| ||||
Public Act 100-0621 | ||||
| ||||
| ||||
AN ACT concerning State government.
| ||||
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, | ||||
represented in the General Assembly:
| ||||
ARTICLE 5. AMENDATORY PROVISIONS | ||||
(20 ILCS 605/605-523 rep.) | ||||
Section 5-5. The Department of Commerce and Economic | ||||
Opportunity Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is | ||||
amended by repealing Section 605-523.
| ||||
(20 ILCS 3930/9 rep.)
| ||||
Section 5-10. The Illinois Criminal Justice Information | ||||
Act is amended by repealing Section 9.
| ||||
(20 ILCS 3988/35 rep.)
| ||||
Section 5-15. The Local Legacy Act is amended by repealing | ||||
Section 35.
| ||||
(30 ILCS 105/5.102 rep.)
| ||||
(30 ILCS 105/5.172 rep.)
| ||||
(30 ILCS 105/5.325 rep.)
| ||||
(30 ILCS 105/5.423 rep.)
| ||||
(30 ILCS 105/5.512 rep.)
| ||||
(30 ILCS 105/5.541 rep.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/5.556 rep.)
| ||
(30 ILCS 105/5.591 rep.)
| ||
(30 ILCS 105/5.595 rep.)
| ||
(30 ILCS 105/5.625 rep.)
| ||
(30 ILCS 105/5.626 rep.) | ||
(30 ILCS 105/5.627 rep.) | ||
(30 ILCS 105/5.628 rep.)
| ||
(30 ILCS 105/5.661 rep.)
| ||
(30 ILCS 105/5.779 rep.) | ||
(30 ILCS 105/5.813 rep.) | ||
(30 ILCS 105/5.818 rep.)
| ||
(30 ILCS 105/6a-5 rep.)
| ||
(30 ILCS 105/6z-55 rep.)
| ||
(30 ILCS 105/6z-83 rep.) | ||
(30 ILCS 105/6z-93 rep.) | ||
Section 5-20. The State Finance Act is amended by repealing | ||
Sections 5.102, 5.172, 5.325, 5.423, 5.512, 5.541, 5.556, | ||
5.591, 5.595, 5.625, 5.626, 5.627, 5.628, 5.661, 5.779, 5.813, | ||
5.818, 6a-5, 6z-55, 6z-83, and 6z-93.
| ||
(35 ILCS 5/208.1 rep.)
| ||
(35 ILCS 5/507XX rep.) | ||
Section 5-25. The Illinois Income Tax Act is amended by | ||
repealing Sections 208.1 and 507XX. | ||
Section 5-30. The Economic Development for a Growing |
Economy Tax Credit Act is amended by changing Section 5-80 as | ||
follows:
| ||
(35 ILCS 10/5-80)
| ||
Sec. 5-80. Adoption of rules. The Department may adopt | ||
rules
necessary to implement this Act. The rules may
provide | ||
for recipients of Credits under this Act to be charged
fees to | ||
cover administrative costs of the tax credit program. Fees
| ||
collected shall be deposited into the General Revenue Economic | ||
Development for a Growing
Economy Fund.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 91-476, eff. 8-11-99.)
| ||
(35 ILCS 10/5-85 rep.)
| ||
Section 5-35. The Economic Development for a Growing | ||
Economy Tax Credit Act is amended by repealing Section 5-85. | ||
(110 ILCS 805/2-16.03 rep.) | ||
Section 5-40. The Public Community College Act is amended | ||
by repealing Section 2-16.03. | ||
Section 5-45. The Higher Education Student Assistance Act | ||
is amended by changing Section 35 as follows:
| ||
(110 ILCS 947/35)
| ||
Sec. 35. Monetary award program.
| ||
(a) The Commission shall, each year, receive and consider |
applications
for grant assistance under this Section. Subject | ||
to a separate
appropriation for such purposes, an applicant is | ||
eligible for a grant under
this Section when the Commission | ||
finds that the applicant:
| ||
(1) is a resident of this State and a citizen or | ||
permanent resident
of the United States; and
| ||
(2) in the absence of grant assistance, will be | ||
deterred by
financial considerations from completing an | ||
educational program at the
qualified institution of his or | ||
her choice.
| ||
(b) The Commission shall award renewals only upon the | ||
student's application
and upon the Commission's finding that | ||
the applicant:
| ||
(1) has remained a student in good standing;
| ||
(2) remains a resident of this State; and
| ||
(3) is in a financial situation that continues to | ||
warrant assistance.
| ||
(c) All grants shall be applicable only to tuition and | ||
necessary fee costs. The Commission shall determine the grant
| ||
amount for each student, which shall not exceed the smallest of
| ||
the following amounts:
| ||
(1) subject to appropriation, $5,468 for fiscal year | ||
2009, $5,968 for fiscal year 2010, and $6,468 for fiscal | ||
year 2011 and each fiscal year thereafter, or such lesser | ||
amount as
the Commission finds to be available, during an | ||
academic year;
|
(2) the amount which equals 2 semesters or 3 quarters | ||
tuition
and other necessary fees required generally by the | ||
institution of all
full-time undergraduate students; or
| ||
(3) such amount as the Commission finds to be | ||
appropriate in view of
the applicant's financial | ||
resources.
| ||
Subject to appropriation, the maximum grant amount for | ||
students not subject to subdivision (1) of this subsection (c) | ||
must be increased by the same percentage as any increase made | ||
by law to the maximum grant amount under subdivision (1) of | ||
this subsection (c). | ||
"Tuition and other necessary fees" as used in this Section | ||
include the
customary charge for instruction and use of | ||
facilities in general, and the
additional fixed fees charged | ||
for specified purposes, which are required
generally of | ||
nongrant recipients for each academic period for which the | ||
grant
applicant actually enrolls, but do not include fees | ||
payable only once or
breakage fees and other contingent | ||
deposits which are refundable in whole or in
part. The | ||
Commission may prescribe, by rule not inconsistent with this
| ||
Section, detailed provisions concerning the computation of | ||
tuition and other
necessary fees.
| ||
(d) No applicant, including those presently receiving | ||
scholarship
assistance under this Act, is eligible for monetary | ||
award program
consideration under this Act after receiving a | ||
baccalaureate degree or
the equivalent of 135 semester credit |
hours of award payments.
| ||
(e) The Commission, in determining the number of grants to | ||
be offered,
shall take into consideration past experience with | ||
the rate of grant funds
unclaimed by recipients. The Commission | ||
shall notify applicants that grant
assistance is contingent | ||
upon the availability of appropriated funds.
| ||
(e-5) The General Assembly finds and declares that it is an | ||
important purpose of the Monetary Award Program to facilitate | ||
access to college both for students who pursue postsecondary | ||
education immediately following high school and for those who | ||
pursue postsecondary education later in life, particularly | ||
Illinoisans who are dislocated workers with financial need and | ||
who are seeking to improve their economic position through | ||
education. For the 2015-2016 and 2016-2017 academic years, the | ||
Commission shall give additional and specific consideration to | ||
the needs of dislocated workers with the intent of allowing | ||
applicants who are dislocated workers an opportunity to secure | ||
financial assistance even if applying later than the general | ||
pool of applicants. The Commission's consideration shall | ||
include, in determining the number of grants to be offered, an | ||
estimate of the resources needed to serve dislocated workers | ||
who apply after the Commission initially suspends award | ||
announcements for the upcoming regular academic year, but prior | ||
to the beginning of that academic year. For the purposes of | ||
this subsection (e-5), a dislocated worker is defined as in the | ||
federal Workforce Investment Act of 1998. |
(f) (Blank). The Commission may request appropriations for | ||
deposit into the
Monetary Award Program Reserve Fund. Monies | ||
deposited into the Monetary Award
Program Reserve Fund may be | ||
expended exclusively for one purpose: to make
Monetary Award | ||
Program grants to eligible students. Amounts on deposit in the
| ||
Monetary Award Program Reserve Fund may not exceed 2% of the | ||
current annual
State appropriation for the Monetary Award | ||
Program.
| ||
The purpose of the Monetary Award Program Reserve Fund is | ||
to enable the
Commission each year to assure as many students | ||
as possible of their
eligibility for a Monetary Award Program | ||
grant and to do so before commencement
of the academic year. | ||
Moneys deposited in this Reserve Fund are intended to
enhance | ||
the Commission's management of the Monetary Award Program, | ||
minimizing
the necessity, magnitude, and frequency of | ||
adjusting award amounts and ensuring
that the annual Monetary | ||
Award Program appropriation can be fully utilized.
| ||
(g) The Commission shall determine the eligibility of and | ||
make grants to
applicants enrolled at qualified for-profit | ||
institutions in accordance with the
criteria set forth in this | ||
Section. The eligibility of applicants enrolled at
such | ||
for-profit institutions shall be limited as follows:
| ||
(1) Beginning with the academic year 1997, only to | ||
eligible first-time
freshmen and
first-time transfer | ||
students who have attained an associate degree.
| ||
(2) Beginning with the academic year 1998, only to |
eligible freshmen
students,
transfer students who have | ||
attained an associate degree, and students who
receive a | ||
grant under paragraph (1) for the academic year 1997 and | ||
whose grants
are being renewed for the academic year 1998.
| ||
(3) Beginning with the academic year 1999, to all | ||
eligible students.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 98-967, eff. 8-15-14.)
| ||
Section 5-50. The Alzheimer's Disease Assistance Act is | ||
amended by changing Section 7 as follows:
| ||
(410 ILCS 405/7) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 6957)
| ||
Sec. 7. Regional ADA center funding. Pursuant to
| ||
appropriations enacted by the General Assembly, the Department | ||
shall
provide funds to hospitals affiliated with each
Regional | ||
ADA Center for
necessary research and
for the development and | ||
maintenance of services for individuals with Alzheimer's
| ||
disease and related disorders and their families. For the | ||
fiscal year
beginning July 1, 2003, and each year thereafter, | ||
the Department shall effect
payments under this Section to | ||
hospitals affiliated with each Regional ADA
Center through the | ||
Department of Healthcare and Family Services (formerly
| ||
Illinois Department of Public Aid) under the Excellence in | ||
Alzheimer's Disease Center Treatment Act . The Department of | ||
Healthcare and Family Services shall annually report to the | ||
Advisory Committee established under this Act regarding the |
funding of centers under this Act. The Department shall
include | ||
the annual expenditures for this purpose in the plan required | ||
by
Section 5 of this Act.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 97-768, eff. 1-1-13.)
| ||
(410 ILCS 407/Act rep.) | ||
Section 5-55. The Excellence in Alzheimer's Disease Center | ||
Treatment Act is repealed. | ||
Section 5-60. The Food and Agriculture Research Act is | ||
amended by changing Section 25 as follows:
| ||
(505 ILCS 82/25)
| ||
Sec. 25. Administrative oversight. | ||
(a) The Department of Agriculture shall
provide general | ||
administrative oversight with the assistance and advice of
duly | ||
elected Board of Directors of the Illinois Council on Food and
| ||
Agricultural Research. Food and agricultural research | ||
administrators at each
of the
universities shall administer the | ||
specifics of the funded research programs. Annually the | ||
Illinois Council on Food and Agricultural Research
| ||
administrators shall prepare a combined proposed budget for the | ||
research that the Director
of Agriculture shall submit to the | ||
Governor for inclusion in the Executive
budget and | ||
consideration by the General Assembly. The budget shall specify
| ||
major categories of proposed expenditures, including salary, |
wages, and fringe
benefits; operation and maintenance; | ||
supplies and expenses; and capital
improvements.
| ||
(b) (Blank). The Department, with the assistance of the | ||
Illinois Council on Food and Agricultural Research, may seek | ||
additional grants and donations for research. Additional funds | ||
shall be used in conjunction with appropriated funds for | ||
research. All additional grants and donations for research | ||
shall be deposited into the Food and Agricultural Research | ||
Fund, a special fund created in the State treasury, and used as | ||
provided in this Act. | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-879, eff. 8-2-12.)
| ||
(710 ILCS 45/Act rep.)
| ||
Section 5-65. The Sorry Works! Pilot Program Act is | ||
repealed.
| ||
(815 ILCS 402/Act rep.)
| ||
Section 5-70. The Restricted Call Registry Act is repealed. | ||
ARTICLE 10. MANDATE RELIEF
| ||
(15 ILCS 550/Act rep.)
