Public Act 098-0078
 
SB0072 EnrolledLRB098 02802 JDS 32810 b

    AN ACT concerning safety.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    (30 ILCS 105/5.380 rep.)
    Section 3. The State Finance Act is amended by repealing
Section 5.380.
 
    (225 ILCS 52/Act rep.)
    Section 5. The Industrial Hygienists Licensure Act is
repealed.
 
    Section 7. The Commercial and Public Building Asbestos
Abatement Act is amended by changing Section 20 as follows:
 
    (225 ILCS 207/20)
    Sec. 20. Powers and Duties of the Department.
    (a) The Department is empowered to promulgate any rules
necessary to ensure proper implementation and administration
of this Act, and compliance with the federal Asbestos School
Hazard Abatement Reauthorization Act of 1990.
    (b) Rules promulgated by the Department shall include, but
not be limited to, rules relating to the correct and safe
performance of response action services, rules for the
assessment of civil penalties for violations of this Act or
rules promulgated under it, and rules providing for the
training and licensing of persons and firms (i) to perform
asbestos inspection, (ii) to perform abatement work, and (iii)
to serve as asbestos abatement contractors, response action
contractors, and asbestos workers. The Department is empowered
to inspect activities regulated by this Act to ensure
compliance.
    Except as otherwise provided by Department rule, on and
after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 98th
General Assembly, any licensing requirement adopted pursuant
to this Section that may be satisfied by an industrial
hygienist licensed pursuant to the Industrial Hygienists
Licensure Act repealed in this amendatory Act may be satisfied
by a Certified Industrial Hygienist certified by the American
Board of Industrial Hygiene.
    (c) In carrying out its responsibilities under this Act,
the Department shall:
        (1) Publish a list of response action contractors
    licensed under this Act, except that the Department shall
    not be required to publish a list of licensed asbestos
    workers; and
        (2) Adopt rules for the collection of fees for training
    course approval and for the licensing of inspectors,
    project designers, contractors, supervisors, and workers.
    (d) The provisions of the Illinois Administrative
Procedure Act are hereby expressly adopted and shall apply to
all administrative rules and procedures of the Department of
Public Health under this Act, except that in case of conflict
between the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act and this Act
the provisions of this Act shall control, and except that
Section 5-35 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act
relating to procedures for rulemaking does not apply to the
adoption of any rule required by federal law in connection with
which the Department is precluded by law from exercising any
discretion.
    (e) All final administrative decisions of the Department
under this Act shall be subject to judicial review pursuant to
the provisions of the Administrative Review Law and the rules
adopted under it. The term "administrative decision" has the
meaning ascribed to it in Section 3-101 of the Code of Civil
Procedure.
    (f) The Director, after notice and opportunity for hearing
to the applicant or license holder, may deny, suspend, or
revoke a license or expunge such person from the State list in
any case in which he or she finds that there has been a
substantial failure to comply with the provisions of this Act
or the standards or rules established under it. Notice shall be
provided by certified mail, return receipt requested, or by
personal service setting forth the particular response for the
proposed action and fixing a date, not less than 15 days from
the date of such mailing or service, at which time the
applicant, asbestos abatement contractor, or license holder
shall be given an opportunity to request hearing.
    The hearing shall be conducted by the Director or by an
individual designated in writing by the Director as Hearing
Officer to conduct the hearing. On the basis of any such
hearing, or upon default of the asbestos abatement contractor,
applicant or license holder, the Director shall make a
determination specifying his or her findings and conclusions. A
copy of the determination shall be sent by certified mail,
return receipt requested, or served personally upon the
applicant, contractor, or license holder.
    The procedure governing hearings authorized by this
Section shall be in accordance with rules promulgated by the
Department. A full and complete record shall be kept of all
proceedings, including the notice of hearing, complaint, and
all other documents in the nature of pleadings, written motions
filed in the proceedings, and the report and orders of the
Director and Hearing Officer. All testimony shall be reported
but need not be transcribed unless the decision is sought to be
reviewed under the Administrative Review Law. A copy or copies
of the transcript may be obtained by any interested party on
payment of the cost of preparing the copy or copies. The
Director or Hearing Officer shall, upon his or her own motion
or on the written request of any party to the proceeding, issue
subpoenas requiring the attendance and the giving of testimony
by witnesses, and subpoenas duces tecum requiring the
production of books, papers, records, or memoranda. All
subpoenas and subpoenas duces tecum issued under this Act may
be served by any person of legal age. The fees of witnesses for
attendance and travel shall be the same as the fees of
witnesses before the courts of this State, such fees to be paid
when the witness is excused from further attendance. When the
witness is subpoenaed at the instance of the Director or
Hearing Officer, such fees shall be paid in the same manner as
other expenses of the Department, and when the witness is
subpoenaed at the instance of any other party to any such
proceeding the Department may require that the cost of service
of the subpoena or subpoena duces tecum and the fee of the
witness be borne by the party at whose instance the witness is
summoned. In such case, the Department in its discretion may
require a deposit to cover the cost of such service and witness
fees. A subpoena or subpoena duces tecum so issued as above
stated shall be served in the same manner as a subpoena issued
by a circuit court.
    Any circuit court of this State, upon the application of
the Director, or upon the application of any other party to the
proceeding, may, in its discretion, compel the attendance of
witnesses, the production of books, papers, records, or
memoranda and the giving of testimony before the Director or
Hearing Officer conducting an investigation or holding a
hearing authorized by this Act, by an attachment for contempt
or otherwise, in the same manner as production of evidence may
be compelled before the court.
    The Director or Hearing Officer, or any party in an
investigation or hearing before the Department, may cause the
depositions of witnesses within this State to be taken in the
manner prescribed by law for like depositions in civil actions
in courts of this State, and, to that end, compel the
attendance of witnesses and the production of books, papers,
records, or memoranda.
(Source: P.A. 89-143, eff. 7-14-95.)
 
    Section 8. The Lead Poisoning Prevention Act is amended by
changing Section 11.1 as follows:
 
    (410 ILCS 45/11.1)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1311.1)
    Sec. 11.1. Licensing of lead abatement contractors and
workers. Except as otherwise provided in this Act, performing
lead abatement or mitigation without a license is a Class A
misdemeanor. The Department shall provide by rule for the
licensing of lead abatement contractors and lead abatement
workers and shall establish standards and procedures for the
licensure. The Department may collect a reasonable fee for the
licenses. The fees shall be deposited into the Lead Poisoning
Screening, Prevention, and Abatement Fund and used by the
Department for the costs of licensing lead abatement
contractors and workers and other activities prescribed by this
Act.
    The Department shall promote and encourage minorities and
females and minority and female owned entities to apply for
licensure under this Act as either licensed lead abatement
workers or licensed lead abatement contractors.
    The Department may adopt any rules necessary to ensure
proper implementation and administration of this Act and of the
federal Toxic Substances Control Act, 15 USC 2682 and 2684, and
the regulations promulgated thereunder: Lead; Requirements for
Lead-Based Paint Activities (40 CFR 745). The application of
this Section shall not be limited to the activities taken in
regard to lead poisoned children and shall include all
activities related to lead abatement, mitigation and training.
    Except as otherwise provided by Department rule, on and
after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 98th
General Assembly, any licensing requirement adopted pursuant
to this Section that may be satisfied by an industrial
hygienist licensed pursuant to the Industrial Hygienists
Licensure Act repealed in this amendatory Act may be satisfied
by a Certified Industrial Hygienist certified by the American
Board of Industrial Hygiene.
(Source: P.A. 89-381, eff. 8-18-95.)
 
