104TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2025 and 2026
HB3525

 

Introduced 2/18/2025, by Rep. Ann M. Williams

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
See Index

    Amends the Public Utilities Act. Provides that a gas utility may cease providing service if the Illinois Commerce Commission determines that adequate substitute service is available at a reasonable cost to support the existing end uses of the affected utility customers. Provides for cost-effective energy efficiency measures for natural gas utilities that supersede existing provisions concerning natural gas energy efficiency programs and take effect beginning January 1, 2027. Provides that gas main and gas service extension policies shall be based on the principle that the full incremental cost associated with new development and growth shall be borne by the customers that cause those incremental costs. Provides that, no later than 60 days after the effective date of the amendatory Act, the Commission shall initiate a docketed rulemaking reviewing each gas public utility tariff that provides for gas main and gas service extensions without additional charge to new customers in excess of the default extensions as specified in administrative rule. Adds the Clean Building Heating Law Article to the Act, with provisions concerning emissions standards for heating in buildings, as well as related and other provisions. Adds the 2050 Heat Decarbonization Standard Article to the Act, with provisions concerning options for compliance, measures for customer emission reduction, customer emission reductions, tradable clean heat credits, banking of emission reductions, equity in emission reductions, enforcement, the 2050 Heat Decarbonization Pathways Study, gas infrastructure planning, a study on gas utility financial incentive reform, and reporting requirements. Adds the Statewide Navigator Program Law Article to the Act, with provisions concerning creation of a statewide navigator program, as well as related and other provisions. Amends the Energy Transition Act to add electrification industries to clean energy jobs. Effective immediately.


LRB104 10206 AAS 20280 b

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

HB3525LRB104 10206 AAS 20280 b

1    AN ACT concerning regulation.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 5. The Energy Transition Act is amended by
5changing Section 5-25 as follows:
 
6    (20 ILCS 730/5-25)
7    (Section scheduled to be repealed on September 15, 2045)
8    Sec. 5-25. Clean Jobs Curriculum.
9    (a) As used in this Section, "clean energy jobs", subject
10to administrative rules, means jobs in the solar energy, wind
11energy, energy efficiency, energy storage, solar thermal,
12green hydrogen, geothermal, electric vehicle industries,
13electrification industries, other renewable energy industries,
14industries achieving emission reductions, and other related
15sectors including related industries that manufacture,
16develop, build, maintain, or provide ancillary services to
17renewable energy resources or energy efficiency products or
18services, including the manufacture and installation of
19healthier building materials that contain fewer hazardous
20chemicals. "Clean energy jobs" includes administrative, sales,
21other support functions within these industries and other
22related sector industries.
23    (b) The Department shall convene a comprehensive

 

 

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1stakeholder process that includes representatives from the
2State Board of Education, the Illinois Community College
3Board, the Department of Labor, community-based organizations,
4workforce development providers, labor unions, building
5trades, educational institutions, residents of BIPOC and
6low-income communities, residents of environmental justice
7communities, clean energy businesses, nonprofit organizations,
8worker-owned cooperatives, other groups that provide clean
9energy jobs opportunities, groups that provide construction
10and building trades job opportunities, and other participants
11to identify the career pathways and training curriculum needed
12for participants to be skilled, work ready, and able to enter
13clean energy jobs. The curriculum shall:
14        (1) identify the core training curricular competency
15    areas needed to prepare workers to enter clean energy and
16    related sector jobs;
17        (2) identify a set of required core cross-training
18    competencies provided in each training area for clean
19    energy jobs with the goal of enabling any trainee to
20    receive a standard set of skills common to multiple
21    training areas that would provide a foundation for
22    pursuing a career composed of multiple clean energy job
23    types;
24        (3) include approaches to integrate broad occupational
25    training to provide career entry into the general
26    construction and building trades sector and any remedial

 

 

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1    education and work readiness support necessary to achieve
2    educational and professional eligibility thresholds; and
3        (4) identify on-the-job training formats, where
4    relevant, and identify suggested trainer certification
5    standards, where relevant.
6    (c) The Department shall publish a report that includes
7the findings, recommendations, and core curriculum identified
8by the stakeholder group and shall post a copy of the report on
9its public website. The Department shall convene the process
10described to update and modify the recommended curriculum
11every 3 years to ensure the curriculum contents are current to
12the evolving clean energy industries, practices, and
13technologies.
14    (d) Organizations that receive funding to provide training
15under the Clean Jobs Workforce Network Program, including, but
16not limited to, community-based and labor-based training
17providers, and educational institutions must use the core
18curriculum that is developed under this Section.
19(Source: P.A. 102-662, eff. 9-15-21.)
 
20    Section 10. The Public Utilities Act is amended by
21changing Sections 1-102, 8-101, 9-229, 9-241, and 16-111.10
22and by adding Sections 1-103, 3-128, 8-104B, 9-228.5, 9-235,
239-254, and 9-255, and Articles XXIII, XXIV, and XXV as
24follows:
 

 

 

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1    (220 ILCS 5/1-102)  (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 1-102)
2    Sec. 1-102. Findings and Intent. The General Assembly
3finds that the health, welfare, and prosperity of all Illinois
4citizens require the provision of adequate, efficient,
5reliable, affordable, environmentally safe, and least-cost
6public utility services at prices which accurately reflect the
7long-term cost of such services and which are equitable to all
8citizens. It is therefore declared to be the policy of the
9State that public utilities shall continue to be regulated
10effectively and comprehensively. It is further declared that
11the goals and objectives of such regulation shall be to
12ensure:
13        (a) Efficiency: the provision of reliable and
14    affordable energy services that meet the State's climate
15    and emissions reduction targets at the lowest societal
16    least possible cost to the citizens of the State; in such
17    manner that:
18            (i) physical, human, and financial resources are
19        allocated efficiently and equitably;
20            (ii) all supply and demand options are considered
21        and evaluated using comparable terms and methods in
22        order to determine how utilities shall meet State
23        emissions reduction targets and their customers'
24        demands for public utility services at the lowest
25        societal least cost;
26            (iii) utilities are allowed a sufficient return on

 

 

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1        investment so as to enable them to attract capital in
2        financial markets at competitive rates;
3            (iv) tariff rates for the sale of various public
4        utility services are authorized such that they
5        accurately reflect the cost of delivering those
6        services and allow utilities to recover the total
7        costs prudently and reasonably incurred;
8            (v) variation in costs by customer class and time
9        of use is taken into consideration in authorizing
10        rates for each class.
11        (b) Environmental Quality: the protection of the
12    environment, people, and communities from the adverse
13    external costs of public utility services, including
14    environmental costs, so that:
15            (i) environmental costs of proposed actions having
16        a significant impact on the environment and the
17        environmental impact of the alternatives are
18        identified, documented, monetized, included in
19        assessments of cost, and considered in all aspects of
20        the regulatory process;
21            (ii) the prudently and reasonably incurred costs
22        of environmental controls are recovered.
23        (c) Reliability: the ability of utilities to provide
24    consumers with public utility services under varying
25    demand conditions in such manner that suppliers of public
26    utility services are able to provide service at varying

 

 

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1    levels of economic reliability giving appropriate
2    consideration to the costs likely to be incurred as a
3    result of service interruptions, and to the costs of
4    increasing or maintaining current levels of reliability
5    consistent with commitments to consumers.
6        (d) Equity: the fair treatment of consumers, including
7    equity investment eligible persons and equity investment
8    eligible communities, as defined in the Energy Transition
9    Act, and investors in order that
10            (i) the public health, safety, and welfare shall
11        be protected;
12            (ii) the application of rates is based on public
13        understandability and acceptance of the reasonableness
14        of the rate structure and level;
15            (iii) the cost of supplying public utility
16        services is allocated to those who cause the costs to
17        be incurred;
18            (iv) if factors other than cost of service are
19        considered in regulatory decisions, the rationale for
20        these actions is set forth;
21            (v) regulation allows for orderly transition
22        periods to accommodate changes in public utility
23        service markets;
24            (vi) regulation does not result in undue or
25        sustained adverse impact on utility earnings;
26            (vii) the impacts of regulatory actions on all

 

 

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1        sectors of the State are carefully weighed;
2            (viii) the rates for utility services are
3        affordable and, therefore, ensure and preserve the
4        availability and accessibility of such services to all
5        customers, and customers are not energy burdened or
6        severely energy burdened citizens.
7        As used in this subsection (d):
8            (I) "Energy burdened" means, with respect to a
9        customer's household, that the household pays 6% or
10        more of its income toward electricity and gas bills.
11            (II) "Severely energy burdened" means, with
12        respect to a customer's household, that the household
13        pays 10% or more of its income toward electricity and
14        gas bills.
15        (e) Affordability: the ability of utilities to ensure
16    uninterrupted access to essential utility service; to
17    minimize and reduce over time the number of households who
18    are energy burdened and severely energy burdened, as
19    defined in this Act, ideally to zero; and to minimize
20    disconnections to residential customers in a manner which
21    ensures that:
22            (i) all low-income customers, defined as those
23        whose income is less than or equal to 80% of the area
24        median income, as defined by the United States
25        Department of Housing and Urban Development, have
26        access to a discounted utility rate;

 

 

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1            (ii) low-income customers 65 years of age or older
2        are not disconnected from essential utility service
3        due to inability to afford the monthly bill;
4            (iii) low-income customers with children under the
5        age of 6 are not disconnected from essential utility
6        service due to inability to afford the monthly bill;
7            (iv) persons with medical conditions are not
8        disconnected from essential utility service if a
9        medical or qualified professional as described in
10        subsection (b) of Section 8-202.7 certifies that the
11        condition will be exacerbated by disconnection from
12        essential utility service;
13            (v) disconnection of essential utility service is
14        not accelerated based on a utility's payment risk
15        assessment of a customer; and
16            (vi) a utility assesses whether a customer may be
17        eligible for energy assistance programs under the
18        Energy Assistance Act, provides the customer with
19        specific information on where and how to obtain energy
20        assistance, and ceases disconnection activity for 60
21        days to allow the customer to apply for and establish
22        eligibility for the energy assistance.
23    It is further declared to be the policy of the State that
24this Act shall not apply in relation to motor carriers and rail
25carriers as defined in the Illinois Commercial Transportation
26Law, or to the Commission in the regulation of such carriers.

 

 

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1    Nothing in this Act shall be construed to limit, restrict,
2or mitigate in any way the power and authority of the State's
3Attorneys or the Attorney General under the Consumer Fraud and
4Deceptive Business Practices Act.
5(Source: P.A. 92-22, eff. 6-30-01.)
 
6    (220 ILCS 5/1-103 new)
7    Sec. 1-103. Commission methodologies and metrics. The
8Commission shall oversee the objectives identified in Section
91-102 by establishing and implementing methodologies for
10tracking each of the following metrics:
11        (1) Environmental costs: The Commission shall
12    establish a social cost of greenhouse gases, measured in
13    dollars per ton of carbon dioxide equivalent, that shall
14    serve as a monetary estimate of the value of not emitting a
15    ton of greenhouse gas emissions. The Commission shall
16    consider prior or existing estimates of the social cost of
17    carbon issued or adopted by the federal government,
18    appropriate international bodies, or other appropriate and
19    reputable scientific organizations. The social cost of
20    greenhouse gases shall:
21            (A) estimate the emissions for all relevant
22        greenhouse gases, including carbon, methane, nitrous
23        oxide, hydrofluorocarbons and hydrofluoroolefins,
24        perfluorocarbons, sulfur hexafluoride, and nitrogen
25        trifluoride;

 

 

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1            (B) consider the fullest geographic and temporal
2        scope of damages;
3            (C) for the purposes of this Act, the cost of
4        greenhouse gas emissions is no less than the cost per
5        metric ton of carbon dioxide equivalent emissions,
6        using the 2.5% discount rate, listed in Table ES-1 of
7        "Technical Support Document: Social Cost of Carbon,
8        Methane, and Nitrous Oxide Interim Estimates under
9        Executive Order 13990", a report prepared in support
10        of federal Executive Order 13990 and dated February
11        2021.
12        The Commission must annually adjust the costs
13    established in this Section to reflect the effect of
14    inflation and may, at its discretion, set the price at a
15    higher level than described above, but no lower.
16        (2) Impacts to public health: The Commission shall
17    develop a methodology for measuring and monetizing in cost
18    assessments the public health impacts of pollutants,
19    including impacts of both indoor and outdoor air quality,
20    including carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide, nitrogen
21    oxides, including nitrogen dioxide, particulate matter,
22    formaldehyde, sulfur dioxide, ozone, and lead. The
23    Commission shall integrate its methodology into
24    assessments of utility system planning and supply and
25    demand-side resource selection.
26    It is further declared to be the policy of the State that

 

 

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1this Section does not apply to motor carriers and rail
2carriers as defined in the Illinois Commercial Transportation
3Law or to the Commission in the regulation of such carriers.
4    Nothing in this Section shall be construed to limit,
5restrict, or mitigate in any way the power and authority of the
6State's Attorneys or the Attorney General under the Consumer
7Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act.
 
8    (220 ILCS 5/3-128 new)
9    Sec. 3-128. Fixed charge. "Fixed charge" means a charge
10that is assessed by a public utility as part of its rates, is
11equal across all customers or customers of a certain class,
12and is not directly proportional to a customer's usage.
 
13    (220 ILCS 5/8-101)  (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 8-101)
14    Sec. 8-101. Duties of public utilities; nondiscrimination.
15A public utility shall furnish, provide, and maintain such
16service instrumentalities, equipment, and facilities as shall
17promote the safety, health, comfort, and convenience of its
18patrons, employees, and public and as shall be in all respects
19adequate, efficient, just, and reasonable.
20    All rules and regulations made by a public utility
21affecting or pertaining to its charges or service to the
22public shall be just and reasonable.
23    An electric A public utility shall, and a gas utility may,
24upon reasonable notice, furnish to all persons who may apply

 

 

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1therefor and be reasonably entitled thereto, suitable
2facilities and service, without discrimination and without
3delay. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a gas
4utility may cease providing service if the Commission
5determines that adequate substitute service is available at a
6reasonable cost to support the existing end uses of the
7affected utility customers. Any applicant for gas service
8shall receive clear, timely information from the gas utility,
9written in plain language, and approved by the Commission
10after stakeholder input on incentives and opportunities for
11installing, as alternatives to gas, energy-efficient electric
12technologies and incentives and opportunities for other energy
13efficiency measures, weatherization, demand management, and
14distributed energy resource programs. The information provided
15must include, among other things, information detailing
16electrification incentives in the Inflation Reduction Act and
17describing how the applicant can elect to receive the upfront
18discounts or tax incentives applicable to the applicant's
19electric purchases.
20    Nothing in this Section shall be construed to prevent a
21public utility from accepting payment electronically or by the
22use of a customer-preferred financially accredited credit or
23debit methodology.
24(Source: P.A. 92-22, eff. 6-30-01.)
 
