104TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2025 and 2026
SB1394

 

Introduced 1/29/2025, by Sen. David Koehler

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
New Act

    Creates the Household Hazardous Waste Stewardship Act. Requires manufacturers, beginning January 1, 2027, to implement a stewardship program for covered products. Details manufacturer obligations under the stewardship program, including in the context of a stewardship organization comprised of manufacturers. Requires registration by April 1, 2026, and annually, for each manufacturer who sells covered products in the State and each stewardship organization. Details the roles of retailers and collections sites. Outlines stewardship plan components. Provides requirements for the Environmental Protection Agency for stewardship plan approval. Details requirements for a stewardship organization implementing a stewardship plan, as well as other statewide collection requirements. Details reporting requirements. Requires a stewardship organization to pay to the Agency an annual fee of $200,000, split if there is more than one stewardship organization. Provides for responsibilities for the Agency. Provides for immunity from antitrust laws. Provides for rulemaking authority for the Agency. Provides for civil and criminal penalties. Allows collection of covered products by a premium collection service. Makes findings. Defines terms. Effective immediately.


LRB104 06517 BDA 16553 b

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

SB1394LRB104 06517 BDA 16553 b

1    AN ACT concerning safety.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
5Household Hazardous Waste Stewardship Act.
 
6    Section 5. Findings. The General Assembly finds that:
7    (1) It is in the best interest of the State of Illinois for
8manufacturers of products for household use that contain
9hazardous substances to assume responsibility for the
10development, financing, and implementation of a statewide
11stewardship program that conveniently serves all areas of the
12State for the collection and environmentally sound management
13of waste from those products. There are hundreds of products
14purchased by consumers that contain hazardous substances,
15including, but not limited to, aerosol products, fertilizers,
16herbicides, pesticides, fluorescent lamps, furniture stripper
17and varnish, gasoline, kerosene, used oil, antifreeze,
18electronic cigarettes, household cleaners, solvent cleaners,
19and pool or hot tub chemicals.
20    (2) Improper management and disposal of household
21hazardous waste is a threat to public health and the
22environment.
23    (3) In 1991, the need for household hazardous waste

 

 

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1collection programs throughout the State was recognized and
2the Household Hazardous Waste Collection Act was enacted.
3Since then, the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency and
4local governments have worked together to support collection
5events and develop 5 permanent household hazardous waste
6collection facilities. However, these existing services do not
7provide convenient collection services statewide, and the cost
8of these programs for the Agency and local governments exceeds
9$6,000,000 annually.
 
10    Section 10. Definitions. In this Act:
11    "Agency" means the Illinois Environmental Protection
12Agency.
13    "Agency contractor" means the company under a contractual
14agreement with the Agency to provide transportation and final
15disposition of covered products collected by collection sites.
16    "Antifreeze" means propylene glycol or ethylene glycol,
17including aggregated batches of propylene glycol or ethylene
18glycol, used as a heat transfer medium in an internal
19combustion engine; heating, ventilating, and air conditioning
20units; and electronics cooling applications; or used for
21winterizing equipment.
22    "Brand" means a name, symbols, words, or marks that
23identify a covered product and attribute the product to the
24owner of the brand as the manufacturer.
25    "Collection cost" means costs related to the collection of

 

 

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1covered products, including, but not limited to, facility
2siting costs; facility permitting costs; facility construction
3costs; facility maintenance costs; equipment costs; fork lift
4costs; truck costs; labor and benefits; costs for supplies,
5including traffic control devices, test kits for unknown
6waste, tape, plastic sheeting, and spill clean-up kits;
7building and equipment maintenance costs; event costs,
8including marketing costs; third-party contractor costs,
9including event set-up costs; environmental service fees;
10insurance fees; costs for shipping containers and materials;
11pallet costs; and personal protective equipment costs.
12    "Collection site" means a permanent facility permitted by
13the Agency to accept, manage, and store covered products or a
14location where a one-day collection event is held to collect
15covered products which are then transported offsite for proper
16management.
17    "Covered entity" means any person who presents a covered
18product to a collection site from that person's use at a
19household, with the exception of large quantity generators,
20small quantity generators, or very small quantity generators.
21    "Covered product" means any product offered for retail
22sale for household use contained in the receptacle in which
23the product is offered for retail sale, except for used oil,
24antifreeze, gasoline, and kerosene, if the product has any of
25the following characteristics:
26        (1) the physical properties of the product meet the