    Section 10. The Environmental Protection Act is amended by
changing Sections 17, 22.2, and 22.8 as follows:
 
    (415 ILCS 5/17)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1017)
    Sec. 17. Rules; chlorination requirements.
    (a) The Board may adopt regulations governing the location,
design, construction, and continuous operation and maintenance
of public water supply installations, changes or additions
which may affect the continuous sanitary quality, mineral
quality, or adequacy of the public water supply, pursuant to
Title VII of this Act.
    (b) The Agency shall exempt from any mandatory chlorination
requirement of the Board any community water supply which meets
all of the following conditions:
        (1) The population of the community served is not more
    than 5,000;
        (2) Has as its only source of raw water one or more
    properly constructed wells into confined geologic
    formations not subject to contamination;
        (3) Has no history of persistent or recurring
    contamination, as indicated by sampling results which show
    violations of finished water quality requirements, for the
    most recent five-year period;
        (4) Does not provide any raw water treatment other than
    fluoridation;
        (5) Has an active program approved by the Agency to
    educate water supply consumers on preventing the entry of
    contaminants into the water system;
        (6) Has a certified operator of the proper class, or if
    it is an exempt community public water supply, under the
    Public Water Supply Operations Act has a registered person
    responsible in charge of operation of the public water
    supply;
        (7) Submits samples for microbiological analysis at
    twice the frequency specified in the Board regulations; and
        (8) A unit of local government seeking to exempt its
    public water supply from the chlorination requirement
    under this subsection (b) on or after September 9, 1983
    shall be required to receive the approval of the voters of
    such local government. The proposition to exempt the
    community water supply from the mandatory chlorination
    requirement shall be placed on the ballot if the governing
    body of the local government adopts an ordinance or
    resolution directing the clerk of the local government to
    place such question on the ballot. The clerk shall cause
    the election officials to place the proposition on the
    ballot at the next election at which such proposition may
    be voted upon if a certified copy of the adopted ordinance
    or resolution is filed in his office at least 90 days
    before such election. The proposition shall also be placed
    on the ballot if a petition containing the signatures of at
    least 10% of the eligible voters residing in the local
    government is filed with the clerk at least 90 days before
    the next election at which the proposition may be voted
    upon. The proposition shall be in substantially the
    following form:
-------------------------------------------------------------
    Shall the community
water supply of ..... (specify     YES
the unit of local government)
be exempt from the mandatory    -----------------------------
chlorination requirement            NO
of the State of Illinois?
-------------------------------------------------------------
    If the majority of the voters of the local government
voting therein vote in favor of the proposition, the community
water supply of that local government shall be exempt from the
mandatory chlorination requirement, provided that the other
requirements under this subsection (b) are met. If the majority
of the vote is against such proposition, the community water
supply may not be exempt from the mandatory chlorination
requirement.
    Agency decisions regarding exemptions under this
subsection may be appealed to the Board pursuant to the
provisions of Section 40(a) of this Act.
    (c) Any supply showing contamination in its distribution
system (including finished water storage) may be required to
chlorinate until the Agency has determined that the source of
contamination has been removed and all traces of contamination
in the distribution system have been eliminated. Standby
chlorination equipment may be required by the Agency if a
supply otherwise exempt from chlorination shows frequent or
gross episodes of contamination.
(Source: P.A. 92-574, eff. 6-26-02.)
 
