set forth  in
10    this  amendatory Act.  This re-enactment is not intended, and
11    shall not be construed, to imply that Public Act  85-1135  is
12    invalid  or  to limit or impair any legal argument concerning
13    (1) whether the Agency has express or  implied  authority  to
14    administer loan programs in the absence of Title IV-A, or (2)
15    whether  the  provisions  of  Title  IV-A  were substantially
16    re-enacted by P.A. 89-27 or 90-121.
17        (e)  All otherwise lawful actions taken before  June  30,
18    1999  (the  effective date of P.A. 91-52) this amendatory Act
19    of 1999 by any employee, officer, agency, or unit of State or
20    local government or by any other person or entity, acting  in
21    reliance  on  or  pursuant to Title IV-A of the Environmental
22    Protection Act, as set forth in  Public  Act  85-1135  or  as
23    subsequently amended, are hereby validated.
24        (f)  All otherwise lawful obligations arising out of loan
25    agreements  entered  into before June 30, 1999 (the effective
26    date of P.A. 91-52) this amendatory Act of 1999 by the  State
27    or  by  any  employee,  officer,  agency, or unit of State or
28    local government, acting in reliance on or pursuant to  Title
29    IV-A  of  the  Environmental  Protection Act, as set forth in
30    Public Act 85-1135 or as  subsequently  amended,  are  hereby
31    validated and affirmed.
32        (g)  All   otherwise   lawful  deposits  into  the  Water
33    Pollution Control Revolving Fund made before  June  30,  1999
34    (the  effective  date  of  P.A. 91-52) this amendatory Act of
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -89-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1    1999 in accordance with Section 4 of the Build Illinois  Bond
 2    Act,  as  set  forth in Public Act 85-1135 or as subsequently
 3    amended, and the use of those deposits for  the  purposes  of
 4    Title  IV-A  of  the Environmental Protection Act, are hereby
 5    validated.
 6        (h)  This amendatory Act of 1999  (P.A.  91-52)  applies,
 7    without  limitation,  to  actions  pending  on  or  after the
 8    effective date of this amendatory Act.
 9    (Source: P.A. 91-52, eff. 6-30-99.)

10        (415 ILCS 5/21) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1021)
11        Sec. 21. Prohibited acts.  No person shall:
12        (a)  Cause or allow the open dumping of any waste.
13        (b)  Abandon, dump, or deposit any waste upon the  public
14    highways  or  other  public  property,  except  in a sanitary
15    landfill approved  by  the  Agency  pursuant  to  regulations
16    adopted by the Board.
17        (c)  Abandon  any  vehicle in violation of the "Abandoned
18    Vehicles Amendment to the Illinois Vehicle Code", as  enacted
19    by the 76th General Assembly.
20        (d)  Conduct   any   waste-storage,  waste-treatment,  or
21    waste-disposal operation:
22             (1)  without a permit granted by the  Agency  or  in
23        violation  of  any  conditions  imposed  by  such permit,
24        including periodic reports and full  access  to  adequate
25        records  and  the  inspection  of  facilities,  as may be
26        necessary to assure compliance with  this  Act  and  with
27        regulations  and  standards adopted thereunder; provided,
28        however, that, except for municipal solid waste  landfill
29        units  that receive waste on or after October 9, 1993, no
30        permit shall be required for (i) any person conducting  a
31        waste-storage,    waste-treatment,    or   waste-disposal
32        operation for  wastes  generated  by  such  person's  own
33        activities  which are stored, treated, or disposed within
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -90-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1        the site where such  wastes  are  generated,  or  (ii)  a
 2        facility  located  in  a  county  with  a population over
 3        700,000, operated and located in accordance with  Section
 4        22.38 of this Act, and used exclusively for the transfer,
 5        storage,   or   treatment   of  general  construction  or
 6        demolition debris;
 7             (2)  in violation of any  regulations  or  standards
 8        adopted by the Board under this Act; or
 9             (3)  which  receives  waste  after  August 31, 1988,
10        does not have a permit issued by the Agency, and is (i) a
11        landfill used  exclusively  for  the  disposal  of  waste
12        generated   at  the  site,  (ii)  a  surface  impoundment
13        receiving special waste not listed in  an  NPDES  permit,
14        (iii)  a waste pile in which the total volume of waste is
15        greater than 100 cubic yards or the waste is  stored  for
16        over   one  year,  or  (iv)  a  land  treatment  facility
17        receiving special waste generated at  the  site;  without
18        giving  notice  of the operation to the Agency by January
19        1, 1989, or 30 days after the date on which the operation
20        commences,  whichever  is  later,  and  every   3   years
21        thereafter.   The  form  for  such  notification shall be
22        specified  by  the  Agency,  and  shall  be  limited   to
23        information  regarding:  the  name  and  address  of  the
24        location  of  the  operation;  the type of operation; the
25        types and amounts of waste stored, treated or disposed of
26        on  an  annual  basis;  the  remaining  capacity  of  the
27        operation;  and  the  remaining  expected  life  of   the
28        operation.
29        Item  (3)  of  this subsection (d) shall not apply to any
30    person engaged in agricultural activity who is disposing of a
31    substance that constitutes solid waste, if the substance  was
32    acquired  for use by that person on his own property, and the
33    substance is disposed of on his own  property  in  accordance
34    with regulations or standards adopted by the Board.
 
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 1        This subsection (d) shall not apply to hazardous waste.
 2        (e)  Dispose,  treat,  store  or  abandon  any  waste, or
 3    transport any waste into this State for disposal,  treatment,
 4    storage  or  abandonment,  except at a site or facility which
 5    meets the requirements of this Act  and  of  regulations  and
 6    standards thereunder.
 7        (f)  Conduct   any   hazardous  waste-storage,  hazardous
 8    waste-treatment or hazardous waste-disposal operation:
 9             (1)  without a RCRA permit for the  site  issued  by
10        the  Agency  under  subsection  (d) of Section 39 of this
11        Act, or in violation of any  condition  imposed  by  such
12        permit,  including  periodic  reports  and full access to
13        adequate records and the inspection of facilities, as may
14        be necessary to assure compliance with this Act and  with
15        regulations and standards adopted thereunder; or
16             (2)  in  violation  of  any regulations or standards
17        adopted by the Board under this Act; or
18             (3)  in  violation  of  any   RCRA   permit   filing
19        requirement  established  under  standards adopted by the
20        Board under this Act; or
21             (4)  in violation of any order adopted by the  Board
22        under this Act.
23        Notwithstanding  the  above,  no  RCRA  permit  shall  be
24    required  under  this subsection or subsection (d) of Section
25    39 of this  Act  for  any  person  engaged  in   agricultural
26    activity  who  is  disposing  of  a  substance which has been
27    identified  as  a  hazardous  waste,  and  which   has   been
28    designated  by  Board  regulations  as  being subject to this
29    exception, if the substance was  acquired  for  use  by  that
30    person  on  his own property and the substance is disposed of
31    on  his  own  property  in  accordance  with  regulations  or
32    standards adopted by the Board.
33        (g)  Conduct    any    hazardous     waste-transportation
34    operation:
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -92-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1             (1)  without registering with and obtaining a permit
 2        from  the  Agency  in accordance with the Uniform Program
 3        implemented under subsection (l-5) of Section 22.2; or
 4             (2)  in violation of any  regulations  or  standards
 5        adopted by the Board under this Act.
 6        (h)  Conduct  any  hazardous waste-recycling or hazardous
 7    waste-reclamation  or  hazardous  waste-reuse  operation   in
 8    violation   of   any   regulations,   standards   or   permit
 9    requirements adopted by the Board under this Act.
10        (i)  Conduct  any  process  or  engage  in  any act which
11    produces hazardous waste in violation of any  regulations  or
12    standards  adopted by the Board under subsections (a) and (c)
13    of Section 22.4 of this Act.
14        (j)  Conduct any special waste  transportation  operation
15    in   violation   of  any  regulations,  standards  or  permit
16    requirements adopted by the Board under this  Act.   However,
17    sludge  from  a  water  or  sewage  treatment plant owned and
18    operated by a unit of local government which (1)  is  subject
19    to  a  sludge  management  plan  approved  by the Agency or a
20    permit granted by the Agency, and (2)  has  been  tested  and
21    determined  not  to  be  a  hazardous  waste  as  required by
22    applicable State and federal laws  and  regulations,  may  be
23    transported  in  this  State  without a special waste hauling
24    permit, and the preparation and carrying of a manifest  shall
25    not  be  required  for  such  sludge  under  the rules of the
26    Pollution Control Board. The unit of local  government  which
27    operates the treatment plant producing such sludge shall file
28    a semiannual report with the Agency identifying the volume of
29    such  sludge  transported  during  the  reporting period, the
30    hauler of the sludge, and the disposal sites to which it  was
31    transported. This subsection (j) shall not apply to hazardous
32    waste.
33        (k)  Fail  or  refuse  to  pay any fee imposed under this
34    Act.
 
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 1        (l)  Locate a hazardous  waste  disposal  site  above  an
 2    active  or  inactive shaft or tunneled mine or within 2 miles
 3    of an active fault in the  earth's  crust.   In  counties  of
 4    population less than 225,000 no hazardous waste disposal site
 5    shall  be  located  (1)  within  1 1/2 miles of the corporate
 6    limits as defined on  June  30,  1978,  of  any  municipality
 7    without   the   approval   of   the  governing  body  of  the
 8    municipality in an official action; or (2) within  1000  feet
 9    of  an  existing  private  well  or  the existing source of a
10    public water supply measured from the boundary of the  actual
11    active permitted site and excluding existing private wells on
12    the  property of the permit applicant. The provisions of this
13    subsection do not apply to publicly-owned sewage works or the
14    disposal or utilization of sludge from publicly-owned  sewage
15    works.
16        (m)  Transfer interest in any land which has been used as
17    a  hazardous waste disposal site without written notification
18    to the Agency of the transfer and to the  transferee  of  the
19    conditions   imposed   by  the  Agency  upon  its  use  under
20    subsection (g) of Section 39.
21        (n)  Use any land which has  been  used  as  a  hazardous
22    waste  disposal  site  except  in  compliance with conditions
23    imposed by the Agency under subsection (g) of Section 39.
24        (o)  Conduct  a  sanitary  landfill  operation  which  is
25    required to have  a  permit  under  subsection  (d)  of  this
26    Section,  in  a  manner which results in any of the following
27    conditions:
28             (1)  refuse in standing or flowing waters;
29             (2)  leachate flows entering waters of the State;
30             (3)  leachate flows exiting  the  landfill  confines
31        (as  determined  by  the  boundaries  established for the
32        landfill by a permit issued by the Agency);
33             (4)  open burning of refuse in violation of  Section
34        9 of this Act;
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -94-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1             (5)  uncovered  refuse  remaining  from any previous
 2        operating day or at the conclusion of any operating  day,
 3        unless authorized by permit;
 4             (6)  failure  to  provide  final  cover  within time
 5        limits established by Board regulations;
 6             (7)  acceptance of wastes without necessary permits;
 7             (8)  scavenging as defined by Board regulations;
 8             (9)  deposition of refuse in any unpermitted portion
 9        of the landfill;
10             (10)  acceptance  of  a  special  waste  without   a
11        required manifest;
12             (11)  failure  to submit reports required by permits
13        or Board regulations;
14             (12)  failure to collect and contain litter from the
15        site by the end of each operating day;
16             (13)  failure to submit any cost  estimate  for  the
17        site  or  any  performance bond or other security for the
18        site as required by this Act or Board rules.
19        The prohibitions specified in this subsection  (o)  shall
20    be   enforceable  by  the  Agency  either  by  administrative
21    citation under Section 31.1  of  this  Act  or  as  otherwise
22    provided  by  this  Act.   The  specific prohibitions in this
23    subsection do not limit the power of the Board  to  establish
24    regulations or standards applicable to sanitary landfills.
25        (p)  In  violation  of  subdivision  (a) of this Section,
26    cause or allow the open dumping of  any  waste  in  a  manner
27    which results in any of the following occurrences at the dump
28    site:
29             (1)  litter;
30             (2)  scavenging;
31             (3)  open burning;
32             (4)  deposition  of  waste  in  standing  or flowing
33        waters;
34             (5)  proliferation of disease vectors;
 
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 1             (6)  standing or flowing liquid discharge  from  the
 2        dump site;
 3             (7)  deposition of:
 4                  (i)  general  construction or demolition debris
 5             as defined in Section 3.160(a) 3.78 of this Act; or
 6                  (ii)  clean construction or  demolition  debris
 7             as defined in Section 3.160(b) 3.78a of this Act.
 8        The  prohibitions  specified in this subsection (p) shall
 9    be  enforceable  by  the  Agency  either  by   administrative
10    citation  under  Section  31.1  of  this  Act or as otherwise
11    provided by this Act.   The  specific  prohibitions  in  this
12    subsection  do  not limit the power of the Board to establish
13    regulations or standards applicable to open dumping.
14        (q)  Conduct  a  landscape  waste  composting   operation
15    without  an  Agency permit, provided, however, that no permit
16    shall be required for any person:
17             (1)  conducting   a   landscape   waste   composting
18        operation for landscape wastes generated by such person's
19        own activities which are stored, treated or  disposed  of
20        within the site where such wastes are generated; or
21             (2)  applying landscape waste or composted landscape
22        waste at agronomic rates; or
23             (3)  operating a landscape waste composting facility
24        on  a  farm,  if  the facility meets all of the following
25        criteria:
26                  (A)  the composting facility is operated by the
27             farmer on property on which the composting  material
28             is utilized, and the composting facility constitutes
29             no  more  than  2%  of the property's total acreage,
30             except that the Agency may allow a higher percentage
31             for individual sites where the owner or operator has
32             demonstrated to the  Agency  that  the  site's  soil
33             characteristics or crop needs require a higher rate;
34                  (B)  the   property  on  which  the  composting
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -96-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1             facility is located, and any associated property  on
 2             which  the  compost  is  used,  is  principally  and
 3             diligently devoted to the production of agricultural
 4             crops   and   is  not  owned,  leased  or  otherwise
 5             controlled by  any  waste  hauler  or  generator  of
 6             nonagricultural  compost materials, and the operator
 7             of the  composting  facility  is  not  an  employee,
 8             partner,  shareholder,  or in any way connected with
 9             or controlled by any such waste hauler or generator;
10                  (C)  all compost generated  by  the  composting
11             facility  is  applied at agronomic rates and used as
12             mulch,  fertilizer  or  soil  conditioner  on   land
13             actually   farmed   by   the  person  operating  the
14             composting facility, and the finished compost is not
15             stored at the composting site for  a  period  longer
16             than  18  months  prior to its application as mulch,
17             fertilizer, or soil conditioner;
18                  (D)  the owner or operator, by January 1,  1990
19             (or   the   January   1  following  commencement  of
20             operation, whichever is later) and January 1 of each
21             year thereafter, (i) registers  the  site  with  the
22             Agency,  (ii) reports to the Agency on the volume of
23             composting material received and used at  the  site,
24             (iii) certifies to the Agency that the site complies
25             with  the  requirements  set  forth in subparagraphs
26             (A), (B) and (C) of this paragraph (q)(3), and  (iv)
27             certifies to the Agency that all composting material
28             was  placed  more  than  200  feet  from the nearest
29             potable water supply well, was  placed  outside  the
30             boundary  of  the 10-year floodplain or on a part of
31             the site that is floodproofed, was placed  at  least
32             1/4  mile  from  the nearest residence (other than a
33             residence  located  on  the  same  property  as  the
34             facility) and there are not more  than  10  occupied
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -97-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1             non-farm   residences   within   1/2   mile  of  the
 2             boundaries of the site on the date  of  application,
 3             and  was  placed  more  than  5 feet above the water
 4             table.
 5        For the  purposes  of  this  subsection  (q),  "agronomic
 6    rates"  means  the  application  of not more than 20 tons per
 7    acre per year, except that the Agency may allow a higher rate
 8    for  individual  sites  where  the  owner  or  operator   has
 9    demonstrated   to   the   Agency   that   the   site's   soil
10    characteristics or crop needs require a higher rate.
11        (r)  Cause  or  allow  the  storage  or  disposal of coal
12    combustion waste unless:
13             (1)  such waste is stored or disposed of at  a  site
14        or  facility  for  which a permit has been obtained or is
15        not otherwise  required  under  subsection  (d)  of  this
16        Section; or
17             (2)  such  waste  is stored or disposed of as a part
18        of the design and reclamation of a site or facility which
19        is  an  abandoned  mine  site  in  accordance  with   the
20        Abandoned Mined Lands and Water Reclamation Act; or
21             (3)  such  waste  is stored or disposed of at a site
22        or facility which is operating under NPDES and Subtitle D
23        permits issued by  the  Agency  pursuant  to  regulations
24        adopted by the Board for mine-related water pollution and
25        permits  issued  pursuant  to  the Federal Surface Mining
26        Control and Reclamation Act of 1977 (P.L. 95-87)  or  the
27        rules  and  regulations  thereunder or any law or rule or
28        regulation adopted by  the  State  of  Illinois  pursuant
29        thereto, and the owner or operator of the facility agrees
30        to accept the waste; and either
31                  (i)  such  waste  is  stored  or disposed of in
32             accordance with requirements  applicable  to  refuse
33             disposal  under regulations adopted by the Board for
34             mine-related water pollution and pursuant  to  NPDES
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -98-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1             and  Subtitle  D  permits issued by the Agency under
 2             such regulations; or
 3                  (ii)  the owner or  operator  of  the  facility
 4             demonstrates all of the following to the Agency, and
 5             the  facility  is  operated  in  accordance with the
 6             demonstration as approved by  the  Agency:  (1)  the
 7             disposal  area will be covered in a manner that will
 8             support continuous vegetation, (2) the facility will
 9             be adequately protected from wind and water erosion,
10             (3) the pH will  be  maintained  so  as  to  prevent
11             excessive  leaching  of metal ions, and (4) adequate
12             containment or other measures will  be  provided  to
13             protect   surface   water   and   groundwater   from
14             contamination  at levels prohibited by this Act, the
15             Illinois Groundwater Protection Act, or  regulations
16             adopted pursuant thereto.
17        Notwithstanding  any  other  provision of this Title, the
18    disposal of coal combustion waste pursuant to item (2) or (3)
19    of this subdivision  (r)  shall  be  exempt  from  the  other
20    provisions   of   this   Title  V,  and  notwithstanding  the
21    provisions of Title X of this Act, the Agency  is  authorized
22    to grant experimental permits which include provision for the
23    disposal  of  wastes  from  the  combustion of coal and other
24    materials pursuant to items (2) and (3) of  this  subdivision
25    (r).
26        (s)  After  April  1,  1989,  offer  for  transportation,
27    transport, deliver, receive or accept special waste for which
28    a  manifest  is  required, unless the manifest indicates that
29    the fee required under Section 22.8  of  this  Act  has  been
30    paid.
31        (t)  Cause  or  allow  a lateral expansion of a municipal
32    solid waste landfill  unit  on  or  after  October  9,  1993,
33    without  a  permit  modification, granted by the Agency, that
34    authorizes the lateral expansion.
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -99-               LRB9212249LBpr
 1        (u)  Conduct any vegetable by-product treatment, storage,
 2    disposal or transportation  operation  in  violation  of  any
 3    regulation,  standards  or permit requirements adopted by the
 4    Board under this Act. However, no permit  shall  be  required
 5    under  this  Title  V  for  the land application of vegetable
 6    by-products conducted pursuant to Agency permit issued  under
 7    Title  III  of  this  Act  to  the generator of the vegetable
 8    by-products.  In  addition,  vegetable  by-products  may   be
 9    transported  in  this  State  without a special waste hauling
10    permit,  and  without  the  preparation  and  carrying  of  a
11    manifest.
12        (v)  (Blank).
13        (w)  Conduct any generation, transportation, or recycling
14    of construction or demolition debris, clean  or  general,  or
15    uncontaminated    soil    generated    during   construction,
16    remodeling, repair, and demolition of utilities,  structures,
17    and  roads that is not commingled with any waste, without the
18    maintenance  of   documentation   identifying   the   hauler,
19    generator,  place of origin of the debris or soil, the weight
20    or volume of the debris or soil, and the location, owner, and
21    operator of  the  facility  where  the  debris  or  soil  was
22    transferred,    disposed,   recycled,   or   treated.    This
23    documentation  must   be   maintained   by   the   generator,
24    transporter,  or  recycler  for 3 years.  This subsection (w)
25    shall not apply to (1) a permitted pollution control facility
26    that transfers or accepts construction or demolition  debris,
27    clean  or general, or uncontaminated soil for final disposal,
28    recycling, or treatment, (2) a public utility (as  that  term
29    is  defined  in  the  Public  Utilities  Act)  or a municipal
30    utility, or (3) the Illinois  Department  of  Transportation;
31    but  it shall apply to an entity that contracts with a public
32    utility, a municipal utility, or the Illinois  Department  of
33    Transportation.   The  terms  "generation" and "recycling" as
34    used in this subsection do not apply to clean construction or
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -100-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    demolition debris when (i) used as fill material below  grade
 2    outside   of   a   setback  zone  if  covered  by  sufficient
 3    uncontaminated soil to support vegetation within 30  days  of
 4    the  completion  of  filling  or  if  covered  by  a  road or
 5    structure, (ii) solely  broken  concrete  without  protruding
 6    metal  bars  is  used  for  erosion  control, or (iii) milled
 7    asphalt  or  crushed  concrete  is  used  as   aggregate   in
 8    construction  of  the  shoulder  of  a  roadway.   The  terms
 9    "generation"  and "recycling", as used in this subsection, do
10    not apply to uncontaminated soil that is not commingled  with
11    any  waste  when  (i)  used  as  fill material below grade or
12    contoured to grade, or (ii) used at the site of generation.
13    (Source: P.A. 90-219,  eff.  7-25-97;  90-344,  eff.  1-1-98;
14    90-475,  eff.  8-17-97;  90-655,  eff.  7-30-98; 90-761, eff.
15    8-14-98; 91-72, eff. 7-9-99.)

16        (415 ILCS 5/21.3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1021.3)
17        Sec. 21.3. Environmental reclamation lien.
18        (a)  All costs and damages for which a person  is  liable
19    to the State of Illinois under Section 22.2 and Section 22.18
20    shall  constitute  an environmental reclamation lien in favor
21    of the State of Illinois upon all real property and rights to
22    such property which:
23             (1)  belong to such person; and
24             (2)  are subject to or  affected  by  a  removal  or
25        remedial  action under Section 22.2 or preventive action,
26        corrective action or  enforcement  action  under  Section
27        22.18.
28        (b)  An  environmental  reclamation  lien  shall continue
29    until the liability for the costs and damages, or a  judgment
30    against   the  person  arising  out  of  such  liability,  is
31    satisfied.
32        (c)  An environmental reclamation lien shall be effective
33    upon the filing by the Agency of a  Notice  of  Environmental
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -101-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    Reclamation Lien with the recorder or the registrar of titles
 2    of  the  county  in which the real property lies.  The Agency
 3    shall not file an environmental reclamation lien, and no such
 4    lien shall be  valid,  unless  the  Agency  has  sent  notice
 5    pursuant to subsection (q) or (v) of Section 4 of this Act to
 6    owners  of  the real property.  Nothing in this Section shall
 7    be construed to give the Agency's lien a preference over  the
 8    rights  of  any  bona  fide  purchaser  or mortgagee or other
 9    lienholder (not including the United States when  holding  an
10    unfiled  lien)  arising  prior  to  the filing of a notice of
11    environmental reclamation lien in the office of the  recorder
12    or  registrar  of  titles of the county in which the property
13    subject to  the  lien  is  located.   For  purposes  of  this
14    Section,  the term "bona fide" shall not include any mortgage
15    of real or personal property or any other credit  transaction
16    that  results  in the mortgagee or the holder of the security
17    acting as trustee  for  unsecured  creditors  of  the  liable
18    person  mentioned  in  the  notice  of lien who executed such
19    chattel or real property mortgage or the document  evidencing
20    such  credit transaction.  Such lien shall be inferior to the
21    lien of general taxes, special assessments and special  taxes
22    heretofore  or  hereafter levied by any political subdivision
23    of this State.
24        (d)  The environmental reclamation lien shall not  exceed
25    the  amount  of  expenditures as itemized on the Affidavit of
26    Expenditures  attached  to  and  filed  with  the  Notice  of
27    Environmental   Reclamation   Lien.    The    Affidavit    of
28    Expenditures  may  be  amended if additional costs or damages
29    are incurred.
30        (e)  Upon  filing  of   the   Notice   of   Environmental
31    Reclamation Lien a copy with attachments shall be served upon
32    the  owners  of  the  real  property.  Notice of such service
33    shall be served on all lienholders of record as of  the  date
34    of filing.
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -102-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        (f)  Within  120  days  after  the effective date of this
 2    Section or  within  60  days  after  initiating  response  or
 3    remedial  action at the site under Section 22.2 or 22.18, the
 4    Agency shall file a Notice of Response  Action  in  Progress.
 5    The  Notice  shall be filed with the recorder or registrar of
 6    titles of the county in which the real property lies.
 7        (g)  In addition to any other remedy provided by the laws
 8    of this State, the Agency may foreclose in the circuit  court
 9    an  environmental  reclamation  lien on real property for any
10    costs or damages imposed under Section 22.2 or Section  22.18
11    to  the  same  extent  and  in  the  same  manner  as  in the
12    enforcement  of  other  liens.   The  process,  practice  and
13    procedure for such foreclosure shall be the same as  provided
14    in  Article  XV  of  the Code of Civil Procedure.  Nothing in
15    this Section shall affect the right of the State of  Illinois
16    to  bring  an  action against any person to recover all costs
17    and damages for which such person  is  liable  under  Section
18    22.2 or Section 22.18.
19        (h)  Any  liability  to  the  State under Section 22.2 or
20    Section 22.18 shall constitute a debt to the State.  Interest
21    on such debt shall begin to accrue at a rate of 12% per annum
22    from the date of the filing of the  Notice  of  Environmental
23    Reclamation Lien under paragraph (c).  Accrued interest shall
24    be included as a cost incurred by the State of Illinois under
25    Section 22.2 or Section 22.18.
26        (i)  "Environmental   reclamation   lien"  means  a  lien
27    established under this Section.
28    (Source: P.A. 90-655, eff. 7-30-98.)

29        (415 ILCS 5/21.5) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1021.5)
30        Sec. 21.5. Toxic packaging reduction.
31        (a)  For the purposes  of  this  Section,  the  following
32    terms have the meanings ascribed to them in this subsection:
33             "Distributor" means any person, firm, or corporation
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -103-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        that takes title to goods purchased for resale.
 2             "Package" means a container providing a direct means
 3        of  marketing,  protecting,  or  handling  a product, and
 4        includes a product unit package, an intermediate package,
 5        or  a  shipping  container  as  defined  by  ASTM   D996.
 6        "Package"  shall  also  include  such  unsealed  consumer
 7        product  receptacles  as  carrying  cases,  crates, cups,
 8        pails, rigid foil and other trays, wrappers and  wrapping
 9        films, bags, and tubs.
10             "Packaging component" means any individual assembled
11        part  of  a  package  including,  but not limited to, any
12        interior  or  exterior  blocking,  bracing,   cushioning,
13        weatherproofing,  coatings,  closure,  ink, and labeling;
14        except that coatings shall not include a thin  tin  layer
15        applied to base steel or sheet steel during manufacturing
16        of the steel or package.
17        (b)  Beginning  July  1,  1994,  no  package or packaging
18    component may be offered for sale or promotional purposes  in
19    this  State,  by  its  manufacturer  or  distributor,  if the
20    package itself or any packaging component includes  any  ink,
21    dye,  pigment,  adhesive,  stabilizer, or other additive that
22    contains lead, cadmium, mercury or hexavalent  chromium  that
23    has  been  intentionally  introduced  during manufacturing or
24    distribution.
25        (c)  Beginning July 1, 1994, no product  may  be  offered
26    for  sale  or  for  promotional purposes in this State by its
27    manufacturer or distributor in Illinois  in  a  package  that
28    includes,  in  the  package itself or in any of its packaging
29    components, any ink, dye, pigment, adhesive,  stabilizer,  or
30    other  additive  that  contains  lead,  cadmium,  mercury  or
31    hexavalent  chromium  that  has been intentionally introduced
32    during manufacturing or distribution.
33        (d)  No package or packaging component, and no product in
34    a package, may be offered for sale or promotional purposes in
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -104-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    this State if the sum of the concentration  levels  of  lead,
 2    cadmium,  mercury,  or  hexavalent  chromium  present  in the
 3    package  or  packaging  component,  but   not   intentionally
 4    introduced  by  the  manufacturer or distributor, exceeds the
 5    following limits:
 6             (1)  600  parts  per  million  by   weight   (0.06%)
 7        beginning July 1, 1994.
 8             (2)  250   parts  per  million  by  weight  (0.025%)
 9        beginning July 1, 1995.
10             (3)  100  parts  per  million  by   weight   (0.01%)
11        beginning July 1, 1996.
12        (e)  The  following packages and packaging components are
13    not subject to this Section:
14             (1)  Those packages or packaging components  with  a
15        code  indicating  a  date  of  manufacture before July 1,
16        1994.
17             (2)  Those  packages  or  packaging  components  for
18        which an exemption has been granted by the  Agency  under
19        subsection (f).
20             (3)  Until  July  1,  1998,  packages  and packaging
21        components that would not exceed the maximum  contaminant
22        levels  set  forth  in subsection (d) of this Section but
23        for the addition of post consumer materials.
24             (4)  Those packages or packaging components used  to
25        contain  wine or distilled spirits that have been bottled
26        before July 1, 1994.
27             (5)  Packaging components, including but not limited
28        to strapping,  seals,  fasteners,  and  other  industrial
29        packaging  components intended to protect, secure, close,
30        unitize or provide pilferage protection for  any  product
31        destined for commercial use.
32             (6)  Those    packages    used    in   transporting,
33        protecting, safe handling or functioning of  radiographic
34        film.
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -105-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        (f)  The   Agency   may   grant  an  exemption  from  the
 2    requirements of this  Section  for  a  package  or  packaging
 3    component  to  which  lead,  cadmium,  mercury, or hexavalent
 4    chromium  has  been  added  in  the  manufacturing,  forming,
 5    printing, or distribution process in  order  to  comply  with
 6    health or safety requirements of federal law or because there
 7    is  not  a  feasible  alternative.  These exemptions shall be
 8    granted, upon application of the manufacturer of the  package
 9    or  packaging  component,  for  a  period  of 2 years and are
10    renewable for periods of 2 years.  If  the  Agency  denies  a
11    request  for  exemption,  or  fails to take final action on a
12    request within 180 days, the applicant may seek  review  from
13    the  Board  in  the  same  manner  as in the case of a permit
14    denial. Any other party to the  Agency  proceeding  may  seek
15    review  in  the  manner provided in subsection (c) of Section
16    40.
17        For the purposes of this  subsection,  a  use  for  which
18    there  is  no  feasible  alternative  is  one  in  which  the
19    regulated  substance  is  essential  to  the protection, safe
20    handling, or function of the package's contents.
21        The Agency may  enter  into  reciprocal  agreements  with
22    other  states that have adopted similar restrictions on toxic
23    packaging and may accept  exemptions  to  those  restrictions
24    granted  by  such  states.   Prior to taking such action, the
25    Agency shall provide for public notice in  the  Environmental
26    Register and for a 30-day comment period.
27        (g)  Beginning  July 1, 1994, a certificate of compliance
28    stating  that  a  package  or  packaging  component   is   in
29    compliance  with  the  requirements  of this Section shall be
30    furnished by its manufacturer or supplier to its distributor,
31    or shall be maintained by the manufacturer in Illinois if the
32    manufacturer  is  also  the  distributor.  If  compliance  is
33    achieved only under the  exemption  provided  in  subdivision
34    (e)(2)  or  (e)(3),  the certificate shall state the specific
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -106-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    basis upon which the exemption is claimed. The certificate of
 2    compliance shall be signed by an authorized official  of  the
 3    manufacturer  or  supplier.  The  certificate  can be for the
 4    entire class, type, or category of packaging or a  particular
 5    product  regulated under this Act, and a certificate need not
 6    be  provided  or  maintained  for  each  individual  package,
 7    packaging  component,  or  packaging  for  a   product.   The
 8    manufacturer  or  distributor  in  Illinois  shall retain the
 9    certificate of compliance for  as  long  as  the  package  or
10    packaging  component  is in use. A copy of the certificate of
11    compliance shall be kept  on  file  by  the  manufacturer  or
12    supplier  of the package or packaging component. Certificates
13    of compliance, or copies thereof, shall be furnished  to  the
14    Agency  upon  its  request  and  to  members of the public in
15    accordance with subsection (i).
16        If  the  manufacturer  or  supplier  of  the  package  or
17    packaging component reformulates or creates a new package  or
18    packaging  component,  the  manufacturer  or  supplier  shall
19    provide  an  amended or new certificate of compliance for the
20    reformulated or new package or packaging component.
21        (h)  (Blank.) The Agency shall review  the  effectiveness
22    of  this  Section  no  later  than January 1, 1996, and shall
23    provide a report based upon that review to the  Governor  and
24    the   General   Assembly.    The   report   shall  contain  a
25    recommendation whether to continue  the  recycling  exemption
26    provided   in  subdivision  (e)(3)  of  this  Section  and  a
27    description of the nature of the substitutes used in lieu  of
28    lead, mercury, cadmium, and hexavalent chromium.
29        (i)  Any  request  from  a  member  of the public for any
30    certificate of compliance from the manufacturer  or  supplier
31    of a package or packaging component shall be:
32             (1)  made  in  writing and transmitted by registered
33        mail with a copy provided to the Agency;
34             (2)  specific  as  to  the  package   or   packaging
 
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 1        component information requested; and
 2             (3)  responded  to  by  the manufacturer or supplier
 3        within 60 days.
 4        (j)  The provisions of this Section shall  not  apply  to
 5    any  glass  or  ceramic  product  used  as  packaging that is
 6    intended to be reusable or refillable, and where the lead and
 7    cadmium  from  the  product  do  not  exceed   the   Toxicity
 8    Characteristic  Leachability  Procedures  of  leachability of
 9    lead and cadmium as  set  forth  by  the  U.S.  Environmental
10    Protection Agency.
11    (Source: P.A. 89-79, eff. 6-30-95.)

12        (415 ILCS 5/22.2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.2)
13        Sec. 22.2. Hazardous waste; fees; liability.
14        (a)  There are hereby created within the State Treasury 2
15    special  funds  to  be  known  respectively as the "Hazardous
16    Waste  Fund"  and  the  "Hazardous  Waste   Research   Fund",
17    constituted from the fees collected pursuant to this Section.
18    In  addition  to  the  fees collected under this Section, the
19    Hazardous  Waste  Fund  shall  include  other   moneys   made
20    available from any source for deposit into the Fund.
21        (b) (1)  On  and  after January 1, 1989, the Agency shall
22        collect from  the  owner  or  operator  of  each  of  the
23        following sites a fee in the amount of:
24                  (A)  6  cents  per  gallon  or $12.12 per cubic
25             yard of hazardous waste disposed for 1989, 7.5 cents
26             per gallon or $15.15 per cubic yard for 1990  and  9
27             cents   per   gallon   or   $18.18  per  cubic  yard
28             thereafter, if the hazardous waste disposal site  is
29             located  off the site where such waste was produced.
30             The maximum amount payable  under  this  subdivision
31             (A) with respect to the hazardous waste generated by
32             a  single  generator  and  deposited in monofills is
33             $20,000 for 1989, $25,000 for 1990, and $30,000  per
 