| ||
Section 10-10. The Public Education Affinity Credit Card | ||
Act is repealed. | ||
Section 10-15. The Illinois Act on the Aging is amended by |
changing Section 4.14 as follows: | ||
(20 ILCS 105/4.14) | ||
Sec. 4.14. Rural Senior Citizen Program. | ||
(a) The General Assembly finds that it is in the best | ||
interest of the citizens of Illinois to identify and address | ||
the special challenges and needs faced by older rural | ||
residents. The General Assembly further finds that rural areas | ||
are often under-served and unserved to the detriment of older | ||
residents and their families, which may require the allocation | ||
of additional resources. | ||
(b) The Department shall identify the special needs and | ||
problems of older rural residents and evaluate the adequacy and | ||
accessibility of existing programs and information for older | ||
rural residents. The scope of the Department's work shall | ||
encompass both Older American Act services, Community Care | ||
services, and all other services targeted in whole or in part | ||
at residents 60 years of age and older, regardless of the | ||
setting in which the service is provided. | ||
(c) (Blank). The Older Rural Adults Task Force is | ||
established to gather information and make recommendations in | ||
collaboration with the Department on Aging and the Older Adult | ||
Services Committee. The Task Force shall be comprised of 12 | ||
voting members and 7 non-voting members. The President and | ||
Minority Leader of the Illinois Senate and the Speaker and | ||
Minority Leader of the Illinois House of Representatives shall |
each appoint 2 members of the General Assembly and one citizen | ||
member to the Task Force. Citizen members may seek | ||
reimbursement for actual travel expenses. Representatives of | ||
the Department on Aging and the Departments of Healthcare and | ||
Family Services, Human Services, Public Health, and Commerce | ||
and Economic Opportunity, the Rural Affairs Council, and the | ||
Illinois Housing Development Authority shall serve as | ||
non-voting members. The Department on Aging shall provide staff | ||
support to the Task Force. | ||
Co-chairs shall be selected by the Task Force at its first | ||
meeting. Both shall be appointed voting members of the Task | ||
Force. One co-chair shall be a member of the General Assembly | ||
and one shall be a citizen member. A simple majority of those | ||
appointed shall constitute a quorum. The Task Force may hold | ||
regional hearings and fact finding meetings and shall submit a | ||
report to the General Assembly no later than January 1, 2009. | ||
The Task Force is dissolved upon submission of the report.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 95-89, eff. 8-13-07.) | ||
(20 ILCS 605/605-312 rep.)
| ||
(20 ILCS 605/605-817 rep.)
| ||
Section 10-20. The Department of Commerce and Economic | ||
Opportunity Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is | ||
amended by repealing Sections 605-312 and 605-817.
| ||
(20 ILCS 685/Act rep.)
|
Section 10-40. The Particle Accelerator Land Acquisition | ||
Act is repealed. | ||
Section 10-45. The Illinois Geographic Information Council | ||
Act is amended by changing Section 5-5 as follows:
| ||
(20 ILCS 1128/5-5)
| ||
Sec. 5-5. Council. The Illinois Geographic Information | ||
Council,
hereinafter called the "Council", is created within | ||
the Department of Natural Resources.
| ||
The Council shall consist of 15 17 voting members, as | ||
follows: the
Illinois Secretary of State, the Illinois | ||
Secretary of Transportation, the
Directors of the Illinois | ||
Departments of Agriculture, Central Management
Services, | ||
Commerce and Economic Opportunity, Nuclear Safety,
Public | ||
Health, Natural Resources, and Revenue, the Directors of
the | ||
Illinois Emergency Management Agency and the Illinois | ||
Environmental
Protection Agency, the President of the | ||
University of Illinois, the Chairman of
the Illinois Commerce | ||
Commission, plus 4 members of the General Assembly, one
each | ||
appointed by the Speaker and Minority Leader of the House and | ||
the
President and Minority Leader of the Senate. An ex officio | ||
voting member may
designate another person to carry out his or | ||
her duties on the Council.
| ||
In addition to the above members, the Governor may appoint | ||
up to 10
additional voting members, representing local, |
regional, and federal agencies,
professional organizations, | ||
academic institutions, public utilities, and the
private | ||
sector.
| ||
Members appointed by the Governor shall serve at the | ||
pleasure of the
Governor.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06; 94-961, eff. 6-27-06.)
| ||
Section 10-55. The Illinois Criminal Justice Information | ||
Act is amended by changing Section 7 as follows:
| ||
(20 ILCS 3930/7) (from Ch. 38, par. 210-7)
| ||
Sec. 7. Powers and Duties. The Authority shall have the | ||
following
powers, duties and responsibilities:
| ||
(a) To develop and operate comprehensive information | ||
systems for the
improvement and coordination of all aspects | ||
of law enforcement, prosecution
and corrections;
| ||
(b) To define, develop, evaluate and correlate State | ||
and local programs
and projects associated with the | ||
improvement of law enforcement and the
administration of | ||
criminal justice;
| ||
(c) To act as a central repository and clearing house | ||
for federal, state
and local research studies, plans, | ||
projects, proposals and other information
relating to all | ||
aspects of criminal justice system improvement and to | ||
encourage
educational programs for citizen support of | ||
State and local efforts to make
such improvements;
|
(d) To undertake research studies to aid in | ||
accomplishing its purposes;
| ||
(e) To monitor the operation of existing criminal | ||
justice information
systems in order to protect the | ||
constitutional rights and privacy of
individuals about | ||
whom criminal history record information has been | ||
collected;
| ||
(f) To provide an effective administrative forum for | ||
the protection of
the rights of individuals concerning | ||
criminal history record information;
| ||
(g) To issue regulations, guidelines and procedures | ||
which ensure the privacy
and security of criminal history | ||
record information
consistent with State and federal laws;
| ||
(h) To act as the sole administrative appeal body in | ||
the State of
Illinois to conduct hearings and make final | ||
determinations concerning
individual challenges to the | ||
completeness and accuracy of criminal
history record | ||
information;
| ||
(i) To act as the sole, official, criminal justice body | ||
in the State of
Illinois to conduct annual and periodic | ||
audits of the procedures, policies,
and practices of the | ||
State central repositories for criminal history
record | ||
information to verify compliance with federal and state | ||
laws and
regulations governing such information;
| ||
(j) To advise the Authority's Statistical Analysis | ||
Center;
|
(k) To apply for, receive, establish priorities for, | ||
allocate, disburse
and spend grants of funds that are made | ||
available by and received on or
after January 1, 1983 from | ||
private sources or from the United States pursuant
to the | ||
federal Crime Control Act of 1973, as amended, and similar | ||
federal
legislation, and to enter into agreements with the | ||
United States government
to further the purposes of this | ||
Act, or as may be required as a condition
of obtaining | ||
federal funds;
| ||
(l) To receive, expend and account for such funds of | ||
the State of Illinois
as may be made available to further | ||
the purposes of this Act;
| ||
(m) To enter into contracts and to cooperate with units | ||
of general local
government or combinations of such units, | ||
State agencies, and criminal justice
system agencies of | ||
other states for the purpose of carrying out the duties
of | ||
the Authority imposed by this Act or by the federal Crime | ||
Control Act
of 1973, as amended;
| ||
(n) To enter into contracts and cooperate with units of | ||
general local
government outside of Illinois, other | ||
states' agencies, and private
organizations outside of | ||
Illinois to provide computer software or design
that has | ||
been developed for the Illinois criminal justice system, or | ||
to
participate in the cooperative development or design of | ||
new software or
systems to be used by the Illinois criminal | ||
justice system. Revenues
received as a result of such |
arrangements shall be deposited in the
Criminal Justice | ||
Information Systems Trust Fund.
| ||
(o) To establish general policies concerning criminal | ||
justice information
systems and to promulgate such rules, | ||
regulations and procedures as are
necessary to the | ||
operation of the Authority and to the uniform consideration
| ||
of appeals and audits;
| ||
(p) To advise and to make recommendations to the | ||
Governor and the General
Assembly on policies relating to | ||
criminal justice information systems;
| ||
(q) To direct all other agencies under the jurisdiction | ||
of the Governor
to provide whatever assistance and | ||
information the Authority may lawfully
require to carry out | ||
its functions;
| ||
(r) To exercise any other powers that are reasonable | ||
and necessary to
fulfill the responsibilities of the | ||
Authority under this Act and to comply
with the | ||
requirements of applicable federal law or regulation;
| ||
(s) To exercise the rights, powers and duties which | ||
have been vested
in the Authority by the "Illinois Uniform | ||
Conviction Information Act",
enacted by the 85th General | ||
Assembly, as hereafter amended;
| ||
(t) To exercise the rights, powers and duties which | ||
have been vested
in the Authority by the Illinois Motor | ||
Vehicle Theft Prevention Act;
| ||
(u) To exercise the rights, powers, and duties vested |
in the Authority by the Illinois Public Safety Agency | ||
Network Act; and | ||
(v) To provide technical assistance in the form of | ||
training to local governmental entities within Illinois | ||
requesting such assistance for the purposes of procuring | ||
grants for gang intervention and gang prevention programs | ||
or other criminal justice programs from the United States | ||
Department of Justice. | ||
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall | ||
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, | ||
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of | ||
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the | ||
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as | ||
required by Section 3.1 of "An Act to revise the law in | ||
relation
to the General Assembly", approved February 25, 1874, | ||
as amended, and
filing such additional copies with the State | ||
Government Report Distribution
Center for the General Assembly | ||
as is required under paragraph (t) of
Section 7 of the State | ||
Library Act.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 97-435, eff. 1-1-12.)
| ||
(20 ILCS 3965/Act rep.)
| ||
Section 10-60. The Illinois Economic Development Board Act | ||
is repealed. | ||
(20 ILCS 4065/Act rep.) |
Section 10-65. The Illinois Children's Savings Accounts | ||
Act is repealed. | ||
(20 ILCS 5000/Act rep.) | ||
Section 10-70. The Task Force on Inventorying Employment | ||
Restrictions Act is repealed. | ||
(30 ILCS 577/35-20 rep.) | ||
Section 10-80. The State Construction Minority and Female | ||
Building Trades Act is amended by repealing Section 35-20.
| ||
(30 ILCS 750/9-4.5 rep.)
| ||
(30 ILCS 750/11-4 rep.)
| ||
Section 10-85. The Build Illinois Act is amended by | ||
repealing Sections 9-4.5 and 11-4. | ||
Section 10-90. The Illinois Income Tax Act is amended by | ||
changing Section 901 as follows: | ||
(35 ILCS 5/901) (from Ch. 120, par. 9-901) | ||
Sec. 901. Collection authority. | ||
(a) In general. | ||
The Department shall collect the taxes imposed by this Act. | ||
The Department
shall collect certified past due child support | ||
amounts under Section 2505-650
of the Department of Revenue Law | ||
(20 ILCS 2505/2505-650). Except as
provided in subsections (c), |
(e), (f), (g), and (h) of this Section, money collected
| ||
pursuant to subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act | ||
shall be
paid into the General Revenue Fund in the State | ||
treasury; money
collected pursuant to subsections (c) and (d) | ||
of Section 201 of this Act
shall be paid into the Personal | ||
Property Tax Replacement Fund, a special
fund in the State | ||
Treasury; and money collected under Section 2505-650 of the
| ||
Department of Revenue Law (20 ILCS 2505/2505-650) shall be paid
| ||
into the
Child Support Enforcement Trust Fund, a special fund | ||
outside the State
Treasury, or
to the State
Disbursement Unit | ||
established under Section 10-26 of the Illinois Public Aid
| ||
Code, as directed by the Department of Healthcare and Family | ||
Services. | ||
(b) Local Government Distributive Fund. | ||
Beginning August 1, 1969, and continuing through June 30, | ||
1994, the Treasurer
shall transfer each month from the General | ||
Revenue Fund to a special fund in
the State treasury, to be | ||
known as the "Local Government Distributive Fund", an
amount | ||
equal to 1/12 of the net revenue realized from the tax imposed | ||
by
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act during | ||
the preceding month.