    (415 ILCS 5/22.2)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.2)
    Sec. 22.2. Hazardous waste; fees; liability.
    (a) There are hereby created within the State Treasury 2
special funds to be known respectively as the "Hazardous Waste
Fund" and the "Hazardous Waste Research Fund", constituted from
the fees collected pursuant to this Section. In addition to the
fees collected under this Section, the Hazardous Waste Fund
shall include other moneys made available from any source for
deposit into the Fund.
    (b)(1) On and after January 1, 1989, the Agency shall
    collect from the owner or operator of each of the following
    sites a fee in the amount of:
            (A) 9 cents per gallon or $18.18 per cubic yard, if
        the hazardous waste disposal site is located off the
        site where such waste was produced. The maximum amount
        payable under this subdivision (A) with respect to the
        hazardous waste generated by a single generator and
        deposited in monofills is $30,000 per year. If, as a
        result of the use of multiple monofills, waste fees in
        excess of the maximum are assessed with respect to a
        single waste generator, the generator may apply to the
        Agency for a credit.
            (B) 9 cents or $18.18 per cubic yard, if the
        hazardous waste disposal site is located on the site
        where such waste was produced, provided however the
        maximum amount of fees payable under this paragraph (B)
        is $30,000 per year for each such hazardous waste
        disposal site.
            (C) If the hazardous waste disposal site is an
        underground injection well, $6,000 per year if not more
        than 10,000,000 gallons per year are injected, $15,000
        per year if more than 10,000,000 gallons but not more
        than 50,000,000 gallons per year are injected, and
        $27,000 per year if more than 50,000,000 gallons per
        year are injected.
            (D) 3 cents per gallon or $6.06 per cubic yard of
        hazardous waste received for treatment at a hazardous
        waste treatment site, if the hazardous waste treatment
        site is located off the site where such waste was
        produced and if such hazardous waste treatment site is
        owned, controlled and operated by a person other than
        the generator of such waste. After treatment at such
        hazardous waste treatment site, the waste shall not be
        subject to any other fee imposed by this subsection
        (b). For purposes of this subsection (b), the term
        "treatment" is defined as in Section 3.505 but shall
        not include recycling, reclamation or reuse.
        (2) The General Assembly shall annually appropriate to
    the Fund such amounts as it deems necessary to fulfill the
    purposes of this Act.
        (3) The Agency shall have the authority to accept,
    receive, and administer on behalf of the State any moneys
    made available to the State from any source for the
    purposes of the Hazardous Waste Fund set forth in
    subsection (d) of this Section.
        (4) Of the amount collected as fees provided for in
    this Section, the Agency shall manage the use of such funds
    to assure that sufficient funds are available for match
    towards federal expenditures for response action at sites
    which are listed on the National Priorities List; provided,
    however, that this shall not apply to additional monies
    appropriated to the Fund by the General Assembly, nor shall
    it apply in the event that the Director finds that revenues
    in the Hazardous Waste Fund must be used to address
    conditions which create or may create an immediate danger
    to the environment or public health or to the welfare of
    the people of the State of Illinois.
        (5) Notwithstanding the other provisions of this
    subsection (b), sludge from a publicly-owned sewage works
    generated in Illinois, coal mining wastes and refuse
    generated in Illinois, bottom boiler ash, flyash and flue
    gas desulphurization sludge from public utility electric
    generating facilities located in Illinois, and bottom
    boiler ash and flyash from all incinerators which process
    solely municipal waste shall not be subject to the fee.
        (6) For the purposes of this subsection (b), "monofill"
    means a facility, or a unit at a facility, that accepts
    only wastes bearing the same USEPA hazardous waste
    identification number, or compatible wastes as determined
    by the Agency.
    (c) The Agency shall establish procedures, not later than
January 1, 1984, relating to the collection of the fees
authorized by this Section. Such procedures shall include, but
not be limited to: (1) necessary records identifying the
quantities of hazardous waste received or disposed; (2) the
form and submission of reports to accompany the payment of fees
to the Agency; and (3) the time and manner of payment of fees
to the Agency, which payments shall be not more often than
quarterly.
    (d) Beginning July 1, 1996, the Agency shall deposit all
such receipts in the State Treasury to the credit of the
Hazardous Waste Fund, except as provided in subsection (e) of
this Section. All monies in the Hazardous Waste Fund shall be
used by the Agency for the following purposes:
        (1) Taking whatever preventive or corrective action is
    necessary or appropriate, in circumstances certified by
    the Director, including but not limited to removal or
    remedial action whenever there is a release or substantial
    threat of a release of a hazardous substance or pesticide;
    provided, the Agency shall expend no more than $1,000,000
    on any single incident without appropriation by the General
    Assembly.
        (2) To meet any requirements which must be met by the
    State in order to obtain federal funds pursuant to the
    Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and
    Liability Act of 1980, (P.L. 96-510).
        (3) In an amount up to 30% of the amount collected as
    fees provided for in this Section, for use by the Agency to
    conduct groundwater protection activities, including
    providing grants to appropriate units of local government
    which are addressing protection of underground waters
    pursuant to the provisions of this Act.
        (4) To fund the development and implementation of the
    model pesticide collection program under Section 19.1 of
    the Illinois Pesticide Act.
        (5) To the extent the Agency has received and deposited
    monies in the Fund other than fees collected under
    subsection (b) of this Section, to pay for the cost of
    Agency employees for services provided in reviewing the
    performance of response actions pursuant to Title XVII of
    this Act.
        (6) In an amount up to 15% of the fees collected
    annually under subsection (b) of this Section, for use by
    the Agency for administration of the provisions of this
    Section.
    (e) The Agency shall deposit 10% of all receipts collected
under subsection (b) of this Section, but not to exceed
$200,000 per year, in the State Treasury to the credit of the
Hazardous Waste Research Fund established by this Act. Pursuant
to appropriation, all monies in such Fund shall be used by the
University of Illinois for the purposes set forth in this
subsection.
    The University of Illinois may enter into contracts with
business, industrial, university, governmental or other
qualified individuals or organizations to assist in the
research and development intended to recycle, reduce the volume
of, separate, detoxify or reduce the hazardous properties of
hazardous wastes in Illinois. Monies in the Fund may also be
used by the University of Illinois for technical studies,
monitoring activities, and educational and research activities
which are related to the protection of underground waters.
Monies in the Hazardous Waste Research Fund may be used to
administer the Illinois Health and Hazardous Substances
Registry Act. Monies in the Hazardous Waste Research Fund shall
not be used for any sanitary landfill or the acquisition or
construction of any facility. This does not preclude the
purchase of equipment for the purpose of public demonstration
projects. The University of Illinois shall adopt guidelines for
cost sharing, selecting, and administering projects under this
subsection.
    (f) Notwithstanding any other provision or rule of law, and
subject only to the defenses set forth in subsection (j) of
this Section, the following persons shall be liable for all
costs of removal or remedial action incurred by the State of
Illinois or any unit of local government as a result of a
release or substantial threat of a release of a hazardous
substance or pesticide:
        (1) the owner and operator of a facility or vessel from
    which there is a release or substantial threat of release
    of a hazardous substance or pesticide;
        (2) any person who at the time of disposal, transport,
    storage or treatment of a hazardous substance or pesticide
    owned or operated the facility or vessel used for such
    disposal, transport, treatment or storage from which there
    was a release or substantial threat of a release of any
    such hazardous substance or pesticide;
        (3) any person who by contract, agreement, or otherwise
    has arranged with another party or entity for transport,
    storage, disposal or treatment of hazardous substances or
    pesticides owned, controlled or possessed by such person at
    a facility owned or operated by another party or entity
    from which facility there is a release or substantial
    threat of a release of such hazardous substances or
    pesticides; and
        (4) any person who accepts or accepted any hazardous
    substances or pesticides for transport to disposal,
    storage or treatment facilities or sites from which there
    is a release or a substantial threat of a release of a
    hazardous substance or pesticide.
    Any monies received by the State of Illinois pursuant to
this subsection (f) shall be deposited in the State Treasury to
the credit of the Hazardous Waste Fund.
    In accordance with the other provisions of this Section,
costs of removal or remedial action incurred by a unit of local
government may be recovered in an action before the Board
brought by the unit of local government under subsection (i) of
this Section. Any monies so recovered shall be paid to the unit
of local government.
    (g)(1) No indemnification, hold harmless, or similar
    agreement or conveyance shall be effective to transfer from
    the owner or operator of any vessel or facility or from any
    person who may be liable for a release or substantial
    threat of a release under this Section, to any other person
    the liability imposed under this Section. Nothing in this
    Section shall bar any agreement to insure, hold harmless or
    indemnify a party to such agreements for any liability
    under this Section.
        (2) Nothing in this Section, including the provisions
    of paragraph (g)(1) of this Section, shall bar a cause of
    action that an owner or operator or any other person
    subject to liability under this Section, or a guarantor,
    has or would have, by reason of subrogation or otherwise
    against any person.
    (h) For purposes of this Section:
        (1) The term "facility" means:
            (A) any building, structure, installation,
        equipment, pipe or pipeline including but not limited
        to any pipe into a sewer or publicly owned treatment
        works, well, pit, pond, lagoon, impoundment, ditch,
        landfill, storage container, motor vehicle, rolling
        stock, or aircraft; or
            (B) any site or area where a hazardous substance