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 1             year  thereafter.   If,  as  a  result of the use of
 2             multiple monofills, waste  fees  in  excess  of  the
 3             maximum  are assessed with respect to a single waste
 4             generator, the generator may apply to the Agency for
 5             a credit.
 6                  (B)  6 cents per gallon  or  $12.12  per  cubic
 7             yard of hazardous waste disposed for 1989, 7.5 cents
 8             per  gallon  or $15.15 per cubic yard for 1990 and 9
 9             cents or $18.18 per cubic yard  thereafter,  if  the
10             hazardous waste disposal site is located on the site
11             where  such waste was produced, provided however the
12             maximum amount of fees payable under this  paragraph
13             (B)  is  $20,000  for  1989,  $25,000  for  1990 and
14             $30,000 per year thereafter for each such  hazardous
15             waste disposal site.
16                  (C)  If the hazardous waste disposal site is an
17             underground  injection  well, $6,000 per year if not
18             more than 10,000,000 gallons per year are  injected,
19             $15,000 per year if more than 10,000,000 gallons but
20             not  more  than  50,000,000  gallons  per  year  are
21             injected,   and   $27,000  per  year  if  more  than
22             50,000,000 gallons per year are injected.
23                  (D)  2 cents per gallon or $4.04 per cubic yard
24             for 1989, 2.5 cents per gallon or  $5.05  per  cubic
25             yard  for  1990, and 3 cents per gallon or $6.06 per
26             cubic yard thereafter of  hazardous  waste  received
27             for  treatment  at a hazardous waste treatment site,
28             if the hazardous waste treatment site is located off
29             the site where such waste was produced and  if  such
30             hazardous  waste treatment site is owned, controlled
31             and operated by a person other than the generator of
32             such waste.  After treatment at such hazardous waste
33             treatment site, the waste shall not  be  subject  to
34             any  other  fee imposed by this subsection (b).  For
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -109-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             purposes  of   this   subsection   (b),   the   term
 2             "treatment"  is defined as in Section 3.505 3.49 but
 3             shall not include recycling, reclamation or reuse.
 4             (2)  The General Assembly shall annually appropriate
 5        to the Fund such amounts as it deems necessary to fulfill
 6        the purposes of this Act.
 7             (3)  The Agency shall have the authority to  accept,
 8        receive, and administer on behalf of the State any moneys
 9        made  available  to  the  State  from  any source for the
10        purposes  of  the  Hazardous  Waste  Fund  set  forth  in
11        subsection (d) of this Section.
12             (4)  Of the amount collected as fees provided for in
13        this Section, the Agency shall manage  the  use  of  such
14        funds  to  assure that sufficient funds are available for
15        match towards federal expenditures for response action at
16        sites which are listed on the National  Priorities  List;
17        provided,   however,   that   this  shall  not  apply  to
18        additional monies appropriated to the Fund by the General
19        Assembly, nor shall  it  apply  in  the  event  that  the
20        Director  finds that revenues in the Hazardous Waste Fund
21        must be used to address conditions which  create  or  may
22        create  an  immediate danger to the environment or public
23        health or to the welfare of the people of  the  State  of
24        Illinois.
25             (5)  Notwithstanding  the  other  provisions of this
26        subsection (b), sludge from a publicly-owned sewage works
27        generated in Illinois,  coal  mining  wastes  and  refuse
28        generated in Illinois, bottom boiler ash, flyash and flue
29        gas  desulphurization sludge from public utility electric
30        generating facilities located  in  Illinois,  and  bottom
31        boiler ash and flyash from all incinerators which process
32        solely municipal waste shall not be subject to the fee.
33             (6)  For   the  purposes  of  this  subsection  (b),
34        "monofill" means a facility, or a  unit  at  a  facility,
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -110-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        that accepts only wastes bearing the same USEPA hazardous
 2        waste  identification  number,  or  compatible  wastes as
 3        determined by the Agency.
 4        (c)  The Agency shall  establish  procedures,  not  later
 5    than  January 1, 1984, relating to the collection of the fees
 6    authorized by this Section. Such  procedures  shall  include,
 7    but  not be limited to: (1) necessary records identifying the
 8    quantities of hazardous waste received or disposed;  (2)  the
 9    form  and  submission  of reports to accompany the payment of
10    fees to the Agency; and (3) the time and manner of payment of
11    fees to the Agency, which payments shall be  not  more  often
12    than quarterly.
13        (d)  Beginning July 1, 1996, the Agency shall deposit all
14    such  receipts  in  the  State  Treasury to the credit of the
15    Hazardous Waste Fund, except as provided in subsection (e) of
16    this Section. All monies in the Hazardous Waste Fund shall be
17    used by the Agency for the following purposes:
18             (1)  Taking whatever preventive or corrective action
19        is necessary or appropriate, in  circumstances  certified
20        by  the Director, including but not limited to removal or
21        remedial  action  whenever  there   is   a   release   or
22        substantial  threat of a release of a hazardous substance
23        or pesticide; provided, the Agency shall expend  no  more
24        than   $1,000,000   on   any   single   incident  without
25        appropriation by the General Assembly.
26             (2)  To meet any requirements which must be  met  by
27        the  State  in  order to obtain federal funds pursuant to
28        the Comprehensive  Environmental  Response,  Compensation
29        and Liability Act of 1980, (P.L. 96-510).
30             (3)  In  an amount up to 30% of the amount collected
31        as fees provided for in this  Section,  for  use  by  the
32        Agency  to  conduct  groundwater  protection  activities,
33        including  providing grants to appropriate units of local
34        government which are addressing protection of underground
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -111-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        waters pursuant to the provisions of this Act.
 2             (4)  To fund the development and  implementation  of
 3        the model pesticide collection program under Section 19.1
 4        of the Illinois Pesticide Act.
 5             (5)  To  the  extent  the  Agency  has  received and
 6        deposited monies in the Fund other  than  fees  collected
 7        under subsection (b) of this Section, to pay for the cost
 8        of  Agency  employees  for services provided in reviewing
 9        the performance of response  actions  pursuant  to  Title
10        XVII of this Act.
11             (6)  In  an  amount  up to 15% of the fees collected
12        annually under subsection (b) of this Section, for use by
13        the Agency for administration of the provisions  of  this
14        Section.
15        (e)  The   Agency  shall  deposit  10%  of  all  receipts
16    collected under subsection (b) of this Section,  but  not  to
17    exceed $200,000 per year, in the State Treasury to the credit
18    of the Hazardous Waste Research Fund established by this Act.
19    Pursuant  to  appropriation, all monies in such Fund shall be
20    used by the Department of Natural Resources for the  purposes
21    set forth in this subsection.
22        The  Department  of  Natural  Resources  may  enter  into
23    contracts with business, industrial, university, governmental
24    or  other qualified individuals or organizations to assist in
25    the research and development intended to recycle, reduce  the
26    volume   of,  separate,  detoxify  or  reduce  the  hazardous
27    properties of hazardous wastes in Illinois.   Monies  in  the
28    Fund  may also be used by the Department of Natural Resources
29    for technical studies, monitoring activities, and educational
30    and research activities which are related to  the  protection
31    of   underground  waters.   Monies  in  the  Hazardous  Waste
32    Research Fund may be used to administer the  Illinois  Health
33    and   Hazardous  Substances  Registry  Act.   Monies  in  the
34    Hazardous Waste Research Fund  shall  not  be  used  for  any
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -112-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    sanitary  landfill  or the acquisition or construction of any
 2    facility.  This does not preclude the purchase  of  equipment
 3    for  the  purpose  of  public  demonstration  projects.   The
 4    Department  of  Natural  Resources shall adopt guidelines for
 5    cost sharing, selecting,  and  administering  projects  under
 6    this subsection.
 7        (f)  Notwithstanding  any other provision or rule of law,
 8    and subject only to the defenses set forth in subsection  (j)
 9    of  this  Section,  the following persons shall be liable for
10    all costs of removal or remedial action incurred by the State
11    of Illinois or any unit of local government as a result of  a
12    release  or  substantial  threat  of a release of a hazardous
13    substance or pesticide:
14             (1)  the owner and operator of a facility or  vessel
15        from  which  there  is a release or substantial threat of
16        release of a hazardous substance or pesticide;
17             (2)  any  person  who  at  the  time  of   disposal,
18        transport,  storage or treatment of a hazardous substance
19        or pesticide owned or operated  the  facility  or  vessel
20        used  for  such disposal, transport, treatment or storage
21        from which there was a release or substantial threat of a
22        release of any such hazardous substance or pesticide;
23             (3)  any  person  who  by  contract,  agreement,  or
24        otherwise has arranged with another party or  entity  for
25        transport,  storage,  disposal  or treatment of hazardous
26        substances or pesticides owned, controlled  or  possessed
27        by such person at a facility owned or operated by another
28        party or entity from which facility there is a release or
29        substantial   threat  of  a  release  of  such  hazardous
30        substances or pesticides; and
31             (4)  any  person  who  accepts   or   accepted   any
32        hazardous  substances  or  pesticides  for  transport  to
33        disposal,  storage  or treatment facilities or sites from
34        which there is a release or a  substantial  threat  of  a
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -113-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        release of a hazardous substance or pesticide.
 2        Any  monies received by the State of Illinois pursuant to
 3    this subsection (f) shall be deposited in the State  Treasury
 4    to the credit of the Hazardous Waste Fund.
 5        In  accordance with the other provisions of this Section,
 6    costs of removal or remedial action incurred  by  a  unit  of
 7    local  government  may  be  recovered in an action before the
 8    Board  brought  by  the  unit  of  local   government   under
 9    subsection  (i)  of  this  Section.   Any monies so recovered
10    shall be paid to the unit of local government.
11        (g)(1)  No indemnification,  hold  harmless,  or  similar
12        agreement  or  conveyance  shall be effective to transfer
13        from the owner or operator of any vessel or  facility  or
14        from  any  person  who  may  be  liable  for a release or
15        substantial threat of a release under  this  Section,  to
16        any   other  person  the  liability  imposed  under  this
17        Section.  Nothing in this Section shall bar any agreement
18        to insure, hold harmless or indemnify  a  party  to  such
19        agreements for any liability under this Section.
20             (2)  Nothing   in   this   Section,   including  the
21        provisions of paragraph (g)(1) of this Section, shall bar
22        a cause of action that an owner or operator or any  other
23        person  subject  to  liability  under  this Section, or a
24        guarantor, has or would have, by reason of subrogation or
25        otherwise against any person.
26        (h)  For purposes of this Section:
27             (1)  The term "facility" means:
28                  (A)  any  building,  structure,   installation,
29             equipment,   pipe  or  pipeline  including  but  not
30             limited to any pipe into a sewer or  publicly  owned
31             treatment    works,   well,   pit,   pond,   lagoon,
32             impoundment,  ditch,  landfill,  storage  container,
33             motor vehicle, rolling stock, or aircraft; or
34                  (B)  any  site  or  area  where   a   hazardous
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -114-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             substance  has  been deposited, stored, disposed of,
 2             placed, or otherwise come to be located.
 3             (2)  The term "owner or operator" means:
 4                  (A)  any person owning or operating a vessel or
 5             facility;
 6                  (B)  in the case of an abandoned facility,  any
 7             person owning or operating the abandoned facility or
 8             any   person   who  owned,  operated,  or  otherwise
 9             controlled  activities  at  the  abandoned  facility
10             immediately prior to such abandonment;
11                  (C)  in the case of a land trust as defined  in
12             Section  2 of the Land Trustee as Creditor Act,  the
13             person owning the beneficial interest  in  the  land
14             trust;
15                  (D)  in  the  case of a fiduciary (other than a
16             land trustee), the estate, trust  estate,  or  other
17             interest  in  property held in a fiduciary capacity,
18             and not the fiduciary.  For  the  purposes  of  this
19             Section,  "fiduciary"  means  a  trustee,  executor,
20             administrator,  guardian,  receiver,  conservator or
21             other person holding  a  facility  or  vessel  in  a
22             fiduciary capacity;
23                  (E)  in  the case of a "financial institution",
24             meaning the Illinois Housing  Development  Authority
25             and  that  term  as  defined  in  Section  2  of the
26             Illinois Banking Act, that has  acquired  ownership,
27             operation,  management,  or  control  of a vessel or
28             facility through foreclosure or under the terms of a
29             security interest held by the financial  institution
30             or under the terms of an extension of credit made by
31             the financial institution, the financial institution
32             only  if  the financial institution takes possession
33             of  the  vessel  or  facility  and   the   financial
34             institution  exercises actual, direct, and continual
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -115-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             or recurrent managerial control in the operation  of
 2             the  vessel  or  facility  that  causes a release or
 3             substantial threat  of  a  release  of  a  hazardous
 4             substance  or  pesticide  resulting  in  removal  or
 5             remedial action;
 6                  (F)  In  the  case  of  an owner of residential
 7             property, the owner if the owner is a  person  other
 8             than an individual, or if the owner is an individual
 9             who owns more than 10 dwelling units in Illinois, or
10             if   the   owner,   or   an  agent,  representative,
11             contractor, or employee of the  owner,  has  caused,
12             contributed to, or allowed the release or threatened
13             release  of  a hazardous substance or pesticide. The
14             term  "residential  property"  means  single  family
15             residences of one to  4  dwelling  units,  including
16             accessory    land,    buildings,   or   improvements
17             incidental to those dwellings that  are  exclusively
18             used  for  the residential use. For purposes of this
19             subparagraph (F),  the  term  "individual"  means  a
20             natural  person, and shall not include corporations,
21             partnerships, trusts, or other non-natural persons.
22                  (G)  In the case  of  any  facility,  title  or
23             control  of  which  was  conveyed due to bankruptcy,
24             foreclosure,  tax   delinquency,   abandonment,   or
25             similar   means   to   a  unit  of  State  or  local
26             government,  any  person  who  owned,  operated,  or
27             otherwise  controlled  activities  at  the  facility
28             immediately beforehand.
29                  (H)  The term  "owner  or  operator"  does  not
30             include  a  unit  of State or local government which
31             acquired ownership or  control  through  bankruptcy,
32             tax delinquency, abandonment, or other circumstances
33             in  which the government acquires title by virtue of
34             its function as sovereign.  The  exclusion  provided
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -116-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             under this paragraph shall not apply to any State or
 2             local  government which has caused or contributed to
 3             the release or threatened  release  of  a  hazardous
 4             substance  from  the  facility,  and such a State or
 5             local government shall be subject to the  provisions
 6             of  this  Act  in  the  same  manner and to the same
 7             extent, both procedurally and substantively, as  any
 8             nongovernmental  entity,  including  liability under
 9             Section 22.2(f).
10        (i)  The costs and damages provided for in  this  Section
11    may  be  imposed by the Board in an action brought before the
12    Board in accordance with Title VIII of this Act, except  that
13    Section 33(c) of this Act shall not apply to any such action.
14        (j) (1)  There  shall  be no liability under this Section
15    for  a  person  otherwise  liable  who  can  establish  by  a
16    preponderance of the evidence that the release or substantial
17    threat of release of a hazardous substance  and  the  damages
18    resulting therefrom were caused solely by:
19             (A)  an act of God;
20             (B)  an act of war;
21             (C)  an  act or omission of a third party other than
22        an employee or agent of the defendant, or other than  one
23        whose  act  or  omission  occurs  in  connection  with  a
24        contractual    relationship,    existing    directly   or
25        indirectly, with the defendant  (except  where  the  sole
26        contractual  arrangement  arises  from a published tariff
27        and acceptance for carriage by a common carrier by rail),
28        if the defendant establishes by a  preponderance  of  the
29        evidence  that  (i) he exercised due care with respect to
30        the   hazardous   substance   concerned,   taking    into
31        consideration   the  characteristics  of  such  hazardous
32        substance,  in  light   of   all   relevant   facts   and
33        circumstances,  and  (ii)  he  took  precautions  against
34        foreseeable acts or omissions of any such third party and
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -117-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        the  consequences that could foreseeably result from such
 2        acts or omissions; or
 3             (D)  any combination of the foregoing paragraphs.
 4        (2)  There shall be no liability under this  Section  for
 5    any release permitted by State or federal law.
 6        (3)  There  shall  be no liability under this Section for
 7    damages as a result of actions taken or omitted in the course
 8    of rendering care, assistance, or advice in  accordance  with
 9    this Section or the National Contingency Plan pursuant to the
10    Comprehensive   Environmental   Response,   Compensation  and
11    Liability Act of 1980 (P.L. 96-510) or at the direction of an
12    on-scene coordinator appointed under such plan, with  respect
13    to  an incident creating a danger to public health or welfare
14    or the environment as a result of any release of a  hazardous
15    substance  or  a substantial threat thereof.  This subsection
16    shall not preclude liability for damages  as  the  result  of
17    gross  negligence  or  intentional  misconduct on the part of
18    such person.  For the purposes  of  the  preceding  sentence,
19    reckless,  willful,  or  wanton  misconduct  shall constitute
20    gross negligence.
21        (4)  There shall be no liability under this  Section  for
22    any  person  (including,  but  not  limited  to,  an owner of
23    residential  property  who  applies  a   pesticide   to   the
24    residential  property  or  who  has  another  person  apply a
25    pesticide to the residential property) for response costs  or
26    damages  as  the  result of the storage, handling and use, or
27    recommendation for storage, handling and use, of a  pesticide
28    consistent with:
29             (A)  its directions for storage, handling and use as
30        stated in its label or labeling;
31             (B)  its  warnings  and  cautions  as  stated in its
32        label or labeling; and
33             (C)  the uses for which it is registered  under  the
34        Federal  Insecticide,  Fungicide  and Rodenticide Act and
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -118-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        the Illinois Pesticide Act.
 2        (4.5)  There shall  be  no  liability  under  subdivision
 3    (f)(1)  of  this Section for response costs or damages as the
 4    result of a release  of  a  pesticide  from  an  agrichemical
 5    facility  site  if  the  Agency  has received notice from the
 6    Department of Agriculture pursuant to  Section  19.3  of  the
 7    Illinois   Pesticide  Act,  the  owner  or  operator  of  the
 8    agrichemical facility is proceeding with a corrective  action
 9    plan  under the Agrichemical Facility Response Action Program
10    implemented under that Section, and the Agency has provided a
11    written endorsement of a corrective action plan.
12        (4.6)  There shall  be  no  liability  under  subdivision
13    (f)(1)  of  this Section for response costs or damages as the
14    result of a substantial threat of a release  of  a  pesticide
15    from an agrichemical facility site if the Agency has received
16    notice from the Department of Agriculture pursuant to Section
17    19.3  of the Illinois Pesticide Act and the owner or operator
18    of the agrichemical facility is proceeding with a  corrective
19    action  plan  under the Agrichemical Facility Response Action
20    Program implemented under that Section.
21        (5)  Nothing in  this  subsection  (j)  shall  affect  or
22    modify  in any way the obligations or liability of any person
23    under any other provision of this Act  or  State  or  federal
24    law,  including  common  law,  for  damages,  injury, or loss
25    resulting from a release or substantial threat of  a  release
26    of  any hazardous substance or for removal or remedial action
27    or the costs of removal or remedial action of such  hazardous
28    substance.
29        (6)(A)  The  term  "contractual  relationship",  for  the
30    purpose  of  this subsection includes, but is not limited to,
31    land contracts, deeds or other instruments transferring title
32    or possession, unless the real property on which the facility
33    concerned is located was acquired by the defendant after  the
34    disposal  or  placement of the hazardous substance on, in, or
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -119-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    at the  facility,  and  one  or  more  of  the  circumstances
 2    described  in clause (i), (ii), or (iii) of this paragraph is
 3    also established by the defendant by a preponderance  of  the
 4    evidence:
 5             (i)  At the time the defendant acquired the facility
 6        the defendant did not know and had no reason to know that
 7        any  hazardous  substance  which  is  the  subject of the
 8        release or threatened release was disposed of on,  in  or
 9        at the facility.
10             (ii)  The  defendant  is  a  government entity which
11        acquired the facility by escheat, or  through  any  other
12        involuntary  transfer  or  acquisition,  or  through  the
13        exercise  of  eminent  domain  authority  by  purchase or
14        condemnation.
15             (iii)  The  defendant  acquired  the   facility   by
16        inheritance or bequest.
17        In  addition to establishing the foregoing, the defendant
18    must establish that he  has  satisfied  the  requirements  of
19    subparagraph (C) of paragraph (l) of this subsection (j).
20        (B)  To establish the defendant had no reason to know, as
21    provided in clause (i) of subparagraph (A) of this paragraph,
22    the   defendant   must   have  undertaken,  at  the  time  of
23    acquisition,  all  appropriate  inquiry  into  the   previous
24    ownership  and  uses  of  the  property  consistent with good
25    commercial or customary practice in  an  effort  to  minimize
26    liability.  For purposes of the preceding sentence, the court
27    shall   take   into  account  any  specialized  knowledge  or
28    experience on the part of the defendant, the relationship  of
29    the   purchase   price  to  the  value  of  the  property  if
30    uncontaminated, commonly known  or  reasonably  ascertainable
31    information  about  the  property,  the  obviousness  of  the
32    presence or likely presence of contamination at the property,
33    and  the  ability to detect such contamination by appropriate
34    inspection.
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -120-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        (C)  Nothing in this paragraph (6) or in subparagraph (C)
 2    of paragraph  (1)  of  this  subsection  shall  diminish  the
 3    liability  of any previous owner or operator of such facility
 4    who would otherwise be liable under this Act. Notwithstanding
 5    this  paragraph  (6),  if  the  defendant   obtained   actual
 6    knowledge of the release or threatened release of a hazardous
 7    substance  at such facility when the defendant owned the real
 8    property and then subsequently transferred ownership  of  the
 9    property to another person without disclosing such knowledge,
10    such  defendant  shall  be treated as liable under subsection
11    (f) of this Section and no defense under subparagraph (C)  of
12    paragraph  (1)  of this subsection shall be available to such
13    defendant.
14        (D)  Nothing in  this  paragraph  (6)  shall  affect  the
15    liability  under  this  Act of a defendant who, by any act or
16    omission, caused or contributed to the release or  threatened
17    release  of a hazardous substance which is the subject of the
18    action relating to the facility.
19        (E) (i)  Except  as  provided  in  clause  (ii)  of  this
20    subparagraph (E), a defendant who has acquired real  property
21    shall  have  established a rebuttable presumption against all
22    State claims and a conclusive presumption against all private
23    party claims that the  defendant  has  made  all  appropriate
24    inquiry  within  the  meaning  of  subdivision (6)(B) of this
25    subsection (j) if the defendant proves that immediately prior
26    to or at the time of the acquisition:
27             (I)  the defendant obtained a Phase I  Environmental
28        Audit  of  the  real  property  that meets or exceeds the
29        requirements of this subparagraph (E), and  the  Phase  I
30        Environmental  Audit  did  not  disclose  the presence or
31        likely presence of a release or a substantial threat of a
32        release of a hazardous substance or pesticide at, on, to,
33        or from the real property; or
34             (II)  the   defendant   obtained    a    Phase    II
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -121-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        Environmental  Audit  of  the real property that meets or
 2        exceeds the requirements of this  subparagraph  (E),  and
 3        the  Phase  II  Environmental  Audit did not disclose the
 4        presence or likely presence of a release or a substantial
 5        threat of a release of a hazardous substance or pesticide
 6        at, on, to, or from the real property.
 7        (ii)  No presumption shall be created under clause (i) of
 8    this subparagraph (E), and a  defendant  shall  be  precluded
 9    from   demonstrating   that   the   defendant  has  made  all
10    appropriate inquiry within the meaning of subdivision  (6)(B)
11    of this subsection (j), if:
12             (I)  the defendant fails to obtain all Environmental
13        Audits  required  under this subparagraph (E) or any such
14        Environmental  Audit  fails  to  meet   or   exceed   the
15        requirements of this subparagraph (E);
16             (II)  a  Phase  I  Environmental Audit discloses the
17        presence or likely presence of a release or a substantial
18        threat of a release of a hazardous substance or pesticide
19        at, on, to, or from  real  property,  and  the  defendant
20        fails to obtain a Phase II Environmental Audit;
21             (III)  a  Phase II Environmental Audit discloses the
22        presence or likely presence of a release or a substantial
23        threat of a release of a hazardous substance or pesticide
24        at, on, to, or from the real property;
25             (IV)  the defendant  fails  to  maintain  a  written
26        compilation   and   explanatory  summary  report  of  the
27        information reviewed in the course of each  Environmental
28        Audit under this subparagraph (E); or
29             (V)  there   is  any  evidence  of  fraud,  material
30        concealment,  or  material   misrepresentation   by   the
31        defendant  of  environmental  conditions  or  of  related
32        information   discovered   during   the   course   of  an
33        Environmental Audit.
34        (iii)  For purposes of this subparagraph  (E),  the  term
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -122-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    "environmental  professional" means an individual (other than
 2    a  practicing  attorney)  who,  through  academic   training,
 3    occupational  experience,  and reputation (such as engineers,
 4    industrial hygienists, or geologists) can objectively conduct
 5    one or more aspects of an Environmental Audit and who either:
 6             (I)  maintains at  the  time  of  the  Environmental
 7        Audit  and  for  at  least  one  year thereafter at least
 8        $500,000  of  environmental   consultants'   professional
 9        liability  insurance  coverage  issued  by  an  insurance
10        company licensed to do business in Illinois; or
11             (II)  is  an Illinois licensed professional engineer
12        or an Illinois licensed industrial hygienist.
13        An environmental professional may employ persons who  are
14    not  environmental professionals to assist in the preparation
15    of an Environmental Audit  if  such  persons  are  under  the
16    direct   supervision   and   control   of  the  environmental
17    professional.
18        (iv)  For purposes of this  subparagraph  (E),  the  term
19    "real property" means any interest in any parcel of land, and
20    shall  not  be  limited  to  the definition of the term "real
21    property" contained in the Responsible Property Transfer  Act
22    of  1988.   For  purposes  of this subparagraph (E), the term
23    "real property" includes, but is not limited  to,  buildings,
24    fixtures, and improvements.
25        (v)  For  purposes  of  this  subparagraph  (E), the term
26    "Phase I Environmental Audit" means an investigation of  real
27    property,   conducted   by  environmental  professionals,  to
28    discover the presence or likely presence of a  release  or  a
29    substantial  threat  of a release of a hazardous substance or
30    pesticide at, on, to, or from real property,  and  whether  a
31    release  or  a substantial threat of a release of a hazardous
32    substance or pesticide has occurred or may occur at, on,  to,
33    or from the real property.  The investigation shall include a
34    review   of  at  least  each  of  the  following  sources  of
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -123-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    information concerning the current and previous ownership and
 2    use of the real property:
 3             (I)  Recorded chain of title documents regarding the
 4        real property, including all  deeds,  easements,  leases,
 5        restrictions, and covenants for a period of 50 years.
 6             (II)  Aerial photographs that may reflect prior uses
 7        of  the  real property and that are reasonably obtainable
 8        through State, federal, or local government  agencies  or
 9        bodies.
10             (III)  Recorded environmental cleanup liens, if any,
11        against  the  real  property that have arisen pursuant to
12        this Act or federal statutes.
13             (IV)  Reasonably  obtainable  State,  federal,   and
14        local  government  records of sites or facilities at, on,
15        or near the real property to  discover  the  presence  or
16        likely  presence  of  a hazardous substance or pesticide,
17        and whether a  release  or  a  substantial  threat  of  a
18        release   of  a  hazardous  substance  or  pesticide  has
19        occurred or may occur  at,  on,  to,  or  from  the  real
20        property.  Such government records shall include, but not
21        be limited to:  reasonably obtainable State, federal, and
22        local government investigation reports for those sites or
23        facilities;  reasonably  obtainable  State,  federal, and
24        local government records of activities likely to cause or
25        contribute to a release or  a  threatened  release  of  a
26        hazardous  substance or pesticide at, on, to, or from the
27        real property, including landfill  and  other  treatment,
28        storage,   and  disposal  location  records,  underground
29        storage tank records,  hazardous  waste  transporter  and
30        generator records, and spill reporting records; and other
31        reasonably   obtainable   State,   federal,   and   local
32        government environmental records that report incidents or
33        activities  that  are  likely to cause or contribute to a
34        release or a threatened release of a hazardous  substance
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -124-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        or  pesticide  at, on, to, or from the real property.  In
 2        order to be deemed "reasonably  obtainable"  as  required
 3        herein, a copy or reasonable facsimile of the record must
 4        be  obtainable  from the government agency by request and
 5        upon payment of a processing fee, if any, established  by
 6        the  government  agency.   The  Agency  is  authorized to
 7        establish  a  reasonable  fee  for  processing   requests
 8        received  under  this  subparagraph (E) for records.  All
 9        fees collected by the Agency under  this  clause  (v)(IV)
10        shall  be  deposited  into  the  Environmental Protection
11        Permit and Inspection Fund  in  accordance  with  Section
12        22.8.
13             Notwithstanding  any  other law, if the fee is paid,
14        commencing on the effective date of this  amendatory  Act
15        of  1993  and  until one year after the effective date of
16        this amendatory Act of 1993, the  Agency  shall  use  its
17        best  efforts  to  process  a request received under this
18        subparagraph   (E)   as   expeditiously   as    possible.
19        Notwithstanding  any other law, commencing one year after
20        the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1993, if the
21        fee is paid, the Agency shall process a request  received
22        under this subparagraph (E) for records within 30 days of
23        the receipt of such request.
24             (V)  A  visual  site inspection of the real property
25        and all facilities and improvements on the real  property
26        and   a   visual  inspection  of  properties  immediately
27        adjacent to the real property, including an investigation
28        of any use,  storage,  treatment,  spills  from  use,  or
29        disposal of hazardous substances, hazardous wastes, solid
30        wastes,  or  pesticides.   If  the  person conducting the
31        investigation is denied access to any  property  adjacent
32        to  the  real property, the person shall conduct a visual
33        inspection of that adjacent property from the property to
34        which  the  person  does  have  access  and  from  public
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -125-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        rights-of-way.
 2             (VI)  A review of business records for activities at
 3        or on the real property for a period of 50 years.
 4        (vi)  For purposes of subparagraph (E), the  term  "Phase
 5    II  Environmental  Audit"  means  an  investigation  of  real
 6    property,    conducted    by   environmental   professionals,
 7    subsequent to a Phase I Environmental Audit.  If the Phase  I
 8    Environmental Audit discloses the presence or likely presence
 9    of  a  hazardous  substance  or a pesticide or a release or a
10    substantial threat of a release of a hazardous  substance  or
11    pesticide:
12             (I)  In  or  to  soil, the defendant, as part of the
13        Phase II Environmental Audit, shall perform a  series  of
14        soil  borings  sufficient to determine whether there is a
15        presence or likely presence of a hazardous  substance  or
16        pesticide and whether there is or has been a release or a
17        substantial  threat of a release of a hazardous substance
18        or pesticide at, on, to, or from the real property.
19             (II)  In or to groundwater, the defendant,  as  part
20        of  the  Phase  II  Environmental  Audit,  shall:  review
21        information   regarding   local   geology,   water   well
22        locations, and locations of waters of the State as may be
23        obtained   from  State,  federal,  and  local  government
24        records, including but not limited to the  United  States
25        Geological  Service, the State Geological Survey Division
26        of the Department of Natural  Resources,  and  the  State
27        Water  Survey  Division  of  the  Department  of  Natural
28        Resources;  and perform groundwater monitoring sufficient
29        to determine  whether  there  is  a  presence  or  likely
30        presence  of  a  hazardous  substance  or  pesticide, and
31        whether there is or has been a release or  a  substantial
32        threat of a release of a hazardous substance or pesticide
33        at, on, to, or from the real property.
34             (III)  On   or   to   media   other   than  soil  or
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -126-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        groundwater, the defendant,  as  part  of  the  Phase  II
 2        Environmental   Audit,  shall  perform  an  investigation
 3        sufficient to determine whether there is  a  presence  or
 4        likely  presence  of  a hazardous substance or pesticide,
 5        and  whether  there  is  or  has  been  a  release  or  a
 6        substantial threat of a release of a hazardous  substance
 7        or pesticide at, on, to, or from the real property.
 8        (vii)  The  findings of each Environmental Audit prepared
 9    under this subparagraph (E) shall be set forth in  a  written
10    audit report.  Each audit report shall contain an affirmation
11    by  the  defendant and by each environmental professional who
12    prepared the Environmental Audit that the facts stated in the
13    report are true and are made under a penalty  of  perjury  as
14    defined  in Section 32-2 of the Criminal Code of 1961.  It is
15    perjury for any person to sign an audit report that  contains
16    a  false  material statement that the person does not believe
17    to be true.
18        (viii)  The Agency is not required to review, approve, or
19    certify  the  results  of  any  Environmental   Audit.    The
20    performance of an Environmental Audit shall in no way entitle
21    a   defendant   to   a  presumption  of  Agency  approval  or
22    certification of the results of the Environmental Audit.
23        The presence or absence of a disclosure document prepared
24    under the Responsible Property Transfer Act of 1988 shall not
25    be a defense  under  this  Act  and  shall  not  satisfy  the
26    requirements of subdivision (6)(A) of this subsection (j).
27        (7)  No  person  shall  be  liable under this Section for
28    response costs or  damages  as  the  result  of  a  pesticide
29    release  if  the  Agency  has  found that a pesticide release
30    occurred based on  a  Health  Advisory  issued  by  the  U.S.
31    Environmental  Protection Agency or an action level developed
32    by the Agency, unless the Agency notified the manufacturer of
33    the pesticide and provided an opportunity of not less than 30
34    days for the manufacturer to comment  on  the  technical  and
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -127-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    scientific  justification  supporting  the Health Advisory or
 2    action level.
 3        (8)  No person shall be liable  under  this  Section  for
 4    response  costs  or  damages  as  the  result  of a pesticide
 5    release that  occurs  in  the  course  of  a  farm  pesticide
 6    collection   program  operated  under  Section  19.1  of  the
 7    Illinois Pesticide Act, unless the release results from gross
 8    negligence or intentional misconduct.
 9        (k)  If any  person  who  is  liable  for  a  release  or
10    substantial  threat  of  release  of a hazardous substance or
11    pesticide fails without sufficient cause to  provide  removal
12    or  remedial  action  upon or in accordance with a notice and
13    request by the Agency or upon or in accordance with any order
14    of the Board or any court, such person may be liable  to  the
15    State  for  punitive  damages in an amount at least equal to,
16    and not more than 3 times, the amount of any  costs  incurred
17    by  the State of Illinois as a result of such failure to take
18    such  removal  or  remedial  action.   The  punitive  damages
19    imposed by the Board  shall  be  in  addition  to  any  costs
20    recovered  from  such  person pursuant to this Section and in
21    addition to any other penalty or relief provided by this  Act
22    or any other law.
23        Any  monies  received  by  the  State  pursuant  to  this
24    subsection  (k)  shall  be  deposited  in the Hazardous Waste
25    Fund.
26        (l)  Beginning January 1, 1988, the Agency shall annually
27    collect a $250 fee for  each  Special  Waste  Hauling  Permit
28    Application  and, in addition, shall collect a fee of $20 for
29    each waste hauling vehicle identified in  the  annual  permit
30    application and for each vehicle which is added to the permit
31    during  the  annual  period.  The Agency shall deposit 85% of
32    such fees  collected  under  this  subsection  in  the  State
33    Treasury  to the credit of the Hazardous Waste Research Fund;
34    and shall deposit the remaining 15% of such fees collected in
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -128-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    the  State  Treasury  to  the  credit  of  the  Environmental
 2    Protection Permit and Inspection Fund.  The majority of  such
 3    receipts  which are deposited in the Hazardous Waste Research
 4    Fund pursuant  to  this  subsection  shall  be  used  by  the
 5    Department  of  Natural Resources for activities which relate
 6    to the protection of underground waters. Persons  engaged  in
 7    the  offsite transportation of hazardous waste by highway and
 8    participating in the Uniform Program under  subsection  (l-5)
 9    are  not  required  to  file  a  Special Waste Hauling Permit
10    Application.
11        (l-5) (1)  As used in this subsection:
12             "Base  state"  means  the  state   selected   by   a
13        transporter according to the procedures established under
14        the Uniform Program.
15             "Base  state  agreement"  means an agreement between
16        participating  states  electing  to  register  or  permit
17        transporters.
18             "Participating state"  means  a  state  electing  to
19        participate  in  the  Uniform  Program by entering into a
20        base state agreement.
21             "Transporter" means a person engaged in the  offsite
22        transportation of hazardous waste by highway.
23             "Uniform application" means the uniform registration
24        and  permit application form prescribed under the Uniform
25        Program.
26             "Uniform Program" means the Uniform State  Hazardous
27        Materials  Transportation Registration and Permit Program
28        established in the report submitted and amended  pursuant
29        to  49  U.S.C.  Section  5119(b),  as  implemented by the
30        Agency under this subsection.
31             "Vehicle" means any  self-propelled  motor  vehicle,
32        except  a  truck  tractor  without a trailer, designed or
33        used for the transportation of hazardous waste subject to
34        the hazardous waste manifesting requirements of 40 U.S.C.
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -129-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        Section 6923(a)(3).
 2             (2)  Beginning  July  1,  1998,  the  Agency   shall
 3        implement   the   Uniform   State   Hazardous   Materials
 4        Transportation  Registration  and  Permit Program. On and
 5        after that date, no person shall engage  in  the  offsite
 6        transportation  of  hazardous  waste  by  highway without
 7        registering and obtaining  a  permit  under  the  Uniform
 8        Program.  A  transporter  with  its  principal  place  of
 9        business  in  Illinois  shall  register with and obtain a
10        permit from the Agency.  A  transporter  that  designates
11        another participating state in the Uniform Program as its
12        base  state  shall  likewise  register  with and obtain a
13        permit from  that  state  before  transporting  hazardous
14        waste in Illinois.
15             (3)  Beginning   July  1,  1998,  the  Agency  shall
16        annually collect no more than a $250 processing and audit
17        fee from each transporter  of  hazardous  waste  who  has
18        filed  a uniform application and, in addition, the Agency
19        shall   annually   collect   an    apportioned    vehicle
20        registration  fee  of  $20. The amount of the apportioned
21        vehicle registration fee shall be  calculated  consistent
22        with   the   procedures  established  under  the  Uniform
23        Program.
24             All  moneys  received  by  the   Agency   from   the
25        collection  of fees pursuant to the Uniform Program shall
26        be deposited into the Hazardous Waste Transporter account
27        hereby created within the Environmental Protection Permit
28        and Inspection Fund.   Moneys remaining in the account at
29        the close of the fiscal  year  shall  not  lapse  to  the
30        General  Revenue  Fund.   The State Treasurer may receive
31        money or other assets from any source  for  deposit  into
32        the  account.   The  Agency  may  expend  moneys from the
33        account, upon appropriation, for  the  implementation  of
34        the Uniform Program, including the costs to the Agency of
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -130-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        fee  collection  and  administration.  In addition, funds
 2        not  expended  for  the  implementation  of  the  Uniform
 3        Program  may  be  utilized  for  emergency  response  and
 4        cleanup   activities   related   to    hazardous    waste
 5        transportation that are initiated by the Agency.
 6             Whenever   the   amount   of   the  Hazardous  Waste
 7    Transporter account  exceeds  by  115%  the  amount  annually
 8    appropriated by the General Assembly, the Agency shall credit
 9    participating  transporters  an amount, proportionately based
10    on the amount of the vehicle fee paid, equal to the excess in
11    the account, and shall  determine  the  need  to  reduce  the
12    amount  of  the  fee  charged  transporters in the subsequent
13    fiscal year by the amount of the credit.
14             (4) (A)  The Agency may propose and the Board  shall
15        adopt  rules  as  necessary  to implement and enforce the
16        Uniform Program.  The Agency is authorized to enter  into
17        agreements with other agencies of this State as necessary
18        to  carry  out administrative functions or enforcement of
19        the Uniform Program.
20             (B)  The Agency shall recognize  a  Uniform  Program
21        registration as valid for one year from the date a notice
22        of  registration form is issued and a permit as valid for
23        3 years from the date issued or until a transporter fails
24        to renew its registration, whichever occurs first.
25             (C)  The Agency may inspect  or  examine  any  motor
26        vehicle  or facility operated by a transporter, including
27        papers, books, records, documents, or other materials  to
28        determine  if a transporter is complying with the Uniform
29        Program.  The Agency may also conduct investigations  and
30        audits  as  necessary  to  determine  if a transporter is
31        entitled to a permit or to make suspension or  revocation
32        determinations  consistent  with  the  standards  of  the
33        Uniform Program.
34             (5)  The  Agency  may  enter  into  agreements  with
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -131-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        federal   agencies,   national   repositories,  or  other
 2        participating  states  as  necessary  to  allow  for  the
 3        reciprocal registration and  permitting  of  transporters
 4        pursuant  to  the  Uniform  Program.   The agreements may
 5        include procedures for  determining  a  base  state,  the
 6        collection and distribution of registration fees, dispute
 7        resolution, the exchange of information for reporting and
 8        enforcement  purposes,  and other provisions necessary to
 9        fully implement,  administer,  and  enforce  the  Uniform
10        Program.
11        (m)  (Blank).
12        (n)  (Blank).
13    (Source:  P.A.  90-14,  eff.  7-1-97;  90-219,  eff. 7-25-97;
14    90-773, eff. 8-14-98; 91-36, eff. 6-15-99.)

15        (415 ILCS 5/22.2b)
16        Sec. 22.2b. Limit of liability for prospective purchasers
17    of real property.
18        (a)  The  State  of  Illinois  may  grant  a  release  of
19    liability that provides that  a  person  is  not  potentially
20    liable under subsection (f) of Section  22.2 of this Act as a
21    result  of  a  release or a threatened release of a hazardous
22    substance or pesticide if:
23             (1)  the person performs  the  response  actions  to
24        remove or remedy all releases or threatened releases of a
25        hazardous substance or pesticide at an identified area or
26        at  identified areas of the property in accordance with a
27        response action plan approved by the  Agency  under  this
28        Section;
29             (2)  the  person did not cause, allow, or contribute
30        to the release  or  threatened  release  of  a  hazardous
31        substance or pesticide through any act or omission;
32             (3)  the  person  requests,  in  writing,  that  the
33        Agency  provide  review  and  evaluation  services  under
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -132-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        subsection (m) of Section 22.2 of this Act and the Agency
 2        agrees to provide the review and evaluation services; and
 3             (4)  the   person  is  not  otherwise  liable  under
 4        subsection (f) of Section 22.2 under, and complies  with,
 5        regulations adopted by the Agency under subsection (e).
 6        (b)  The  Agency may approve a response action plan under
 7    this Section, including but not limited to a response  action
 8    plan  that  does  not  require  the  removal or remedy of all
 9    releases or threatened releases of  hazardous  substances  or
10    pesticides,  if  the  person  described  under subsection (a)
11    proves:
12             (1)  the response action will  prevent  or  mitigate
13        immediate  and significant risk of harm to human life and
14        health and the environment;
15             (2)  activities at  the  property  will  not  cause,
16        allow,   contribute  to,  or  aggravate  the  release  or
17        threatened release of a hazardous substance or pesticide;
18             (3)  due consideration has been given to the  effect
19        that  activities  at the property will have on the health
20        of those persons likely to be present at the property;
21             (4)  irrevocable access to the property is given  to
22        the State of Illinois and its authorized representatives;
23             (5)  the person is financially capable of performing
24        the proposed response action; and
25             (6)  the person complies with regulations adopted by
26        the Agency under subsection (e).
27        (c)  The  limit  of  liability  granted  by  the State of
28    Illinois under this Section does not apply to any person:
29             (1)  Who is potentially liable under subsection  (f)
30        of  Section  22.2 of this Act for any costs of removal or
31        remedial action incurred by the State of Illinois or  any
32        unit  of  local  government as a result of the release or
33        substantial threat of a release of a hazardous  substance
34        or  pesticide that was the subject of the response action
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -133-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        plan approved by the Agency under this Section.
 2             (2)  Who  agrees  to  perform  the  response  action
 3        contained in a  response  action  plan  approved  by  the
 4        Agency  under  this  Section  and  fails  to  perform  in
 5        accordance with the approved response action plan.
 6             (3)  Whose willful and wanton conduct contributes to
 7        a  release or threatened release of a hazardous substance
 8        or pesticide.
 9             (4)  Whose  negligent  conduct  contributes   to   a
10        release or threatened release of a hazardous substance or
11        pesticide.
12             (5)  Who  is  seeking  a construction or development
13        permit for a new municipal waste incinerator or other new
14        waste-to-energy facility.
15        (d)  If a release or threatened release  of  a  hazardous
16    substance  or  pesticide occurs within the area identified in
17    the response action plan approved by the  Agency  under  this
18    Section  and  such  release  or  threatened  release  is  not
19    specifically  identified in the response action plan, for any
20    person to whom this  Section  applies,  the  numeric  cleanup
21    level  established  by the Agency in the response action plan
22    shall also apply to the release  or  threatened  release  not
23    specifically  identified  in  the response action plan if the
24    response action plan has a  numeric  cleanup  level  for  the
25    hazardous substance or pesticide released or threatened to be
26    released.  Nothing  in  this  subsection  (d) shall limit the
27    authority of the Agency to require, for any  person  to  whom
28    this  Section  does  not  apply, a numeric cleanup level that
29    differs from the numeric cleanup  level  established  in  the
30    response  action  plan  approved  by  the  Agency  under this
31    Section.
32        (e)  The Agency may adopt regulations  relating  to  this
33    Section. The regulations may include, but are not limited to,
34    both of the following:
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -134-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             (1)  Requirements  and  procedures  for  a  response
 2        action plan.
 3             (2)  Additional requirements that a person must meet
 4        in order not to be liable under subsection (f) of Section
 5        22.2.
 6    (Source: P.A. 89-101, eff. 7-7-95; 90-655, eff. 7-30-98.)

 7        (415 ILCS 5/22.9) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.9)
 8        Sec. 22.9. Special waste determinations.
 9        (a)  (Blank.)  The  Department  shall complete a study of
10    the benefits and feasibility  of  establishing  a  system  of
11    classifying  and regulating special wastes according to their
12    degree of hazard.  Such study shall include, at a minimum, an
13    assessment of the degree  of  hazard  of  the  special  waste
14    streams  produced  in  the  State,  alternative  systems  for
15    classifying  these wastes according to their degree of hazard
16    and an evaluation of  the  benefits  of  assessing  hazardous
17    waste  fees  and  developing  storage, treatment and disposal
18    standards based on such classes of  wastes.   The  Department
19    shall  report  to  the Governor, the General Assembly and the
20    Pollution Control Board with the results  of  such  study  no
21    later than July 1, 1985.
22        (b)  Following  the completion of the Department's study,
23    but Not later than December 1, 1990,  the  Pollution  Control
24    Board  shall,  pursuant  to  Title  VII  of  the  Act,  adopt
25    regulations   that   establish  standards  and  criteria  for
26    classifying special wastes according to the degree of  hazard
27    or an alternative method.
28        (c)  The  Board  shall  adopt  regulations by December 1,
29    1990, establishing the standards and criteria  by  which  the
30    Agency  may determine upon written request by any person that
31    a waste or class of waste is not special waste.
32        (d)  (Blank.) Until such time as the regulations required
33    in subsection (c) of this Section are effective,  any  person
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -135-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    may  request  the  Agency  to determine that a waste is not a
 2    special waste.  Within  60  days  of  receipt  of  a  written
 3    request,  the  Agency shall make a final determination, which
 4    shall be based on whether the waste would pose a  present  or
 5    potential  threat to human health or to the environment or if
 6    such waste has inherent properties  which  make  disposal  of
 7    such waste in a landfill difficult to manage by normal means.
 8        (e)  (Blank.)   If  the  Agency  denies  a  request  made
 9    pursuant to subsection (c) or (d) of this Section or  if  the
10    Agency  fails  to  act  within  60 days after receipt of such
11    request, the requestor  may  seek  review  before  the  Board
12    pursuant  to  Section  40  as  if  the  Agency  had denied an
13    application for a permit.
14        (f)  The determinations to be made under  subsection  (c)
15    subsections  (c), (d) and (e) of this Section shall not apply
16    to hazardous waste.
17    (Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)

18        (415 ILCS 5/22.15) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.15)
19        Sec. 22.15.  Solid Waste Management Fund; fees.
20        (a)  There is hereby created within the State Treasury  a
21    special fund to be known as the "Solid Waste Management Fund"
22    constituted  from the fees collected by the State pursuant to
23    this Section and from repayments of loans made from the  Fund
24    for  solid waste projects.  Moneys received by the Department
25    of Commerce and Community Affairs in repayment of loans  made
26    pursuant  to the Illinois Solid Waste Management Act shall be
27    deposited into the  Solid  Waste  Management  Revolving  Loan
28    Fund.
29        (b)  On  and  after  January  1,  1987,  the Agency shall
30    assess and collect a fee in the amount set forth herein  from
31    the  owner or operator of each sanitary landfill permitted or
32    required to be permitted by the Agency to  dispose  of  solid
33    waste  if the sanitary landfill is located off the site where
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -136-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    such waste was produced and  if  such  sanitary  landfill  is
 2    owned,  controlled,  and  operated by a person other than the
 3    generator of such waste.  The Agency shall deposit  all  fees
 4    collected  into the Solid Waste Management Fund. If a site is
 5    contiguous to one or more landfills owned or operated by  the
 6    same  person,  the  volumes  permanently  disposed of by each
 7    landfill shall be combined for purposes  of  determining  the
 8    fee under this subsection.
 9             (1)  If   more   than   150,000   cubic   yards   of
10        non-hazardous solid waste is permanently disposed of at a
11        site  in  a  calendar  year,  the owner or operator shall
12        either pay a fee of 45 cents  per  cubic  yard  (60¢  per
13        cubic  yard  from  January  1,  1989 through December 31,
14        1993), or, alternatively, the owner or operator may weigh
15        the quantity of the solid waste permanently  disposed  of
16        with  a  device for which certification has been obtained
17        under the Weights and Measures Act and pay a  fee  of  95
18        cents per ton ($1.27 per ton from January 1, 1989 through
19        December  31,  1993)  of solid waste permanently disposed
20        of.  An owner or operator that is  subject  to  any  fee,
21        tax,   or   surcharge  imposed  under  the  authority  of
22        subsection (j) of this Section  on  September  26,  1991,
23        with  respect  to  fees  due  to  the  Agency  under this
24        paragraph after December 31, 1991 and before  January  1,
25        1994, shall deduct from the amount paid to the Agency the
26        amount by which the fee paid under subsection (j) exceeds
27        45  cents per cubic yard or 95 cents per ton.  In no case
28        shall the fee collected or paid by the owner or  operator
29        under this paragraph exceed $1.05 per cubic yard or $2.22
30        per ton.
31             (2)  If  more than 100,000 cubic yards, but not more
32        than  150,000  cubic  yards  of  non-hazardous  waste  is
33        permanently disposed of at a site in a calendar year, the
34        owner or operator shall pay a fee of $25,000 ($33,350  in
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -137-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        1989, 1990 and 1991).
 2             (3)  If  more  than 50,000 cubic yards, but not more
 3        than 100,000 cubic yards of non-hazardous solid waste  is
 4        permanently disposed of at a site in a calendar year, the
 5        owner  or operator shall pay a fee of $11,300 ($15,500 in
 6        1989, 1990 and 1991).
 7             (4)  If more than 10,000 cubic yards, but  not  more
 8        than  50,000  cubic yards of non-hazardous solid waste is
 9        permanently disposed of at a site in a calendar year, the
10        owner or operator shall pay a fee of  $3,450  ($4,650  in
11        1989, 1990 and 1991).
12             (5)  If   not   more  than  10,000  cubic  yards  of
13        non-hazardous solid waste is permanently disposed of at a
14        site in a calendar year, the owner or operator shall  pay
15        a fee of $500 ($650 in 1989, 1990 and 1991).
16        (c)  (Blank.)  From  January 1, 1987 through December 31,
17    1988, the fee set forth in this Section shall not apply to:
18             (1)  Solid waste which is hazardous waste;
19             (2)  Any landfill which is permitted by  the  Agency
20        to  receive  only  demolition  or  construction debris or
21        landscape waste; or
22             (3)  The following wastes:
23                  (A)  Foundry sand;
24                  (B)  Coal  combustion   by-product,   including
25             scrubber  waste and fluidized bed boiler waste which
26             does not contain metal cleaning waste;
27                  (C)  Slag from  the  manufacture  of  iron  and
28             steel;
29                  (D)  Pollution Control Waste;
30                  (E)  Wastes   from  recycling,  reclamation  or
31             reuse processes designed to remove  any  contaminant
32             from  wastes  so  as to render such wastes reusable,
33             provided that the process renders at  least  50%  of
34             the waste reusable;
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -138-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1                  (F)  Non-hazardous solid waste that is received
 2             at  a  sanitary  landfill  after January 1, 1987 and
 3             recycled through a process permitted by the Agency.
 4        (d)  The Agency shall establish  rules  relating  to  the
 5    collection  of  the  fees  authorized  by this Section.  Such
 6    rules shall include, but not be limited to:
 7             (1)  necessary records identifying the quantities of
 8        solid waste received or disposed;
 9             (2)  the form and submission of reports to accompany
10        the payment of fees to the Agency;
11             (3)  the time and manner of payment of fees  to  the
12        Agency,  which  payments  shall  not  be  more often than
13        quarterly; and
14             (4)  procedures setting forth criteria  establishing
15        when an owner or operator may measure by weight or volume
16        during any given quarter or other fee payment period.
17        (e)  Pursuant  to  appropriation, all monies in the Solid
18    Waste Management Fund shall be used by  the  Agency  and  the
19    Department of Commerce and Community Affairs for the purposes
20    set  forth  in  this  Section and in the Illinois Solid Waste
21    Management Act, including for the costs of fee collection and
22    administration, and through June 30, 1989, by the  University
23    of  Illinois  for research consistent with the Illinois Solid
24    Waste Management Act.
25        (f)  The  Agency  is  authorized  to  enter   into   such
26    agreements  and  to promulgate such rules as are necessary to
27    carry out its duties under  this  Section  and  the  Illinois
28    Solid Waste Management Act.
29        (g)  On  the  first  day  of  January,  April,  July, and
30    October of each year, beginning on July 1,  1996,  the  State
31    Comptroller  and  Treasurer  shall transfer $500,000 from the
32    Solid Waste Management Fund  to  the  Hazardous  Waste  Fund.
33    Moneys  transferred  under  this subsection (g) shall be used
34    only for the purposes set forth in item (1) of subsection (d)
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -139-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    of Section 22.2.
 2        (h)  The  Agency  is  authorized  to  provide   financial
 3    assistance  to  units of local government for the performance
 4    of  inspecting,  investigating  and  enforcement   activities
 5    pursuant to Section 4(r) at nonhazardous solid waste disposal
 6    sites.
 7        (i)  The  Agency  is authorized to support the operations
 8    of an industrial materials exchange service, and  to  conduct
 9    household waste collection and disposal programs.
10        (j)  A  unit of local government, as defined in the Local
11    Solid Waste Disposal Act, in which  a  solid  waste  disposal
12    facility  is  located  may establish a fee, tax, or surcharge
13    with regard to the permanent disposal of solid  waste.    All
14    fees,  taxes,  and surcharges collected under this subsection
15    shall  be  utilized  for  solid  waste  management  purposes,
16    including long-term monitoring and maintenance of  landfills,
17    planning,  implementation,  inspection, enforcement and other
18    activities consistent with the Solid Waste Management Act and
19    the  Local  Solid  Waste  Disposal  Act,  or  for  any  other
20    environment-related purpose, including but not limited to  an
21    environment-related  public  works  project,  but not for the
22    construction of a new pollution control facility other than a
23    household hazardous waste facility.  However, the total  fee,
24    tax  or  surcharge  imposed  by all units of local government
25    under this subsection  (j)  upon  the  solid  waste  disposal
26    facility shall not exceed:
27             (1)  45¢   per   cubic  yard  (60¢  per  cubic  yard
28        beginning January 1, 1992) if  more  than  150,000  cubic
29        yards   of   non-hazardous  solid  waste  is  permanently
30        disposed of at the site in a calendar  year,  unless  the
31        owner  or operator weighs the quantity of the solid waste
32        received with a device for which certification  has  been
33        obtained  under  the  Weights  and Measures Act, in which
34        case the fee shall not exceed 95¢ per ton ($1.27 per  ton
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -140-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        beginning  January  1,  1992)  of solid waste permanently
 2        disposed of.
 3             (2)  $25,000 ($33,350 beginning  in  1992)  if  more
 4        than 100,000 cubic yards, but not more than 150,000 cubic
 5        yards,  of non-hazardous waste is permanently disposed of
 6        at the site in a calendar year.
 7             (3)  $11,300 ($15,500 beginning  in  1992)  if  more
 8        than  50,000 cubic yards, but not more than 100,000 cubic
 9        yards,  of  non-hazardous  solid  waste  is   permanently
10        disposed of at the site in a calendar year.
11             (4)  $3,450  ($4,650 beginning in 1992) if more than
12        10,000 cubic yards, but not more than 50,000 cubic yards,
13        of non-hazardous solid waste is permanently  disposed  of
14        at the site in a calendar year.
15             (5)  $500  ($650 beginning in 1992) if not more than
16        10,000  cubic  yards  of  non-hazardous  solid  waste  is
17        permanently disposed of at the site in a calendar year.
18        The corporate authorities of the unit of local government
19    may use proceeds from the fee, tax, or surcharge to reimburse
20    a highway commissioner whose road  district  lies  wholly  or
21    partially  within  the  corporate limits of the unit of local
22    government  for  expenses  incurred   in   the   removal   of
23    nonhazardous,  nonfluid  municipal waste that has been dumped
24    on public property in violation  of  a  State  law  or  local
25    ordinance.
26        A  county or Municipal Joint Action Agency that imposes a
27    fee, tax, or surcharge under  this  subsection  may  use  the
28    proceeds thereof to reimburse a municipality that lies wholly
29    or  partially  within its boundaries for expenses incurred in
30    the removal of nonhazardous, nonfluid  municipal  waste  that
31    has  been  dumped  on public property in violation of a State
32    law or local ordinance.
33        If the fees are to be used to conduct  a  local  sanitary
34    landfill inspection or enforcement program, the unit of local
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -141-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    government  must  enter  into  a written delegation agreement
 2    with the Agency pursuant to subsection (r) of Section 4.  The
 3    unit of local government and the Agency shall enter into such
 4    a written delegation  agreement  within  60  days  after  the
 5    establishment  of such fees. or August 23, 1988, whichever is
 6    later.  For the year commencing  January  1,  1989,  and   At
 7    least  annually thereafter, the Agency shall conduct an audit
 8    of the expenditures made by units of  local  government  from
 9    the  funds  granted  by  the  Agency  to  the  units of local
10    government for purposes of local sanitary landfill inspection
11    and enforcement programs, to ensure that the funds have  been
12    expended for the prescribed purposes under the grant.
13        The  fees,  taxes  or  surcharges  collected  under  this
14    subsection   (j)  shall  be  placed  by  the  unit  of  local
15    government in a separate fund, and the interest  received  on
16    the  moneys  in  the  fund shall be credited to the fund. The
17    monies in the fund may be accumulated over a period of  years
18    to be expended in accordance with this subsection.
19        A unit of local government, as defined in the Local Solid
20    Waste  Disposal  Act,  shall  prepare  and  distribute to the
21    Agency, in April of each year, a report that details spending
22    plans  for  monies  collected   in   accordance   with   this
23    subsection.   The  report  will  at  a  minimum  include  the
24    following:
25             (1)  The  total  monies  collected  pursuant to this
26        subsection.
27             (2)  The most current balance  of  monies  collected
28        pursuant to this subsection.
29             (3)  An  itemized  accounting of all monies expended
30        for the previous year pursuant to this subsection.
31             (4)  An estimation of monies to be collected for the
32        following 3 years pursuant to this subsection.
33             (5)  A narrative detailing the general direction and
34        scope of future expenditures for one, 2 and 3 years.
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -142-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        The exemptions granted under Sections 22.16  and  22.16a,
 2    and  under  subsections (c) and (k) of this Section, shall be
 3    applicable to any fee, tax or surcharge  imposed  under  this
 4    subsection  (j);  except  that  the  fee,  tax  or  surcharge
 5    authorized  to  be  imposed  under this subsection (j) may be
 6    made  applicable  by  a  unit  of  local  government  to  the
 7    permanent disposal of solid waste after  December  31,  1986,
 8    under  any  contract  lawfully  executed  before June 1, 1986
 9    under which more than 150,000 cubic yards (or 50,000 tons) of
10    solid waste is to be permanently disposed of, even though the
11    waste is exempt from the  fee  imposed  by  the  State  under
12    subsection  (b)  of  this  Section  pursuant  to an exemption
13    granted under Section 22.16.
14        (k)  In accordance with the findings and purposes of  the
15    Illinois  Solid  Waste  Management  Act, beginning January 1,
16    1989 the fee  under  subsection  (b)  and  the  fee,  tax  or
17    surcharge under subsection (j) shall not apply to:
18             (1)  Waste which is hazardous waste; or
19             (2)  Waste which is pollution control waste; or
20             (3)  Waste  from  recycling,  reclamation  or  reuse
21        processes which have been approved by the Agency as being
22        designed  to  remove any contaminant from wastes so as to
23        render such wastes reusable, provided  that  the  process
24        renders at least 50% of the waste reusable; or
25             (4)  Non-hazardous solid waste that is received at a
26        sanitary  landfill  and  composted  or recycled through a
27        process permitted by the Agency; or
28             (5)  Any landfill which is permitted by  the  Agency
29        to  receive  only  demolition  or  construction debris or
30        landscape waste.
31    (Source: P.A.  89-93,  eff.  7-6-95;  89-443,  eff.   7-1-96;
32    89-445,   eff.  2-7-96;  90-14,  eff.  7-1-97;  90-475,  eff.
33    8-17-97.)
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -143-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        (415 ILCS 5/22.16) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.16)
 2        Sec. 22.16. Fee exemptions.
 3        (a)  The Agency  shall  grant  exemptions  from  the  fee
 4    requirements  of  Section  22.15  of  this  Act for permanent
 5    disposal or transport of  solid  waste  meeting  all  of  the
 6    following criteria:
 7             (1)  permanent   disposal  of  the  solid  waste  is
 8        pursuant to a  written  contract  between  the  owner  or
 9        operator  of the sanitary landfill and some other person,
10        or transport of the solid waste is pursuant to a  written
11        contract between the transporter and some other person;
12             (2)  the   contract   for   permanent   disposal  or
13        transport of solid waste  was  lawfully  executed  on  or
14        before  December  31,  1986,  and  by  its  express terms
15        continues  beyond  January  1,  1987,  or  was   lawfully
16        executed  during  1987  or  1988 and by its express terms
17        continues beyond January 1, 1989;
18             (3)  the  contract   for   permanent   disposal   or
19        transport  of  solid  waste  establishes  a  fixed fee or
20        compensation, does not allow the operator or  transporter
21        to  pass  the  fee through to another party, and does not
22        allow voluntary cancellation  or  re-negotiation  of  the
23        compensation or fee during the term of the contract; and
24             (4)  the contract was lawfully executed on or before
25        December  31,  1986  and has not been amended at any time
26        after that date, or was lawfully executed during 1987  or
27        1988  and  has  not  been  amended on or after January 1,
28        1989.
29        (b)  Exemptions granted under this  Section  shall  cause
30    the  solid  waste  received  by  an  owner  or  operator of a
31    sanitary landfill pursuant to a contract exempted under  this
32    Section to be disregarded in calculating the volume or weight
33    of solid waste permanently disposed of during a calendar year
34    under Section 22.15 of this Act.
 