25    (220 ILCS 5/8-104B new)

 

 

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1    Sec. 8-104B. Gas energy efficiency.
2    (a) As used in this Section:
3    "Benefit-cost ratio" means the ratio of the net present
4value of the total benefits of the measures to the net present
5value of the total costs as calculated over the lifetime of the
6measures.
7    "Cost-effective measure" means a measure that satisfies
8the total resource cost test.
9    "Energy efficiency measure" means a measure that reduces
10(i) the total Btus of electricity and natural gas and other
11utility-delivered gaseous fuels needed to meet an end use or
12end uses and (ii) the amount of natural gas and other
13utility-delivered gaseous fuels consumed on site, at the home
14or business facility, to meet an end use or end uses.
15    "Total resource cost test" means a standard that is met
16if, for an investment in an energy efficiency measure, the
17benefit-cost ratio is greater than one. The total resource
18cost test quantifies the net savings obtained through the
19substitution of demand-side measures for supply resources by
20comparing (i) the sum of avoided natural gas utility costs,
21representing the benefits that accrue to the natural gas
22system and the participant in the delivery of those energy
23efficiency measures and including avoided costs associated
24with the use of electricity or other fuels, avoided costs
25associated with reduced water consumption, avoided operation
26and maintenance costs, and avoided societal costs associated

 

 

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1with reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, as well as other
2quantifiable societal benefits and (ii) the sum of all
3incremental costs of end-use measures, including both utility
4and participant contribution costs to administer, deliver, and
5evaluate each demand-side measure. The societal costs
6associated with greenhouse gas emissions shall be assumed to
7be the greater of (i) $200 per short ton, expressed in 2024
8dollars, or (ii) the most recently approved estimate developed
9by the federal government using a real discount rate
10consistent with long-term U.S. Treasury bond yields. Changes
11in greenhouse gas emissions from changes in electricity
12consumption shall be estimated using long-run marginal
13emissions rates developed by the National Renewable Energy
14Laboratory's Cambium model or other State-specific modeling of
15comparable analytical rigor. In calculating avoided costs,
16reasonable estimates shall be included for financial costs
17likely to be imposed by future regulation of emissions of
18greenhouse gases. In discounting future societal costs and
19benefits for the purpose of calculating net present values, a
20societal discount rate based on actual, long-term U.S.
21Treasury bond yields shall be used. The income-qualified
22measures described in paragraphs (5) and (6) of subsection (d)
23shall not be required to meet the total resource cost test.
24    (b) It is the policy of the State for gas utilities to be
25required to use cost-effective energy efficiency measures to
26reduce delivery load. Requiring investment in cost-effective

 

 

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1energy efficiency measures will reduce direct and indirect
2costs to consumers by decreasing environmental impacts,
3reducing the amount of natural gas and other utility-delivered
4gaseous fuels that need to be purchased, and avoiding or
5delaying the need for new transmission, distribution, storage,
6and other related infrastructure. Moreover, the public
7interest is served by allowing gas utilities to recover costs
8for reasonably and prudently incurred expenditures for energy
9efficiency measures.
10    (c) This Section applies to all gas distribution utilities
11in the State and supersedes Section 8-104 beginning January 1,
122027.
13    (d) Natural gas utilities shall implement cost-effective
14energy efficiency measures to achieve all of the following
15requirements:
16        (1) Total incremental annual savings shall be equal to
17    at least 0.6% of annual sales to distribution customers in
18    2027, 0.8% of such sales in 2028 and at least 1% of such
19    sales in 2029 and each subsequent year. For the purposes
20    of this Section, "incremental annual savings" means the
21    total gas savings from all measures installed in a
22    calendar year that will be realized within 12 months of
23    each measure's installation. For the purpose of
24    calculating savings as a percent of sales to distribution
25    customers for a given program year, the denominator of
26    sales to distribution customers shall be the annual

 

 

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1    average sales over the second, third, and fourth full
2    calendar years prior to the beginning of the program year.
3        (2) The savings achieved must have an average life of
4    at least 12 years. In no event can more than one-fifth of
5    the incremental annual savings counted towards a utility's
6    annual savings goal in any given year be derived from
7    efficiency measures with average savings lives of less
8    than 5 years. For the purposes of this Section, "average
9    savings life" means the lifetime savings that would be
10    realized as a result of a utility's efficiency programs
11    divided by the incremental annual savings such programs
12    produce. Average savings lives may be shorter than the
13    average operational lives of measures installed if the
14    measures do not produce savings in every year in which
15    they operate or if the savings that the measures produce
16    decline during their operational lives.
17        (3) Except as provided in paragraph (4) of this
18    subsection (d), savings may not be applied toward
19    achievement of utility savings goals if the savings arise
20    from the installation of efficient new gas furnaces, gas
21    boilers, gas water heaters, or other gas-consuming
22    equipment in a residential building, such as a
23    single-family, individually-metered multifamily, or
24    master-metered multifamily building.
25        (4) Savings may be applied toward achievement of
26    utility savings goals if the savings arise from the

 

 

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1    installation of gas furnaces through income-eligible
2    programs when it is determined that the existing furnace
3    is no longer working, requires significant annual
4    maintenance costs in order to remain operational, or is
5    creating a health and safety hazard.
6        (5) At least 67% of the entire budget for efficiency
7    programs shall be spent on energy efficiency measures that
8    reduce space heating needs through improvements to the
9    efficiency of building envelopes, including, but not
10    limited to, insulation measures and efficient windows and
11    energy efficiency measures that reduce air leakage through
12    improvements to systems for distributing heat, including,
13    but not limited to, duct leakage reduction, duct
14    insulation, or pipe insulation in buildings or through
15    improved heating systems controls, including, but not
16    limited to, advanced thermostats and demand control
17    ventilation. Spending on efficient furnaces, efficient
18    boilers, or other efficient heating systems is permitted
19    within business efficiency programs but does not count
20    toward this minimum requirement for spending on building
21    envelope, heating distribution, and control efficiencies.
22    Spending on income-qualified building envelope measures,
23    heating distribution system measures, and heating controls
24    does count toward this requirement. The portion of
25    portfolio spending on program marketing, training of
26    installers, audits of buildings, inspections of work

 

 

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1    performed, and other administrative and technical expenses
2    that are clearly tied to promotion or installation of
3    building envelope or heating distribution system measures
4    shall count toward this requirement. If this minimum
5    requirement is not met, any performance incentive earned
6    under subsection (h) should be reduced by the percentage
7    point level of shortfall in meeting this requirement.
8        (6) The portion of the entire budget for efficiency
9    programs that is spent on efficiency measures for
10    income-qualified households shall be the greater of 25% or
11    5 percentage points more than the proportion of total
12    residential and business customer gas sales going to
13    income-qualified households. For purposes of this Section,
14    households at or below 80% of area median income are
15    income-qualified. At least 80% of spending on measures in
16    programs targeted at income-qualified households shall be
17    delivered through whole building weatherization programs
18    and spent on measures that reduce space heating needs
19    through improvements to the building envelope, heating
20    distribution systems, or heating controls. The utilities
21    shall invest in health and safety measures appropriate and
22    necessary for comprehensively weatherizing the homes and
23    multifamily buildings of income-qualified households, with
24    up to 15% of income-qualified program spending made
25    available for such purposes. The ratio of spending on
26    efficiency programs targeted at multifamily buildings of

 

 

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1    income-qualified households to spending on energy
2    efficiency programs targeted at single-family buildings of
3    income-qualified households shall be designed to achieve
4    levels of savings from each building type that are
5    approximately proportional to the magnitude of
6    cost-effective lifetime savings potential in each building
7    type. The gas utilities shall participate in a Low-Income
8    Energy Efficiency Accountability Committee as established
9    in Section 8-103B.
10        Gas utilities must conduct customer outreach and
11    education efforts in equity investment eligible
12    communities in order to provide notice of and explanations
13    concerning the following types of programs:
14            (A) energy efficiency programs, the Illinois Solar
15        for All Program, and whole home retrofit programs that
16        reduce natural gas usage;
17            (B) income-qualified financial assistance
18        programs, including rebate programs from the federal
19        government; and
20            (C) general education programs designed to explain
21        utility bills and the decisions customers can make to
22        lower energy usage.
23        These outreach and education efforts must be brought
24    to communities in a diversity of ways, must be created
25    with input from members of the communities, and must be
26    provided through, among other things:

 

 

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1            (i) information on customers' bills in the main
2        languages spoken in the communities;
3            (ii) a quarterly posting in local newspapers that
4        cover the service area;
5            (iii) a dedicated section on the investor-owned
6        utility's website; and
7            (iv) in-person and virtual educational sessions
8        that take place in the income-qualified and Justice40
9        community, provide food and child care for
10        participating customers, and are codesigned with
11        interested community-based organization
12        representatives.
13        (7) Implementation of energy efficiency measures and
14    programs targeted at income-qualified households shall be
15    contracted, when practicable, to independent third parties
16    that have demonstrated the capability of serving those
17    households, with a preference for not-for-profit entities
18    and government agencies that have existing relationships
19    with, experience serving, or working directly within and
20    alongside income-qualified communities in the State. Each
21    gas utility shall develop and implement reporting
22    procedures that address and assist in determining the
23    amount of energy savings that can be applied to the
24    income-qualified procurement and expenditure requirements
25    set forth in this paragraph.
26        (8) A minimum of 10% of the utility's entire portfolio

 

 

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1    funding level for a given year shall be used to procure
2    cost-effective energy efficiency measures from units of
3    local government, municipal corporations, school
4    districts, public housing, community college districts,
5    and nonprofit-owned buildings as long as a minimum
6    percentage of available funds shall be used to procure
7    energy efficiency from public housing, which percentage
8    shall be, at a minimum, equal to public housing's share of
9    public building energy consumption. Spending on public
10    housing may count toward minimum spending requirements on
11    efficiency improvements for income-qualified households.
12    (e) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a utility
13providing approved energy efficiency measures in the State may
14recover all reasonable and prudently incurred costs of those
15measures from its retail customers. However, nothing in this
16subsection permits the double recovery of such costs from
17customers.
18    (f) Beginning in 2026, each gas utility shall file an
19energy efficiency plan with the Commission to meet the energy
20efficiency standards in subsection (d) for the next applicable
21multiyear period beginning January 1 of the year following the
22filing, according to the schedule set forth in paragraphs (1)
23through (4). If a utility does not file such a plan on or
24before the applicable filing deadline for the plan, the
25utility shall be liable for a civil penalty of $100,000 per day
26until the plan is filed.

 

 

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1        (1) The energy efficiency plans of gas utilities that
2    were approved by the Commission for calendar years 2022
3    through 2025, including any stipulated agreements between
4    the utility and other parties that were approved by the
5    Commission, shall continue to be in force through calendar
6    year 2026. The utilities' savings goals for 2026 shall be
7    equal to the average annual savings goal approved for the
8    years 2022 through 2025.
9        (2) No later than March 1, 2026, each gas utility
10    shall file a 3-year energy efficiency plan that takes
11    effect on January 1, 2027 and is designed to achieve,
12    through implementation of emergency efficiency measures,
13    the incremental annual savings goals, minimum average
14    savings life, and other requirements specified in
15    paragraphs (1) through (7) of subsection (d). An energy
16    efficiency plan submitted by a gas utility under this
17    paragraph (2) supersedes any energy efficiency plan
18    previously filed by the gas utility for calendar year 2027
19    or thereafter.
20        (3) Beginning in 2029 and every 4 years thereafter,
21    each gas utility shall file by no later than March 1 of the
22    applicable year, a 4-year energy efficiency plan that
23    takes effect on the following January 1 and is designed to
24    achieve, through implementation of energy efficiency
25    measures, the incremental annual savings goals, minimum
26    average savings life, and other requirements specified in

 

 

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1    paragraphs (1) through (7) of subsection (d). However, the
2    incremental annual savings goals may be reduced if the
3    plan's analysis and forecasts of the utility's ability to
4    acquire energy savings demonstrate by clear and convincing
5    evidence and through independent analysis that achievement
6    of such goals is not cost-effective. In no event may
7    incremental annual savings goals for any year be reduced
8    to levels below (i) those actually achieved in the
9    calendar year before the plan filing, (ii) those forecast
10    to be achieved in the calendar year in which the plan
11    filing is made, or (iii) 0.75% of sales. The Commission
12    shall review any proposed goal reduction as part of its
13    review and approval of the utility's proposed plan.
14        (4) Each utility's plan shall set forth the utility's
15    proposals to meet the energy efficiency standards
16    identified in subsection (d). The Commission shall seek
17    public comment on each plan that takes effect on or after
18    January 1, 2027 and shall issue an order approving or
19    disapproving the plan within 6 months after its
20    submission. If the Commission disapproves a plan, the
21    Commission shall, within 30 days, describe in detail the
22    reasons for the disapproval and describe a path by which
23    the utility may file a revised draft of the plan to address
24    the Commission's concerns satisfactorily. If the utility
25    does not refile with the Commission within 60 days, the
26    utility shall be subject to civil penalties at a rate of

 

 

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1    $100,000 per day until the plan is refiled. This process
2    shall continue, and penalties shall accrue, until the
3    utility has successfully filed a portfolio of energy
4    efficiency measures. Penalties shall be deposited into the
5    Energy Efficiency Trust Fund.
6    (g) In submitting proposed plans and funding levels under
7subsection (f) to meet the savings goals identified in
8subsection (d), the utility shall:
9        (1) demonstrate that its proposed energy efficiency
10    measures will achieve the requirements that are identified
11    in subsection (d);
12        (2) demonstrate consideration of program options for
13    supporting efforts to improve compliance with new building
14    codes, appliance standards, and municipal regulations as
15    potentially cost-effective means of acquiring energy
16    savings to count toward energy savings goals;
17        (3) demonstrate that its overall portfolio of measures
18    and programs, not including income-qualified programs
19    described in subsection (d), is cost-effective using the
20    total resource cost test and represents a diverse cross
21    section of opportunities for customers of all rate classes
22    to participate in programs. Individual measures need not
23    be cost-effective;
24        (4) demonstrate that the utility's plan integrates the
25    delivery of energy efficiency programs with electric
26    efficiency programs, programs promoting demand response,

 

 

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1    and other efforts to address bill payment issues,
2    including, but not limited to, the Low Income Home Energy
3    Assistance Program and the Percentage of Income Payment
4    Plans;
5        (5) include a proposed or revised cost-recovery
6    mechanism to fund the proposed energy efficiency measures
7    and ensure the recovery of the prudently and reasonably
8    incurred costs of Commission-approved programs;
9        (6) provide, using not more than 3% of portfolio
10    resources in any given year, an annual independent
11    evaluation of the performance and cost-effectiveness of
12    the utility's portfolio of measures and programs;
13        (7) demonstrate how it will ensure that program
14    implementation contractors and energy efficiency
15    installation vendors will promote workforce equity and
16    quality jobs. Utilities shall collect, and make publicly
17    available at least quarterly, data necessary to
18    demonstrate how efforts are advancing workforce equity.
19    Utilities shall work with relevant vendors providing
20    education, training, and other resources needed to ensure
21    compliance and, where necessary, adjusting or terminating
22    work with vendors that cannot assist with compliance; and
23        (8) include any plans for research, development, or
24    pilot deployment of new measures or program approaches.
25    For utilities with unmodified savings goals, no more than
26    4% of energy efficiency portfolio spending may be