Beginning July 1, 1994, and continuing | ||
through June 30, 1995, the Treasurer
shall transfer each month | ||
from the General Revenue Fund to the Local Government
| ||
Distributive Fund an amount equal to 1/11 of the net revenue | ||
realized from the
tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of | ||
Section 201 of this Act during the
preceding month. Beginning |
July 1, 1995 and continuing through January 31, 2011, the | ||
Treasurer shall transfer each
month from the General Revenue | ||
Fund to the Local Government Distributive Fund
an amount equal | ||
to the net of (i) 1/10 of the net revenue realized from the
tax | ||
imposed by
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of the | ||
Illinois Income Tax Act during
the preceding month
(ii) minus, | ||
beginning July 1, 2003 and ending June 30, 2004, $6,666,666, | ||
and
beginning July 1,
2004,
zero. Beginning February 1, 2011, | ||
and continuing through January 31, 2015, the Treasurer shall | ||
transfer each month from the General Revenue Fund to the Local | ||
Government Distributive Fund an amount equal to the sum of (i) | ||
6% (10% of the ratio of the 3% individual income tax rate prior | ||
to 2011 to the 5% individual income tax rate after 2010) of the | ||
net revenue realized from the tax imposed by subsections (a) | ||
and (b) of Section 201 of this Act upon individuals, trusts, | ||
and estates during the preceding month and (ii) 6.86% (10% of | ||
the ratio of the 4.8% corporate income tax rate prior to 2011 | ||
to the 7% corporate income tax rate after 2010) of the net | ||
revenue realized from the tax imposed by subsections (a) and | ||
(b) of Section 201 of this Act upon corporations during the | ||
preceding month. Beginning February 1, 2015 and continuing | ||
through January 31, 2025, the Treasurer shall transfer each | ||
month from the General Revenue Fund to the Local Government | ||
Distributive Fund an amount equal to the sum of (i) 8% (10% of | ||
the ratio of the 3% individual income tax rate prior to 2011 to | ||
the 3.75% individual income tax rate after 2014) of the net |
revenue realized from the tax imposed by subsections (a) and | ||
(b) of Section 201 of this Act upon individuals, trusts, and | ||
estates during the preceding month and (ii) 9.14% (10% of the | ||
ratio of the 4.8% corporate income tax rate prior to 2011 to | ||
the 5.25% corporate income tax rate after 2014) of the net | ||
revenue realized from the tax imposed by subsections (a) and | ||
(b) of Section 201 of this Act upon corporations during the | ||
preceding month. Beginning February 1, 2025, the Treasurer | ||
shall transfer each month from the General Revenue Fund to the | ||
Local Government Distributive Fund an amount equal to the sum | ||
of (i) 9.23% (10% of the ratio of the 3% individual income tax | ||
rate prior to 2011 to the 3.25% individual income tax rate | ||
after 2024) of the net revenue realized from the tax imposed by | ||
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act upon | ||
individuals, trusts, and estates during the preceding month and | ||
(ii) 10% of the net revenue realized from the tax imposed by | ||
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act upon | ||
corporations during the preceding month. Net revenue realized | ||
for a month shall be defined as the
revenue from the tax | ||
imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this
Act | ||
which is deposited in the General Revenue Fund, the Education | ||
Assistance
Fund, the Income Tax Surcharge Local Government | ||
Distributive Fund, the Fund for the Advancement of Education, | ||
and the Commitment to Human Services Fund during the
month | ||
minus the amount paid out of the General Revenue Fund in State | ||
warrants
during that same month as refunds to taxpayers for |
overpayment of liability
under the tax imposed by subsections | ||
(a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act. | ||
Beginning on August 26, 2014 (the effective date of Public | ||
Act 98-1052), the Comptroller shall perform the transfers | ||
required by this subsection (b) no later than 60 days after he | ||
or she receives the certification from the Treasurer as | ||
provided in Section 1 of the State Revenue Sharing Act. | ||
(c) Deposits Into Income Tax Refund Fund. | ||
(1) Beginning on January 1, 1989 and thereafter, the | ||
Department shall
deposit a percentage of the amounts | ||
collected pursuant to subsections (a)
and (b)(1), (2), and | ||
(3), of Section 201 of this Act into a fund in the State
| ||
treasury known as the Income Tax Refund Fund. The | ||
Department shall deposit 6%
of such amounts during the | ||
period beginning January 1, 1989 and ending on June
30, | ||
1989. Beginning with State fiscal year 1990 and for each | ||
fiscal year
thereafter, the percentage deposited into the | ||
Income Tax Refund Fund during a
fiscal year shall be the | ||
Annual Percentage. For fiscal years 1999 through
2001, the | ||
Annual Percentage shall be 7.1%.
For fiscal year 2003, the | ||
Annual Percentage shall be 8%.
For fiscal year 2004, the | ||
Annual Percentage shall be 11.7%. Upon the effective date | ||
of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, the | ||
Annual Percentage shall be 10% for fiscal year 2005. For | ||
fiscal year 2006, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.75%. For | ||
fiscal
year 2007, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.75%. For |
fiscal year 2008, the Annual Percentage shall be 7.75%. For | ||
fiscal year 2009, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.75%. For | ||
fiscal year 2010, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.75%. For | ||
fiscal year 2011, the Annual Percentage shall be 8.75%. For | ||
fiscal year 2012, the Annual Percentage shall be 8.75%. For | ||
fiscal year 2013, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.75%. For | ||
fiscal year 2014, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.5%. For | ||
fiscal year 2015, the Annual Percentage shall be 10%. For | ||
all other
fiscal years, the
Annual Percentage shall be | ||
calculated as a fraction, the numerator of which
shall be | ||
the amount of refunds approved for payment by the | ||
Department during
the preceding fiscal year as a result of | ||
overpayment of tax liability under
subsections (a) and | ||
(b)(1), (2), and (3) of Section 201 of this Act plus the
| ||
amount of such refunds remaining approved but unpaid at the | ||
end of the
preceding fiscal year, minus the amounts | ||
transferred into the Income Tax
Refund Fund from the | ||
Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund, and
the denominator of | ||
which shall be the amounts which will be collected pursuant
| ||
to subsections (a) and (b)(1), (2), and (3) of Section 201 | ||
of this Act during
the preceding fiscal year; except that | ||
in State fiscal year 2002, the Annual
Percentage shall in | ||
no event exceed 7.6%. The Director of Revenue shall
certify | ||
the Annual Percentage to the Comptroller on the last | ||
business day of
the fiscal year immediately preceding the | ||
fiscal year for which it is to be
effective. |
(2) Beginning on January 1, 1989 and thereafter, the | ||
Department shall
deposit a percentage of the amounts | ||
collected pursuant to subsections (a)
and (b)(6), (7), and | ||
(8), (c) and (d) of Section 201
of this Act into a fund in | ||
the State treasury known as the Income Tax
Refund Fund. The | ||
Department shall deposit 18% of such amounts during the
| ||
period beginning January 1, 1989 and ending on June 30, | ||
1989. Beginning
with State fiscal year 1990 and for each | ||
fiscal year thereafter, the
percentage deposited into the | ||
Income Tax Refund Fund during a fiscal year
shall be the | ||
Annual Percentage. For fiscal years 1999, 2000, and 2001, | ||
the
Annual Percentage shall be 19%.
For fiscal year 2003, | ||
the Annual Percentage shall be 27%. For fiscal year
2004, | ||
the Annual Percentage shall be 32%.
Upon the effective date | ||
of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, the | ||
Annual Percentage shall be 24% for fiscal year 2005.
For | ||
fiscal year 2006, the Annual Percentage shall be 20%. For | ||
fiscal
year 2007, the Annual Percentage shall be 17.5%. For | ||
fiscal year 2008, the Annual Percentage shall be 15.5%. For | ||
fiscal year 2009, the Annual Percentage shall be 17.5%. For | ||
fiscal year 2010, the Annual Percentage shall be 17.5%. For | ||
fiscal year 2011, the Annual Percentage shall be 17.5%. For | ||
fiscal year 2012, the Annual Percentage shall be 17.5%. For | ||
fiscal year 2013, the Annual Percentage shall be 14%. For | ||
fiscal year 2014, the Annual Percentage shall be 13.4%. For | ||
fiscal year 2015, the Annual Percentage shall be 14%. For |
all other fiscal years, the Annual
Percentage shall be | ||
calculated
as a fraction, the numerator of which shall be | ||
the amount of refunds
approved for payment by the | ||
Department during the preceding fiscal year as
a result of | ||
overpayment of tax liability under subsections (a) and | ||
(b)(6),
(7), and (8), (c) and (d) of Section 201 of this | ||
Act plus the
amount of such refunds remaining approved but | ||
unpaid at the end of the
preceding fiscal year, and the | ||
denominator of
which shall be the amounts which will be | ||
collected pursuant to subsections (a)
and (b)(6), (7), and | ||
(8), (c) and (d) of Section 201 of this Act during the
| ||
preceding fiscal year; except that in State fiscal year | ||
2002, the Annual
Percentage shall in no event exceed 23%. | ||
The Director of Revenue shall
certify the Annual Percentage | ||
to the Comptroller on the last business day of
the fiscal | ||
year immediately preceding the fiscal year for which it is | ||
to be
effective. | ||
(3) The Comptroller shall order transferred and the | ||
Treasurer shall
transfer from the Tobacco Settlement | ||
Recovery Fund to the Income Tax Refund
Fund (i) $35,000,000 | ||
in January, 2001, (ii) $35,000,000 in January, 2002, and
| ||
(iii) $35,000,000 in January, 2003. | ||
(d) Expenditures from Income Tax Refund Fund. | ||
(1) Beginning January 1, 1989, money in the Income Tax | ||
Refund Fund
shall be expended exclusively for the purpose | ||
of paying refunds resulting
from overpayment of tax |
liability under Section 201 of this Act , for paying
rebates | ||
under Section 208.1 in the event that the amounts in the | ||
Homeowners'
Tax Relief Fund are insufficient for that | ||
purpose,
and for
making transfers pursuant to this | ||
subsection (d). | ||
(2) The Director shall order payment of refunds | ||
resulting from
overpayment of tax liability under Section | ||
201 of this Act from the
Income Tax Refund Fund only to the | ||
extent that amounts collected pursuant
to Section 201 of | ||
this Act and transfers pursuant to this subsection (d)
and | ||
item (3) of subsection (c) have been deposited and retained | ||
in the
Fund. | ||
(3) As soon as possible after the end of each fiscal | ||
year, the Director
shall
order transferred and the State | ||
Treasurer and State Comptroller shall
transfer from the | ||
Income Tax Refund Fund to the Personal Property Tax
| ||
Replacement Fund an amount, certified by the Director to | ||
the Comptroller,
equal to the excess of the amount | ||
collected pursuant to subsections (c) and
(d) of Section | ||
201 of this Act deposited into the Income Tax Refund Fund
| ||
during the fiscal year over the amount of refunds resulting | ||
from
overpayment of tax liability under subsections (c) and | ||
(d) of Section 201
of this Act paid from the Income Tax | ||
Refund Fund during the fiscal year. | ||
(4) As soon as possible after the end of each fiscal | ||
year, the Director shall
order transferred and the State |
Treasurer and State Comptroller shall
transfer from the | ||
Personal Property Tax Replacement Fund to the Income Tax
| ||
Refund Fund an amount, certified by the Director to the | ||
Comptroller, equal
to the excess of the amount of refunds | ||
resulting from overpayment of tax
liability under | ||
subsections (c) and (d) of Section 201 of this Act paid
| ||
from the Income Tax Refund Fund during the fiscal year over | ||
the amount
collected pursuant to subsections (c) and (d) of | ||
Section 201 of this Act
deposited into the Income Tax | ||
Refund Fund during the fiscal year. | ||
(4.5) As soon as possible after the end of fiscal year | ||
1999 and of each
fiscal year
thereafter, the Director shall | ||
order transferred and the State Treasurer and
State | ||
Comptroller shall transfer from the Income Tax Refund Fund | ||
to the General
Revenue Fund any surplus remaining in the | ||
Income Tax Refund Fund as of the end
of such fiscal year; | ||
excluding for fiscal years 2000, 2001, and 2002
amounts | ||
attributable to transfers under item (3) of subsection (c) | ||
less refunds
resulting from the earned income tax credit. | ||
(5) This Act shall constitute an irrevocable and | ||
continuing
appropriation from the Income Tax Refund Fund | ||
for the purpose of paying
refunds upon the order of the | ||
Director in accordance with the provisions of
this Section. | ||
(e) Deposits into the Education Assistance Fund and the | ||
Income Tax
Surcharge Local Government Distributive Fund. | ||
On July 1, 1991, and thereafter, of the amounts collected |