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 1        (c)  (Blank.)  Applications  for  exemptions  under  this
 2    Section  may  be  granted  retroactively.    Applications for
 3    retroactive or prospective exemptions must be submitted  with
 4    proof  of  satisfaction  of  all  criteria  for  granting the
 5    exemption, and must be received by the Agency before March 1,
 6    1989.
 7        (d)  It shall be the duty of an owner or  operator  of  a
 8    sanitary  landfill  to  keep accurate records and to prove to
 9    the satisfaction of the Agency the volume or weight of  solid
10    waste received under an exemption during a calendar year.
11        (e)  Exemptions  under this Section shall expire upon the
12    expiration, renewal or amendment of  the  exempted  contract,
13    whichever occurs first.
14    (Source: P.A. 85-1195.)

15        (415 ILCS 5/22.16a) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.16a)
16        Sec. 22.16a. Additional fee exemptions.
17        (a)  In  accordance with the findings and purposes of the
18    Illinois Solid Waste Management Act, the Agency  shall  grant
19    exemptions from the fee requirements of Section 22.15 of this
20    Act for solid waste meeting all of the following criteria:
21             (1)  the  waste  is  non-putrescible and homogeneous
22        and does not contain free liquids;
23             (2)  combustion  of  the  waste  would  not  provide
24        practical  energy  recovery  or  practical  reduction  in
25        volume; and
26             (3)  the applicant for exemption  demonstrates  that
27        it  is not technologically and economically reasonable to
28        recycle or reuse the waste.
29        (b)  Exemptions granted under this  Section  shall  cause
30    the  solid  waste  exempted  under  subsection  (a)  which is
31    permanently disposed of by an owner or operator of a sanitary
32    landfill to be  disregarded  in  calculating  the  volume  or
33    weight  of  solid  waste  permanently  disposed  of  during a
 
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 1    calendar year under Section 22.15 of this Act.
 2        (c)  Applications for exemptions under this Section  must
 3    be  submitted  on  forms  provided  by  the  Agency  for such
 4    purpose, together with proof of satisfaction of all  criteria
 5    for granting the exemption.  For applications received before
 6    March  1,  1989, exemptions issued under subsection (a) shall
 7    be  effective  as  of  January  1,  1989.   For  applications
 8    received on or after March 1, 1989, exemptions  issued  under
 9    subsection  (a)  shall  be  effective beginning with the next
10    calendar quarter following issuance of the exemption.
11        (d)  If the Agency denies  a  request  made  pursuant  to
12    subsection  (a),  the  applicant  may  seek review before the
13    Board pursuant to Section 40 as if the Agency had  denied  an
14    application  for a permit.  If the Agency fails to act within
15    90 days after receipt of an application, the request shall be
16    deemed granted until such time as the Agency has taken  final
17    action.
18        (e)  It  shall  be  the duty of an owner or operator of a
19    sanitary landfill to keep accurate records and  to  prove  to
20    the  satisfaction of the Agency the volume or weight of solid
21    waste received under an exemption during a calendar year.
22    (Source: P.A. 85-1195.)

23        (415 ILCS 5/22.22) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.22)
24        Sec. 22.22. Landscape waste.
25        (a)  Beginning July 1, 1990, no person may knowingly  mix
26    landscape  waste  that  is  intended  for  collection  or for
27    disposal at a landfill with any other municipal waste.
28        (b)  Beginning July 1, 1990, no person may knowingly  put
29    landscape  waste  into a container intended for collection or
30    disposal  at   a   landfill,   unless   such   container   is
31    biodegradable.
32        (c)  Beginning  July  1,  1990, no owner or operator of a
33    sanitary landfill shall  accept  landscape  waste  for  final
 
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 1    disposal,   except   that   landscape  waste  separated  from
 2    municipal waste may be accepted by a sanitary landfill if (1)
 3    the landfill provides and maintains for that purpose separate
 4    landscape  waste  composting  facilities  and  composts   all
 5    landscape  waste, and (2) the composted waste is utilized, by
 6    the operators of the landfill or by any other person, as part
 7    of the final vegetative cover for the landfill  or  for  such
 8    other uses as soil conditioning material, or the landfill has
 9    received  an  Agency  permit  to  use  source  separated  and
10    processed  landscape  waste as an alternative daily cover and
11    the landscape waste is processed at a site,  other  than  the
12    sanitary  landfill, that has received an Agency permit before
13    July 30, the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997 to
14    process landscape waste.  For purposes of this  Section,  (i)
15    "source  separated" means divided into its component parts at
16    the point of generation and collected separately  from  other
17    solid waste and (ii) "processed" means shredded by mechanical
18    means to reduce the landscape waste to a uniform consistency.
19        (d)  The requirements of this Section shall not apply (i)
20    to  landscape  waste  collected as part of a municipal street
21    sweeping operation where the  intent  is  to  provide  street
22    sweeping  service  rather  than  leaf collection, nor (ii) to
23    landscape waste collected by  bar  screens  or  grates  in  a
24    sewage treatment system.
25    (Source: P.A. 90-266, eff. 7-30-97.)

26        (415 ILCS 5/22.23) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.23)
27        Sec. 22.23. Batteries.
28        (a)  Beginning  September  1,  1990,  any  person selling
29    lead-acid batteries at retail or offering lead-acid batteries
30    for retail sale in this State shall:
31             (1)  accept for recycling used  lead-acid  batteries
32        from  customers,  at the point of transfer, in a quantity
33        equal to the number of new batteries purchased; and
 
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 1             (2)  post in a conspicuous place a written notice at
 2        least  8.5  by  11  inches  in  size  that  includes  the
 3        universal recycling symbol and the following  statements:
 4        "DO  NOT  put  motor  vehicle  batteries  in the trash.";
 5        "Recycle your used batteries."; and "State  law  requires
 6        us  to  accept  motor vehicle batteries for recycling, in
 7        exchange for new batteries purchased.".
 8        (b)  Any person selling lead-acid batteries at retail  in
 9    this  State  may  either  charge  a recycling fee on each new
10    lead-acid battery sold for which the customer does not return
11    a used battery to the retailer, or provide a recycling credit
12    to each customer who returns a used battery for recycling  at
13    the time of purchasing a new one.
14        (c)  Beginning  September  1,  1990, no lead-acid battery
15    retailer may dispose of a used lead-acid  battery  except  by
16    delivering  it  (1) to a battery wholesaler or its agent, (2)
17    to a battery manufacturer, (3) to a collection  or  recycling
18    facility,  or  (4)  to  a secondary lead smelter permitted by
19    either a state or federal environmental agency.
20        (d)  Any person selling lead-acid batteries at  wholesale
21    or  offering  lead-acid batteries for sale at wholesale shall
22    accept for recycling used lead-acid batteries from customers,
23    at the point of transfer, in a quantity equal to  the  number
24    of  new  batteries  purchased.   Such used batteries shall be
25    disposed of as provided in subsection (c).
26        (e)  A person who accepts used  lead-acid  batteries  for
27    recycling  pursuant  to subsection (a) or (d) shall not allow
28    such batteries to accumulate for  periods  of  more  than  90
29    days.
30        (f)  Beginning September 1, 1990, no person may knowingly
31    cause or allow:
32             (1) the  placing  of  a  lead-acid  battery into any
33        container intended  for  collection  and  disposal  at  a
34        municipal waste sanitary landfill; or
 
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 1             (2) the  disposal  of  any  lead-acid battery in any
 2        municipal waste sanitary landfill or incinerator.
 3        (g)  The Department of  Commerce  and  Community  Affairs
 4    shall   identify   and   assist   in  developing  alternative
 5    processing and recycling options for used batteries.
 6        (h)  For the purpose of this Section:
 7        "Lead-acid battery" means a battery containing  lead  and
 8    sulfuric  acid that has a nominal voltage of at least 6 volts
 9    and is intended for use in motor vehicles.
10        "Motor  vehicle"  includes  automobiles,  vans,   trucks,
11    tractors, motorcycles and motorboats.
12        (i)  (Blank.)  The  Department  shall  study the problems
13    associated with household batteries  that  are  processed  or
14    disposed  of  as part of mixed solid waste, and shall develop
15    and implement a pilot project to  collect  and  recycle  used
16    household   batteries.    The  Department  shall  report  its
17    findings to the Governor and the General  Assembly,  together
18    with  any  recommendations  for  legislation,  by November 1,
19    1991.
20        (j)  Knowing violation of this Section shall be  a  petty
21    offense punishable by a fine of $100.
22    (Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)

23        (415 ILCS 5/22.23a)
24        Sec.  22.23a.  Fluorescent  and  high intensity discharge
25    lamps.
26        (a)  As  used  in  this  Section,  "fluorescent  or  high
27    intensity  discharge  lamp"  means  a  lighting  device  that
28    contains mercury and generates light through the discharge of
29    electricity  either  directly   or   indirectly   through   a
30    fluorescent coating, including a mercury vapor, high pressure
31    sodium,  or  metal  halide  lamp containing mercury, lead, or
32    cadmium.
33        (b)  No person may knowingly cause or allow the  disposal
 
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 1    of  any  fluorescent  or high intensity discharge lamp in any
 2    municipal waste incinerator beginning  July  1,  1997.   This
 3    Section does not apply to lamps generated by households.
 4        (c) (1)  Hazardous   fluorescent   and   high   intensity
 5        discharge  lamps  are  hereby designated as a category of
 6        universal waste  subject  to  the  streamlined  hazardous
 7        waste  rules  set  forth  in  Title  35  of  the Illinois
 8        Administrative Code, Subtitle G, Chapter I, Subchapter c,
 9        Part 733 ("Part 733").  Within 60 days of August 19, 1997
10        (the effective date of Public Act 90-502) this amendatory
11        Act of 1997 the Agency shall propose, and within 180 days
12        of receipt of  the  Agency's  proposal  the  Board  shall
13        adopt,  rules  that  reflect  this  designation  and that
14        prescribe procedures and standards for the management  of
15        hazardous  fluorescent and high intensity discharge lamps
16        as universal waste.
17             (2)  If the United States  Environmental  Protection
18        Agency  adopts  streamlined  hazardous  waste regulations
19        pertaining to the  management  of  fluorescent  and  high
20        intensity  discharge  lamps,  or  otherwise exempts those
21        lamps from regulation as hazardous waste, the Board shall
22        adopt an equivalent rule in accordance with  Section  7.2
23        of  this  Act  within 180 days of adoption of the federal
24        regulation.  The equivalent Board rule may  serve  as  an
25        alternative to the rules adopted under subdivision (1) of
26        this subsection.
27        (d)  (Blank.)  Until  the  Board adopts rules pursuant to
28    subsection (c),  fluorescent  and  high  intensity  discharge
29    lamps  shall  be managed in accordance with existing laws and
30    regulations or under the following conditions:
31             (1)  after being removed from service, the generator
32        stores the lamps in a  safe  manner  that  minimizes  the
33        chance of breakage;
34             (2)  no  lamps  are stored longer than 6 months from
 
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 1        the time they are removed from service;
 2             (3)  the generator delivers the lamps to a  licensed
 3        hauler that will deliver the lamps to a recycler; and
 4             (4)  the lamps are transported in a safe manner that
 5        minimizes the chance of breakage.
 6        (e)  (Blank.)   The   Agency   shall  study  the  problem
 7    associated with used fluorescent and high intensity discharge
 8    lamps that are processed or disposed  of  as  part  of  mixed
 9    solid  waste,  and  shall  identify  possible  collection and
10    recycling systems for used  fluorescent  and  high  intensity
11    discharge lamps.  The Agency shall report its findings to the
12    General Assembly and the Governor by January 1, 1998.
13    (Source: P.A. 89-619, eff. 1-1-97; 90-502, eff. 8-19-97.)

14        (415 ILCS 5/22.27) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.27)
15        Sec.   22.27.   Alternative   Daily  Cover  for  Sanitary
16    Landfills.
17        (a)  The Agency shall investigate  alternative  materials
18    to  soil  as  daily  cover  at  sanitary landfills, including
19    chemical foam, grit and nonputrescible residuals  from  solid
20    waste   recycling   facilities,   shredded   tire   material,
21    hydromulch  produced  from newsprint or other wastepaper, and
22    finished  compost.   The  investigation   shall   include   a
23    comparative  cost  analysis  of  each alternative material to
24    soil, environmental suitability of  each  material,  and  any
25    potential savings in landfill capacity resulting from the use
26    of an alternative cover material.  The Agency shall report to
27    the General Assembly by September 1, 1992, on the feasibility
28    of   alternative   materials  for  daily  cover  at  sanitary
29    landfills.  If the Agency determines that any or all chemical
30    foams provides a cover material that is as good as, or better
31    than, the traditional soil cover commonly used in this State,
32    the  Agency  shall  certify  that  material  as  meeting  the
33    requirements of this Section.  If the Agency determines  that
 
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 1    any   alternative   materials   other   than  chemical  foams
 2    adequately satisfies daily  cover  requirements  at  sanitary
 3    landfills,  it  shall  permit  use  of such materials at such
 4    facilities.  The Department shall cooperate with  the  Agency
 5    in  the  conduct  of the investigation and report required by
 6    this subsection (a) of this Section.
 7        (b)  In  complying  with  the  daily  cover  requirements
 8    imposed  on  sanitary  landfills  by  Board  regulation,  the
 9    operator of a sanitary landfill may use  any  foam  that  has
10    been certified by the Agency under this Section in place of a
11    soil cover.
12    (Source: P.A. 87-727.)

13        (415 ILCS 5/22.33)
14        Sec. 22.33. Compost quality standards.
15        (a)  By  January  1,  1994,  the Agency shall develop and
16    make recommendations to the Board concerning (i)  performance
17    standards  for  landscape  waste  compost facilities and (ii)
18    testing procedures and standards for the end-product  compost
19    produced by landscape waste compost facilities.
20        The  Agency,  in  cooperation  with the Department, shall
21    appoint a Technical Advisory Committee  for  the  purpose  of
22    developing  these  recommendations.   Among other things, the
23    Committee   shall   evaluate   environmental    and    safety
24    considerations,  compliance costs, and regulations adopted in
25    other  states  and  countries.   The  Committee  shall   have
26    balanced    representation    and   shall   include   members
27    representing   academia,   the   composting   industry,   the
28    Department  of   Agriculture,   the   landscaping   industry,
29    environmental organizations, municipalities, and counties.
30        Performance   standards   for   landscape  waste  compost
31    facilities shall at a minimum include:
32             (1)  the management of odor;
33             (2)  the management of surface water;
 
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 1             (3)  contingency planning for  handling  end-product
 2        compost  material  that  does  not  meet  requirements of
 3        subsection (b);
 4             (4)  plans for intended purposes of end-use product;
 5        and
 6             (5)  a financial assurance plan necessary to restore
 7        the site as specified in Agency permit.
 8        (b)  By December 1, 1997, the Board shall adopt:
 9             (1)  performance  standards  for   landscape   waste
10        compost facilities; and
11             (2)  testing   procedures   and  standards  for  the
12        end-product compost produced by landscape  waste  compost
13        facilities.
14        The   Board   shall  evaluate  the  merits  of  different
15    standards for end-product compost applications.
16        (c)  On-site composting  that  is  used  solely  for  the
17    purpose  of  composting landscape waste generated on-site and
18    that will not be offered for off-site sale or use  is  exempt
19    from any standards promulgated under subsections (a) and (b).
20    Subsection (b)(2) shall not apply to end-product compost used
21    as  daily  cover  or vegetative amendment in the final layer.
22    Subsection (b) applies to any end-product compost offered for
23    sale or use in Illinois.
24    (Source: P.A. 87-1227; 88-690, eff. 1-24-95.)

25        (415 ILCS 5/22.40)
26        Sec. 22.40. Municipal solid waste landfill rules.
27        (a)  In accordance with Sec. 7.2, the Board  shall  adopt
28    rules  that are identical in substance to federal regulations
29    or amendments thereto promulgated by the Administrator of the
30    United States Environmental Protection  Agency  to  implement
31    Sections  4004  and  4010  of  the  Resource Conservation and
32    Recovery  Act  of  1976  (P.L.  94-580)  insofar   as   those
33    regulations  relate  to a municipal solid waste landfill unit
 
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 1    program.  The Board may consolidate into a single  rulemaking
 2    under  this  Section  all  such  federal  regulations adopted
 3    within a period of time not to exceed 6  months.   Where  the
 4    federal  regulations authorize the State to adopt alternative
 5    standards,  schedules,  or  procedures  to   the   standards,
 6    schedules,   or   procedures   contained   in   the   federal
 7    regulations,  the  Board  may  adopt  alternative  standards,
 8    schedules,  or  procedures  under  subsection  (b)  or retain
 9    existing Board rules that  establish  alternative  standards,
10    schedules,  or  procedures that are not inconsistent with the
11    federal regulations.  The Board may consolidate into a single
12    rulemaking under this Section all  such  federal  regulations
13    adopted within a period of time not to exceed 6 months.
14        The  provisions and requirements of Title VII of this Act
15    shall not apply to rules adopted under this  subsection  (a).
16    Section  5-35  of  the  Illinois Administrative Procedure Act
17    relating to the procedures for rulemaking shall not apply  to
18    regulations adopted under this subsection (a).
19        (b)  The  Board may adopt regulations relating to a State
20    municipal  solid  waste  landfill  program   that   are   not
21    inconsistent  with the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
22    of 1976 (P.L. 94-580),  or  regulations  adopted  thereunder.
23    Rules  adopted  under  this  subsection  shall  be adopted in
24    accordance with the provisions and requirements of Title  VII
25    of this Act and the procedures for rulemaking in Section 5-35
26    of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
27        (c)  (Blank.)  Notwithstanding  action  by the Board, and
28    effective October 9, 1993, only for those facilities  meeting
29    the   conditions  of  40  C.F.R.  258.1(e)(2)  or  40  C.F.R.
30    258.1(e)(3), the deadlines established in subsections  (d)(1)
31    and  (t),  as  added  by Public Act 88-496, of Section 21 and
32    subsections (a.5), (a.10), and (b) of Section 22.17  of  this
33    Act   are   extended   to  those  new  dates  established  in
34    regulations promulgated by the  United  States  Environmental
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -154-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    Protection  Agency  at  58 Federal Register 51536 (October 1,
 2    1993); provided, however, no deadline for  receipt  of  solid
 3    waste is extended past October 9, 1994.
 4        With  respect  to  those  facilities  that qualify for an
 5    extension in accordance with  the  provisions  of  40  C.F.R.
 6    258.1(e)(3),  the  Agency shall determine that the facilities
 7    are needed to receive flood related waste  from  a  federally
 8    designated  area within a major disaster area declared by the
 9    President during the summer of 1993  pursuant  to  42  U.S.C.
10    5121 et seq.
11    (Source: P.A. 88-496; 88-512; 88-540.)

12        (415 ILCS 5/22.43)
13        Sec.  22.43. Permit modifications for lateral expansions.
14    The Agency may issue a  permit  modification  for  a  lateral
15    expansion, as defined in Section 3.275 Sec. 3.88 of this Act,
16    for  an existing MSWLF unit under Section Sec. 39 of this Act
17    on or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1993
18    to a person required to obtain  such  a  permit  modification
19    under subsection (t) of Section 21 of this Act.
20    (Source: P.A. 88-496.)

21        (415 ILCS 5/22.44)
22        Sec. 22.44. Subtitle D management fees.
23        (a)  There is created within the State treasury a special
24    fund  to  be  known  as  the  "Subtitle  D  Management  Fund"
25    constituted  from  the fees collected by the State under this
26    Section.
27        (b)  On and after  January  1,  1994,  the  Agency  shall
28    assess  and  collect  a  fee  in the amount set forth in this
29    subsection from  the  owner  or  operator  of  each  sanitary
30    landfill  permitted or required to be permitted by the Agency
31    to dispose of solid waste if the sanitary landfill is located
32    off the site where the waste was produced and if the sanitary
 
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 1    landfill is owned, controlled, and operated by a person other
 2    than the generator of the waste.  The  Agency  shall  deposit
 3    all  fees collected under this subsection into the Subtitle D
 4    Management Fund.  If a site is  contiguous  to  one  or  more
 5    landfills  owned  or operated by the same person, the volumes
 6    permanently disposed of by each landfill  shall  be  combined
 7    for purposes of determining the fee under this subsection.
 8             (1)  If   more   than   150,000   cubic   yards   of
 9        non-hazardous solid waste is permanently disposed of at a
10        site  in  a  calendar  year,  the owner or operator shall
11        either pay  a  fee  of  5.5  cents  per  cubic  yard  or,
12        alternatively,  the  owner  or  operator  may  weigh  the
13        quantity  of the solid waste permanently disposed of with
14        a device for which certification has been obtained  under
15        the  Weights  and  Measures Act and pay a fee of 12 cents
16        per ton of waste permanently disposed of.
17             (2)  If more than 100,000 cubic yards, but not  more
18        than  150,000  cubic  yards,  of  non-hazardous  waste is
19        permanently disposed of at a site in a calendar year, the
20        owner or operator shall pay a fee of $3,825.
21             (3)  If more than 50,000 cubic yards, but  not  more
22        than 100,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous solid waste is
23        permanently disposed of at a site in a calendar year, the
24        owner or operator shall pay a fee of $1,700.
25             (4)  If  more  than 10,000 cubic yards, but not more
26        than 50,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous solid waste  is
27        permanently disposed of at a site in a calendar year, the
28        owner or operator shall pay a fee of $530.
29             (5)  If   not   more  than  10,000  cubic  yards  of
30        non-hazardous solid waste is permanently disposed of at a
31        site in a calendar year, the owner or operator shall  pay
32        a fee of $110.
33        (c)  The  fee under subsection (b) shall not apply to any
34    of the following:
 
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 1             (1)  Hazardous waste.
 2             (2)  Pollution control waste.
 3             (3)  Waste from  recycling,  reclamation,  or  reuse
 4        processes  that have been approved by the Agency as being
 5        designed to remove any contaminant from wastes so  as  to
 6        render  the  wastes  reusable,  provided that the process
 7        renders at least 50% of the waste reusable.
 8             (4)  Non-hazardous solid waste that is received at a
 9        sanitary landfill and composted  or  recycled  through  a
10        process permitted by the Agency.
11             (5)  Any landfill that is permitted by the Agency to
12        receive   only   demolition  or  construction  debris  or
13        landscape waste.
14        (d)  The Agency shall establish  rules  relating  to  the
15    collection  of  the  fees  authorized by this Section.  These
16    rules shall include, but not be limited to the following:
17             (1)  Necessary records identifying the quantities of
18        solid waste received or disposed.
19             (2)  The form and submission of reports to accompany
20        the payment of fees to the Agency.
21             (3)  The time and manner of payment of fees  to  the
22        Agency,  which  payments  shall  not  be  more often than
23        quarterly.
24             (4)  Procedures setting forth criteria  establishing
25        when an owner or operator may measure by weight or volume
26        during any given quarter or other fee payment period.
27        (e)  Fees  collected  under  this  Section  shall  be  in
28    addition to any other fees collected under any other Section.
29        (f)  The Agency shall not refund any fee paid to it under
30    this Section.
31        (g)  Pursuant   to   appropriation,  all  moneys  in  the
32    Subtitle D Management Fund shall be used  by  the  Agency  to
33    administer   the   United   States  Environmental  Protection
34    Agency's Subtitle D Program provided  in  Sections  4004  and
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -157-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    4010  of  the  Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976
 2    (P.L. 94-580) as  it  relates  to  a  municipal  solid  waste
 3    landfill  program  in  Illinois  and  to fund a delegation of
 4    inspecting, investigating, and enforcement functions,  within
 5    the  municipality only, pursuant to subsection (r) of Section
 6    4 of this Act to a municipality having a population  of  more
 7    than  1,000,000  inhabitants.   The  Agency  shall  execute a
 8    delegation agreement pursuant to subsection (r) of Section  4
 9    of  this  Act with a municipality having a population of more
10    than 1,000,000 inhabitants within 90 days  of  September  13,
11    the  effective  date of this amendatory Act of 1993 and shall
12    on an annual basis distribute from the Subtitle D  Management
13    Fund to that municipality no less than $150,000.
14    (Source: P.A. 90-655, eff. 7-30-98.)

15        (415 ILCS 5/22.45)
16        Sec.   22.45.   Subtitle  D  management  fee  exemptions;
17    pre-existing contracts.
18        (a)  The Agency  shall  grant  exemptions  from  the  fee
19    requirements  of  Section  22.44  of  this  Act for permanent
20    disposal or transport of  solid  waste  meeting  all  of  the
21    following criteria:
22             (1)  Permanent   disposal  of  the  solid  waste  is
23        pursuant to a  written  contract  between  the  owner  or
24        operator  of the sanitary landfill and some other person,
25        or transport of the solid waste is pursuant to a  written
26        contract between the transporter and some other person.
27             (2)  The   contract   for   permanent   disposal  or
28        transport of solid waste  was  lawfully  executed  on  or
29        before   September   13,   the  effective  date  of  this
30        amendatory Act of 1993 and by its express terms continues
31        beyond January 1, 1994.
32             (3)  The  contract   for   permanent   disposal   or
33        transport  of  solid  waste  establishes  a  fixed fee or
 
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 1        compensation, does not allow the operator or  transporter
 2        to  pass  the  fee through to another party, and does not
 3        allow voluntary  cancellation  or  renegotiation  of  the
 4        compensation or fee during the term of the contract.
 5             (4)  The contract was lawfully executed on or before
 6        September  13,  the effective date of this amendatory Act
 7        of 1993 and has not been amended at any time  after  that
 8        date.
 9        (b)  Exemptions  granted  under  this Section shall cause
10    the solid waste  received  by  an  owner  or  operator  of  a
11    sanitary  landfill pursuant to a contract exempted under this
12    Section to be disregarded in calculating the volume or weight
13    of solid waste permanently disposed of during a calendar year
14    under Section 22.44 of this Act.
15        (c)  An owner or operator of a  sanitary  landfill  shall
16    keep  accurate  records and prove, to the satisfaction of the
17    Agency, the volume or weight of solid waste received under an
18    exemption during a calendar year.
19        (d)  Exemptions under this Section shall expire upon  the
20    expiration,  renewal,  or amendment of the exempted contract,
21    whichever occurs first.
22        (e)  For the purposes of this  Section,  the  term  "some
23    other person" shall only include persons that are independent
24    operating  entities.   For purposes of this Section, a person
25    is not an independent operating entity if:
26             (1)  the person has any officers or  directors  that
27        are  also  officers or directors of the sanitary landfill
28        or transporter;
29             (2)  the person is a parent corporation, subsidiary,
30        or affiliate of the owner or  operator  of  the  sanitary
31        landfill or transporter; or
32             (3)  the  person  and  the  owner or operator of the
33        sanitary landfill or transporter are owned  by  the  same
34        entity.
 
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 1    (Source: P.A. 88-496.)

 2        (415 ILCS 5/22.47)
 3        Sec.  22.47.  School district hazardous educational waste
 4    collection.
 5        (a)  The  Agency  shall  develop,  implement,  and   fund
 6    (through  appropriations  for  that  purpose from the General
 7    Revenue Fund) a program to collect school district  hazardous
 8    educational  waste  from  school districts and schools in the
 9    State.  The program shall provide for  the  availability  for
10    collection,  transportation,  and  appropriate  management of
11    hazardous educational wastes  for  each  school  district  or
12    school by private contractors at least every 3 years.
13        (b)  A  school  district  or  school may participate in a
14    hazardous educational waste collection program by:
15             (1)  Notifying   the   Agency   of   the   hazardous
16        educational wastes used by the school district or  school
17        and including the following information:
18                  (A)  Waste types.
19                  (B)  Waste volumes.
20                  (C)  Number of containers.
21                  (D)  Condition of containers.
22                  (E)  Location of containers.
23             (2)  Maintaining  wastes in the original containers,
24        if practical.
25             (3)  Labeling each container if contents are known.
26             (4)  Following   Agency   instructions   on    waste
27        segregation,  preparation,  or  delivery  for  subsequent
28        handling.
29        (c)  The  Agency  shall  accept  applications from school
30    districts or schools throughout the year.  The  Agency  shall
31    designate  waste  haulers  throughout  the State qualified to
32    remove school district hazardous waste at the  request  of  a
33    school  district  or  school.   By March 1 and September 1 of
 
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 1    each year the Agency  shall  prepare  a  schedule  of  school
 2    districts  or schools that have been selected for collections
 3    over the next 6 months.  The selections shall be based on the
 4    waste types and volumes, geographic  distribution,  order  of
 5    application,   and   expected  costs  balanced  by  available
 6    resources.  The Agency shall notify each selected  school  or
 7    school  district of the date of collection and instruction on
 8    waste preparation.
 9        (d)  For purposes of this Section "hazardous  educational
10    waste"  means a waste product that could pose a hazard during
11    normal storage, transportation, or disposal generated from an
12    instructional curriculum including laboratory wastes, expired
13    chemicals,  unstable  compounds,  and  toxic   or   flammable
14    materials.   "Hazardous  educational  waste" does not include
15    wastes generated as a result of building, grounds, or vehicle
16    maintenance, asbestos abatement,  lead  paint  abatement,  or
17    other non-curriculum activities.
18        (e)  (Blank.) By January 1, 1997, the agency shall submit
19    a  report to the General Assembly on the status of the school
20    district  hazardous  educational  waste  collection   program
21    detailing   the  amounts,  types,  and  locations  of  wastes
22    collected, costs of the program, evaluation of  the  program,
23    and recommendations for future legislative actions.
24        (f)  The Agency is authorized to use funds from the Solid
25    Waste Management Fund to implement this Section.
26    (Source: P.A. 89-300, eff. 1-1-96.)

27        (415 ILCS 5/22.48)
28        Sec.  22.48.  Non-special  waste certification; effect on
29    permit.
30        (a)  An industrial process  waste  or  pollution  control
31    waste  not  within the exception set forth in subdivision (2)
32    of subsection (c) of Section 3.475 3.45 of this Act  must  be
33    managed as special waste unless the generator first certifies
 
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 1    in  a  signed,  dated,  written  statement  that the waste is
 2    outside the scope of the categories listed in subdivision (1)
 3    of subsection (c) of Section 3.475 3.45 of this Act.
 4        (b)  All information used to determine that the waste  is
 5    not  a  special waste shall be attached to the certification.
 6    The information shall include but not be limited to:
 7             (1)  the means by which the generator has determined
 8        that the waste is not a hazardous waste;
 9             (2)  the means by which the generator has determined
10        that the waste is not a liquid;
11             (3)  if the waste undergoes  testing,  the  analytic
12        results  obtained  from  testing, signed and dated by the
13        person responsible for completing the analysis;
14             (4)  if the  waste  does  not  undergo  testing,  an
15        explanation as to why no testing is needed;
16             (5)  a  description  of  the  process generating the
17        waste; and
18             (6)  relevant Material Data Safety Sheets.
19        (c)  Certification made pursuant to this Section shall be
20    effective from the date signed until there is a change in the
21    generator, in the raw  materials  used,  or  in  the  process
22    generating the waste.
23        (d)  Certification  made  pursuant  to this Section, with
24    the  requisite  attachments,  shall  be  maintained  by   the
25    certifying generator while effective and for at least 3 years
26    following  a  change  in  the  generator, a change in the raw
27    materials used, or a change in or termination of the  process
28    generating  the waste.  The generator shall provide a copy of
29    the certification, upon request  by  the  Agency,  the  waste
30    hauler,  or  the operator of the facility receiving the waste
31    for storage, treatment, or disposal, to the party  requesting
32    the  copy.  If the Agency believes that the waste that is the
33    subject of the certification has been inaccurately  certified
34    to, the Agency may require the generator to analytically test
 
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 1    the  waste  for  the  constituent  believed to be present and
 2    provide the Agency with a copy of the analytic results.
 3        (e)  A person who knowingly and falsely certifies that  a
 4    waste  is  not  special waste is subject to the penalties set
 5    forth in subdivision (6) of subsection (h) of Section  44  of
 6    this Act.
 7        (f)  To  the  extent  that  a  term  or  condition  of an
 8    existing permit requires the permittee to manage  as  special
 9    waste  a  material  that  is  made  a non-special waste under
10    Public Act 90-502 this amendatory Act of 1997, that  term  or
11    condition  is hereby superseded, and the permittee may manage
12    that material as a non-special waste, even if the material is
13    identified in the permit as part of a particular waste stream
14    rather than identified specifically as a special waste.
15    (Source: P.A. 90-502, eff. 8-19-97.)

16        (415 ILCS 5/25b-5) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1025b-5)
17        Sec. 25b-5. Review of toxic chemical status.  The  Agency
18    shall  periodically  review the status of toxic chemicals and
19    types of facilities covered under the reporting  requirements
20    of   Section  313  of  the  federal  Emergency  Planning  and
21    Community Right-to-Know Act of 1986.  On or before January 1,
22    1989, and after providing an opportunity for public  comment,
23    the  Agency  shall  submit  to  the  Governor a list of toxic
24    chemicals and facilities not currently covered under that Act
25    which it believes may pose a threat to public health and  the
26    environment  in  Illinois.    Within  60 days thereafter, the
27    Governor shall  either  petition  the  Administrator  of  the
28    United  States  Environmental Protection Agency to modify the
29    lists of chemicals and facilities currently covered  pursuant
30    to  Section 313 according to the Agency's recommendations, or
31    refer the matter back to the Agency for further consideration
32    in accordance with his written recommendations for change.
33    (Source: P.A. 85-927.)
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -163-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        (415 ILCS 5/28.5) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1028.5)
 2        (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2002.)
 3        Sec. 28.5.  Clean Air Act rules; fast-track.
 4        (a)  This Section shall apply solely to the  adoption  of
 5    rules  proposed  by  the Agency and required to be adopted by
 6    the State under the Clean Air Act as amended by the Clean Air
 7    Act Amendments of 1990 (CAAA).
 8        (b)  This Section is repealed on December 31, 2007 2002.
 9        (c)  For  purposes  of  this  Section,   a   "fast-track"
10    rulemaking  proceeding  is  a proceeding to promulgate a rule
11    that the CAAA requires to be adopted.  For purposes  of  this
12    Section,  "requires  to  be  adopted"  refers  only  to those
13    regulations or parts of  regulations  for  which  the  United
14    States Environmental Protection Agency is empowered to impose
15    sanctions  against the State for failure to adopt such rules.
16    All fast-track rules must be  adopted  under  procedures  set
17    forth   in this Section, unless another provision of this Act
18    specifies the method for adopting a specific rule.
19        (d)  When the CAAA requires rules other than identical in
20    substance rules to be adopted, upon request  by  the  Agency,
21    the  Board  shall  adopt  rules  under  fast-track rulemaking
22    requirements.
23        (e)  The Agency shall submit  its  fast-track  rulemaking
24    proposal in the following form:
25             (1)  The  Agency  shall file the rule in a form that
26        meets the requirements  of  the  Illinois  Administrative
27        Procedure Act and regulations promulgated thereunder.
28             (2)  The   cover   sheet   of   the  proposal  shall
29        prominently state that the rule is being  proposed  under
30        this Section.
31             (3)  The   proposal   shall   clearly  identify  the
32        provisions  and  portions   of   the   federal   statute,
33        regulations,   guidance,   policy   statement,  or  other
34        documents upon which the rule is based.
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -164-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             (4)  The supporting documentation for the rule shall
 2        summarize the basis of the rule.
 3             (5)  The  Agency  shall  describe  in  general   the
 4        alternative selected and the basis for the alternative.
 5             (6)  The Agency shall file a summary of economic and
 6        technical data upon which it relied in drafting the rule.
 7             (7)  The   Agency   shall  provide  a  list  of  any
 8        documents upon which it directly relied in  drafting  the
 9        rule or upon which it intends to rely at the hearings and
10        shall  provide such documents to the Board. Additionally,
11        the Agency shall make  such  documents  available  at  an
12        appropriate  location  for  inspection and copying at the
13        expense of the interested party.
14             (8)  The Agency shall include in  its  submission  a
15        description of the geographical area to which the rule is
16        intended  to  apply,  a  description  of  the  process or
17        processes affected, an identification by classes  of  the
18        entities  expected  to be affected, and a list of sources
19        expected to be affected by the rule to the  extent  known
20        to the Agency.
21        (f)  Within 14 days of receipt of the proposal, the Board
22    shall  file  the  rule  for  first  notice under the Illinois
23    Administrative Procedure Act and shall schedule all  required
24    hearings  on the proposal and cause public notice to be given
25    in accordance with the Illinois Administrative Procedure  Act
26    and the CAAA.
27        (g)  The Board shall set 3 hearings on the proposal, each
28    of  which  shall  be  scheduled  to continue from day to day,
29    excluding weekends and  State  and  federal  holidays,  until
30    completed.  The Board shall require the written submission of
31    all  testimony  at  least  10  days  before  a  hearing, with
32    simultaneous service to all participants  of  record  in  the
33    proceeding as of 15 days prior to hearing, unless a waiver is
34    granted  by  the  Board  for good cause.  In order to further
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -165-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    expedite  the  hearings,  presubmitted  testimony  shall   be
 2    accepted into the record without the reading of the testimony
 3    at hearing, provided that the witness swears to the testimony
 4    and  is  available  for questioning, and the Board shall make
 5    every effort to conduct  the  proceedings  expeditiously  and
 6    avoid duplication and extraneous material.
 7             (1)  The  first hearing shall be held within 55 days
 8        of receipt of the rule and shall be confined to testimony
 9        by and questions of the Agency's witnesses concerning the
10        scope, applicability, and basis of  the  rule.  Within  7
11        days after the first hearing, any person may request that
12        the second hearing be held.
13                  (A)  If,  after  the  first hearing, the Agency
14             and affected entities are in agreement on the  rule,
15             the  United  States  Environmental Protection Agency
16             has  not  informed  the  Board  of  any   unresolved
17             objection to the rule, and no other interested party
18             contests  the  rule  or  asks for the opportunity to
19             present additional evidence, the  Board  may  cancel
20             the  additional  hearings. When the Board adopts the
21             final order under these circumstances, it  shall  be
22             based  on  the Agency's proposal as agreed to by the
23             parties.
24                  (B)  If, after the first  hearing,  the  Agency
25             and  affected  entities  are  in  agreement  upon  a
26             portion of the rule, the United States Environmental
27             Protection  Agency has not informed the Board of any
28             unresolved objections to that agreed portion of  the
29             rule,  and  no  other interested party contests that
30             agreed  portion  of  the  rule  or  asks   for   the
31             opportunity  to  present  additional  evidence,  the
32             Board  shall  proceed  to  the  second  hearing,  as
33             provided  in paragraph (2) of subsection (g) of this
34             Section, but the hearing shall be limited  in  scope
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -166-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             to  the unresolved portion of the proposal. When the
 2             Board   adopts   the   final   order   under   these
 3             circumstances, it shall be based on such portion  of
 4             the Agency's proposal as agreed to by the parties.
 5             (2)  The   second  hearing  shall  be  scheduled  to
 6        commence within 30 days of the first  day  of  the  first
 7        hearing   and   shall   be  devoted  to  presentation  of
 8        testimony, documents, and comments by  affected  entities
 9        and all other interested parties.
10             (3)  The   third   hearing  shall  be  scheduled  to
11        commence within 14 days after the first day of the second
12        hearing  and  shall  be  devoted  solely  to  any  Agency
13        response to the material submitted at the second  hearing
14        and  to any response by other parties.  The third hearing
15        shall be cancelled if the Agency indicates to  the  Board
16        that  it  does  not  intend  to  introduce any additional
17        material.
18        (h)  In any fast-track rulemaking proceeding,  the  Board
19    shall  accept evidence and comments on the economic impact of
20    any provision of the rule and  shall  consider  the  economic
21    impact  of the rule based on the record.  The Board may order
22    an economic impact study in a manner that  will  not  prevent
23    adoption  of  the rule within the time required by subsection
24    (o) of this Section.
25        (i)  In all fast-track rulemakings  under  this  Section,
26    the  Board  shall  take  into  account  factors  set forth in
27    subsection (a) of Section 27 of this Act.
28        (j)  The  Board  shall  adopt  rules  in  the  fast-track
29    rulemaking docket under the requirements of this Section that
30    the  CAAA  requires  to  be  adopted,  and  may  consider   a
31    non-required rule in a second docket that shall proceed under
32    Title VII of this Act.
33        (k)  The  Board is directed to take whatever measures are
34    available  to  it  to  complete  fast-track   rulemaking   as
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -167-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    expeditiously  as  possible  consistent  with  the  need  for
 2    careful consideration.  These measures shall include, but not
 3    be  limited  to,  having hearings transcribed on an expedited
 4    basis.
 5        (l)  Following the hearings, the Board  shall  close  the
 6    record 14 days after the availability of the transcript.
 7        (m)  The  Board  shall  not revise or otherwise change an
 8    Agency fast-track rulemaking proposal  without  agreement  of
 9    the  Agency  until  after  the end of the hearing and comment
10    period.  Any revisions to an Agency proposal shall  be  based
11    on the record of the proceeding.
12        (n)  All  rules  adopted  by the Board under this Section
13    shall be based solely on the record before it.
14        (o)  The Board shall complete a fast-track rulemaking  by
15    adopting  a  second notice order no later than 130 days after
16    receipt of the proposal if no third hearing is  held  and  no
17    later  than  150  days  if  the third hearing is held. If the
18    order includes a rule, the Illinois Board shall file the rule
19    for second notice under the Illinois Administrative Procedure
20    Act within 5 days after adoption of the order.
21        (p)  Upon receipt of a statement of no objection  to  the
22    rule  from  the  Joint Committee on Administrative Rules, the
23    Board shall adopt the final order and submit the rule to  the
24    Secretary  of  State for publication and certification within
25    21 days.
26    (Source: P.A. 90-265, eff. 7-30-97.)