 

 

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1    criteria for characteristic wastes under the federal
2    Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, 42 U.S.C.
3    6901 et seq., including ignitability, corrosivity,
4    reactivity or toxicity as defined in 40 CFR 261.20 to
5    261.24;
6        (2) the physical properties of the product meet the
7    criteria for designation as a class 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 or 8
8    hazardous material, as defined in 49 CFR 173, by the
9    United States Department of Transportation under the
10    Hazardous Materials Transportation Act of 1975, 49 U.S.C.
11    5101 et seq.; or
12        (3) the product requires registration under the
13    Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act, 7
14    U.S.C. 136.
15    "Covered product" includes:
16        (1) automotive fluids, including household "do it
17    yourselfer" used oil, as defined in 35 Ill. Adm. Code
18    739.100, and antifreeze; and
19        (2) a product added by rule under Section 70 of this
20    Act.
21    "Covered product" does not include:
22        (1) a covered battery, as defined in the Portable and
23    Medium-Format Battery Stewardship Act;
24        (2) a drug, as defined in 21 U.S.C. 321(g)(1); a
25    biological product, as defined in 42 U.S.C. 262(i); a
26    device, as defined by 21 U.S.C. 3231(h)(1); or any

 

 

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1    combination of those items;
2        (3) products sold for commercial agricultural use that
3    require registration under the Federal Insecticide,
4    Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act, 7 U.S.C. 136;
5        (4) architectural paint or any other covered product,
6    as defined in the Paint Stewardship Act;
7        (5) a covered electronic device, as defined in the
8    Consumer Electronics Recycling Act;
9        (6) a vitamin or dietary supplement;
10        (7) a liquefied petroleum or other gas container,
11    cylinder or receptacle;
12        (8) a fire extinguisher;
13        (9) an oil filter;
14        (10) a smoke detector, ionizing type;
15        (11) ammunition, fireworks, explosives projectile
16    marine flares;
17        (12) potentially infectious medical waste, as defined
18    in Section 3.360 of the Illinois Environmental Protection
19    Act;
20        (13) electronic cigarettes, as defined in the
21    Prevention of Tobacco Use by Persons under 21 Years of Age
22    and Sale and Distribution of Tobacco Products Act, and
23    their apparatuses, including, but not limited to, vape
24    pods;
25        (14) an antimicrobial product that requires
26    registration under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and

 

 

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1    Rodenticide Act, 7 U.S.C. 136, and is labeled in
2    accordance with federal requirements for pesticide
3    products intended for household use only; and
4        (15) a product that is subtracted by rule under
5    Section 70 of this Act.
6    "Disposal cost" means the costs related to the final
7disposition of the collected covered products.
8    "Environmental justice community" means environmental
9justice community, as defined in the Illinois Solar for All
10Program, as that definition is updated from time to time by the
11Illinois Power Agency and the Administrator of the Illinois
12Solar for All Program.
13    "Environmentally sound management" means management
14practices implemented in a manner that is designed to protect
15public health, safety, and the environment, including, but not
16limited to:
17        (1) adequate recordkeeping;
18        (2) keeping detailed documentation of the methods used
19    to:
20            (A) manage covered products; and
21            (B) track and document the fate of covered
22        products from collection through final disposition
23        within this State and outside this State;
24        (3) performance audits and inspections;
25        (4) compliance with worker health and safety
26    requirements; and

 

 

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1        (5) maintenance of adequate environmental liability
2    insurance and financial assurances for a stewardship
3    organization and contractors working for the stewardship
4    organization.
5    "Final disposition" means the point beyond which no
6further processing takes place and the covered product has
7been either transformed for direct use as a feedstock in
8producing new products, discarded in a manner approved by the
9Agency, processed for energy recovery in permitted facilities,
10or incinerated without energy recovery in permitted
11facilities.
12    "Manufacturer" means a person who:
13        (1) manufactures or manufactured a covered product
14    under its own brand or label for sale in the State;
15        (2) sells in the State under its own brand or label a
16    covered product produced by another supplier;
17        (3) owns a brand that it licenses or licensed to
18    another person for use on a covered product sold in the
19    State;
20        (4) imports a covered product manufactured by a person
21    without a presence in the United States into the United
22    States for sale in the United States;
23        (5) manufactures a covered product for sale in the
24    State without affixing a brand name; or
25        (6) is the manufacturer of a covered product sold,
26    offered for sale, or distributed in or into this State, as