        has been deposited, stored, disposed of, placed, or
        otherwise come to be located.
        (2) The term "owner or operator" means:
            (A) any person owning or operating a vessel or
        facility;
            (B) in the case of an abandoned facility, any
        person owning or operating the abandoned facility or
        any person who owned, operated, or otherwise
        controlled activities at the abandoned facility
        immediately prior to such abandonment;
            (C) in the case of a land trust as defined in
        Section 2 of the Land Trustee as Creditor Act, the
        person owning the beneficial interest in the land
        trust;
            (D) in the case of a fiduciary (other than a land
        trustee), the estate, trust estate, or other interest
        in property held in a fiduciary capacity, and not the
        fiduciary. For the purposes of this Section,
        "fiduciary" means a trustee, executor, administrator,
        guardian, receiver, conservator or other person
        holding a facility or vessel in a fiduciary capacity;
            (E) in the case of a "financial institution",
        meaning the Illinois Housing Development Authority and
        that term as defined in Section 2 of the Illinois
        Banking Act, that has acquired ownership, operation,
        management, or control of a vessel or facility through
        foreclosure or under the terms of a security interest
        held by the financial institution or under the terms of
        an extension of credit made by the financial
        institution, the financial institution only if the
        financial institution takes possession of the vessel
        or facility and the financial institution exercises
        actual, direct, and continual or recurrent managerial
        control in the operation of the vessel or facility that
        causes a release or substantial threat of a release of
        a hazardous substance or pesticide resulting in
        removal or remedial action;
            (F) In the case of an owner of residential
        property, the owner if the owner is a person other than
        an individual, or if the owner is an individual who
        owns more than 10 dwelling units in Illinois, or if the
        owner, or an agent, representative, contractor, or
        employee of the owner, has caused, contributed to, or
        allowed the release or threatened release of a
        hazardous substance or pesticide. The term
        "residential property" means single family residences
        of one to 4 dwelling units, including accessory land,
        buildings, or improvements incidental to those
        dwellings that are exclusively used for the
        residential use. For purposes of this subparagraph
        (F), the term "individual" means a natural person, and
        shall not include corporations, partnerships, trusts,
        or other non-natural persons.
            (G) In the case of any facility, title or control
        of which was conveyed due to bankruptcy, foreclosure,
        tax delinquency, abandonment, or similar means to a
        unit of State or local government, any person who
        owned, operated, or otherwise controlled activities at
        the facility immediately beforehand.
            (H) The term "owner or operator" does not include a
        unit of State or local government which acquired
        ownership or control through bankruptcy, tax
        delinquency, abandonment, or other circumstances in
        which the government acquires title by virtue of its
        function as sovereign. The exclusion provided under
        this paragraph shall not apply to any State or local
        government which has caused or contributed to the
        release or threatened release of a hazardous substance
        from the facility, and such a State or local government
        shall be subject to the provisions of this Act in the
        same manner and to the same extent, both procedurally
        and substantively, as any nongovernmental entity,
        including liability under Section 22.2(f).
    (i) The costs and damages provided for in this Section may
be imposed by the Board in an action brought before the Board
in accordance with Title VIII of this Act, except that Section
33(c) of this Act shall not apply to any such action.
    (j)(1) There shall be no liability under this Section for a
person otherwise liable who can establish by a preponderance of
the evidence that the release or substantial threat of release
of a hazardous substance and the damages resulting therefrom
were caused solely by:
        (A) an act of God;
        (B) an act of war;
        (C) an act or omission of a third party other than an
    employee or agent of the defendant, or other than one whose
    act or omission occurs in connection with a contractual
    relationship, existing directly or indirectly, with the
    defendant (except where the sole contractual arrangement
    arises from a published tariff and acceptance for carriage
    by a common carrier by rail), if the defendant establishes
    by a preponderance of the evidence that (i) he exercised
    due care with respect to the hazardous substance concerned,
    taking into consideration the characteristics of such
    hazardous substance, in light of all relevant facts and
    circumstances, and (ii) he took precautions against
    foreseeable acts or omissions of any such third party and
    the consequences that could foreseeably result from such
    acts or omissions; or
        (D) any combination of the foregoing paragraphs.
    (2) There shall be no liability under this Section for any
release permitted by State or federal law.
    (3) There shall be no liability under this Section for
damages as a result of actions taken or omitted in the course
of rendering care, assistance, or advice in accordance with
this Section or the National Contingency Plan pursuant to the
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and
Liability Act of 1980 (P.L. 96-510) or at the direction of an
on-scene coordinator appointed under such plan, with respect to
an incident creating a danger to public health or welfare or
the environment as a result of any release of a hazardous
substance or a substantial threat thereof. This subsection
shall not preclude liability for damages as the result of gross
negligence or intentional misconduct on the part of such
person. For the purposes of the preceding sentence, reckless,
willful, or wanton misconduct shall constitute gross
negligence.
    (4) There shall be no liability under this Section for any
person (including, but not limited to, an owner of residential
property who applies a pesticide to the residential property or
who has another person apply a pesticide to the residential
property) for response costs or damages as the result of the
storage, handling and use, or recommendation for storage,
handling and use, of a pesticide consistent with:
        (A) its directions for storage, handling and use as
    stated in its label or labeling;
        (B) its warnings and cautions as stated in its label or
    labeling; and
        (C) the uses for which it is registered under the
    Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act and the
    Illinois Pesticide Act.
    (4.5) There shall be no liability under subdivision (f)(1)
of this Section for response costs or damages as the result of
a release of a pesticide from an agrichemical facility site if
the Agency has received notice from the Department of
Agriculture pursuant to Section 19.3 of the Illinois Pesticide
Act, the owner or operator of the agrichemical facility is
proceeding with a corrective action plan under the Agrichemical
Facility Response Action Program implemented under that
Section, and the Agency has provided a written endorsement of a
corrective action plan.
    (4.6) There shall be no liability under subdivision (f)(1)
of this Section for response costs or damages as the result of
a substantial threat of a release of a pesticide from an
agrichemical facility site if the Agency has received notice
from the Department of Agriculture pursuant to Section 19.3 of
the Illinois Pesticide Act and the owner or operator of the
agrichemical facility is proceeding with a corrective action
plan under the Agrichemical Facility Response Action Program
implemented under that Section.
    (5) Nothing in this subsection (j) shall affect or modify
in any way the obligations or liability of any person under any
other provision of this Act or State or federal law, including
common law, for damages, injury, or loss resulting from a
release or substantial threat of a release of any hazardous
substance or for removal or remedial action or the costs of
removal or remedial action of such hazardous substance.
    (6)(A) The term "contractual relationship", for the
purpose of this subsection includes, but is not limited to,
land contracts, deeds or other instruments transferring title
or possession, unless the real property on which the facility
concerned is located was acquired by the defendant after the
disposal or placement of the hazardous substance on, in, or at
the facility, and one or more of the circumstances described in
clause (i), (ii), or (iii) of this paragraph is also
established by the defendant by a preponderance of the
evidence:
        (i) At the time the defendant acquired the facility the
    defendant did not know and had no reason to know that any
    hazardous substance which is the subject of the release or
    threatened release was disposed of on, in or at the
    facility.
        (ii) The defendant is a government entity which
    acquired the facility by escheat, or through any other
    involuntary transfer or acquisition, or through the
    exercise of eminent domain authority by purchase or
    condemnation.
        (iii) The defendant acquired the facility by
    inheritance or bequest.
    In addition to establishing the foregoing, the defendant
must establish that he has satisfied the requirements of
subparagraph (C) of paragraph (l) of this subsection (j).
    (B) To establish the defendant had no reason to know, as
provided in clause (i) of subparagraph (A) of this paragraph,
the defendant must have undertaken, at the time of acquisition,
all appropriate inquiry into the previous ownership and uses of
the property consistent with good commercial or customary
practice in an effort to minimize liability. For purposes of
the preceding sentence, the court shall take into account any
specialized knowledge or experience on the part of the
defendant, the relationship of the purchase price to the value
of the property if uncontaminated, commonly known or reasonably
ascertainable information about the property, the obviousness
of the presence or likely presence of contamination at the
property, and the ability to detect such contamination by
appropriate inspection.
    (C) Nothing in this paragraph (6) or in subparagraph (C) of
paragraph (1) of this subsection shall diminish the liability
of any previous owner or operator of such facility who would
otherwise be liable under this Act. Notwithstanding this
paragraph (6), if the defendant obtained actual knowledge of
the release or threatened release of a hazardous substance at
such facility when the defendant owned the real property and
then subsequently transferred ownership of the property to
another person without disclosing such knowledge, such
defendant shall be treated as liable under subsection (f) of
this Section and no defense under subparagraph (C) of paragraph
(1) of this subsection shall be available to such defendant.
    (D) Nothing in this paragraph (6) shall affect the
liability under this Act of a defendant who, by any act or
omission, caused or contributed to the release or threatened
