Public Act 1007 103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 103-1007 |
SB3501 Enrolled | LRB103 36511 AWJ 66617 b |
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AN ACT concerning safety. |
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, |
represented in the General Assembly: |
Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
Responsible Outdoor Lighting Control Act. |
Section 5. Findings. The General Assembly finds that: |
(1) Article XI of the Illinois Constitution states the |
public policy of the State and the duty of each person is |
to provide and maintain a healthful environment for the |
benefit of this and future generations and that the |
General Assembly shall provide by law for the |
implementation and enforcement of this policy. |
(2) The House of Representatives has resolved in House |
Resolution 884 of the 96th General Assembly to (i) express |
its support for improved night preservation practices in |
Illinois, (ii) encourage State agencies to adopt suitable |
outdoor lighting practices based on the principles of |
applying artificial light only where it is needed, when it |
is needed, and to only the levels needed using the best |
safety and energy-efficient standards available, and (iii) |
encourage the Illinois Sustainable Technology Center of |
the University of Illinois to provide artificial outdoor |
illumination engineering assistance to State agencies, |
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municipalities, and businesses that seek to implement |
responsible outdoor lighting to conserve and preserve the |
important natural phenomenon of night. |
(3) The Senate has resolved in Senate Resolution 64 of |
the 103rd General Assembly that local governments in |
Illinois should abide by the International Dark-Sky |
Association (now known as Dark Sky International) |
guidelines and lighting principles to help mitigate the |
effects of light pollution produced by outdoor lighting. |
(4) The State should promote responsible outdoor |
lighting. |
(5) Government structures, facilities, places, and |
spaces should serve as models of best practices for |
private structures, facilities, places, and spaces. These |
government structures, facilities, places, and spaces |
should encourage residents, business owners, and others to |
join in transitioning to responsible lighting. |
Section 10. Definitions. As used in this Act: |
"ANSI/IES standards" means the American National Standards |
Institute and Illuminating Engineering Society's lighting |
guidelines, also known as the IES Lighting Library Standards |
Collection. |
"Correlated color temperature" means the measure of the |
approximate spectrum of the color of light of an object as |
perceived by the eye, measured in degrees Kelvin. |
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"Fully shielded" means a luminaire that is constructed in |
such a manner that all light emitted, either directly from the |
lamp or indirectly by reflection or refraction from any part |
of the luminaire, is projected below the horizontal plane |
aligned with the bottom of the luminaire aperture, where no |
part of the lamp protrudes outside of the luminaire or shield. |
"Glare" means light emitted by a luminaire that causes |
visual discomfort, reduced visibility of objects, or produces |
momentary blindness. |
"Illuminating Engineering Society Backlight, Uplight, and |
Glare rating" or "IES BUG rating" means the luminaire |
classification system developed by the Illuminating |
Engineering Society that ranks and defines how many lumens of |
light a luminaire emits backwards, upwards, and in glare. |
"Lamp" means the component of a luminaire that produces |
light. |
"Light pollution" means the scattering of artificial light |
into the nighttime environment caused by excessive or |
improperly positioned artificial outdoor lighting resulting in |
sky glow, light trespass, or glare. |
"Light trespass" means light emitted by a luminaire that |
shines beyond the boundaries of the property the luminaire is |
intended to illuminate. |
"Luminaire" means a complete installed or portable |
illuminating device, including a lamp, together with the parts |
designed to distribute the light, such as a reflector or |
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refractor, parts to position and protect the lamps, and parts |
to connect the lamps to a power supply. |
"Lumen" means a standard unit of measurement of luminous |
flux. |
"Lux" means a standard unit of luminous flux expressed in |
lumens per square meter. |
"Nadir" means the point on the ground that is directly |
below the center of a luminaire. |
"Ornamental lighting" means a luminaire that has a |
historical or seasonal holiday purpose and that serves a |
historical or seasonal holiday purpose only. |
"Outdoor luminaire" means installed or portable outdoor |
artificial illuminating devices used for flood lighting, |
roadway and area lighting, general illumination, or |
advertisement. |
"Permanent outdoor luminaire" means exterior lighting or a |
system of lighting that is used in place for 7 or more days. |
"Reflective roadway markings" means lines and markers with |
reflective properties intended to promote vehicular and |
pedestrian safety. |
"Reflective signage" means roadway and informational |
signage that has reflective properties to aid with vehicular |
and pedestrian safety. |
"Responsible lighting principles" means the use of modern |
lighting technologies, including shielding, an upper limit on |
color temperature (2,700 Kelvin), on-off controls, dimming |
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controls, and motion sensors. |