 

 

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1    defined in this Section, except if another party has
2    contractually accepted responsibility as a responsible
3    manufacturer and has joined a stewardship organization as
4    the manufacturer for that covered product.
5    "Manufacturer" does not include a person who
6manufacturers, sells, licenses, or imports less than
7$5,000,000 of covered products in or into the United States in
8a program year and provides documentation on an annual basis
9with a stewardship organization that it is not a manufacturer
10as defined by this Act.
11    "Orphan covered product" means a covered product for which
12no manufacturer can be identified.
13    "Person" has the meaning given to that term in Section
143.315 of the Environmental Protection Act.
15    "Premium collection service" means collection service
16provided at a location that is not a collection site such as
17at-home pickup service, including curbside pickup service.
18    "Program year" means a calendar year. The first program
19year is 2027.
20    "Retailer" means a person who first sells, through any
21means, including a sales outlet, catalog, the Internet, or
22electronic means, a covered product to a customer for
23residential use or any permanent establishment where
24merchandise is displayed, held, stored, or offered for sale to
25the public.
26    "Stewardship organization" means a manufacturer that

 

 

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1directly implements a stewardship program required under this
2Act, a corporation designated by a manufacturer or group of
3manufacturers to implement a stewardship program under this
4Act, or a nonprofit organization designated by a manufacturer
5or group of manufacturers to implement a stewardship program
6under this Act.
7    "Stewardship plan" means a plan developed by a
8manufacturer or a stewardship organization that is consistent
9with this Act and approved by the Agency. "Stewardship
10program" means a program implemented by a stewardship
11organization consistent with this Act and the approved
12stewardship plan.
13    "Transfer facility" has the meaning given to that term in
1435 Ill. Adm. Code 723.112.
15    "Transfer station" has the meaning given to that term in
16Section 3.500 of the Environmental Protection Act.
17    "Transportation cost" means the cost associated with
18loading and shipping covered products to a transfer station,
19transfer facility, or final disposition location.
 
20    Section 15. Requirement that manufacturers implement a
21stewardship program.
22    (a) Beginning January 1, 2027, a manufacturer selling,
23making available for sale, or distributing covered products in
24or into the State of Illinois shall participate in the
25approved stewardship plan.

 

 

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1    (b) Beginning January 1, 2027, no manufacturer shall sell
2covered products covered by this Act in or into the State who
3does not participate in a stewardship organization and
4stewardship plan.
5    (c) Beginning January 1, 2027, no manufacturer shall sell
6covered products covered by this Act unless the product is
7labeled with a brand and the original manufacturer is
8identified on the label.
 
9    Section 20. Manufacturer obligations.
10    (a) A manufacturer shall establish, fund, and implement a
11stewardship program individually or collectively as part of a
12stewardship organization. The proportion of funding by
13manufacturers shall be:
14        (1) 100% of the collection cost for all collection
15    sites in an approved stewardship program; and
16        (2) 50% of the transportation cost and disposal cost
17    for covered products and orphan covered products in
18    program year 2027, 60% in 2028, 70% in 2029, 80% in 2030
19    and thereafter manufacturers shall be responsible for 90%
20    of the transportation cost and disposal cost for covered
21    products and orphan covered products unless the Agency is
22    not appropriated funding by the State in which case
23    manufacturers shall be responsible for 100% of the
24    transportation cost and disposal cost; and
25        (3) 100% of the collection cost, transportation cost,

 

 