pursuant to
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act, | ||
minus deposits into the
Income Tax Refund Fund, the Department | ||
shall deposit 7.3% into the
Education Assistance Fund in the | ||
State Treasury. Beginning July 1, 1991,
and continuing through | ||
January 31, 1993, of the amounts collected pursuant to
| ||
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of the Illinois Income | ||
Tax Act, minus
deposits into the Income Tax Refund Fund, the | ||
Department shall deposit 3.0%
into the Income Tax Surcharge | ||
Local Government Distributive Fund in the State
Treasury. | ||
Beginning February 1, 1993 and continuing through June 30, | ||
1993, of
the amounts collected pursuant to subsections (a) and | ||
(b) of Section 201 of the
Illinois Income Tax Act, minus | ||
deposits into the Income Tax Refund Fund, the
Department shall | ||
deposit 4.4% into the Income Tax Surcharge Local Government
| ||
Distributive Fund in the State Treasury. Beginning July 1, | ||
1993, and
continuing through June 30, 1994, of the amounts | ||
collected under subsections
(a) and (b) of Section 201 of this | ||
Act, minus deposits into the Income Tax
Refund Fund, the | ||
Department shall deposit 1.475% into the Income Tax Surcharge
| ||
Local Government Distributive Fund in the State Treasury. | ||
(f) Deposits into the Fund for the Advancement of | ||
Education. Beginning February 1, 2015, the Department shall | ||
deposit the following portions of the revenue realized from the | ||
tax imposed upon individuals, trusts, and estates by | ||
subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act during the | ||
preceding month, minus deposits into the Income Tax Refund |
Fund, into the Fund for the Advancement of Education: | ||
(1) beginning February 1, 2015, and prior to February | ||
1, 2025, 1/30; and | ||
(2) beginning February 1, 2025, 1/26. | ||
If the rate of tax imposed by subsection (a) and (b) of | ||
Section 201 is reduced pursuant to Section 201.5 of this Act, | ||
the Department shall not make the deposits required by this | ||
subsection (f) on or after the effective date of the reduction. | ||
(g) Deposits into the Commitment to Human Services Fund. | ||
Beginning February 1, 2015, the Department shall deposit the | ||
following portions of the revenue realized from the tax imposed | ||
upon individuals, trusts, and estates by subsections (a) and | ||
(b) of Section 201 of this Act during the preceding month, | ||
minus deposits into the Income Tax Refund Fund, into the | ||
Commitment to Human Services Fund: | ||
(1) beginning February 1, 2015, and prior to February | ||
1, 2025, 1/30; and | ||
(2) beginning February 1, 2025, 1/26. | ||
If the rate of tax imposed by subsection (a) and (b) of | ||
Section 201 is reduced pursuant to Section 201.5 of this Act, | ||
the Department shall not make the deposits required by this | ||
subsection (g) on or after the effective date of the reduction. | ||
(h) Deposits into the Tax Compliance and Administration | ||
Fund. Beginning on the first day of the first calendar month to | ||
occur on or after August 26, 2014 (the effective date of Public | ||
Act 98-1098), each month the Department shall pay into the Tax |
Compliance and Administration Fund, to be used, subject to | ||
appropriation, to fund additional auditors and compliance | ||
personnel at the Department, an amount equal to 1/12 of 5% of | ||
the cash receipts collected during the preceding fiscal year by | ||
the Audit Bureau of the Department from the tax imposed by | ||
subsections (a), (b), (c), and (d) of Section 201 of this Act, | ||
net of deposits into the Income Tax Refund Fund made from those | ||
cash receipts. | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-24, eff. 6-19-13; 98-674, eff. 6-30-14; | ||
98-1052, eff. 8-26-14; 98-1098, eff. 8-26-14; 99-78, eff. | ||
7-20-15.) | ||
Section 10-95. The Property Tax Code is amended by changing | ||
Section 20-15 as follows:
| ||
(35 ILCS 200/20-15)
| ||
Sec. 20-15. Information on bill or separate statement. | ||
There shall be
printed on each bill, or on a separate slip | ||
which shall be mailed with the
bill:
| ||
(a) a statement itemizing the rate at which taxes have | ||
been extended for
each of the taxing districts in the | ||
county in whose district the property is
located, and in | ||
those counties utilizing
electronic data processing | ||
equipment the dollar amount of tax due from the
person | ||
assessed allocable to each of those taxing districts, | ||
including a
separate statement of the dollar amount of tax |
due which is allocable to a tax
levied under the Illinois | ||
Local Library Act or to any other tax levied by a
| ||
municipality or township for public library purposes,
| ||
(b) a separate statement for each of the taxing | ||
districts of the dollar
amount of tax due which is | ||
allocable to a tax levied under the Illinois Pension
Code | ||
or to any other tax levied by a municipality or township | ||
for public
pension or retirement purposes,
| ||
(c) the total tax rate,
| ||
(d) the total amount of tax due, and
| ||
(e) the amount by which the total tax and the tax | ||
allocable to each taxing
district differs from the | ||
taxpayer's last prior tax bill.
| ||
The county treasurer shall ensure that only those taxing | ||
districts in
which a parcel of property is located shall be | ||
listed on the bill for that
property.
| ||
In all counties the statement shall also provide:
| ||
(1) the property index number or other suitable | ||
description,
| ||
(2) the assessment of the property,
| ||
(3) the statutory amount of each homestead exemption | ||
applied to the property, | ||
(4) the assessed value of the property after | ||
application of all homestead exemptions,
| ||
(5) the equalization factors imposed by the county and | ||
by the Department,
and
|
(6) the equalized assessment resulting from the | ||
application of the
equalization factors to the basic | ||
assessment.
| ||
In all counties which do not classify property for purposes | ||
of taxation, for
property on which a single family residence is | ||
situated the statement shall
also include a statement to | ||
reflect the fair cash value determined for the
property. In all | ||
counties which classify property for purposes of taxation in
| ||
accordance with Section 4 of Article IX of the Illinois | ||
Constitution, for
parcels of residential property in the lowest | ||
assessment classification the
statement shall also include a | ||
statement to reflect the fair cash value
determined for the | ||
property.
| ||
In all counties, the statement must include information | ||
that certain
taxpayers may be eligible for tax exemptions, | ||
abatements, and other assistance programs and that, for more | ||
information, taxpayers should consult with the office of their | ||
township or county assessor and with the Illinois Department of | ||
Revenue.
| ||
In all counties, the statement shall include information | ||
that certain
taxpayers may be eligible for the Senior Citizens | ||
and Persons with Disabilities Property
Tax Relief Act and that | ||
applications are
available from the Illinois Department on | ||
Aging.
| ||
In counties which use the estimated or accelerated billing | ||
methods, these
statements shall only be provided with the final |
installment of taxes due. The
provisions of this Section create | ||
a mandatory statutory duty. They are not
merely directory or | ||
discretionary. The failure or neglect of the collector to
mail | ||
the bill, or the failure of the taxpayer to receive the bill, | ||
shall not
affect the validity of any tax, or the liability for | ||
the payment of any tax.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 98-93, eff. 7-16-13; 99-143, eff. 7-27-15.)
| ||
Section 10-100. The Illinois Public Safety Agency Network | ||
Act is amended by changing Section 5 as follows: | ||
(50 ILCS 752/5)
| ||
Sec. 5. Definitions. As used in this Act, unless the | ||
context requires otherwise: | ||
"ALECS" means the Automated Law Enforcement Communications | ||
System. | ||
"ALERTS" means the Area-wide Law Enforcement Radio | ||
Terminal System. | ||
"Authority" means the Illinois Criminal Justice | ||
Information Authority. | ||
"Board" means the Board of Directors of Illinois Public | ||
Safety Agency Network, Inc. | ||
"IPSAN" or "Partnership" means Illinois Public Safety | ||
Agency Network, Inc., the not-for-profit
entity incorporated | ||
as provided in this Act. | ||
"PIMS" means the Police Information Management System. |
"Trust Fund" means the Criminal Justice Information | ||
Systems Trust Fund.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 94-896, eff. 7-1-06.) | ||
(235 ILCS 5/Art. XII rep.) | ||
Section 10-110. The Liquor Control Act of 1934 is amended | ||
by repealing Article XII.
| ||
(310 ILCS 5/42 rep.)
| ||
(310 ILCS 5/43 rep.)
| ||
(310 ILCS 5/44 rep.)
| ||
Section 10-115. The State Housing Act is amended by | ||
repealing Sections 42, 43, and 44.
| ||
(310 ILCS 55/Act rep.)
| ||
Section 10-130. The Home Ownership Made Easy Act is | ||
repealed.
| ||
(310 ILCS 65/16 rep.)
| ||
Section 10-135. The Illinois Affordable Housing Act is | ||
amended by repealing Section 16.
| ||
(315 ILCS 10/4 rep.)
| ||
Section 10-150. The Blighted Vacant Areas Development Act | ||
of 1949 is amended by repealing Section 4. |
(315 ILCS 35/Act rep.) | ||
Section 10-165. The Urban Flooding Awareness Act is | ||
repealed. | ||
Section 10-170. The Older Adult Services Act is amended by | ||
changing Section 35 as follows: | ||
(320 ILCS 42/35)
| ||
Sec. 35. Older Adult Services Advisory Committee. | ||
(a) The Older Adult Services Advisory Committee is created | ||
to advise the directors of Aging, Healthcare and Family | ||
Services, and Public Health on all matters related to this Act | ||
and the delivery of services to older adults in general.
| ||
(b) The Advisory Committee shall be comprised of the | ||
following:
| ||
(1) The Director of Aging or his or her designee, who | ||
shall serve as chair and shall be an ex officio and | ||
nonvoting member.
| ||
(2) The Director of Healthcare and Family Services and | ||
the Director of Public Health or their designees, who shall | ||
serve as vice-chairs and shall be ex officio and nonvoting | ||
members.
| ||
(3) One representative each of the Governor's Office, | ||
the Department of Healthcare and Family Services, the | ||
Department of Public Health, the Department of Veterans' | ||
Affairs, the Department of Human Services, the Department |
of Insurance, the Department of Commerce and Economic | ||
Opportunity, the Department on Aging, the Department on | ||
Aging's State Long Term Care Ombudsman, the Illinois | ||
Housing Finance Authority, and the Illinois Housing | ||
Development Authority, each of whom shall be selected by | ||
his or her respective director and shall be an ex officio | ||
and nonvoting member.
| ||
(4) Thirty members appointed by the Director of Aging | ||
in collaboration with the directors of Public Health and | ||
Healthcare and Family Services, and selected from the | ||
recommendations of statewide associations and | ||
organizations, as follows:
| ||
(A) One member representing the Area Agencies on | ||
Aging;
| ||
(B) Four members representing nursing homes or | ||
licensed assisted living establishments;
| ||
(C) One member representing home health agencies;
| ||
(D) One member representing case management | ||
services;
| ||
(E) One member representing statewide senior | ||
center associations;
| ||
(F) One member representing Community Care Program | ||
homemaker services;
| ||
(G) One member representing Community Care Program | ||
adult day services;
| ||
(H) One member representing nutrition project |
directors;
| ||
(I) One member representing hospice programs;
| ||
(J) One member representing individuals with | ||
Alzheimer's disease and related dementias;
| ||
(K) Two members representing statewide trade or | ||
labor unions;
| ||
(L) One advanced practice nurse with experience in | ||
gerontological nursing;
| ||
(M) One physician specializing in gerontology;
| ||
(N) One member representing regional long-term | ||
care ombudsmen;
| ||
(O) One member representing municipal, township, | ||
or county officials;
| ||
(P) (Blank);
| ||
(Q) (Blank);
| ||
(R) One member representing the parish nurse | ||
movement;
| ||
(S) One member representing pharmacists;
| ||
(T) Two members representing statewide | ||
organizations engaging in advocacy or legal | ||
representation on behalf of the senior population;
| ||
(U) Two family caregivers;
| ||
(V) Two citizen members over the age of 60;
| ||
(W) One citizen with knowledge in the area of | ||
gerontology research or health care law;
| ||
(X) One representative of health care facilities |
licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act; and
| ||
(Y) One representative of primary care service | ||
providers. | ||
The Director of Aging, in collaboration with the Directors | ||
of Public Health and Healthcare and Family Services, may | ||
appoint additional citizen members to the Older Adult Services | ||
Advisory Committee. Each such additional member must be either | ||
an individual age 60 or older or an uncompensated caregiver for | ||
a family member or friend who is age 60 or older.