"Roadway lighting" means permanent outdoor luminaires that |
are specifically intended to illuminate roadways for safe |
vehicular and pedestrian traffic. |
"Sky glow" means the brightening of the night sky due to |
inefficiently and improperly lit areas. |
Section 15. Outdoor lighting control. All new luminaires |
purchased with State funds after the effective date of this |
Act or installed after the effective date of this Act on a |
structure or land that is owned and managed by the Department |
of Natural Resources, including roadways, facilities, |
properties, nonhabitable structures, monuments, and public |
right-of-way spaces, including sidewalks, with the intended |
purpose of outdoor illumination must follow the following |
outdoor lighting control requirements: |
(1) Permanent outdoor luminaires must be fully |
shielded with an IES BUG rating and produce less than 1% of |
its emitted light above 80 degrees from the downward |
vertical direction of nadir. Light should not be emitted |
at an angle above 60 degrees from the downward vertical |
direction of nadir. |
(2) Luminaires must avoid light trespass by not |
exceeding an illuminance of one lux as measured at ground |
level both horizontally and vertically at the property |
boundary. |
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(3) Luminaires must have a correlated color |
temperature less than or equal to 2,700 Kelvin. In |
residential areas, dark sky locations, or environmentally |
sensitive areas, such as State parks and outdoor |
recreation facilities, correlated color temperature should |
be no more than 2,200 Kelvin. |
(4) Outdoor lighting must be minimized to no more than |
25% above ANSI/IES standards or United States Department |
of Transportation recommendations. |
(5) Facade lighting must be minimized to no more than |
25% above ANSI/IES standards, must project downward, and |
must not violate the light trespass limits in paragraph |
(2). |
(6) When the installation or replacement of roadway |
lighting is planned, the appropriate authority must |
determine whether reflective roadway markings or |
reflective signage is appropriate and safe for the |
situation in lieu of outdoor lighting. Reflectorized |
roadway markings, lines, warning signs, informational |
signs or other passive means must be used for roadway |
lighting, except at intersections of 2 or more streets or |
highways, unless it is determined that adequate safety |
cannot be achieved by reflective means. |
(7) No artificial lighting above one lux, as measured |
at ground level both horizontally and vertically, may |
trespass onto land or waterways designated or managed as |
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habitat, reserve, natural area, open space, or wilderness. |
Section 20. Exceptions. This Act does not apply if: |
(1) the luminaires are on a structure or land that is |
owned, supported, funded, leased, or managed by the State |
in a county or municipality that, by ordinance or |
resolution, has adopted provisions that are equal to or |
more stringent than the provisions of this Act; |
(2) a federal law or regulation preempts this Act; |
(3) a State agency determines a safety or security |
need exists that cannot be addressed by any other method; |
(4) fire, police, rescue, or repair personnel need |
light for temporary emergencies or road repair work; |
(5) it has been determined that a reasonable safety |
and security interest exists at correctional or hospital |
facilities that cannot be addressed by another method as |
long as it complies with existing standards, |
specifications, or policies; |
(6) navigational lighting systems and other lighting |
are necessary to comply with Federal Aviation |
Administration airside operations or nautical safety; |
(7) lamps greater than 2,700 Kelvin are used on active |
sports grounds or show grounds, but only for the duration |
of a practice, match, or event. Lamps emitting greater |
than 2,700 Kelvin under this paragraph must be positioned, |
angled, or shielded to prevent direct glare and light |
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trespass onto neighboring property or properties, and the |
positioning, angling, or shielding must limit upward light |
emission to only the amount necessary to light the |
sporting or grounds activity; |
(8) flagpoles installed after the effective date of |
this Act are lit by means of a downward-facing lamp and |
using a lamp of 2,700 Kelvin or lower; |
(9) flagpoles installed on or before the effective |
date of this Act are upward-lit by partially shielded or |
unshielded luminaires using a lamp of 2,200 Kelvin or |
lower to minimize the impact of glare, light trespass, and |
sky glow and are converted to conform to requirements upon |
retrofitting; |
(10) the luminaries are existing decorative and |
ornamental lighting that serve historical purposes, but |
replacement luminaries for the existing decorative and |
ornamental lighting must meet the standards of this Act; |
or |
(11) the luminaries are temporary seasonal holiday |
lighting lasting no longer than 45 days surrounding the |
holiday season. |
Section 25. Other laws. If this Act conflicts with any |
other federal law, State law, or local ordinance controlling |
lighting, outdoor luminaries, signage, outdoor advertising, |
displays, or devices that is more stringent than the Act, then |
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the federal law, State law, or local ordinance controls to the |
extent it is more stringent than the Act. |
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect January |
1, 2025. |