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1    and disposal cost for collection sites operated by the
2    stewardship organization.
3    (b) If there is more than one stewardship organization
4representing manufacturers, manufacturers shall jointly submit
5a single stewardship plan that meets the requirements of
6Section 40 and a single annual report that meets the
7requirements of Section 55.
8    (c) If there is more than one stewardship organization,
9manufacturers shall designate one stewardship organization to
10enter into mutual agreements with collection sites.
11    (d) Each stewardship organization shall equitably allocate
12stewardship program costs to manufacturers participating in
13the stewardship program. The method of cost allocation shall
14be included in the stewardship plan required under Section 40.
15    (e) A manufacturer, stewardship organization, or retailer
16shall not charge:
17        (1) a specific point-of-sale fee to a covered entity
18    to recoup the costs of the stewardship program; or
19        (2) a specific fee at the time the covered products
20    are collected from a covered entity.
21    (f) A manufacturer or stewardship organization shall not
22charge a fee to any person collecting covered products under
23this Act.
24    (g) Beginning January 1, 2027, units of local government
25and any person with a permanent collection site, an Agency
26sponsored one-day collection site, or a contractually

 

 

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1obligated one-day collection site shall be included in the
2stewardship organization's plan and stewardship program and
3shall be counted toward complying with the collection
4requirements in Section 50. A stewardship organization must
5reimburse collection sites for collection costs incurred due
6to serving as a collection site for a stewardship program. A
7stewardship organization must establish a mutual agreement
8with each collection site and provide reimbursement for
9collection costs no less frequently than every 3 months.
10    (h) A stewardship organization must reimburse the Agency's
11contractor for transportation costs and disposal costs
12incurred by the Agency's contractor for the transportation
13cost and disposal cost incurred by the collection sites. A
14stewardship organization must establish a mutual agreement
15with the Agency and provide reimbursement to the Agency's
16contractor in compliance with the Agency's contract with its
17contractor.
18    (i) A stewardship organization must accept and fund the
19collection, transportation, and disposal costs associated with
20orphan covered products.
21    (j) A stewardship organization is not responsible for
22funding the cost associated with premium collection service.
 
23    Section 25. Manufacturer registration.
24    (a) By April 1, 2026, and by April 1 of each year
25thereafter for the upcoming program year, beginning with

 

 

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1program year 2027, each manufacturer who sells covered
2products in the State must register with a stewardship
3organization by submitting to the stewardship organization a
4list of all the brands under which the manufacturer sells or
5offers for sale in the State. Each stewardship organization
6shall subsequently register with the Agency, on a form
7prescribed by the Agency, and provide a list of all the brands
8and manufacturers covered by the stewardship organization.
9    (b) By January 1, 2027, each stewardship organization
10shall post on the single, coordinated website, as required by
11Section 40, a list of all registered manufacturers and
12associated brands.
13    (c) Beginning in program year 2027, a manufacturer whose
14covered products are sold or offered for sale in this State for
15the first time on or after April 1 of the program year must
16register with a stewardship organization within 30 days after
17the date the covered products are first sold or offered for
18sale in the State. The stewardship organization must provide
19the Agency the name of the manufacturer and its brand or
20brands, in writing, within 30 days of the date the
21manufacturer registered with the stewardship organization.
22    (d) Beginning in program year 2027, no manufacturer may
23sell or offer to sell a covered product in this State unless
24the manufacturer is registered and operates a stewardship
25program either individually or as part of a stewardship
26organization.
 

 

 

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1    Section 30. Role of retailers.
2    (a) Beginning July 1, 2027, a retailer may not sell, offer
3for sale, distribute, or otherwise make available for sale a
4covered product unless the manufacturer of the covered product
5is identified as a participant in a stewardship organization
6whose stewardship plan has been approved by the Agency.
7    (b) A retailer is not in violation of the requirements of
8subsection (a) of this Section if the website made available
9under subsection (b) of Section 25 lists the manufacturer as a
10participant in a stewardship organization whose stewardship
11plan has been approved by the Agency.
12    (c) A retailer selling or offering covered products for
13sale in the State shall provide information to covered
14entities, provided by the stewardship organization, regarding
15available end-of-life management options for covered products.
16The information that a stewardship organization must make
17available to retailers for use by retailers must include, but
18is not limited to, in-store signage, written materials, and
19other promotional materials that retailers may use to inform
20customers of the available end-of-life management options for
21covered products.
 