| ||
(c) Voting members of the Advisory Committee shall serve | ||
for a term of 3 years or until a replacement is named. All | ||
members shall be appointed no later than January 1, 2005. Of | ||
the initial appointees, as determined by lot, 10 members shall | ||
serve a term of one year; 10 shall serve for a term of 2 years; | ||
and 12 shall serve for a term of 3 years. Any member appointed | ||
to fill a vacancy occurring prior to the expiration of the term | ||
for which his or her predecessor was appointed shall be | ||
appointed for the remainder of that term. The Advisory | ||
Committee shall meet at least quarterly and may meet more | ||
frequently at the call of the Chair. A simple majority of those | ||
appointed shall constitute a quorum. The affirmative vote of a | ||
majority of those present and voting shall be necessary for | ||
Advisory Committee action. Members of the Advisory Committee | ||
shall receive no compensation for their services.
| ||
(d) The Advisory Committee shall have an Executive | ||
Committee comprised of the Chair, the Vice Chairs, and up to 15 |
members of the Advisory Committee appointed by the Chair who | ||
have demonstrated expertise in developing, implementing, or | ||
coordinating the system restructuring initiatives defined in | ||
Section 25. The Executive Committee shall have responsibility | ||
to oversee and structure the operations of the Advisory | ||
Committee and to create and appoint necessary subcommittees and | ||
subcommittee members.
| ||
(e) The Advisory Committee shall study and make | ||
recommendations related to the implementation of this Act, | ||
including but not limited to system restructuring initiatives | ||
as defined in Section 25 or otherwise related to this Act.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 96-916, eff. 6-9-10.) | ||
(410 ILCS 48/25 rep.) | ||
(410 ILCS 48/30 rep.) | ||
Section 10-180. The Brominated Fire Retardant Prevention | ||
Act is amended by repealing Sections 25 and 30. | ||
Section 10-185. The Environmental Protection Act is | ||
amended by changing Sections 21.6, 22.15, 22.23, 22.28, 22.29, | ||
55, and 55.6 as follows:
| ||
(415 ILCS 5/21.6) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1021.6)
| ||
Sec. 21.6. Materials disposal ban.
| ||
(a) Beginning July 1, 1996, no person may knowingly mix | ||
liquid used oil
with any municipal waste that is intended for |
collection and disposal at a
landfill.
| ||
(b) Beginning July 1, 1996, no owner or operator of a | ||
sanitary landfill
shall accept for final disposal liquid used | ||
oil that
is discernible in the course of prudent business | ||
operation.
| ||
(c) For purposes of this Section, "liquid used oil" does | ||
not
include used oil filters, rags, absorbent material used to | ||
collect spilled oil
or other materials incidentally | ||
contaminated with used oil, or empty containers
which | ||
previously contained virgin oil, re-refined oil, or used oil.
| ||
(d) (Blank). The Agency and the Department of Commerce and | ||
Economic Opportunity
shall investigate the manner in which | ||
liquid used oil is currently being
utilized and potential | ||
prospects for future use.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
| ||
(415 ILCS 5/22.15) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.15)
| ||
Sec. 22.15. Solid Waste Management Fund; fees.
| ||
(a) There is hereby created within the State Treasury a
| ||
special fund to be known as the "Solid Waste Management Fund", | ||
to be
constituted from the fees collected by the State pursuant | ||
to this Section
and from repayments of loans made from the Fund | ||
for solid waste projects.
Moneys received by the Department of | ||
Commerce and Economic Opportunity
in repayment of loans made | ||
pursuant to the Illinois Solid Waste Management
Act shall be | ||
deposited into the General Revenue Fund.
|
(b) The Agency shall assess and collect a
fee in the amount | ||
set forth herein from the owner or operator of each sanitary
| ||
landfill permitted or required to be permitted by the Agency to | ||
dispose of
solid waste if the sanitary landfill is located off | ||
the site where such waste
was produced and if such sanitary | ||
landfill is owned, controlled, and operated
by a person other | ||
than the generator of such waste. The Agency shall deposit
all | ||
fees collected into the Solid Waste Management Fund. If a site | ||
is
contiguous to one or more landfills owned or operated by the | ||
same person, the
volumes permanently disposed of by each | ||
landfill shall be combined for purposes
of determining the fee | ||
under this subsection.
| ||
(1) If more than 150,000 cubic yards of non-hazardous | ||
solid waste is
permanently disposed of at a site in a | ||
calendar year, the owner or operator
shall either pay a fee | ||
of 95 cents per cubic yard or,
alternatively, the owner or | ||
operator may weigh the quantity of the solid waste
| ||
permanently disposed of with a device for which | ||
certification has been obtained
under the Weights and | ||
Measures Act and pay a fee of $2.00 per
ton of solid waste | ||
permanently disposed of. In no case shall the fee collected
| ||
or paid by the owner or operator under this paragraph | ||
exceed $1.55 per cubic yard or $3.27 per ton.
| ||
(2) If more than 100,000 cubic yards but not more than | ||
150,000 cubic
yards of non-hazardous waste is permanently | ||
disposed of at a site in a calendar
year, the owner or |
operator shall pay a fee of $52,630.
| ||
(3) If more than 50,000 cubic yards but not more than | ||
100,000 cubic
yards of non-hazardous solid waste is | ||
permanently disposed of at a site
in a calendar year, the | ||
owner or operator shall pay a fee of $23,790.
| ||
(4) If more than 10,000 cubic yards but not more than | ||
50,000 cubic
yards of non-hazardous solid waste is | ||
permanently disposed of at a site
in a calendar year, the | ||
owner or operator shall pay a fee of $7,260.
| ||
(5) If not more than 10,000 cubic yards of | ||
non-hazardous solid waste is
permanently disposed of at a | ||
site in a calendar year, the owner or operator
shall pay a | ||
fee of $1050.
| ||
(c) (Blank).
| ||
(d) The Agency shall establish rules relating to the | ||
collection of the
fees authorized by this Section. Such rules | ||
shall include, but not be
limited to:
| ||
(1) necessary records identifying the quantities of | ||
solid waste received
or disposed;
| ||
(2) the form and submission of reports to accompany the | ||
payment of fees
to the Agency;
| ||
(3) the time and manner of payment of fees to the | ||
Agency, which payments
shall not be more often than | ||
quarterly; and
| ||
(4) procedures setting forth criteria establishing | ||
when an owner or
operator may measure by weight or volume |
during any given quarter or other
fee payment period.
| ||
(e) Pursuant to appropriation, all monies in the Solid | ||
Waste Management
Fund shall be used by the Agency and the | ||
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity for the | ||
purposes set forth in this Section and in the Illinois
Solid | ||
Waste Management Act, including for the costs of fee collection | ||
and
administration.
| ||
(f) The Agency is authorized to enter into such agreements | ||
and to
promulgate such rules as are necessary to carry out its | ||
duties under this
Section and the Illinois Solid Waste | ||
Management Act.
| ||
(g) On the first day of January, April, July, and October | ||
of each year,
beginning on July 1, 1996, the State Comptroller | ||
and Treasurer shall
transfer $500,000 from the Solid Waste | ||
Management Fund to the Hazardous Waste
Fund. Moneys transferred | ||
under this subsection (g) shall be used only for the
purposes | ||
set forth in item (1) of subsection (d) of Section 22.2.
| ||
(h) The Agency is authorized to provide financial | ||
assistance to units of
local government for the performance of | ||
inspecting, investigating and
enforcement activities pursuant | ||
to Section 4(r) at nonhazardous solid
waste disposal sites.
| ||
(i) The Agency is authorized to support the operations of | ||
an industrial
materials exchange service, and to conduct | ||
household waste collection and
disposal programs.
| ||
(j) A unit of local government, as defined in the Local | ||
Solid Waste Disposal
Act, in which a solid waste disposal |
facility is located may establish a fee,
tax, or surcharge with | ||
regard to the permanent disposal of solid waste.
All fees, | ||
taxes, and surcharges collected under this subsection shall be
| ||
utilized for solid waste management purposes, including | ||
long-term monitoring
and maintenance of landfills, planning, | ||
implementation, inspection, enforcement
and other activities | ||
consistent with the Solid Waste Management Act and the
Local | ||
Solid Waste Disposal Act, or for any other environment-related | ||
purpose,
including but not limited to an environment-related | ||
public works project, but
not for the construction of a new | ||
pollution control facility other than a
household hazardous | ||
waste facility. However, the total fee, tax or surcharge
| ||
imposed by all units of local government under this subsection | ||
(j) upon the
solid waste disposal facility shall not exceed:
| ||
(1) 60¢ per cubic yard if more than 150,000 cubic yards | ||
of non-hazardous
solid waste is permanently disposed of at | ||
the site in a calendar year, unless
the owner or operator | ||
weighs the quantity of the solid waste received with a
| ||
device for which certification has been obtained under the | ||
Weights and Measures
Act, in which case the fee shall not | ||
exceed $1.27 per ton of solid waste
permanently disposed | ||
of.
| ||
(2) $33,350 if more than 100,000
cubic yards, but not | ||
more than 150,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous waste
is | ||
permanently disposed of at the site in a calendar year.
| ||
(3) $15,500 if more than 50,000 cubic
yards, but not |
more than 100,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous solid waste | ||
is
permanently disposed of at the site in a calendar year.
| ||
(4) $4,650 if more than 10,000 cubic
yards, but not | ||
more than 50,000 cubic yards, of non-hazardous solid waste
| ||
is permanently disposed of at the site in a calendar year.
| ||
(5) $$650 if not more than 10,000 cubic
yards of | ||
non-hazardous solid waste is permanently disposed of at the | ||
site in
a calendar year.
| ||
The corporate authorities of the unit of local government
| ||
may use proceeds from the fee, tax, or surcharge to reimburse a | ||
highway
commissioner whose road district lies wholly or | ||
partially within the
corporate limits of the unit of local | ||
government for expenses incurred in
the removal of | ||
nonhazardous, nonfluid municipal waste that has been dumped
on | ||
public property in violation of a State law or local ordinance.
| ||
A county or Municipal Joint Action Agency that imposes a | ||
fee, tax, or
surcharge under this subsection may use the | ||
proceeds thereof to reimburse a
municipality that lies wholly | ||
or partially within its boundaries for expenses
incurred in the | ||
removal of nonhazardous, nonfluid municipal waste that has been
| ||
dumped on public property in violation of a State law or local | ||
ordinance.
| ||
If the fees are to be used to conduct a local sanitary | ||
landfill
inspection or enforcement program, the unit of local | ||
government must enter
into a written delegation agreement with | ||
the Agency pursuant to subsection
(r) of Section 4. The unit of |
local government and the Agency shall enter
into such a written | ||
delegation agreement within 60 days after the
establishment of | ||
such fees. At least annually,
the Agency shall conduct an audit | ||
of the expenditures made by units of local
government from the | ||
funds granted by the Agency to the units of local
government | ||
for purposes of local sanitary landfill inspection and | ||
enforcement
programs, to ensure that the funds have been | ||
expended for the prescribed
purposes under the grant.
| ||
The fees, taxes or surcharges collected under this | ||
subsection (j) shall
be placed by the unit of local government | ||
in a separate fund, and the
interest received on the moneys in | ||
the fund shall be credited to the fund. The
monies in the fund | ||
may be accumulated over a period of years to be
expended in | ||
accordance with this subsection.
| ||
A unit of local government, as defined in the Local Solid | ||
Waste Disposal
Act, shall prepare and distribute to the Agency, | ||
in April of each year, a
report that details spending plans for | ||
monies collected in accordance with
this subsection. The report | ||
will at a minimum include the following:
| ||
(1) The total monies collected pursuant to this | ||
subsection.
| ||
(2) The most current balance of monies collected | ||
pursuant to this
subsection.
| ||
(3) An itemized accounting of all monies expended for | ||
the previous year
pursuant to this subsection.
| ||
(4) An estimation of monies to be collected for the |
following 3
years pursuant to this subsection.
| ||
(5) A narrative detailing the general direction and | ||
scope of future
expenditures for one, 2 and 3 years.
