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Public Act 096-0077 |
SB1932 Enrolled |
LRB096 04479 JDS 14531 b |
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AN ACT concerning safety.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Illinois Solid Waste Management Act is |
amended by changing Section 3 as follows:
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(415 ILCS 20/3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7053)
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Sec. 3. State agency materials recycling program.
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(a) All State agencies responsible for the maintenance of |
public lands in
the State shall, to the maximum extent |
feasible, give due consideration and
preference to the use of |
compost materials in all land maintenance
activities which are |
to be paid with public funds.
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(b) The Department of Central Management Services, in |
coordination
with the Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity, shall implement
waste reduction programs, |
including source separation and collection, for
office |
wastepaper, corrugated containers, newsprint and mixed paper, |
in all
State buildings as appropriate and feasible. Such waste |
reduction programs
shall be designed to achieve waste |
reductions of at least 25% of
all such waste by December 31, |
1995, and at least 50% of all such waste by
December 31, 2000. |
Any source separation and collection program
shall include, at |
a minimum, procedures for collecting and storing
recyclable |
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materials, bins or containers for storing materials, and
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contractual or other arrangements with buyers of recyclable |
materials. If
market conditions so warrant, the Department of |
Central Management
Services, in coordination with the |
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, may modify |
programs developed pursuant to this Section.
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The Department of Commerce and Community Affairs (now |
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity) shall conduct |
waste
categorization studies of all State facilities for |
calendar years 1991,
1995 and 2000. Such studies shall be |
designed to assist the Department of
Central Management |
Services to achieve the waste reduction goals
established in |
this subsection.
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(c) Each State agency shall, upon consultation with the |
Department of
Commerce and Economic Opportunity,
periodically |
review its procurement procedures and specifications related
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to the purchase of products or supplies. Such procedures and
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specifications shall be modified as necessary to require the |
procuring
agency to seek out products and supplies that contain |
recycled materials,
and to ensure that purchased products or |
supplies are reusable, durable or
made from recycled materials |
whenever economically and practically
feasible. In choosing |
among products or supplies that contain recycled
material, |
consideration shall be given to products and supplies with the
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highest recycled material content that is consistent with the |
effective and
efficient use of the product or supply.
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(d) Wherever economically and practically feasible, the |
Department of
Central Management Services shall procure |
recycled paper and paper products
as follows:
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(1) Beginning July 1, 1989, at least 10% of the
total |
dollar value of paper and paper products purchased by
the |
Department of Central Management Services shall be
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recycled paper and paper products.
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(2) Beginning July 1, 1992, at least 25% of the
total |
dollar value of paper and paper products purchased by
the |
Department of Central Management Services shall be
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recycled paper and paper products.
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(3) Beginning July 1, 1996, at least
40% of the total |
dollar value of paper and paper products
purchased by the |
Department of Central Management Services shall be
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recycled paper and paper products.
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(4) Beginning July 1, 2000, at least 50% of the total |
dollar value of
paper and paper products purchased by the |
Department of Central Management
Services shall be |
recycled paper and paper products.
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(e) Paper and paper products purchased from private vendors
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pursuant to printing contracts are not considered paper |
products for the
purposes of subsection (d). However, the |
Department of Central Management
Services shall report to the |
General Assembly on an annual
basis the total dollar value of |
printing contracts awarded to private
sector vendors that |
included the use of recycled paper.
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(f)(1) Wherever economically and practically feasible, the |
recycled paper
and paper products referred to in subsection |
(d) shall contain postconsumer
or recovered paper |
materials as specified by paper category in this |
subsection:
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(i) Recycled high grade printing and writing paper |
shall contain at
least 50% recovered paper material. |
Such recovered paper material, until
July 1, 1994, |
shall consist of at least 20% deinked stock or |
postconsumer
material; and beginning July 1, 1994, |
shall consist of at least 25%
deinked stock or |
postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, 1996, |
shall
consist of at least 30% deinked stock or |
postconsumer material; and
beginning July 1, 1998, |
shall consist of at least 40% deinked stock or
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postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, 2000, |
shall consist of at
least 50% deinked stock or |
postconsumer material.
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(ii) Recycled tissue products, until July 1, 1994, |
shall contain at
least 25% postconsumer material; and |
beginning July 1, 1994, shall contain
at least 30% |
postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, 1996, |
shall
contain at least 35% postconsumer material; and |
beginning July 1, 1998,
shall contain at least 40% |
postconsumer material; and beginning July 1,
2000, |
shall contain at least 45% postconsumer material.
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(iii) Recycled newsprint, until July 1, 1994, |
shall contain at least
40% postconsumer material; and |
beginning July 1, 1994, shall contain at
least 50% |
postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, 1996, |
shall contain
at least 60% postconsumer material; and |
beginning July 1, 1998, shall
contain at least 70% |
postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, 2000,
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shall contain at least 80% postconsumer material.