22    Section 35. Role of collection sites.
23    (a) Collection sites must keep accurate records to
24demonstrate collection costs associated with the stewardship

 

 

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1program.
2    (b) Collection sites must provide data as required by a
3stewardship organization to comply with the requirements of
4Section 55.
 
5    Section 40. Stewardship plan components.
6    (a) By June 1, 2026, each stewardship organization must
7coordinate and submit to the Agency for approval a single
8stewardship plan for covered products. The Agency shall review
9and approve a plan based on whether it:
10        (1) lists each manufacturer and brand of covered
11    products registered with each stewardship organization,
12    including manufacturers who have contractually accepted
13    responsibility as a manufacturer in accordance with
14    paragraph (6) of the definition of "manufacturer" in this
15    Act;
16        (2) provides for free, convenient, and accessible
17    statewide access for the collection of covered products
18    from covered entities in the State;
19        (3) describes how retailers will be made aware of
20    their obligation to sell only covered products from
21    manufacturers participating in an approved stewardship
22    plan;
23        (4) describes the education and communications
24    strategy being implemented to promote participation in the
25    stewardship program by covered entities and provides the

 

 

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1    information necessary for effective participation in the
2    stewardship program, including the development of a single
3    website and providing information to retailers under
4    subsection (c) of Section 30 of this Act;
5        (5) describes the information to be provided on a
6    single website, including, but not limited to, information
7    about collection site locations, including a map showing
8    the locations of all collection sites, hours of operation,
9    contact information, and a list of acceptable covered
10    products and nonacceptable items;
11        (6) describes efforts by manufacturers to reduce the
12    environmental health and safety impacts of covered
13    products;
14        (7) provides for the environmentally sound management
15    of covered products;
16        (8) provides the name, location and permit status of
17    final disposition facilities where covered products will
18    be transported and the covered products managed by each
19    final disposition facility;
20        (9) demonstrates compliance with the collection
21    convenience standard requirements in Section 50;
22        (10) describes how data regarding the covered products
23    collected in a program year will be reported, including
24    independent data for each collection site regarding the
25    amount of covered products collected and the number of
26    covered entities that participated in the stewardship

 

 

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1    program;
2        (11) describes how a stewardship organization will
3    incorporate existing permanent collection sites and
4    one-day collection sites into the stewardship program;
5        (12) describes the method to establish and administer
6    a means for fully funding the stewardship program in a
7    manner that equitably distributes the stewardship
8    program's costs among the manufacturers that are part of
9    each stewardship organization. For manufacturers that
10    choose to meet the requirements of this Act individually,
11    without joining a stewardship organization, the plan must
12    describe the proposed method to establish and administer a
13    means for fully funding the stewardship program; and
14        (13) describes efforts that will be made to ensure
15    that areas designated as environmental justice communities
16    will have convenient access to collection sites.
17    (b) A stewardship organization must submit a new
18stewardship plan to the Agency for approval no less than every
195 years.
20    (c) A stewardship organization must provide plan
21amendments to the Agency for approval when proposing changes
22to the approved stewardship plan or when requested by the
23Agency due to deficiencies in the stewardship program being
24implemented under the stewardship plan in effect.
 
25    Section 45. Stewardship plan approval.

 

 

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1    (a) The Agency shall approve the proposed stewardship plan
2if each manufacturer participating in the stewardship plan has
3registered under Section 25 and the stewardship plan
4demonstrates compliance with the requirements of Section 40.
5    (b) Within 90 days after receiving the stewardship plan,
6the Agency shall either approve, reject, or approve with
7modification the stewardship plan in writing for each
8stewardship organization. If the Agency rejects the
9stewardship plan, it shall provide the reason for the
10rejection in the written notification to the stewardship
11organization.
12    (c) No later than 60 days after receipt of a notice of
13rejection under subsection (b) of this Section, a revised
14stewardship plan must be submitted to the Agency. Within 30
15days after receipt of the revised stewardship plan, the Agency
16shall either approve or reject the revised stewardship plan in
17writing for the stewardship organization.
18    (d) After approval, manufacturers must, either
19individually or collectively as a stewardship organization,
20initiate operation of the stewardship program outlined in the
21stewardship plan no later than January 1, 2027.
 