| ||
The exemptions granted under Sections 22.16 and 22.16a, and | ||
under
subsection (k) of this Section, shall be applicable to | ||
any fee,
tax or surcharge imposed under this subsection (j); | ||
except that the fee,
tax or surcharge authorized to be imposed | ||
under this subsection (j) may be
made applicable by a unit of | ||
local government to the permanent disposal of
solid waste after | ||
December 31, 1986, under any contract lawfully executed
before | ||
June 1, 1986 under which more than 150,000 cubic yards (or | ||
50,000 tons)
of solid waste is to be permanently disposed of, | ||
even though the waste is
exempt from the fee imposed by the | ||
State under subsection (b) of this Section
pursuant to an | ||
exemption granted under Section 22.16.
| ||
(k) In accordance with the findings and purposes of the | ||
Illinois Solid
Waste Management Act, beginning January 1, 1989 | ||
the fee under subsection
(b) and the fee, tax or surcharge | ||
under subsection (j) shall not apply to:
| ||
(1) Waste which is hazardous waste; or
| ||
(2) Waste which is pollution control waste; or
| ||
(3) Waste from recycling, reclamation or reuse | ||
processes which have been
approved by the Agency as being | ||
designed to remove any contaminant from
wastes so as to | ||
render such wastes reusable, provided that the process
| ||
renders at least 50% of the waste reusable; or
|
(4) Non-hazardous solid waste that is received at a | ||
sanitary landfill
and composted or recycled through a | ||
process permitted by the Agency; or
| ||
(5) Any landfill which is permitted by the Agency to | ||
receive only
demolition or construction debris or | ||
landscape waste.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 97-333, eff. 8-12-11.)
| ||
(415 ILCS 5/22.23) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.23)
| ||
Sec. 22.23. Batteries.
| ||
(a) Beginning September 1, 1990, any person selling | ||
lead-acid batteries at
retail or offering lead-acid batteries | ||
for retail sale in this State shall:
| ||
(1) accept for recycling used lead-acid batteries from | ||
customers, at the
point of transfer, in a quantity equal to | ||
the number of new
batteries purchased; and
| ||
(2) post in a conspicuous place a written notice at | ||
least 8.5 by 11
inches in size that includes the universal | ||
recycling symbol and the
following statements: "DO NOT put | ||
motor vehicle batteries in the trash.";
"Recycle your used | ||
batteries."; and "State law requires us to accept motor
| ||
vehicle batteries for recycling, in exchange for new | ||
batteries purchased.".
| ||
(b) Any person selling lead-acid batteries at retail in | ||
this State may
either charge a recycling fee on each new | ||
lead-acid battery sold
for which the customer does not return a |
used battery to the retailer, or
provide a recycling credit to | ||
each customer who returns a used battery for
recycling at the | ||
time of purchasing a new one.
| ||
(c) Beginning September 1, 1990, no lead-acid battery | ||
retailer
may dispose of a used lead-acid
battery except by | ||
delivering it (1) to a battery wholesaler or its agent,
(2) to | ||
a battery manufacturer, (3) to a collection or recycling | ||
facility,
or (4) to a secondary lead smelter permitted by | ||
either a state or federal
environmental agency.
| ||
(d) Any person selling lead-acid batteries at wholesale or | ||
offering
lead-acid batteries for sale at wholesale shall accept | ||
for recycling used
lead-acid batteries from customers, at the | ||
point of transfer,
in a quantity equal to the number of new | ||
batteries purchased.
Such used batteries shall be disposed of | ||
as provided in subsection (c).
| ||
(e) A person who accepts used lead-acid batteries for | ||
recycling pursuant
to subsection (a) or (d) shall not allow | ||
such batteries to accumulate for
periods of more than 90 days.
| ||
(f) Beginning September 1, 1990, no person may knowingly | ||
cause or allow:
| ||
(1) the placing of a lead-acid battery into any | ||
container intended for
collection and disposal at a | ||
municipal waste sanitary landfill; or
| ||
(2) the disposal of any lead-acid battery in any | ||
municipal waste
sanitary landfill or incinerator.
| ||
(g) (Blank). The Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity shall identify and
assist in developing | ||
alternative processing and recycling options for used
| ||
batteries.
| ||
(h) For the purpose of this Section:
| ||
"Lead-acid battery" means a battery containing lead and | ||
sulfuric acid
that has a nominal voltage of at least 6 volts | ||
and is intended for use in
motor vehicles.
| ||
"Motor vehicle" includes automobiles, vans, trucks, | ||
tractors, motorcycles
and motorboats.
| ||
(i) (Blank.)
| ||
(j) Knowing violation of this Section shall be a petty | ||
offense
punishable by a fine of $100.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
| ||
(415 ILCS 5/22.28) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.28)
| ||
Sec. 22.28. White goods.
| ||
(a) No Beginning July 1, 1994, no person shall knowingly | ||
offer for
collection or collect white goods for the purpose of | ||
disposal by
landfilling unless the white good components have | ||
been removed.
| ||
(b) No Beginning July 1, 1994, no owner or operator of a | ||
landfill shall
accept any white goods for final disposal, | ||
except that white goods may be
accepted if:
| ||
(1) (blank); the landfill participates in the | ||
Industrial Materials Exchange
Service by communicating the | ||
availability of white goods;
|
(2) prior to final disposal, any white good components | ||
have been
removed from the white goods; and
| ||
(3) if white good components are removed from the white | ||
goods at the
landfill, a site operating plan satisfying | ||
this Act has been approved under
the landfill's site | ||
operating permit and the conditions of the such operating | ||
plan are met.
| ||
(c) For the purposes of this Section:
| ||
(1) "White goods" shall include all discarded | ||
refrigerators, ranges,
water heaters, freezers, air | ||
conditioners, humidifiers and other similar
domestic and | ||
commercial large appliances.
| ||
(2) "White good components" shall include:
| ||
(i) any chlorofluorocarbon refrigerant gas;
| ||
(ii) any electrical switch containing mercury;
| ||
(iii) any device that contains or may contain PCBs | ||
in a closed system,
such as a dielectric fluid for a | ||
capacitor, ballast or other component;
and
| ||
(iv) any fluorescent lamp that contains mercury.
| ||
(d) The Agency is authorized to provide financial | ||
assistance to units of
local government from the Solid Waste | ||
Management Fund to plan for and
implement programs to collect, | ||
transport and manage white goods.
Units of local government may | ||
apply jointly for financial
assistance under this Section.
| ||
Applications for such financial assistance shall be | ||
submitted to the
Agency and must provide a description of:
|
(A) the area to be served by the program;
| ||
(B) the white goods intended to be included in the | ||
program;
| ||
(C) the methods intended to be used for collecting | ||
and receiving
materials;
| ||
(D) the property, buildings, equipment and | ||
personnel included in
the program;
| ||
(E) the public education systems to be used as part | ||
of the program;
| ||
(F) the safety and security systems that will be | ||
used;
| ||
(G) the intended processing methods for each white | ||
goods type;
| ||
(H) the intended destination for final material | ||
handling location; and
| ||
(I) any staging sites used to handle collected | ||
materials, the
activities to be performed at such sites | ||
and the procedures for assuring
removal of collected | ||
materials from such sites.
| ||
The application may be amended to reflect changes in | ||
operating
procedures, destinations for collected materials, or | ||
other factors.
| ||
Financial assistance shall be awarded for a State fiscal | ||
year, and
may be renewed, upon application, if the Agency | ||
approves the operation
of the program.
| ||
(e) All materials collected or received under a program |
operated with
financial assistance under this Section shall be | ||
recycled whenever
possible. Treatment or disposal of collected | ||
materials are not eligible
for financial assistance unless the | ||
applicant shows and the Agency approves
which materials may be | ||
treated or disposed of under various conditions.
| ||
Any revenue from the sale of materials collected under such | ||
a program
shall be retained by the unit of local government and | ||
may be used only for
the same purposes as the financial | ||
assistance under this Section.
| ||
(f) The Agency is authorized to adopt rules necessary or | ||
appropriate to
the administration of this Section.
| ||
(g) (Blank).
| ||
(Source: P.A. 91-798, eff. 7-9-00; revised 10-6-16.)
| ||
(415 ILCS 5/22.29) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.29)
| ||
Sec. 22.29.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (c), any | ||
waste
material generated by processing recyclable metals by | ||
shredding shall be
managed as a special waste unless (1) a site | ||
operating plan has been
approved by the Agency and the | ||
conditions of such operating plan are met ;
and (2) the facility | ||
participates in the Industrial Materials Exchange
Service by | ||
communicating availability to process recyclable metals .
| ||
(b) An operating plan submitted to the Agency under this | ||
Section shall
include the following concerning recyclable | ||
metals processing and
components which may contaminate waste | ||
from shredding recyclable metals
(such as lead acid batteries, |
fuel tanks, or components that contain or may
contain PCB's in | ||
a closed system such as a capacitor or ballast):
| ||
(1) procedures for inspecting recyclable metals when | ||
received to
assure that such components are identified;
| ||
(2) a list of equipment and removal procedures to be | ||
used to assure
proper removal of such components;
| ||
(3) procedures for safe storage of such components | ||
after removal and
any waste materials;
| ||
(4) procedures to assure that such components and waste | ||
materials will
only be stored for a period long enough to | ||
accumulate the proper quantities
for off-site | ||
transportation;
| ||
(5) identification of how such components and waste | ||
materials will be
managed after removal from the site to | ||
assure proper handling and disposal;
| ||
(6) procedures for sampling and analyzing waste | ||
intended for disposal
or off-site handling as a waste;
| ||
(7) a demonstration, including analytical reports, | ||
that any waste
generated is not a hazardous waste and will | ||
not pose a present or potential
threat to human health or | ||
the environment.
| ||
(c) Any waste generated as a result of processing | ||
recyclable metals by
shredding which is determined to be | ||
hazardous waste shall be managed as
a hazardous waste.
| ||
(d) The Agency is authorized to adopt rules necessary or | ||
appropriate to
the administration of this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-806; 87-895 .)
| ||
(415 ILCS 5/55) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1055)
| ||
Sec. 55. Prohibited activities.
| ||
(a) No person shall:
| ||
(1) Cause or allow the open dumping of any used or | ||
waste tire.
| ||
(2) Cause or allow the open burning of any used or | ||
waste tire.
| ||
(3) Except at a tire storage site which contains more | ||
than 50 used
tires, cause or allow the storage of any used | ||
tire unless the tire is
altered, reprocessed, converted, | ||
covered, or otherwise prevented from
accumulating water.
| ||
(4) Cause or allow the operation of a tire storage site | ||
except in
compliance with Board regulations.
| ||
(5) Abandon, dump or dispose of any used or waste tire | ||
on private or
public property, except in a sanitary | ||
landfill approved by the Agency
pursuant to regulations | ||
adopted by the Board.
| ||
(6) Fail to submit required reports, tire removal | ||
agreements,
or Board regulations.
| ||
(b) (Blank.)
| ||
(b-1) No Beginning January 1, 1995,
no person shall | ||
knowingly mix any used or waste tire, either whole or cut, with
| ||
municipal waste, and no owner or operator of a sanitary | ||
landfill shall accept
any used or waste tire for final |
disposal; except that used or waste tires,
when separated from | ||
other waste, may be accepted if : (1) the sanitary landfill
| ||
provides and maintains a means for shredding, slitting, or | ||
chopping whole tires
and so treats whole tires and, if approved | ||
by the Agency in a permit issued
under this Act, uses the used | ||
or waste tires for alternative uses, which may
include on-site | ||
practices such as lining of roadways with tire scraps,
| ||
alternative daily cover, or use in a leachate collection system | ||
or (2) the
sanitary landfill, by its notification to the | ||
Illinois Industrial Materials
Exchange Service, makes | ||
available the used or waste tire to an appropriate
facility for | ||
reuse, reprocessing, or converting, including use as an | ||
alternate
energy fuel. If, within 30 days after notification to | ||
the Illinois Industrial
Materials Exchange Service of the | ||
availability of waste tires, no specific
request for the used | ||
or waste tires is received by the sanitary landfill, and
the | ||
sanitary landfill determines it has no alternative use for | ||
those used or
waste tires, the sanitary landfill may dispose of | ||
slit, chopped, or
shredded used or waste tires in the sanitary | ||
landfill .