27        (415 ILCS 5/30) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1030)
28        Sec.  30.  Investigations.   The   Agency   shall   cause
29    investigations  to  be  made upon the request of the Board or
30    upon receipt of information concerning an  alleged  violation
31    of  this  Act  or  of  any  rule  or  regulation  promulgated
32    thereunder,  or  of  any  permit granted by the Agency or any
33    term or condition of any such permit, and  may  cause  to  be
 
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 1    made such other investigations as it shall deem advisable.
 2    (Source: P.A. 78-862.)

 3        (415 ILCS 5/31) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1031)
 4        Sec. 31. Notice; complaint; hearing.
 5        (a) (1)  Within  180 days of becoming aware of an alleged
 6        violation of the Act or any rule adopted under the Act or
 7        of a permit granted by the Agency  or  condition  of  the
 8        permit,  the  Agency  shall issue and serve, by certified
 9        mail, upon the person complained against a written notice
10        informing that person that the Agency has evidence of the
11        alleged violation.  At  a  minimum,  the  written  notice
12        shall contain:
13                  (A)  notification   to  the  person  complained
14             against of  the  requirement  to  submit  a  written
15             response  addressing  the violations alleged and the
16             option to meet with appropriate agency personnel  to
17             resolve  any  alleged  violations that could lead to
18             the filing of a formal complaint;
19                  (B)  a detailed explanation by  the  Agency  of
20             the violations alleged;
21                  (C)  an   explanation  by  the  Agency  of  the
22             actions that the Agency  believes  may  resolve  the
23             alleged  violations,  including  an  estimate  of  a
24             reasonable  time  period  for  the person complained
25             against to complete the suggested resolution; and
26                  (D)  an explanation of  any  alleged  violation
27             that  the Agency believes cannot be resolved without
28             the  involvement  of  the  Office  of  the  Illinois
29             Attorney General or  the  State's  Attorney  of  the
30             county  in  which the alleged violation occurred and
31             the basis for the Agency's belief.
32             (2)  A written response to  the  violations  alleged
33        shall  be  submitted  to  the  Agency, by certified mail,
 
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 1        within 45  days  of  receipt  of  notice  by  the  person
 2        complained  against,  unless  the  Agency  agrees  to  an
 3        extension.  The written response shall include:
 4                  (A)  information  in  rebuttal,  explanation or
 5             justification of each alleged violation;
 6                  (B)  a proposed Compliance Commitment Agreement
 7             that includes specified  times  for  achieving  each
 8             commitment  and  which  may  consist  of a statement
 9             indicating  that  the  person   complained   against
10             believes that compliance has been achieved; and
11                  (C)  a  request  for a meeting with appropriate
12             Agency personnel if a  meeting  is  desired  by  the
13             person complained against.
14             (3)  If  the  person  complained  against  fails  to
15        respond   in   accordance   with   the   requirements  of
16        subdivision (2) of this subsection (a),  the  failure  to
17        respond  shall be considered a waiver of the requirements
18        of this subsection (a) and nothing in this Section  shall
19        preclude   the   Agency   from   proceeding  pursuant  to
20        subsection (b) of this Section.
21             (4)  A meeting requested pursuant to subdivision (2)
22        of  this  subsection  (a)  shall  be   held   without   a
23        representative  of  the  Office  of the Illinois Attorney
24        General or the State's Attorney of the  county  in  which
25        the alleged violation occurred, within 60 days of receipt
26        of  notice  by  the person complained against, unless the
27        Agency agrees to a postponement.   At  the  meeting,  the
28        Agency  shall  provide  an  opportunity  for  the  person
29        complained  against to respond to each alleged violation,
30        suggested resolution, and suggested  implementation  time
31        frame, and to suggest alternate resolutions.
32             (5)  If  a meeting requested pursuant to subdivision
33        (2) of this subsection (a) is held, the person complained
34        against shall, within 21 days following  the  meeting  or
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -170-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        within  an  extended  time  period  as  agreed  to by the
 2        Agency, submit by certified mail to the Agency a  written
 3        response to the alleged violations.  The written response
 4        shall include:
 5                  (A)  additional    information   in   rebuttal,
 6             explanation  or  justification   of   each   alleged
 7             violation;
 8                  (B)  a proposed Compliance Commitment Agreement
 9             that  includes  specified  times  for achieving each
10             commitment and which  may  consist  of  a  statement
11             indicating   that   the  person  complained  against
12             believes that compliance has been achieved; and
13                  (C)  a statement indicating  that,  should  the
14             person   complained  against  so  wish,  the  person
15             complained against chooses to rely upon the  initial
16             written  response  submitted pursuant to subdivision
17             (2) of this subsection (a).
18             (6)  If  the  person  complained  against  fails  to
19        respond  in   accordance   with   the   requirements   of
20        subdivision  (5)  of  this subsection (a), the failure to
21        respond shall be considered a waiver of the  requirements
22        of  this subsection (a) and nothing in this Section shall
23        preclude  the  Agency   from   proceeding   pursuant   to
24        subsection (b) of this Section.
25             (7)  Within  30  days  of  the Agency's receipt of a
26        written  response  submitted  by  the  person  complained
27        against pursuant to subdivision (2)  of  this  subsection
28        (a), if a meeting is not requested, or subdivision (5) of
29        this  subsection  (a),  if a meeting is held, or within a
30        later time period as agreed to  by  the  Agency  and  the
31        person  complained  against,  the  Agency shall issue and
32        serve, by certified  mail,  upon  the  person  complained
33        against  a  written  notice  informing  the person of its
34        acceptance, rejection, or proposed  modification  to  the
 
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 1        proposed  Compliance  Commitment  Agreement  as contained
 2        within the written response.
 3             (8)  Nothing in this subsection (a) is  intended  to
 4        require  the  Agency  to enter into Compliance Commitment
 5        Agreements for any  alleged  violation  that  the  Agency
 6        believes  cannot  be  resolved without the involvement of
 7        the  Office  of  the  Attorney  General  or  the  State's
 8        Attorney of the county in  which  the  alleged  violation
 9        occurred,  for,  among  other purposes, the imposition of
10        statutory penalties.
11             (9)  The Agency's failure to respond  to  a  written
12        response  submitted  pursuant  to subdivision (2) of this
13        subsection  (a),  if  a  meeting  is  not  requested,  or
14        subdivision (5) of this subsection (a), if a  meeting  is
15        held, within 30 days, or within the time period otherwise
16        agreed  to  in  writing  by  the  Agency  and  the person
17        complained against, shall be deemed an acceptance by  the
18        Agency  of  the  proposed Compliance Commitment Agreement
19        for the violations alleged in the written  notice  issued
20        under subdivision (1) of this subsection (a) as contained
21        within the written response.
22             (10)  If the person complained against complies with
23        the  terms  of a Compliance Commitment Agreement accepted
24        pursuant to this subsection (a),  the  Agency  shall  not
25        refer the alleged violations which are the subject of the
26        Compliance  Commitment  Agreement  to  the  Office of the
27        Illinois Attorney General or the State's Attorney of  the
28        county in which the alleged violation occurred.  However,
29        nothing  in  this  subsection is intended to preclude the
30        Agency  from  continuing  negotiations  with  the  person
31        complained against or from  proceeding  pursuant  to  the
32        provisions  of subsection (b) of this Section for alleged
33        violations  which  remain  the  subject  of  disagreement
34        between the Agency  and  the  person  complained  against
 
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 1        following   fulfillment   of  the  requirements  of  this
 2        subsection (a).
 3             (11)  Nothing in this subsection (a) is intended  to
 4        preclude the person complained against from submitting to
 5        the  Agency, by certified mail, at any time, notification
 6        that the person complained against consents to waiver  of
 7        the  requirements  of  subsections  (a)  and  (b) of this
 8        Section.
 9        (b)  For alleged violations that remain  the  subject  of
10    disagreement  between  the  Agency  and the person complained
11    against  following  fulfillment  of   the   requirements   of
12    subsection  (a) of this Section, and as a precondition to the
13    Agency's referral or request to the Office  of  the  Illinois
14    Attorney  General  or  the  State's Attorney of the county in
15    which the alleged violation occurred for legal representation
16    regarding an alleged violation that may be addressed pursuant
17    to subsection (c) or (d)  of  this  Section  or  pursuant  to
18    Section  42 of this Act, the Agency shall issue and serve, by
19    certified mail, upon the person complained against a  written
20    notice  informing  that  person  that  the  Agency intends to
21    pursue legal action.   Such notice shall  notify  the  person
22    complained  against of the violations to be alleged and offer
23    the person an opportunity to  meet  with  appropriate  Agency
24    personnel in an effort to resolve any alleged violations that
25    could  lead to the filing of a formal complaint.  The meeting
26    with Agency personnel shall be held within 30 days of receipt
27    of notice served pursuant to this subsection upon the  person
28    complained   against,   unless   the   Agency   agrees  to  a
29    postponement or the person notifies the Agency that he or she
30    will not appear at a meeting within the 30 day  time  period.
31    Nothing in this subsection is intended to preclude the Agency
32    from  following  the  provisions  of subsection (c) or (d) of
33    this Section or from requesting the legal  representation  of
34    the  Office  of  the Illinois Attorney General or the State's
 
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 1    Attorney of  the  county  in  which  the  alleged  violations
 2    occurred  for  alleged violations which remain the subject of
 3    disagreement between the Agency  and  the  person  complained
 4    against   after   the   provisions  of  this  subsection  are
 5    fulfilled.
 6        (c)  (1) For alleged violations which remain the  subject
 7        of   disagreement  between  the  Agency  and  the  person
 8        complained  against   following   waiver,   pursuant   to
 9        subdivision  (10)  of  subsection (a) of this Section, or
10        fulfillment of the requirements of  subsections  (a)  and
11        (b)  of this Section, the Office of the Illinois Attorney
12        General or the State's Attorney of the  county  in  which
13        the alleged violation occurred shall issue and serve upon
14        the  person complained against a written notice, together
15        with  a  formal  complaint,  which  shall   specify   the
16        provision  of the Act or the rule or regulation or permit
17        or term or condition thereof under which such  person  is
18        said  to  be  in violation, and a statement of the manner
19        in, and the extent  to  which  such  person  is  said  to
20        violate  the  Act or such rule or regulation or permit or
21        term or condition thereof and shall require the person so
22        complained against to answer the charges of  such  formal
23        complaint  at  a  hearing  before the Board at a time not
24        less than 21 days after the date of notice by the  Board,
25        except  as  provided  in  Section  34  of  this Act. Such
26        complaint shall be accompanied by a notification  to  the
27        defendant  that  financing  may be available, through the
28        Illinois  Environmental  Facilities  Financing  Act,   to
29        correct  such  violation.   A copy of such notice of such
30        hearings shall also  be  sent  to  any  person  that  has
31        complained to the Agency respecting the respondent within
32        the  six  months preceding the date of the complaint, and
33        to any person  in  the  county  in  which  the  offending
34        activity   occurred   that   has   requested   notice  of
 
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 1        enforcement proceedings; 21 days notice of such  hearings
 2        shall  also  be  published  in  a  newspaper  of  general
 3        circulation  in  such  county.  The respondent may file a
 4        written answer, and at such hearing the rules  prescribed
 5        in  Sections  32  and 33 of this Act shall apply.  In the
 6        case  of  actual  or  threatened  acts  outside  Illinois
 7        contributing to environmental  damage  in  Illinois,  the
 8        extraterritorial    service-of-process    provisions   of
 9        Sections 2-208 and 2-209 of the Code of  Civil  Procedure
10        shall apply.
11             With  respect  to  notices  served  pursuant to this
12        subsection (c)(1) which  involve  hazardous  material  or
13        wastes in any manner, the Agency shall annually publish a
14        list  of all such notices served.  The list shall include
15        the date the investigation commenced, the date notice was
16        sent, the date the matter was referred  to  the  Attorney
17        General,  if  applicable,  and  the current status of the
18        matter.
19             (2)  Notwithstanding the provisions  of  subdivision
20        (1) of this subsection (c), whenever a complaint has been
21        filed  on  behalf  of  the Agency or by the People of the
22        State of Illinois, the parties may file with the Board  a
23        stipulation  and proposal for settlement accompanied by a
24        request for relief from  the  requirement  of  a  hearing
25        pursuant  to  subdivision  (1).  Unless the Board, in its
26        discretion, concludes that a hearing will  be  held,  the
27        Board shall cause notice of the stipulation, proposal and
28        request  for  relief to be published and sent in the same
29        manner as is required for hearing pursuant to subdivision
30        (1) of  this  subsection.  The  notice  shall  include  a
31        statement  that  any person may file a written demand for
32        hearing within 21 days after receiving the notice. If any
33        person files a timely written  demand  for  hearing,  the
34        Board  shall  deny  the request for relief from a hearing
 
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 1        and  shall  hold  a  hearing  in  accordance   with   the
 2        provisions of subdivision (1).
 3             (3)  Notwithstanding  the  provisions of subdivision
 4        (1) of this subsection (c), if the Agency  becomes  aware
 5        of  a  violation of this Act arising from, or as a result
 6        of, voluntary pollution prevention activities, the Agency
 7        shall not proceed with the  written  notice  required  by
 8        subsection (a) of this Section unless:
 9                  (A)  the person fails to take corrective action
10             or   eliminate   the  reported  violation  within  a
11             reasonable time; or
12                  (B)  the Agency  believes  that  the  violation
13             poses  a  substantial  and  imminent  danger  to the
14             public health or welfare or  the  environment.   For
15             the  purposes  of  this  item  (B), "substantial and
16             imminent danger" means a danger with a likelihood of
17             serious or irreversible harm.
18        (d)  Any person may file  with  the  Board  a  complaint,
19    meeting  the  requirements of subsection (c) of this Section,
20    against any person allegedly violating this Act or  any  rule
21    or  regulation  thereunder or any permit or term or condition
22    thereof.  The complainant shall immediately serve a  copy  of
23    such  complaint  upon  the  person  or persons named therein.
24    Unless  the  Board  determines   that   such   complaint   is
25    duplicative  duplicitous  or  frivolous,  it shall schedule a
26    hearing and serve written notice thereof upon the  person  or
27    persons  named therein, in accord with subsection (c) of this
28    Section.
29        (e)  In hearings before the Board under  this  Title  the
30    burden  shall  be  on the Agency or other complainant to show
31    either that the respondent has caused or threatened to  cause
32    air or water pollution or that the respondent has violated or
33    threatens to violate any provision of this Act or any rule or
34    regulation  of  the  Board  or  permit  or  term or condition
 
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 1    thereof.  If such proof has been made, the burden shall be on
 2    the respondent to  show  that  compliance  with  the  Board's
 3    regulations   would   impose  an  arbitrary  or  unreasonable
 4    hardship.
 5        (f)  The provisions of this Section shall  not  apply  to
 6    administrative  citation actions commenced under Section 31.1
 7    of this Act.
 8    (Source: P.A. 88-145; 89-596, eff. 8-1-96.)

 9        (415 ILCS 5/39) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1039)
10        Sec. 39. Issuance of permits; procedures.
11        (a)  When the Board has by regulation required  a  permit
12    for  the construction, installation, or operation of any type
13    of facility, equipment, vehicle,  vessel,  or  aircraft,  the
14    applicant  shall  apply  to the Agency for such permit and it
15    shall be the duty of the Agency to issue such a  permit  upon
16    proof by the applicant that the facility, equipment, vehicle,
17    vessel, or aircraft will not cause a violation of this Act or
18    of  regulations  hereunder.   The  Agency  shall  adopt  such
19    procedures  as  are  necessary  to carry out its duties under
20    this Section. In granting permits the Agency may impose  such
21    conditions  as may be necessary to accomplish the purposes of
22    this Act, and as are not inconsistent  with  the  regulations
23    promulgated  by  the  Board  hereunder.   Except as otherwise
24    provided in this Act, a bond or other security shall  not  be
25    required as a condition for the issuance of a permit.  If the
26    Agency denies any permit under this Section, the Agency shall
27    transmit to the applicant within the time limitations of this
28    Section  specific,  detailed statements as to the reasons the
29    permit  application  was  denied.   Such   statements   shall
30    include, but not be limited to the following:
31             (i)  the  Sections of this Act which may be violated
32        if the permit were granted;
33             (ii)  the provision of the regulations,  promulgated
 
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 1        under  this Act, which may be violated if the permit were
 2        granted;
 3             (iii)  the specific type  of  information,  if  any,
 4        which  the Agency deems the applicant did not provide the
 5        Agency; and
 6             (iv)  a statement of specific reasons  why  the  Act
 7        and  the  regulations might not be met if the permit were
 8        granted.
 9        If there is no final action by the Agency within 90  days
10    after the filing of the application for permit, the applicant
11    may  deem  the  permit  issued;  except that this time period
12    shall be extended to 180 days when (1) notice and opportunity
13    for public hearing are required by State or  federal  law  or
14    regulation,  (2)  the  application which was filed is for any
15    permit to develop a landfill subject to issuance pursuant  to
16    this subsection, or (3) the application that was filed is for
17    a MSWLF unit required to issue public notice under subsection
18    (p)  of  Section 39.  The 90-day and 180-day time periods for
19    the Agency to take final action do not apply to NPDES  permit
20    applications  under  subsection  (b) of this Section, to RCRA
21    permit applications under subsection (d) of this Section,  or
22    to  UIC  permit  applications  under  subsection  (e) of this
23    Section.
24        The Agency shall  publish  notice  of  all  final  permit
25    determinations  for  development  permits for MSWLF units and
26    for significant permit modifications for  lateral  expansions
27    for  existing  MSWLF units one time in a newspaper of general
28    circulation in the county in which the unit is or is proposed
29    to be located.
30        After January 1, 1994 and until July 1,  1998,  operating
31    permits  issued  under this Section by the Agency for sources
32    of air pollution permitted to emit less than 25 tons per year
33    of any combination of regulated air pollutants, as defined in
34    Section 39.5 of this Act, shall be  required  to  be  renewed
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -178-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    only  upon  written  request  by  the  Agency consistent with
 2    applicable provisions of this Act and regulations promulgated
 3    hereunder.  Such operating  permits  shall  expire  180  days
 4    after the date of such a request.  The Board shall revise its
 5    regulations  for  the  existing State air pollution operating
 6    permit program consistent with this provision by  January  1,
 7    1994.
 8        After  June 30, 1998, operating permits issued under this
 9    Section by the Agency for sources of air pollution  that  are
10    not  subject to Section 39.5 of this Act and are not required
11    to have a federally enforceable State operating permit  shall
12    be  required  to  be renewed only upon written request by the
13    Agency consistent with applicable provisions of this Act  and
14    its  rules.   Such  operating  permits  shall expire 180 days
15    after the date of such a request.  Before July 1,  1998,  the
16    Board  shall  revise  its  rules  for  the existing State air
17    pollution  operating  permit  program  consistent  with  this
18    paragraph and shall adopt rules  that  require  a  source  to
19    demonstrate  that  it  qualifies  for  a  permit  under  this
20    paragraph.
21        (b)  The Agency may issue NPDES permits exclusively under
22    this  subsection for the discharge of contaminants from point
23    sources into navigable waters, all as defined in the  Federal
24    Water  Pollution  Control  Act,  as now or hereafter amended,
25    within the jurisdiction of the State, or into any well.
26        All  NPDES  permits  shall  contain   those   terms   and
27    conditions,   including  but  not  limited  to  schedules  of
28    compliance, which may be required to accomplish the  purposes
29    and provisions of this Act.
30        The Agency may issue general NPDES permits for discharges
31    from  categories  of  point  sources which are subject to the
32    same permit limitations and conditions. Such general  permits
33    may  be  issued  without  individual  applications  and shall
34    conform to regulations promulgated under Section 402  of  the
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -179-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    Federal  Water  Pollution  Control  Act,  as now or hereafter
 2    amended.
 3        The Agency may include, among such  conditions,  effluent
 4    limitations  and  other  requirements  established under this
 5    Act, Board regulations, the Federal Water  Pollution  Control
 6    Act,  as  now  or hereafter amended, and regulations pursuant
 7    thereto, and schedules for achieving compliance therewith  at
 8    the earliest reasonable date.
 9        The Agency shall adopt filing requirements and procedures
10    which are necessary and appropriate for the issuance of NPDES
11    permits, and which are consistent with the Act or regulations
12    adopted  by  the  Board, and with the Federal Water Pollution
13    Control Act, as now or  hereafter  amended,  and  regulations
14    pursuant thereto.
15        The  Agency,  subject  to  any  conditions  which  may be
16    prescribed by Board regulations, may issue NPDES  permits  to
17    allow  discharges beyond deadlines established by this Act or
18    by regulations of the Board  without  the  requirement  of  a
19    variance, subject to the Federal Water Pollution Control Act,
20    as   now  or  hereafter  amended,  and  regulations  pursuant
21    thereto.
22        (c)  Except for those facilities  owned  or  operated  by
23    sanitary  districts  organized  under  the Metropolitan Water
24    Reclamation District Act, no permit for  the  development  or
25    construction  of  a  new  pollution  control  facility may be
26    granted by the Agency unless the applicant submits  proof  to
27    the  Agency  that  the  location  of  the  facility  has been
28    approved  by  the  County  Board  of  the  county  if  in  an
29    unincorporated  area,  or   the   governing   body   of   the
30    municipality  when  in  an  incorporated  area,  in which the
31    facility is to be located in accordance with Section 39.2  of
32    this Act.
33        In  the  event  that  siting approval granted pursuant to
34    Section 39.2 has been transferred to a  subsequent  owner  or
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -180-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    operator,  that subsequent owner or operator may apply to the
 2    Agency for, and  the  Agency  may  grant,  a  development  or
 3    construction  permit  for the facility for which local siting
 4    approval was granted. Upon application to the  Agency  for  a
 5    development  or  construction permit by that subsequent owner
 6    or operator, the permit applicant shall cause written  notice
 7    of  the  permit application to be served upon the appropriate
 8    county board or  governing  body  of  the  municipality  that
 9    granted  siting approval for that facility and upon any party
10    to the siting proceeding pursuant to  which  siting  approval
11    was  granted.   In  that  event,  the Agency shall conduct an
12    evaluation  of  the  subsequent  owner  or  operator's  prior
13    experience in  waste  management  operations  in  the  manner
14    conducted under subsection (i) of Section 39 of this Act.
15        Beginning  August  20,  1993,  if  the  pollution control
16    facility consists of a  hazardous  or  solid  waste  disposal
17    facility  for  which  the  proposed  site  is  located  in an
18    unincorporated area of a county with  a  population  of  less
19    than  100,000  and  includes  all or a portion of a parcel of
20    land that was, on April 1, 1993, adjacent to  a  municipality
21    having a population of less than 5,000, then the local siting
22    review required under this subsection (c) in conjunction with
23    any  permit applied for after that date shall be performed by
24    the governing body of that adjacent municipality rather  than
25    the  county board of the county in which the proposed site is
26    located; and for the purposes of that  local  siting  review,
27    any  references  in  this  Act  to  the county board shall be
28    deemed  to  mean  the  governing  body   of   that   adjacent
29    municipality;  provided, however, that the provisions of this
30    paragraph shall not apply to any proposed site which was,  on
31    April  1,  1993,  owned  in  whole  or  in  part  by  another
32    municipality.
33        In  the  case of a pollution control facility for which a
34    development permit was issued before November 12, 1981, if an
 
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 1    operating permit has not been issued by the Agency  prior  to
 2    August  31,  1989  for  any portion of the facility, then the
 3    Agency may not issue or  renew  any  development  permit  nor
 4    issue  an  original  operating permit for any portion of such
 5    facility unless the applicant  has  submitted  proof  to  the
 6    Agency that the location of the facility has been approved by
 7    the  appropriate  county  board  or  municipal governing body
 8    pursuant to Section 39.2 of this Act.
 9        After  January  1,  1994,  if  a  solid  waste   disposal
10    facility,  any portion for which an operating permit has been
11    issued by the Agency, has not accepted waste disposal  for  5
12    or more consecutive calendars years, before that facility may
13    accept  any  new  or additional waste for disposal, the owner
14    and operator must obtain a new operating  permit  under  this
15    Act  for  that  facility  unless  the owner and operator have
16    applied to the Agency for a permit authorizing the  temporary
17    suspension  of  waste acceptance.  The Agency may not issue a
18    new operation permit under this Act for the  facility  unless
19    the  applicant  has  submitted  proof  to the Agency that the
20    location of the facility has been approved or re-approved  by
21    the  appropriate  county  board  or  municipal governing body
22    under Section 39.2 of this  Act  after  the  facility  ceased
23    accepting waste.
24        Except for those facilities owned or operated by sanitary
25    districts  organized under the Metropolitan Water Reclamation
26    District Act, and except for new pollution control facilities
27    governed by Section 39.2, and except for fossil  fuel  mining
28    facilities, the granting of a permit under this Act shall not
29    relieve the applicant from meeting and securing all necessary
30    zoning  approvals  from  the unit of government having zoning
31    jurisdiction over the proposed facility.
32        Before beginning construction on any new sewage treatment
33    plant or sludge drying site to be  owned  or  operated  by  a
34    sanitary  district  organized  under  the  Metropolitan Water
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -182-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    Reclamation District Act  for which a new permit (rather than
 2    the renewal or amendment of an existing permit) is  required,
 3    such sanitary district shall hold a public hearing within the
 4    municipality  within  which  the  proposed  facility is to be
 5    located, or within the  nearest  community  if  the  proposed
 6    facility  is  to be located within an unincorporated area, at
 7    which information concerning the proposed facility  shall  be
 8    made available to the public, and members of the public shall
 9    be  given  the  opportunity to express their views concerning
10    the proposed facility.
11        The Agency may issue  a  permit  for  a  municipal  waste
12    transfer  station  without  requiring  approval  pursuant  to
13    Section  39.2  provided  that  the following demonstration is
14    made:
15             (1)  the municipal waste  transfer  station  was  in
16        existence  on  or  before  January  1,  1979  and  was in
17        continuous operation from January 1, 1979 to  January  1,
18        1993;
19             (2)  the  operator submitted a permit application to
20        the Agency to develop and  operate  the  municipal  waste
21        transfer station during April of 1994;
22             (3)  the  operator  can  demonstrate that the county
23        board of the county,  if  the  municipal  waste  transfer
24        station  is  in  an unincorporated area, or the governing
25        body of  the  municipality,  if  the  station  is  in  an
26        incorporated  area,  does not object to resumption of the
27        operation of the station; and
28             (4)  the site has local zoning approval.
29        (d)  The Agency may issue RCRA permits exclusively  under
30    this subsection to persons owning or operating a facility for
31    the  treatment,  storage,  or  disposal of hazardous waste as
32    defined under this Act.
33        All  RCRA  permits  shall   contain   those   terms   and
34    conditions,   including  but  not  limited  to  schedules  of
 
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 1    compliance, which may be required to accomplish the  purposes
 2    and  provisions  of  this  Act.  The Agency may include among
 3    such conditions standards and other requirements  established
 4    under  this Act, Board regulations, the Resource Conservation
 5    and Recovery Act of  1976  (P.L.  94-580),  as  amended,  and
 6    regulations  pursuant  thereto, and may include schedules for
 7    achieving compliance therewith  as  soon  as  possible.   The
 8    Agency  shall  require  that  a  performance  bond  or  other
 9    security  be  provided  as  a condition for the issuance of a
10    RCRA permit.
11        In the case of a permit to operate a hazardous  waste  or
12    PCB  incinerator  as defined in subsection (k) of Section 44,
13    the Agency shall require, as a condition of the permit,  that
14    the  operator  of  the  facility perform such analyses of the
15    waste to be incinerated as may be necessary  and  appropriate
16    to ensure the safe operation of the incinerator.
17        The Agency shall adopt filing requirements and procedures
18    which  are necessary and appropriate for the issuance of RCRA
19    permits, and which are consistent with the Act or regulations
20    adopted by the Board, and with the Resource Conservation  and
21    Recovery   Act   of  1976  (P.L.  94-580),  as  amended,  and
22    regulations pursuant thereto.
23        The applicant shall make  available  to  the  public  for
24    inspection  all  documents  submitted by the applicant to the
25    Agency in furtherance of an application, with  the  exception
26    of  trade  secrets,  at  the  office  of  the county board or
27    governing body of the municipality.  Such  documents  may  be
28    copied upon payment of the actual cost of reproduction during
29    regular business hours of the local office.  The Agency shall
30    issue a written statement concurrent with its grant or denial
31    of the permit explaining the basis for its decision.
32        (e)  The  Agency  may issue UIC permits exclusively under
33    this subsection to persons owning or operating a facility for
34    the underground injection of contaminants  as  defined  under
 
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 1    this Act.
 2        All UIC permits shall contain those terms and conditions,
 3    including  but  not limited to schedules of compliance, which
 4    may be required to accomplish the purposes and provisions  of
 5    this  Act.  The  Agency  may  include  among  such conditions
 6    standards and other requirements established under this  Act,
 7    Board regulations, the Safe Drinking Water Act (P.L. 93-523),
 8    as amended, and regulations pursuant thereto, and may include
 9    schedules  for  achieving  compliance  therewith.  The Agency
10    shall require that a performance bond or  other  security  be
11    provided as a condition for the issuance of a UIC permit.
12        The Agency shall adopt filing requirements and procedures
13    which  are  necessary and appropriate for the issuance of UIC
14    permits, and which are consistent with the Act or regulations
15    adopted by the Board, and with the Safe  Drinking  Water  Act
16    (P.L. 93-523), as amended, and regulations pursuant thereto.
17        The  applicant  shall  make  available  to the public for
18    inspection, all documents submitted by the applicant  to  the
19    Agency  in  furtherance of an application, with the exception
20    of trade secrets, at  the  office  of  the  county  board  or
21    governing  body  of  the municipality.  Such documents may be
22    copied upon payment of the actual cost of reproduction during
23    regular business hours of the local office.  The Agency shall
24    issue a written statement concurrent with its grant or denial
25    of the permit explaining the basis for its decision.
26        (f)  In making any determination pursuant to Section  9.1
27    of this Act:
28             (1)  The  Agency  shall  have  authority to make the
29        determination of any question required to  be  determined
30        by  the  Clean Air Act, as now or hereafter amended, this
31        Act, or the  regulations  of  the  Board,  including  the
32        determination  of  the  Lowest  Achievable Emission Rate,
33        Maximum Achievable Control Technology, or Best  Available
34        Control   Technology,   consistent   with   the   Board's
 
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 1        regulations, if any.
 2             (2)  The  Agency  shall,  after  conferring with the
 3        applicant, give written notice to the  applicant  of  its
 4        proposed  decision on the application including the terms
 5        and conditions of the permit to be issued and the  facts,
 6        conduct or other basis upon which the Agency will rely to
 7        support its proposed action.
 8             (3)  Following  such  notice,  the Agency shall give
 9        the applicant an opportunity for a hearing in  accordance
10        with  the  provisions  of Sections 10-25 through 10-60 of
11        the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
12        (g)  The Agency shall  include  as  conditions  upon  all
13    permits  issued  for  hazardous  waste  disposal  sites  such
14    restrictions  upon  the  future  use  of  such  sites  as are
15    reasonably  necessary  to  protect  public  health  and   the
16    environment,  including  permanent  prohibition of the use of
17    such sites for purposes which may create an unreasonable risk
18    of injury to human  health  or  to  the  environment.   After
19    administrative  and  judicial challenges to such restrictions
20    have been exhausted, the Agency shall file such  restrictions
21    of  record  in  the  Office  of the Recorder of the county in
22    which the hazardous waste disposal site is located.
23        (h)  A hazardous waste stream may not be deposited  in  a
24    permitted  hazardous waste site unless specific authorization
25    is obtained from the Agency by  the  generator  and  disposal
26    site  owner  and  operator  for  the deposit of that specific
27    hazardous  waste  stream.   The  Agency  may  grant  specific
28    authorization for disposal of hazardous  waste  streams  only
29    after   the   generator  has  reasonably  demonstrated  that,
30    considering   technological    feasibility    and    economic
31    reasonableness,  the  hazardous  waste  cannot  be reasonably
32    recycled for reuse, nor incinerated or chemically, physically
33    or biologically treated so as  to  neutralize  the  hazardous
34    waste  and render it nonhazardous.  In granting authorization
 
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 1    under this Section, the Agency may impose such conditions  as
 2    may  be  necessary  to accomplish the purposes of the Act and
 3    are consistent with this Act and regulations  promulgated  by
 4    the   Board  hereunder.   If  the  Agency  refuses  to  grant
 5    authorization under this Section, the applicant may appeal as
 6    if the Agency refused to grant  a  permit,  pursuant  to  the
 7    provisions  of subsection (a) of Section 40 of this Act.  For
 8    purposes of this subsection (h), the term "generator" has the
 9    meaning given in Section 3.205 3.12 of this Act, unless:  (1)
10    the  hazardous  waste  is  treated, incinerated, or partially
11    recycled for reuse prior to disposal, in which case the  last
12    person  who  treats,  incinerates,  or partially recycles the
13    hazardous waste prior to disposal is the  generator;  or  (2)
14    the  hazardous waste is from a response action, in which case
15    the person performing the response action is  the  generator.
16    This  subsection  (h)  does  not apply to any hazardous waste
17    that is restricted from land disposal under 35 Ill. Adm. Code
18    728.
19        (i)  Before issuing any RCRA permit or any permit  for  a
20    waste  storage  site, sanitary landfill, waste disposal site,
21    waste  transfer  station,  waste  treatment  facility,  waste
22    incinerator,  or  any  waste-transportation  operation,   the
23    Agency shall conduct an evaluation of the prospective owner's
24    or   operator's   prior   experience   in   waste  management
25    operations.  The  Agency  may  deny  such  a  permit  if  the
26    prospective  owner  or operator or any employee or officer of
27    the prospective owner or operator has a history of:
28             (1)  repeated violations of federal, State, or local
29        laws,  regulations,  standards,  or  ordinances  in   the
30        operation of waste management facilities or sites; or
31             (2)  conviction  in  this  or  another  State of any
32        crime which is a felony under the laws of this State,  or
33        conviction of a felony in a federal court; or
34             (3)  proof  of gross carelessness or incompetence in
 
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 1        handling, storing, processing, transporting or  disposing
 2        of waste.
 3        (j)  The issuance under this Act of a permit to engage in
 4    the  surface  mining of any resources other than fossil fuels
 5    shall not relieve the permittee from its duty to comply  with
 6    any   applicable   local  law  regulating  the  commencement,
 7    location or operation of surface mining facilities.
 8        (k)  A development permit issued under subsection (a)  of
 9    Section 39 for any facility or site which is required to have
10    a  permit  under subsection (d) of Section 21 shall expire at
11    the end of 2 calendar years from the date upon which  it  was
12    issued,  unless  within  that  period the applicant has taken
13    action to develop the facility or the site. In the event that
14    review of the conditions of the development permit is  sought
15    pursuant  to Section 40 or 41, or permittee is prevented from
16    commencing development of the facility or site by  any  other
17    litigation  beyond  the  permittee's  control,  such two-year
18    period shall be deemed to begin on the date upon  which  such
19    review  process or litigation is concluded.
20        (l)  No  permit  shall be issued by the Agency under this
21    Act for construction or operation of  any  facility  or  site
22    located within the boundaries of any setback zone established
23    pursuant to this Act, where such construction or operation is
24    prohibited.
25        (m)  The  Agency  may  issue permits to persons owning or
26    operating a  facility  for  composting  landscape  waste.  In
27    granting  such permits, the Agency may impose such conditions
28    as may be necessary to accomplish the purposes of  this  Act,
29    and  as  are  not  inconsistent  with  applicable regulations
30    promulgated by the Board.  Except as  otherwise  provided  in
31    this Act, a bond or other security shall not be required as a
32    condition for the issuance of a permit.  If the Agency denies
33    any  permit  pursuant  to  this  subsection, the Agency shall
34    transmit to the applicant within the time limitations of this
 
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 1    subsection specific, detailed statements as  to  the  reasons
 2    the  permit  application  was  denied.  Such statements shall
 3    include but not be limited to the following:
 4             (1)  the Sections of this Act that may  be  violated
 5        if the permit were granted;
 6             (2)  the  specific  regulations promulgated pursuant
 7        to this Act that may  be  violated  if  the  permit  were
 8        granted;
 9             (3)  the  specific  information,  if any, the Agency
10        deems the applicant did not provide in its application to
11        the Agency; and
12             (4)  a statement of specific reasons why the Act and
13        the regulations might be  violated  if  the  permit  were
14        granted.
15        If  no final action is taken by the Agency within 90 days
16    after the filing of the application for permit, the applicant
17    may deem the permit issued.  Any applicant for a  permit  may
18    waive  the  90  day  limitation by filing a written statement
19    with the Agency.
20        The Agency shall issue permits for such  facilities  upon
21    receipt  of  an application that includes a legal description
22    of the site, a topographic map of the site drawn to the scale
23    of 200 feet to the inch  or  larger,  a  description  of  the
24    operation,  including  the  area  served,  an estimate of the
25    volume of materials to be processed, and documentation that:
26             (1)  the facility includes a setback of at least 200
27        feet from the nearest potable water supply well;
28             (2)  the facility is located outside the boundary of
29        the 10-year floodplain or the site will be floodproofed;
30             (3)  the facility  is  located  so  as  to  minimize
31        incompatibility  with  the  character  of the surrounding
32        area, including at least a  200  foot  setback  from  any
33        residence,  and  in  the  case  of  a  facility  that  is
34        developed  or  the  permitted composting area of which is
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -189-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        expanded after November 17, 1991, the composting area  is
 2        located  at  least  1/8  mile  from the nearest residence
 3        (other than a residence located on the same  property  as
 4        the facility);
 5             (4)  the  design  of  the  facility will prevent any
 6        compost material from being placed within 5 feet  of  the
 7        water  table,  will  adequately  control  runoff from the
 8        site, and will collect and manage any  leachate  that  is
 9        generated on the site;
10             (5)  the  operation  of  the  facility  will include
11        appropriate dust and odor control  measures,  limitations
12        on  operating  hours,  appropriate noise control measures
13        for shredding, chipping and similar equipment, management
14        procedures for composting, containment  and  disposal  of
15        non-compostable   wastes,   procedures  to  be  used  for
16        terminating operations at  the  site,  and  recordkeeping
17        sufficient  to document the amount of materials received,
18        composted and otherwise disposed of; and
19             (6)  the operation will be conducted  in  accordance
20        with any applicable rules adopted by the Board.
21        The  Agency  shall  issue renewable permits of not longer
22    than 10 years in duration for  the  composting  of  landscape
23    wastes,  as  defined in Section 3.155 3.70 of this Act, based
24    on the above requirements.
25        The  operator  of  any  facility  permitted  under   this
26    subsection  (m) must submit a written annual statement to the
27    Agency on or before April 1 of each  year  that  includes  an
28    estimate  of  the  amount  of material, in tons, received for
29    composting.
30        (n)  The Agency shall  issue  permits  jointly  with  the
31    Department  of  Transportation for the dredging or deposit of
32    material in Lake Michigan in accordance with  Section  18  of
33    the Rivers, Lakes, and Streams Act.
34        (o)  (Blank.)  From  September 4, 1990 until December 31,
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -190-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    1993, no permit  shall  be  issued  by  the  Agency  for  the
 2    development  or  construction of any new facility intended to
 3    be used for the incineration  of any hazardous  waste.   This
 4    subsection shall not apply to facilities intended for use for
 5    combustion  of  potentially infectious medical waste, for use
 6    as part of a State or federally designated  clean-up  action,
 7    or  for  use  solely  for  the  conduct  of  research and the
 8    development  and  demonstration  of  technologies   for   the
 9    incineration of hazardous waste.
10        (p) (1)  Any  person  submitting  an  application  for  a
11    permit  for a new MSWLF unit or for a lateral expansion under
12    subsection (t) of Section 21 of  this  Act  for  an  existing
13    MSWLF  unit that has not received and is not subject to local
14    siting approval under Section 39.2 of this Act shall  publish
15    notice   of   the  application  in  a  newspaper  of  general
16    circulation in the county in which the MSWLF unit  is  or  is
17    proposed  to  be  located.   The  notice must be published at
18    least 15 days before submission of the permit application  to
19    the  Agency.   The notice shall state the name and address of
20    the applicant, the location of the  MSWLF  unit  or  proposed
21    MSWLF unit, the nature and size of the MSWLF unit or proposed
22    MSWLF unit, the nature of the activity proposed, the probable
23    life   of   the   proposed  activity,  the  date  the  permit
24    application will be submitted, and a statement  that  persons
25    may  file  written  comments  with  the Agency concerning the
26    permit application within 30 days after  the  filing  of  the
27    permit  application unless the time period to submit comments
28    is extended by the Agency.
29        When a permit applicant submits information to the Agency
30    to supplement a permit  application  being  reviewed  by  the
31    Agency,  the  applicant  shall not be required to reissue the
32    notice under this subsection.
33        (2)  The Agency shall accept written comments  concerning
34    the  permit  application that are postmarked no later than 30
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -191-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    days after the filing of the permit application,  unless  the
 2    time period to accept comments is extended by the Agency.
 3        (3)  Each applicant for a permit described in part (1) of
 4    this  subsection  shall file a copy of the permit application
 5    with the county board or governing body of  the  municipality
 6    in  which  the  MSWLF unit is or is proposed to be located at
 7    the same time the application is  submitted  to  the  Agency.
 8    The  permit  application  filed  with  the  county  board  or
 9    governing   body   of  the  municipality  shall  include  all
10    documents submitted to or to  be  submitted  to  the  Agency,
11    except  trade secrets as determined under Section 7.1 of this
12    Act.  The permit application and other documents on file with
13    the county board or governing body of the municipality  shall
14    be  made  available  for  public  inspection  during  regular
15    business  hours  at  the  office  of  the county board or the
16    governing body of the municipality and  may  be  copied  upon
17    payment of the actual cost of reproduction.
18    (Source: P.A.  89-487,  eff.  6-21-96;  89-556, eff. 7-26-96;
19    90-14,  eff.  7-1-97;  90-367,  eff.  8-10-97;  90-537,  eff.
20    11-26-97; 90-655, eff 7-30-98.)