 

 

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1    allocated for such purposes. For utilities with modified
2    savings goals, no more than 2% of energy efficiency
3    portfolio spending may be allocated for such purposes.
4    Utilities shall work with interested stakeholders to
5    formulate a plan for how any proposed funds should be
6    spent, incorporate statewide approaches for these
7    allocations whenever such approaches would be more
8    effective or cost-efficient, and demonstrate such
9    collaboration in the utilities' plans.
10    (h) Each gas utility shall be eligible to earn a
11shareholder incentive for effective implementation of its
12efficiency programs. The incentive shall be tied to each
13utility's annual energy efficiency spending and its savings.
14There shall be no incentive if the independent evaluator
15determines the utility either (i) did not fully meet all of the
16requirements specified in paragraphs (3) through (7) of
17subsection (d) or (ii) failed to achieve at least 90% of its
18lifetime savings goal. If a utility meets all of the
19requirements specified in paragraphs (3) through (7) of
20subsection (d), it can earn an incentive equal to 0.4% of the
21total annual efficiency spending in the year being evaluated
22for every one percentage point above 90% of its lifetime
23savings goal that it achieves for that year, with a maximum
24incentive of 12% for achieving 120% of its lifetime savings
25goal. For purposes of this subsection (h), "lifetime savings
26goal" means the product of a utility's incremental savings

 

 

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1goal specified in paragraph (1) of subsection (d) and the
2minimum average savings life specified in paragraph (2) of
3subsection (d).
4    (i) The utility shall submit energy savings data to the
5independent evaluator no later than 30 days after the close of
6the plan year. The independent evaluator shall determine the
7incremental annual savings and average savings life, as well
8as an estimate of the job impacts and other macroeconomic
9impacts of the efficiency programs for that year, achieved no
10later than 120 days after the close of the plan year. The
11utility shall submit an informational filing to the Commission
12no later than 160 days after the close of the plan year that
13attaches the independent evaluator's final report identifying
14the incremental annual savings for the year, identifying
15average savings life for the year, documenting compliance with
16other requirements in subsection (d), and, as applicable, the
17magnitude of any shareholder incentive which the utility has
18earned.
19    (j) Gas utilities shall report annually to the Commission
20and General Assembly on how hiring, contracting, job training,
21and other practices related to its energy efficiency programs
22enhance the diversity of vendors working on such programs.
23These reports must include data on vendor and employee
24diversity.
25    (k) The independent evaluator shall follow the guidelines
26and use the savings set forth in Commission-approved energy

 

 

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1efficiency policy manuals and technical reference manuals, as
2each may be updated from time to time. Until measure life
3values for energy efficiency measures implemented for
4income-qualified households are separately incorporated into
5such Commission-approved manuals, the income-qualified
6measures shall have the same measure life values that are
7established for the same measures implemented in households
8that are not income-qualified households.
 
9    (220 ILCS 5/9-228.5 new)
10    Sec. 9-228.5. Consideration of gas main and gas service
11extension costs. Gas main and gas service extension policies
12shall be based on the principle that the full incremental cost
13associated with new development and growth shall be borne by
14the customers that cause those incremental costs. Gas main and
15gas service extension policies, procedures, and conditions
16shall align with the greenhouse gas emission reduction goals
17established in Article XXIV.
 
18    (220 ILCS 5/9-229)
19    Sec. 9-229. Consideration of attorney and expert
20compensation as an expense and intervenor compensation fund.
21    (a) The Commission shall specifically assess the justness
22and reasonableness of any amount expended by a public utility
23to compensate attorneys or technical experts to prepare and
24litigate a general rate case filing. This issue shall be

 

 

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1expressly addressed in the Commission's final order.
2    (b) The State of Illinois shall create a Consumer
3Intervenor Compensation Fund subject to the following:
4        (1) Provision of compensation for Consumer Interest
5    Representatives that intervene in Illinois Commerce
6    Commission proceedings will increase public engagement,
7    encourage additional transparency, expand the information
8    available to the Commission, and improve decision-making.
9        (2) As used in this Section, "consumer Consumer
10    interest representative" means:
11            (A) a residential utility customer or group of
12        residential utility customers represented by a
13        not-for-profit group or organization registered with
14        the Illinois Attorney General under the Solicitation
15        for Charity Act;
16            (B) representatives of not-for-profit groups or
17        organizations whose membership is limited to
18        residential utility customers; or
19            (C) representatives of not-for-profit groups or
20        organizations whose membership includes Illinois
21        residents and that address the community, economic,
22        environmental, or social welfare of Illinois
23        residents, except government agencies or intervenors
24        specifically authorized by Illinois law to participate
25        in Commission proceedings on behalf of Illinois
26        consumers.

 

 

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1        (3) A consumer interest representative is eligible to
2    receive compensation from the consumer intervenor
3    compensation fund if its participation included lay or
4    expert testimony or legal briefing and argument concerning
5    the expenses, investments, rate design, rate impact, or
6    other matters affecting the pricing, rates, costs or other
7    charges associated with utility service, the Commission
8    adopts a material recommendation related to a significant
9    issue in the docket, and participation caused a
10    significant financial cost hardship to the participant;
11    however, no consumer interest representative shall be
12    eligible to receive an award pursuant to this Section if
13    the consumer interest representative receives any
14    compensation, funding, or donations, directly or
15    indirectly, from parties that have a financial interest in
16    the outcome of the proceeding.
17        (4) Within 30 days after September 15, 2021 (the
18    effective date of Public Act 102-662), each utility that
19    files a request for an increase in rates under Article IX
20    or Article XVI shall deposit an amount equal to one half of
21    the rate case attorney and expert expense allowed by the
22    Commission, but not to exceed $500,000, into the fund
23    within 35 days of the date of the Commission's Final final
24    Order in the rate case or 20 days after the denial of
25    rehearing under Section 10-113 of this Act, whichever is
26    later. The Consumer Intervenor Compensation Fund shall be

 

 

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1    used to provide payment to consumer interest
2    representatives as described in this Section.
3        (5) An electric public utility with 3,000,000 or more
4    retail customers shall contribute $450,000 to the Consumer
5    Intervenor Compensation Fund within 60 days after
6    September 15, 2021 (the effective date of Public Act
7    102-662). A combined electric and gas public utility
8    serving fewer than 3,000,000 but more than 500,000 retail
9    customers shall contribute $225,000 to the Consumer
10    Intervenor Compensation Fund within 60 days after
11    September 15, 2021 (the effective date of Public Act
12    102-662). A gas public utility with 1,500,000 or more
13    retail customers that is not a combined electric and gas
14    public utility shall contribute $225,000 to the Consumer
15    Intervenor Compensation Fund within 60 days after
16    September 15, 2021 (the effective date of Public Act
17    102-662). A gas public utility with fewer than 1,500,000
18    retail customers but more than 300,000 retail customers
19    that is not a combined electric and gas public utility
20    shall contribute $80,000 to the Consumer Intervenor
21    Compensation Fund within 60 days after September 15, 2021
22    (the effective date of Public Act 102-662). A gas public
23    utility with fewer than 300,000 retail customers that is
24    not a combined electric and gas public utility shall
25    contribute $20,000 to the Consumer Intervenor Compensation
26    Fund within 60 days after September 15, 2021 (the

 

 

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1    effective date of Public Act 102-662). A combined electric
2    and gas public utility serving fewer than 500,000 retail
3    customers shall contribute $20,000 to the Consumer
4    Intervenor Compensation Fund within 60 days after
5    September 15, 2021 (the effective date of Public Act
6    102-662). A water or sewer public utility serving more
7    than 100,000 retail customers shall contribute $80,000,
8    and a water or sewer public utility serving fewer than
9    100,000 but more than 10,000 retail customers shall
10    contribute $20,000.
11        (6)(A) Prior to the entry of a Final Order in a
12    docketed case, the Commission Administrator shall provide
13    a payment to a consumer interest representative that
14    demonstrates through a verified application for funding
15    that the consumer interest representative's participation
16    or intervention without an award of fees or costs imposes
17    a significant financial hardship based on a schedule to be
18    developed by the Commission. The Administrator may require
19    verification of costs incurred, including statements of
20    hours spent, as a condition to paying the consumer
21    interest representative prior to the entry of a Final
22    Order in a docketed case.
23        (B) If the Commission adopts a material recommendation
24    related to a significant issue in the docket and
25    participation caused a significant financial cost hardship
26    to the participant, then the consumer interest

 

 

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1    representative shall be allowed payment for some or all of
2    the consumer interest representative's reasonable
3    attorney's or advocate's fees, reasonable expert witness
4    fees, and other reasonable costs of preparation for and
5    participation in a hearing or proceeding. Expenses related
6    to travel or meals shall not be compensable.
7        (C) The consumer interest representative shall submit
8    an itemized request for compensation to the Consumer
9    Intervenor Compensation Fund, including the advocate's or
10    attorney's reasonable fee rate, the number of hours
11    expended, reasonable expert and expert witness fees, and
12    other reasonable costs for the preparation for and
13    participation in the hearing and briefing within 30 days
14    of the Commission's final order after denial or decision
15    on rehearing, if any.
16        (7) Administration of the Fund.
17        (A) The Consumer Intervenor Compensation Fund is
18    created as a special fund in the State treasury. All
19    disbursements from the Consumer Intervenor Compensation
20    Fund shall be made only upon warrants of the Comptroller
21    drawn upon the Treasurer as custodian of the Fund upon
22    vouchers signed by the Executive Director of the
23    Commission or by the person or persons designated by the
24    Director for that purpose. The Comptroller is authorized
25    to draw the warrant upon vouchers so signed. The Treasurer
26    shall accept all warrants so signed and shall be released

 

 

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1    from liability for all payments made on those warrants.
2    The Consumer Intervenor Compensation Fund shall be
3    administered by an Administrator that is a person or
4    entity that is independent of the Commission. The
5    administrator will be responsible for the prudent
6    management of the Consumer Intervenor Compensation Fund
7    and for recommendations for the award of consumer
8    intervenor compensation from the Consumer Intervenor
9    Compensation Fund. The Commission shall issue a request
10    for qualifications for a third-party program administrator
11    to administer the Consumer Intervenor Compensation Fund.
12    The third-party administrator shall be chosen through a
13    competitive bid process based on selection criteria and
14    requirements developed by the Commission. The Illinois
15    Procurement Code does not apply to the hiring or payment
16    of the Administrator. All Administrator costs may be paid
17    for using monies from the Consumer Intervenor Compensation
18    Fund, but the Program Administrator shall strive to
19    minimize costs in the implementation of the program.
20        (B) The computation of compensation awarded from the
21    fund shall take into consideration the market rates paid
22    to persons of comparable training and experience who offer
23    similar services, but may not exceed the comparable market
24    rate for services paid by the public utility as part of its
25    rate case expense.
26        (C)(1) Recommendations on the award of compensation by

 

 

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1    the administrator shall include consideration of whether
2    the participation raised Commission adopted a material
3    recommendation related to a significant issue in the
4    docket and whether participation caused a significant
5    financial cost hardship to the participant and the payment
6    of compensation is fair, just, and reasonable.
7        (2) Recommendations on the award of compensation by
8    the administrator shall be submitted to the Commission for
9    approval. Unless the Commission initiates an investigation
10    within 45 days after the notice to the Commission, the
11    award of compensation shall be allowed 45 days after
12    notice to the Commission. Such notice shall be given by
13    filing with the Commission on the Commission's e-docket
14    system, and keeping open for public inspection the award
15    for compensation proposed by the Administrator. The
16    Commission shall have power, and it is hereby given
17    authority, either upon complaint or upon its own
18    initiative without complaint, at once, and if it so
19    orders, without answer or other formal pleadings, but upon
20    reasonable notice, to enter upon a hearing concerning the
21    propriety of the award.
22    (c) The Commission may adopt rules to implement this
23Section.
24(Source: P.A. 102-662, eff. 9-15-21; 103-605, eff. 7-1-24.)
 
25    (220 ILCS 5/9-235 new)

 

 

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1    Sec. 9-235. Tariffed gas main and gas service extension
2provisions. No later than 60 days after the effective date of
3this amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly, the
4Commission shall initiate a docketed rulemaking reviewing each
5gas public utility tariff that provides for gas main and gas
6service extensions without additional charge to new customers
7in excess of the default extensions without charge as
8specified in 83 Ill. Adm. Code 501. The focus of the rulemaking
9shall be to modify each gas utility's gas main and gas service
10extension tariff to align with the provisions set forth in
11Section 9-228.5.
 