In the event the physical condition of a used or | ||
waste tire makes shredding,
slitting, chopping, reuse, | ||
reprocessing, or other alternative use of the used
or waste | ||
tire impractical or infeasible, then the sanitary landfill, | ||
after
authorization by the Agency, may accept the used or waste | ||
tire for disposal.
| ||
Sanitary landfills and facilities for reuse, reprocessing, |
or converting,
including use as alternative fuel, shall (i) | ||
notify the Illinois Industrial
Materials Exchange Service of | ||
the availability of and demand for used or waste
tires and (ii) | ||
consult with the Department of Commerce and Economic | ||
Opportunity
regarding the status of marketing of waste tires to | ||
facilities for reuse.
| ||
(c) Any person who sells new or used
tires at retail or | ||
operates a tire storage
site or a tire disposal site which | ||
contains more than 50 used or waste
tires shall give notice of | ||
such activity to the Agency. Any person
engaging in such | ||
activity for the first time after January 1, 1990, shall
give | ||
notice to the Agency within 30 days after the date of | ||
commencement of
the activity. The form of such notice shall be | ||
specified by the Agency and
shall be limited to information | ||
regarding the following:
| ||
(1) the name and address of the owner and operator;
| ||
(2) the name, address and location of the operation;
| ||
(3) the type of operations involving used and waste | ||
tires (storage,
disposal, conversion or processing); and
| ||
(4) the number of used and waste tires present at the | ||
location.
| ||
(d) Beginning January 1, 1992, no person shall cause or | ||
allow the
operation of:
| ||
(1) a tire storage site which contains more than 50 | ||
used tires,
unless the owner or operator, by January 1, | ||
1992 (or the January 1
following commencement of operation, |
whichever is later) and January 1 of
each year thereafter, | ||
(i) registers the site with the Agency, except that the | ||
registration requirement in this item (i) does not apply in | ||
the case of a tire storage site required to be permitted | ||
under subsection (d-5), (ii)
certifies to the Agency that | ||
the site complies with any applicable
standards adopted by | ||
the Board pursuant to Section 55.2, (iii) reports to
the | ||
Agency the number of tires accumulated, the status of | ||
vector controls,
and the actions taken to handle and | ||
process the tires, and (iv) pays the
fee required under | ||
subsection (b) of Section 55.6; or
| ||
(2) a tire disposal site, unless the owner or operator | ||
(i) has
received approval from the Agency after filing a | ||
tire removal agreement
pursuant to Section 55.4, or (ii) | ||
has entered into a written agreement to
participate in a | ||
consensual removal action under Section 55.3.
| ||
The Agency shall provide written forms for the annual | ||
registration and
certification required under this subsection | ||
(d).
| ||
(d-4) On or before January 1, 2015, the owner or operator | ||
of each tire storage site that contains used tires totaling | ||
more than 10,000 passenger tire equivalents, or at which more | ||
than 500 tons of used tires are processed in a calendar year, | ||
shall submit documentation demonstrating its compliance with | ||
Board rules adopted under this Title. This documentation must | ||
be submitted on forms and in a format prescribed by the Agency. |
(d-5) Beginning July 1, 2016, no person shall cause or | ||
allow the operation of a tire storage site that contains used | ||
tires totaling more than 10,000 passenger tire equivalents, or | ||
at which more than 500 tons of used tires are processed in a | ||
calendar year, without a permit granted by the Agency or in | ||
violation of any conditions imposed by that permit, including | ||
periodic reports and full access to adequate records and the | ||
inspection of facilities, as may be necessary to ensure | ||
compliance with this Act and with regulations and standards | ||
adopted under this Act. | ||
(d-6) No person shall cause or allow the operation of a | ||
tire storage site in violation of the financial assurance rules | ||
established by the Board under subsection (b) of Section 55.2 | ||
of this Act. In addition to the remedies otherwise provided | ||
under this Act, the State's Attorney of the county in which the | ||
violation occurred, or the Attorney General, may, at the | ||
request of the Agency or on his or her own motion, institute a | ||
civil action for an immediate injunction, prohibitory or | ||
mandatory, to restrain any violation of this subsection (d-6) | ||
or to require any other action as may be necessary to abate or | ||
mitigate any immediate danger or threat to public health or the | ||
environment at the site. Injunctions to restrain a violation of | ||
this subsection (d-6) may include, but are not limited to, the | ||
required removal of all tires for which financial assurance is | ||
not maintained and a prohibition against the acceptance of | ||
tires in excess of the amount for which financial assurance is |
maintained. | ||
(e) No person shall cause or allow the storage, disposal, | ||
treatment or
processing of any used or waste tire in violation | ||
of any regulation or
standard adopted by the Board.
| ||
(f) No person shall arrange for the transportation of used | ||
or waste tires
away from the site of generation with a person | ||
known to openly dump such tires.
| ||
(g) No person shall engage in any operation as a used or | ||
waste tire
transporter except in compliance with Board | ||
regulations.
| ||
(h) No person shall cause or allow the combustion of any | ||
used or waste
tire in an enclosed device unless a permit has | ||
been issued by the Agency
authorizing such combustion pursuant | ||
to regulations adopted by the Board
for the control of air | ||
pollution and consistent with the provisions of
Section 9.4 of | ||
this Act.
| ||
(i) No person shall cause or allow the use of pesticides to | ||
treat tires
except as prescribed by Board regulations.
| ||
(j) No person shall fail to comply with the terms of a tire | ||
removal
agreement approved by the Agency pursuant to Section | ||
55.4.
| ||
(k) No person shall: | ||
(1) Cause or allow water to accumulate in used or waste | ||
tires. The prohibition set forth in this paragraph (1) of | ||
subsection (k) shall not apply to used or waste tires | ||
located at a residential household, as long as not more |
than 12 used or waste tires are located at the site. | ||
(2) Fail to collect a fee required under Section 55.8 | ||
of this Title. | ||
(3) Fail to file a return required under Section 55.10 | ||
of this Title. | ||
(4) Transport used or waste tires in violation of the | ||
registration and vehicle placarding requirements adopted | ||
by the Board. | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-656, eff. 6-19-14.)
| ||
(415 ILCS 5/55.6) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1055.6)
| ||
Sec. 55.6. Used Tire Management Fund.
| ||
(a) There is hereby created in the State Treasury a special
| ||
fund to be known as the Used Tire Management Fund. There shall | ||
be
deposited into the Fund all monies received as (1) recovered | ||
costs or
proceeds from the sale of used tires under Section | ||
55.3 of this Act, (2)
repayment of loans from the Used Tire | ||
Management Fund, or (3) penalties or
punitive damages for | ||
violations of this Title, except as provided by
subdivision | ||
(b)(4) or (b)(4-5) of Section 42.
| ||
(b) Beginning January 1, 1992, in addition to any other | ||
fees required by
law, the owner or operator of each site | ||
required to be registered or permitted under
subsection (d) or | ||
(d-5) of Section 55 shall pay to the Agency an annual fee of | ||
$100.
Fees collected under this subsection shall be deposited | ||
into the Environmental
Protection Permit and Inspection Fund.
|
(c) Pursuant to appropriation, monies up to an amount of $2 | ||
million per
fiscal year from the Used Tire Management Fund | ||
shall be allocated as follows:
| ||
(1) 38% shall be available to the Agency for the | ||
following
purposes, provided that priority shall be given | ||
to item (i):
| ||
(i) To undertake preventive, corrective or removal | ||
action as
authorized by and in accordance with Section | ||
55.3, and
to recover costs in accordance with Section | ||
55.3.
| ||
(ii) For the performance of inspection and | ||
enforcement activities for
used and waste tire sites.
| ||
(iii) (Blank). To assist with marketing of used | ||
tires by augmenting the
operations of an industrial | ||
materials exchange service.
| ||
(iv) To provide financial assistance to units of | ||
local government
for the performance of inspecting, | ||
investigating and enforcement activities
pursuant to | ||
subsection (r) of Section 4 at used and waste tire | ||
sites.
| ||
(v) To provide financial assistance for used and | ||
waste tire collection
projects sponsored by local | ||
government or not-for-profit corporations.
| ||
(vi) For the costs of fee collection and | ||
administration relating to
used and waste tires, and to | ||
accomplish such other purposes as are
authorized by |
this Act and regulations thereunder.
| ||
(vii) To provide financial assistance to units of | ||
local government and private industry for the purposes | ||
of: | ||
(A) assisting in the establishment of | ||
facilities and programs to collect, process, and | ||
utilize used and waste tires and tire-derived | ||
materials; | ||
(B) demonstrating the feasibility of | ||
innovative technologies as a means of collecting, | ||
storing, processing, and utilizing used and waste | ||
tires and tire-derived materials; and | ||
(C) applying demonstrated technologies as a | ||
means of collecting, storing, processing, and | ||
utilizing used and waste tires and tire-derived | ||
materials. | ||
(2) For fiscal years beginning prior to July 1, 2004,
| ||
23% shall be available to the Department of Commerce and
| ||
Economic Opportunity for the following purposes, provided | ||
that priority shall be
given to item (A):
| ||
(A) To provide grants or loans for the purposes of:
| ||
(i) assisting units of local government and | ||
private industry in the
establishment of | ||
facilities and programs to collect, process
and | ||
utilize used and waste tires and tire derived | ||
materials;
|
(ii) demonstrating the feasibility of | ||
innovative technologies as a
means of collecting, | ||
storing, processing and utilizing used
and waste | ||
tires and tire derived materials; and
| ||
(iii) applying demonstrated technologies as a | ||
means of collecting,
storing, processing, and | ||
utilizing used and waste tires
and tire derived | ||
materials.
| ||
(B) To develop educational material for use by | ||
officials and the public
to better understand and | ||
respond to the problems posed by used tires and
| ||
associated insects.
| ||
(C) (Blank).
| ||
(D) To perform such research as the Director deems | ||
appropriate to
help meet the purposes of this Act.
| ||
(E) To pay the costs of administration of its | ||
activities authorized
under this Act.
| ||
(2.1) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2004 and | ||
for all fiscal years thereafter, 23% shall be deposited | ||
into the General Revenue Fund.
| ||
(3) 25% shall be available to the Illinois Department | ||
of
Public Health for the following purposes:
| ||
(A) To investigate threats or potential threats to | ||
the public health
related to mosquitoes and other | ||
vectors of disease associated with the
improper | ||
storage, handling and disposal of tires, improper |
waste disposal,
or natural conditions.
| ||
(B) To conduct surveillance and monitoring | ||
activities for
mosquitoes and other arthropod vectors | ||
of disease, and surveillance of
animals which provide a | ||
reservoir for disease-producing organisms.
| ||
(C) To conduct training activities to promote | ||
vector control programs
and integrated pest management | ||
as defined in the Vector Control Act.
| ||
(D) To respond to inquiries, investigate | ||
complaints, conduct evaluations
and provide technical | ||
consultation to help reduce or eliminate public
health | ||
hazards and nuisance conditions associated with | ||
mosquitoes and other
vectors.
| ||
(E) To provide financial assistance to units of | ||
local government for
training, investigation and | ||
response to public nuisances associated with
| ||
mosquitoes and other vectors of disease.
| ||
(4) 2% shall be available to the Department of | ||
Agriculture for its
activities under the Illinois | ||
Pesticide Act relating to used and waste tires.
| ||
(5) 2% shall be available to the Pollution Control | ||
Board for
administration of its activities relating to used | ||
and waste tires.
| ||
(6) 10% shall be available to the Department of Natural | ||
Resources for
the Illinois Natural History Survey to | ||
perform research to study the biology,
distribution, |
population ecology, and biosystematics of tire-breeding
| ||
arthropods, especially mosquitoes, and the diseases they | ||
spread.
| ||
(d) By January 1, 1998, and biennially thereafter, each | ||
State
agency receiving an appropriation from the Used Tire | ||
Management Fund shall
report to the Governor and the General | ||
Assembly on its activities relating to
the Fund.
| ||
(e) Any monies appropriated from the Used Tire Management | ||
Fund, but not
obligated, shall revert to the Fund.
| ||
(f) In administering the provisions of subdivisions (1), | ||
(2) and (3) of
subsection (c) of this Section, the Agency, the | ||
Department of Commerce and
Economic Opportunity, and the | ||
Illinois
Department of Public Health shall ensure that | ||
appropriate funding
assistance is provided to any municipality | ||
with a population over 1,000,000
or to any sanitary district | ||
which serves a population over 1,000,000.
| ||
(g) Pursuant to appropriation, monies in excess of $2 | ||
million per fiscal
year from the Used Tire Management Fund | ||
shall be used as follows:
| ||
(1) 55% shall be available to the Agency for the | ||
following purposes, provided that priority shall be given | ||
to subparagraph (A): | ||
(A) To undertake preventive,
corrective or renewed | ||
action as authorized by and in accordance with
Section | ||
55.3 and to recover costs in accordance with Section | ||
55.3.