21        (415 ILCS 5/39.2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1039.2)
22        Sec. 39.2. Local siting review.
23        (a)  The county board of the county or the governing body
24    of the  municipality,  as  determined  by  paragraph  (c)  of
25    Section  39  of  this  Act,  shall  approve or disapprove the
26    request for local siting approval for each pollution  control
27    facility  which  is subject to such review.  An applicant for
28    local  siting  approval  shall  submit   sufficient   details
29    describing  the  proposed facility to demonstrate compliance,
30    and local siting  approval  shall  be  granted  only  if  the
31    proposed facility meets the following criteria:
32             (i)  the  facility  is  necessary to accommodate the
33        waste needs of the area it is intended to serve;
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -192-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             (ii)  the  facility  is  so  designed,  located  and
 2        proposed to be operated that the  public  health,  safety
 3        and welfare will be protected;
 4             (iii)  the  facility  is  located  so as to minimize
 5        incompatibility with the  character  of  the  surrounding
 6        area  and  to  minimize  the  effect  on the value of the
 7        surrounding property;
 8             (iv) (A)  for  a  facility  other  than  a  sanitary
 9        landfill or waste disposal site, the facility is  located
10        outside  the  boundary of the 100 year flood plain or the
11        site is flood-proofed; (B)  for  a  facility  that  is  a
12        sanitary landfill or waste disposal site, the facility is
13        located  outside the boundary of the 100-year floodplain,
14        or if the facility is a facility described in  subsection
15        (b)(3) of Section 22.19a, the site is flood-proofed;
16             (v)  the  plan  of  operations  for  the facility is
17        designed to minimize the danger to the  surrounding  area
18        from fire, spills, or other operational accidents;
19             (vi)  the  traffic  patterns to or from the facility
20        are so designed as to minimize  the  impact  on  existing
21        traffic flows;
22             (vii)  if  the facility will be treating, storing or
23        disposing of hazardous waste, an emergency response  plan
24        exists  for  the  facility  which  includes notification,
25        containment and evacuation procedures to be used in  case
26        of an accidental release;
27             (viii)  if the facility is to be located in a county
28        where   the  county  board  has  adopted  a  solid  waste
29        management plan consistent with the planning requirements
30        of the Local Solid Waste Disposal Act or the Solid  Waste
31        Planning  and  Recycling  Act, the facility is consistent
32        with that plan; and
33             (ix)  if the  facility  will  be  located  within  a
34        regulated  recharge  area,  any  applicable  requirements
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -193-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        specified by the Board for such areas have been met.
 2        The   county   board   or   the  governing  body  of  the
 3    municipality may  also  consider  as  evidence  the  previous
 4    operating  experience  and  past  record  of  convictions  or
 5    admissions of violations of the applicant (and any subsidiary
 6    or parent corporation) in the field of solid waste management
 7    when considering criteria (ii) and (v) under this Section.
 8        (b)  No  later  than 14 days before the date on which the
 9    county board or governing body of the  municipality  receives
10    prior  to a request for site location approval, the applicant
11    shall cause written notice  of  such  request  to  be  served
12    either  in  person  or  by  registered  mail,  return receipt
13    requested, on the owners of all property within  the  subject
14    area  not solely owned by the applicant, and on the owners of
15    all property within 250 feet in each  direction  of  the  lot
16    line  of the subject property, said owners being such persons
17    or entities which appear from the authentic  tax  records  of
18    the County in which such facility is to be located; provided,
19    that  the  number  of  all feet occupied by all public roads,
20    streets, alleys and other public ways shall  be  excluded  in
21    computing the 250 feet requirement; provided further, that in
22    no  event  shall  this requirement exceed 400 feet, including
23    public streets, alleys and other public ways.
24        Such written notice shall also be served upon members  of
25    the  General  Assembly from the legislative district in which
26    the proposed facility is located and shall be published in  a
27    newspaper  of  general circulation published in the county in
28    which the site is located.
29        Such notice shall state  the  name  and  address  of  the
30    applicant,  the location of the proposed site, the nature and
31    size of the development, the nature of the activity proposed,
32    the probable life of the proposed activity, the date when the
33    request  for  site  approval  will  be   submitted,   and   a
34    description  of  the  right  of  persons  to  comment on such
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -194-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    request as hereafter provided.
 2        (c)  An applicant shall file a copy of its  request  with
 3    the  county  board of the county or the governing body of the
 4    municipality in which the  proposed  site  is  located.   The
 5    request  shall  include  (i) the substance of the applicant's
 6    proposal and (ii) all documents, if any, submitted as of that
 7    date to the  Agency  pertaining  to  the  proposed  facility,
 8    except  trade secrets as determined under Section 7.1 of this
 9    Act.  All such documents or other materials on file with  the
10    county  board  or governing body of the municipality shall be
11    made available for public inspection at  the  office  of  the
12    county  board  or  the governing body of the municipality and
13    may  be  copied  upon  payment  of   the   actual   cost   of
14    reproduction.
15        Any person may file written comment with the county board
16    or   governing   body  of  the  municipality  concerning  the
17    appropriateness  of  the  proposed  site  for  its   intended
18    purpose.    The   county  board  or  governing  body  of  the
19    municipality  shall  consider   any   comment   received   or
20    postmarked  not later than 30 days after the date of the last
21    public hearing.
22        (d)  At least one public hearing is to  be  held  by  the
23    county  board or governing body of the municipality no sooner
24    than 90 days but no later than 120 days  after  the  date  on
25    which  it  received  from  receipt  of  the  request for site
26    approval.  No later than  14  days  prior  to  such  hearing,
27    notice   shall   be  published  in  a  newspaper  of  general
28    circulation published in the county of the proposed site, and
29    delivered by certified mail to all  members  of  the  General
30    Assembly  from  the  district  in  which the proposed site is
31    located, to the governing  authority  of  every  municipality
32    contiguous   to  the  proposed  site  or  contiguous  to  the
33    municipality in which the proposed site is to be located,  to
34    the  county board of the county where the proposed site is to
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -195-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    be located, if  the  proposed  site  is  located  within  the
 2    boundaries  of a municipality, and to the Agency.  Members or
 3    representatives of the governing authority of a  municipality
 4    contiguous   to  the  proposed  site  or  contiguous  to  the
 5    municipality in which the proposed  site  is  to  be  located
 6    and,  if  the  proposed  site  is  located in a municipality,
 7    members or representatives of the county board of a county in
 8    which the proposed site is to be located may  appear  at  and
 9    participate in public hearings held pursuant to this Section.
10    The  public hearing shall develop a record sufficient to form
11    the basis of  appeal  of  the  decision  in  accordance  with
12    Section  40.1  of  this  Act.   The fact that a member of the
13    county board  or  governing  body  of  the  municipality  has
14    publicly  expressed  an opinion on an issue related to a site
15    review proceeding shall not preclude the member  from  taking
16    part in the proceeding and voting on the issue.
17        (e)  Decisions  of  the county board or governing body of
18    the municipality are to be in writing, specifying the reasons
19    for the decision, such reasons  to  be  in  conformance  with
20    subsection  (a)  of this Section.  In granting approval for a
21    site the county board or governing body of  the  municipality
22    may impose such conditions as may be reasonable and necessary
23    to  accomplish  the  purposes  of this Section and as are not
24    inconsistent with regulations promulgated by the Board.  Such
25    decision shall be available  for  public  inspection  at  the
26    office   of  the  county  board  or  governing  body  of  the
27    municipality and may be copied upon  payment  of  the  actual
28    cost  of  reproduction.   If  there is no final action by the
29    county board or governing body of the municipality within 180
30    days after the date  on  which  it  received  filing  of  the
31    request for site approval, the applicant may deem the request
32    approved.
33        At  any  time prior to completion by the applicant of the
34    presentation of  the  applicant's  factual  evidence  and  an
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -196-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    opportunity  for  cross-questioning  by  the  county board or
 2    governing body of the municipality and any participants,  the
 3    applicant may file not more than one amended application upon
 4    payment  of  additional  fees  pursuant to subsection (k); in
 5    which case the time limitation for final action set forth  in
 6    this  subsection  (e)  shall  be  extended  for an additional
 7    period of 90 days.
 8        If, prior to making a  final  local  siting  decision,  a
 9    county   board  or  governing  body  of  a  municipality  has
10    negotiated and entered into a host agreement with  the  local
11    siting  applicant,  the  terms  and  conditions  of  the host
12    agreement, whether written or oral, shall  be  disclosed  and
13    made  a  part  of  the  hearing  record for that local siting
14    proceeding.  In the case of an oral agreement, the disclosure
15    shall be made in  the  form  of  a  written  summary  jointly
16    prepared  and submitted by the county board or governing body
17    of the  municipality  and  the  siting  applicant  and  shall
18    describe the terms and conditions of the oral agreement.
19        (e-5)  Siting  approval obtained pursuant to this Section
20    is transferable and may be transferred to a subsequent  owner
21    or  operator.   In  the  event  that siting approval has been
22    transferred  to  a  subsequent  owner   or   operator,   that
23    subsequent owner or operator assumes and takes subject to any
24    and  all  conditions imposed upon the prior owner or operator
25    by the county board of the county or governing  body  of  the
26    municipality  pursuant  to subsection (e).  However, any such
27    conditions imposed pursuant to this Section may  be  modified
28    by agreement between the subsequent owner or operator and the
29    appropriate  county board or governing body.  Further, in the
30    event that siting approval obtained pursuant to this  Section
31    has  been transferred to a subsequent owner or operator, that
32    subsequent  owner  or  operator  assumes   all   rights   and
33    obligations  and  takes  the  facility subject to any and all
34    terms and conditions of any existing host  agreement  between
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -197-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    the  prior owner or operator and the appropriate county board
 2    or governing body.
 3        (f)  A local siting approval granted under  this  Section
 4    shall  expire  at  the  end of 2 calendar years from the date
 5    upon which it was granted, unless the local  siting  approval
 6    granted  under  this  Section  is  for  a  sanitary  landfill
 7    operation, in which case the approval shall expire at the end
 8    of  3 calendar years from the date upon which it was granted,
 9    and  unless  within  that  period  the  applicant  has   made
10    application  to  the Agency for a permit to develop the site.
11    In  the  event  that  the  local  siting  decision  has  been
12    appealed, such expiration period shall be deemed to begin  on
13    the date upon which the appeal process is concluded.
14        Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, upon the
15    expiration  of  a  development permit under subsection (k) of
16    Section 39, any associated local siting approval granted  for
17    the facility under this Section shall also expire.
18        If  a  first  development  permit  for  a municipal waste
19    incineration facility expires under subsection (k) of Section
20    39 after September 30, 1989 due to circumstances  beyond  the
21    control   of  the  applicant,  any  associated  local  siting
22    approval granted for the facility under this Section  may  be
23    used  to  fulfill  the local siting approval requirement upon
24    application for a second  development  permit  for  the  same
25    site,  provided  that  the proposal in the new application is
26    materially  the  same,  with  respect  to  the  criteria   in
27    subsection (a) of this Section, as the proposal that received
28    the  original siting approval, and application for the second
29    development permit is made before January 1, 1990.
30        (g)  The siting approval procedures, criteria and  appeal
31    procedures provided for in this Act for new pollution control
32    facilities shall be the exclusive siting procedures and rules
33    and   appeal   procedures  for  facilities  subject  to  such
34    procedures. Local zoning or other local land use requirements
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -198-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    shall not be applicable to such siting decisions.
 2        (h)  Nothing in this Section shall apply to any  existing
 3    or   new   pollution  control  facility  located  within  the
 4    corporate limits of a municipality with a population of  over
 5    1,000,000.
 6        (i)  (Blank.)  The  Department  shall  make  a  study  of
 7    technical  considerations  relating  to  the  siting  of  new
 8    pollution  control  facilities. Such study shall include, but
 9    need not be limited to, a determination of the  geologic  and
10    hydrologic  conditions  in  the  State  most suitable for the
11    siting of such facilities, the establishment of a  data  base
12    on  such  conditions in Illinois, and recommendations for the
13    establishment of technical guidelines and criteria to be used
14    in making such siting decisions.  The Department shall report
15    such study and recommendations to the General  Assembly,  the
16    Governor,  the  Board and the public no later than October 1,
17    1984.
18        The  Board  shall  adopt  regulations  establishing   the
19    geologic  and hydrologic siting criteria necessary to protect
20    usable groundwater resources which are to be followed by  the
21    Agency in its review of permit applications for new pollution
22    control  facilities.  Such regulations, insofar as they apply
23    to new pollution  control  facilities  authorized  to  store,
24    treat or dispose of any hazardous waste, shall be at least as
25    stringent  as  the  requirements of the Resource Conservation
26    and Recovery Act and any State or federal regulations adopted
27    pursuant thereto.
28        (j)  Any new pollution control facility which  has  never
29    obtained  local  siting approval under the provisions of this
30    Section shall be required to obtain  such  approval  after  a
31    final decision on an appeal of a permit denial.
32        (k)  A  county  board or governing body of a municipality
33    may charge applicants for siting review under this Section  a
34    reasonable  fee  to  cover the reasonable and necessary costs
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -199-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    incurred by such county or municipality in the siting  review
 2    process.
 3        (l)  The  governing Authority as determined by subsection
 4    (c) of Section 39 of this Act may request the  Department  of
 5    Transportation  to perform traffic impact studies of proposed
 6    or  potential  locations  for  required   pollution   control
 7    facilities.
 8        (m)  An applicant may not file a request for local siting
 9    approval  which  is substantially the same as a request which
10    was disapproved pursuant to a finding against  the  applicant
11    under  any  of criteria (i) through (ix) of subsection (a) of
12    this Section within the preceding 2 years.
13        (n)  In any review proceeding of a decision of the county
14    board or governing body of a municipality  made  pursuant  to
15    the local siting review process, the petitioner in the review
16    proceeding  shall  pay to the county or municipality the cost
17    of  preparing  and  certifying  the  record  of  proceedings.
18    Should the petitioner in the review proceeding fail  to  make
19    payment, the provisions of Section 3-109 of the Code of Civil
20    Procedure shall apply.
21        In  the  event  the  petitioner is a citizens' group that
22    participated in the siting proceeding and is so located as to
23    be affected by the proposed facility, such  petitioner  shall
24    be  exempt  from paying the costs of preparing and certifying
25    the record.
26        (o)  Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section,
27    a transfer station  used  exclusively  for  landscape  waste,
28    where  landscape  waste  is held no longer than 24 hours from
29    the time it was received, is not subject to the  requirements
30    of  local  siting approval under this Section, but is subject
31    only to local zoning approval.
32    (Source: P.A. 90-217,  eff.  1-1-98;  90-409,  eff.  8-15-97;
33    90-503,  eff.  8-19-97;  90-537,  eff. 11-26-97; 90-655, eff.
34    7-30-98; 91-588, eff. 8-14-99.)
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -200-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        (415 ILCS 5/39.3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1039.3)
 2        Sec. 39.3. Hazardous waste facilities.
 3        (a)  The  provisions  of  this  Section  apply   to   any
 4    application  for  a permit under the Solid Waste Rules of the
 5    Board's Rules and Regulations  to  develop  a  new  pollution
 6    control  facility for the disposal of hazardous waste, and to
 7    any application to modify the development of an existing site
 8    or facility which would allow the disposal of hazardous waste
 9    for the first time.  The requirements of this Section are  in
10    addition to any other procedures as may be required by law.
11        (b)  Any  application  for  a  permit  under this Section
12    shall be made to the Agency,  and  shall  be  accompanied  by
13    proof that notice of the application has been served upon the
14    Attorney  General,  the  State's Attorney and the Chairman of
15    the County Board of the  county  in  which  the  facility  is
16    proposed  to  be located, each member of the General Assembly
17    from the  legislative  district  in  which  the  facility  is
18    proposed  to  be located, and the clerk of each municipality,
19    any portion of which is within three miles of the boundary of
20    the facility.  Upon the  request  of  any  person  upon  whom
21    notice is required to be served, the applicant shall promptly
22    furnish  a  copy  of the application to the person making the
23    request.
24        (c) (i)  Not  more  than  90  days  after  receipt  of  a
25    complete application for a permit  under  this  Section,  the
26    Agency   shall   give   public   notice  of  its  preliminary
27    determination to either issue or deny the permit,  and  shall
28    give  notice  of the opportunity for a public hearing on that
29    preliminary  determination  under  this  Section.   Upon  the
30    request of the permit applicant, or of any other  person  who
31    is admitted as a party pursuant to subsection (d), the Agency
32    shall schedule a public hearing pursuant to subsection (e).
33        (ii)  The Agency notice shall be published in a newspaper
34    of  general  circulation  in  the county in which the site is
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -201-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    proposed to be located, and shall be served upon the Attorney
 2    General, the State's Attorney and the Chairman of the  County
 3    Board  of  the county in which the facility is proposed to be
 4    located,  each  member  of  the  General  Assembly  from  the
 5    legislative district in which the facility is proposed to  be
 6    located,  and  the clerk of each municipality, any portion of
 7    which is within three miles of the boundary of the facility.
 8        (iii)  The contents, form, and manner of service  of  the
 9    Agency  notice  shall  conform to the requirements of Section
10    10-25 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
11        (d)  Within 60 days after the date of the  Agency  notice
12    required  by  subsection  (c) of this Section, any person who
13    may be adversely affected by an Agency decision on the permit
14    application may petition the Agency to intervene  before  the
15    Agency as a party.  The petition to intervene shall contain a
16    short  and  plain  statement  identifying  the petitioner and
17    stating the  petitioner's  interest.   The  petitioner  shall
18    serve the petition upon the applicant for the permit and upon
19    any  other  persons who have petitioned to intervene.  Unless
20    the  Agency  determines  that  the  petition  is  duplicative
21    duplicitous or frivolous, it shall admit the petitioner as  a
22    party.
23        (e) (i)  Not  less  than  60  days nor more than 180 days
24    after the date of the Agency notice  required  by  subsection
25    (c)  of  this  Section,  the Agency shall commence the public
26    hearing required by this Section.
27        (ii)  The public hearing and other  proceedings  required
28    by  this  Section  shall  be conducted in accordance with the
29    provisions  concerning  contested  cases  of   the   Illinois
30    Administrative Procedure Act.
31        (iii)  The  public  hearing required by this Section may,
32    with the concurrence of the Agency, the permit applicant  and
33    the  County  Board of the county or the governing body of the
34    municipality, be conducted jointly with  the  public  hearing
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -202-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    required by Section 39.2 of this Act.
 2        (iv)  All documents submitted to the Agency in connection
 3    with  the public hearing shall be reproduced and filed at the
 4    office  of  the  county  board  or  governing  body  of   the
 5    municipality  and  may  be  copied upon payment of the actual
 6    cost of reproduction.
 7        (f)  Within sixty days of the completion  of  the  public
 8    hearing  required  by  this Section the Agency shall render a
 9    final decision either granting or denying the permit.
10        (g)  The Agency shall adopt such procedural rules as  may
11    be  necessary  and  appropriate to carry out its duties under
12    this Section which are not inconsistent with the requirements
13    of this Section.   In  adopting  such  procedural  rules  the
14    Agency shall follow the requirements concerning rulemaking of
15    the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
16        (h)  This  Section  shall  not apply to permits issued by
17    the Agency pursuant to authority delegated  from  the  United
18    States pursuant to the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
19    of  1976, P.L. 94-580, as amended, or the Safe Drinking Water
20    Act, P.L. 93-523, as amended.
21    (Source: P.A. 90-655, eff. 7-30-98.)

22        (415 ILCS 5/40) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1040)
23        Sec. 40. Appeal of permit denial.
24        (a) (1)  If the Agency refuses to grant  or  grants  with
25    conditions  a  permit  under  Section  39  of  this  Act, the
26    applicant may, within 35 days after the  date  on  which  the
27    Agency  served  its decision on the applicant, petition for a
28    hearing before the Board  to  contest  the  decision  of  the
29    Agency.   However,  the  35-day  period for petitioning for a
30    hearing may be extended for an additional a  period  of  time
31    not to exceed 90 days by written notice provided to the Board
32    from  the  applicant and the Agency within the initial appeal
33    period.  The Board shall give 21 day notice to any person  in
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -203-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    the  county  where  is  located the facility in issue who has
 2    requested notice  of  enforcement  proceedings  and  to  each
 3    member  of the General Assembly in whose legislative district
 4    that installation or property is located; and  shall  publish
 5    that  21  day notice in a newspaper of general circulation in
 6    that county.  The Agency shall appear as respondent  in  such
 7    hearing.   At such hearing the rules prescribed in Section 32
 8    and subsection (a) of Section 33 of this Act shall apply, and
 9    the burden of proof shall be on the petitioner.  If, however,
10    the Agency issues an NPDES permit that imposes  limits  which
11    are  based  upon  a  criterion  or denies a permit based upon
12    application of a criterion, then the Agency  shall  have  the
13    burden  of going forward with the basis for the derivation of
14    those limits  or  criterion  which  were  derived  under  the
15    Board's rules.
16        (2)  Except  as provided in paragraph (a)(3), if there is
17    no final action by the Board within 120 days after  the  date
18    on  which  it  received the petition, the petitioner may deem
19    the permit issued under this  Act,  provided,  however,  that
20    that period of 120 days shall not run for any period of time,
21    not  to  exceed  30  days,  during which the Board is without
22    sufficient membership to constitute the  quorum  required  by
23    subsection (a) of Section 5 of this Act, and provided further
24    that  such  120  day  period  shall not be stayed for lack of
25    quorum beyond 30 days  regardless  of  whether  the  lack  of
26    quorum  exists  at  the  beginning  of such 120 day period or
27    occurs during the running of such 120 day period.
28        (3)  Paragraph (a)(2) shall not apply to any permit which
29    is subject to subsection (b), (d) or (e) of Section  39.   If
30    there  is  no final action by the Board within 120 days after
31    the date on which it received the  petition,  the  petitioner
32    shall  be  entitled  to  an Appellate Court order pursuant to
33    subsection (d) of Section 41 of this Act.
34        (b)  If the Agency grants a RCRA permit for  a  hazardous
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -204-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    waste  disposal  site,  a  third party, other than the permit
 2    applicant or Agency, may, within 35 days after  the  date  on
 3    which  the  Agency  issued  its  decision, petition the Board
 4    within 35 days for a hearing to contest the issuance  of  the
 5    permit.    Unless  the Board determines that such petition is
 6    duplicative duplicitous or frivolous, or that the  petitioner
 7    is  so  located  as  to  not  be  affected  by  the permitted
 8    facility, the Board shall hear  the  petition  in  accordance
 9    with  the  terms  of  subsection  (a) of this Section and its
10    procedural rules governing denial appeals, such hearing to be
11    based exclusively on  the  record  before  the  Agency.   The
12    burden  of  proof shall be on the petitioner.  The Agency and
13    the permit applicant shall be named co-respondents.
14        The provisions of this subsection do  not  apply  to  the
15    granting of permits issued for the disposal or utilization of
16    sludge from publicly-owned sewage works.
17        (c)  Any party to an Agency proceeding conducted pursuant
18    to  Section  39.3 of this Act may petition as of right to the
19    Board for review of the Agency's decision within 35 days from
20    the date of issuance of the Agency's decision, provided  that
21    such  appeal  is  not  duplicative  duplicitous or frivolous.
22    However, the 35-day period for petitioning for a hearing  may
23    be  extended  by  the  applicant  for a period of time not to
24    exceed 90 days by written notice provided to the  Board  from
25    the  applicant  and  the  Agency  within  the  initial appeal
26    period.  If another person with standing to appeal wishes  to
27    obtain  an extension, there must be a written notice provided
28    to the Board by that person, the Agency, and  the  applicant,
29    within  the initial appeal period.  The decision of the Board
30    shall be based exclusively on  the  record  compiled  in  the
31    Agency  proceeding.   In  other  respects  the Board's review
32    shall be conducted in accordance with subsection (a) of  this
33    Section  and  the  Board's  procedural rules governing permit
34    denial appeals.
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -205-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        (d)  In reviewing the denial or any condition of a permit
 2    issued by  the  Agency  pursuant  to  rules  and  regulations
 3    adopted  under subsection (c) of Section 9.1 of this Act, the
 4    decision of the Board  shall  be  based  exclusively  on  the
 5    record before the Agency including the record of the hearing,
 6    if  any,  held  pursuant  to  paragraph  (f)(3) of Section 39
 7    unless the parties agree to supplement the record. The  Board
 8    shall,  if  it  finds  the  Agency  is in error, make a final
 9    determination as to the substantive limitations of the permit
10    including a final determination of Lowest Achievable Emission
11    Rate or Best Available Control Technology.
12        (e) (1)  If the Agency grants or denies  a  permit  under
13        subsection  (b) of Section 39 of this Act, a third party,
14        other than the permit applicant or Agency,  may  petition
15        the Board within 35 days from the date of issuance of the
16        Agency's  decision, for a hearing to contest the decision
17        of the Agency.
18             (2)  A petitioner shall include the following within
19        a  petition  submitted  under  subdivision  (1)  of  this
20        subsection:
21                  (A)  a demonstration that the petitioner raised
22             the issues contained within the petition during  the
23             public notice period or during the public hearing on
24             the  NPDES  permit  application, if a public hearing
25             was held; and
26                  (B)  a demonstration that the petitioner is  so
27             situated   as   to  be  affected  by  the  permitted
28             facility.
29             (3)  If the Board determines that  the  petition  is
30        not  duplicative  duplicitous or frivolous and contains a
31        satisfactory demonstration under subdivision (2) of  this
32        subsection,  the  Board  shall  hear  the petition (i) in
33        accordance with the  terms  of  subsection  (a)  of  this
34        Section  and its procedural rules governing permit denial
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -206-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        appeals and (ii) exclusively on the basis of  the  record
 2        before  the  Agency.  The burden of proof shall be on the
 3        petitioner.  The Agency and  permit  applicant  shall  be
 4        named co-respondents.
 5        (f)  Any  person  who  files  a  petition  to contest the
 6    issuance of a permit by the Agency shall pay a filing fee.
 7    (Source: P.A. 90-274, eff. 7-30-97.)

 8        (415 ILCS 5/40.1) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1040.1)
 9        Sec. 40.1. Appeal of siting approval.
10        (a)  If the county board or the  governing  body  of  the
11    municipality, as determined by paragraph (c) of Section 39 of
12    this Act, refuses to grant or grants with conditions approval
13    under  Section 39.2 of this Act, the applicant may, within 35
14    days after the date  on  which  the  local  siting  authority
15    disapproved  or conditionally approved siting, petition for a
16    hearing before the Board  to  contest  the  decision  of  the
17    county  board or the governing body of the municipality.  The
18    Board shall publish 21 day  notice  of  the  hearing  on  the
19    appeal  in  a  newspaper  of general circulation published in
20    that county.  The county  board  or  governing  body  of  the
21    municipality  shall appear as respondent in such hearing, and
22    such hearing shall be based exclusively on the record  before
23    the  county  board or the governing body of the municipality.
24    At such hearing the rules prescribed in Sections  32  and  33
25    (a) of this Act shall apply, and the burden of proof shall be
26    on  the petitioner; however, no new or additional evidence in
27    support  of  or  in  opposition  to   any   finding,   order,
28    determination  or decision of the appropriate county board or
29    governing body of the municipality  shall  be  heard  by  the
30    Board.   In  making  its orders and determinations under this
31    Section the Board shall  include  in  its  consideration  the
32    written  decision  and reasons for the decision of the county
33    board  or  the  governing  body  of  the  municipality,   the
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -207-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    transcribed record of the hearing held pursuant to subsection
 2    (d)  of  Section  39.2,  and  the fundamental fairness of the
 3    procedures used by the county board or the governing body  of
 4    the  municipality  in reaching its decision.  The Board shall
 5    transmit a copy of its decision to the office of  the  county
 6    board or governing body of the municipality where it shall be
 7    available  for  public  inspection and copied upon payment of
 8    the actual cost of reproduction.  If there is no final action
 9    by the Board within 120 days  after  the  date  on  which  it
10    received  the  petition,  the  petitioner  may  deem the site
11    location approved; provided, however, that that period of 120
12    days shall not run for any period of time, not to  exceed  30
13    days, during which the Board is without sufficient membership
14    to  constitute  the  quorum  required  by  subsection  (a) of
15    Section 5 of this Act, and provided further,  that  such  120
16    day  period  shall not be stayed for lack of quorum beyond 30
17    days regardless of whether the lack of quorum exists  at  the
18    beginning of such 120 day period or occurs during the running
19    of such 120 day period.
20        (b)  If  the  county  board  or the governing body of the
21    municipality as determined by paragraph (c) of Section 39  of
22    this  Act,  grants approval under Section 39.2 of this Act, a
23    third party other than the applicant who participated in  the
24    public  hearing  conducted  by  the county board or governing
25    body of the municipality may, petition the  Board  within  35
26    days  after  the  date  on  which  the local siting authority
27    granted siting approval, petition the Board for a hearing  to
28    contest  the  approval  of  the county board or the governing
29    body of the municipality.  Unless the Board  determines  that
30    such  petition  is  duplicative  duplicitous or frivolous, or
31    that the petitioner is so located as to not  be  affected  by
32    the  proposed  facility, the Board shall hear the petition in
33    accordance with the terms of subsection (a) of  this  Section
34    and  its  procedural  rules  governing  denial  appeals, such
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -208-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    hearing to be based exclusively on the record  before  county
 2    board  or the governing body of the municipality.  The burden
 3    of proof shall be on the petitioner.  The county board or the
 4    governing body of the municipality and the applicant shall be
 5    named as co-respondents.
 6        The Board shall transmit a copy of its  decision  to  the
 7    office   of  the  county  board  or  governing  body  of  the
 8    municipality  where  it  shall  be   available   for   public
 9    inspection  and may be copied upon payment of the actual cost
10    of reproduction.
11        (c)  Any  person  who  files  a  petition  to  contest  a
12    decision of  the  county  board  or  governing  body  of  the
13    municipality shall pay a filing fee.
14    (Source: P.A. 85-1331.)

15        (415 ILCS 5/40.2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1040.2)
16        Sec. 40.2. Application of review process.
17        (a)  Subsection  (a)  of Section 40 does not apply to any
18    permit which is subject  to  Section  39.5.   If  the  Agency
19    refuses  to  grant  or grants with conditions a CAAPP permit,
20    makes a determination of incompleteness regarding a submitted
21    CAAPP application, or fails to act on an  application  for  a
22    CAAPP  permit,  permit renewal, or permit revision within the
23    time specified in paragraph 5(j) of Section 39.5 of this Act,
24    the applicant, any person  who  participated  in  the  public
25    comment  process  pursuant to subsection 8 of Section 39.5 of
26    this Act, or any  other  person  who  could  obtain  judicial
27    review  a  hearing before the Board pursuant to Section 41(a)
28    of this Act, may, within 35 days after final  permit  action,
29    petition  for  a  hearing  before  the  Board  to contest the
30    decision of the  Agency.   However,  the  35-day  period  for
31    petitioning  for  a  hearing may be extended by the applicant
32    for an additional a period of time not to exceed 90  days  by
33    written  notice  provided to the Board from the applicant and
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -209-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    the Agency within the  initial  appeal  period.   If  another
 2    person with standing to appeal wishes to obtain an extension,
 3    there  must be a written notice provided to the Board by that
 4    person, the Agency, and the  applicant,  within  the  initial
 5    appeal  period.   Notwithstanding the preceding requirements,
 6    petitions  for  a  hearing  before  the  Board   under   this
 7    subsection may be filed after the 35-day period, only if such
 8    petitions  are  based  solely  on  grounds  arising after the
 9    35-day period expires.  Such petitions shall be filed  within
10    35 days after the new grounds for review arise.  If the final
11    permit  action  being  challenged  is the Agency's failure to
12    take final action, a petition for a hearing before the  Board
13    shall  be  filed before the Agency denies or issues the final
14    permit.
15        The Agency shall appear as respondent  in  such  hearing.
16    At such hearing the rules prescribed in Sections 32 and 33(a)
17    of  this Act shall apply, and the burden of proof shall be on
18    the petitioner.
19        (b)  The Agency's failure to take final action within  90
20    days  of  receipt  of  an application requesting minor permit
21    modification  procedures  (or  180  days  for   modifications
22    subject   to  group  processing  requirements),  pursuant  to
23    subsection 14 of  Section  39.5,  will  be  subject  to  this
24    Section and Section 41 of this Act.
25        (c)  If  there is no final action by the Board within 120
26    days after the date on which it received  the  petition,  the
27    permit  shall  not  be  deemed issued; rather, the petitioner
28    shall be entitled to an Appellate  Court  order  pursuant  to
29    Section  41(d) of this Act.  The period of 120 days shall not
30    run for any period of time, not to  exceed  30  days,  during
31    which   the   Board   is  without  sufficient  membership  to
32    constitute the quorum required by subsection (a) of Section 5
33    of this Act; the 120 day period shall not be stayed for  lack
34    of  quorum  beyond 30 days, regardless of whether the lack of
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -210-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    quorum exists at the beginning  of  the  120  day  period  or
 2    occurs during the running of the 120 day period.
 3        (d)  Any person who files a petition to contest the final
 4    permit  action  by  the Agency under this Section shall pay a
 5    filing fee.
 6        (e)  The Agency shall notify USEPA, in  writing,  of  any
 7    petition  for  hearing brought under this Section involving a
 8    provision or denial of a Phase II acid rain permit within  30
 9    days  of the filing of the petition. USEPA may intervene as a
10    matter of right in any such hearing. The Agency shall  notify
11    USEPA, in writing, of any determination or order in a hearing
12    brought   under  this  Section  that  interprets,  voids,  or
13    otherwise relates to any portion of  a  Phase  II  acid  rain
14    permit.
15    (Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99.)

16        (415 ILCS 5/45) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1045)
17        Sec. 45. Injunctive and other relief.
18        (a)  No   existing  civil  or  criminal  remedy  for  any
19    wrongful action shall be excluded or impaired  by  this  Act.
20    Nothing  in this Act shall be construed to limit or supersede
21    the provisions of the Illinois Oil and Gas Act and the powers
22    therein granted to prevent the intrusion of water  into  oil,
23    gas  or  coal  strata  and  to prevent the pollution of fresh
24    water supplies by oil, gas or salt water or oil field wastes,
25    except that water quality  standards  as  set  forth  by  the
26    Pollution Control Board apply to and are effective within the
27    areas  covered  by  and  affected  by  permits  issued by the
28    Department of Natural Resources.  However, if the  Department
29    of Natural Resources fails to act upon any complaint within a
30    period  of  10  working  days  following  the  receipt  of  a
31    complaint  by  the  Department,  the Environmental Protection
32    Agency may proceed under the provisions of this Act.
33        (b)  Any person adversely affected in fact by a violation
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -211-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    of this Act, any rule or regulation adopted under  this  Act,
 2    or  any  permit  or  term  or  condition  of  a permit, or of
 3    regulations adopted thereunder may sue for injunctive  relief
 4    against  such  violation.    However,  except  as provided in
 5    subsection (d), no action shall be brought under this Section
 6    until 30 days after the plaintiff has been denied  relief  by
 7    the Board in a proceeding brought under subsection (d) (b) of
 8    Section  31  of  this  Act.   The  prevailing  party shall be
 9    awarded costs and reasonable attorneys' fees.
10        (c)  Nothing in Section 39.4 of this Act shall limit  the
11    authority of the Agency to proceed with enforcement under the
12    provisions of this Act for violations of terms and conditions
13    of  an  endorsed  agrichemical  facility  permit, an endorsed
14    lawncare containment  permit,  or  this  Act  or  regulations
15    hereunder caused or threatened by an agrichemical facility or
16    a  lawncare  wash water containment area, provided that prior
17    notice is  given  to  the  Department  of  Agriculture  which
18    provides   that  Department  an  opportunity  to  respond  as
19    appropriate.
20        (d)  If the State brings an action under this Act against
21    a person with an interest in real  property  upon  which  the
22    person  is  alleged  to  have  allowed  open  dumping or open
23    burning by a third party in  violation  of  this  Act,  which
24    action  seeks  to compel the defendant to remove the waste or
25    otherwise clean up the site, the defendant may, in the manner
26    provided by law for third-party complaints,  bring  in  as  a
27    third-party  defendant  a  person  who  with actual knowledge
28    caused or contributed to the illegal  open  dumping  or  open
29    burning,  or  who  is or may be liable for all or part of the
30    removal and cleanup costs.  The court may include any of  the
31    parties  which  it determines to have, with actual knowledge,
32    allowed, caused or contributed to the illegal open dumping or
33    open burning in any order that it may issue to compel removal
34    of the waste and cleanup of the site, and may  apportion  the
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -212-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    removal  and  cleanup  costs  among such parties, as it deems
 2    appropriate. However, a person may not seek  to  recover  any
 3    fines or civil penalties imposed upon him under this Act from
 4    a  third-party  defendant  in  an  action  brought under this
 5    subsection.
 6    (Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99.)

 7        (415 ILCS 5/49) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1049)
 8        Sec. 49.  Proceedings  governed  by  Act;  compliance  as
 9    defense.
10        (a)  (Blank.)  Until the Board and the Agency established
11    by  this  Act  has  been  appointed  and  taken  office,  the
12    functions assigned to the Board and to the  Agency  shall  be
13    performed  by  the  members  of  the  existing  Air Pollution
14    Control Board and Sanitary Water Board and by the  Department
15    of Public Health.
16        (b)  All  proceedings  respecting  acts  done  before the
17    effective date of this Act shall be determined in  accordance
18    with  the  law and regulations in force at the time such acts
19    occurred.  All proceedings instituted for actions taken after
20    the effective date of  this  Act  (July  1,  1970)  shall  be
21    governed by this Act.
22        (c)  (Blank.)  All  rules  and  regulations  of  the  Air
23    Pollution  Control  Board,  the  Sanitary Water Board, or the
24    Department of Public Health  relating  to  subjects  embraced
25    within  this  Act shall remain in full force and effect until
26    repealed, amended, or superseded by  regulations  under  this
27    Act.
28        (d)  (Blank.)    All    orders    entered,   permits   or
29    certifications granted, and pending proceedings instituted by
30    the Air Pollution Control Board, the Sanitary Water Board, or
31    the Department of Public Health relating to subjects embraced
32    within this Act shall remain in full force and  effect  until
33    superseded by actions taken under this Act.
 
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 1        (e)  Compliance    with   the   rules   and   regulations
 2    promulgated by the Board under this Act  shall  constitute  a
 3    prima  facie  defense  to  any  action,  legal, equitable, or
 4    criminal, or an administrative proceeding for a violation  of
 5    this Act, brought by any person.
 6    (Source: P.A. 76-2429.)

 7        (415 ILCS 5/55) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1055)
 8        Sec. 55. Prohibited activities.
 9        (a)  No person shall:
10             (1)  Cause  or allow the open dumping of any used or
11        waste tire.
12             (2)  Cause or allow the open burning of any used  or
13        waste tire.
14             (3)  Except  at  a  tire storage site which contains
15        more than 50 used tires, cause or allow  the  storage  of
16        any  used  tire  unless the tire is altered, reprocessed,
17        converted,   covered,   or   otherwise   prevented   from
18        accumulating water.
19             (4)  Cause or allow the operation of a tire  storage
20        site except in compliance with Board regulations.
21             (5)  Abandon,  dump  or dispose of any used or waste
22        tire on private or public property, except in a  sanitary
23        landfill  approved  by the Agency pursuant to regulations
24        adopted by the Board.
25             (6)  Fail to submit required reports,  tire  removal
26        agreements, or Board regulations.
27        (b)  (Blank.) Beginning July 1, 1994 through December 31,
28    1994,  no  person shall knowingly mix any whole used or waste
29    tire with municipal waste, and no  owner  or  operator  of  a
30    sanitary  landfill  shall accept any whole used or waste tire
31    for final disposal, except that  such  tires  when  separated
32    from  other  waste  may  be  accepted  if:  (1)  the sanitary
33    landfill  provides  and  maintains  a  means  for  shredding,
 
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 1    slitting or chopping such tires and so treats all such  tires
 2    prior to disposal; and (2) the sanitary landfill implements a
 3    program to actively seek alternative uses for the tire scraps
 4    so as to minimize the need for on-site disposal, including at
 5    a  minimum participation in the Illinois Industrial Materials
 6    Exchange Service to communicate the availability of the  tire
 7    scraps,  and consultation with the Department of Commerce and
 8    Community Affairs regarding the status of regional  marketing
 9    of  tire  scraps  to  facilities  for  reuse, reprocessing or
10    converting.  Such alternative uses may also  include  on-site
11    practices such as lining of roadways with tire scraps.
12        (b-1)  Beginning   January   1,  1995,  no  person  shall
13    knowingly mix any used or waste tire, either  whole  or  cut,
14    with  municipal waste, and no owner or operator of a sanitary
15    landfill shall accept  any  used  or  waste  tire  for  final
16    disposal;  except  that  used  or waste tires, when separated
17    from other waste,  may  be  accepted  if:  (1)  the  sanitary
18    landfill  provides  and  maintains  a  means  for  shredding,
19    slitting,  or  chopping whole tires and so treats whole tires
20    and, if approved by the Agency in a permit issued under  this
21    Act, uses the used or waste tires for alternative uses, which
22    may include on-site practices such as lining of roadways with
23    tire  scraps,  alternative  daily cover, or use in a leachate
24    collection system  or  (2)  the  sanitary  landfill,  by  its
25    notification  to   the Illinois Industrial Materials Exchange
26    Service, makes  available  the  used  or  waste  tire  to  an
27    appropriate  facility for reuse, reprocessing, or converting,
28    including use as an alternate energy  fuel.   If,  within  30
29    days  after notification to the Illinois Industrial Materials
30    Exchange Service of  the  availability  of  waste  tires,  no
31    specific  request  for the used or waste tires is received by
32    the sanitary landfill, and the sanitary  landfill  determines
33    it  has no alternative use for those used or waste tires, the
34    sanitary landfill may dispose of slit, chopped,  or  shredded
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -215-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    used  or  waste tires in the sanitary landfill.  In the event
 2    the  physical  condition  of  a  used  or  waste  tire  makes
 3    shredding, slitting, chopping, reuse, reprocessing, or  other
 4    alternative  use  of  the  used  or waste tire impractical or
 5    infeasible, then the sanitary landfill,  after  authorization
 6    by  the  Agency,  may  accept  the  used  or  waste  tire for
 7    disposal.
 8        Sanitary   landfills   and    facilities    for    reuse,
 9    reprocessing,  or  converting,  including  use as alternative
10    fuel, shall (i)  notify  the  Illinois  Industrial  Materials
11    Exchange  Service  of the availability of and demand for used
12    or waste tires  and  (ii)  consult  with  the  Department  of
13    Commerce  and  Community  Affairs  regarding  the  status  of
14    marketing of waste tires to facilities for reuse.
15        (c)  On  or  before  January  1,  1990,  any  person  who
16    operates  a  tire  storage site or a tire disposal site which
17    contains more than 50 used or waste tires shall  give  notice
18    of  such activity to the Agency.  Any person engaging in such
19    activity for the first time after January 1, 1990, shall give
20    notice to the  Agency  within  30  days  after  the  date  of
21    commencement  of the activity.  The form of such notice shall
22    be  specified  by  the  Agency  and  shall  be   limited   to
23    information regarding the following:
24             (1)  the name and address of the owner and operator;
25             (2)  the   name,   address   and   location  of  the
26        operation;
27             (3)  the type of operations involving used and waste
28        tires (storage, disposal, conversion or processing); and
29             (4)  the number of used and waste tires  present  at
30        the location.
31        (d)  Beginning  January 1, 1992, no person shall cause or
32    allow the operation of:
33             (1)  a tire storage site which contains more than 50
34        used tires, unless the owner or operator, by  January  1,
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -216-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        1992   (or   the  January  1  following  commencement  of
 2        operation, whichever is later) and January 1 of each year
 3        thereafter, (i) registers the site with the Agency,  (ii)
 4        certifies  to  the Agency that the site complies with any
 5        applicable standards adopted by  the  Board  pursuant  to
 6        Section  55.2,  (iii) reports to the Agency the number of
 7        tires accumulated, the status of vector controls, and the
 8        actions taken to handle and process the tires,  and  (iv)
 9        pays  the  fee  required  under subsection (b) of Section
10        55.6; or
11             (2)  a tire  disposal  site,  unless  the  owner  or
12        operator  (i) has received approval from the Agency after
13        filing a tire removal agreement pursuant to Section 55.4,
14        or  (ii)  has  entered  into  a  written   agreement   to
15        participate  in a consensual removal action under Section
16        55.3.
17        The Agency shall provide written  forms  for  the  annual
18    registration and certification required under this subsection
19    (d).
20        (e)  No   person   shall  cause  or  allow  the  storage,
21    disposal, treatment or processing of any used or  waste  tire
22    in  violation  of  any  regulation or standard adopted by the
23    Board.
24        (f)  No person shall arrange for  the  transportation  of
25    used  or  waste tires away from the site of generation with a
26    person known to openly dump such tires.
27        (g)  No person shall engage in any operation as a used or
28    waste  tire  transporter  except  in  compliance  with  Board
29    regulations.
30        (h)  No person shall cause or allow the combustion of any
31    used or waste tire in an enclosed device unless a permit  has
32    been   issued  by  the  Agency  authorizing  such  combustion
33    pursuant to regulations adopted by the Board for the  control
34    of  air  pollution  and  consistent  with  the  provisions of
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -217-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    Section 9.4 of this Act.
 2        (i)  No person shall cause or allow the use of pesticides
 3    to treat tires except as prescribed by Board regulations.
 4        (j)  No person shall fail to comply with the terms  of  a
 5    tire  removal  agreement  approved  by the Agency pursuant to
 6    Section 55.4.
 7    (Source: P.A. 88-690, eff. 1-24-95; 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)