12    (220 ILCS 5/9-241)  (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 9-241)
13    Sec. 9-241. Nondiscrimination.
14    (a) No public utility shall, as to rates or other charges,
15services, facilities, or in other respect, make or grant any
16preference or advantage to any corporation or person or
17subject any corporation or person to any prejudice or
18disadvantage. No public utility shall establish or maintain
19any unreasonable difference as to rates or other charges,
20services, facilities, or in any other respect, either as
21between localities or as between classes of service.
22    (b) An electric utility in a county with a population of
233,000,000 or more shall not establish or maintain any
24unreasonable difference as to rates or other charges,
25services, contractual terms, or facilities for access to or

 

 

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1the use of its utility infrastructure by another person or for
2any other purpose. Notwithstanding any other provision of law,
3the Commission and its staff shall interpret this Section in
4accordance with Article XVI of this Act.
5     (c) Nothing in this Section shall be construed as
6limiting the authority of the Commission to permit the
7establishment of economic development rates as incentives to
8economic development either in enterprise zones as designated
9by the State of Illinois or in other areas of a utility's
10service area. Such rates should be available to existing
11businesses which demonstrate an increase to existing load as
12well as new businesses which create new load for a utility so
13as to create a more balanced utilization of generating
14capacity. The Commission shall ensure that such rates are
15established at a level which provides a net benefit to
16customers within a public utility's service area.
17    (d) On or before January 1, 2026 2023, the Commission
18shall conduct a comprehensive study to assess whether
19low-income discount rates for electric and natural gas
20residential customers are appropriate and the potential design
21and implementation of any such rates. The Commission shall
22include its findings, together with the appropriate
23recommendations, in a report to be provided to the General
24Assembly. Upon completion of the study, the Commission shall
25have the authority to permit or require electric and natural
26gas utilities to file a tariff establishing low-income

 

 

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1discount rates.
2    Such study shall assess, at a minimum, the following:
3        (1) customer eligibility requirements, including
4    income-based eligibility and eligibility based on
5    participation in or eligibility for certain public
6    assistance programs;
7        (2) appropriate rate structures, including
8    consideration of tiered discounts for different income
9    levels;
10        (3) appropriate recovery mechanisms, including the
11    consideration of volumetric charges and customer charges;
12        (4) appropriate verification mechanisms;
13        (5) measures to ensure customer confidentiality and
14    data safeguards;
15        (6) outreach and consumer education procedures; and
16        (7) the impact that a low-income discount rate would
17    have on the affordability of delivery service to
18    low-income customers and customers overall.
19    On or before January 1, 2027, the Commission shall begin a
20docketed rulemaking process to implement low-income discount
21rates for electric and natural gas residential customers,
22incorporating the recommendations of the report required by
23this Section, released by the Commission in December 2022 and
24titled the "Illinois Commerce Commission Low-Income Discount
25Rate Study Report to the Illinois General Assembly".
26    (e) The Commission shall adopt rules requiring utility

 

 

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1companies to produce information, in the form of a mailing,
2and other approved methods of distribution, to its consumers,
3to inform the consumers of available rebates, discounts,
4credits, and other cost-saving mechanisms that can help them
5lower their monthly utility bills, and send out such
6information semi-annually, unless otherwise provided by this
7Article.
8    (f) Prior to October 1, 1989, no public utility providing
9electrical or gas service shall consider the use of solar or
10other nonconventional renewable sources of energy by a
11customer as a basis for establishing higher rates or charges
12for any service or commodity sold to such customer; nor shall a
13public utility subject any customer utilizing such energy
14source or sources to any other prejudice or disadvantage on
15account of such use. No public utility shall without the
16consent of the Commission, charge or receive any greater
17compensation in the aggregate for a lesser commodity, product,
18or service than for a greater commodity, product, or service
19of like character.
20    The Commission, in order to expedite the determination of
21rate questions, or to avoid unnecessary and unreasonable
22expense, or to avoid unjust or unreasonable discrimination
23between classes of customers, or, whenever in the judgment of
24the Commission public interest so requires, may, for rate
25making and accounting purposes, or either of them, consider
26one or more municipalities either with or without the adjacent

 

 

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1or intervening rural territory as a regional unit where the
2same public utility serves such region under substantially
3similar conditions, and may within such region prescribe
4uniform rates for consumers or patrons of the same class.
5    Any public utility, with the consent and approval of the
6Commission, may as a basis for the determination of the
7charges made by it classify its service according to the
8amount used, the time when used, the purpose for which used,
9and other relevant factors.
10(Source: P.A. 102-662, eff. 9-15-21; 103-679, eff. 7-19-24.)
 
11    (220 ILCS 5/9-254 new)
12    Sec. 9-254. Independent gas system assessment.
13    (a) The General Assembly finds that an independent audit
14of the current state of the gas distribution system, and of the
15expenditures made since 2012, will need to be made.
16Specifically, the General Assembly finds:
17        (1) Pursuant to 2013 legislation establishing the
18    qualifying infrastructure plant charge, gas utilities in
19    this State that serve over 700,000 retail customers have
20    spent significant amounts of ratepayer dollars on system
21    investments purporting to refurbish, rebuild, modernize,
22    and expand gas system infrastructure.
23        (2) The qualifying infrastructure plant charge is set
24    to conclude at its statutory deadline of December 31,
25    2023, and it is in the interest of this State and in the

 

 

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1    interest of gas utilities' customers to understand the
2    benefits of these investments to the gas system and to
3    customers and to evaluate the current condition of the gas
4    system.
5        (3) It is also necessary for gas utilities, the
6    Commission, and stakeholders to have an independently
7    verified set of data to draw upon for future gas rate cases
8    and any other proposed gas system spending.
9        (4) Meeting the State's climate goals will require an
10    ordered transition away from gas, and toward electric
11    heating and appliances, for all or nearly all buildings,
12    and planning this transition will require a thorough
13    understanding of the current state of the gas system.
14        (5) The Commission has authority to order and
15    implement the requirements of this Section under Section
16    8-102.
17    (b) Terms used in this Section shall have the meanings
18given to them in Section 19-105.
19    (c) Within 30 days after the effective date of this
20amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly, the Commission
21shall issue an order initiating an audit of each gas utility
22serving over 700,000 retail customers in the State, which
23shall examine the following:
24        (1) An assessment of the gas distribution system, as
25    described in paragraph (2) of subsection (a). The
26    Commission shall have the authority to require additional

 

 

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1    items that it deems necessary.
2        (2) An analysis of the utility's capital projects
3    placed into service in the preceding 10 years, including,
4    but not limited to, an assessment of the value and safety
5    impact of pipe replacement, increased system pressure, and
6    pipe capacity expansion.
7        (3) An assessment of the utility's emissions
8    reductions to date and what preparations the utility has
9    made to meet the terms of the Paris Climate Agreement,
10    with which it is the policy of the State to comply.
11        (4) The creation of a visual, geographic map of the
12    gas system displaying the level of risk of various
13    pipelines and showing the areas where pipelines have
14    already been replaced.
15        (5) The identifying areas of the gas system where the
16    cost to replace pipeline is likely to be high, including,
17    but not limited to, identifying places where
18    decommissioning a portion of the gas system and planning
19    to provide for electric heating and appliance needs in
20    that area may be preferable, considering the costs and
21    benefits for affordability, health, and climate.
22    (d) It is contemplated that the auditor will use materials
23filed with the Commission by the utilities with respect to the
24auditor's expenditures in the preceding 10 years; however, the
25auditor may also, with Commission approval, assess other
26information deemed necessary to make its report. The results

 

 

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1of the audit described in this Section shall be reflected in a
2report delivered to the Commission, describing the information
3specified in this Section. The report is to be delivered no
4later than 180 days after the Commission enters its order
5under subsection (c). It is understood that any public report
6may not contain items that are confidential or proprietary.
7    (e) The costs of a gas utility's audit described in this
8Section shall not exceed $500,000 and shall be paid for by the
9electric utility that is the subject of the audit. Such costs
10shall be a recoverable expense.
11    (f) The Commission shall have the authority to retain the
12services of an auditor to assist with the distribution
13planning process, as well as in docketed proceedings. Such
14expenses for these activities shall also be borne by the
15Commission.
 
16    (220 ILCS 5/9-255 new)
17    Sec. 9-255. Phase-out of gas fixed changes. Beginning
18January 1, 2035, a public utility providing gas service may
19not assess fixed charges as part of its rates. Beginning
20January 1, 2030, a public utility providing gas service must
21limit, for each customer class, any fixed charges in its rates
22to no greater than 50% of the average of monthly fixed charges
23for that customer class during the period January 1, 2019 to
24December 31, 2021.
 

 

 

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1    (220 ILCS 5/16-111.10)
2    Sec. 16-111.10. Equitable Energy Upgrade Program.
3    (a) The General Assembly finds and declares that Illinois
4homes and businesses can contribute to the creation of a clean
5energy economy, conservation of natural resources, and
6reliability of the electricity grid through the installation
7of cost-effective renewable energy generation, energy
8efficiency and demand response equipment, and energy storage
9systems. Further, a large portion of Illinois residents and
10businesses that would benefit from the installation of energy
11efficiency, storage, and renewable energy generation systems
12are unable to purchase systems due to capital or credit
13barriers. This State should pursue options to enable many more
14Illinoisans to access the health, environmental, and financial
15benefits of new clean energy technology.
16    (b) As used in this Section:
17    "Commission" means the Illinois Commerce Commission.
18    "Energy project" means renewable energy generation
19systems, including solar projects, energy efficiency upgrades,
20decarbonization and electrification measures, energy storage
21systems, demand response equipment, or any combination
22thereof.
23    "Fund" means the Clean Energy Jobs and Justice Fund
24established in the Clean Energy Jobs and Justice Fund Act.
25    "Program" means the Equitable Energy Upgrade Program
26established under subsection (c).

 

 

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1    "Utility" means electric public utilities providing
2services to 500,000 or more customers under this Act.
3    (c) The Commission shall open an investigation into and
4direct all electric and gas public utilities in this State to
5adopt an Equitable Energy Upgrade Program that permits
6customers to finance the construction of energy projects
7through an optional tariff payable directly through their
8utility bill, modeled after the Pay As You Save system,
9developed by the Energy Efficiency Institute. The Program
10model shall enable utilities to offer to make investments in
11energy projects to customer properties with low-cost capital
12and use an opt-in tariff to recover the costs. The Program
13shall be designed to provide customers with immediate
14financial savings if they choose to participate. The Program
15shall allow residential electric and gas utility customers
16that own the property, or renters that have permission of the
17property owner, for which they subscribe to utility service to
18agree to the installation of an energy project. The Program
19shall ensure:
20        (1) eligible projects do not require upfront payments;
21    however, customers may pay down the costs for projects
22    with a payment to the installing contractor in order to
23    qualify projects that would otherwise require upfront
24    payments;
25        (2) eligible projects have sufficient estimated
26    savings and estimated life span to produce significant,

 

 

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1    immediate net savings;
2        (3) participants shall agree the utility can recover
3    its costs for the projects at their location by paying for
4    the project through an optional tariff directly through
5    the participant's utility electricity bill, allowing
6    participants to benefit from installation of energy
7    projects without traditional loans;
8        (4) accessibility by lower-income residents and
9    environmental justice community residents; and
10        (5) the utility must ensure that customers who are
11    interested in participating are notified that if they are
12    income qualified, they may also be eligible for the
13    Percentage of Income Payment Plan program and free energy
14    improvements through other programs and facilitate
15    interested customers' enrollment in those programs; and
16    provide contact information.
17        (6) coordination with existing utility, state, and
18    federal energy efficiency, solar, electrification, and
19    other energy savings funding and implementation programs.
20    (d) The Commission shall establish Program guidelines with
21the anticipated schedule of Program availability as follows:
22        (1) Year 1: Beginning in the first year of operation,
23    each utility with greater than 100,000 retail customers is
24    required to obtain low-cost capital of at least
25    $20,000,000 annually for investments in energy projects.
26        (2) Year 2: Beginning in the second year of operation,

 

 

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1    each utility with greater than 100,000 retail customers is
2    required to obtain low-cost capital for investments in
3    energy projects of at least $40,000,000 annually.
4        (3) Year 3: Beginning in the third year of operation,
5    each utility with greater than 100,000 retail customers is
6    required to obtain low-cost capital for investments in as
7    many systems as customers demand, subject to available
8    capital provided by the utility, State, or other lenders.
9    (e) In the design of the Program, the Commission shall:
10        (1) Within 90 days after the effective date of this
11    amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly, begin a
12    process to update the Program guidelines for
13    implementation of the Program. Any such process shall
14    allow for participation from interested stakeholders.
15    Within 270 days after the effective date of this
16    amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, convene a
17    workshop during which interested participants may discuss
18    issues and submit comments related to the Program.
19        (2) Establish Program guidelines for implementation of
20    the Program in accordance with the Pay As You Save
21    Essential Elements and Minimum Program Requirements that
22    electric and gas utilities must abide by when implementing
23    the Program. Program guidelines established by the
24    Commission shall include the following elements:
25            (A) The Commission shall establish conditions
26        under which utilities secure capital to fund the

 

 

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1        energy projects. The Commission may allow utilities to
2        raise capital independently, work with third-party
3        lenders to secure the capital for participants, or a
4        combination thereof. Any process the Commission
5        approves must use a market mechanism to identify the
6        least costly sources of capital funds so as to pass on
7        maximum savings to participants. The State or the
8        Clean Energy Jobs and Justice Fund may also provide
9        capital for the Program.
10            (B) Customer protection guidelines should be
11        designed consistent with Pay As You Save Essential
12        Elements and Minimum Program Requirements.
13            (C) The Commission shall establish conditions by
14        which utilities may connect Program participants to
15        energy project vendors. In setting conditions for
16        connection, the Commission may prioritize vendors that
17        have a history of good relations with the State,
18        including vendors that have hired participants from
19        State-created job training programs.
20            (D) Guarantee that conservative estimates of
21        financial savings will immediately and significantly
22        exceed estimated Program costs for Program
23        participants.
24            (E) Require any customer data sharing between
25        electric and gas utilities and third-party vendors
26        needed to evaluate the energy and demand saving and

 

 

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1        energy services revenue opportunities of all customers
2        and otherwise facilitate a positive customer
3        experience. Such data sharing may include but shall
4        not be limited to historical and ongoing customer
5        usage data and billing rates. The Commission may allow
6        utilities to recover the costs associated with data
7        sharing from all customers.
8            (F) Notwithstanding the method used to estimate
9        site-specific energy savings or measure direct energy
10        savings for Program participants, the utility will
11        report aggregate savings to the Commission for
12        regulatory filings in the same or a similar manner as
13        other energy efficiency or clean energy programs.
14    (f) Within 90 120 days after the Commission releases the
15Program conditions established under this Section, each
16utility subject to the requirements of this Section shall
17submit an informational filing to the Commission that
18describes its plan for implementing the provisions of this
19Section. If the Commission finds that the submission does not
20properly comply with the statutory or regulatory requirements
21of the Program, the Commission may require that the utility
22make modifications to its filing.
23    (g) An independent process evaluation shall be conducted
24after one year of the Program's operation. An independent
25impact evaluation shall be conducted after 3 years of
26operation, excluding one-time startup costs and results from

 

 

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1the first 12 months of the Program. The Commission shall
2convene an advisory council of stakeholders, including
3representation of low-income and environmental justice
4community members to make recommendations in response to the
5findings of the independent evaluation.
6    (h) The Program shall be designed using the Pay As You Save
7system guidelines to be cost-effective for customers. Only
8projects that are deemed to be cost-effective and can be
9reasonably expected to ensure customer savings are eligible
10for funding through the Program, unless, as specified in
11paragraph (1) of subsection (c), customers able to make
12upfront copayments to installers buy down the cost of projects
13so it can be deemed cost-effective.
14    (i) Eligible customers must be:
15        (1) property renters with permission of the property
16    owner; or
17        (2) property owners.
18    (j) The calculation of project cost-effectiveness shall be
19based upon the Pay As You Save system requirements.
20        (1) The calculation of cost-effectiveness must be
21    conducted by an objective process approved by the
22    Commission and based on rates in effect at the time of
23    installation.
24        (2) A project shall be considered cost-effective only
25    if it is estimated to produce significant immediate net
26    savings, not counting copayments voluntarily made by

 

 