release of a hazardous substance which is the subject of the
action relating to the facility.
    (E)(i) Except as provided in clause (ii) of this
subparagraph (E), a defendant who has acquired real property
shall have established a rebuttable presumption against all
State claims and a conclusive presumption against all private
party claims that the defendant has made all appropriate
inquiry within the meaning of subdivision (6)(B) of this
subsection (j) if the defendant proves that immediately prior
to or at the time of the acquisition:
        (I) the defendant obtained a Phase I Environmental
    Audit of the real property that meets or exceeds the
    requirements of this subparagraph (E), and the Phase I
    Environmental Audit did not disclose the presence or likely
    presence of a release or a substantial threat of a release
    of a hazardous substance or pesticide at, on, to, or from
    the real property; or
        (II) the defendant obtained a Phase II Environmental
    Audit of the real property that meets or exceeds the
    requirements of this subparagraph (E), and the Phase II
    Environmental Audit did not disclose the presence or likely
    presence of a release or a substantial threat of a release
    of a hazardous substance or pesticide at, on, to, or from
    the real property.
    (ii) No presumption shall be created under clause (i) of
this subparagraph (E), and a defendant shall be precluded from
demonstrating that the defendant has made all appropriate
inquiry within the meaning of subdivision (6)(B) of this
subsection (j), if:
        (I) the defendant fails to obtain all Environmental
    Audits required under this subparagraph (E) or any such
    Environmental Audit fails to meet or exceed the
    requirements of this subparagraph (E);
        (II) a Phase I Environmental Audit discloses the
    presence or likely presence of a release or a substantial
    threat of a release of a hazardous substance or pesticide
    at, on, to, or from real property, and the defendant fails
    to obtain a Phase II Environmental Audit;
        (III) a Phase II Environmental Audit discloses the
    presence or likely presence of a release or a substantial
    threat of a release of a hazardous substance or pesticide
    at, on, to, or from the real property;
        (IV) the defendant fails to maintain a written
    compilation and explanatory summary report of the
    information reviewed in the course of each Environmental
    Audit under this subparagraph (E); or
        (V) there is any evidence of fraud, material
    concealment, or material misrepresentation by the
    defendant of environmental conditions or of related
    information discovered during the course of an
    Environmental Audit.
    (iii) For purposes of this subparagraph (E), the term
"environmental professional" means an individual (other than a
practicing attorney) who, through academic training,
occupational experience, and reputation (such as engineers,
industrial hygienists, or geologists) can objectively conduct
one or more aspects of an Environmental Audit and who either:
        (I) maintains at the time of the Environmental Audit
    and for at least one year thereafter at least $500,000 of
    environmental consultants' professional liability
    insurance coverage issued by an insurance company licensed
    to do business in Illinois; or
        (II) is an Illinois licensed professional engineer or a
    Certified Industrial Hygienist certified by the American
    Board of Industrial Hygiene an Illinois licensed
    industrial hygienist.
    An environmental professional may employ persons who are
not environmental professionals to assist in the preparation of
an Environmental Audit if such persons are under the direct
supervision and control of the environmental professional.
    (iv) For purposes of this subparagraph (E), the term "real
property" means any interest in any parcel of land, and
includes, but is not limited to, buildings, fixtures, and
improvements.
    (v) For purposes of this subparagraph (E), the term "Phase
I Environmental Audit" means an investigation of real property,
conducted by environmental professionals, to discover the
presence or likely presence of a release or a substantial
threat of a release of a hazardous substance or pesticide at,
on, to, or from real property, and whether a release or a
substantial threat of a release of a hazardous substance or
pesticide has occurred or may occur at, on, to, or from the
real property. Until such time as the United States
Environmental Protection Agency establishes standards for
making appropriate inquiry into the previous ownership and uses
of the facility pursuant to 42 U.S.C. Sec. 9601(35)(B)(ii), the
investigation shall comply with the procedures of the American
Society for Testing and Materials, including the document known
as Standard E1527-97, entitled "Standard Procedures for
Environmental Site Assessment: Phase 1 Environmental Site
Assessment Process". Upon their adoption, the standards
promulgated by USEPA pursuant to 42 U.S.C. Sec. 9601(35)(B)(ii)
shall govern the performance of Phase I Environmental Audits.
In addition to the above requirements, the Phase I
Environmental Audit shall include a review of recorded land
title records for the purpose of determining whether the real
property is subject to an environmental land use restriction
such as a No Further Remediation Letter, Environmental Land Use
Control, or Highway Authority Agreement.
    (vi) For purposes of subparagraph (E), the term "Phase II
Environmental Audit" means an investigation of real property,
conducted by environmental professionals, subsequent to a
Phase I Environmental Audit. If the Phase I Environmental Audit
discloses the presence or likely presence of a hazardous
substance or a pesticide or a release or a substantial threat
of a release of a hazardous substance or pesticide:
        (I) In or to soil, the defendant, as part of the Phase
    II Environmental Audit, shall perform a series of soil
    borings sufficient to determine whether there is a presence
    or likely presence of a hazardous substance or pesticide
    and whether there is or has been a release or a substantial
    threat of a release of a hazardous substance or pesticide
    at, on, to, or from the real property.
        (II) In or to groundwater, the defendant, as part of
    the Phase II Environmental Audit, shall: review
    information regarding local geology, water well locations,
    and locations of waters of the State as may be obtained
    from State, federal, and local government records,
    including but not limited to the United States Geological
    Survey, the State Geological Survey of the University of
    Illinois, and the State Water Survey of the University of
    Illinois; and perform groundwater monitoring sufficient to
    determine whether there is a presence or likely presence of
    a hazardous substance or pesticide, and whether there is or
    has been a release or a substantial threat of a release of
    a hazardous substance or pesticide at, on, to, or from the
    real property.
        (III) On or to media other than soil or groundwater,
    the defendant, as part of the Phase II Environmental Audit,
    shall perform an investigation sufficient to determine
    whether there is a presence or likely presence of a
    hazardous substance or pesticide, and whether there is or
    has been a release or a substantial threat of a release of
    a hazardous substance or pesticide at, on, to, or from the
    real property.
    (vii) The findings of each Environmental Audit prepared
under this subparagraph (E) shall be set forth in a written
audit report. Each audit report shall contain an affirmation by
the defendant and by each environmental professional who
prepared the Environmental Audit that the facts stated in the
report are true and are made under a penalty of perjury as
defined in Section 32-2 of the Criminal Code of 1961. It is
perjury for any person to sign an audit report that contains a
false material statement that the person does not believe to be
true.
    (viii) The Agency is not required to review, approve, or
certify the results of any Environmental Audit. The performance
of an Environmental Audit shall in no way entitle a defendant
to a presumption of Agency approval or certification of the
results of the Environmental Audit.
    The presence or absence of a disclosure document prepared
under the Responsible Property Transfer Act of 1988 shall not
be a defense under this Act and shall not satisfy the
requirements of subdivision (6)(A) of this subsection (j).
    (7) No person shall be liable under this Section for
response costs or damages as the result of a pesticide release
if the Agency has found that a pesticide release occurred based
on a Health Advisory issued by the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency or an action level developed by the Agency,
unless the Agency notified the manufacturer of the pesticide
and provided an opportunity of not less than 30 days for the
manufacturer to comment on the technical and scientific
justification supporting the Health Advisory or action level.
    (8) No person shall be liable under this Section for
response costs or damages as the result of a pesticide release
that occurs in the course of a farm pesticide collection
program operated under Section 19.1 of the Illinois Pesticide
Act, unless the release results from gross negligence or
intentional misconduct.
    (k) If any person who is liable for a release or
substantial threat of release of a hazardous substance or
pesticide fails without sufficient cause to provide removal or
remedial action upon or in accordance with a notice and request
by the Agency or upon or in accordance with any order of the
Board or any court, such person may be liable to the State for
punitive damages in an amount at least equal to, and not more
than 3 times, the amount of any costs incurred by the State of
Illinois as a result of such failure to take such removal or
remedial action. The punitive damages imposed by the Board
shall be in addition to any costs recovered from such person
pursuant to this Section and in addition to any other penalty
or relief provided by this Act or any other law.
    Any monies received by the State pursuant to this
subsection (k) shall be deposited in the Hazardous Waste Fund.
    (l) Beginning January 1, 1988, and prior to January 1,
2013, the Agency shall annually collect a $250 fee for each
Special Waste Hauling Permit Application and, in addition,
shall collect a fee of $20 for each waste hauling vehicle
identified in the annual permit application and for each
vehicle which is added to the permit during the annual period.
Beginning January 1, 2013, the Agency shall issue 3-year
Special Waste Hauling Permits instead of annual Special Waste
Hauling Permits and shall collect a $750 fee for each Special
Waste Hauling Permit Application. In addition, beginning
January 1, 2013, the Agency shall collect a fee of $60 for each
waste hauling vehicle identified in the permit application and
for each vehicle that is added to the permit during the 3-year
period. The Agency shall deposit 85% of such fees collected
under this subsection in the State Treasury to the credit of
the Hazardous Waste Research Fund; and shall deposit the
remaining 15% of such fees collected in the State Treasury to
the credit of the Environmental Protection Permit and
Inspection Fund. The majority of such receipts which are
deposited in the Hazardous Waste Research Fund pursuant to this
subsection shall be used by the University of Illinois for
activities which relate to the protection of underground
waters.
    (l-5) (Blank).
    (m) (Blank).
    (n) (Blank).
(Source: P.A. 97-220, eff. 7-28-11; 97-1081, eff. 8-24-12.)
 