 8        (415 ILCS 5/56.1) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1056.1)
 9        Sec. 56.1. Acts prohibited.
10        (A)  No person shall:
11        (a)  Cause or  allow  the  disposal  of  any  potentially
12    infectious  medical  waste.   Sharps  may  be disposed in any
13    landfill permitted by the Agency under Section 21 of this Act
14    to accept municipal waste for disposal, if both:
15             (1)  the infectious potential  has  been  eliminated
16        from the sharps by treatment; and
17             (2)  the  sharps  are  packaged  in  accordance with
18        Board regulations.:
19                  (A)  Board regulations; or
20                  (B)  subsection (b)(2), until Board regulations
21             relating to the packaging of potentially  infectious
22             medical waste are adopted and effective.
23        (b)  Cause  or  allow  the  delivery  of  any potentially
24    infectious medical waste for transport,  storage,  treatment,
25    or transfer except in accordance with Board regulations.:
26             (1)  Board regulations; or
27             (2)  the following, until Board regulations relating
28        to  the packaging of potentially infectious medical waste
29        are adopted and effective:
30                  (A)  All potentially infectious  medical  waste
31             shall  be  placed  in a container or containers that
32             are (i) rigid; (ii) leak-resistant; (iii) impervious
33             to  moisture;  (iv)  of  a  strength  sufficient  to
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -218-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             prevent tearing or bursting under normal  conditions
 2             of  use  and  handling;  and  (v)  sealed to prevent
 3             leakage during transport.
 4                  (B)  In  addition  to   the   requirements   of
 5             subsection   (b)(2)(A),   sharps   and  sharps  with
 6             residual fluids shall be packaged in packaging  that
 7             is puncture-resistant.
 8                  (C)  Oversized  potentially  infectious medical
 9             waste need not be placed in containers.
10        (c)  Beginning July 1, 1992, cause or allow the  delivery
11    of  any  potentially  infectious medical waste to a person or
12    facility for storage, treatment, or transfer  that  does  not
13    have  a  permit  issued  by the agency to receive potentially
14    infectious medical waste, unless no permit is required  under
15    subsection (g)(1).
16        (d)  Beginning  July 1, 1992, cause or allow the delivery
17    or transfer of any potentially infectious medical  waste  for
18    transport unless:
19             (1)  the  transporter  has  a  permit  issued by the
20        Agency to transport potentially infectious medical waste,
21        or the transporter is exempt from the permit  requirement
22        set forth in subsection (f)(l).
23             (2)  a potentially infectious medical waste manifest
24        is  completed  for  the  waste  if a manifest is required
25        under subsection (h).
26        (e)  Cause or allow the  acceptance  of  any  potentially
27    infectious  medical waste for purposes of transport, storage,
28    treatment,  or  transfer  except  in  accordance  with  Board
29    regulations.:
30             (1)  Board regulations; or
31             (2)  The following, until Board regulations relating
32        to the packaging and storage  of  potentially  infectious
33        medical waste are adopted and effective:
34                  (A)  All  potentially  infectious medical waste
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -219-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             shall be placed in a container  or  containers  that
 2             are (i) rigid; (ii) leak-resistant; (iii) impervious
 3             to  moisture;  (iv)  of  a  strength  sufficient  to
 4             prevent  tearing or bursting under normal conditions
 5             of use and  handling;  and  (v)  sealed  to  prevent
 6             leakage during transport.
 7                  (B)  In   addition   to   the  requirements  of
 8             subsection  (b)(2)(A),  sharps   and   sharps   with
 9             residual  fluids shall be packaged in packaging that
10             is puncture-resistant.
11                  (C)  Oversized potentially  infectious  medical
12             waste need not be placed in containers.
13                  (D)  Any    person   who   stores   potentially
14             infectious  medical  waste  prior  to  treatment  or
15             disposal on-site or transport off-site  must  comply
16             with all of the following storage requirements:
17                       (i)  Store   the   potentially  infectious
18                  medical waste in a  manner  and  location  that
19                  maintains  the  integrity  of the packaging and
20                  provides protection from water, rain, and wind.
21                       (ii)  Maintain the potentially  infectious
22                  medical  waste  in a nonputrescent state, using
23                  refrigeration when necessary.
24                       (iii)  Lock  the  outdoor  storage   areas
25                  containing potentially infectious medical waste
26                  to prevent unauthorized access.
27                       (iv)  Limit   access  to  on-site  storage
28                  areas to authorized employees.
29                       (v)  Store  the   potentially   infectious
30                  medical   waste   in   a  manner  that  affords
31                  protection from animals and does not provide  a
32                  breeding place or a food source for insects and
33                  rodents.
34        (f)  Beginning  July  1,  1992,  conduct  any potentially
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -220-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    infectious medical waste transportation operation:
 2             (1)  Without  a  permit  issued  by  the  Agency  to
 3        transport potentially infectious medical waste. No permit
 4        is required under this provision (f)(1) for:
 5                  (A)  a    person    transporting    potentially
 6             infectious medical waste generated  solely  by  that
 7             person's activities;
 8                  (B)  noncommercial  transportation of less than
 9             50 pounds of potentially infectious medical waste at
10             any one time; or
11                  (C)  the U.S. Postal Service.
12             (2)  In violation of any  condition  of  any  permit
13        issued by the Agency under this Act.
14             (3)  In  violation  of any regulation adopted by the
15        Board.
16             (4)  In violation of any order adopted by the  Board
17        under this Act.
18        (g)  Beginning  July  1,  1992,  conduct  any potentially
19    infectious medical  waste  treatment,  storage,  or  transfer
20    operation:
21             (1)  without  a  permit  issued  by  the Agency that
22    specifically authorizes the treatment, storage,  or  transfer
23    of  potentially  infectious  medical  waste.   No  permit  is
24    required under this subsection (g) for any:
25                  (A)  Person conducting a potentially infectious
26             medical   waste   treatment,  storage,  or  transfer
27             operation for potentially infectious  medical  waste
28             generated  by  the  person's own activities that are
29             treated, stored,  or  transferred  within  the  site
30             where  the  potentially  infectious medical waste is
31             generated.
32                  (B)  Hospital that treats, stores, or transfers
33             only potentially infectious medical waste  generated
34             by  its  own activities or by members of its medical
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -221-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             staff.
 2             (2)  in violation of any  condition  of  any  permit
 3        issued by the Agency under this Act.
 4             (3)  in  violation  of any regulation adopted by the
 5        Board.
 6             (4)  In violation of any order adopted by the  Board
 7        under this Act.
 8        (h)  Transport   potentially   infectious  medical  waste
 9    unless  the  transporter  carries  a  completed   potentially
10    infectious  medical  waste  manifest. No manifest is required
11    for the transportation of:
12             (1)  potentially  infectious  medical  waste   being
13        transported  by  generators  who  generated  the waste by
14        their own activities,  when  the  potentially  infectious
15        medical  waste  is transported within or between sites or
16        facilities owned, controlled, or operated by that person;
17             (2)  less than 50 pounds of  potentially  infectious
18        medical  waste  at  any  one  time  for  a  noncommercial
19        transportation activity; or
20             (3)  potentially  infectious  medical  waste  by the
21        U.S. Postal Service.
22        (i)  Offer  for   transportation,   transport,   deliver,
23    receive  or  accept  potentially infectious medical waste for
24    which a manifest is required, unless the  manifest  indicates
25    that  the  fee  required   under Section 56.4 of this Act has
26    been paid.
27        (j)  Beginning January 1,  1994,  conduct  a  potentially
28    infectious   medical   waste   treatment   operation   at  an
29    incinerator in existence on the effective date of this  Title
30    in  violation  of  emission  standards  established for these
31    incinerators under Section 129 of the Clean Air Act  (42  USC
32    7429), as amended.
33        (B) (k)  In making its orders and determinations relative
34    to penalties, if any, to be imposed for violating subdivision
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -222-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    (A)(a)  of  this  Section  56.1(a) of this Act, the Board, in
 2    addition to the factors in Sections 33(c) and 42(h)  of  this
 3    Act,  or  the Court shall take into consideration whether the
 4    owner or  operator  of  the  landfill  reasonably  relied  on
 5    written statements from the person generating or treating the
 6    waste  that  the  waste is not potentially infectious medical
 7    waste.
 8    (Source: P.A. 87-752; 87-1097.)

 9        (415 ILCS 5/56.2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1056.2)
10        Sec. 56.2. Regulations.
11        (a)  No later than July 1, 1993, the  Board  shall  adopt
12    regulations   in  accordance  with  Title  VII  of  this  Act
13    prescribing design and operating standards and  criteria  for
14    all  potentially infectious medical waste treatment, storage,
15    and transfer facilities.  At  a  minimum,  these  regulations
16    shall  require  treatment  of  potentially infectious medical
17    waste at a facility that:
18             (1)  eliminates  the  infectious  potential  of  the
19        waste;
20             (2)  prevents compaction and rupture  of  containers
21        during handling operations;
22             (3)  disposes  of  treatment residuals in accordance
23        with this Act and regulations adopted thereunder;
24             (4)  provides for quality assurance programs;
25             (5)  provides for periodic testing using  biological
26        testing,   where  appropriate,  that  demonstrate  proper
27        treatment of the waste;
28             (6)  provides   for    assurances    that    clearly
29        demonstrate that potentially infectious medical waste has
30        been properly treated; and
31             (7)  is  in  compliance  with  all Federal and State
32        laws  and   regulations   pertaining   to   environmental
33        protection.
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -223-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        (b)  Until  the  effective  date of the Board regulations
 2    adopted  under  subsection  (a),   each   applicant   for   a
 3    potentially  infectious  medical waste treatment permit shall
 4    prove that the facility will not cause a violation of the Act
 5    or of regulations adopted  thereunder,  and  prove  that  the
 6    facility  meets  the  requirements  set  forth in subsections
 7    (a)(1) through (a)(7).  After the effective date of the Board
 8    regulations adopted under subsection (a), each applicant  for
 9    a potentially infectious medical waste treatment permit shall
10    prove that the facility will not cause a violation of the Act
11    or of regulations adopted thereunder.
12        (c)  No  later  than  July 1, 1993, the Board shall adopt
13    regulations  in  accordance  with  Title  VII  of  this   Act
14    prescribing   standards   and   criteria   for  transporting,
15    packaging, segregating,  labeling,  and  marking  potentially
16    infectious medical waste.
17        (d)  In  accord with Title VII of this Act, no later than
18    January 1, 1992, the Board shall repeal Subpart I of 35  Ill.
19    Adm. Code 809.
20        (e)  No later than January 1, 1992, the Board shall adopt
21    rules  that  are  identical  in  substance  to  the  list  of
22    etiologic agents identified as Class 4 agents as set forth in
23    "Classification of Etiological Agents on the Basis of Hazard,
24    1974",  published by the Centers for Disease Control.  If the
25    Centers for Disease Control amends the listing  of  etiologic
26    agents   identified  as  Class  4  agents  as  set  forth  in
27    "Classification of Etiological Agents on the Basis of Hazard,
28    1974", the Board shall adopt  rules  that  are  identical  in
29    substance  to  the  amended  list  within  180 days after the
30    Centers for Disease Control's amendment. The  provisions  and
31    requirements  of  Title  VII  of  this Act shall not apply to
32    rules adopted under this subsection (e).  Section  5  of  the
33    Illinois   Administrative   Procedure  Act  relating  to  the
34    procedures for rulemaking shall not apply  to  rules  adopted
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -224-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    under this subsection (e).
 2        (f)  In  accord with Title VII of this Act, the Board may
 3    adopt regulations to promote the purposes of this Title.  The
 4    regulations prescribed in subsection (a), (c), and (e)  shall
 5    not limit the generality of this authority.
 6    (Source: P.A. 87-752; 87-1097.)

 7        (415 ILCS 5/57.7)
 8        Sec.  57.7.  Leaking  underground storage tanks; physical
 9    soil   classification,   groundwater   investigation,    site
10    classification, and corrective action.
11        (a)  Physical   soil   classification   and   groundwater
12    investigation.
13             (1)  Prior   to   conducting   any   physical   soil
14        classification  and  groundwater investigation activities
15        required by statute or regulation, the owner or  operator
16        shall  prepare  and submit to the Agency for the Agency's
17        approval or modification:
18                       (A)  a physical  soil  classification  and
19                  groundwater   investigation  plan  designed  to
20                  determine site  classification,  in  accordance
21                  with  subsection  (b)  of this Section, as High
22                  Priority, Low Priority, or No Further Action.
23                       (B)  a  request  for  payment   of   costs
24                  associated  with eligible early action costs as
25                  provided  in  Section  57.6(b).   However,  for
26                  purposes of payment  for  early  action  costs,
27                  fill  materials  shall  not  be  removed  in an
28                  amount in excess of 4  feet  from  the  outside
29                  dimensions of the tank.
30             (2)  If  the  owner  or  operator  intends  to  seek
31        payment  from  the Fund, prior to conducting any physical
32        soil   classification   and   groundwater   investigation
33        activities required by statute or regulation,  the  owner
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -225-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        or  operator  shall submit to the Agency for the Agency's
 2        approval or   modification a physical soil classification
 3        and groundwater investigation budget which includes,  but
 4        is  not limited to, an accounting of all costs associated
 5        with the implementation and completion  of  the  physical
 6        soil classification and groundwater investigation plan.
 7             (3)  Within  30  days  of completion of the physical
 8        soil classification or groundwater  investigation  report
 9        the owner or operator shall submit to the Agency:
10                  (A)  all   physical   soil  classification  and
11             groundwater investigation results; and
12                  (B)  a certification by a Licensed Professional
13             Engineer  of  the  site's  classification  as   High
14             Priority,  Low  Priority,  or  No  Further Action in
15             accordance with subsection (b) of  this  Section  as
16             High Priority, Low Priority, or No Further Action.
17        (b)  Site Classification.
18             (1)  After   evaluation   of   the   physical   soil
19        classification  and  groundwater  investigation  results,
20        when  required,  and  general  site information, the site
21        shall  be  classified  as  "No  Further   Action",   "Low
22        Priority",  or  "High Priority" based on the requirements
23        of this Section.  Site classification shall be determined
24        by a Licensed Professional Engineer  in  accordance  with
25        the   requirements   of   this  Title  and  the  Licensed
26        Professional Engineer shall submit a certification to the
27        Agency of the site classification.  The  Agency  has  the
28        authority  to  audit  site  classifications and reject or
29        modify any  site  classification  inconsistent  with  the
30        requirements of this Title.
31             (2)  Sites  shall be classified as No Further Action
32        if the criteria in subparagraph (A) are satisfied:
33                  (A)(i)  The  site  is  located   in   an   area
34             designated  D, E, F and G on the Illinois Geological
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -226-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             Survey  Circular  (1984)   titled   "Potential   for
 2             Contamination  of  Shallow Aquifers in Illinois," by
 3             Berg, Richard C., et al.;
 4                  (ii)  A site evaluation under the direction  of
 5             a   Licensed   Professional  Engineer  verifies  the
 6             physical   soil   classification   conditions    are
 7             consistent  with  those  indicated  on  the Illinois
 8             Geological Survey Circular (1984) titled  "Potential
 9             for  Contamination of Shallow Aquifers in Illinois,"
10             by Berg, Richard C., et al.; and
11                  (iii)  The conditions identified in subsections
12             (b)(3)(B), (C), (D), and (E) do not exist.
13                  (B)  Groundwater investigation  monitoring  may
14             be  required  to  confirm  that  a  site  meets  the
15             criteria  of  a  No  Further  Action site. The Board
16             shall adopt rules setting forth the  criteria  under
17             which  the  Agency  may  exercise  its discretionary
18             authority to require investigations and the  minimum
19             field requirements for conducting investigations.
20             (3)  Sites  shall  be classified as High Priority if
21        any of the following are met:
22                  (A)  The site is located in an area  designated
23             A1,  A2, A3, A4, A5, AX, B1, B2, BX, C1, C2, C3, C4,
24             or C5 on the  Illinois  Geological  Survey  Circular
25             (1984)   titled   "Potential  for  Contamination  of
26             Shallow Aquifers in Illinois," by Berg, Richard  C.,
27             et  al.;  a site evaluation under the direction of a
28             Licensed Professional Engineer verifies the physical
29             soil classifications conditions are consistent  with
30             those  indicated  on  the Illinois Geological Survey
31             Circular    (1984)    entitled    "Potential     for
32             Contamination  of  Shallow Aquifers in Illinois," by
33             Berg, Richard C., et al.; and  the  results  of  the
34             physical   soil   classification   and   groundwater
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -227-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             investigation  indicate that an applicable indicator
 2             contaminant   groundwater   quality   standard    or
 3             groundwater  objective  has  been  exceeded  at  the
 4             property   boundary   line  or  200  feet  from  the
 5             excavation, whichever is less as  a  consequence  of
 6             the underground storage tank release.
 7                  (B)  The underground storage tank is within the
 8             minimum  or  maximum setback zone of a potable water
 9             supply well or regulated recharge area of a  potable
10             water supply well.
11                  (C)  There is evidence that, through natural or
12             manmade  pathways,  migration of petroleum or vapors
13             threaten human health or human safety or  may  cause
14             explosions   in  basements,  crawl  spaces,  utility
15             conduits, storm or sanitary sewers, vaults or  other
16             confined spaces.
17                  (D)  Class  III  special  resource  groundwater
18             exists within 200 feet of the excavation.
19                  (E)  A surface water body is adversely affected
20             by  the  presence of a visible sheen or free product
21             layer as the result of an underground  storage  tank
22             release.
23             (4)  Sites  shall  be  classified as Low Priority if
24        all of the following are met:
25                  (A)  The site does not meet any of the criteria
26             for classification as a High Priority Site.
27                  (B) (i)  The site is located in area designated
28             A1, A2, A3, A4, A5, AX, B1, B2, BX, C1, C2, C3,  C4,
29             C5 on the Illinois Geological Survey Circular (1984)
30             entitled  "Potential  for  Contamination  of Shallow
31             Aquifers in Illinois," by Berg, Richard C., et  al.;
32             and
33                  (ii)  a  site evaluation under the direction of
34             a  Licensed  Professional  Engineer   verifies   the
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -228-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             physical    soil   classification   conditions   are
 2             consistent with  those  indicated  on  the  Illinois
 3             Geological  Survey Circular (1984) titled "Potential
 4             for Contamination of Shallow Aquifers in  Illinois,"
 5             by Berg, Richard C., et al.; and
 6                  (iii)  the   results   of   the  physical  soil
 7             classification and groundwater investigation do  not
 8             indicate   an   applicable   indicator   contaminant
 9             groundwater    quality   standard   or   groundwater
10             objective has been exceeded at the property boundary
11             line or 200 feet from the underground storage  tank,
12             whichever is less.
13             (5)  In  the  event the results of the physical soil
14        classification and any required groundwater investigation
15        reveal that the actual site geologic characteristics  are
16        different than those indicated by the Illinois Geological
17        Survey    Circular    (1984)    titled   "Potential   for
18        Contamination of Shallow Aquifers in Illinois"  by  Berg,
19        Richard  C.,  et al., classification of the site shall be
20        determined    using    the    actual    site     geologic
21        characteristics.
22             (6)  For  purposes  of physical soil classification,
23        the  Board  is  authorized  to  prescribe  by  regulation
24        alternatives to use of  the  Illinois  Geological  Survey
25        Circular  (1984)  titled  "Potential for Contamination of
26        Shallow Aquifers in Illinois" by Berg, Richard C., et al.
27        (c)  Corrective Action.
28             (1)  High Priority Site.
29                  (A)  Prior to  performance  of  any  corrective
30             action,  beyond  that  required  by Section 57.6 and
31             subsection (a) of Section  57.7  of  this  Act,  the
32             owner  or  operator  shall prepare and submit to the
33             Agency for the Agency's approval or  modification  a
34             corrective  action  plan  designed  to  mitigate any
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -229-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             threat  to  human  health,  human  safety   or   the
 2             environment  resulting  from the underground storage
 3             tank release.
 4                  (B)  If the owner or operator intends  to  seek
 5             payment  from  the Fund, prior to performance of any
 6             corrective action beyond that  required  by  Section
 7             57.6  and  subsection (a) of Section 57.7, the owner
 8             or operator shall  submit  to  the  Agency  for  the
 9             Agency's   approval  or  modification  a  corrective
10             action  plan  budget  which  includes,  but  is  not
11             limited to, an accounting of  all  costs  associated
12             with   the  implementation  and  completion  of  the
13             corrective action plan.
14                  (C)  The corrective action plan shall do all of
15             the following:
16                       (i)  Provide  that  applicable   indicator
17                  contaminant  groundwater  quality  standards or
18                  groundwater objectives will not be exceeded  in
19                  groundwater  at  the  property boundary line or
20                  200 feet  from  the  excavation,  whichever  is
21                  less, or other level if approved by the Agency,
22                  for   any   contaminant   identified   in   the
23                  groundwater    investigation   after   complete
24                  performance of the corrective action plan.
25                       (ii)  Provide  that  Class   III   special
26                  resource   groundwater  quality  standards  for
27                  Class III special resource  groundwater  within
28                  200 feet of the excavation will not be exceeded
29                  as  a  result  of  the underground storage tank
30                  release   for   any    indicator    contaminant
31                  identified  in  the  groundwater  investigation
32                  after  complete  performance of the  corrective
33                  action plan.
34                       (iii)  Remediate  threats   due   to   the
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -230-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1                  presence  or   migration,  through  natural  or
 2                  manmade     pathways,     of    petroleum    in
 3                  concentrations sufficient to harm human  health
 4                  or  human  safety  or  to  cause  explosions in
 5                  basements,  crawl  spaces,  utility   conduits,
 6                  storm  or  sanitary  sewers,  vaults  or  other
 7                  confined spaces.
 8                       (iv)  Remediate threats to a potable water
 9                  supply.
10                       (v)  Remediate  threats to a surface water
11                  body.
12                  (D)  Within  30  days  of  completion  of   the
13             corrective  action,  the  owner  or  operator  shall
14             submit  to  the Agency such a completion report that
15             includes a description of the corrective action plan
16             and a description  of  the  corrective  action  work
17             performed  and  all  analytical  or sampling results
18             derived from performance of  the  corrective  action
19             plan.
20                  (E)  The  Agency  shall  issue  to the owner or
21             operator  a  no  further   remediation   letter   in
22             accordance   with   Section  57.10  if  all  of  the
23             following are met:
24                       (i)  The  corrective   action   completion
25                  report   demonstrates   that:   (a)  applicable
26                  indicator   contaminant   groundwater   quality
27                  standards or  groundwater  objectives  are  not
28                  exceeded  at  the property boundary line or 200
29                  feet from the excavation, whichever is less, as
30                  a  result  of  the  underground  storage   tank
31                  release    for    any   indicator   contaminant
32                  identified in  the  groundwater  investigation;
33                  (b)  Class III special use resource groundwater
34                  quality standards, for Class  III  special  use
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -231-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1                  resource  groundwater  within  200  feet of the
 2                  underground storage tank, are not exceeded as a
 3                  result of the underground storage tank  release
 4                  for   any   contaminant   identified   in   the
 5                  groundwater  investigation; (c) the underground
 6                  storage tank release does  not  threaten  human
 7                  health  or  human safety due to the presence or
 8                  migration, through natural or manmade pathways,
 9                  of  petroleum  or   hazardous   substances   in
10                  concentrations  sufficient to harm human health
11                  or human  safety  or  to  cause  explosions  in
12                  basements,   crawl  spaces,  utility  conduits,
13                  storm  or  sanitary  sewers,  vaults  or  other
14                  confined spaces; (d)  the  underground  storage
15                  tank  release  does  not  threaten  any surface
16                  water body; and  (e)  the  underground  storage
17                  tank  release  does  not  threaten  any potable
18                  water supply.
19                       (ii)  The owner or operator submits to the
20                  Agency  a   certification   from   a   Licensed
21                  Professional  Engineer  that the work described
22                  in the approved corrective action plan has been
23                  completed and that the information presented in
24                  the  corrective  action  completion  report  is
25                  accurate and complete.
26             (2)  Low Priority Site.
27                  (A)  Corrective action at a low  priority  site
28             must  include groundwater monitoring consistent with
29             part (B) of this paragraph (2).
30                  (B)  Prior  to  implementation  of  groundwater
31             monitoring, the owner or operator shall prepare  and
32             submit  to  the Agency a groundwater monitoring plan
33             and, if  the  owner  or  operator  intends  to  seek
34             payment under this Title, an associated budget which
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -232-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             includes, at a minimum, all of the following:
 2                       (i)  Placement  of  groundwater monitoring
 3                  wells at the property line, or at 200 feet from
 4                  the excavation which ever is  closer,  designed
 5                  to provide the greatest likelihood of detecting
 6                  migration of groundwater contamination.
 7                       (ii)  Quarterly groundwater sampling for a
 8                  period  of  one  year, semi-annual sampling for
 9                  the second year and annual groundwater sampling
10                  for  one  subsequent  year  for  all  indicator
11                  contaminants identified during the  groundwater
12                  investigation.
13                       (iii)  The  annual submittal to the Agency
14                  of a summary of groundwater sampling results.
15                  (C)  If  at  any  time   groundwater   sampling
16             results   indicate   a   confirmed   exceedence   of
17             applicable indicator contaminant groundwater quality
18             standards  or  groundwater objectives as a result of
19             the underground storage tank release, the  site  may
20             be  reclassified  as  a  High  Priority  Site by the
21             Agency  at  any  time  before  the  Agency's   final
22             approval  of  a  Low Priority groundwater monitoring
23             completion report. Agency review and approval  shall
24             be  in  accordance  with paragraph (4) of subsection
25             (c) of this Section. If the owner or operator elects
26             to appeal an Agency action to disapprove, modify, or
27             reject  by  operation  of   law   a   Low   Priority
28             groundwater monitoring completion report, the Agency
29             shall indicate to the Board in conjunction with such
30             appeal  whether it intends to reclassify the site as
31             High Priority. If a site is reclassified as  a  High
32             Priority  Site, the owner or operator shall submit a
33             corrective action plan  and  budget  to  the  Agency
34             within  120  days  of  the  confirmed exceedence and
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -233-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             shall initiate compliance with all corrective action
 2             requirements for a High Priority Site.
 3                  (D)  If, throughout the implementation  of  the
 4             groundwater   monitoring   plan,   the   groundwater
 5             sampling  results  do  not  confirm an exceedence of
 6             applicable indicator contaminant groundwater quality
 7             standards or groundwater objectives as a  result  of
 8             the  underground  storage tank release, the owner or
 9             operator shall submit to the Agency a  certification
10             of a Licensed Professional Engineer so stating.
11                  (E)  Unless   the  Agency  takes  action  under
12             subsection (b)(2)(C) to reclassify a  site  as  high
13             priority,  upon  receipt  of  a  certification  by a
14             Licensed Professional Engineer submitted pursuant to
15             paragraph (2) of subsection (c) of this Section, the
16             Agency shall issue to the owner  or  operator  a  no
17             further   remediation   letter  in  accordance  with
18             Section 57.10.
19             (3)  No Further Action Site.
20                  (A)  No  Further  Action   sites   require   no
21             remediation beyond that required in Section 57.6 and
22             subsection  (a)  of  this  Section  if  the owner or
23             operator has submitted to the Agency a certification
24             by a Licensed Professional Engineer  that  the  site
25             meets  all  of the criteria for classification as No
26             Further Action in subsection (b) of this Section.
27                  (B)  Unless the Agency takes action  to  reject
28             or modify a site classification under subsection (b)
29             of  this  Section  or  the  site  classification  is
30             rejected  by  operation  of law under item (4)(B) of
31             subsection (c) of this Section, upon  receipt  of  a
32             certification  by  a  Licensed Professional Engineer
33             submitted pursuant to part (A) of paragraph  (3)  of
34             subsection  (c)  of  this  Section, the Agency shall
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -234-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             issue  to  the  owner  or  operator  a  no   further
 2             remediation letter in accordance with Section 57.10.
 3             (4)  Agency review and approval.
 4                  (A)  Agency approval of any plan and associated
 5             budget,  as  described  in  this  item (4), shall be
 6             considered final approval for  purposes  of  seeking
 7             and  obtaining  payment from the Underground Storage
 8             Tank  Fund  if  the  costs   associated   with   the
 9             completion  of  any such plan are less than or equal
10             to the amounts approved in such budget.
11                  (B)  In the event the Agency fails to  approve,
12             disapprove,  or  modify any plan or report submitted
13             pursuant to this Title in writing within 120 days of
14             the receipt by the Agency, the plan or report  shall
15             be considered to be rejected by operation of law for
16             purposes  of this Title and rejected for purposes of
17             payment from the Leaking  Underground  Storage  Tank
18             Fund.
19                       (i)  For   purposes   of  those  plans  as
20                  identified  in   subparagraph   (E)   of   this
21                  subsection  (c)(4),  the Agency's review may be
22                  an audit procedure.  Such review or audit shall
23                  be  consistent  with  the  procedure  for  such
24                  review or audit as  promulgated  by  the  Board
25                  under  item  (7)  of  subsection (b) of Section
26                  57.14.  The  Agency  has   the   authority   to
27                  establish   an   auditing   program  to  verify
28                  compliance of such plans with the provisions of
29                  this Title.
30                       (ii)  For   purposes   of   those    plans
31                  submitted  pursuant  to  Part (E) (iii) of this
32                  paragraph (4) for which payment from  the  Fund
33                  is  not  being sought, the Agency need not take
34                  action on such plan until  120  days  after  it
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -235-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1                  receives   the   corrective  action  completion
 2                  report required under Section  57(c)(1)(D).  In
 3                  the  event  the  Agency  approved  the plan, it
 4                  shall proceed under the provisions  of  Section
 5                  57(c)(4).
 6                  (C)  In  approving  any plan submitted pursuant
 7             to Part (E) of this paragraph (4), the Agency  shall
 8             determine,  by  a procedure promulgated by the Board
 9             under item (7) of subsection (b) of  Section  57.14,
10             that   the   costs  associated  with  the  plan  are
11             reasonable, will be incurred in the  performance  of
12             corrective   action,   and  will  not  be  used  for
13             corrective action  activities  in  excess  of  those
14             required  to  meet  the minimum requirements of this
15             title.
16                  (D)  For any  plan  or  report  received  after
17             September  13, the effective date of this amendatory
18             Act of 1993, any action by the Agency to  disapprove
19             or  modify  a  plan submitted pursuant to this Title
20             shall be  provided  to  the  owner  or  operator  in
21             writing within 120 days of the receipt by the Agency
22             or,  in  the  case  of  a corrective action plan for
23             which payment is not being sought, within  120  days
24             of  receipt  of  the  corrective  action  completion
25             report, and shall be accompanied by:
26                       (i)  an  explanation  of  the  Sections of
27                  this Act which may be  violated  if  the  plans
28                  were approved;
29                       (ii)  an  explanation of the provisions of
30                  the regulations, promulgated  under  this  Act,
31                  which   may   be  violated  if  the  plan  were
32                  approved;
33                       (iii)  an explanation of the specific type
34                  of information, if any, which the Agency  deems
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -236-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1                  the applicant did not provide the Agency; and
 2                       (iv)  a  statement of specific reasons why
 3                  the Act and the regulations might not be met if
 4                  the plan were approved.
 5                  Any action  by  the  Agency  to  disapprove  or
 6             modify a plan or report or the rejection of any plan
 7             or  report  by  operation of law shall be subject to
 8             appeal  to  the  Board  in   accordance   with   the
 9             procedures  of Section 40.  If the owner or operator
10             elects to incorporate modifications required by  the
11             Agency  rather than appeal, an amended plan shall be
12             submitted to the Agency within 35 days of receipt of
13             the Agency's written notification.
14                  (E)  For  purposes  of  this  Title,  the  term
15             "plan" shall include:
16                       (i)  Any physical soil classification  and
17                  groundwater    investigation   plan   submitted
18                  pursuant to item (1)(A) of  subsection  (a)  of
19                  this  Section,  or  budget  under  item  (2) of
20                  subsection (a) of this Section;
21                       (ii)  Any groundwater monitoring  plan  or
22                  budget   submitted   pursuant   to   subsection
23                  (c)(2)(B) of this Section;
24                       (iii)  Any    corrective    action    plan
25                  submitted  pursuant  to subsection (c)(1)(A) of
26                  this Section; or
27                       (iv)  Any corrective  action  plan  budget
28                  submitted  pursuant  to subsection (c)(1)(B) of
29                  this Section.
30        (d)  For purposes of  this  Title,  the  term  "indicator
31    contaminant"   shall   mean,   unless  and  until  the  Board
32    promulgates regulations to the contrary, the  following:  (i)
33    if   an  underground  storage  tank  contains  gasoline,  the
34    indicator parameter shall be BTEX and Benzene;  (ii)  if  the
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -237-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    tank   contained  petroleum  products  consisting  of  middle
 2    distillate or heavy ends, then the indicator parameter  shall
 3    be  determined  by  a  scan  of PNA's taken from the location
 4    where contamination is most likely to be present;  and  (iii)
 5    if   the   tank   contained  used  oil,  then  the  indicator
 6    contaminant  shall  be  those  chemical  constituents   which
 7    indicate  the  type  of  petroleum  stored  in an underground
 8    storage tank.  All references in this  Title  to  groundwater
 9    objectives  shall  mean  Class  I  groundwater  standards  or
10    objectives as applicable.
11        (e) (1)  Notwithstanding  the provisions of this Section,
12        an owner or operator may proceed to conduct physical soil
13        classification,    groundwater    investigation,     site
14        classification  or  other  corrective action prior to the
15        submittal or approval of an otherwise required plan.   If
16        the owner or operator elects to so proceed, an applicable
17        plan  shall  be  filed with the Agency at any time.  Such
18        plan shall detail the steps taken to determine  the  type
19        of  corrective  action  which  was  necessary at the site
20        along with the corrective action taken or to be taken, in
21        addition to costs associated with activities to date  and
22        anticipated costs.
23             (2)  Upon   receipt   of   a  plan  submitted  after
24        activities have commenced at a  site,  the  Agency  shall
25        proceed  to  review  in the same manner as required under
26        this Title.  In the event the Agency disapproves  all  or
27        part  of the costs, the owner or operator may appeal such
28        decision to the Board.  The owner or operator  shall  not
29        be  eligible  to be reimbursed for such disapproved costs
30        unless and until the Board  determines  that  such  costs
31        were eligible for payment.
32    (Source:  P.A.  88-496;  88-668,  eff.  9-16-94; 89-428, eff.
33    1-1-96; 89-457, eff. 5-22-96.)
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -238-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        (415 ILCS 5/57.8)
 2        Sec.  57.8.  Underground  Storage  Tank  Fund;   payment;
 3    options  for  State  payment; deferred correction election to
 4    commence corrective action upon availability of funds.  If an
 5    owner or operator  is  eligible  to  access  the  Underground
 6    Storage Tank Fund pursuant to an Office of State Fire Marshal
 7    eligibility/deductible  final  determination letter issued in
 8    accordance with Section  57.9,  the  owner  or  operator  may
 9    submit a complete application for final or partial payment to
10    the  Agency  for  activities taken in response to a confirmed
11    release.  An owner or  operator  may  submit  a  request  for
12    partial  or final payment regarding a site no more frequently
13    than once every 90 days.
14        (a)  Payment  after  completion  of   corrective   action
15    measures. The owner or operator may submit an application for
16    payment  for  activities performed at a site after completion
17    of the requirements of  Sections  57.6  and  57.7,  or  after
18    completion   of   any   other   required  activities  at  the
19    underground storage tank site.
20             (1)  In the case of any approved plan and budget for
21        which payment is being sought, the Agency  shall  make  a
22        payment  determination  within 120 days of receipt of the
23        application.  Such determination shall  be  considered  a
24        final  decision.  The Agency's review shall be limited to
25        generally accepted auditing and accounting practices.  In
26        no case shall the Agency conduct additional review of any
27        plan  which  was  completed  within  the  budget,  beyond
28        auditing for adherence to the corrective action  measures
29        in  the  proposal.   If  the  Agency fails to approve the
30        payment application within  120  days,  such  application
31        shall  be  deemed  approved  by  operation of law and the
32        Agency shall proceed to reimburse the owner  or  operator
33        the   amount   requested   in  the  payment  application.
34        However, in no event shall the Agency reimburse the owner
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -239-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        or operator an amount greater than the amount approved in
 2        the plan.
 3             (2)  If  sufficient  funds  are  available  in   the
 4        Underground  Storage  Tank Fund, the Agency shall, within
 5        60 days, forward to the Office of the State Comptroller a
 6        voucher  in  the  amount  approved  under   the   payment
 7        application.
 8             (3)  In  the  case of insufficient funds, the Agency
 9        shall form  a priority list for payment and shall  notify
10        persons in such priority list monthly of the availability
11        of  funds  and when payment shall be made.  Payment shall
12        be made  to  the  owner  or  operator  at  such  time  as
13        sufficient   funds   become   available   for  the  costs
14        associated with corrective action and costs expended  for
15        activities  performed  where  no proposal is required, if
16        applicable.  Such priority list shall be available to any
17        owner or operator  upon  request.  Priority  for  payment
18        shall  be  determined  by  the date the Agency receives a
19        complete request for  partial  or  final  payment.   Upon
20        receipt   of   notification  from  the  Agency  that  the
21        requirements of this Title have been met, the Comptroller
22        shall make payment to the owner or operator of the amount
23        approved by the Agency, if sufficient money exists in the
24        Fund.  If there is insufficient money in the  Fund,  then
25        payment  shall  not  be  made.   If the owner or operator
26        appeals a final Agency payment determination  and  it  is
27        determined  that  the  owner  or operator is eligible for
28        payment or additional payment, the priority date for  the
29        payment  or  additional  payment shall be the same as the
30        priority  date  assigned  to  the  original  request  for
31        partial or final payment.
32             (4)  Any deductible, as determined pursuant  to  the
33        Office  of  the  State  Fire  Marshal's  eligibility  and
34        deductibility  final  determination  in  accordance  with
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -240-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        Section  57.9,  shall  be  subtracted  from  any  payment
 2        invoice  paid to an eligible owner or operator.  Only one
 3        deductible shall apply per underground storage tank site.
 4             (5)  In the event that costs are or will be incurred
 5        in addition to those approved by  the  Agency,  or  after
 6        payment,  the  owner  or  operator  may submit successive
 7        plans containing amended budgets.   The  requirements  of
 8        Section 57.7 shall apply to any amended plans.
 9             (6)  For   purposes  of  this  Section,  a  complete
10        application shall consist of:
11                  (A)  A   certification    from    a    Licensed
12             Professional  Engineer  as required under this Title
13             and acknowledged by the owner or operator.
14                  (B)  A statement of the amount approved in  the
15             plan  and  the  amount  actually  sought for payment
16             along with a certified statement that the amount  so
17             sought  shall  be  expended  in conformance with the
18             approved budget.
19                  (C)  A copy of the Office  of  the  State  Fire
20             Marshal's      eligibility     and     deductibility
21             determination.
22                  (D)  Proof  that  approval   of   the   payment
23             requested  will  not  result  in the limitations set
24             forth  in  subsection  (g)  of  this  Section  being
25             exceeded.
26                  (E)  A federal taxpayer  identification  number
27             and  legal status disclosure certification on a form
28             prescribed and provided by the Agency.
29        (b)  Commencement of corrective action upon  availability
30    of  funds.  The  Board  shall adopt regulations setting forth
31    procedures based on risk to human health or  the  environment
32    under  which  the owner or operator who has received approval
33    for any budget plan submitted pursuant to Section  57.7,  and
34    who is eligible for payment from the Underground Storage Tank
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -241-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    Fund  pursuant  to  an  Office  of  the  State  Fire  Marshal
 2    eligibility  and  deductibility  determination,  may elect to
 3    defer   site   classification,   low   priority   groundwater
 4    monitoring,  or  remediation  activities  until   funds   are
 5    available  in  an  amount equal to the amount approved in the
 6    budget plan.  The regulations shall establish criteria  based
 7    on  risk  to  human  health or the environment to be used for
 8    determining on  a  site-by-site  basis  whether  deferral  is
 9    appropriate.    The  regulations  also  shall  establish  the
10    minimum  investigatory  requirements  for determining whether
11    the risk based criteria are present  at  a  site  considering
12    deferral  and  procedures  for  the notification of owners or
13    operators of insufficient funds, Agency review of request for
14    deferral, notification of Agency final  decisions,  returning
15    deferred  sites to active status, and earmarking of funds for
16    payment.
17        (c)  When the owner or operator requests  indemnification
18    for  payment  of  costs  incurred as a result of a release of
19    petroleum from an underground storage tank, if the  owner  or
20    operator  has satisfied the requirements of subsection (a) of
21    this Section, the Agency shall forward a copy of the  request
22    to  the  Attorney General.  The Attorney General shall review
23    and approve the request for indemnification if:
24             (1)  there is a legally enforceable judgment entered
25        against the owner  or  operator  and  such  judgment  was
26        entered due to harm caused by a release of petroleum from
27        an  underground  storage  tank  and such judgment was not
28        entered as a result of fraud; or
29             (2)  a settlement  with  a  third  party  due  to  a
30        release  of petroleum from an underground storage tank is
31        reasonable.
32        (d)  Notwithstanding any other provision of  this  Title,
33    the  Agency shall not approve payment to an owner or operator
34    from  the  Fund   for   costs   of   corrective   action   or
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -242-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    indemnification  incurred during a calendar year in excess of
 2    the following  aggregate  amounts  based  on  the  number  of
 3    petroleum underground storage tanks owned or operated by such
 4    owner or operator in Illinois.
 5             Amount                               Number of Tanks
 6             $1,000,000............................fewer than 101
 7             $2,000,000...............................101 or more
 8             (1)  Costs  incurred  in  excess  of  the  aggregate
 9        amounts  set  forth  in  paragraph (1) of this subsection
10        shall not be eligible for payment in subsequent years.
11             (2)  For  purposes  of  this  subsection,   requests
12        submitted  by  any  of the agencies, departments, boards,
13        committees or commissions of the State of Illinois  shall
14        be acted upon as claims from a single owner or operator.
15             (3)  For  purposes  of  this  subsection,  owner  or
16        operator  includes  (i)  any subsidiary, parent, or joint
17        stock company of the  owner  or  operator  and  (ii)  any
18        company  owned  by any parent, subsidiary, or joint stock
19        company of the owner or operator.
20        (e)  Costs  of  corrective  action   or   indemnification
21    incurred  by  an owner or operator which have been paid to an
22    owner or  operator  under  a  policy  of  insurance,  another
23    written  agreement,  or  a  court  order are not eligible for
24    payment  under  this  Section.   An  owner  or  operator  who
25    receives payment under a policy of insurance, another written
26    agreement, or a court order shall reimburse the State to  the
27    extent  such  payment  covers  costs  for  which  payment was
28    received from the Fund.  Any monies  received  by  the  State
29    under this subsection (e) shall be deposited into the Fund.
30        (f)  (Blank.) Until the Board adopts regulations pursuant
31    to  Section  57.14, handling charges are eligible for payment
32    only if they are equal to or less than the amount  determined
33    by the following table:
34        Subcontract or field      Eligible Handling Charges
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -243-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        Purchase Cost             as a Percentage of Cost

 2        $0 - $5,000...........................................12%
 3        $5,001 - $15,000.............$600+10% of amt. over $5,000
 4        $15,001 - $50,000...........$1600+8% of amt. over $15,000
 5        $50,001 - $100,000..........$4400+5% of amt. over $50,000
 6        $100,001 - $1,000,000......$6900+2% of amt. over $100,000
 7        (g)  The  Agency  shall  not approve any payment from the
 8    Fund to pay an owner or operator:
 9             (1)  for costs of corrective action incurred by such
10        owner or operator in an amount in  excess  of  $1,000,000
11        per occurrence; and
12             (2)  for  costs  of indemnification of such owner or
13        operator  in  an  amount  in  excess  of  $1,000,000  per
14        occurrence.
15        (h)  Payment of any amount from the Fund  for  corrective
16    action  or  indemnification  shall  be  subject  to the State
17    acquiring by subrogation the rights of any  owner,  operator,
18    or  other person to recover the costs of corrective action or
19    indemnification for  which  the  Fund  has  compensated  such
20    owner,  operator,  or  person  from the person responsible or
21    liable for the release.
22        (i)  If the Agency refuses to pay or  authorizes  only  a
23    partial  payment, the affected owner or operator may petition
24    the Board for a hearing in the manner provided for the review
25    of permit decisions in Section 40 of this Act.
26        (j)  Costs  of  corrective  action   or   indemnification
27    incurred  by  an  owner  or  operator prior to July 28, 1989,
28    shall not be eligible for payment or reimbursement under this
29    Section.
30        (k)  The Agency shall not pay costs of corrective  action
31    or  indemnification incurred before providing notification of
32    the release of petroleum in accordance with the provisions of
33    this Title.
34        (l)  Corrective action does  not  include  legal  defense
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -244-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    costs.   Legal  defense costs include legal costs for seeking
 2    payment  under  this  Title  unless  the  owner  or  operator
 3    prevails before  the  Board  in  which  case  the  Board  may
 4    authorize payment of legal fees.
 5        (m)  The  Agency may apportion payment of costs for plans
 6    submitted under Section 57.7(c)(4)(E)(iii) if:
 7             (1)  the owner or operator was  deemed  eligible  to
 8        access  the  Fund  for payment of corrective action costs
 9        for some, but not all, of the underground  storage  tanks
10        at the site; and
11             (2)  the  owner  or  operator  failed to justify all
12        costs attributable to each underground  storage  tank  at
13        the site.
14    (Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99.)