22    Section 50. Collection convenience standard requirements.
23    (a) A stewardship organization implementing a stewardship
24plan must provide for the collection of all covered products
25to all covered entities on a free, continuous, and statewide

 

 

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1basis. If there is more than one stewardship organization,
2those stewardship organizations may coordinate and meet the
3requirements of this Section jointly.
4    (b) For covered products, by the beginning of program year
52027, statewide collection requirements must include all
6permanent collection sites permitted to collect covered
7products as of January 1, 2027, all Agency sponsored one-day
8collection sites under which the Agency has an agreement to
9conduct one-day events, and all one-day collection sites that
10are contractually obligated by any person.
11    (c) For covered products, statewide collection
12requirements by the beginning of program year 2029 must
13include:
14        (1) at least one collection site that is a permanent
15    collection site for covered products within a 15-mile
16    radius for at least 60% of State residents; and
17        (2) at least one collection site that is a one-day
18    collection site for covered products within a 25-mile
19    radius for at least an additional 20% of State residents.
20    (d) For covered products, statewide collection
21requirements by the beginning of program year 2030 must
22include:
23        (1) at least one collection site that is a permanent
24    collection site for covered products within a 15-mile
25    radius for at least 70% of State residents; and
26        (2) at least one collection site that is a one-day

 

 

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1    collection site for covered products within a 25-mile
2    radius for at least 25% of State residents.
3    (e) Collection convenience shall be for at least the
4number of hours allowed by the site's Agency permit for a
5permanent collection site. Collection convenience for a
6one-day collection site shall be at least once per year or as
7contractually obligated and shall be at least 6 hours in
8length per collection event.
 
9    Section 55. Reporting requirements.
10    (a) By June 1, 2028, and each June 1st thereafter, each
11stewardship organization must coordinate and submit a single
12annual report to the Agency covering the preceding program
13year and post the annual report on its website. The report must
14include the following:
15        (1) an independent financial assessment of the
16    stewardship program implemented by each stewardship
17    organization, including a breakdown of the program's
18    expenses, including, but not limited to, collection cost,
19    disposal cost, transportation cost, and administrative
20    cost;
21        (2) a summary financial statement documenting the
22    financing of each stewardship organization's program and
23    an analysis of program costs and expenditures. A
24    stewardship organization implementing similar programs in
25    other states may submit a financial statement, including

 

 

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1    all other covered states, if the statement breaks out
2    financial information pertinent to Illinois;
3        (3) a breakdown of the type and manifested weight of
4    covered products collected by the stewardship program for
5    each collection site and the number of covered entities
6    who brought covered products to each collection site;
7        (4) the name and address of each collection site used
8    to collect covered products, including an up-to-date map
9    indicating the location of all collection sites;
10        (5) a breakdown of the final disposition of the
11    covered products including a list of the facilities used
12    in the disposition of the covered products that includes
13    the name and geographic location of the facilities and any
14    violations of environmental laws and regulations over the
15    previous 3 years at each facility;
16        (6) an assessment of whether the collection
17    convenience standard requirements in Section 50 have been
18    met or not;
19        (7) a description of the education and communication
20    efforts, including examples of marketing materials and
21    efforts used, including an assessment of the success of
22    the educational efforts; and
23        (8) any recommendations for changes to the stewardship
24    program.
25    (b) Proprietary information submitted to the Agency under
26this Act is exempted from disclosure as provided under

 

 

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1paragraphs (g) and (mm) of subsection (1) of Section 7 of the
2Freedom of Information Act.
3    (c) Within 30 days after Agency approval of the annual
4report, the annual report shall be posted to the program
5website required under paragraph (5) of subsection (a) of
6Section 40.
 