|
(B) To provide financial assistance to units of | ||
local government and private industry for the purposes | ||
of: | ||
(i) assisting in the establishment of | ||
facilities and programs to collect, process, and | ||
utilize used and waste tires and tire-derived | ||
materials; | ||
(ii) demonstrating the feasibility of | ||
innovative technologies as a means of collecting, | ||
storing, processing, and utilizing used and waste | ||
tires and tire-derived materials; and | ||
(iii) applying demonstrated technologies as a | ||
means of collecting, storing, processing, and | ||
utilizing used and waste tires and tire-derived | ||
materials. | ||
(2) For fiscal years beginning prior to July 1, 2004,
| ||
45% shall be available to the Department of Commerce and | ||
Economic Opportunity to provide grants or loans for the | ||
purposes of:
| ||
(i) assisting units of local government and | ||
private industry in the
establishment of facilities | ||
and programs to collect, process and utilize
waste | ||
tires and tire derived material;
| ||
(ii) demonstrating the feasibility of innovative | ||
technologies as a
means of collecting, storing, | ||
processing, and utilizing used and waste tires
and tire |
derived materials; and
| ||
(iii) applying demonstrated technologies as a | ||
means of collecting,
storing, processing, and | ||
utilizing used and waste tires and tire derived
| ||
materials.
| ||
(3) For the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2004 and for | ||
all fiscal years thereafter, 45% shall be deposited into | ||
the General Revenue Fund.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 98-656, eff. 6-19-14.)
| ||
(415 ILCS 15/8 rep.)
| ||
(415 ILCS 15/8.5 rep.)
| ||
Section 10-195. The Solid Waste Planning and Recycling Act | ||
is amended by repealing Sections 8 and 8.5. | ||
Section 10-200. The Illinois Solid Waste Management Act is | ||
amended by changing Section 6 as follows:
| ||
(415 ILCS 20/6) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7056)
| ||
Sec. 6. The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity | ||
shall be the lead agency for implementation of this Act and
| ||
shall have the following powers:
| ||
(a) To provide technical and educational assistance for | ||
applications of
technologies and practices which will minimize | ||
the land disposal of
non-hazardous solid waste; economic | ||
feasibility of implementation of solid
waste management |
alternatives; analysis of markets for recyclable materials
and | ||
energy products; application of the Geographic Information
| ||
System to provide analysis of natural resource, land use, and | ||
environmental
impacts; evaluation of financing and ownership | ||
options; and evaluation of
plans prepared by units of local | ||
government pursuant to Section 22.15 of
the Environmental | ||
Protection Act.
| ||
(b) (Blank). To provide technical assistance in siting | ||
pollution control
facilities, defined as any waste storage | ||
site, sanitary landfill, waste
disposal site, waste transfer | ||
station or waste incinerator.
| ||
(c) To provide loans or recycling and composting grants to | ||
businesses and
not-for-profit and governmental organizations | ||
for the purposes of increasing
the quantity of materials | ||
recycled or composted in Illinois; developing and
implementing
| ||
innovative recycling methods and technologies; developing and | ||
expanding
markets for recyclable materials; and increasing the | ||
self-sufficiency of
the recycling industry in Illinois. The | ||
Department shall work with and
coordinate its activities with | ||
existing for-profit and not-for-profit
collection and | ||
recycling systems to encourage orderly growth in the supply
of | ||
and markets for recycled materials and to assist existing | ||
collection and
recycling efforts.
| ||
The Department shall develop a public education program | ||
concerning the
importance of both composting and recycling in | ||
order to preserve landfill
space in Illinois.
|
(d) To establish guidelines and funding criteria for the | ||
solicitation of
projects under this Act, and to receive and | ||
evaluate applications for
loans or grants for solid waste | ||
management projects based upon such
guidelines and criteria. | ||
Funds may be loaned with or without interest.
| ||
(e) To support and coordinate solid waste research in | ||
Illinois, and to
approve the annual solid waste research agenda | ||
prepared by the University of
Illinois.
| ||
(f) To provide loans or grants for research, development | ||
and
demonstration of innovative technologies and practices, | ||
including but not
limited to pilot programs for collection and | ||
disposal of household wastes.
| ||
(g) To promulgate such rules and regulations as are | ||
necessary to carry
out the purposes of subsections (c), (d) and | ||
(f) of this Section.
| ||
(h) To cooperate with the Environmental Protection Agency | ||
for the
purposes specified herein.
| ||
The Department is authorized to accept any and all grants,
| ||
repayments of
interest and principal on loans, matching funds,
| ||
reimbursements, appropriations, income derived from | ||
investments, or other
things of value from the federal or state | ||
governments or from any
institution, person, partnership, | ||
joint venture, corporation, public or
private.
| ||
The Department is authorized to use moneys available for | ||
that purpose, subject
to appropriation, expressly for the | ||
purpose of implementing a
loan program according to procedures |
established pursuant to this Act.
Those moneys shall be used by | ||
the Department for the purpose of
financing additional projects | ||
and for the Department's administrative
expenses related | ||
thereto.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 94-91, eff. 7-1-05.)
| ||
(415 ILCS 20/5 rep.)
| ||
(415 ILCS 20/7.1 rep.)
| ||
(415 ILCS 20/7.3 rep.)
| ||
(415 ILCS 20/8 rep.)
| ||
Section 10-205. The Illinois Solid Waste Management Act is | ||
amended by repealing Sections 5, 7.1, 7.3, and 8. | ||
(415 ILCS 56/Act rep.) | ||
Section 10-210. The Green Infrastructure for Clean Water | ||
Act is repealed. | ||
Section 10-215. The Environmental Toxicology Act is | ||
amended by changing Sections 3 and 5 as follows:
| ||
(415 ILCS 75/3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 983)
| ||
Sec. 3. Definitions. As used in this Act, unless the | ||
context otherwise
requires;
| ||
(a) "Department" means the Illinois Department of Public | ||
Health;
| ||
(b) "Director" means the Director of the Illinois |
Department of Public
Health;
| ||
(c) "Program" means the Environmental Toxicology program | ||
as established by
this Act;
| ||
(d) "Exposure" means contact with a hazardous substance;
| ||
(e) "Hazardous Substance" means chemical compounds, | ||
elements, or
combinations of chemicals which, because of | ||
quantity concentration, physical
characteristics or | ||
toxicological characteristics may pose a substantial
present | ||
or potential hazard to human health and includes, but is not
| ||
limited to, any substance defined as a hazardous substance in | ||
Section 3.215
of the "Environmental Protection Act", approved | ||
June 29, 1970, as
amended;
| ||
(f) "Initial Assessment" means a review and evaluation of | ||
site history
and hazardous substances involved, potential for | ||
population exposure, the
nature of any health related | ||
complaints and any known patterns in disease
occurrence;
| ||
(g) "Comprehensive Health Study" means a detailed analysis | ||
which may
include: a review of available
environmental, | ||
morbidity and mortality data; environmental and biological
| ||
sampling; detailed review of scientific literature; exposure | ||
analysis;
population surveys; or any other scientific or | ||
epidemiologic methods
deemed necessary to adequately evaluate | ||
the health status of the population
at risk and any potential | ||
relationship to environmental factors;
| ||
(h) "Superfund Site" means any hazardous waste site | ||
designated for
cleanup on the National Priorities List as |
mandated by the Comprehensive
Environmental Response, | ||
Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (P.L. 96-510),
as | ||
amended;
| ||
(i) (Blank). "State Remedial Action Priority List" means a | ||
list compiled by the
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency | ||
which identifies sites that appear
to present significant risk | ||
to the public health, welfare or environment.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 92-574, eff. 6-26-02.)
| ||
(415 ILCS 75/5) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 985)
| ||
Sec. 5.
(a) Upon request by the Illinois Environmental | ||
Protection
Agency, the Department shall conduct an initial | ||
assessment for any location
designated as a Superfund Site or | ||
on the State Remedial Action Priority
List . Such assessment | ||
shall be initiated within 60 days of the request.
| ||
(b) (Blank). For sites designated as Superfund Sites or | ||
sites on the State
Remedial Action Priority List on the | ||
effective date of this Act, the
Department and the Illinois | ||
Environmental Protection Agency shall jointly
determine which | ||
sites warrant initial assessment. If warranted, initial
| ||
assessment shall be initiated by January 1, 1986.
| ||
(c) If, as a result of the initial assessment, the | ||
Department determines
that a public health problem related to | ||
exposure to hazardous substances
may exist in a community | ||
located near a designated site, the
Department shall conduct a | ||
comprehensive health study to assess the full
relationship, if |
any, between such threat or potential threat and possible
| ||
exposure to hazardous substances at the designated site.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 84-987.)
| ||
(415 ILCS 80/3 rep.) | ||
(415 ILCS 80/4 rep.) | ||
Section 10-220. The Degradable Plastic Act is amended by | ||
repealing Sections 3 and 4.
| ||
(415 ILCS 120/25 rep.)
| ||
Section 10-230. The Alternate Fuels Act is amended by | ||
repealing Section 25. | ||
Section 10-235. The Interstate Ozone Transport Oversight | ||
Act is amended by changing Section 20 as follows:
| ||
(415 ILCS 130/20)
| ||
Sec. 20. Legislative referral and public hearings.
| ||
(a) Not later than 10 days after the development of any | ||
proposed
memorandum of understanding by the Ozone Transport | ||
Assessment Group
potentially requiring the State of Illinois to | ||
undertake emission reductions
in addition to those specified by | ||
the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990, or
subsequent to the | ||
issuance of a request made by the United States Environmental
| ||
Protection Agency on or after June 1, 1997 for
submission of a | ||
State Implementation Plan for Illinois relating to ozone
|
attainment and before submission of the Plan, the
Director | ||
shall submit
the proposed memorandum of understanding or State | ||
Implementation Plan to
the House Committee and the Senate
| ||
Committee for their consideration. At that time, the Director | ||
shall also
submit information detailing any alternate | ||
strategies.
| ||
(b) (Blank). To assist the legislative review required by | ||
this Act, the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity | ||
shall
conduct a joint study of the impacts on the State's | ||
economy which may result
from implementation of the emission | ||
reduction strategies contained within any
proposed memorandum | ||
of understanding or State Implementation Plan relating to
ozone | ||
and from implementation of any alternate
strategies. The study | ||
shall include, but not be limited to, the impacts on
economic | ||
development, employment, utility costs and rates, personal | ||
income, and
industrial competitiveness which may result from | ||
implementation of the emission
reduction strategies contained | ||
within any proposed memorandum of agreement or
State | ||
Implementation Plan relating to ozone and
from implementation | ||
of any alternate strategies. The study shall be
submitted
to | ||
the House Committee and Senate Committee not less than 10 days | ||
prior to any
scheduled hearing conducted pursuant to subsection | ||
(c) of this Section.
| ||
(c) Upon receipt of the information required by subsections | ||
(a) and (b) of
this Section, the House Committee and Senate | ||
Committee shall each convene
one or more public hearings to |
receive comments from agencies of government and
other | ||
interested parties on the memorandum of understanding's or | ||
State
Implementation Plan's prospective
economic and | ||
environmental impacts, including its impacts on energy use,
| ||
economic development, utility costs and rates, and | ||
competitiveness.
Additionally,
comments shall be received on | ||
the prospective economic and environmental
impacts, including | ||
impacts on energy use, economic development, utility
costs and | ||
rates, and competitiveness, which may result from | ||
implementation of
any
alternate strategies.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 97-916, eff. 8-9-12.)
| ||
(505 ILCS 84/Act rep.) | ||
Section 10-240. The Illinois Food, Farms, and Jobs Act is | ||
repealed. | ||
ARTICLE 99. EXEMPTIONS; SEVERABILITY; EFFECTIVE DATE | ||
Section 99-90. The State Mandates Act is amended by adding | ||
Section 8.41 as follows: | ||
(30 ILCS 805/8.41 new) | ||
Sec. 8.41. Exempt mandate. Notwithstanding Sections 6 and 8 | ||
of this Act, no reimbursement by the State is required for the | ||
implementation of any mandate created by this amendatory Act of | ||
the 100th General Assembly. |
Section 99-97. Severability. The provisions of this Act are | ||
severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
| ||
Section 99-99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | ||
becoming law.
|