15        (415 ILCS 5/57.13)
16        Sec. 57.13. Underground Storage Tank Program; transition.
17        (a)  If  a  release  is  reported  to  the  proper  State
18    authority  on  or  after  September 13, the effective date of
19    this amendatory Act of 1993,  the  owner  or  operator  shall
20    comply with the requirements of this Title.
21        (b)  If  a  release  is  reported  to  the  proper  State
22    authority  prior  to September 13, the effective date of this
23    amendatory  Act  of  1993,  the  owner  or  operator  of   an
24    underground  storage  tank may elect to proceed in accordance
25    with the requirements of this Title by submitting  a  written
26    statement  to  the  Agency of such election.  If the owner or
27    operator elects to proceed under  the  requirements  of  this
28    Title  all  costs  incurred  in  connection with the incident
29    prior to notification  shall  be  reimbursable  in  the  same
30    manner   as  was  allowable  under  the  then  existing  law.
31    Completion  of  corrective  action  shall  then  follow   the
32    provisions of this Title.
33    (Source: P.A. 88-496.)
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -245-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        (415 ILCS 5/58.7)
 2        Sec. 58.7. Review and approvals.
 3        (a)  Requirements.    All  plans  and  reports  that  are
 4    submitted pursuant to  this  Title  shall  be  submitted  for
 5    review or approval in accordance with this Section.
 6        (b)  Review and evaluation by the Agency.
 7             (1)  Except  for  sites  excluded  under subdivision
 8        (a)(2) of Section 58.1,  the  Agency  shall,  subject  to
 9        available   resources,   agree   to  provide  review  and
10        evaluation services for activities carried  out  pursuant
11        to  this Title for which the RA requested the services in
12        writing.  As a condition for providing such services, the
13        Agency may require that the RA for a site:
14                  (A)  Conform with the procedures of this Title;
15                  (B)  Allow for or otherwise arrange site visits
16             or other site  evaluation  by  the  Agency  when  so
17             requested;
18                  (C)  Agree  to perform the Remedial Action Plan
19             work plan as approved under this Title;
20                  (D)  Agree to pay any reasonable costs incurred
21             and documented  by  the  Agency  in  providing  such
22             services;
23                  (E)  Make  an  advance  partial  payment to the
24             Agency for such anticipated services in  an  amount,
25             acceptable  to  the Agency, but not to exceed $5,000
26             or one-half of the total anticipated  costs  of  the
27             Agency, whichever sum is less; and
28                  (F)  Demonstrate,  if  necessary,  authority to
29             act on  behalf  of  or  in  lieu  of  the  owner  or
30             operator.
31             (2)  Any  moneys  received  by  the  State for costs
32        incurred by the Agency in performing review or evaluation
33        services for actions conducted  pursuant  to  this  Title
34        shall be deposited in the Hazardous Waste Fund.
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -246-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             (3)  An  RA  requesting  services  under subdivision
 2        (b)(1) of this Section  may,  at  any  time,  notify  the
 3        Agency,  in  writing,  that  Agency  services  previously
 4        requested  are  no  longer wanted.  Within 180 days after
 5        receipt of the notice, the Agency shall  provide  the  RA
 6        with a final invoice for services provided until the date
 7        of such notifications.
 8             (4)  The  Agency may invoice or otherwise request or
 9        demand payment from a RA for costs incurred by the Agency
10        in performing review or evaluation services  for  actions
11        by the RA at sites only if:
12                  (A)  The   Agency   has   incurred   costs   in
13             performing  response  actions,  other than review or
14             evaluation services, due to the failure of the RA to
15             take response action in  accordance  with  a  notice
16             issued pursuant to this Act;
17                  (B)  The  RA  has  agreed  in  writing  to  the
18             payment of such costs;
19                  (C)  The  RA has been ordered to pay such costs
20             by the Board or a court  of  competent  jurisdiction
21             pursuant to this Act; or
22                  (D)  The  RA  has requested or has consented to
23             Agency   review   or   evaluation   services   under
24             subdivision (b)(1) of this Section.
25             (5)  The Agency may, subject to available resources,
26        agree to  provide  review  and  evaluation  services  for
27        response  actions  if  there is a written agreement among
28        parties to a legal action or if a  notice  to  perform  a
29        response action has been issued by the Agency.
30        (c)  Review  and  evaluation  by  a Licensed Professional
31    Engineer.  A  RA  may  elect  to  contract  with  a  Licensed
32    Professional  Engineer who will perform review and evaluation
33    services on behalf of and under the direction of  the  Agency
34    relative to the site activities.
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -247-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             (1)  Prior  to  entering  into the contract with the
 2        Review  and  Evaluation  Licensed  Professional  Engineer
 3        (RELPE), the RA shall notify the Agency of the  RELPE  to
 4        be  selected.   The  Agency  and the RA shall discuss the
 5        potential terms of the contract.
 6             (2)  At a  minimum,  the  contract  with  the  RELPE
 7        shall  provide  that  the  RELPE  will submit any reports
 8        directly to the Agency, will take his or  her  directions
 9        for  work  assignments  from the Agency, and will perform
10        the assigned work on behalf of the Agency.
11             (3)  Reasonable costs incurred by the  Agency  shall
12        be  paid  by the RA directly to the Agency in  accordance
13        with the terms of  the  review  and  evaluation  services
14        agreement   entered  into  under  subdivision  (b)(1)  of
15        Section 58.7.
16             (4)  In no event shall the RELPE acting on behalf of
17        the Agency be an employee of  the  RA  or  the  owner  or
18        operator  of  the  site  or  be  an employee of any other
19        person the RA has contracted to provide services relative
20        to the site.
21        (d)  Review and approval.   All  reviews  required  under
22    this  Title  shall  be  carried out by the Agency or a RELPE,
23    both under the direction of a Licensed Professional Engineer.
24             (1)   All review activities conducted by the  Agency
25        or  a RELPE shall be carried out in conformance with this
26        Title and rules promulgated under Section 58.11.
27             (2)  Specific plans, reports, and  activities  which
28        the Agency or a RELPE may review include:
29                  (A)  Site  Investigation  Reports  and  related
30             activities;
31                  (B)  Remediation Objectives Reports;
32                  (C)  Remedial    Action   Plans   and   related
33             activities; and
34                  (D)  Remedial  Action  Completion  Reports  and
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -248-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             related activities.
 2             (3)  Only the Agency shall  have  the  authority  to
 3        approve,  disapprove,  or approve with conditions  a plan
 4        or report as a result of  the  review  process  including
 5        those  plans  and  reports  reviewed  by a RELPE.  If the
 6        Agency disapproves a plan or report or approves a plan or
 7        report with conditions, the written notification required
 8        by subdivision (d)(4) of this Section shall  contain  the
 9        following information, as applicable:
10                  (A)  An  explanation  of  the  Sections of this
11             Title that may be violated if the plan or report was
12             approved;
13                  (B)  An explanation of the  provisions  of  the
14             rules  promulgated  under  this  Title  that  may be
15             violated if the plan or report was approved;
16                  (C)  An explanation of  the  specific  type  of
17             information,  if  any,  that  the  Agency  deems the
18             applicant did not provide the Agency;
19                  (D)  A statement of specific  reasons  why  the
20             Title  and  regulations might not be met if the plan
21             or report were approved; and
22                  (E)  An  explanation   of   the   reasons   for
23             conditions if conditions are required.
24             (4)  Upon approving, disapproving, or approving with
25        conditions  a plan or report, the Agency shall notify the
26        RA in writing of its decision.  In the case  of  approval
27        or   approval   with  conditions  of  a  Remedial  Action
28        Completion Report, the Agency shall prepare a No  Further
29        Remediation Letter that meets the requirements of Section
30        58.10 and send a copy of the letter to the RA.
31             (5)  All reviews undertaken by the Agency or a RELPE
32        shall  be completed and the decisions communicated to the
33        RA within 60 days of the request for review or  approval.
34        The  RA  may  waive  the deadline upon a request from the
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -249-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        Agency.  If  the  Agency  disapproves  or  approves  with
 2        conditions  a  plan  or  report or fails to issue a final
 3        decision within the 60 day period  and  the  RA  has  not
 4        agreed to a waiver of the deadline, the RA may, within 35
 5        days,  file an appeal to the Board.  Appeals to the Board
 6        shall be in the manner provided for the review of  permit
 7        decisions in Section 40 of this Act.
 8        (e)  Standard  of  review.  In making determinations, the
 9    following factors, and additional factors as may  be  adopted
10    by  the  Board  in  accordance  with  Section 58.11, shall be
11    considered by the Agency when reviewing or  approving  plans,
12    reports, and related activities, or the RELPE, when reviewing
13    plans, reports, and related activities:
14             (1)  Site    Investigation   Reports   and   related
15        activities:  Whether investigations have  been  conducted
16        and   the   results   compiled  in  accordance  with  the
17        appropriate procedures and  whether  the  interpretations
18        and  conclusions reached are supported by the information
19        gathered.  In making  the  determination,  the  following
20        factors shall be considered:
21                  (A)  The  adequacy  of  the  description of the
22             site and site  characteristics  that  were  used  to
23             evaluate the site;
24                  (B)  The   adequacy  of  the  investigation  of
25             potential pathways and risks to receptors identified
26             at the site; and
27                  (C)  The appropriateness of  the  sampling  and
28             analysis used.
29             (2)  Remediation  Objectives  Reports:  Whether  the
30        remediation    objectives   are   consistent   with   the
31        requirements of the applicable method  for  selecting  or
32        determining  remediation  objectives  under Section 58.5.
33        In making the determination,  the following factors shall
34        be considered:
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -250-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1                  (A)  If  the  objectives  were  based  on   the
 2             determination   of   area  background  levels  under
 3             subsection (b) of Section 58.5, whether  the  review
 4             of  current  and  historic  conditions  at or in the
 5             immediate vicinity of the site has been thorough and
 6             whether the site  sampling  and  analysis  has  been
 7             performed   in   a   manner  resulting  in  accurate
 8             determinations;
 9                  (B)  If the objectives were calculated  on  the
10             basis of predetermined equations using site specific
11             data,   whether  the  calculations  were  accurately
12             performed and whether the site specific data reflect
13             actual site conditions; and
14                  (C)  If the objectives were determined using  a
15             site specific risk assessment procedure, whether the
16             procedure   used   is   nationally   recognized  and
17             accepted, whether the calculations  were  accurately
18             performed,   and  whether  the  site  specific  data
19             reflect actual site conditions.
20             (3)  Remedial Action Plans and  related  activities:
21        Whether  the  plan  will  result  in compliance with this
22        Title, and rules adopted under it and attainment  of  the
23        applicable   remediation   objectives.    In  making  the
24        determination, the following factors shall be considered:
25                  (A)  The likelihood that the plan  will  result
26             in  the  attainment  of  the  applicable remediation
27             objectives;
28                  (B)  Whether  the   activities   proposed   are
29             consistent   with   generally  accepted  engineering
30             practices; and
31                  (C)  The management of  risk  relative  to  any
32             remaining  contamination,  including but not limited
33             to,  provisions  for  the   long-term   enforcement,
34             operation,  and  maintenance  of  institutional  and
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -251-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             engineering controls, if relied on.
 2             (4)  Remedial  Action Completion Reports and related
 3        activities:  Whether the remedial  activities  have  been
 4        completed in accordance with the approved Remedial Action
 5        Plan  and  whether  the applicable remediation objectives
 6        have been attained.
 7        (f)  All plans and reports  submitted  for  review  shall
 8    include a Licensed Professional Engineer's certification that
 9    all  investigations and remedial activities  were carried out
10    under his or her direction and, to the best  of  his  or  her
11    knowledge  and  belief,  the  work  described  in the plan or
12    report  has  been  completed  in  accordance  with  generally
13    accepted engineering practices, and the information presented
14    is accurate and complete.
15        (g)  In accordance with Section 58.11, the  Agency  shall
16    propose  and  the  Board  shall  adopt rules to carry out the
17    purposes of this Section.  At  a  minimum,  the  rules  shall
18    detail  the  types  of  services  the  Agency  may provide in
19    response to requests under subdivision (b)(1) of this Section
20    and the recordkeeping it will utilize in documenting  to  the
21    RA  the  costs  incurred  by  the  Agency  in  providing such
22    services.  Until the Board adopts the rules, the  Agency  may
23    continue   to  offer  services  of  the  type  offered  under
24    subsections (m) and (n) of Section 22.2 of this Act prior  to
25    their repeal.
26        (h)  Public participation.
27             (1)  The  Agency  shall  develop  guidance to assist
28        RA's in the implementation of a community relations  plan
29        to  address  activity at sites undergoing remedial action
30        pursuant to this Title.
31             (2)  The RA  may elect  to  enter  into  a  services
32        agreement  with  the  Agency  for  Agency  assistance  in
33        community outreach efforts.
34             (3)  The  Agency  shall  maintain a registry listing
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -252-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        those sites undergoing remedial action pursuant  to  this
 2        Title.
 3             (4)  Notwithstanding any provisions of this Section,
 4        the RA of a site undergoing remedial activity pursuant to
 5        this  Title  may  elect  to initiate a community outreach
 6        effort for the site.
 7    (Source: P.A. 89-431, eff.  12-15-95;  89-443,  eff.  7-1-96;
 8    89-626, eff. 8-9-96.)

 9        (415 ILCS 5/58.8)
10        Sec. 58.8. Duty to record.
11        (a)  The  RA  receiving  a  No Further Remediation Letter
12    from the Agency pursuant to Section 58.10, shall  submit  the
13    letter  to  the  Office  of  the Recorder or the Registrar of
14    Titles of the county in which the site is located  within  45
15    days of receipt of the letter.  The Office of the Recorder or
16    the  Registrar  of Titles shall accept and record that letter
17    in accordance with Illinois law so that it forms a  permanent
18    part of the chain of title for the site.
19        (b)  A  No  Further  Remediation  Letter shall not become
20    effective  until  officially  recorded  in  accordance   with
21    subsection  (a)  of  this  Section.   The RA shall obtain and
22    submit to the Agency a  certified  copy  of  the  No  Further
23    Remediation Letter as recorded.
24        (c)  At  no  time  shall  any  site  for which a land use
25    limitation has  been  imposed  as  a  result  of  remediation
26    activities  under this Title be used in a manner inconsistent
27    with the land use limitation unless further investigation  or
28    remedial   action  has  been  conducted  that  documents  the
29    attainment of objectives appropriate for the new land use and
30    a new No Further Remediation Letter obtained and recorded  in
31    accordance with this Title.
32        (d)  In  the  event  that a No Further Remediation Letter
33    issues by operation of law pursuant to Section 58.10, the  RA
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -253-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    may,  for purposes of this Section, file an affidavit stating
 2    that the letter issued by operation of law.  Upon receipt  of
 3    the  No  Further  Remediation  Letter from the Agency, the RA
 4    shall comply with the requirements of subsections (a) and (b)
 5    of this Section.
 6    (Source: P.A. 89-431, eff. 12-15-95; 89-443, eff. 7-1-96.)

 7        (415 ILCS 5/58.14)
 8        Sec. 58.14. Environmental Remediation Tax Credit review.
 9        (a)  Prior to applying for the Environmental  Remediation
10    Tax  Credit under Section 201 of the Illinois Income Tax Act,
11    Remediation Applicants shall first submit to  the  Agency  an
12    application for review of remediation costs.  The application
13    and  review process shall be conducted in accordance with the
14    requirements of this Section  and  the  rules  adopted  under
15    subsection  (g).   A  preliminary  review  of  the  estimated
16    remediation  costs  for development and implementation of the
17    Remedial Action Plan  may  be  obtained  in  accordance  with
18    subsection (d).
19        (b)  No application for review shall be submitted until a
20    No  Further  Remediation Letter has been issued by the Agency
21    and recorded in the chain of title for the site in accordance
22    with Section 58.10.  The Agency shall review the  application
23    to  determine  whether  the  costs  submitted are remediation
24    costs, and whether the costs incurred  are  reasonable.   The
25    application  shall be on forms prescribed and provided by the
26    Agency.  At a minimum,  the  application  shall  include  the
27    following:
28             (1)  information    identifying    the   Remediation
29        Applicant and the site for which the tax credit is  being
30        sought  and  the  date of acceptance of the site into the
31        Site Remediation Program;
32             (2)  a copy of the  No  Further  Remediation  Letter
33        with  official  verification  that  the  letter  has been
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -254-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        recorded in the  chain  of  title  for  the  site  and  a
 2        demonstration  that the site for which the application is
 3        submitted is the same site as the one for  which  the  No
 4        Further Remediation Letter is issued;
 5             (3)  a   demonstration   that  the  release  of  the
 6        regulated substances of concern for which the No  Further
 7        Remediation   Letter   was  issued  were  not  caused  or
 8        contributed to in any material respect by the Remediation
 9        Applicant.  After the Pollution Control Board  rules  are
10        adopted pursuant to the Illinois Administrative Procedure
11        Act  for  the  administration  and enforcement of Section
12        58.9 of the Environmental Protection Act,  determinations
13        as  to  credit availability shall be made consistent with
14        those rules;
15             (4)  an  itemization  and  documentation,  including
16        receipts, of the remediation costs incurred;
17             (5)  a demonstration that  the  costs  incurred  are
18        remediation costs as defined in this Act and its rules;
19             (6)  a  demonstration  that  the costs submitted for
20        review were incurred by  the  Remediation  Applicant  who
21        received the No Further Remediation Letter;
22             (7)  an  application  fee in the amount set forth in
23        subsection  (e)  for  each  site  for  which  review   of
24        remediation   costs  is  requested  and,  if  applicable,
25        certification  from  the  Department  of   Commerce   and
26        Community   Affairs  that  the  site  is  located  in  an
27        enterprise zone;
28             (8)  any other information deemed appropriate by the
29        Agency.
30        (c)  Within 60 days after receipt by  the  Agency  of  an
31    application  meeting  the requirements of subsection (b), the
32    Agency shall issue  a  letter  to  the  applicant  approving,
33    disapproving, or modifying the remediation costs submitted in
34    the  application.   If  the remediation costs are approved as
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -255-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    submitted, the Agency's letter shall state the amount of  the
 2    remediation  costs  to  be  applied  toward the Environmental
 3    Remediation Tax Credit.  If an application is disapproved  or
 4    approved with modification of remediation costs, the Agency's
 5    letter  shall  set  forth  the reasons for the disapproval or
 6    modification and state the amount of the  remediation  costs,
 7    if  any,  to  be applied toward the Environmental Remediation
 8    Tax Credit.
 9        If a  preliminary  review  of  a  budget  plan  has  been
10    obtained  under subsection (d), the Remediation Applicant may
11    submit, with the  application  and  supporting  documentation
12    under   subsection   (b),   a  copy  of  the  Agency's  final
13    determination accompanied by a certification that the  actual
14    remediation   costs   incurred   for   the   development  and
15    implementation of the Remedial Action Plan are  equal  to  or
16    less   than   the   costs  approved  in  the  Agency's  final
17    determination on the budget plan.  The certification shall be
18    signed by the Remediation Applicant and notarized.  Based  on
19    that  submission, the Agency shall not be required to conduct
20    further review of the  costs  incurred  for  development  and
21    implementation  of  the  Remedial Action Plan and may approve
22    costs as submitted.
23        Within  35  days  after  receipt  of  an  Agency   letter
24    disapproving  or  modifying  an  application  for approval of
25    remediation costs, the Remediation Applicant may  appeal  the
26    Agency's decision to the Board in the manner provided for the
27    review of permits in Section 40 of this Act.
28        (d)  (1) A Remediation Applicant may obtain a preliminary
29        review of estimated remediation costs for the development
30        and   implementation  of  the  Remedial  Action  Plan  by
31        submitting a budget plan along with the  Remedial  Action
32        Plan.   The  budget  plan  shall  be  set  forth on forms
33        prescribed and provided by the Agency and  shall  include
34        but  shall  not  be limited to line item estimates of the
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -256-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        costs associated with each line item (such as  personnel,
 2        equipment,  and materials) that the Remediation Applicant
 3        anticipates will be  incurred  for  the  development  and
 4        implementation  of  the Remedial Action Plan.  The Agency
 5        shall review the budget  plan  along  with  the  Remedial
 6        Action  Plan  to  determine  whether  the estimated costs
 7        submitted are remediation costs  and  whether  the  costs
 8        estimated for the activities are reasonable.
 9             (2)  If  the  Remedial Action Plan is amended by the
10        Remediation Applicant or as a result  of  Agency  action,
11        the   corresponding   budget   plan   shall   be  revised
12        accordingly and resubmitted for Agency review.
13             (3)  The budget plan shall  be  accompanied  by  the
14        applicable fee as set forth in subsection (e).
15             (4)  Submittal  of  a budget plan shall be deemed an
16        automatic 60-day  waiver  of  the  Remedial  Action  Plan
17        review deadlines set forth in this Section and its rules.
18             (5)  Within  the  applicable  period  of review, the
19        Agency shall issue a letter to the Remediation  Applicant
20        approving,   disapproving,  or  modifying  the  estimated
21        remediation costs submitted in the  budget  plan.   If  a
22        budget  plan is disapproved or approved with modification
23        of estimated remediation costs, the Agency's letter shall
24        set  forth   the   reasons   for   the   disapproval   or
25        modification.
26             (6)  Within  35  days  after  receipt  of  an Agency
27        letter disapproving  or  modifying  a  budget  plan,  the
28        Remediation Applicant may appeal the Agency's decision to
29        the  Board  in  the  manner  provided  for  the review of
30        permits in Section 40 of this Act.
31        (e)  The fees for reviews conducted  under  this  Section
32    are  in  addition  to  any  other fees or payments for Agency
33    services rendered pursuant to the  Site  Remediation  Program
34    and shall be as follows:
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -257-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             (1)  The  fee  for  an  application  for  review  of
 2        remediation costs shall be $1,000 for each site reviewed.
 3             (2)  The  fee  for  the  review  of  the budget plan
 4        submitted under subsection (d) shall  be  $500  for  each
 5        site reviewed.
 6             (3)  In   the   case   of  a  Remediation  Applicant
 7        submitting for review total remediation costs of $100,000
 8        or less for a site located within an enterprise zone  (as
 9        set  forth  in paragraph (i) of subsection (l) of Section
10        201 of the Illinois Income  Tax  Act),  the  fee  for  an
11        application for review of remediation costs shall be $250
12        for  each  site reviewed. For those sites, there shall be
13        no fee for review of a budget plan under subsection (d).
14        The application fee shall be made payable to the State of
15    Illinois, for deposit into the Hazardous Waste Fund.
16        Pursuant to appropriation, the Agency shall use the  fees
17    collected   under   this   subsection   for  development  and
18    administration of the review program.
19        (f)  The Agency shall have the authority  to  enter  into
20    any  contracts  or  agreements that may be necessary to carry
21    out its duties and responsibilities under this Section.
22        (g)  Within 6 months after July 21, the effective date of
23    this amendatory Act of 1997, the Agency shall  propose  rules
24    prescribing  procedures  and standards for its administration
25    of this Section.   Within  6  months  after  receipt  of  the
26    Agency's  proposed  rules,  the  Board  shall adopt on second
27    notice, pursuant to Sections 27 and 28 of this  Act  and  the
28    Illinois   Administrative   Procedure  Act,  rules  that  are
29    consistent with this Section.  Prior to the effective date of
30    rules adopted under this  Section,  the  Agency  may  conduct
31    reviews  of applications under this Section and the Agency is
32    further authorized to distribute guidance documents on  costs
33    that are eligible or ineligible as remediation costs.
34    (Source: P.A. 90-123, eff. 7-21-97; 90-792, eff. 1-1-99.)
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -258-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        (415 ILCS 5/58.17)
 2        Sec.  58.17.  Environmental  Land  Use Control.  No later
 3    than 2 months after July 7, 2000 the effective date  of  this
 4    amendatory  Act  of  the  91st  General Assembly, the Agency,
 5    after consideration of the recommendations of the Regulations
 6    and Site Remediation Advisory Committee, shall propose  rules
 7    creating  an instrument to be known as the Environmental Land
 8    Use Control (ELUC).  Within 6 months  after  receipt  of  the
 9    Agency's  proposed  rules, the Board shall adopt, pursuant to
10    Sections 27 and 28 of this Act, rules creating the ELUC  that
11    establish  land  use limitations or obligations on the use of
12    real property when necessary to manage risk to  human  health
13    or  the  environment arising from contamination left in place
14    pursuant to the procedures set forth in Section 58.5 of  this
15    Act  or  35  Ill.  Adm.  Code  742.   The rules shall include
16    provisions  addressing  establishment,  content,   recording,
17    duration, and enforcement of ELUCs.
18    (Source: P.A. 91-909, eff. 7-7-00.)

19        (415 ILCS 5/4.1 rep.)
20        (415 ILCS 5/5.1 rep.)
21        (415 ILCS 5/12.1 rep.)
22        (415 ILCS 5/22.20 rep.)
23        (415 ILCS 5/22.41 rep.)
24        (415 ILCS 5/22.42 rep.)
25        (415 ILCS 5/50 rep.)
26        Section  10.  The Environmental Protection Act is amended
27    by repealing Sections 4.1, 5.1, 12.1,  22.20,  22.41,  22.42,
28    and 50.

29        Section 15.  The Employment of Illinois Workers on Public
30    Works Act is amended by changing Section 1 as follows:

31        (30 ILCS 570/1) (from Ch. 48, par. 2201)
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -259-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        Sec.  1.   For the purposes of Article 2 of this Act, the
 2    following words have the meanings ascribed to  them  in  this
 3    Section.
 4        (1)  "Illinois  laborer"  refers  to  any  person who has
 5    resided in Illinois for at  least  30  days  and  intends  to
 6    become or remain an Illinois resident.
 7        (2)  "A period of excessive unemployment" means any month
 8    immediately  following  2  consecutive calendar months during
 9    which the level of unemployment in the State of Illinois  has
10    exceeded  5% as measured by the United States Bureau of Labor
11    Statistics in  its  monthly  publication  of  employment  and
12    unemployment figures.
13        (3)  "Hazardous  waste" has the definition ascribed to it
14    in  Section  3.220  3.15  of   the   Illinois   Environmental
15    Protection Act, approved June 29, 1970, as amended.
16    (Source: P.A. 86-1015.)

17        Section  20.   The  Counties  Code is amended by changing
18    Section 5-15002 as follows:

19        (55 ILCS 5/5-15002) (from Ch. 34, par. 5-15002)
20        Sec. 5-15002. Definitions.  When used  in  this  Division
21    the  term "waterworks system" means and includes a waterworks
22    system  in  its  entirety,  or  any  integral  part  thereof,
23    including  mains,  hydrants,  meters,   valves,   standpipes,
24    storage  tanks,  pumps,  tanks,  intakes,  wells,  impounding
25    reservoirs,   machinery,   purification   plants,   softening
26    apparatus, and all other elements useful in connection with a
27    water supply or water distribution system.
28        The  term "sewerage system" means and includes any or all
29    of  the  following:  Sewerage  treatment  plant  or   plants,
30    collecting,  intercepting,  and outlet sewers, lateral sewers
31    and drains,  including  combined  storm  water  and  sanitary
32    drains,  force  mains,  conduits,  pumping  stations, ejector
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -260-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    stations,  and  all  other  appurtenances,   extensions   and
 2    improvements   necessary,   useful   or  convenient  for  the
 3    collection, treatment and disposal in a  sanitary  manner  of
 4    storm water, sanitary sewage and industrial wastes.
 5        The  term "combined waterworks and sewerage system" means
 6    and includes a waterworks and sewerage system, as hereinabove
 7    defined, which any  county  shall  determine  to  operate  in
 8    combination.
 9        The term "waste management" means the process of storage,
10    treatment  or  disposal, but not the hauling or transport, of
11    "waste" as defined in Section 3.535 3.53 of the Environmental
12    Protection Act, but excluding "hazardous waste" as defined in
13    that Act.
14    (Source: P.A. 86-962; 87-650.)

15        Section 25.  The Illinois Municipal Code  is  amended  by
16    changing Section 11-31-1 as follows:

17        (65 ILCS 5/11-31-1) (from Ch. 24, par. 11-31-1)
18        Sec.    11-31-1.  Demolition,   repair,   enclosure,   or
19    remediation.
20        (a)  The corporate authorities of each  municipality  may
21    demolish, repair, or enclose or cause the demolition, repair,
22    or enclosure of dangerous and unsafe buildings or uncompleted
23    and   abandoned   buildings   within  the  territory  of  the
24    municipality and may remove or cause the removal of  garbage,
25    debris, and other hazardous, noxious, or unhealthy substances
26    or  materials  from  those  buildings.   In any county having
27    adopted by referendum or otherwise a county health department
28    as provided by Division 5-25 of  the  Counties  Code  or  its
29    predecessor,  the  county  board  of that county may exercise
30    those powers with regard to dangerous and unsafe buildings or
31    uncompleted and abandoned buildings within the  territory  of
32    any  city,  village,  or  incorporated  town having less than
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -261-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    50,000 population.
 2        The corporate authorities  shall  apply  to  the  circuit
 3    court  of the county in which the building is located (i) for
 4    an order authorizing action to be taken  with  respect  to  a
 5    building  if  the  owner or owners of the building, including
 6    the lien holders of record, after at least 15  days'  written
 7    notice by mail so to do, have failed to put the building in a
 8    safe  condition  or  to  demolish  it  or  (ii)  for an order
 9    requiring the owner or owners of record to demolish,  repair,
10    or  enclose  the  building  or to remove garbage, debris, and
11    other  hazardous,  noxious,  or   unhealthy   substances   or
12    materials  from  the  building.   It  is not a defense to the
13    cause of action that the building is boarded up or  otherwise
14    enclosed,  although the court may order the defendant to have
15    the building boarded up or otherwise  enclosed.  Where,  upon
16    diligent  search, the identity or whereabouts of the owner or
17    owners of the building, including the lien holders of record,
18    is not ascertainable, notice mailed to the person or  persons
19    in whose name the real estate was last assessed is sufficient
20    notice under this Section.
21        The  hearing  upon  the  application to the circuit court
22    shall be expedited by the court and shall be given precedence
23    over all other suits. Any person entitled to bring an  action
24    under  subsection (b) shall have the right to intervene in an
25    action brought under this Section.
26        The cost of the demolition, repair, enclosure, or removal
27    incurred by the municipality, by an intervenor, or by a  lien
28    holder of record, including court costs, attorney's fees, and
29    other  costs  related  to the enforcement of this Section, is
30    recoverable from the owner or owners of the  real  estate  or
31    the  previous  owner  or both if the property was transferred
32    during the 15 day notice period and is a  lien  on  the  real
33    estate;  the lien is superior to all prior existing liens and
34    encumbrances, except taxes, if, within  180  days  after  the
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -262-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    repair,  demolition, enclosure, or removal, the municipality,
 2    the lien holder of record, or the intervenor who incurred the
 3    cost and expense shall file a notice of lien for the cost and
 4    expense incurred in the office of the recorder in the  county
 5    in  which  the real estate is located or in the office of the
 6    registrar of titles of the county if the real estate affected
 7    is registered under the Registered Titles (Torrens) Act.
 8        The notice must consist of a sworn statement setting  out
 9    (1)  a  description  of  the  real  estate sufficient for its
10    identification, (2) the amount of money representing the cost
11    and expense incurred, and (3) the date or dates when the cost
12    and expense was incurred by the municipality, the lien holder
13    of record, or the intervenor. Upon payment of  the  cost  and
14    expense by the owner of or persons interested in the property
15    after  the  notice  of lien has been filed, the lien shall be
16    released by the municipality, the person in  whose  name  the
17    lien  has  been  filed,  or the assignee of the lien, and the
18    release may be filed of record  as  in  the  case  of  filing
19    notice  of lien. Unless the lien is enforced under subsection
20    (c), the lien may be enforced by foreclosure  proceedings  as
21    in  the case of mortgage foreclosures under Article XV of the
22    Code of Civil Procedure or mechanics' lien  foreclosures.  An
23    action  to  foreclose  this lien may be commenced at any time
24    after the date of filing of the notice of lien.  The costs of
25    foreclosure incurred by  the  municipality,  including  court
26    costs,  reasonable  attorney's fees, advances to preserve the
27    property, and other costs related to the enforcement of  this
28    subsection,  plus  statutory interest, are a lien on the real
29    estate and are recoverable by the municipality from the owner
30    or owners of the real estate.
31        All liens arising under  this  subsection  (a)  shall  be
32    assignable.  The  assignee  of  the  lien shall have the same
33    power to enforce the lien as the assigning party, except that
34    the lien may not be enforced under subsection (c).
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -263-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        If  the  appropriate   official   of   any   municipality
 2    determines   that   any  dangerous  and  unsafe  building  or
 3    uncompleted  and  abandoned  building  within  its  territory
 4    fulfills the requirements for an action by  the  municipality
 5    under   the   Abandoned   Housing   Rehabilitation  Act,  the
 6    municipality may petition under  that  Act  in  a  proceeding
 7    brought under this subsection.
 8        (b)  Any  owner  or  tenant  of real property within 1200
 9    feet in any direction of any  dangerous  or  unsafe  building
10    located  within  the  territory  of  a  municipality  with  a
11    population  of  500,000 or more may file with the appropriate
12    municipal authority  a request that the municipality apply to
13    the circuit court of the county  in  which  the  building  is
14    located  for  an  order permitting the demolition, removal of
15    garbage, debris, and other noxious  or  unhealthy  substances
16    and materials from, or repair or enclosure of the building in
17    the  manner  prescribed in subsection (a) of this Section. If
18    the municipality fails to  institute  an  action  in  circuit
19    court  within  90  days  after the filing of the request, the
20    owner or tenant of real property  within  1200  feet  in  any
21    direction  of the building may institute an action in circuit
22    court seeking an order compelling  the  owner  or  owners  of
23    record to demolish, remove garbage, debris, and other noxious
24    or unhealthy substances and materials from, repair or enclose
25    or to cause to be demolished, have garbage, debris, and other
26    noxious  or  unhealthy substances and materials removed from,
27    repaired, or enclosed the building  in  question.  A  private
28    owner  or tenant who institutes an action under the preceding
29    sentence shall not be required to pay any fee to the clerk of
30    the circuit court. The cost of repair,  removal,  demolition,
31    or  enclosure shall be borne by the owner or owners of record
32    of the building. In the event the owner or owners  of  record
33    fail  to  demolish, remove garbage, debris, and other noxious
34    or  unhealthy  substances  and  materials  from,  repair,  or
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -264-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    enclose the building within 90 days of  the  date  the  court
 2    entered  its  order,  the  owner or tenant who instituted the
 3    action may request that the court join the municipality as  a
 4    party to the action.  The court may order the municipality to
 5    demolish,  remove  materials  from,  repair,  or  enclose the
 6    building, or cause that action to be taken upon  the  request
 7    of  any owner or tenant who instituted the action or upon the
 8    municipality's request.  The municipality may file,  and  the
 9    court  may approve, a plan for rehabilitating the building in
10    question. A  court  order  authorizing  the  municipality  to
11    demolish,   remove  materials  from,  repair,  or  enclose  a
12    building, or  cause  that  action  to  be  taken,  shall  not
13    preclude  the  court  from  adjudging  the owner or owners of
14    record of the building  in  contempt  of  court  due  to  the
15    failure to comply with the order to demolish, remove garbage,
16    debris,   and  other  noxious  or  unhealthy  substances  and
17    materials from, repair, or enclose the building.
18        If a municipality or a person or persons other  than  the
19    owner or owners of record pay the cost of demolition, removal
20    of garbage, debris, and other noxious or unhealthy substances
21    and  materials,  repair,  or  enclosure  pursuant  to a court
22    order, the cost, including court costs, attorney's fees,  and
23    other costs related to the enforcement of this subsection, is
24    recoverable  from  the owner or owners of the real estate and
25    is a lien on the real estate; the lien  is  superior  to  all
26    prior  existing  liens  and  encumbrances,  except taxes, if,
27    within 180 days after the  repair,  removal,  demolition,  or
28    enclosure, the municipality or the person or persons who paid
29    the  costs of demolition, removal, repair, or enclosure shall
30    file a notice of lien of the cost and expense incurred in the
31    office of the recorder in the county in which the real estate
32    is located or in the office of the registrar of the county if
33    the real estate affected is registered under  the  Registered
34    Titles  (Torrens)  Act.  The  notice shall be in a form as is
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -265-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    provided  in  subsection  (a).   An  owner  or   tenant   who
 2    institutes  an  action  in  circuit court seeking an order to
 3    compel the owner or owners  of  record  to  demolish,  remove
 4    materials  from,  repair,  or enclose any dangerous or unsafe
 5    building, or to cause that action  to  be  taken  under  this
 6    subsection  may recover court costs and reasonable attorney's
 7    fees for instituting the action from the owner or  owners  of
 8    record  of  the  building.  Upon  payment  of  the  costs and
 9    expenses by the owner  of  or  a  person  interested  in  the
10    property  after  the  notice of lien has been filed, the lien
11    shall be released by the municipality or the person in  whose
12    name  the lien has been filed or his or her assignee, and the
13    release may be filed of record as in the  case  of  filing  a
14    notice of lien.  Unless the lien is enforced under subsection
15    (c),  the  lien may be enforced by foreclosure proceedings as
16    in the case of mortgage foreclosures under Article XV of  the
17    Code  of Civil Procedure or mechanics' lien foreclosures.  An
18    action to foreclose this lien may be commenced  at  any  time
19    after the date of filing of the notice of lien.  The costs of
20    foreclosure  incurred  by  the  municipality, including court
21    costs, reasonable attorneys' fees, advances to  preserve  the
22    property,  and other costs related to the enforcement of this
23    subsection, plus statutory interest, are a lien on  the  real
24    estate and are recoverable by the municipality from the owner
25    or owners of the real estate.
26        All  liens arising under the terms of this subsection (b)
27    shall be assignable.  The assignee of the lien shall have the
28    same power to enforce the lien as the assigning party, except
29    that the lien may not be enforced under subsection (c).
30        (c)  In any case where a municipality has obtained a lien
31    under subsection (a),  (b),  or  (f),  the  municipality  may
32    enforce  the  lien  under  this  subsection  (c)  in the same
33    proceeding in which the lien is authorized.
34        A municipality desiring to  enforce  a  lien  under  this
 
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 1    subsection   (c)   shall   petition   the   court  to  retain
 2    jurisdiction   for   foreclosure   proceedings   under   this
 3    subsection.  Notice of  the  petition  shall  be  served,  by
 4    certified  or registered mail, on all persons who were served
 5    notice under subsection (a), (b), or (f).   The  court  shall
 6    conduct a hearing on the petition not less than 15 days after
 7    the  notice  is  served.   If  the  court determines that the
 8    requirements of this subsection (c) have been  satisfied,  it
 9    shall  grant  the  petition  and retain jurisdiction over the
10    matter until the foreclosure proceeding  is  completed.   The
11    costs  of foreclosure incurred by the municipality, including
12    court costs, reasonable attorneys' fees, advances to preserve
13    the property, and other costs related to the  enforcement  of
14    this  subsection,  plus statutory interest, are a lien on the
15    real estate and are recoverable by the municipality from  the
16    owner  or owners of the real estate.  If the court denies the
17    petition, the municipality may enforce the lien in a separate
18    action as provided in subsection (a), (b), or (f).
19        All persons designated in Section 15-1501 of the Code  of
20    Civil   Procedure   as   necessary   parties  in  a  mortgage
21    foreclosure action shall be joined as parties before issuance
22    of an order of foreclosure.  Persons  designated  in  Section
23    15-1501 of the Code of Civil Procedure as permissible parties
24    may also be joined as parties in the action.
25        The  provisions  of  Article  XV  of  the  Code  of Civil
26    Procedure applicable to mortgage foreclosures shall apply  to
27    the  foreclosure  of a lien under this subsection (c), except
28    to the extent that those  provisions  are  inconsistent  with
29    this  subsection.    For  purposes  of  foreclosures of liens
30    under  this  subsection,  however,  the   redemption   period
31    described in subsection (b) of Section 15-1603 of the Code of
32    Civil  Procedure shall end 60 days after the date of entry of
33    the order of foreclosure.
34        (d)  In addition to any other remedy provided by law, the
 
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 1    corporate authorities of any municipality  may  petition  the
 2    circuit  court to have property declared abandoned under this
 3    subsection (d) if:
 4             (1)  the property has been tax delinquent for  2  or
 5        more  years  or  bills for water service for the property
 6        have been outstanding for 2 or more years;
 7             (2)  the property is unoccupied by  persons  legally
 8        in possession; and
 9             (3)  the  property  contains  a  dangerous or unsafe
10        building.
11        All persons having an interest of record in the property,
12    including  tax  purchasers  and  beneficial  owners  of   any
13    Illinois  land  trust  having title to the property, shall be
14    named as defendants in the petition and shall be served  with
15    process.   In  addition,  service  shall be had under Section
16    2-206 of the Code  of  Civil  Procedure  as  in  other  cases
17    affecting property.
18        The   municipality,   however,  may  proceed  under  this
19    subsection in a proceeding brought under  subsection  (a)  or
20    (b).   Notice of the petition shall be served by certified or
21    registered mail on all persons who were served  notice  under
22    subsection (a) or (b).
23        If  the municipality proves that the conditions described
24    in this subsection exist and  the  owner  of  record  of  the
25    property  does  not enter an appearance in the action, or, if
26    title to the property is held by an Illinois land  trust,  if
27    neither  the  owner of record nor the owner of the beneficial
28    interest of the trust enters an appearance, the  court  shall
29    declare the property abandoned.
30        If  that  determination  is made, notice shall be sent by
31    certified  or  registered  mail  to  all  persons  having  an
32    interest of record in the property, including tax  purchasers
33    and beneficial owners of any Illinois land trust having title
34    to  the  property, stating that title to the property will be
 
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 1    transferred to the municipality unless, within 30 days of the
 2    notice, the owner of  record  enters  an  appearance  in  the
 3    action,  or unless any other person having an interest in the
 4    property files with the  court  a  request  to  demolish  the
 5    dangerous  or  unsafe building or to put the building in safe
 6    condition.
 7        If the owner of record enters an appearance in the action
 8    within the 30 day period, the court shall  vacate  its  order
 9    declaring   the   property  abandoned.   In  that  case,  the
10    municipality may amend its complaint  in  order  to  initiate
11    proceedings under subsection (a).
12        If  a request to demolish or repair the building is filed
13    within the 30 day period, the court shall grant permission to
14    the requesting party to demolish the building within 30  days
15    or  to  restore the building to safe condition within 60 days
16    after the request is granted.  An extension  of  that  period
17    for up to 60 additional days may be given for good cause.  If
18    more than one person with an interest in the property files a
19    timely  request, preference shall be given to the person with
20    the lien or other interest of the highest priority.
21        If the requesting party proves  to  the  court  that  the
22    building  has  been  demolished  or  put  in a safe condition
23    within the period of time granted by  the  court,  the  court
24    shall issue a quitclaim judicial deed for the property to the
25    requesting party, conveying only the interest of the owner of
26    record,  upon  proof  of  payment  to the municipality of all
27    costs incurred by the municipality  in  connection  with  the
28    action,  including but not limited to court costs, attorney's
29    fees, administrative costs, the  costs,  if  any,  associated
30    with   building   enclosure   or   removal,   and  receiver's
31    certificates.  The interest in the property so conveyed shall
32    be subject to all liens and encumbrances on the property.  In
33    addition, if the interest is conveyed to a person  holding  a
34    certificate  of  purchase for the property under the Property
 