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1    customers. The Commission may establish guidelines by
2    which this required savings is estimated.
3        (3) Net savings shall include savings across all fuel
4    sources, not limited to electricity and natural gas.
5        (4) The calculation of project cost-effectiveness
6    shall not exclude projects that:
7            (A) would raise customer costs in a particular
8        month so long as customers see annual project savings;
9        or
10            (B) increase electric load and accompanying costs
11        when a heating electrification project results in the
12        ability to cool part or all of a home that was not
13        previously cooled. In such cases, the increased
14        electricity consumption associated with that added
15        cooling shall not be included in calculations of net
16        savings. Extreme heat poses an increasing risk to
17        Illinois communities. As such, it is in the public
18        interest to mitigate that risk through the addition of
19        building cooling systems.
20        However, any expected increase in electric load and
21    customer costs should be clearly communicated to impacted
22    customers, along with any options for mitigating that
23    increase.
24    (k) The Program should be modeled after the Pay As You Save
25system, by which Program participants finance energy projects
26using the savings that the energy project creates with a

 

 

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1tariffed on-bill program. Eligible projects shall not create
2personal debt for the customer, result in a lien in the event
3of nonpayment, or require customers to pay monthly charges for
4any upgrade that fails and is not repaired within 21 days. The
5utility may restart charges once the upgrade is repaired and
6functioning and extend the term of payments to recover its
7costs for missed payments and deferred cost recovery,
8providing the upgrade continues to function.
9    (l) Any energy project that is defective or damaged due to
10no fault of the participant must be either replaced or
11repaired with parts that meet industry standards at the cost
12of the utility or vendor, as specified by the Commission, and
13charges shall be suspended until repairs or replacement is
14completed. The Commission may establish, increase, or replace
15the requirements imposed in this subsection. The Commission
16may determine that this responsibility is best handled by
17participating project vendors in the form of insurance,
18contractual guarantees, or other mechanisms, and issue rules
19detailing this requirement. Customers shall not be charged
20monthly payments for upgrades that are no longer functioning.
21    (m) In the event of nonpayment, the remaining balance due
22to pay off the system shall remain with the utility meter at an
23upgraded location. The Commission shall establish conditions
24subject to this constraint in the event of nonpayment that are
25in accordance with the Pay As You Save system.
26    (n) The utility shall make every effort to ensure that

 

 

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1customers who are income-qualified for free energy upgrade
2programs take full advantage of those programs first before
3using the Equitable Energy Upgrade Program. If the demand by
4utility customers exceeds the Program capital supply in a
5given year, utilities shall ensure that 50% of participants
6are:
7        (1) customers in neighborhoods where a majority of
8    households make 150% or less of area median income; or
9        (2) residents of environmental justice communities.
10    (o) Utilities shall endeavor to inform customers about the
11availability of the Program, their potential eligibility for
12participation in the Program, and whether they are likely to
13save money on the basis of an estimate conducted using
14variables consistent with the Program that the utility has at
15its disposal. The Commission may establish guidelines by which
16utilities must abide by this directive and alternatives if the
17Commission deems utilities' efforts as inadequate.
18    (p) Subject to Commission specifications under subsection
19(c), each utility shall work with certified project vendors
20selected using a request for proposals process to establish
21the terms and processes under which a utility can install
22eligible renewable energy generation and energy storage
23systems using the capital to fit the Equitable Energy Upgrade
24model. The utility certified project vendor shall explain and
25offer the approved upgrades to customers and shall assist
26customers in applying for financing through the Program. As

 

 

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1part of the process, utilities vendors shall also provide
2participants with information about any other relevant
3incentives that may be available and customer service
4regarding the effective use of the upgrades.
5    Nothing shall preclude gas and electric utilities that
6have overlapping service territories from jointly implementing
7and delivering the Program.
8    (q) A participating An electric utility shall recover all
9of the prudently incurred costs of offering a program approved
10by the Commission under this Section. For investor-owned
11utilities, shareholder incentives will be proportional to
12meeting Commission approved thresholds for the number of
13customers served and the amount of its investments in those
14locations.
15    (r) The Commission shall adopt all rules necessary for the
16administration of this Section.
17(Source: P.A. 102-662, eff. 9-15-21.)
 
18    (220 ILCS 5/Art. XXIII heading new)
19
ARTICLE XXIII. CLEAN BUILDING HEATING LAW

 
20    (220 ILCS 5/23-101 new)
21    Sec. 23-101. Short title. This Article may be cited as the
22Clean Building Heating Law. References in this Article to
23"this Act" mean this Article.
 

 

 

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1    (220 ILCS 5/23-102 new)
2    Sec. 23-102. Findings. The General Assembly finds that the
3adoption and use of clean, zero-pollution space and water
4heating appliances in residential and commercial buildings
5would benefit the State by (i) protecting the air that
6Illinoisans breathe through reducing unhealthy levels of smog
7and ozone, (ii) minimizing health risks associated with air
8pollution, including respiratory ailments, cardiovascular
9illnesses, and premature death, which are linked to exposure
10to fine particulate matter and nitrogen dioxide, (iii)
11assisting the State in achieving attainment of federal
12National Ambient Air Quality Standards for ozone and meeting
13the State's obligations under the federal Regional Haze Rule,
14(iv) reducing climate pollution in service to the State's
15net-zero greenhouse gas goals, and (v) contributing to the
16State's economy through building and mobilizing a trained and
17competitive workforce to install and maintain newly purchased
18appliances.
 
19    (220 ILCS 5/23-103 new)
20    Sec. 23-103. Definitions. As used in this Article:
21    "Annual fuel utilization efficiency" or "AFUE" means the
22efficiency as defined by Section 4.2.35 of the Code of Federal
23Regulations, Title 10, Part 430, Subpart B, Appendix N.
24    "Boiler" or "water heater" means a product used to heat
25water or produce steam and that is not exclusively used to

 

 

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1produce electricity for sale. "Boiler" does not include any
2waste heat recovery boiler that is used to recover sensible
3heat from the exhaust of a combustion turbine or any unfired
4waste heat recovery boiler that is used to recover sensible
5heat from the exhaust of any combustion equipment.
6    "Btu" means British thermal unit, which is a scientific
7unit of measurement equal to the quantity of heat required to
8raise the temperature of one pound of water by one degree
9Fahrenheit at approximately 60 degrees Fahrenheit.
10    "Director" means the Director of the Environmental
11Protection Agency or the Director's designee.
12    "Fan-type central furnace" means a self-contained space
13heater providing for circulation of heated air at pressures
14other than atmospheric through ducts more than 25 cm (10 in) in
15length.
16    "Furnace" means a product designed to be a source of
17interior space heating.
18    "Heat input" means the heat released by the combustion of
19fuels in a unit based on the higher heating value of fuel,
20excluding the enthalpy of incoming combustion air.
21    "Heat output" means the product obtained by multiplying
22the recovery efficiency, as defined by Section 6.1.3 of the
23Code of Federal Regulation, Title 10, Part 430, Subpart B,
24Appendix E, by the input rating of the unit.
25    "NOx" and "NOx emissions" means the sum of nitric oxide and
26nitrogen dioxide in the unit's flue gas, collectively

 

 

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1expressed as nitrogen dioxide.
2    "Rated heat input capacity" means the heat input capacity
3specified on the nameplate of the combustion unit. If a unit
4has been altered or modified such that its maximum heat input
5is different from the heat input capacity specified on the
6nameplate, the new maximum heat input is the unit's rated heat
7input capacity.
8    "Useful heat delivered to the heated space" means the
9annual fuel utilization efficiency (expressed as a fraction)
10multiplied by the heat input.
 
11    (220 ILCS 5/23-104 new)
12    Sec. 23-104. Applicability. This Article applies to any
13person who sells, installs, offers for sale, leases, or offers
14for lease the following products in this State, as well as any
15manufacturer who intends to sell or distribute for sale or
16installation the following products in this State: (i) new
17water heaters and boilers with a rated heat input capacity of
182,000,000 Btus per hour or less; and (ii) new furnaces with a
19rated heat input capacity of 175,000 Btus per hour or less,
20and, in the case of combination heating and cooling units, a
21cooling rate of 65,000 Btus per hour or less.
 
22    (220 ILCS 5/23-105 new)
23    Sec. 23-105. Emissions standards for new building heating
24and water heating appliances.

 

 

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1    (a) On and after January 1, 2027, a person shall not sell,
2install, offer for sale, lease, or offer for lease, and a
3manufacturer shall not sell or distribute for sale or
4installation, the following new products in this State:
5        (1) water heaters with a rated heat input capacity of
6    75,000 Btus per hour or less, and any water heaters with
7    power assist, that emit more than 10 nanograms of NOx per
8    joule of heat output;
9        (2) water heaters and boilers with a rated heat input
10    capacity from 75,001 to 2,000,000 Btus per hour,
11    inclusive, that emit more than 14 nanograms of NOx per
12    joule of heat output; or
13        (3) fan-type central furnaces with a rated heat input
14    capacity of 175,000 Btus per hour or less that emit more
15    than 14 nanograms of NOx per joule of heat output.
16    (b) On and after January 1, 2030, a person shall not sell,
17install, offer for sale, lease, or offer for lease, and a
18manufacturer shall not sell or distribute for sale or
19installation, the following new products in this State:
20        (1) water heaters and boilers with a rated heat input
21    capacity of 2,000,000 Btus per hour or less that emit more
22    than 0.0 nanograms of NOx per joule of heat output; or
23        (2) furnaces with a rated heat input capacity of
24    175,000 Btus per hour or less that emit more than 0.0
25    nanograms of NOx per joule of heat output. This includes
26    non-central installations, such as wall furnaces, as well

 

 

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1    as units installed in non-residential applications.
 
2    (220 ILCS 5/23-106 new)
3    Sec. 23-106. Certification and identification of compliant
4products.
5    (a) The manufacturer shall obtain confirmation from an
6independent testing laboratory that each water heater, boiler,
7or furnace model that is subject to the requirements of this
8Article and that the manufacturer intends to sell or
9distribute for sale or installation into the State has been
10tested in accordance with the procedures in Section 23-107.
11This confirmation shall include the following statement signed
12and dated by the person responsible for the report at the
13independent testing laboratory: "Based on my inquiry of those
14individuals with primary responsibility for obtaining the
15information, I certify that the statements and information in
16this source test report are to the best of my knowledge and
17belief true, accurate, and complete. I am aware that there are
18significant civil and criminal penalties for submitting false
19statements or information or omitting required statements or
20information, including the possibility of fine or
21imprisonment."
22    (b) For each such product model, the manufacturer shall
23submit to the Director either of the following:
24        (1) A statement that each product model meets the
25    emission standards set forth in Section 23-105. The

 

 

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1    statement must:
2            (A) provide the following general information:
3        name and address of manufacturer, brand name, trade
4        name, model number, and rated heat input capacity;
5            (B) provide a description of the model being
6        certified;
7            (C) include a complete certification source test
8        report demonstrating that the product model was tested
9        in accordance with procedures in Section 23-107 and a
10        written statement that the model complies with Section
11        23-105;
12            (D) include the following statement signed and
13        dated by a managerial level employee responsible for
14        the certification request at the manufacturer: "Based
15        on my inquiry of those individuals with primary
16        responsibility for obtaining the information, I
17        certify that the statements and information in this
18        request for certification are to the best of my
19        knowledge and belief true, accurate, and complete. I
20        am aware that there are significant civil and criminal
21        penalties for submitting false statements or
22        information or omitting required statements or
23        information, including the possibility of fine or
24        imprisonment.";
25            (E) be submitted to the Director no more than 90
26        days after the date of the emissions compliance test

 

 

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1        conducted in accordance with Section 23-107; and
2            (F) be submitted to the Director no less than 90
3        days before the intention to sell or distribute a new
4        product model within the State or no less than 90 days
5        before the dates described in Section 23-105.
6        (2) An approved South Coast Air Quality Management
7    District (SCAQMD) certification for each product model
8    issued pursuant to SCAQMD Rules 1111, 1121, or 1146.2, to
9    demonstrate compliance with subsection (a) of Section
10    23-105.
11    (c) The manufacturer shall display the model number and
12the certification status of a product complying with this
13Article on the shipping carton and rating plate of each unit.
 
14    (220 ILCS 5/23-107 new)
15    Sec. 23-107. Determination of emissions. Emissions from
16products subject to the requirements of this Article shall be
17tested in accordance with the following provisions:
18        (1) Each product model shall receive certification
19    based on emission tests of a randomly selected unit of
20    that model.
21        (2) The measurement of NOx emissions shall be
22    conducted in accordance with EPA Reference Method 7 (40
23    CFR Part 60, Appendix A), Test Methods 7A-7E.
24        (3) Each tested water heater shall be operated in
25    accordance with Section 2.4 of American National Standards

 

 

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1    ANSI Z21.10.1-1990 at normal test pressure, input rates,
2    and with a 5-foot exhaust stack installed during the NOx
3    emissions tests.
4        (4) Each tested furnace shall be operated in
5    accordance with the procedures specified in Section 3.1 of
6    the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 10, Part 430,
7    Subpart B, Appendix N.
8        (5) One of the 2 following formulas shall be used to
9    calculate the NOx emission rate in nanograms of NOx per
10    joule of heat output:
11        N=4.566×104PUHCE
12        or
13        N=3.655×1010P20.9-YZE
14        Where:
15        N = Calculated mass emissions of NOx per unit of useful
16    heat (nanograms per joule of useful heat delivered to the
17    heated space).
18        P = Measured concentration of NOx in flue gas (parts
19    per million by volume).
20        Y = Measured concentration of O2 in flue gas
21    (percentage by volume).
22        Z = Gross heating value of gas (joules per cubic meter
23    at 0.0 degrees Celsius, 1 atm).
24        E = AFUE (percentage), as defined in Section 23-103.
25        U = Concentration of CO2 in water-free flue gas for
26    stoichiometric combustion (percentage by volume).

 

 

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1        H = Gross heating value of the fuel (Btu per cubic
2    foot, 60 degrees Fahrenheit, 30-in Hg).
3        C = Measured concentration of CO2 in flue gas
4    (percentage by volume).
 
5    (220 ILCS 5/23-108 new)
6    Sec. 23-108. Enforcement and penalties.
7    (a) The Director may require the emission test results to
8be provided when deemed necessary to verify compliance and may
9periodically conduct on-site inspections and tests as are
10deemed necessary to ensure compliance. Such verifications
11shall be conducted at least once within 2 years of the date
12described in subsection (a) of Section 23-105 and again at
13least once every 5 years thereafter.
14    (b) If the Director determines that a manufacturer,
15distributor, retailer, installer, or other person is in
16violation of any provision of this Act, that violation is
17subject to fines and penalties according to the Director's
18authority.
19    (c) For purposes of this Section, fines or penalties may
20be levied against an installer who installs a product covered
21by this Article in violation of this Article, however they
22shall not be levied against such installer's nonmanagerial
23employees, if any, who perform such installation.
24    (d) Fines and penalties collected under this Section may
25be used for supplemental environmental programs to offset the

 

 

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1cost of furnace and water heater replacements in low-income
2and moderate-income households or households in environmental
3justice communities, according to the Director's authority to
4use fines and penalties.
5    (e) On or before the date described in subsection (a) of
6Section 23-105, the Director shall establish a process whereby
7individuals may anonymously report potential violations of
8this Act. The Director shall investigate any such reported
9potential violations.
 