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(iv) Recycled unbleached packaging, until July 1, |
1994, shall
contain at least 35% postconsumer |
material; and beginning July 1, 1994,
shall contain at |
least 40% postconsumer material; and beginning July 1,
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1996, shall contain at least 45% postconsumer |
material; and beginning July
1, 1998, shall contain at |
least 50% postconsumer material; and beginning
July 1, |
2000, shall contain at least 55% postconsumer |
material.
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(v) Recycled paperboard, until July 1, 1994, shall |
contain at least
80% postconsumer material; and |
beginning July 1, 1994, shall contain at
least 85% |
postconsumer material; and beginning July 1, 1996, |
shall contain
at least 90% postconsumer material; and |
beginning July 1, 1998, shall
contain at least 95% |
postconsumer material.
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(2) For the purposes of this Section, "postconsumer |
material" includes:
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(i) paper, paperboard, and fibrous wastes from |
retail stores, office
buildings, homes, and so forth, |
after the waste has passed through its end
usage as a |
consumer item, including used corrugated boxes, old |
newspapers,
mixed waste paper, tabulating cards, and |
used cordage; and
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(ii) all paper, paperboard, and fibrous wastes |
that are diverted or
separated from the municipal solid |
waste stream.
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(3) For the purposes of this Section, "recovered paper |
material" includes:
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(i) postconsumer material;
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(ii) dry paper and paperboard waste generated |
after completion of the
papermaking process (that is, |
those manufacturing operations up to and
including the |
cutting and trimming of the paper machine reel into |
smaller
rolls or rough sheets), including envelope |
cuttings, bindery trimmings, and
other paper and |
paperboard waste resulting from printing, cutting,
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forming, and other converting operations, or from bag, |
box and carton
manufacturing, and butt rolls, mill |
wrappers, and rejected unused stock; and
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(iii) finished paper and paperboard from obsolete |
inventories of
paper and paperboard manufacturers, |
merchants, wholesalers, dealers,
printers, converters, |
or others.
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(g) The Department of Central Management Services may
adopt |
regulations to carry out the provisions and
purposes of this |
Section.
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(h) Every State agency shall, in its procurement documents, |
specify
that, whenever economically and practically feasible, |
a product to be
procured must consist, wholly or in part, of |
recycled materials, or be
recyclable or reusable in whole or in |
part. When applicable, if state
guidelines are not already |
prescribed, State agencies shall follow USEPA
guidelines for |
federal procurement.
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(i) All State agencies shall cooperate with the Department |
of Central
Management Services in carrying out this Section. |
The Department of
Central Management Services may enter into |
cooperative purchasing
agreements with other governmental |
units in order to obtain volume
discounts, or for other reasons |
in accordance with the Governmental Joint
Purchasing Act, or in |
accordance with the Intergovernmental Cooperation Act
if |
governmental units of other states or the federal government |
are involved.
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(j) The Department of Central Management Services shall |
submit an annual
report to the General Assembly concerning its |
implementation of the
State's collection and recycled paper |
procurement programs. This report
shall include a description |
of the actions that the Department of Central
Management |
Services has taken in the previous fiscal year to implement |
this
Section. This report shall be submitted on or before |
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November 1 of each year.
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(k) The Department of Central Management Services, in
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cooperation with all other appropriate departments and |
agencies of the
State, shall institute whenever economically |
and practically feasible the
use of re-refined motor oil in all |
State-owned motor vehicles and the use
of remanufactured and |
retread tires whenever such use is practical,
beginning no |
later than July 1, 1992.
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(l) (Blank).
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(m) The Department of Central Management Services, in |
coordination with
the Department of Commerce and Community |
Affairs (now Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity), |
shall implement an aluminum
can recycling program in all State |
buildings within 270 days of the effective
date of this |
amendatory Act of 1997. The program shall provide for (1) the
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collection and storage of used aluminum cans in bins or other |
appropriate
containers made reasonably available to occupants |
and visitors of State
buildings and (2) the sale of used |
aluminum cans to buyers of recyclable
materials.
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Proceeds from the sale of used aluminum cans shall be |
deposited into I-CYCLE
accounts maintained in the State Surplus |
Property Revolving Fund and, subject
to appropriation, shall be |
used by the Department of Central Management
Services and any |
other State agency to offset the costs of implementing the
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aluminum can recycling program under this Section.
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All State agencies having an aluminum can recycling program |
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in place shall
continue with their current plan. If a State |
agency has an existing recycling
program in place, proceeds |
from the aluminum can recycling program may be
retained and |
distributed pursuant to that program, otherwise all revenue
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resulting from these programs shall be forwarded to Central |
Management
Services, I-CYCLE for placement into the |
appropriate account within the State
Surplus Property |
Revolving Fund, minus any operating costs associated with the
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program.
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(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
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Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
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