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 1    Tax Code, the conveyance shall be subject to  the  rights  of
 2    redemption  of all persons entitled to redeem under that Act,
 3    including the original owner of record.
 4        If no person with an interest in  the  property  files  a
 5    timely  request  or if the requesting party fails to demolish
 6    the building or put the building in safe condition within the
 7    time specified by the court, the  municipality  may  petition
 8    the  court  to  issue a judicial deed for the property to the
 9    municipality.  A conveyance by judicial deed shall operate to
10    extinguish all existing ownership interests in, liens on, and
11    other interest in the  property,  including  tax  liens,  and
12    shall  extinguish  the  rights  and  interests of any and all
13    holders of  a  bona  fide  certificate  of  purchase  of  the
14    property   for   delinquent   taxes.    Any  such  bona  fide
15    certificate of purchase holder shall be entitled to a sale in
16    error as prescribed under Section 21-310 of the Property  Tax
17    Code.
18        (e)  Each  municipality  may  use  the provisions of this
19    subsection to expedite the removal of certain buildings  that
20    are  a  continuing  hazard to the community in which they are
21    located.
22        If a residential or commercial building is 3  stories  or
23    less  in  height  as  defined  by the municipality's building
24    code, and the corporate official designated to be  in  charge
25    of enforcing the municipality's building code determines that
26    the  building  is  open  and  vacant  and  an  immediate  and
27    continuing  hazard  to the community in which the building is
28    located, then the official shall  be  authorized  to  post  a
29    notice not less than 2 feet by 2 feet in size on the front of
30    the  building.   The  notice shall be dated as of the date of
31    the posting and shall  state  that  unless  the  building  is
32    demolished,  repaired,  or  enclosed, and unless any garbage,
33    debris, and other hazardous, noxious, or unhealthy substances
34    or materials are removed so that an immediate and  continuing
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -270-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    hazard  to  the community no longer exists, then the building
 2    may be demolished, repaired, or  enclosed,  or  any  garbage,
 3    debris, and other hazardous, noxious, or unhealthy substances
 4    or materials may be removed, by the municipality.
 5        Not  later  than  30  days  following  the posting of the
 6    notice, the municipality shall do all of the following:
 7             (1)  Cause to be sent,  by  certified  mail,  return
 8        receipt  requested,  a Notice to Remediate to  all owners
 9        of record of the property, the beneficial owners  of  any
10        Illinois land trust having title to the property, and all
11        lienholders of record in the property, stating the intent
12        of  the  municipality to demolish, repair, or enclose the
13        building  or  remove  any  garbage,  debris,   or   other
14        hazardous,  noxious, or unhealthy substances or materials
15        if that action is not taken by the owner or owners.
16             (2)  Cause to be published, in a newspaper published
17        or circulated in the municipality where the  building  is
18        located,  a  notice  setting  forth (i) the permanent tax
19        index number and the address  of  the  building,  (ii)  a
20        statement  that  the  property  is  open  and  vacant and
21        constitutes an immediate and  continuing  hazard  to  the
22        community,  and  (iii)  a statement that the municipality
23        intends to demolish, repair, or enclose the  building  or
24        remove  any garbage, debris, or other hazardous, noxious,
25        or unhealthy substances or  materials  if  the  owner  or
26        owners  or  lienholders  of  record  fail to do so.  This
27        notice shall be published for 3 consecutive days.
28             (3)  Cause to be recorded the  Notice  to  Remediate
29        mailed  under paragraph (1) in the office of the recorder
30        in the county in which the real estate is located  or  in
31        the  office  of  the registrar of titles of the county if
32        the real estate is registered under the Registered  Title
33        (Torrens) Act.
34        Any  person  or persons with a current legal or equitable
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -271-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    interest in the property objecting to the proposed actions of
 2    the corporate authorities may file his or her objection in an
 3    appropriate form in a court of competent jurisdiction.
 4        If the building is not demolished, repaired, or enclosed,
 5    or the garbage,  debris,  or  other  hazardous,  noxious,  or
 6    unhealthy  substances or materials are not removed, within 30
 7    days of mailing the notice  to  the  owners  of  record,  the
 8    beneficial  owners of any Illinois land trust having title to
 9    the property, and all lienholders of record in the  property,
10    or  within  30  days  of  the  last day of publication of the
11    notice, whichever is later, the corporate  authorities  shall
12    have  the  power to demolish, repair, or enclose the building
13    or  to  remove  any  garbage,  debris,  or  other  hazardous,
14    noxious, or unhealthy substances or materials.
15        The municipality may  proceed  to  demolish,  repair,  or
16    enclose  a  building  or remove any garbage, debris, or other
17    hazardous, noxious,  or  unhealthy  substances  or  materials
18    under  this  subsection within a 120-day period following the
19    date of the mailing of the notice if the appropriate official
20    determines that the demolition, repair, enclosure, or removal
21    of any garbage,  debris,  or  other  hazardous,  noxious,  or
22    unhealthy  substances or materials is necessary to remedy the
23    immediate and continuing hazard.   If,  however,  before  the
24    municipality  proceeds  with any of the actions authorized by
25    this  subsection,  any  person  with  a  legal  or  equitable
26    interest in the property has  sought  a  hearing  under  this
27    subsection  before  a  court  and  has  served  a copy of the
28    complaint on the chief executive officer of the municipality,
29    then the municipality shall not proceed with the  demolition,
30    repair,  enclosure,  or  removal of garbage, debris, or other
31    substances until the court determines  that  that  action  is
32    necessary   to   remedy   the  hazard  and  issues  an  order
33    authorizing the municipality to do so.
34        Following the  demolition,  repair,  or  enclosure  of  a
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -272-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    building,  or  the  removal  of  garbage,  debris,  or  other
 2    hazardous,  noxious,  or  unhealthy  substances  or materials
 3    under this subsection, the municipality may file a notice  of
 4    lien  against the real estate for the cost of the demolition,
 5    repair, enclosure, or  removal  within  180  days  after  the
 6    repair,  demolition,  enclosure, or removal occurred, for the
 7    cost and expense incurred, in the office of the  recorder  in
 8    the  county  in  which  the  real estate is located or in the
 9    office of the registrar of titles of the county if  the  real
10    estate  affected  is  registered  under the Registered Titles
11    (Torrens) Act; this lien has priority over the  interests  of
12    those  parties  named in the Notice to Remediate mailed under
13    paragraph (1), but not over  the  interests  of  third  party
14    purchasers  or  encumbrancers  for  value  who obtained their
15    interests  in  the  property  before  obtaining   actual   or
16    constructive  notice  of  the lien.  The notice of lien shall
17    consist of a sworn statement setting forth (i) a  description
18    of  the real estate, such as the address or other description
19    of the property, sufficient for its identification; (ii)  the
20    expenses  incurred  by  the  municipality  in undertaking the
21    remedial actions authorized under this subsection; (iii)  the
22    date or dates the expenses were incurred by the municipality;
23    (iv)  a  statement  by the corporate official responsible for
24    enforcing the building code that the building  was  open  and
25    vacant  and constituted an immediate and continuing hazard to
26    the community; (v) a statement by the corporate official that
27    the required sign was posted on the building, that notice was
28    sent by certified mail to the  owners  of  record,  and  that
29    notice  was published in accordance with this subsection; and
30    (vi) a  statement  as  to  when  and  where  the  notice  was
31    published.   The  lien  authorized  by  this  subsection  may
32    thereafter  be  released  or  enforced by the municipality as
33    provided in subsection (a).
34        (f)  The corporate authorities of each  municipality  may
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -273-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    remove  or cause the removal of, or otherwise environmentally
 2    remediate hazardous substances and petroleum products on, in,
 3    or  under  any  abandoned  and  unsafe  property  within  the
 4    territory of a municipality.  In addition, where  preliminary
 5    evidence  indicates  the  presence  or  likely  presence of a
 6    hazardous substance or a petroleum product or a release or  a
 7    substantial threat of a release of a hazardous substance or a
 8    petroleum   product  on,  in,  or  under  the  property,  the
 9    corporate authorities of the  municipality  may  inspect  the
10    property  and  test  for the presence or release of hazardous
11    substances and petroleum  products.   In  any  county  having
12    adopted by referendum or otherwise a county health department
13    as  provided  by  Division  5-25  of the Counties Code or its
14    predecessor, the county board of that county may exercise the
15    above-described powers with regard  to  property  within  the
16    territory  of  any city, village, or incorporated town having
17    less than 50,000 population.
18        For purposes of this subsection (f):
19             (1)  "property" or  "real  estate"  means  all  real
20        property, whether or not improved by a structure;
21             (2)  "abandoned" means;
22                  (A)  the property has been tax delinquent for 2
23             or more years;
24                  (B)  the  property  is  unoccupied  by  persons
25             legally in possession; and
26             (3)  "unsafe" means property that presents an actual
27        or  imminent threat to public health and safety caused by
28        the release of hazardous substances; and
29             (4)  "hazardous substances" means  the  same  as  in
30        Section 3.215 3.14 of the Environmental Protection Act.
31        The  corporate  authorities  shall  apply  to the circuit
32    court of the county in which the property is located (i)  for
33    an  order allowing the municipality to enter the property and
34    inspect and test substances on, in, or under the property; or
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -274-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    (ii) for an order authorizing the  corporate  authorities  to
 2    take  action  with  respect to remediation of the property if
 3    conditions on the  property,  based  on  the  inspection  and
 4    testing authorized in paragraph (i), indicate the presence of
 5    hazardous  substances  or  petroleum  products.   Remediation
 6    shall be deemed complete for purposes of paragraph (ii) above
 7    when  the  property  satisfies Tier I, II, or III remediation
 8    objectives  for  the  property's  most   recent   usage,   as
 9    established  by  the  Environmental  Protection  Act, and the
10    rules and regulations promulgated  thereunder.   Where,  upon
11    diligent  search, the identity or whereabouts of the owner or
12    owners of the property, including the lien holders of record,
13    is not ascertainable, notice mailed to the person or  persons
14    in whose name the real estate was last assessed is sufficient
15    notice under this Section.
16        The  court shall grant an order authorizing testing under
17    paragraph (i) above upon a showing  of  preliminary  evidence
18    indicating  the  presence  or  likely presence of a hazardous
19    substance or a  petroleum  product  or  a  release  of  or  a
20    substantial threat of a release of a hazardous substance or a
21    petroleum  product  on, in, or under abandoned property.  The
22    preliminary evidence may include,  but  is  not  limited  to,
23    evidence  of prior use, visual site inspection, or records of
24    prior environmental investigations.  The  testing  authorized
25    by   paragraph   (i)   above   shall   include  any  type  of
26    investigation  which  is  necessary  for   an   environmental
27    professional  to determine the environmental condition of the
28    property, including but not limited to  performance  of  soil
29    borings  and groundwater monitoring.  The court shall grant a
30    remediation order under paragraph (ii) above where testing of
31    the property indicates that it fails to meet  the  applicable
32    remediation  objectives.  The hearing upon the application to
33    the circuit court shall be expedited by the court  and  shall
34    be given precedence over all other suits.
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -275-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        The  cost  of  the  inspection,  testing,  or remediation
 2    incurred by the municipality or by a lien holder  of  record,
 3    including  court  costs,  attorney's  fees,  and  other costs
 4    related to the enforcement of this Section, is a lien on  the
 5    real   estate;   except   that   in  any  instances  where  a
 6    municipality incurs costs of inspection and testing but finds
 7    no hazardous substances or petroleum products on the property
 8    that present an actual or imminent threat  to  public  health
 9    and  safety,  such  costs are not recoverable from the owners
10    nor are such costs a lien on the real estate.   The  lien  is
11    superior to all prior existing liens and encumbrances, except
12    taxes  and any lien obtained under subsection (a) or (e), if,
13    within 180 days  after  the  completion  of  the  inspection,
14    testing,  or remediation, the municipality or the lien holder
15    of record who incurred the cost  and  expense  shall  file  a
16    notice  of  lien  for  the  cost  and expense incurred in the
17    office of the recorder in the county in which the real estate
18    is located or in the office of the registrar of titles of the
19    county if the real estate affected is  registered  under  the
20    Registered Titles (Torrens) Act.
21        The  notice must consist of a sworn statement setting out
22    (i) a description of  the  real  estate  sufficient  for  its
23    identification,  (ii)  the  amount  of money representing the
24    cost and expense incurred, and (iii) the date or  dates  when
25    the  cost and expense was incurred by the municipality or the
26    lien holder of record.  Upon payment of the  lien  amount  by
27    the  owner of or persons interested in the property after the
28    notice of lien has been filed, a release  of  lien  shall  be
29    issued by the municipality, the person in whose name the lien
30    has  been filed, or the assignee of the lien, and the release
31    may be filed of record as in the case  of  filing  notice  of
32    lien.
33        The  lien  may  be  enforced  under  subsection (c) or by
34    foreclosure  proceedings  as  in   the   case   of   mortgage
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -276-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    foreclosures  under Article XV of the Code of Civil Procedure
 2    or mechanics' lien foreclosures; provided that where the lien
 3    is enforced by foreclosure  under  subsection  (c)  or  under
 4    either  statute, the municipality may not proceed against the
 5    other assets of the owner or owners of the  real  estate  for
 6    any  costs  that  otherwise  would  be recoverable under this
 7    Section but that remain unsatisfied after foreclosure  except
 8    where  such  additional  recovery  is  authorized by separate
 9    environmental laws.  An action to foreclose this lien may  be
10    commenced  at any time after the date of filing of the notice
11    of  lien.  The  costs  of   foreclosure   incurred   by   the
12    municipality,  including  court  costs, reasonable attorney's
13    fees, advances to preserve  the  property,  and  other  costs
14    related to the enforcement of this subsection, plus statutory
15    interest, are a lien on the real estate.
16        All  liens  arising  under  this  subsection (f) shall be
17    assignable.  The assignee of the lien  shall  have  the  same
18    power to enforce the lien as the assigning party, except that
19    the lien may not be enforced under subsection (c).
20        (g)  In any case where a municipality has obtained a lien
21    under  subsection  (a),  the  municipality  may also bring an
22    action for a money judgment against the owner  or  owners  of
23    the  real estate in the amount of the lien in the same manner
24    as provided for bringing causes of action in  Article  II  of
25    the  Code  of Civil Procedure and, upon obtaining a judgment,
26    file a judgment lien against all of the real  estate  of  the
27    owner  or  owners  and  enforce  that lien as provided for in
28    Article XII of the Code of Civil Procedure.
29    (Source: P.A. 91-162,  eff.  7-16-99;  91-177,  eff.  1-1-00;
30    91-357,  eff.  7-29-99;  91-542,  eff.  1-1-00;  91-561, eff.
31    1-1-00; 92-16, eff. 6-28-01.)

32        Section 30.  The Conservation District Act is amended  by
33    changing Section 19 as follows:
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -277-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        (70 ILCS 410/19) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 7129)
 2        Sec. 19.  Landfills.
 3        (a)  No  land that is owned or acquired by a conservation
 4    district may be used for the development or operation of  any
 5    new pollution control facility, as those terms are defined in
 6    Section 3.330 3.32 of the Environmental Protection Act.
 7        (b)  A conservation district may not transfer any land or
 8    interest  in  land  owned  or acquired by the district to any
 9    other entity which the district has reason to know intends to
10    construct, expand or operate thereon any sanitary landfill or
11    regulated waste treatment, disposal or  storage  facility  or
12    develop   or   operate  thereon  any  new  pollution  control
13    facility, as that term is defined in Section  3.330  3.32  of
14    the Environmental Protection Act.
15        A  conservation district that wishes to transfer any land
16    or interest in land owned or acquired by the district to  any
17    other  entity  must impose, as a condition of the transfer, a
18    covenant prohibiting the development thereon or operation  of
19    any  new  pollution control facility, as that term is defined
20    in Section 3.330 3.32 of the Environmental Protection Act.
21    (Source: P.A. 87-554; 88-681, eff. 12-22-94.)

22        Section 35.  The Downstate Forest Preserve  District  Act
23    is amended by changing Section 18.6c as follows:

24        (70 ILCS 805/18.6c) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 6340c)
25        Sec. 18.6c.  Landfills.
26        (a)  No  land  that  is  owned  or  acquired  by a forest
27    preserve  district  may  be  used  for  the  development   or
28    operation of any new pollution control facility, as that term
29    is  defined  in  Section  3.330  3.32  of  the  Environmental
30    Protection Act.
31        (b)  A forest preserve district may not transfer any land
32    or  interest in land owned or acquired by the district to any
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -278-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    other entity which the district has reason to know intends to
 2    construct, expand or operate thereon any sanitary landfill or
 3    regulated waste treatment, disposal or  storage  facility  or
 4    develop   or   operate  thereon  any  new  pollution  control
 5    facility, as that term is defined in Section  3.330  3.32  of
 6    the Environmental Protection Act.
 7        A  forest  preserve  district that wishes to transfer any
 8    land or interest in land owned or acquired by the district to
 9    any other entity must impose, as a condition of the transfer,
10    a covenant prohibiting the development thereon  or  operation
11    of  any  new  pollution  control  facility,  as  that term is
12    defined in Section 3.330 3.32 of the Environmental Protection
13    Act.
14    (Source: P.A. 87-554; 88-681, eff. 12-22-94.)

15        Section 40.  The  Public  Utilities  Act  is  amended  by
16    changing Section 8-403.1 as follows:

17        (220 ILCS 5/8-403.1) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 8-403.1)
18        Sec.  8-403.1. Electricity purchased from qualified solid
19    waste energy facility; tax credit; distributions for economic
20    development.
21        (a)  It is hereby declared to be the policy of this State
22    to encourage the development of alternate  energy  production
23    facilities  in  order to conserve our energy resources and to
24    provide for their most efficient use.
25        (b)  For the purpose of this Section and Section 9-215.1,
26    "qualified solid waste  energy  facility"  means  a  facility
27    determined  by the Illinois Commerce Commission to qualify as
28    such under the Local Solid Waste Disposal Act, to use methane
29    gas generated from landfills as  its  primary  fuel,  and  to
30    possess  characteristics that would enable it to qualify as a
31    cogeneration or small power production facility under federal
32    law.
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -279-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        (c)  In  furtherance  of  the  policy  declared  in  this
 2    Section,  the  Illinois  Commerce  Commission  shall  require
 3    electric utilities  to  enter  into  long-term  contracts  to
 4    purchase   electricity  from  qualified  solid  waste  energy
 5    facilities located in the electric  utility's  service  area,
 6    for  a  period beginning on the date that the facility begins
 7    generating electricity and having a duration of not less than
 8    10   years   in   the   case   of   facilities   fueled    by
 9    landfill-generated  methane,  or  20  years  in  the  case of
10    facilities fueled by methane generated from a landfill  owned
11    by  a  forest preserve district.  The purchase rate contained
12    in such contracts shall be equal to the  average  amount  per
13    kilowatt-hour  paid from time to time by the unit or units of
14    local  government  in  which   the   electricity   generating
15    facilities  are  located,  excluding  amounts paid for street
16    lighting and pumping service.
17        (d)  Whenever a public utility is  required  to  purchase
18    electricity  pursuant  to  subsection  (c) above, it shall be
19    entitled to credits in respect of its obligations to remit to
20    the State taxes it has collected under the Electricity Excise
21    Tax Law equal to the amounts, if any, by which  payments  for
22    such  electricity  exceed  (i) the then current rate at which
23    the utility must purchase the output of qualified  facilities
24    pursuant  to  the  federal Public Utility Regulatory Policies
25    Act of 1978, less (ii) any costs, expenses,  losses,  damages
26    or  other  amounts  incurred  by the utility, or for which it
27    becomes liable, arising out of its  failure  to  obtain  such
28    electricity  from such other sources.  The amount of any such
29    credit shall, in the first instance,  be  determined  by  the
30    utility, which shall make a monthly report of such credits to
31    the  Illinois  Commerce  Commission  and,  on its monthly tax
32    return, to the  Illinois  Department  of  Revenue.  Under  no
33    circumstances   shall  a  utility  be  required  to  purchase
34    electricity from a qualified solid waste energy  facility  at
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -280-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    the rate prescribed in subsection (c) of this Section if such
 2    purchase  would  result in estimated tax credits that exceed,
 3    on a monthly basis, the  utility's  estimated  obligation  to
 4    remit   to  the  State  taxes  it  has  collected  under  the
 5    Electricity Excise Tax  Law.  The  owner  or  operator  shall
 6    negotiate  facility  operating conditions with the purchasing
 7    utility in accordance with  that  utility's  posted  standard
 8    terms  and  conditions  for  small  power  producers.  If the
 9    Department of Revenue disputes the amount of any such credit,
10    such dispute  shall  be  decided  by  the  Illinois  Commerce
11    Commission.  Whenever a qualified solid waste energy facility
12    has  paid or otherwise satisfied in full the capital costs or
13    indebtedness incurred  in  developing  and  implementing  the
14    qualified  facility,  the  qualified facility shall reimburse
15    the Public Utility Fund and the General Revenue Fund  in  the
16    State  treasury for the actual reduction in payments to those
17    Funds caused by  this  subsection  (d)  in  a  manner  to  be
18    determined  by  the Illinois Commerce Commission and based on
19    the manner in which revenues for those Funds were reduced.
20        (e)  The Illinois Commerce Commission shall  not  require
21    an   electric   utility  to  purchase  electricity  from  any
22    qualified solid waste  energy  facility  which  is  owned  or
23    operated  by  an  entity  that  is  primarily  engaged in the
24    business of producing or selling electricity, gas, or  useful
25    thermal energy from a source other than one or more qualified
26    solid waste energy facilities.
27        (f)  This Section does not require an electric utility to
28    construct  additional  facilities unless those facilities are
29    paid for by the owner or operator of the  affected  qualified
30    solid waste energy facility.
31        (g)  The Illinois Commerce Commission shall require that:
32    (1)  electric  utilities use the electricity purchased from a
33    qualified solid waste energy facility to displace electricity
34    generated from nuclear power  or  coal  mined  and  purchased
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -281-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    outside  the  boundaries  of  the  State  of  Illinois before
 2    displacing  electricity  generated  from   coal   mined   and
 3    purchased  within  the  State  of  Illinois,  to  the  extent
 4    possible,  and  (2) electric utilities report annually to the
 5    Commission on the extent of such displacements.
 6        (h)  Nothing in this Section  is  intended  to  cause  an
 7    electric utility that is required to purchase power hereunder
 8    to  incur any economic loss as a result of its purchase.  All
 9    amounts paid  for  power  which  a  utility  is  required  to
10    purchase  pursuant  to subparagraph (c) shall be deemed to be
11    costs prudently incurred for purposes  of  computing  charges
12    under  rates  authorized  by  Section 9-220 of this Act.  Tax
13    credits provided for herein shall  be  reflected  in  charges
14    made  pursuant  to  rates  so  authorized  to the extent such
15    credits are based upon a cost which is also reflected in such
16    charges.
17        (i)  Beginning in February 1999 and through January 2009,
18    each  qualified  solid  waste  energy  facility  that   sells
19    electricity  to  an  electric  utility  at  the purchase rate
20    described in subsection (c) shall file with the Department of
21    Revenue  on  or  before  the  15th  of  each  month  a  form,
22    prescribed by the Department  of  Revenue,  that  states  the
23    number of kilowatt hours of electricity for which payment was
24    received  at  that  purchase  rate from electric utilities in
25    Illinois during the immediately preceding month.   This  form
26    shall  be  accompanied  by a payment from the qualified solid
27    waste energy facility in an amount equal to six-tenths  of  a
28    mill ($0.0006) per kilowatt hour of electricity stated on the
29    form.  Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act
30    of  the 92nd General Assembly, a qualified solid waste energy
31    facility must file the form required  under  this  subsection
32    (i)  before  the 15th of each month regardless of whether the
33    facility  received  any  payment  in  the   previous   month.
34    Payments  received  by  the  Department  of  Revenue shall be
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -282-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    deposited into the Municipal  Economic  Development  Fund,  a
 2    trust  fund  created  outside  the  State treasury. The State
 3    Treasurer may invest the moneys in the Fund in any investment
 4    authorized by the Public Funds Investment Act, and investment
 5    income shall be deposited into and become part of  the  Fund.
 6    Moneys  in  the  Fund shall be used by the State Treasurer as
 7    provided in subsection (j).  The obligation  of  a  qualified
 8    solid  waste  energy  facility  to  make  payments  into  the
 9    Municipal  Economic  Development  Fund  shall  terminate upon
10    either:  (1)  expiration  or  termination  of  a   facility's
11    contract  to  sell  electricity to an electric utility at the
12    purchase rate described in subsection (c); or (2) entry of an
13    enforceable, final, and non-appealable order by  a  court  of
14    competent  jurisdiction  that  Public  Act 89-448 is invalid.
15    Payments by a qualified solid waste energy facility into  the
16    Municipal  Economic  Development  Fund  do  not  relieve  the
17    qualified  solid  waste  energy facility of its obligation to
18    reimburse the Public Utility Fund  and  the  General  Revenue
19    Fund for the actual reduction in payments to those Funds as a
20    result  of  credits  received  by  electric  utilities  under
21    subsection (d).
22        A  qualified  solid  waste  energy facility that fails to
23    timely file the requisite form and  payment  as  required  by
24    this  subsection  (i)  shall  be  subject  to  penalties  and
25    interest  in  conformance with the provisions of the Illinois
26    Uniform Penalty and Interest Act.
27        Every qualified solid waste energy  facility  subject  to
28    the provisions of this subsection (i) shall keep and maintain
29    records  and  books  of its sales pursuant to subsection (c),
30    including  payments  received  from  those  sales   and   the
31    corresponding  tax  payments  made  in  accordance  with this
32    subsection (i), and  for  purposes  of  enforcement  of  this
33    subsection (i) all such books and records shall be subject to
34    inspection   by   the  Department  of  Revenue  or  its  duly
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -283-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    authorized agents or employees.
 2        When a qualified solid waste  energy  facility  fails  to
 3    file  the  form  or  make  the  payment  required  under this
 4    subsection (i), the Department of Revenue, to the extent that
 5    it is practical, may enforce  the  payment  obligation  in  a
 6    manner consistent with Section 5 of the Retailers' Occupation
 7    Tax  Act,  and if necessary may impose and enforce a tax lien
 8    in a manner consistent with Sections 5a, 5b, 5c, 5d, 5e,  5f,
 9    5g, and 5i of the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act.  No tax lien
10    may be imposed or enforced, however, unless a qualified solid
11    waste  energy  facility  fails  to  make the payment required
12    under this subsection (i).  Only to the extent necessary  and
13    for  the  purpose  of  enforcing  this  subsection  (i),  the
14    Department of Revenue may secure necessary information from a
15    qualified  solid waste energy facility in a manner consistent
16    with Section 10 of the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act.
17        All information received by the Department of Revenue  in
18    its  administration  and  enforcement  of this subsection (i)
19    shall be confidential in a manner consistent with Section  11
20    of  the  Retailers'  Occupation  Tax  Act.  The Department of
21    Revenue may adopt rules to implement the provisions  of  this
22    subsection (i).
23        For   purposes  of  implementing  the  maximum  aggregate
24    distribution provisions in subsections (j) and  (k),  when  a
25    qualified solid waste energy facility makes a late payment to
26    the  Department  of  Revenue  for  deposit into the Municipal
27    Economic Development Fund, that payment and deposit shall  be
28    attributed  to  the  month and corresponding quarter in which
29    the payment should have been made, and  the  Treasurer  shall
30    make  retroactive  distributions  or refunds, as the case may
31    be, whenever such late payments so require.
32        (j)  The State  Treasurer,  without  appropriation,  must
33    make  distributions  immediately  after January 15, April 15,
34    July 15, and October 15 of each year, up to maximum aggregate
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -284-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    distributions of $500,000 for the distributions made in the 4
 2    quarters beginning with the  April  distribution  and  ending
 3    with  the  January  distribution, from the Municipal Economic
 4    Development Fund to each city, village, or incorporated  town
 5    that  has within its boundaries an incinerator that: (1) uses
 6    or,  on  the  effective  date  of  Public  Act  90-813,  used
 7    municipal waste as its primary fuel to generate  electricity;
 8    (2)  was  determined  by  the Illinois Commerce Commission to
 9    qualify as a qualified solid waste energy facility  prior  to
10    the  effective  date  of Public Act 89-448; and (3) commenced
11    operation prior to January 1, 1998.  Total  distributions  in
12    the   aggregate   to  all  qualified  cities,  villages,  and
13    incorporated towns in the 4 quarters beginning with the April
14    distribution and ending with the January  distribution  shall
15    not  exceed  $500,000.  The amount of each distribution shall
16    be determined pro rata based on the population of  the  city,
17    village,   or   incorporated   town  compared  to  the  total
18    population of all cities, villages,  and  incorporated  towns
19    eligible to receive a distribution. Distributions received by
20    a  city,  village,  or  incorporated  town  must be held in a
21    separate account and may be used only to promote and  enhance
22    industrial, commercial, residential, service, transportation,
23    and   recreational   activities  and  facilities  within  its
24    boundaries, thereby enhancing the  employment  opportunities,
25    public  health  and general welfare, and economic development
26    within the community, including  administrative  expenditures
27    exclusively   to  further  these  activities.   These  funds,
28    however,  shall  not  be  used  by  the  city,  village,   or
29    incorporated  town,  directly  or  indirectly,  to  purchase,
30    lease,  operate, or in any way subsidize the operation of any
31    incinerator, and these funds shall not be paid,  directly  or
32    indirectly, by the city, village, or incorporated town to the
33    owner,  operator,  lessee,  shareholder, or bondholder of any
34    incinerator. Moreover, these funds shall not be used  to  pay
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -285-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    attorneys  fees in any litigation relating to the validity of
 2    Public Act 89-448.  Nothing in this Section prevents a  city,
 3    village,  or  incorporated  town  from  using other corporate
 4    funds for any  legitimate  purpose.   For  purposes  of  this
 5    subsection,  the  term  "municipal  waste"  has  the  meaning
 6    ascribed  to  it  in  Section 3.290 3.21 of the Environmental
 7    Protection Act.
 8        (k)  If maximum aggregate distributions of $500,000 under
 9    subsection (j) have been made after the January  distribution
10    from  the  Municipal  Economic  Development  Fund,  then  the
11    balance  in the Fund shall be refunded to the qualified solid
12    waste  energy  facilities  that  made  payments   that   were
13    deposited  into the Fund during the previous 12-month period.
14    The refunds shall  be  prorated  based  upon  the  facility's
15    payments  in  relation  to  total  payments for that 12-month
16    period.
17        (l)  Beginning  January  1,  2000,  and  each  January  1
18    thereafter, each city, village,  or  incorporated  town  that
19    received    distributions   from   the   Municipal   Economic
20    Development  Fund,   continued   to   hold   any   of   those
21    distributions,  or made expenditures from those distributions
22    during the immediately  preceding  year  shall  submit  to  a
23    financial   and   compliance   and  program  audit  of  those
24    distributions performed by the Auditor General at no cost  to
25    the  city,  village,  or  incorporated town that received the
26    distributions.  The audit should be completed by June  30  or
27    as soon thereafter as possible.  The audit shall be submitted
28    to  the  State  Treasurer  and  those  officers enumerated in
29    Section 3-14 of the Illinois State  Auditing  Act.    If  the
30    Auditor  General  finds that distributions have been expended
31    in violation of this Section, the Auditor General shall refer
32    the matter to the Attorney General.  The Attorney General may
33    recover, in a  civil  action,  3  times  the  amount  of  any
34    distributions  illegally  expended.    For  purposes  of this
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -286-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    subsection, the terms "financial audit," "compliance  audit",
 2    and  "program  audit"  have  the meanings ascribed to them in
 3    Sections 1-13 and 1-15 of the Illinois State Auditing Act.
 4    (Source: P.A. 91-901, eff. 1-1-01; 92-435, eff. 8-17-01.)

 5        Section 45.   The  Hazardous  Waste  Crane  and  Hoisting
 6    Equipment  Operators  Licensing  Act  is  amended by changing
 7    Section 3 as follows:

 8        (225 ILCS 220/3) (from Ch. 111, par. 7703)
 9        Sec. 3.  For the purposes of this Act, unless the context
10    otherwise requires:
11        (a)  "Agency" means the Environmental Protection Agency.
12        (b)  "Crane" means any hoisting equipment that lifts  and
13    rotates   or   moves   a  load  horizontally  or  vertically,
14    including: hydraulic back hoes,  hydraulic  cranes,  friction
15    cranes, derricks, jib hoists, gantry, bridge cranes, floating
16    cranes of any type and air-borne hoisting equipment.
17        (c)  "Hoist"  includes, but is not limited to, a material
18    hoist  (construction  elevator),  air  tugger   (one   drum),
19    multi-drum  hoist,  overhead  hoist,  sideboom,  A-Frame boom
20    truck or behind the cab truck mounted boom.
21        (d)  "Director" means the Director of  the  Environmental
22    Protection Agency.
23        (e)  "Hazardous waste" means a hazardous waste as defined
24    in  Section  3.220  3.15 of the Environmental Protection Act,
25    except asbestos.
26        (f)  "Facility" means a  pollution  control  facility  as
27    defined in Section 3.330 3.32 of the Environmental Protection
28    Act,  or  a  site  undergoing  cleanup pursuant to either the
29    federal Comprehensive  Environmental  Response,  Compensation
30    and Liability Act of 1980, as amended, or Section 22.2 of the
31    Illinois Environmental Protection Act.
32    (Source: P.A. 88-681, eff. 12-22-94.)
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -287-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1        Section  50.   The Hazardous Waste Laborers Licensing Act
 2    is amended by changing Section 3 as follows:

 3        (225 ILCS 221/3) (from Ch. 111, par. 7803)
 4        Sec. 3.  For the purposes of this Act, unless the context
 5    otherwise requires:
 6        (a)  "Agency" means the Environmental Protection Agency.
 7        (b)  "Director" means the Director of  the  Environmental
 8    Protection Agency.
 9        (c)  "Laborer"  means  a  person  who  (1) erects, moves,
10    services  and  dismantles  scaffolds  and  barricades  at   a
11    facility;  (2)  constructs,  erects,  removes  and dismantles
12    enclosures, chambers or decontamination  units  required  for
13    the  removal or containment of hazardous waste at a facility;
14    (3) labels, bags, cartons  or  otherwise  packages  hazardous
15    waste  for  disposal;  and  (4)  cleans  up the work site and
16    performs other work incidental to the removal,  abatement  or
17    encapsulation of hazardous waste.
18        (d)  "Hazardous waste" means a hazardous waste as defined
19    in  Section  3.220  3.15 of the Environmental Protection Act,
20    except asbestos.
21        (e)  "Facility" means a  pollution  control  facility  as
22    defined in Section 3.330 3.32 of the Environmental Protection
23    Act,  or  a  site  undergoing  cleanup pursuant to either the
24    federal Comprehensive  Environmental  Response,  Compensation
25    and Liability Act of 1980, as amended, or Section 22.2 of the
26    Illinois Environmental Protection Act.
27    (Source: P.A. 88-681, eff. 12-22-94.)

28        Section  55.  The Environmental Toxicology Act is amended
29    by changing Section 3 as follows:

30        (415 ILCS 75/3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 983)
31        Sec. 3.  Definitions.  As used in this  Act,  unless  the
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -288-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    context otherwise requires;
 2        (a)  "Department" means the Illinois Department of Public
 3    Health;
 4        (b)  "Director"   means  the  Director  of  the  Illinois
 5    Department of Public Health;
 6        (c)  "Program" means the Environmental Toxicology program
 7    as established by this Act;
 8        (d)  "Exposure" means contact with a hazardous substance;
 9        (e)  "Hazardous  Substance"  means  chemical   compounds,
10    elements,  or  combinations  of  chemicals  which, because of
11    quantity   concentration,   physical    characteristics    or
12    toxicological  characteristics may pose a substantial present
13    or potential hazard to human health and includes, but is  not
14    limited to, any substance defined as a hazardous substance in
15    Section  3.215  of  3  of the "Environmental Protection Act",
16    approved June 29, 1970, as amended;
17        (f)  "Initial Assessment" means a review  and  evaluation
18    of  site history and hazardous substances involved, potential
19    for population exposure, the nature  of  any  health  related
20    complaints and any known patterns in disease occurrence;
21        (g)  "Comprehensive   Health   Study"  means  a  detailed
22    analysis  which  may   include:   a   review   of   available
23    environmental,  morbidity  and  mortality data; environmental
24    and  biological  sampling;  detailed  review  of   scientific
25    literature;  exposure  analysis;  population  surveys; or any
26    other scientific or epidemiologic methods deemed necessary to
27    adequately evaluate the health status of  the  population  at
28    risk and any potential relationship to environmental factors;
29        (h)  "Superfund  Site"  means  any  hazardous  waste site
30    designated for cleanup on the  National  Priorities  List  as
31    mandated   by   the   Comprehensive  Environmental  Response,
32    Compensation, and Liability Act of  1980  (P.L.  96-510),  as
33    amended;
34        (i)  "State  Remedial  Action Priority List" means a list
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -289-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    compiled by  the  Illinois  Environmental  Protection  Agency
 2    which  identifies  sites  that  appear to present significant
 3    risk to the public health, welfare or environment.
 4    (Source: P.A. 84-987.)

 5        Section  60.   The  Toxic  Pollution  Prevention  Act  is
 6    amended by changing Section 3 as follows:

 7        (415 ILCS 85/3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7953)
 8        Sec. 3.  Definitions.  As used in this Act:
 9        "Agency"  means  the  Illinois  Environmental  Protection
10    Agency.
11        "Center" means the Waste Management and Research Center.
12        "Person"    means    any     individual,     partnership,
13    co-partnership,   firm,  company,  corporation,  association,
14    joint stock  company,  trust,  political  subdivision,  State
15    agency,   or   any   other   legal   entity,   or  its  legal
16    representative, agent or assigns.
17        "Release" means emission to the air, discharge to surface
18    waters  or  off-site  wastewater  treatment  facilities,   or
19    on-site  release  to  the  land, including but not limited to
20    landfills, surface impoundments and injection wells.
21        "Toxic substance"  means  any  substance  listed  by  the
22    Agency pursuant to Section 4 of this Act.
23        "Toxic  pollution  prevention"  means  in-plant practices
24    that reduce, avoid  or  eliminate:   (i)  the  use  of  toxic
25    substances,  (ii)  the  generation  of  toxic constituents in
26    wastes, (iii) the disposal or  release  of  toxic  substances
27    into  the environment, or (iv) the development or manufacture
28    of products with toxic constituents, through the  application
29    of any of the following techniques:
30             (1)  input substitution, which refers to replacing a
31        toxic  substance  or  raw  material  used in a production
32        process with a nontoxic or less toxic substance;
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -290-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             (2)  product   reformulation,   which   refers    to
 2        substituting  for  an existing end product an end product
 3        which is nontoxic or less  toxic  upon  use,  release  or
 4        disposal;
 5             (3)  production  process  redesign  or modification,
 6        which refers to developing and using production processes
 7        of a different design than those currently used;
 8             (4)  production process modernization, which  refers
 9        to  upgrading  or  replacing  existing production process
10        equipment or methods  with  other  equipment  or  methods
11        based on the same production process;
12             (5)  improved  operation and maintenance of existing
13        production process equipment and methods, which refers to
14        modifying or adding to  existing  equipment  or  methods,
15        including  but not limited to such techniques as improved
16        housekeeping practices, system adjustments,  product  and
17        process   inspections,  and  production  process  control
18        equipment or methods;
19             (6)  recycling,  reuse  or  extended  use  of  toxic
20        substances by using equipment or methods which become  an
21        integral  part  of  the production process, including but
22        not limited to filtration and other closed loop methods.
23        However, "toxic pollution prevention" shall  not  include
24    or in any way be inferred to promote or require incineration,
25    transfer  from  one medium of release to another, off-site or
26    out of process waste recycling, or end of pipe  treatment  of
27    toxic substances.
28        "Trade   secret"   means   any   information   concerning
29    production  processes  employed  or  substances manufactured,
30    processed or otherwise  used  within  a  facility  which  the
31    Agency  determines  to satisfy the criteria established under
32    Section 3.490 3.48 of the Environmental Protection  Act,  and
33    to which specific trade secret status has been granted by the
34    Agency.
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -291-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    (Source: P.A. 90-490, eff. 8-17-97.)

 2        Section  65.   The  Litter  Control  Act  is  amended  by
 3    changing Sections 3 and 4 as follows

 4        (415 ILCS 105/3) (from Ch. 38, par. 86-3)
 5        Sec.  3.   As  used  in  this  Act,  unless  the  context
 6    otherwise requires:
 7        (a)  "Litter"  means  any  discarded,  used or unconsumed
 8    substance or waste. "Litter" may include, but is not  limited
 9    to,  any  garbage,  trash,  refuse,  debris,  rubbish,  grass
10    clippings   or   other   lawn  or  garden  waste,  newspaper,
11    magazines, glass, metal, plastic or paper containers or other
12    packaging  construction  material,  abandoned   vehicle   (as
13    defined  in  the Illinois Vehicle Code), motor vehicle parts,
14    furniture, oil, carcass of a dead  animal,  any  nauseous  or
15    offensive matter of any kind, any object likely to injure any
16    person  or  create  a  traffic hazard, potentially infectious
17    medical waste  as  defined  in  Section  3.360  3.84  of  the
18    Environmental   Protection   Act,  or  anything  else  of  an
19    unsightly or unsanitary nature,  which  has  been  discarded,
20    abandoned or otherwise disposed of improperly.
21        (b)  "Motor  vehicle"  has  the  meaning ascribed to that
22    term in Section 1-146 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
23        (c)  "Person"   means   any   individual,    partnership,
24    copartnership, firm, company, corporation, association, joint
25    stock  company,  trust, estate, or any other legal entity, or
26    their legal representative, agent or assigns.
27    (Source: P.A. 90-89, eff. 1-1-98.)

28        (415 ILCS 105/4) (from Ch. 38, par. 86-4)
29        Sec. 4.  No person  shall  dump,  deposit,  drop,  throw,
30    discard,  leave,  cause  or  permit  the dumping, depositing,
31    dropping, throwing, discarding or leaving of litter upon  any
 
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 1    public or private property in this State, or upon or into any
 2    river,  lake,  pond, or other stream or body of water in this
 3    State, unless:
 4        (a)  the property has been designated by the State or any
 5    of its  agencies,  political  subdivisions,  units  of  local
 6    government  or  school  districts for the disposal of litter,
 7    and the litter is disposed of on that property in  accordance
 8    with  the  applicable  rules and regulations of the Pollution
 9    Control Board;
10        (b)  the litter is placed  into  a  receptacle  or  other
11    container   intended   by  the  owner  or  tenant  in  lawful
12    possession of that property for the deposit of litter;
13        (c)  the  person  is  the  owner  or  tenant  in   lawful
14    possession  of the property or has first obtained the consent
15    of the owner or tenant in lawful possession,  or  unless  the
16    act  is  done  under  the  personal direction of the owner or
17    tenant and does not create a public health or safety  hazard,
18    a public nuisance, or a fire hazard;
19        (d)  the  person  is acting under the direction of proper
20    public officials during special cleanup days; or
21        (e)  the person is lawfully acting in or reacting  to  an
22    emergency  situation  where  health and safety is threatened,
23    and removes and properly disposes of such litter,  including,
24    but  not  limited to, potentially infectious medical waste as
25    defined in Section 3.360 3.84 of the Environmental Protection
26    Act, when the emergency situation no longer exists.
27    (Source: P.A. 88-415; 88-670, eff. 12-2-94.)

28        Section 70.  The Illinois  Vehicle  Code  is  amended  by
29    changing Sections 11-1413 and 12-606 as follows:

30        (625 ILCS 5/11-1413) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 11-1413)
31        Sec. 11-1413.  Depositing material on highway prohibited.
32        (a)  No  person  shall  throw,  spill or deposit upon any
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -293-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1    highway any bottle, glass, nails, tacks, wire, cans,  or  any
 2    litter (as defined in Section 3 of the Litter Control Act).
 3        (b)  Any  person  who  violates  subsection  (a) upon any
 4    highway shall immediately remove such material or cause it to
 5    be removed.
 6        (c)  Any person removing a  wrecked  or  damaged  vehicle
 7    from a highway shall remove any glass or other debris, except
 8    any  hazardous  substance as defined in Section 3.215 3.14 of
 9    the Environmental Protection Act, hazardous waste as  defined
10    in  Section  3.220  3.15 of the Environmental Protection Act,
11    and  potentially  infectious  medical  waste  as  defined  in
12    Section 3.360  3.84  of  the  Environmental  Protection  Act,
13    dropped upon the highway from such vehicle.
14    (Source: P.A. 87-190; 88-415; 88-670, eff. 12-2-94.)

15        (625 ILCS 5/12-606) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 12-606)
16        Sec.   12-606.   Tow-trucks;  identification;  equipment;
17    insurance.
18        (a)  Every tow-truck, except those owned by  governmental
19    agencies,  shall  have displayed on each side thereof, a sign
20    with letters not less than 2 inches in height, contrasting in
21    color to that of the background, stating the full legal name,
22    complete address (including street  address  and  city),  and
23    telephone  number  of  the  owner  or operator thereof.  This
24    information shall be permanently affixed to the sides of  the
25    tow truck.
26        (b)  Every tow-truck shall be equipped with:
27             (1)  One or more brooms and shovels;
28             (2)  One  or  more  trash  cans of at least 5 gallon
29        capacity; and
30             (3)  One fire extinguisher.  This extinguisher shall
31        be either:
32                  (i)  of the dry chemical or carbon dioxide type
33             with an aggregate rating of at least 4-B,  C  units,
 
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 1             and  bearing  the approval of a laboratory qualified
 2             by the Division of Fire Prevention for this purpose;
 3             or
 4                  (ii)  One that meets the  requirements  of  the
 5             Federal  Motor  Carrier  Safety  Regulations  of the
 6             United States Department of Transportation for  fire
 7             extinguishers on commercial motor vehicles.
 8        (c)  Every  owner  or  operator and driver of a tow-truck
 9    shall comply with Section  11-1413  of  this  Act  and  shall
10    remove  or  cause  to be removed all glass and debris, except
11    any (i) hazardous substance as defined in Section 3.215  3.14
12    of  the Environmental Protection Act, (ii) hazardous waste as
13    defined in Section 3.220 3.15 of the Environmental Protection
14    Act, and (iii) medical samples or waste,  including  but  not
15    limited  to  any  blood  samples,  used  syringes, other used
16    medical supplies, or any other potentially infectious medical
17    waste as defined in Section 3.360 3.84 of  the  Environmental
18    Protection  Act,  deposited upon any street or highway by the
19    disabled vehicle  being  serviced,  and  shall  in  addition,
20    spread dirt or sand or oil absorbent upon that portion of any
21    street  or  highway where oil or grease has been deposited by
22    the disabled vehicle being serviced.
23        (d)  Every tow-truck operator shall in addition  file  an
24    indemnity bond, insurance policy, or other proof of insurance
25    in   a   form   to   be  prescribed  by  the  Secretary  for:
26    garagekeepers liability insurance, in an amount no less  than
27    a  combined  single  limit  of  $500,000,  and  truck  (auto)
28    liability  insurance  in  an  amount  no less than a combined
29    single limit of $500,000, on hook coverage  or  garagekeepers
30    coverage  in  an  amount  of no less than $25,000 which shall
31    indemnify or insure the tow-truck operator for the following:
32             (1)  Bodily injury or  damage  to  the  property  of
33        others.
34             (2)  Damage to any vehicle towed by the tower.
 
HB5557 Enrolled             -295-              LRB9212249LBpr
 1             (3)  In  case  of  theft,  loss of, or damage to any
 2        vehicle stored, garagekeepers legal liability coverage in
 3        an amount of no less than $25,000.
 4             (4)  In case of injury to or occupational illness of
 5        the tow truck  driver  or  helper,  workers  compensation
 6        insurance   meeting   the  minimum  requirements  of  the
 7        Workers' Compensation Act.
 8        Any such bond or policy shall be issued only by a bonding
 9    or insuring firm authorized to do business  as  such  in  the
10    State  of  Illinois, and a certificate of such bond or policy
11    shall be carried in the cab of each tow-truck.
12        (e)  The bond or policy required in subsection (d)  shall
13    provide  that  the insurance carrier may cancel it by serving
14    previous notice, as required by Sections 143.14 and 143.16 of
15    the Illinois Insurance Code, in writing, either personally or
16    by registered mail, upon the owner or operator of  the  motor
17    vehicle  and  upon the Secretary of State.  Whenever any such
18    bond or policy shall be so cancelled, the Secretary of  State
19    shall  mark  the  policy  "Cancelled"  and shall require such
20    owner or operator either to furnish a new bond or policy,  in
21    accordance with this Act.
22    (Source:  P.A.  88-415;  88-670,  eff.  12-2-94; 89-433, eff.
23    12-15-95.)

24        Section 99. Effective date.  This Act takes  effect  upon
25    becoming law.

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