    (415 ILCS 5/22.8)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1022.8)
    Sec. 22.8. Environmental Protection Permit and Inspection
Fund.
    (a) There is hereby created in the State Treasury a special
fund to be known as the Environmental Protection Permit and
Inspection Fund. All fees collected by the Agency pursuant to
this Section, Section 9.6, 12.2, 16.1, 22.2 (j)(6)(E)(v)(IV),
56.4, 56.5, 56.6, and subsection (f) of Section 5 of this Act
or pursuant to Section 22 of the Public Water Supply Operations
Act and funds collected under subsection (b.5) of Section 42 of
this Act shall be deposited into the Fund. In addition to any
monies appropriated from the General Revenue Fund, monies in
the Fund shall be appropriated by the General Assembly to the
Agency in amounts deemed necessary for manifest, permit, and
inspection activities and for processing requests under
Section 22.2 (j)(6)(E)(v)(IV).
    The General Assembly may appropriate monies in the Fund
deemed necessary for Board regulatory and adjudicatory
proceedings.
    (a-5) As soon as practicable after the effective date of
this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, but no later
than January 1, 2014, the State Comptroller shall direct and
the State Treasurer shall transfer all monies in the Industrial
Hygiene Regulatory and Enforcement Fund to the Environmental
Protection Permit and Inspection Fund to be used in accordance
with the terms of the Environmental Protection Permit and
Inspection Fund.
    (b) The Agency shall collect from the owner or operator of
any of the following types of hazardous waste disposal sites or
management facilities which require a RCRA permit under
subsection (f) of Section 21 of this Act, or a UIC permit under
subsection (g) of Section 12 of this Act, an annual fee in the
amount of:
        (1) $35,000 ($70,000 beginning in 2004) for a hazardous
    waste disposal site receiving hazardous waste if the
    hazardous waste disposal site is located off the site where
    such waste was produced;
        (2) $9,000 ($18,000 beginning in 2004) for a hazardous
    waste disposal site receiving hazardous waste if the
    hazardous waste disposal site is located on the site where
    such waste was produced;
        (3) $7,000 ($14,000 beginning in 2004) for a hazardous
    waste disposal site receiving hazardous waste if the
    hazardous waste disposal site is an underground injection
    well;
        (4) $2,000 ($4,000 beginning in 2004) for a hazardous
    waste management facility treating hazardous waste by
    incineration;
        (5) $1,000 ($2,000 beginning in 2004) for a hazardous
    waste management facility treating hazardous waste by a
    method, technique or process other than incineration;
        (6) $1,000 ($2,000 beginning in 2004) for a hazardous
    waste management facility storing hazardous waste in a
    surface impoundment or pile;
        (7) $250 ($500 beginning in 2004) for a hazardous waste
    management facility storing hazardous waste other than in a
    surface impoundment or pile; and
        (8) Beginning in 2004, $500 for a large quantity
    hazardous waste generator required to submit an annual or
    biennial report for hazardous waste generation.
    (c) Where two or more operational units are located within
a single hazardous waste disposal site, the Agency shall
collect from the owner or operator of such site an annual fee
equal to the highest fee imposed by subsection (b) of this
Section upon any single operational unit within the site.
    (d) The fee imposed upon a hazardous waste disposal site
under this Section shall be the exclusive permit and inspection
fee applicable to hazardous waste disposal at such site,
provided that nothing in this Section shall be construed to
diminish or otherwise affect any fee imposed upon the owner or
operator of a hazardous waste disposal site by Section 22.2.
    (e) The Agency shall establish procedures, no later than
December 1, 1984, relating to the collection of the hazardous
waste disposal site fees authorized by this Section. Such
procedures shall include, but not be limited to the time and
manner of payment of fees to the Agency, which shall be
quarterly, payable at the beginning of each quarter for
hazardous waste disposal site fees. Annual fees required under
paragraph (7) of subsection (b) of this Section shall accompany
the annual report required by Board regulations for the
calendar year for which the report applies.
    (f) For purposes of this Section, a hazardous waste
disposal site consists of one or more of the following
operational units:
        (1) a landfill receiving hazardous waste for disposal;
        (2) a waste pile or surface impoundment, receiving
    hazardous waste, in which residues which exhibit any of the
    characteristics of hazardous waste pursuant to Board
    regulations are reasonably expected to remain after
    closure;
        (3) a land treatment facility receiving hazardous
    waste; or
        (4) a well injecting hazardous waste.
    (g) The Agency shall assess a fee for each manifest
provided by the Agency. For manifests provided on or after
January 1, 1989 but before July 1, 2003, the fee shall be $1
per manifest. For manifests provided on or after July 1, 2003,
the fee shall be $3 per manifest.
(Source: P.A. 93-32, eff. 7-1-03.)
 