7    Section 60. Fee and Agency role.
8    (a) By July 1, 2026, and by July 1 of each year thereafter,
9a stewardship organization shall pay to the Agency an annual
10fee of $200,000. If there is more than one stewardship
11organization, the stewardship organizations shall equitably
12split the annual fee of $200,000. The fee shall cover the
13Agency's full costs of implementing, administering, and
14enforcing this Act. The annual fee shall be deposited into the
15Solid Waste Management Fund to be used for costs associated
16with the administration of this Act.
17    (b) The responsibilities of the Agency in implementing,
18administering and enforcing this Act include:
19        (1) reviewing submitted stewardship plans and plan
20    amendments and making determinations as to whether to
21    approve the plan or plan amendment;
22        (2) reviewing annual reports submitted under Section
23    55 within 90 days after submission to ensure compliance
24    with that Section;
25        (3) maintaining a link on its website to the single

 

 

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1    website required under paragraph (5) of subsection (a) of
2    Section 40;
3        (4) maintaining the list of registered manufacturers
4    on its website; and
5        (5) providing technical assistance to producers,
6    retailers and collection sites related to the requirements
7    of this Act.
 
8    Section 65. Antitrust immunity. The activities authorized
9by this Act require collaboration among the covered
10manufacturers and the collection sites. These activities will
11enable safe and secure collection, transportation, and
12disposal of covered products in Illinois and are, therefore,
13in the best interest of the public. The benefits of
14collaboration, together with active State supervision,
15outweigh potential adverse impacts. Therefore, the General
16Assembly intends to exempt State antitrust laws and provide
17immunity through the state action doctrine from federal
18antitrust laws, activities that are undertaken under this Act
19that might otherwise be constrained by such laws. The General
20Assembly does not intend to authorize any person or entity to
21engage in activities not provided for by this Act, and the
22General Assembly neither exempts nor provides immunity for
23such activities.
 
24    Section 70. Rulemaking authority. The Agency may adopt

 

 

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1rules to implement this Act.
 
2    Section 75. Penalties and civil actions.
3    (a) Any person who violates any provision of this Act is
4liable for a civil penalty of $7,000 per violation, except
5that failure to pay a fee under this Act shall cause the person
6who fails to pay the fee to be liable for a civil penalty that
7is double the applicable fee.
8    (b) The penalties provided in this Section may be
9recovered in a civil action brought in the name of the People
10of the State of Illinois by the State's Attorney of the county
11in which the violation occurred or by the Attorney General.
12Any penalties collected under this Section in an action in
13which the Attorney General has prevailed shall be deposited
14into the Environmental Protection Trust Fund, to be used in
15accordance with the provisions of the Environmental Protection
16Trust Fund Act.
17    (c) The Attorney General or the State's Attorney of a
18county in which a violation occurs may institute a civil
19action for an injunction, prohibitory or mandatory, to
20restrain violations of this Act or to require such actions as
21may be necessary to address violations of this Act.
22    (d) The penalties and injunctions provided in this Act are
23in addition to any penalties, injunctions, or other relief
24provided under any other State law. Nothing in this Act bars a
25cause of action by the State for any other penalty,

 

 

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1injunction, or other relief provided by any other law.
2    (e) Any person who makes a false, fictitious, or
3fraudulent material statement, orally or in writing, to the
4Agency, related to or required by this Act or any rule adopted
5under this Act commits a Class 4 felony, and each such
6statement or writing shall be considered a separate Class 4
7felony. A person who, after being convicted under this
8subsection, violates this subsection a second or subsequent
9time commits a Class 3 felony.
 
10    Section 80. Collection of covered products using premium
11collection service. Nothing in this Act shall prevent or
12prohibit a person from offering or performing a fee-based,
13household collection of covered products provided such
14person's premium collection services must be performed in
15compliance with all applicable federal, State, and local laws
16and requirements, including, but not limited to, all
17applicable U.S. Department of Transportation laws and
18regulations, and all applicable provisions of the
19Environmental Protection Act. Such person collecting covered
20products may make available to the stewardship organization
21some or all of the covered products collected using premium
22collection service at no expense. After consolidation of some
23or all of the covered products at the person's facilities, the
24transport to and processing of such covered products by the
25stewardship organization's processors of some or all of the

 

 

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1covered products shall be at the stewardship organization's
2expense. The stewardship organization may count the households
3serviced by premium collection service toward the collection
4and convenience standard requirements in Section 50 of this
5Act.
 
6    Section 97. Severability. The provisions of this Act are
7severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
 
8    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
9becoming law.