10    (220 ILCS 5/23-109 new)
11    Sec. 23-109. Additional regulation. The Director may adopt
12rules as necessary to ensure the proper implementation and
13enforcement of this Article.
 
14    (220 ILCS 5/23-111 new)
15    Sec. 23-111. Revisions to building codes to comply with
16greenhouse gas emissions reduction requirements.
17    (a) Beginning no later than July 1, 2027, to support the
18State's achievement of its greenhouse gas emissions
19requirements and to improve public health outcomes, the State
20building code shall require that the site energy use intensity
21between minimally compliant but otherwise similar buildings of
22differing fuel types shall not be significantly unequal in all
23new construction statewide. Beginning no later than July 1,
242027, to the fullest extent feasible, the building code shall

 

 

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1require that any area or service within a project where
2infrastructure, building systems, or equipment used for the
3combustion of fossil fuels are installed must be all-electric
4ready.
5    (b) Requirements for all-electric ready new construction
6for residential buildings shall include:
7        (1) a heat pump space heater ready. Systems using gas
8    or propane furnaces to serve individual dwelling units
9    shall include the following:
10            (A) a dedicated 240 volt branch circuit wiring
11        shall be installed within 3 feet from the furnace and
12        accessible to the furnace with no obstructions. The
13        branch circuit conductors shall be rated at 30 amps
14        minimum. The blank cover shall be identified as "240V
15        ready"; and
16            (B) the main electrical service panel shall have a
17        reserved space to allow for the installation of a
18        double pole circuit breaker for a future heat pump
19        space heater installation. The reserved space shall be
20        permanently marked as "For Future 240V use";
21        (2) an electric cooktop ready. Systems using gas or
22    propane cooktops to serve individual dwelling units shall
23    include the following:
24            (A) a dedicated 240 volt branch circuit wiring
25        shall be installed within 3 feet from the cooktop and
26        accessible to the cooktop with no obstructions. The

 

 

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1        branch circuit conductors shall be rated at 50 amps
2        minimum. The blank cover shall be identified as "240V
3        ready"; and
4            (B) the main electrical service panel shall have a
5        reserved space to allow for the installation of a
6        double pole circuit breaker for a future electric
7        cooktop installation. The reserved space shall be
8        permanently marked as "For Future 240V Use";
9        (3) an electric clothes dryer ready. Clothes dryer
10    locations with gas or propane plumbing shall include the
11    following:
12            (A) systems serving individual dwelling units
13        shall include:
14                (i) a dedicated 240 volt branch circuit wiring
15            shall be installed within 3 feet from the clothes
16            dryer location and accessible to the clothes dryer
17            location with no obstructions. The branch circuit
18            conductors shall be rated at 30 amps minimum. The
19            blank cover shall be identified as "240V ready";
20            and
21                (ii) the main electrical service panel shall
22            have a reserved space to allow for the
23            installation of a double pole circuit breaker for
24            a future electric clothes dryer installation. The
25            reserved space shall be permanently marked as "For
26            Future 240V Use"; and

 

 

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1            (B) systems in common use areas shall include
2        conductors or raceway shall be installed with
3        termination points at the main electrical panel, via
4        subpanels if applicable, to a location no more than 3
5        feet from each gas outlet or a designated location of
6        future electric replacement equipment. Both ends of
7        the conductors or raceway shall be labeled "Future
8        240V Use". The conductors or raceway and any
9        intervening subpanels, panelboards, switchboards, and
10        busbars shall be sized to meet the future electric
11        power requirements, at the service voltage to the
12        point at which the conductors serving the building
13        connect to the utility distribution system. The
14        capacity requirements may be adjusted for demand
15        factors. Gas flow rates shall be determined in
16        accordance with State plumbing code. Capacity shall be
17        one of the following:
18                (i) 0.24 amps at 208/240 volts per clothes
19            dryer;
20                (ii) 2.6 kVA for each 10,000 Btu per hour of
21            rated gas input or gas pipe capacity; or
22                (iii) the electrical power required to provide
23            equivalent functionality of the gas-powered
24            equipment as calculated and documented by the
25            responsible person associated with the project;
26            and

 

 

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1        (4) a heat pump water heater ready. Systems using gas
2    or propane service water heaters to serve individual
3    dwelling units shall include the following:
4            (A) a dedicated 240 volt branch circuit wiring
5        shall be installed within 3 feet from the furnace and
6        accessible to the furnace with no obstructions. The
7        branch circuit conductors shall be rated at 30 amps
8        minimum. The blank cover shall be identified as "240V
9        ready";
10            (B) the main electrical service panel shall have a
11        reserved space to allow for the installation of a
12        double pole circuit breaker for a future heat pump
13        water heater installation. The reserved space shall be
14        permanently marked as "For Future 240V use"; and
15            (C) an indoor space that is at least 3 feet by 3
16        feet by 7 feet high shall be available surrounding or
17        within 3 feet of the installed water heater, except
18        where a tankless water heater is installed.
19    (c) Newly constructed commercial buildings shall meet the
20requirements of Appendix CH of the 2024 version of the
21International Energy Conservation Code.
22    (d) Beginning no later than January 1, 2028, the State
23building code must include a prescriptive requirement for
24central air conditioning systems that are being removed due to
25equipment failure or as part of a larger renovation project,
26that they must be replaced with a heat pump capable of both

 

 

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1heating and cooling in accordance with the following
2requirements:
3        (1) Requirements for residential buildings:
4            (A) If an existing central air conditioner is
5        removed from a natural gas, propane, or fuel oil
6        forced air system that is to remain in place, the
7        replacement heat pump must be sized to meet the
8        cooling load of the home with controls allowing the
9        heat pump to provide the primary heating and furnace
10        as "backup" heating.
11            (B) If an existing central air conditioner is
12        connected to a natural gas, propane, or fuel oil
13        forced air system that is to also be replaced, the
14        replacement heat pump must be sized to meet all loads
15        of the home. Exceptions may be given for replacement
16        systems that require the main electrical service panel
17        to be upgraded.
18            (C) If an existing central air conditioner and its
19        accompanying ductwork are replaced, the replacement
20        heat pump must be sized to meet all loads of the home.
21        (2) Requirements for commercial buildings: If an
22    existing rooftop packaged unit is removed, the replacement
23    unit must be a heat pump. This requirement only applies to
24    existing rooftop packaged units that are 65,000 Btu/h or
25    less. Exceptions may be given for replacement systems that
26    require the main electrical service panel to be upgraded.
 

 

 

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1    (220 ILCS 5/23-112 new)
2    Sec. 23-112. Revisions to gas service line extensions to
3comply with greenhouse gas emissions reduction requirements.
4    (a) To support the State's achievement of its greenhouse
5gas emissions requirements, and to improve public health
6outcomes, no gas company may furnish or supply gas service,
7instrumentalities, and facilities to any commercial or
8residential location that did not receive gas service or did
9not file applications for gas service on or before June 30,
102028.
11    (b) The following locations are exempt from the
12requirements of subsection (a):
13        (1) buildings that require gas systems for emergency
14    backup power; and
15        (2) buildings specifically designated for occupancy by
16    a commercial food establishment, laboratory, laundromat,
17    hospital, or crematorium.
 
18    (220 ILCS 5/23-301 new)
19    Sec. 23-301. Severability. If any provision of this
20Article or the application of this Article to any person or
21circumstance is held invalid, such invalidity does not affect
22other provisions or applications of the Article that can be
23given effect without the invalid provision or application, and
24to this end the provisions of this Article are declared to be

 

 

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1severable.
 
2    (220 ILCS 5/Art. XXIV heading new)
3
ARTICLE XXIV. 2050 HEAT DECARBONIZATION STANDARD

 
4    (220 ILCS 5/24-101 new)
5    Sec. 24-101. Legislative policy. To provide the highest
6quality of life for the residents of this State and to provide
7for a clean and healthy environment, it is the policy of this
8State that natural gas utilities, otherwise referred to as
9"obligated parties", shall transition to 100% zero emissions
10by 2050. Under the heat decarbonization standard, each gas
11utility has an annual obligation, beginning in 2030, to reduce
12the greenhouse gas emissions resulting from the combustion of
13the fuels it delivers to its customers. The emission reduction
14obligation for 2030 shall be 20% relative to each utility's
152020 greenhouse gas emissions levels on a weather-normalized
16basis. The emission reduction obligation shall grow by 4
17percentage points per year every year thereafter, such that
18the annual emission reduction requirement will reach 24% in
192031, 28% in 2032, 32% in 2033, 36% in 2034, 40% by 2035, 44%
20by 2036, 48% by 2037, 52% by 2038, 56% by 2039, 60% by 2040,
2164% by 2041, 68% by 2042, 72% by 2043, 76% by 2044, 80% by
222045, 84% by 2046, 88% by 2047, 92% by 2048, 96% by 2049, and
23100% by 2050. This obligation shall be referred to as the "heat
24decarbonization standard". The heat decarbonization standard

 

 

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1must be met by the lowest societal cost combination of supply
2and demand-side resources. References in this Article to "this
3Act" means this Article.
 
4    (220 ILCS 5/24-102 new)
5    Sec. 24-102. Options for compliance.
6    (a) Obligated parties must demonstrate compliance with the
7heat decarbonization standard using a combination of:
8        (1) emission reductions achieved from the obligated
9    parties' own customers; and
10        (2) clean heat credits purchased from other gas
11    utilities that are also obligated parties in this State.
12    (b) Prior to 2035, at least 70% of each obligated party's
13emission reduction obligation must be met through emission
14reductions achieved from its own customers, with no more than
1530% of the emission reduction obligation in any year met
16through the purchase of clean heat credits. From 2035 through
172040, at least 80% of each obligated party's emission
18reduction requirement must be met through emission reductions
19from its own customers, with no more than 20% met through the
20purchase of clean heat credits. After 2040, at least 90% of
21each obligated party's emission reduction requirement must be
22met through emission reductions achieved from its own
23customers, with no more than 10% met through the purchase of
24clean heat credits.
 

 

 

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1    (220 ILCS 5/24-103 new)
2    Sec. 24-103. Measures for customer emission reduction.
3Emissions must be achieved through improvements in customers'
4energy conservation practices, improvements in customers'
5end-use efficiency, full or partial electrification of any end
6use, or switching from fossil methane to lower-emitting liquid
7or gaseous fuels that are delivered by the obligated party and
8directly consumed by end-use customers at the customers' homes
9or businesses. Lower-emitting liquid or gaseous fuels may
10include biomethane, but lower-emitting liquid or gaseous fuels
11may not include hydrogen except for industrial applications.
12For emission reductions from lower-emitting liquid or gaseous
13fuels to be counted toward an obligated party's emission
14reduction obligation, the obligated party must both acquire
15the lower-emitting fuel, including its environmental
16attributes, and demonstrate a contractual pathway for the
17physical delivery of the fuel from the point of injection into
18a pipeline to the obligated party's delivery system. Gas
19utilities may not use reductions in emissions from sources
20unrelated to combustion of fossil gas at customers' homes and
21businesses in this State as emissions offsets or alternatives
22to reductions in the customers' own emissions.
23    Obligated parties must meet the heat decarbonization
24standard with the lowest societal cost combination of
25resources, where societal cost includes infrastructure costs,
26utility return on capital, the social cost of greenhouse gas

 

 

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1emissions and leakage, and the cost of health impacts
2attributable to pollution from a given measure.
 
3    (220 ILCS 5/24-104 new)
4    Sec. 24-104. Demonstrating customer emission reductions.
5    (a) Each obligated party's emissions in each year shall be
6calculated as:
7        (1) a weather-normalized estimate of emissions from
8    the actual amount of fossil methane consumed by its
9    customers in the year, plus;
10        (2) a weather-normalized estimate of emissions from
11    the leakage of methane, hydrogen, or other greenhouse
12    gases from front or behind-the-meter sources in a given
13    year, plus;
14        (3) a weather-normalized estimate of the magnitude of
15    remaining emissions resulting from switching from fossil
16    methane to lower-emitting liquid or gaseous fuels that are
17    delivered by the obligated party and directly consumed by
18    customers at the customers' homes or businesses in the
19    year. The magnitude of remaining emissions resulting from
20    switching from fossil methane to lower-emitting liquid or
21    gaseous fuels shall be calculated as (i) the magnitude of
22    emissions that would have occurred had fossil methane
23    continued to be consumed, multiplied by (ii) one minus the
24    percent reduction in life cycle emissions resulting from
25    the fuel substitution. Life cycle emission calculations

 

 

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1    shall account for emissions associated with the entire
2    pathway of a fuel, including extraction, production,
3    transportation, distribution, and combustion of the fuel
4    by the consumer.
5    (b) Obligated parties shall calculate these figures
6annually, and electronically submit the figures in an easily
7accessible digital format, such as .PDF, .DOCX, or XLSX, to
8the Environmental Protection Agency, the Commission, the
9Governor, and the General Assembly.
10    (c) The Environmental Protection Agency shall post these
11figures for each utility on a website readily accessible to
12the public, within 30 days of obligated parties submitting the
13figures to the Agency, and shall maintain all previous years'
14records for similar public access.
15    (d) The Environmental Protection Agency shall also assess
16the emissions figures submitted by obligated parties to assess
17those parties' compliance or lack thereof with the heat
18decarbonization standard. If an obligated party does not
19comply, the obligated party shall be subject to enforcement
20mechanisms described in Section 24-108.
 
21    (220 ILCS 5/24-105 new)
22    Sec. 24-105. Tradable clean heat credits. A tradable clean
23heat credit is a tradable, intangible commodity that
24represents an amount of greenhouse gas reduction, measured in
25tons of CO2, achieved by a gas utility from its customers in

 

 

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1this State. An obligated party must achieve excess emission
2reductions, over and above its annual obligation, to sell
3tradable clean heat credits to another obligated party. The
4number of tradable clean heat credits sold by an obligated
5party in any year may not exceed the magnitude of the obligated
6party's excess emission reductions in that year.
 
7    (220 ILCS 5/24-106 new)
8    Sec. 24-106. Banking of emission reductions. An obligated
9party that achieves emission reductions in a given year that
10are in excess of its emission reduction obligation in that
11year may, in lieu of selling them to another obligated party,
12bank them. Emission reductions that are banked in a given year
13may be used to comply with emission reduction obligations in
14any of the following 3 years. Excess emission reductions may
15not be banked for more than 3 years or used as part of an
16obligated party's annual compliance more than 3 years after
17they were generated. No obligated party may achieve more than
1820% of any annual emission reduction obligation using banked
19emission reductions.
 
20    (220 ILCS 5/24-107 new)
21    Sec. 24-107. Equity in emission reductions.
22    (a) As used in this Section:
23    "Equity investment eligible communities" has the meaning
24given to that term in the Energy Transition Act.