    Section 13. The Illinois Pesticide Act is amended by
changing Section 19.3 as follows:
 
    (415 ILCS 60/19.3)
    Sec. 19.3. Agrichemical Facility Response Action Program.
    (a) It is the policy of the State of Illinois that an
Agrichemical Facility Response Action Program be implemented
to reduce potential agrichemical pollution and minimize
environmental degradation risk potential at these sites. In
this Section, "agrichemical facility" means a site where
agrichemicals are stored or handled, or both, in preparation
for end use. "Agrichemical facility" does not include basic
manufacturing or central distribution sites utilized only for
wholesale purposes. As used in this Section, "agrichemical"
means pesticides or commercial fertilizers at an agrichemical
facility.
    The program shall provide guidance for assessing the threat
of soil agrichemical contaminants to groundwater and
recommending which sites need to establish a voluntary
corrective action program.
    The program shall establish appropriate site-specific soil
cleanup objectives, which shall be based on the potential for
the agrichemical contaminants to move from the soil to
groundwater and the potential of the specific soil agrichemical
contaminants to cause an exceedence of a Class I or Class III
groundwater quality standard or a health advisory level. The
Department shall use the information found and procedures
developed in the Agrichemical Facility Site Contamination
Study or other appropriate physical evidence to establish the
soil agrichemical contaminant levels of concern to groundwater
in the various hydrological settings to establish
site-specific cleanup objectives.
    No remediation of a site may be recommended unless (i) the
agrichemical contamination level in the soil exceeds the
site-specific cleanup objectives or (ii) the agrichemical
contaminant level in the soil exceeds levels where physical
evidence and risk evaluation indicates probability of the site
causing an exceedence of a groundwater quality standard.
    When a remediation plan must be carried out over a number
of years due to limited financial resources of the owner or
operator of the agrichemical facility, those soil agrichemical
contaminated areas that have the greatest potential to
adversely impact vulnerable Class I groundwater aquifers and
adjacent potable water wells shall receive the highest priority
rating and be remediated first.
    (b) The Agrichemical Facility Response Action Program
Board ("the Board") is created. The Board members shall consist
of the following:
        (1) The Director or the Director's designee.
        (2) One member who represents pesticide manufacturers.
        (3) Two members who represent retail agrichemical
    dealers.
        (4) One member who represents agrichemical
    distributors.
        (5) One member who represents active farmers.
        (6) One member at large.
    The public members of the Board shall be appointed by the
Governor for terms of 2 years. Those persons on the Board who
represent pesticide manufacturers, agrichemical dealers,
agrichemical distributors, and farmers shall be selected from
recommendations made by the associations whose membership
reflects those specific areas of interest. The members of the
Board shall be appointed within 90 days after the effective
date of this amendatory Act of 1995. Vacancies on the Board
shall be filled within 30 days. The Board may fill any
membership position vacant for a period exceeding 30 days.
    The members of the Board shall be paid no compensation, but
shall be reimbursed for their expenses incurred in performing
their duties. If a civil proceeding is commenced against a
Board member arising out of an act or omission occurring within
the scope of the Board member's performance of his or her
duties under this Section, the State, as provided by rule,
shall indemnify the Board member for any damages awarded and
court costs and attorney's fees assessed as part of a final and
unreversed judgement, or shall pay the judgment, unless the
court or jury finds that the conduct or inaction that gave rise
to the claim or cause of action was intentional, wilful or
wanton misconduct and was not intended to serve or benefit
interests of the State.
    The chairperson of the Board shall be selected by the Board
from among the public members.
    (c) The Board has the authority to do the following:
        (1) Cooperate with the Department and review and
    approve an agrichemical facility remediation program as
    outlined in the handbook or manual as set forth in
    subdivision (d)(8) of this Section.
        (2) Review and give final approval to each agrichemical
    facility corrective action plan.
        (3) Approve any changes to an agrichemical facility's
    corrective action plan that may be necessary.
        (4) Upon completion of the corrective action plan,
    recommend to the Department that the site-specific cleanup
    objectives have been met and that a notice of closure be
    issued by the Department stating that no further remedial
    action is required to remedy the past agrichemical
    contamination.
        (5) When a soil agrichemical contaminant assessment
    confirms that remedial action is not required in accordance
    with the Agrichemical Facility Response Action Program,
    recommend that a notice of closure be issued by the
    Department stating that no further remedial action is
    required to remedy the past agrichemical contamination.
        (6) Periodically review the Department's
    administration of the Agrichemical Incident Response Trust
    Fund and actions taken with respect to the Fund. The Board
    shall also provide advice to the Interagency Committee on
    Pesticides regarding the proper handling of agrichemical
    incidents at agrichemical facilities in Illinois.
    (d) The Director has the authority to do the following:
        (1) When requested by the owner or operator of an
    agrichemical facility, may investigate the agrichemical
    facility site contamination.
        (2) After completion of the investigation under
    subdivision (d)(1) of this Section, recommend to the owner
    or operator of an agrichemical facility that a voluntary
    assessment be made of the soil agrichemical contaminant
    when there is evidence that the evaluation of risk
    indicates that groundwater could be adversely impacted.
        (3) Review and make recommendations on any corrective
    action plan submitted by the owner or operator of an
    agrichemical facility to the Board for final approval.
        (4) On approval by the Board, issue an order to the
    owner or operator of an agrichemical facility that has
    filed a voluntary corrective action plan that the owner or
    operator may proceed with that plan.
        (5) Provide remedial project oversight, monitor
    remedial work progress, and report to the Board on the
    status of remediation projects.
        (6) Provide staff to support the activities of the
    Board.
        (7) Take appropriate action on the Board's
    recommendations regarding policy needed to carry out the
    Board's responsibilities under this Section.
        (8) In cooperation with the Board, incorporate the
    following into a handbook or manual: the procedures for
    site assessment; pesticide constituents of concern and
    associated parameters; guidance on remediation techniques,
    land application, and corrective action plans; and other
    information or instructions that the Department may find
    necessary.
        (9) Coordinate preventive response actions at
    agrichemical facilities pursuant to the Groundwater
    Quality Standards adopted pursuant to Section 8 of the
    Illinois Groundwater Protection Act to mitigate resource
    groundwater impairment.
    Upon completion of the corrective action plan and upon
recommendation of the Board, the Department shall issue a
notice of closure stating that site-specific cleanup
objectives have been met and no further remedial action is
required to remedy the past agrichemical contamination.
    When a soil agrichemical contaminant assessment confirms
that remedial action is not required in accordance with the
Agrichemical Facility Response Action Program and upon the
recommendation of the Board, a notice of closure shall be
issued by the Department stating that no further remedial
action is required to remedy the past agrichemical
contamination.
    (e) Upon receipt of notification of an agrichemical
contaminant in groundwater pursuant to the Groundwater Quality
Standards, the Department shall evaluate the severity of the
agrichemical contamination and shall submit to the
Environmental Protection Agency an informational notice
characterizing it as follows:
        (1) An agrichemical contaminant in Class I or Class III
    groundwater has exceeded the levels of a standard adopted
    pursuant to the Illinois Groundwater Protection Act or a
    health advisory established by the Illinois Environmental
    Protection Agency or the United States Environmental
    Protection Agency; or
        (2) An agrichemical has been detected at a level that
    requires preventive notification pursuant to a standard
    adopted pursuant to the Illinois Groundwater Protection
    Act.
    (f) When agrichemical contamination is characterized as in
subdivision (e)(1) of this Section, a facility may elect to
participate in the Agrichemical Facility Response Action
Program. In these instances, the scope of the corrective action
plans developed, approved, and completed under this program
shall be limited to the soil agrichemical contamination present
at the site unless implementation of the plan is coordinated
with the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency as follows:
        (1) Upon receipt of notice of intent to include
    groundwater in an action by a facility, the Department
    shall also notify the Illinois Environmental Protection
    Agency.
        (2) Upon receipt of the corrective action plan, the
    Department shall coordinate a joint review of the plan with
    the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency.
        (3) The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency may
    provide a written endorsement of the corrective action
    plan.
        (4) The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency may
    approve a groundwater management zone for a period of 5
    years after the implementation of the corrective action
    plan to allow for groundwater impairment mitigation
    results.
        (5) The Department, in cooperation with the Illinois
    Environmental Protection Agency, shall recommend a
    proposed corrective action plan to the Board for final
    approval to proceed with remediation. The recommendation
    shall be based on the joint review conducted under
    subdivision (f)(2) of this Section and the status of any
    endorsement issued under subdivision (f)(3) of this
    Section.
        (6) The Department, in cooperation with the Illinois
    Environmental Protection Agency, shall provide remedial
    project oversight, monitor remedial work progress, and
    report to the Board on the status of the remediation
    project.
        (7) The Department shall, upon completion of the
    corrective action plan and recommendation of the Board,
    issue a notice of closure stating that no further remedial
    action is required to remedy the past agrichemical
    contamination.
    (g) When an owner or operator of an agrichemical facility
initiates a soil contamination assessment on the owner's or
operator's own volition and independent of any requirement
under this Section 19.3, information contained in that
assessment may be held as confidential information by the owner
or operator of the facility.
    (h) Except as otherwise provided by Department rule, on and
after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 98th
General Assembly, any Agrichemical Facility Response Action
Program requirement that may be satisfied by an industrial
hygienist licensed pursuant to the Industrial Hygienists
Licensure Act repealed in this amendatory Act may be satisfied
by a Certified Industrial Hygienist certified by the American
Board of Industrial Hygiene.
(Source: P.A. 92-113, eff. 7-20-01.)
 
    Section 15. The Rivers, Lakes, and Streams Act is amended
by changing Section 14a as follows:
 
    (615 ILCS 5/14a)  (from Ch. 19, par. 61a)
    Sec. 14a. It is the express intention of this legislation
that close cooperation shall exist between the Pollution
Control Board, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the
Department of Natural Resources and that every resource of
State government shall be applied to the proper preservation
and utilization of the waters of Lake Michigan.
    The Environmental Protection Agency shall work in close
cooperation with the City of Chicago and other affected units
of government to: (1) terminate discharge of pollutional waste
materials to Lake Michigan from vessels in both intra-state and
inter-state navigation, and (2) abate domestic, industrial,
and other pollution to assure that Lake Michigan beaches in
Illinois are suitable for full body contact sports, meeting
criteria of the Pollution Control Board.
    The Environmental Protection Agency shall regularly
conduct water quality and lake bed surveys to evaluate the
ecology and the quality of water in Lake Michigan. Results of
such surveys shall be made available, without charge, to all
interested persons and agencies. It shall be the responsibility
of the Director of the Environmental Protection Agency to
report biennially annually or at such other times as the
Governor shall direct; such report shall provide hydrologic,
biologic, and chemical data together with recommendations to
the Governor and members of the General Assembly.
    The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall
be satisfied by filing copies of the report with the Speaker,
the Minority Leader and the Clerk of the House of
Representatives and the President, the Minority Leader and the
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research Unit, as
required by Section 3.1 of "An Act to revise the law in
relation to the General Assembly", approved February 25, 1874,
as amended, and filing such additional copies with the State
Government Report Distribution Center for the General Assembly
as is required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State
Library Act.
    In meeting the requirements of this Act, the Pollution
Control Board, Environmental Protection Agency and Department
of Natural Resources are authorized to be in direct contact
with individuals, municipalities, public and private
corporations and other organizations which are or may be
contributing to the discharge of pollution to Lake Michigan.
(Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.