 

 

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1    "Income-qualified households" means those households whose
2annual incomes are at or below 80% of the area median income.
3    (b) Each obligated party must achieve real emission
4reductions from income-qualified households and environmental
5justice communities that are at least 5 percentage points
6greater than a proportional percentage of the annual gas
7consumption of such customers multiplied by each obligated
8party's annual emissions reduction requirements. At least half
9of the emission reductions from equity investment eligible
10communities shall be from measures that require capital
11investments in homes, have expected lives of at least 10
12years, and are estimated to lower annual energy bills.
13Emission reductions in equity investment eligible communities
14shall include codelivery and coordinated implementation of all
15relevant programs, measures, and complementary services. This
16includes, but is not limited to, pairing high efficiency
17electrification measures and programs with energy efficiency,
18building envelope improvements, the Illinois Solar for All
19Program, energy assistance, health and safety improvements,
20and federal incentives targeted to disadvantaged communities.
21Emission reductions from income-qualified and environmental
22justice communities, including efforts to codeliver and
23coordinate other programs and services, shall be reported on
24at least annually to the Commission. Tradable clean heat
25credits cannot be used to fulfill this requirement.
 

 

 

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1    (220 ILCS 5/24-108 new)
2    Sec. 24-108. Enforcement.
3    (a) The Commission shall order an obligated party that
4fails to achieve its emission reduction obligation in a given
5year, including required amounts from income-qualified
6customers and front-line communities, to make a noncompliance
7payment. The noncompliance payment shall be equal to 3 times
8the estimated cost per unit of emission reduction incurred by
9all obligated parties in the State for the emission reductions
10the obligated parties achieved in the prior year.
11    (b) The Commission may waive the noncompliance payment if:
12        (1) it finds that the obligated party made a good
13    faith effort to achieve the required amount of emission
14    reduction and its failure to achieve the required
15    reduction resulted from market factors beyond its control,
16    that could not have reasonably been anticipated, and for
17    which the obligated party could not have planned; and
18        (2) it directs the obligated party to add the
19    difference between its obligated level of emission
20    reduction and actual emission reduction achieved to its
21    required emission reduction amount in subsequent years,
22    with the shortfall being made up in no more than 3 years.
23    (c) Payments received pursuant to the noncompliance
24penalty shall be directed to the Commission.
25    (d) The Commission shall use any noncompliance payments to
26contract with an independent third party to achieve emission

 

 

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1reductions in the service territory of the noncomplying
2utility. The Commission shall prioritize achieving such
3reductions from weatherization or electrification of
4income-qualified households, to the extent that such
5reductions would lower annual energy bills.
 
6    (220 ILCS 5/24-109 new)
7    Sec. 24-109. 2050 Heat Decarbonization Pathways Study.
8    (a) In order to ensure sufficient planning for achieving
9this goal, the Commission shall complete a 2050 Heat
10Decarbonization Pathways Study by June 1, 2026, to examine
11feasible and practical pathways for investor-owned natural gas
12utilities to achieve the State's decarbonization requirement
13to be net zero by 2050, and the impacts of decarbonization on
14customers and the electric and natural gas utilities that
15serve the customers.
16    (b) The Commission shall host the study in collaboration
17with a technical working group whose members are appointed by
18the Governor and a consultant selected by the technical
19working group. The Commission and technical working group
20shall host a public process for stakeholder input regarding
21(i) the proposed scope of the study, (ii) initial draft
22assumptions for the study, (iii) draft study results, and (iv)
23the draft study report. The technical working group shall
24consist of the following members:
25        (1) one representative of natural gas utilities;

 

 

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1        (2) one representative of electric utilities;
2        (3) the chair of the Commission, or the chair's
3    designee;
4        (4) one representative of the Office of
5    Decarbonization Planning within the Illinois Commerce
6    Commission;
7        (5) one representative of the Environmental Protection
8    Agency;
9        (6) one representative of an environmental advocacy
10    group;
11        (7) one representative of a labor organization;
12        (8) one representative of commercial and industrial
13    gas customers;
14        (9) one representative of an organization that
15    represents residential ratepayer advocates;
16        (10) one representative of a group that represents
17    environmental justice or front-line communities;
18        (11) one representative of a group that represents
19    low-income residents;
20        (12) one representative of an organization that
21    focuses on access to and promotion of energy efficiency;
22    and
23        (13) one climate scientist from a national laboratory
24    or institution of higher education in the State.
25    (c) The 2050 Heat Decarbonization Pathways Study shall
26consider:

 

 

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1        (1) future clean heating strategies for residential,
2    commercial, and industrial customers, including
3    electrification, geothermal heat and thermal networks, and
4    energy efficiency that would comply with each gas
5    utility's obligation under the heat decarbonization
6    standard;
7        (2) a comparative assessment of the marginal
8    greenhouse gas abatement cost curve of resources and
9    technologies, including electrification, that are
10    available for helping the utility meet its heat
11    decarbonization standard requirements;
12        (3) how a reduction in natural gas and other
13    utility-delivered gaseous fuels throughput will impact
14    customer gas and electric rates, considering various price
15    scenarios for electricity, natural gas, and other gaseous
16    fuels and reference medium and high electrification
17    scenarios;
18        (4) strategies to ensure equitable prioritization of
19    decarbonization measures and programs in income-qualified
20    and environmental justice communities while minimizing
21    energy transition costs on ratepayers, with an emphasis on
22    an accessible and affordable transition for low-income
23    residents, fixed-income residents, and residents within
24    equity investment eligible communities;
25        (5) an assessment of demand-side resource potential,
26    including load management, energy efficiency,

 

 

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1    conservation, demand response, and fuel switching,
2    including electrification, available federal, State,
3    county, local, and private incentives, or financing
4    options related to building electrification and
5    efficiency;
6        (6) that the federal incentives analysis must include
7    ways that investor-owned utilities can leverage rebates
8    and tax incentives in the Inflation Reduction Act and
9    Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act; in addition, the
10    assessment must include ways for the investor-owned
11    utilities to maximize low-income qualified households'
12    participation in the electrification incentive programs;
13        (7) the impacts of building and vehicle
14    electrification on the electric grid and strategies to
15    integrate gas and electric system planning and resource
16    optimization;
17        (8) specific natural gas end uses that may be suitable
18    for the use of alternative fuels, such as biomethane and
19    green hydrogen, and an assessment of the natural gas end
20    uses' commercial availability, social cost, and life cycle
21    emissions;
22        (9) a comparative evaluation of the cost of natural
23    gas purchasing strategies, storage options, delivery
24    resources, and improvements in demand-side resources using
25    a consistent method to calculate cost-effectiveness; and
26        (10) an evaluation of employment metrics associated

 

 

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1    with each alternative, including a projection of gas
2    distribution jobs affected by a given alternative and jobs
3    made available through the alternative, a description of
4    opportunities to transition any affected gas distribution
5    jobs to the alternative, and an explanation of how
6    employment impacts associated with each alternative could
7    affect equity investment eligible communities. Given its
8    findings, the study will create a Just Transition Plan,
9    inclusive of funding needs, for the current gas workforce.
10    (d) The Chair of the Commission, or the Chair's designee,
11will also serve as the Chair of the Technical Working Group.
 
12    (220 ILCS 5/24-110 new)
13    Sec. 24-110. Gas infrastructure planning.
14    (a) This Article creates the Office of Decarbonization
15Planning within the Commission to manage an iterative
16statewide heat decarbonization plan located within the
17Commission. On a timeline concurrent with the 2050 Heat
18Decarbonization Pathways Study, the Office of Decarbonization
19Planning shall adopt rules for implementing the heat
20decarbonization plans.
21    (b) As used in this Section:
22    "Environmental justice communities" has the meaning given
23to that term in the Illinois Power Agency Act.
24    "Lowest reasonable cost" means the least-cost, least-risk
25mix of demand-side, supply-side, and electrification resources

 

 

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1determined through a detailed and consistent analysis of a
2wide range of commercially available sources. At a minimum,
3this analysis must consider resource costs, resource
4availability, market-volatility risks, the risks imposed on
5ratepayers, resource effect on system operations, public
6policies regarding resource preferences, the cost of risks
7associated with environmental effects, including emissions of
8carbon dioxide, the ability to scale to meet 2050 goals, air
9pollution and resulting public health impacts, equity impacts,
10and the need for security of supply.
11    "Planned project" means any programmatic expense or
12related group of programmatic expenses with a defined scope of
13work and associated cost estimate that exceeds $1,000,000 in
142020 dollars or $500,000 in 2020 dollars for gas utilities
15with less than 50,000 full service customers, as adjusted
16annually for inflation.
17    "Resources" means both demand-side and supply-side
18resources, including, but not limited to, natural gas,
19biomethane, green hydrogen for industrial application,
20conservation, energy efficiency, demand response, and
21electrification.
22    (c) Each natural gas utility regulated by the Commission
23has the responsibility to meet system demand and public policy
24requirements, including the State's heat decarbonization
25standard, with the lowest reasonable cost and most feasible
26mix of resources. In furtherance of that responsibility, each

 

 

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1natural gas utility must develop a gas infrastructure plan for
2meeting the utility's heat decarbonization standard, including
35-year interim milestones from 2025 until 2050. The gas
4infrastructure plan must take into account the findings of the
52050 Heat Decarbonization Pathways Study.
6    (d) Natural gas utilities shall file biennial gas
7infrastructure plans that create alignment between gas utility
8distribution system investments and the utility's heat
9decarbonization standard obligations at lowest reasonable cost
10and that consider nonpipeline infrastructure projects that
11minimize costs over the long term.
12    (e) Before the filing of each biennial gas infrastructure
13plan, the Office of Decarbonization Planning shall contract
14for gas demand forecasts for each regulated gas utility in the
15State from an independent party. Gas utilities must reasonably
16provide accurate and timely system data to the independent
17contractor selected to conduct the forecasts. For each
18regulated gas utility in the State, the third party must
19produce forecasts for each customer class that consider slow,
20medium, and rapid acceleration of residential, commercial, and
21industrial electrification of the end uses that rely upon the
22direct combustion of natural gas in buildings. The forecasts
23must include, to the extent possible, the effects of updated
24State and local building codes, changes to the number of gas
25utility customers, consumer responses to building
26electrification programs or incentives offered within a gas

 

 

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1utility's service territory, the price elasticity of gas
2demand if rates increase due to reduced gas throughput and the
3impacts of commodity prices, and any other criteria as
4stipulated by the Commission. The forecasts shall be due to
5the Commission and the gas utilities at least 8 months prior to
6the filing of a gas infrastructure plan.
7    (f) A gas infrastructure plan must:
8        (1) cover the 20 years immediately following the
9    approval of the plan with a 5-year action plan of
10    investments;
11        (2) provide the estimated total cost and annual
12    incremental revenue requirements of the proposed action
13    plan, assuming both conventional depreciation and
14    accelerated depreciation, as applicable;
15        (3) use the various gas demand forecasts provided to
16    it under this article and include a range of possible
17    future scenarios and input sensitivities for the purpose
18    of testing the robustness of the utility's portfolio of
19    planned projects under various parameters;
20        (4) take into account the findings of the 2050 Heat
21    Decarbonization Pathways Study;
22        (5) demonstrate that the utility's infrastructure
23    investment plans align with obligations under the heat
24    decarbonization standard;
25        (6) include a list of all proposed system expenditures
26    and investments, including an analysis of infrastructure

 

 

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1    needs and detailed information on all planned projects
2    within the action plan;
3        (7) include the results of nonpipeline alternative
4    analyses conducted for all planned projects not necessary
5    to mitigate a near-term safety or reliability risk subject
6    to rules by the Commission that include, but are not
7    limited to:
8            (A) a consideration of both supply and demand-side
9        alternatives to traditional capital investments,
10        including gas demand response and electrification; and
11            (B) a cost-benefit analysis of the various options
12        that consider non-energy benefits and the societal
13        value, including health benefits, of reduced carbon
14        emissions and surface-level pollutants, particularly
15        in equity investment eligible communities;
16        (8) minimize rate impacts on customers, particularly
17    low-income households and households within equity
18    investment eligible communities;
19        (9) describe the methodology, criteria, and
20    assumptions used to develop the plan;
21        (10) include one or more system maps indicating
22    locations of individual planned projects, pressure
23    districts served by the individual project, locations of
24    equity investment eligible communities, and any other
25    information as required by the Commission;
26        (11) provide a summary of stakeholder participation

 

 

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1    and input from a public stakeholder process, and an
2    explanation of how input was incorporated into the plan,
3    including for all projects located within equity
4    investment eligible communities, a description of its
5    outreach to members of that community and findings from
6    those efforts; and
7        (12) requires the utility, to the extent that the
8    utility assumes the use of alternative fuels, such as
9    biomethane or green hydrogen, to meet its obligations
10    under the heat decarbonization standard, to demonstrate a
11    plan to procure firm supply and cost-effectiveness as
12    compared to nonfuel alternatives, inclusive of the costs
13    to retrofit all public and private infrastructure to
14    accommodate the fuels; green hydrogen may only be used for
15    industrial applications; hydrogen blending with methane
16    shall not be part of decarbonization plans.
17    (g) Not later than 12 months before the due date of a plan,
18the utility must provide a work plan for the Commission to
19review. The work plan must outline the content of the resource
20plan to be developed by the utility, the method for assessing
21potential resources, and the timing and extent of public
22participation. In addition, the Commission will hear comments
23on the plan at a minimum of 3 public hearings, held at times
24and locations accessible and convenient to most people,
25including at least one in an equity investment eligible
26community, which are scheduled after the utility submits its

 

 

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1plan for Commission review.
2    (h) No later than July 1, 2027, gas utilities in this State
3must file the first gas infrastructure plan application for
4approval. The Commission may approve, deny, or require
5modifications to the plan. Once approved, the plan must be
6incorporated into the utility's next general rate case using
7the approved ratemaking treatments. Deviations based on
8unforeseen circumstances must be justified and approved by the
9Commission.
10    (i) The Commission shall adopt new rules, amend existing
11rules, as necessary, and dedicate sufficient resources to
12implement this Section.
 
13    (220 ILCS 5/24-111 new)
14    Sec. 24-111. Study on gas utility financial incentive
15reform.
16    (a) The General Assembly finds that:
17        (1) Improving the alignment of gas utility customer
18    interests, State policy, and company interests is critical
19    to ensuring the expected decline in the use of natural gas
20    is done efficiently, safely, cost-effectively, and
21    transparently.
22        (2) There is urgency around addressing increasing
23    threats from climate change and assisting communities that
24    have borne disproportionate impacts from climate change,
25    including air pollution, greenhouse gas emissions, and

 

 

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1    energy burdens. Addressing this problem requires changes
2    to the energy used to power homes and businesses, and
3    changes to the gas utility business model under which
4    utilities in the State have traditionally functioned.
5        (3) Gas utility ratepayers may face upwardly spiraling
6    bills if steps are not taken to contain costs and
7    strategically prune parts of the gas distribution network.
8        (4) There is a need to encourage gas utilities to
9    innovate and find new lines of business to maintain
10    financial health as their main business, the provision of
11    fossil natural gas, winds down.
12        (5) The current regulatory framework has encouraged
13    infrastructure programs that have been plagued by
14    excessive cost overruns and delays.
15        (6) Discussions of performance incentive mechanisms
16    must always take into account the affordability of
17    customer rates and bills via stakeholder input.
18    The General Assembly, therefore, directs the Commission to
19reform the gas utility financial incentives structure to
20further specified goals and objectives related to the
21provision of clean, affordable heat and the advancement of an
22equitable distribution of benefits and reduction in harms in
23equity investment eligible communities and economically
24disadvantaged communities.
25    (b) The Commission shall open an investigation to consider
26performance-based ratemaking tools and other financial

 

 

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1mechanisms to advance the goals of affordability, equity,
2pollution reduction, energy system flexibility and
3electrification, reliability, safety, customer experience,
4cost-effectiveness, and the financial health of gas utilities
5as the gas utilities scale down their core business of
6delivering fuel-based energy through the distribution network.
7The investigation shall consider the following mechanisms, in
8addition to any others that the Commission or stakeholders
9deem necessary:
10        (1) accelerated and shortened depreciation schedules;
11        (2) performance metrics and benchmarking;
12        (3) revenue decoupling;
13        (4) cost-recovery options for nonpipeline
14    alternatives;
15        (5) electrification;
16        (6) networked geothermal systems;
17        (7) securitization;
18        (8) fuel-cost sharing;
19        (9) multiyear rate plans;
20        (10) performance incentive mechanisms;
21        (11) the equalization of capital and operational
22    expenditures;
23        (12) return on equity levels for different investment
24    types;
25        (13) rate designs at the electric and gas nexus;
26        (14) low-income rates;

 

 

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1        (15) luxury gas rates; and
2        (16) intersectoral cost recovery.
3    (c) The Commission must create a framework to evaluate
4each mechanism on its own and as part of a set of mechanisms to
5achieve the policy objectives determined by the General
6Assembly, stakeholders, and the general public after a minimum
7of 3 public hearings held at times and locations accessible
8and convenient to most people, including at least one in an
9equity investment eligible community.
10    (d) The investigation shall consist of a series of
11workshops facilitated by an independent consultant that
12encourages representation from diverse stakeholders, ensures
13equitable opportunities for participation, and does not
14require formal intervention or representation by an attorney.
15    (e) Any recommendations at the conclusion of the process
16must be shared with the General Assembly, and those
17recommendations already within the Commission's existing
18authorities must be adopted in the next applicable general
19rate case or relevant filing.
 
20    (220 ILCS 5/24-112 new)
21    Sec. 24-112. Reporting requirements.
22    (a) Each gas utility in the State must report data to the
23Commission in January and July of each year that satisfy
24metrics that are set by the Commission to assess, on a system,
25segment, and neighborhood basis, the level of system safety

 

 

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1and risk. The metrics must include, but are not limited to, the
2following:
3        (1) the overall average leak rate of replaced and
4    to-be-replaced mains and leak-prone pipes;
5        (2) the overall average leak rate using only
6    leak-prone pipe and current leaks;
7        (3) the neighborhood average leak rate using only
8    remaining leak-prone pipes and current leaks; and
9        (4) the neighborhood historic average leak rate using
10    leaks on leak-prone pipes for the past 2 years, on a
11    rolling basis, normalized for weather, and incorporating
12    all class 2 leaks except third-party damage.
13    (b) Gas utilities must include in the report an assessment
14of whether the actions taken in the prior 3 years produced the
15best value, in terms of risk reduction, for the amounts
16expended and a prediction of how planned projects will change
17risk levels on a neighborhood, segment, and system basis. The
18report filed by Peoples Gas Light and Coke Company must also
19include updates on steps taken to implement the
20recommendations of the Final Report on Phase One of an
21Investigation of Peoples Gas Light and Coke Company's AMRP.
22The Commission may require any other gas utility to adopt new
23and revised practices and processes by Peoples Gas Light and
24Coke Company to ensure consistency across utilities.
25    (c) In its review of the data and metrics provided, the
26Commission may order adjustments in infrastructure replacement

 

 

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1plans as it deems necessary to meet an acceptable level of risk
2at appropriate cost.
 
3    (220 ILCS 5/Art. XXV heading new)
4
ARTICLE XXV. STATE NAVIGATOR PROGRAM LAW

 
5    (220 ILCS 5/25-101 new)
6    Sec. 25-101. Short title. This Article may be cited as the
7State Navigator Program Law. References in this Article to
8"this Act" mean this Article.
 
9    (220 ILCS 5/25-102 new)
10    Sec. 25-102. Intent. The General Assembly finds that
11improving the energy efficiency of, and reducing the
12greenhouse gases from, residential buildings are critical to
13meeting the State's adopted climate goals in Public Act
14102-662.
15    The General Assembly recognizes that making information
16about energy efficiency and weatherization programs,
17electrification services, skilled contractors, and federal and
18State electrification incentives available to State residents
19will assist obligated parties to comply with the Clean Heat
20Standard set out in Article XXIII. Further, the General
21Assembly recognizes that establishing a comprehensive
22statewide navigator program is essential to ensuring equitable
23access to electrification and energy efficient services. This

 

 

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1program requires the Administrator to help State residents
2combine local, State, federal, and utility services related to
3electrification, energy efficiency, and the reduction of
4energy burdens to maximize electrification and energy
5efficiency in this State, and fill gaps as needed.
 
6    (220 ILCS 5/25-103 new)
7    Sec. 25-103. Definitions. As used in this Article:
8    "Administrator" means an entity, including, but not
9limited to, a nonprofit corporation or community-based
10organization. "Administrator" does not include an energy
11utility.
12    "Customers" means residents, businesses, and building
13owners.
14    "Department" means the Department of Commerce and Economic
15Opportunity.
16    "Electrification services" includes energy audits,
17assistance converting to on-site renewable energy, installing
18electric heat pumps and heat pump water heaters, electric
19appliance replacement, assistance with paperwork, arranging
20for financing, energy efficiency, weatherization, health and
21safety, and any related services and work.
22    "Equity investment eligible communities" has the meaning
23given to that term in Section 5-5 of the Energy Transition Act.
24    "Income-qualified households" means those whose annual
25incomes are at or below 80% of area median income.

 

 

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1    "Navigator Working Group" means representatives appointed
2by the Department who represent members from either the
3electrician trades, construction industry, community
4organizations that work in energy burdened communities,
5community organizations who have experience with
6weatherization programs, members from equity investment
7eligible communities or the Illinois Commerce Commission or
8staff, and electric utilities and obligated parties as
9indicated in Article XXIII.
 
10    (220 ILCS 5/25-104 new)
11    Sec. 25-104. Creation of State navigator program.
12    (a) The Department may establish and oversee a statewide
13building energy upgrade navigator program. The purpose of the
14navigator program is to provide a statewide resource to assist
15building owners and building renters with accessing
16electrification services and energy efficiency services and
17programs, funding, and any other assistance that will result
18in aiding obligated parties' compliance with the Clean Heat
19Standard in Article XXIII. This includes, but is not limited
20to, utility programs, the weatherization assistance program,
21federal funding, rebates, health and safety funding, and other
22State and local funding.
23    (b) The Department must coordinate and collaborate with
24the navigator working group on the design, administration, and
25implementation of the navigator program.

 

 

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1    (c) The Department must ensure that all State residents
2have equitable access to the navigator program.
3    (d) The Department may consult with other programs,
4entities, and stakeholders as the Department determines to be
5appropriate on the design, administration, and implementation
6of the navigator program.
7    (e) Third-Party Administrator.
8        (1) The Department may contract out this program to
9    the Administrator. Subject to the following requirements:
10            (A) The Administrator must be selected through a
11        competitive process.
12            (B) The Administrator must have experience with
13        running statewide programs related to energy
14        efficiency, electrification services, or
15        weatherization programs.
16            (C) The Administrator must have experience working
17        with multifamily building owners and renters.
18            (D) The Administrator must have experience
19        assisting people with low incomes or energy burdened
20        households.
21            (E) The Administrator must have experience running
22        programs in both urban and rural parts of the State,
23        including covering a range of geographic and community
24        diversity.
25        (2) If the Department decides to hire an
26    Administrator, they must enter into a contract within a

 

 

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1    year of the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
2    104th General Assembly.
3        (3) If the Department decides to hire an
4    Administrator, the contract expires after 4 years. After 4
5    years, the Department can renew the contract or select a
6    different Administrator. If the Administrator is not
7    meeting the requirements of the program and its
8    participants, the contract may be terminated early, and a
9    new Administrator may be hired.
10        (4) The Administrator shall have the same
11    responsibilities as the Department in creating,
12    overseeing, and implementing the programs in the navigator
13    program.
14    (f) The Department or Administrator of the navigator
15program must:
16        (1) provide outreach and deliver energy services to:
17            (A) owner occupied and rental residences; and
18            (B) single-family and multifamily dwellings;
19        (2) provide coverage for all geographic regions in the
20    State;
21        (3) support energy efficient and emissions reductions
22    alternatives for all types of fuel used in buildings; the
23    Department or Administrator shall ensure funding is used
24    for projects that include electrification and energy
25    efficiency work, and any related health and safety,
26    renewable energy, and whole building needs; funding shall

 

 

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1    not be used for the installation of new natural gas or
2    other fossil fuel equipment;
3        (4) create strategies to ensure that the navigator
4    program prioritizes services in equity investment eligible
5    communities, one of which must include dedicating at least
6    40% of the total funding for the navigator program to
7    deploy electrification services, energy efficiency
8    measures, renewable energy, health and safety upgrades,
9    and related upgrades in equity investment eligible
10    communities, through;
11            (A) weatherization services, including air sealing
12        and insulation;
13            (B) health and safety improvements;
14            (C) purchase and installation of efficient
15        electric equipment;
16            (D) energy efficiency improvements, as needed;
17            (E) health and safety improvements that aid in
18        energy conservation;
19            (F) weatherization services;
20            (G) solar, storage, and renewable energy, as
21        needed; and
22            (G) workforce development programs;
23        (5) create a strategy for how the navigator program
24    will equitably assist residents in accessing rebates and
25    incentives in the federal Inflation Reduction Act;
26        (6) create a strategy for how the navigator program

 

 

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1    will assist customers in accessing State funding
2    opportunities available to access electrification
3    services;
4        (7) create a strategy to stack funding from all
5    available incentives and tax rebates together with the
6    goal of creating a 'one-stop shop' for all weatherization,
7    energy efficiency and electrification services;
8        (8) support the integrated implementation of all
9    relevant clean building programs funded in the State
10    budget, including, but not limited to:
11            (A) the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program;
12        and
13            (B) the Illinois Home Weatherization Assistance
14        Program; and
15        (9) maintain a recommended contractor list.
 
16    (220 ILCS 5/25-105 new)
17    Sec. 25-105. Education materials and outreach. The
18Department or Administrator shall:
19        (1) create educational materials, which must include
20    information about all relevant funds and financial
21    assistance available from federal, State, local, and
22    energy utility programs, including, but not limited to,
23    incentives, rebates, tax credits, grants, and loan
24    programs;
25        (2) contract with one or more community-based

 

 

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1    organizations that demonstrate past success in working
2    with equity investment eligible communities in order to
3    create and distribute educational materials specifically
4    targeted at equity investment eligible communities;
5        (3) support and connect community-based organizations
6    in their region to training programs in areas of
7    electrification, energy efficiency, building envelope, and
8    installation technical assistance, and other relevant
9    areas; and
10        (4) ensure the education and outreach work is
11    coordinated with other State energy efficiency,
12    weatherization, electrification, and related programs and
13    providers.
 
14    (220 ILCS 5/25-106 new)
15    Sec. 25-106. Delivered services for equity investment
16eligible communities.
17    (a) The Department or Administrator must implement the
18navigator program for income-qualified households, which must
19include support navigating to existing programs or directly
20providing and filling gaps related to:
21        (1) energy audits to provide recommendations to
22    customers on a wide range of cost-effective energy and
23    health improvements;
24        (2) weatherization and energy efficiency services,
25    including, but not limited to,     adding insulation, sealing

 

 

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1    cracks, and making other changes that reduce heat loss,
2    save money on heating bills, and improve the health and
3    safety of buildings;
4        (3) appliance upgrades;
5        (4) electrification services, including installation
6    of air-sourced heat pumps, heat pump hot water heaters,
7    cooling, and electric panel upgrades and wiring;
8        (5) accessing qualified energy contractors; and
9        (6) securing financing.
10    (b) Nothing in this Section shall preclude the
11implementation of measures that, in addition to producing
12energy savings, increase electric load by adding building
13cooling systems where none existed before.
 
14    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
15becoming law.

 

 

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1 INDEX
2 Statutes amended in order of appearance
3    20 ILCS 730/5-25
4    220 ILCS 5/1-102from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 1-102
5    220 ILCS 5/1-103 new
6    220 ILCS 5/3-128 new
7    220 ILCS 5/8-101from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 8-101
8    220 ILCS 5/8-104B new
9    220 ILCS 5/9-228.5 new
10    220 ILCS 5/9-229
11    220 ILCS 5/9-235 new
12    220 ILCS 5/9-241from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 9-241
13    220 ILCS 5/9-254 new
14    220 ILCS 5/9-255 new
15    220 ILCS 5/16-111.10
16    220 ILCS 5/Art. XXIII
17    heading new
18    220 ILCS 5/23-101 new
19    220 ILCS 5/23-102 new
20    220 ILCS 5/23-103 new
21    220 ILCS 5/23-104 new
22    220 ILCS 5/23-105 new
23    220 ILCS 5/23-106 new
24    220 ILCS 5/23-107 new
25    220 ILCS 5/23-108 new

 

 

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1    220 ILCS 5/23-109 new
2    220 ILCS 5/23-111 new
3    220 ILCS 5/23-112 new
4    220 ILCS 5/23-301 new
5    220 ILCS 5/Art. XXIV
6    heading new
7    220 ILCS 5/24-101 new
8    220 ILCS 5/24-102 new
9    220 ILCS 5/24-103 new
10    220 ILCS 5/24-104 new
11    220 ILCS 5/24-105 new
12    220 ILCS 5/24-106 new
13    220 ILCS 5/24-107 new
14    220 ILCS 5/24-108 new
15    220 ILCS 5/24-109 new
16    220 ILCS 5/24-110 new
17    220 ILCS 5/24-111 new
18    220 ILCS 5/24-112 new
19    220 ILCS 5/Art. XXV
20    heading new
21    220 ILCS 5/25-101 new
22    220 ILCS 5/25-102 new
23    220 ILCS 5/25-103 new
24    220 ILCS 5/25-104 new
25    220 ILCS 5/25-105 new
26    220 ILCS 5/25-106 new